R. B. Tyler Co. v. Merrill Engineering Co.

159 So. 319, 181 La. 191, 1935 La. LEXIS 1475
CourtSupreme Court of Louisiana
DecidedJanuary 7, 1935
DocketNo. 33037.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 159 So. 319 (R. B. Tyler Co. v. Merrill Engineering Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Louisiana primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
R. B. Tyler Co. v. Merrill Engineering Co., 159 So. 319, 181 La. 191, 1935 La. LEXIS 1475 (La. 1935).

Opinion

*194 LAND, Justice.

This is a coneursus proceeding, under Act No. 224 of 1918, as amended by Act No. 271 of 1926, wherein all claimants of record against State Highway Project No. 4606, the Monroe-Chatham Highway, were cited to come into court and establish their claims.

The proceeding was instituted by R. B. Tyler Company, subcontractor. The general contractor, Merrill Engineering Company, and the surety on its bond, Union Indemnity Company; another subcontractor, Hennington Bros., and its surety, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company; and the Louisiana Highway Commission, were made parties defendant-and served and cited.

The contract between the general contractor and the Highway Commission was signed March 4,1931. To this contract was annexed a bond, dated April 7, 1931, for the faithful performance of the contract and payment of all laborers and furnishers of material, signed by Merrill Engineering Company, as principal, and the Union Indemnity Company, as surety.

Notice of default by the contractor was filed by the Highway-Commission on March 13, 1933.

It is alleged in the petition provoking the coneursus that tlfe Highway Commission had in its hands funds due on the contract, and that more than forty-five days had elapsed since filing of the notice of default, but that the Highway Commission had failed and refused to provoke a coneursus and deposit the fund in the registry of the court

It was further alleged that the Union Indemnity Company, surety on the general contractor’s bond, was insolvent and in the hands of receivers; that the bond was therefore insufficient; and that, by reason of the insolvency and default by both surety and principal thereon, the Highway Commission was itself in default and liable to claimants on the project to the same extent as the surety on the bond.

Answers • were filed by the Merrill Engineering Company, Hennington Bros., Highway Commission, and most of the claimants.

No answer was filed by the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, or by the Union Indemnity Company; but the receivers of the latter filed an exception to the jurisdiction, wherein it is alleged and admitted that “in the proceedings entitled E. A. Conway, Secretary of State, v. Union Indemnity Company, of the docket of the Civil District Court of the Parish of Orleans bearing the No. 200,442, judgment was entered declaring that the Union Indemnity Company was insolvent and adjudging the dissolution of same.”

On the. trial, the several claimants adduced testimony and introduced documentary proof in support of their claims and the matter was submitted to the court.

Judgment was rendered fixing the balance due by the Highway Commission at $18,915.79, and ordering this amount deposited in the registry of the court for pro rata distribution among the claimants entitled thereto, and decreeing the principal contractor’s bond insolvent, and that the Highway Commission was liable for all claims under the bond, and that the claimants whose claims were established to the satisfaction of the court were entitled to judgment against the contractor *196 and the Highway Commission, in solido, for the full amount of their respective claims, with 5 per cent, per annum interest theron. Volume 3, pp. 769, 771, 773.

From this judgment the Highway Commission has taken a suspensive appeal.

The only parties before the court in this appeal are the Highway Commission, and the eleven claimants in whose favor judgment was rendered for the amounts o-f their respective claims against the Highway Commission and the Merrill Engineering Company, in solido.

The Highway Commission admitted that it had on hand, due on this contract, the amount which was found by the trial judge to be correct.

The insolvency of the Merrill Engineering Company and the Union Indemnity Company, principal and surety on the bond, is established, in our opinion.

The defenses raised by the Highway Commission for its refusal to deposit the funds in its hands, and as against its liability to the claimants to the same extent as the surety on the bond, are as follows:

1. (a) “This suit is brought against Merrill Engineering Company, and the Highway Commission has no contract with such company, its contract being with Merrill Engineering Company, Inc., a separate, distinctive juristic entity.”

It was shown on the trial that there was but one Merrill Engineering Company interested Or involved in this project, that it was the one which made the contract, gave the bond, and was responsible for the labor and materials which went into the work, notwithstanding that the name of the "corporation was indiscriminately used.

“In our view,” said the court in National Oil Works v. Korn Bros., 164 La. 800, 807, 114 So. 659, 661, “the accidental omission of the abbreviation, ‘Inc.,’ from plaintiffs assumed name, in defendant’s copy of the contract, did not affect the matter.”

And in Southern Hide Co. v. Best, 174 La. 748, 141 So. 449, 451, it was held that: “Conceding, as counsel argues, that the letters ‘Inc.’ are part of the name of the corporation, the slight alteration of the name by omitting those letters was not misleading and did not vitiate the citation.”

Besides, article 432 of the Civil Code provides that: “Corporations must not only be authorized by the Legislature, or established according to law, but a name must be given to them; and it is in that name they must sue or be sued, and do all their legal acts, although a slight alteration in this name he not important.” (Italics ours.)

The objection is more technical than sound, and is not well taken.

2. (b) “There was no contract, express or implied with R. B. Tyler Company, Inc.”

This company is a subcontractor, and provoked the concursus proceeding in this case. The Highway Commission contends that its contract with the general contractor specifically provided that it should not be sublet, unless written approval was first secured from the State Highway Engineer and that no such approval was ever obtained.

*198 It .appears that a printed document was filed and produced in evidence by the Highway Commission, containing regulations for the guidance of contractors and referred to in the contract on Project No. 4606, but not made a part thereof, or recorded with the contract in the mortgage book.

. This printed document was objected to by the claimants, for the reason that it had not been authenticated or proved in any way, and was ex parte and not binding on them.

None of the subcontracts was formally approved, but it was shown by oral and documentary proof that the Highway Commission, through its resident engineer and other employees and officials, was cognizant, at all times, who the subcontractors were, what they were doing, and who was performing the labor and furnishing the material that went into the construction of the project.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
159 So. 319, 181 La. 191, 1935 La. LEXIS 1475, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/r-b-tyler-co-v-merrill-engineering-co-la-1935.