Rumsey v. Livers

77 A. 295, 112 Md. 546, 1910 Md. LEXIS 143
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 24, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 77 A. 295 (Rumsey v. Livers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rumsey v. Livers, 77 A. 295, 112 Md. 546, 1910 Md. LEXIS 143 (Md. 1910).

Opinion

Urner, J.,

delivered the'opinion of the Court.

The appellants contracted with the Bolivar Light, Heat and Power Company to furnish and install for it an electric light plant at the village of Bolivar in Westmoreland County, Pennsylvania, and the appellee entered into a sub-contract with the appellants to perform the construction work and provide part of the materials contemplated by the main contract. In consideration of this service the appellants agreed' to pay the appellee fifteen hundred dollars. It was provided, however, that payment should be made “in the like manner *550 of the contract attached when payments are received b'y the party of the first part” (appellants). The contract thus referred to was that between the appellants and the company. It was further agreed by the appellee, in’ case of the failure of the appellants to receive the contract price “upon non-payment or from any other cause, to stand his ratio of loss to the amount of contract, and if suit is brought, to stand the ratio of expense.” .’ . .

The contract price stipulated to be paid by the company to the appellants was $11,307.75 payable in designated installments. Immediately upon the execution of the contract, which occurred on March 6th, 1906, the company executed to the appellants three judgment notes aggregating the sum to accrue under the contract, and on the same day judgments by confession for the amounts of the notes were entered in the Court of Common Pleas for Westmoreland County in favor of the appellants in pursuance of the authorization in the notes for that purpose.

The appellee proceeded to the performance of his sub-contract and completed the work on July 15th, 1906. Payments to the amount of $2,181.13, the last being on September 9th. 1906, were made by the.company to the appellants on account of their contract. The appellee received a due proportion of these sums according to the ratio which his claim against the appellants bore to their claim against the company. His total receipts amounted to $274.82. He was chargeable also with $258.75 for poles which he was to furnish but which the company itself supplied and for which it was credited by the appellants. Independently of these, items the appellee’s claim under his sub-contract remains unpaid.

■ The plant was put in operation when the appellee completed his work. The contract had then been fully performed on the part of the contractor, the various instalments of the contract price were then payable, the - judgment notes were all matured and the judgments, constituting first liens on the company’s property, were enforceable. Ho execution was ever issued-on the judgments by the appellant firm, but on *551 June 17th, 1907, immediately after they received a letter from the appellee stating that he had placed his claim in the hands of his attorney, they assigned the judgments to the Rumsey Electric Company, limited, a sejwate partnership composed of the appellants and others and the assignees issued execution on October 31st, 1908. It does not appear from the record that the execution has ever been pressed to a sale of the property covered by the judgment liens. In the meantime, prior to the assignment of the judgments, the appellee had written the apj>ellants repeatedly urging settlement with the company and the payment of his claim. He brought the present suit as a foreign attachment proceeding on December 10th, 1907. The appellants^ as defendants below, appeared to the short note case, the trial of which resulted in a verdict and judgment for the appellee for the balance of his claim and interest.

A demurrer filed by the defendants to the whole, and each of the two counts, of the amended declaration presents the primary question for our consideration.

The first count declares in common form for money payable for work and labor done and materials furnished. The second alleges that the contract and sub-contract to which we have referred and then avers that the plaintiff fully performed his contract according to its terms and that the work so done and the materials so furnished were 'accepted by the defendants as a complete performance of the contract; that by its terms he was entitled to be paid in -the like manner in which the defendants were to receive payment from the company under their contract with it; and that from time to time the defendants paid to him on account of his contract the sum of $533.57, leaving a balance due him of $966.43, which balance the defendants by the exercise of reasonable diligence could have long since collected by the execution upon certain judgments given to them by the company for the whole amount of their claim against it; which included the sum due by them to the plaintiff, but that the 'defendants have failed and refused to take steps to enforce and' collect *552 the judgments by execution, and have failed and refused to exercise due and reasonable diligence to collect the amount of the judgments, but on the contrary; without the consent of" the plaintiff, have elected to defer and delay the collection of the judgments and to give unreasonable indulgence to the company upon the judgments, which by the exercise of reasonable diligence the defendants could have collected, to the great loss and injury of the plaintiff, etc.

We have no difficulty in approving the action of the Court below in overruling the demurrer, as we are clearly of the opinion that the allegations in question set forth a good cause of action. The full performance of the sub-contract by the plaintiff and the acceptance of its results by the defendants undoubtedly created the relation of creditor and debtor between the parties; but-as the agreement contained the unusual provision that the debt should be due when payments were received by the defendants under the principal contract, it was essential to the plaintiff’s recovery that he should aver and prove not only the existence of the debt but also that it had become payable either on account of the actual receipt by the defendants of the sums due them from the company or as a result of such conduct on the part of the defendants as would preclude them from relying upon the provisions suspending the maturity of the plaintiff’s claim. As the defendants agreed to pay their indebtedness to the plaintiff upon the receipt by them-of a fund to which they were entitled and to secure the payment of which they had obtained judgments which were enforceable, they must, upon the plainest principles of justice, to be held to have incurred the implied obligation to the plaintiff to utilize the means of their command for the performance of the stipulated condition precedent. The payment of the compensation he had earned from the defendants could not be perpetually postponed merely because the company refrained from paying its debt to the defendants or because they omitted or refused to enforce its collection. They could insist upon their right to withhold payment from the plaintiff until their receipt of *553 funds from the company only by asserting their right under their contract with the company to the payment of the sums to which they were entitled, especially in view of the fact that this contract was specifically referred to in the sub-contract in relation to the maimer in which the payments were to he received.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
77 A. 295, 112 Md. 546, 1910 Md. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rumsey-v-livers-md-1910.