Ramada Development Company, a Corporation v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, a Corporation

626 F.2d 517, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 16800
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit
DecidedJune 10, 1980
Docket79-1076, 79-1077
StatusPublished
Cited by28 cases

This text of 626 F.2d 517 (Ramada Development Company, a Corporation v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Sixth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ramada Development Company, a Corporation v. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, a Corporation, 626 F.2d 517, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 16800 (6th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

KEITH, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff-Appellant Ramada Development Company (hereinafter “Radco”), appeals from the judgment of the district court discharging the defendant Surety, United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company (USF&G), pro tanto, for payments made by Radco to its electrical subcontractor (Mays Electric, Inc.) for work that Radco knew had not been completed by the subcontractor. Radco argues on appeal that the discharge was improper because: 1) the payments were actually used toward completion of the contract, which would ultimately benefit the Surety; 2) since there was no actual breach of any terms of its contract with the subcontractor, prepayment alone was insufficient to discharge the Surety pro tanto; and 3) the district court was unable to determine the amount of work actually completed by Mays before leaving the job.

Defendant-Appellee USF&G cross-appeals from the judgment of the district court granting Radco recovery for the sums that it paid the completion subcontractor to complete the job left unfinished by Mays. Specifically, the Surety argues that the district court erred in computing the interest on the final judgment by assessing the interest from the date of payment to TransPac, the completion subcontractor, and not from the date that the complaint was filed. 1 In addition, the Surety alleges error in the district court’s computation of the amount by which it was discharged pro tanto from the payment of completion costs. USF&G argues that it should have been discharged for twenty percent 2 of the total contract price, plus ten percent retainage of that portion of the contract completed by Mays ($43,170.00), rather than for the amount of the December, 1973 and January, 1974 payments made to Mays by Radco, for which the work had not been completed ($32,-265.00).

We reverse the district court on the pro tanto discharge of the Surety for the reason that the Surety was not injured or otherwise prejudiced by Radco’s payments to subcontractor Mays. We affirm the district court on its interest calculation from the date of payment to Trans-Pac on the basis of MCLA § 438.7, which permits interest to be calculated from the date that the award became fixed and ascertainable.

I.

Plaintiff-Appellant Radco was the general contractor for the construction of a ten-story, 253-unit, Ramada Inn in Southfield, Michigan pursuant to a contract dated February 16, 1972. Radco subcontracted the electrical work for the Inn to Mays Electric, Inc., pursuant to a contract dated August 14,1972, requiring that Mays furnish a performance and labor and material payment bond surety satisfactory to Radco. The agreed upon price for the entire electrical job was Three Hundred Twenty Thousand Two Hundred Seventy-Five Dollars ($320,- *519 275.00). Mays executed a performance bond on that same date in the penal sum of Three Hundred Twenty-Eight Thousand Twenty-Five Dollars ($328,025.00) guaranteeing its performance of the subcontract. 3 USF&G was the Surety on that performance bond.

During the course of its performance of the subcontract, Mays began to experience financial difficulties which resulted in a default on the contract. Unable to meet its payroll or pay for supplies, Mays voluntarily left the job at the end of February, 1974. Mays was paid by Radco Two Hundred Seventy-Eight Thousand Three Hundred Fifteen Dollars ($278,315.00); in addition, Radco paid Miller-Seldon Electric Company, a supplier of Mays, Seventeen Thousand Three Hundred Fifty-Eight Dollars ($17,-358.00) for electrical supplies which Mays had ordered but for which it had not paid. The payments which were made to Mays were based on written monthly pay estimates executed by Mays for work completed in the preceding month and submitted to Radco for payment. Payments were made by Radco over the period beginning October 23, 1972 and ending January 17, 1974.

The district court found that Radco believed in the accuracy of, and reasonably relied upon, these sworn estimates of Mays, with the exception of the last two estimates dated December 18, 1973, in the amount of Twelve Thousand Four Hundred Sixty-Five Dollars ($12,465.00) and January 17, 1974 in the amount of Nineteen Thousand Eight Hundred Dollars ($19,800.00). With respect to these last two payments, the district court found that Radco was in fact aware that Mays had not completed all of the work claimed in the estimates, but that the payments were made in Radco’s good faith belief that Mays would be able to complete the job it these payments were made, enabling Mays to meet its payroll and pay for supplies.

The parties stipulated in the district court that Radco was required to, and did, finish the job on which Mays defaulted by employing another electrical contractor. Rad-co hired Trans-Pac Construction Company of Los Angeles, California on a time and material basis, and paid Trans-Pac Two Hundred Eighty-Seven Thousand Four Hundred Sixty-Eight Dollars ($287,468.00) to complete the job, plus Twelve Thousand Dollars ($12,000.00) for additional work not included in Mays’ contract. Payment was made to Trans-Pac on April 23, 1974.

In the district court, Radco sought a judgment against the surety USF&G, in the amount of Two Hundred Fifty-Six Thousand One Hundred Sixteen Dollars ($256,-116.00) —the sum paid Trans-Pac for completion of the electrical work ($287,468.00), less the amount of Mays’ contract which had not been paid to Mays ($48,710.00), plus the amount paid to Miller-Seldon for electrical equipment ($17,358.00). The district court awarded Radco Two Hundred Twenty-Three Thousand Eight Hundred Fifty-One Dollars ($223,851.00) — the sum that Radco paid Trans-Pac to complete the job ($287,468.00), 4 plus the sum paid Miller-Seldon Electric Company for supplies ($17,-358.00) , less the $48,710.00 retained by Rad-co, less the $32,265.00 for the last two payments made to Mays for which the surety was discharged — plus interest at six percent since April 23, 1974, the date payment was made to Trans-Pac. 5

*520 II.

The first assignment of error raised by appellant in this case is that the pro tanto discharge of the surety was improper. Appellant argues that before a compensated surety can be discharged pro tanto, it must be shown that the obligee (here Radco) committed a material and substantial breach of its contract with the Surety’s principal (here Mays) as well as that the Surety was damaged by any unauthorized payments.

While noting that Michigan law is not free of ambiguity on the subject of surety discharges, 6 the district court ruled that the discharge was proper on the basis of a 1921 Michigan Supreme Court opinion, Sandusky Grain Co. v. Borden’s Condensed Milk Co., 214 Mich. 306, 183 N.W. 218 (1921). In Sandusky Grain, the Supreme Court held that the surety was discharged when the obligee owner departed from the terms of its contract with the contractor and paid the contractor without requiring its compliance with the mechanic’s lien law, as provided for in the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
626 F.2d 517, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 16800, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ramada-development-company-a-corporation-v-united-states-fidelity-ca6-1980.