Platte Valley Drainage District v. National Surety Co.

295 S.W. 1083, 221 Mo. App. 898, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 192
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 8, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 295 S.W. 1083 (Platte Valley Drainage District v. National Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Platte Valley Drainage District v. National Surety Co., 295 S.W. 1083, 221 Mo. App. 898, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 192 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinions

On Rehearing.

BLAND, J.

'This suit is npon an oral contract wherein defendant is alleged to have assumed, upon a consideration, to carry out in favor of plaintiff an obligation of a third person. The ease was tried before the court without the aid of a jury, resulting in a judgment in favor of plaintiff in the sum of $3212.78 and defendant has appealed.

The facts show that in May, 1920, plaintiff, having decided to provide funds for meeting the cost of certain drainage work by the issuance of bonds, accepted the offer of the J. R. Sutherlin & Company, a corporation of Kansas City, Missouri, to purchase the bonds. To insure the performance of the agreement, plaintiff required the J. R. Sutherlin & Company to execute a bond in the penal sum of $90,000, upon which bond the defendant became surety. The accepted offer of the J. R. Sutherlin & Company was made a part of the bond by being copied therein in full. In its offer the J. R. S'utherlin & Company agreed to buy bonds up to the par value of $200,000, to pay par and accrued interest for the bonds delivered to it and to keep on deposit to the credit of plaintiff in a local bank selected by the latter the sum of $10,000. The remainder of the purchase price of such bonds was to be left on deposit with the J. R. Sutherlin & Company and to be paid to plaintiff as the drainage work progressed and as called for by plaintiff to meet the monthly engineer’s estimates. Of the sum so remaining in the hands of the J. R. Sutherlin & Company, it was to pay plaintiff four per cent interest on daily balances.

Plaintiff found it necessary to issue bonds only to the par value of $100,000, which were delivered to the J. R. Sutherlin & Company under the contract. An initial payment of $10,000 on account of the purchase price was made and the remainder1, $90,000, was left on-deposit with the J. R. Sutherlin & Company. The bond recited delivery of the bonds to the J. R. Sutherlin & Company and that of the purchase price $90,000 had been deposited with that company in accordance with the terms of the agreement. The bond contained the usual conditions and provided for1 indemnity to plaintiff for loss and damages suffered by reason of the J. R. Sutherlin & Company’s failure to perform the contract, and contained a special con-' dition providing, in effect, that if the J. R. Sutherlin & Company should default in any manner in the performance of any of the *902 things specified in the contract to be performed, plaintiff should give written notice to the defendant “and the whole sum then on deposit or under the control of said principal — J. E. Sutherlin & Company — to the credit” of the plaintiff “shall become immediately due and payable to ’ ’ the plaintiff.

With the exception that J. E. Sutherlin & Company paid interest from time to time on the money deposited with it, nothing further transpired until in June, 1921, when plaintiff had occasion to call on the J. E. Sutherlin & Company to pay the sum of $4625.52, being the first estimate of plaintiff’s engineer. Plaintiff promptly “billed” the J. E. Sutherlin & Company for this amount and that company gave its check for the same, which check was dishonored and went to protest. Thereupon plaintiff unsuccessfully undertook to collect this sum from the J. E. Sutherlin & Company and gave the defendant at its head office in New York City notice by letter of the non-payment but did not make any demand for the whole of the deposit with the J. E. Sutherlin & Company J. E. Sutherlin & Company was not looked to further by plaintiff but no formal release of it was ever made. In response to said notice, Mr. Weichelt, defendant’s general attorney for the central district, with headquarters at Chicago, went to Grant City, the home of the attorneys for plaintiff.

Mr. Edward Kelso, one of these attorneys, testified that at the time of the default of the J. E. Sutherlin & Company, it owed the district about $90,000; that when Weichelt arrived the witness showed him the bond and contract and told him that under their provisions plaintiff was entitled to $90,000 and demanded of Weichelt that defendant pay this sum of money; he did not mention any interest upon the deposit. Further on in his testimony the witness stated that he did not make a formal demand for the money but stated to Weichelt that under the provisions of the bond $90,000 was due and “for him to take that upon that basis and have the $90,000 paid to us. At the same time I said to him, now if you don’t care to do that ... if your company does not care to pay us this $90,000 to carry out this contract with Sutherlin & Company, go ahead and complete that contract, we will agree to that.” Mr. Kelso testified that he was afraid that the company might attempt to “sidestep” their obligation. Mr. Weichelt replied to Mr. Kelso, “I don’t know anything about it. This matter is all new to me — I will have to investigate it.” Weichelt returned to Kansas City apd afterwards Kelso made several trips to that place when Weichelt would call him up over the phone and ask him to come.

Mr. Kelso further testified that on June 15th Weichelt made a draft upon the defendant in the sum of $4625.52 to pay the first estimate, which was honored by the defendant, this was about a week *903 after Weichelt first appeared in Grant City. The witness further testified that about thirty days after the negotiations first started when Weichelt first came to Grant City, he and Weichelt arrived at a settlement. Mr. Kelso telling him all the time that he would not insist on the payment of the $90,000 if defendant would carry out the Sutherlin contract; that finally Weichelt called him over the phone and told him that he had word from the general office that “they had everything completed and that they would agree to carry out the contract of Sutherlin & Company if it would be satisfactory.” Mr. Kelso replied that it would be, and Weichelt said, “You rest assured that it will be carried out, and you- tell your supervisors that they don’t need to worry anything about it.” Nothing more occurred and Weichelt returned to Chicago. Plaintiff sent its estimates as they fell due to the defendant at New York, which estimates were all paid. At the expiration of six months the payments had amounted to $90,000. The second estimate was not promptly paid so Mr. Kelso wrote to Weichelt at Chicago about the matter and Weichelt replied on a letter-head of defendant that he felt assured that Mr. Magee, the general counsel at New York, would handle the matter satisfactorily; if not, the latter would probably call on Mr. Kelso for any additional information that he might want. When the final estimate came due, which covered the balance of the $90,000, plaintiff for the first time demanded payment of the interest that would have accrued under its contract with the J. R. Sutherlin & Company. Defendant paid this estimate but refused to pay the interest. Mr. Kelso further testified that during these negotiations he called up Mr. Magee in New York City, defendant’s general attorney, but that he did not ask him “who Mr. Weichelt was” nor did he inquire of defendant’s local agent at Kansas City.

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Bluebook (online)
295 S.W. 1083, 221 Mo. App. 898, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 192, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/platte-valley-drainage-district-v-national-surety-co-moctapp-1926.