Quantom Corporate Funding, Ltd. v. Westway Industries Inc.

825 N.E.2d 117, 4 N.Y.3d 211, 791 N.Y.S.2d 876, 2005 N.Y. LEXIS 175
CourtNew York Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 17, 2005
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 825 N.E.2d 117 (Quantom Corporate Funding, Ltd. v. Westway Industries Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New York Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Quantom Corporate Funding, Ltd. v. Westway Industries Inc., 825 N.E.2d 117, 4 N.Y.3d 211, 791 N.Y.S.2d 876, 2005 N.Y. LEXIS 175 (N.Y. 2005).

Opinion

OPINION OF THE COURT

Rosenblatt, J.

We hold today that State Finance Law § 137 allows subcontractors’ assignees to recover payment from bond sureties. The statute requires general contractors on public works projects to purchase payment bonds, which work like insurance policies designed to guarantee payment to the general contractors’ suppliers, employees and subcontractors. The statute is silent, however, on who may sue on the bond. In our view, section 137 should be read to allow suit by the subcontractor’s assignee.

L

Atlas Concrete Cutting LLC served as a subcontractor for Westway Industries, Inc., a general contractor hired to complete various public works projects in Westchester and Queens counties. After completing the work, Atlas sold its accounts receivable at a substantial discount to Quantum Corporate Funding, Ltd., for cash up front. Westway then failed to pay its debts and went out of business. To recover on Atlas’s claims, Quantum pursued United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company (Guaranty), the surety for the section 137 payment bonds that West-way had purchased. 1

After Guaranty refused to honor Quantum’s demands for the payments due to Atlas, Quantum brought suit in Supreme Court *215 and obtained a default judgment against Westway, establishing that Atlas’s invoices to Westway were proper and payable. Supreme Court, however, granted Guaranty’s motion for summary judgment, dismissing Quantum’s claims under section 137 against Guaranty in reliance on the Appellate Division, First Department’s holding that the subcontractor’s right to recover on payment bonds is nonassignable (see Quantum Corporate Funding v Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Md., 258 AD2d 376 [1st Dept 1999]).

On appeal, the Appellate Division, Second Department, reversed the dismissal, acknowledging that its holding conflicts with the First Department’s decision in Fidelity. Quantum then won summary judgment in Supreme Court. To resolve the split between Appellate Division departments, we granted Guaranty’s motion for leave to appeal directly to this Court {see CPLR 5602 [a] [1] [ii]). We now affirm.

II

The bonding requirement in State Finance Law § 137 first passed in 1938 to protect laborers and material suppliers from defaulting employers.* 2 An additional purpose was to reduce the cost of state projects by encouraging lower-cost bids from contractors (see Governor’s Counsel’s Mem to Governor, Bill Jacket, L 1938, ch 707, at 3 [“Those (contractors) who do (undertake state work) materially raise their bids in order to allow for outside financing pending the receipt of the state moneys.”]). *216 The bond requirement guarantees that subcontractors will receive payment for their work once they complete the project. That assurance is not always enough. Some subcontractors, often smaller or newer companies, may have difficulty financing their work even before the job is done. For example, a gravel company working on a six-month project might run out of gravel after three months. If it lacked the means to obtain more gravel, the company would be unable to complete its contract obligations. Subcontractors in that position seek to trade their certain right to future payment in exchange for present financing.

Similarly, small subcontractors who have completed projects and await payment may be ill equipped to pursue their payment claims, preferring not to spend limited company resources on the extra paperwork and potential litigation costs connected with such claims. Such companies, like Atlas here, have therefore sold their accounts receivable to factors, companies that specialize in financing and collecting these payments (see Black’s Law Dictionary 630 [8th ed 2004]; see also James J. White, A Symposium on the Code After 25 Years: 1978-2003, Death and Resurrection of Secured Credit, 12 Am Bankr Inst L Rev 139, 153-154 [2004]).

Whether parties may sell an enforceable right to receive payments under bonds required by section 137 is an open question before this Court. In construing the statute, we bear in mind the background principle that claims typically remain transferrable (see General Obligations Law § 13-101 [“Any claim or demand can be transferred . . . .”]; see also Restatement [Second] of Contracts § 317 [2] [setting transferability of rights as the default and outlining narrow exceptions]). As a second guiding principle, we note that the original section 137 and every subsequent amendment were designed to protect workers, material suppliers and subcontractors from the hardship that accompanied the previous instability in the financing of public works (see e.g. Spanos Painting Contrs., Inc. v Union Bldg. & Constr. Corp., 334 F2d 457, 459 [2d Cir 1964] [“The primary purpose of § 137 ... is to provide subcontractors a remedy by which they may recover sums due them where they would have failed under the old, more stringent lien law.”]). 3

*217 Guaranty argues that, despite the law generally favoring transferability, an exception applies in this case. Guaranty asserts that a subcontractor’s right under Lien Law article 2 (to place a hen on the general contractor’s proceeds) is not assignable, and argues that the same restriction should apply to bonds under section 137. We are not persuaded. As Guaranty and amicus Surety Association of America acknowledge, section 137 is aimed at providing greater protection to laborers, suppliers and subcontractors than the Lien Law. To adopt Guaranty’s analogy would set the statutory beneficiaries back to the financial inflexibility and risk they endured before section 137’s passage.

Guaranty also argues that by explicitly granting labor trustees the right to stand in place of the actual workers, suppliers and subcontractors under section 137 (5) (b),* ** 4 the Legislature intended to make that grant exclusive. The better interpretation is that the clause is the Legislature’s way of allowing parties not directly connected to the project to sue on behalf of the named statutory beneficiaries. If the Legislature wanted to exclude those with merely a financial interest in the work performed from collecting on behalf of the statutory beneficiaries, it would not have expressly allowed labor representatives to sue. The text itself points to this interpretation: by defining what claims are recoverable with the phrase “payable to or on behalf of’ the workers, section 137 (5) (b) explicitly authorizes that some payments will go to parties acting “on behalf of’ the direct statutory beneficiaries.

Guaranty argues that affirmance would not be consistent with the legislative goal of reducing the cost of state projects, because sureties would have to raise the premiums charged for *218 bonds to cover the increased risk. Subcontractors and Quantum counter that sureties set the price of the bond before

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Bluebook (online)
825 N.E.2d 117, 4 N.Y.3d 211, 791 N.Y.S.2d 876, 2005 N.Y. LEXIS 175, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/quantom-corporate-funding-ltd-v-westway-industries-inc-ny-2005.