Progress Glass Co. v. American Insurance

100 Cal. App. 3d 720, 161 Cal. Rptr. 243, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1348
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJanuary 7, 1980
DocketCiv. 46507
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 100 Cal. App. 3d 720 (Progress Glass Co. v. American Insurance) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Progress Glass Co. v. American Insurance, 100 Cal. App. 3d 720, 161 Cal. Rptr. 243, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1348 (Cal. Ct. App. 1980).

Opinion

Opinion

RATTIGAN, J.

Plaintiff Progress Glass Company, a corporation, furnished labor and materials as a subcontractor in the construction of a motel complex. A balance due it from the original contractor was not paid. Plaintiff commenced this action to recover the balance from de *722 fendant American Insurance Company as the surety on a labor and materials payment bond given by the original contractor as the principal. The trial court granted defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the ground that the action was barred by a provision in the bond requiring that the action be commenced within a specified one-year period. Plaintiff appeals from the order in which the motion was granted, but which also operates as a summary judgment dismissing the action. 1 We reverse it.

Facts and Procedural Sequence

The parties agree that there is no material dispute concerning the facts, which may therefore be summarized from the full record. It supports the following recitals:

The motel complex was built in Contra Costa County by Ralph E. Carlsen Construction Company, a corporation (Carlsen), the original contractor under a written contract with the owners of the complex. The owners were a partnership, a corporation, and an individual. The partnership held a leasehold interest in the motel site under a long-term lease from the County of Contra Costa (County), which owned the land. The lease provided that the motel complex would be constructed on the site by the lessee. Paragraph XI of the lease obligated the lessee to provide a labor and materials payment bond, for the protection of the County, in an amount not less than 50 percent of the total estimated cost of the construction project. The paragraph also provided that the lessee would meet this obligation if and when its original contractor furnished “such bond ... in like amount” naming the County “as an additional obligee of Lessee’s principal and surety under such bond...”

*723 The lease took effect when the board of supervisors of the County approved its execution in a resolution adopted on September 21, 1971. The owners of the motel complex entered into the construction contract with Carlsen on March 8, 1972. The County had executed the lease as “Lessor,” but was not a party to the construction contract. Copies of the board’s resolution and the lease were recorded in the office of the county recorder on September 29, 1971. The construction contract was apparently not recorded. 2

The bond involved in this litigation was executed by Carlsen and defendant on April 4, 1972. It is entitled “Labor & Material Payment Bond.” Carlsen executed it as the “Principal,” defendant as the “Surety.” The bond cites no statute. It describes the construction contract and incorporates it, but by reference only. It provides that the principal and the surety “are held and firmly bound unto” the owners of the motel complex and the County, “as Obligee[s].. .for the use and benefit of claimants as hereinbelow defined.... ” Its amount is $917,000, which appears to have been calculated at 50 percent of the contract price. The bond further provides that “the condition of this obligation is such that, if Principal [Carlsen] shall promptly make payment to all claimants as hereinafter defined,... then this obligation shall be void; otherwise it shall remain in full force and effect, subject, however,” to “conditions” specified in paragraphs numbered 1 through 4.

Paragraph 1 defines “claimant” to include any subcontractor furnishing “labor, material, or both” in the performance of the construction contract. Paragraph 3 effectively provides that an action on the bond by a “claimant” must be commenced within one year after the cessation of work on the contract by the principal (Carlsen). 3 The bond was acknowledged before a notary public on behalf of defendant, but it was not recorded in the office of the county recorder at any time. The lease, which was recorded there (see fn. 2, ante), referred to the bond but not *724 to the one-year limitation provision. There was thus no public record of the provision.

Carlsen commenced work pursuant to the contract in 1972. Plaintiff furnished labor and materials in the work pursuant to a written subcontract executed with Carlsen on April 28, 1972. Carlsen ceased all work under the construction contract on January 31, 1973.

Plaintiff was not paid in full for its labor and materials. It brought an action on the 1972 subcontract and recovered a judgment for $5,024.97 against Carlsen on November 5, 1975. The judgment not having been satisfied, plaintiff commenced the present action for the recovery of the $5,024.97 from defendant as the surety on the 1972 bond. The complaint in this action was filed on January 14, 1977, after the expiration of the one-year period of limitation provided in paragraph 3 of the bond (i.e., more than one year after Carlsen had ceased work on Jan. 31, 1973) but within the four-year period prescribed in section 337, subdivision 1, of the Code of Civil Procedure. 4

Defendant filed an answer to the complaint in which it alleged as an affirmative defense (among others) that Carlsen had ceased all work under the construction contract on January 31, 1973, and that “[plaintiff is barred from any recovery upon...[the bond]...by virtue of having failed to file this action within the period set forth in such bond —one year following the date upon which [the] principal ceased work on said contract.” Defendant subsequently made its motion for summary judgment on this ground, the motion was granted, and plaintiff appealed, as recited above.

Review

The trial court obviously reasoned that the provision of the bond imposing a one-year period of limitation on an action “commenced hereunder by any claimant” (see fn. 3, ante) was valid and enforceable against plaintiff, that the four-year statute of limitations did not apply (see fn. 4), and that the action was barred accordingly. Claiming error in these respects, plaintiff contends that the one-year provision *725 in the bond was invalidated by Civil Code section 3239 because the bond was not recorded. 5 This contention must be sustained.

Section 3239 applies by its terms to “any” unrecorded “payment bond given pursuant to any of the provisions of... [the]... chapter” in which the section appears. (See fn. 5, ante.) It appears in chapter 6 (“Payment Bond for Private Works,” commencing with § 3235) of title 15 (“Works of Improvement,” commencing with § 3082) of part 4 of division third of the Civil Code. It being undisputed that defendant’s bond was never recorded, section 3239 operates to invalidate its one-year limitation provision if the bond was “given pursuant to any of the provisions” of chapter 6.

Defendant argues that the bond was not so “given” because it was not required

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
100 Cal. App. 3d 720, 161 Cal. Rptr. 243, 1980 Cal. App. LEXIS 1348, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/progress-glass-co-v-american-insurance-calctapp-1980.