Provident Trust Co. v. Metropolitan Casualty Ins. Co.

152 F.2d 875, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2356
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedDecember 17, 1945
Docket8846, 8847
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 152 F.2d 875 (Provident Trust Co. v. Metropolitan Casualty Ins. Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Provident Trust Co. v. Metropolitan Casualty Ins. Co., 152 F.2d 875, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2356 (3d Cir. 1945).

Opinion

GOODRICH, Circuit, Judge.

This case arises on appeal from two District Court judgments, 1 against a surety on three completion bonds in the aggregate amount of $868,264.79. Both cases are factually alike and present identical questions of law. 2 The persons involved are: Provident Trust Company of Philadelphia, plaintiff; Metropolitan Casualty Insurance Company of New York, defendant; and Equitable Bonded Indemnity Company with its wholly owned subsidiary, Equitable Securities Corporation. From the business operations of the Equitable companies with certain builders, Furman, Roehm and Storck and their surety, the defendant Metropolitan, on the one hand, and the plaintiff Provident on the other, the present conflict of interests arose.

The case is in Federal Court on diversity grounds only. All the operative facts seem to have had their setting in Pennsylvania. Under the now well understood and established rule, Pennsylvania law is to be applied and Pennsylvania decisions, so far as found to be applicable to the questions in the case are controlling. 3 '

The defendant’s principal and most important point, while presented with considerable elaboration, brings the case down to a simple set of facts which, in turn, is controlled by simple and well settled propositions of law. The substance of the case on the defendant’s theory is this: A builder undertakes certain operations. In the *877 language of suretyship, he is the principal debtor. He is to he supplied with money by a creditor, in this instance Equitable. A completion bond is given by the defendant surety. With the consent of the principal debtor and surety, rights of the creditor (Equitable) are assigned to plaintiff Provident Trust Company. The principal debt- or’s project is never completed because the creditor (Equitable) fails to advance the funds promised. This failure excuses the debtor from its performance. 4 Since the principal debtor is not in default upon his performance, his surety is likewise not in default. Therefore the creditor (Equitable) cannot recover against the surety. 5 Provident is but the assignee of the creditor and the rights of the assignee rise no higher than the assignor. 6 Judgment must, therefore, be for the defendant. If the defendant is right in its argument that the facts in the instant case are essentially those in the statement just made, it is perfectly clear that it is right in its legal conclusion. Indeed, the plaintiff would not claim to the contrary.

The plaintiff, however, claims and got the District Judge to go along with the claim, that it is not the assignee of a contract made by the defendant with Equitable but the contract is essentially one with the plaintiff itself. Its rights are not, therefore, derived by assignment from Equitable, but are obligations running directly from defendant to plaintiff. Of course, if this is the substance of the transaction, the view set out above has no application. There were no conflicts of testimony to be resolved at the trial. Most of the facts weye stipulated and the testimony of the one witness, A. G. Scattergood, Vice-President of the plaintiff, was not disputed but •relied on by the defendant. Our question becomes, therefore, what is the legal conclusion to be drawn from facts rather than what are the facts themselves.

Are the plaintiff’s rights based on an obligation running directly to it or do they arise only by assignment from Equitable? Plaintiff contends, 7 * and the District Court agreed, that Provident was a direct obligee. The facts upon which this conclusion is based are these: the surety knew that Provident and not Equitable was to be the ultimate recipient of the bonds; 8 the bonds, assignment and consent to assignment were bound together as though they were a single document; 9 the whole trans *878 action was consummated in a single day (exc'ept for' advances of money) so that Equitable was only a fleeting holder of the instruments which were immediately transferred to Provident; the assignment was executed and consented to even before the bonds were delivered to Equitable; 10 and finally defendant’s statement that the principals were straw men. 11 This we think is a fair summary of the points relied upon by plaintiff and sustained by the District Court to show an obligation direct to plaintiff.

But since we are here dealing with obligations arising out of words used by the parties, we had better give attention to the language they used, unless we are to put the cart before the horse. If that language is ambiguous, we may, of course, go behind it and examine the cartload of surrounding facts to try to find out what was meant. As might well be expected of large financial organizations skilled in their calling, and advised by able counsel, the language is clear and to the point. It is plainly the language of assignment. The bonds refer to Equitable and its subsidiary as “obligees.” The assignments say that Equitable does “grant, bargain, sell, transfer, assign and set over” to Provident. They speak of the bond “so assigned” and of “this assignment” to Provident. They provide that if the mortgages be reassigned to Equitable, Provident will also “re-assign” its rights under the bond. Metropolitan and the builders state, “We hereby consent to the above assignment.” The pleadings by Provident speak of defendant surety having “executed its written consent to a certain written assignment” to plaintiff. It is further expressly stipulated that Metropolitan as surety and the builders as principals, “executed their written consent to a certain written assignment to Provident.” And the plaintiff sues as assignee of a contract, not one praying for reformation of an instrument. This is clear, exact, accurate. Neither we nor Judge Learned Hand’s twenty bishops could change its plain meaning. 12 We have no case of mistake here, nor reliance by one party on the superior skill or knowledge of the other, no dominant bargaining agency which has imposed its will on a weaker party by hiding the real nature of the transaction through language formed to its own advantage, 13 nor any *879 other possible reason for disregarding a simple meaning clearly expressed.

Furthermore, we do not see that the various facts urged by the plaintiff to show that Provident was a direct obligee prove the conclusion. It was quite probable that Provident considered itself sufficiently protected as an assignee. The testimony of its vice president showed the company sometimes took obligations running directly to it. We have no doubt that in fact its'officers knew the difference.

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Bluebook (online)
152 F.2d 875, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2356, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/provident-trust-co-v-metropolitan-casualty-ins-co-ca3-1945.