Sioux Falls Pressed Brick Co. v. Board of Education

125 N.W. 291, 25 S.D. 36, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 41
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 16, 1910
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 125 N.W. 291 (Sioux Falls Pressed Brick Co. v. Board of Education) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sioux Falls Pressed Brick Co. v. Board of Education, 125 N.W. 291, 25 S.D. 36, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 41 (S.D. 1910).

Opinion

WHITING, P. J.

The defendant board of education is a ■public school corporation. It contracted with its codefendant, J. J. Olsen & Son, for the erection of a school building. Olsen & Son entered upon the contract, and, when the building was partly completed, they failed in their contract, and the building was completed by the school corporation. Plaintiffs are, all subcontractors who -furnished to Olsen & Son material for such building. Plaintiffs each brought an action against -the above-named defendants, naming as codefendants the other parties now joined [40]*40as plaintiffs and appellants; such plaintiffs claiming that under the laws of this state both the school corporation and the contractors were liable to them for the amount unpaid them for material so furnished the contractors. The said several actions were consolidated by uniting the subcontractors as plaintiffs. The cause was tried to the court without a jury. Findings and conclusions were made in favor of the defendant- corporation and judgment entered thereon. A m-o-tion for new trial having been denied, the plaintiffs have appealed to- this court from such judgment and from the order denying a new trial.

There are several assignments of error in the record herein that are not discussed by appellants and may be considered as abandoned. The main question involved is one of interpretation -of a certain statute in connection with the terms of the contract that existed -between the school corporation and the contractors, and, in the view which we take as to the proper construction of such statute and contract, all other questions covered by -the assignments of error become immaterial.

It will be ’ unnecessary to set o-ut such contract in full; the material provisions being as follows: The contract price for erection of building was $66,475, and -changes were agreed to' increasing -this to $69,2x0.52. After work commenced on the building, -the supervising architect, twice a month, was to make an estimate as to -the value of the material and labor which shall actually have entered into the construction of said building and the materials which shall have been delivered upon the grounds since the last preceding estimate. Such material so delivered became the property of -the school corporation. After an estimate was so made by the architect, the corporation, upon demand of the contractor, was -to- pay such contractor 80 per cent, of such estimate. “The balance of twenty per cent, shall be retained by the •said second party [corporation] and shall be paid after the full and satisfactory completion of said building and after all claims for labor or materials furnished in, upon or for said work shall have been discharged and released.” The contract had -the usual provisions whereby the contractor agreed -to save the corporation from any liens of subcontractors, and also contained a provision [41]*41under which the corporation, in case of failure on part of the contractors, could go on and complete the building, deducting, from what would otherwise come to the contractors under the contract, the cost of so finishing the building; the contractors being being liable,for any excess of such cost of completing building over what remained unpaid to contractors on contract price.

Estimates were made from time to time by the architect and the 8o- per cent, thereof paid the contractors; -the amount of such estimates reserved under the 20 per cent, provision being over $ii,qoo, which is more than thfe aggregate of the several plaintiffs’ claims. This was the 'situation when the contractors failed in their contract and the work was taken up by the corporation. The several appellants proceeded to file liens under the provisions of article 2, c. 31, Rev. Code Civ. Proc. being sections 713 to 721 of such Code. Section 713 of such Code is as follows: “Every person who shall perform any labor or furnish any material for the construction or repair of any work for any county or municipal or public school corporation in this’ state to any person who shall have made any contract for such work with such corporation, upon complying with the provisions of this article shall have for his labor done or material furnished a lien upon all moneys in the control of such corporation due or to become due under such contract.” Section 714 provides that such lien shall be filed within 20 days after labor performed or material furnished, but that failure to file within such time “shall not defeat the lien upon the amount remaining due to the contractor at the time of filing.” The several plaintiffs failed -to file within the 20-day period, but did file their Mens before, the payment of the above $ir,ooo to any one. In completing the building the corporation expended much more than the excess of the contract price over what had been paid the contractors.

It is the contention of the appellants that their liens attached to the said $11,000 fund it being the 20. per cent, reserved from such estimates, and that such liens were superior to' any rights of the corporation in such fund, and that the corporation must satisfy such liens regardless of the cost of completing the building. The appellants have cited several au[42]*42thorities and have argued at length in support of their claim, but their authorities are not in point, and their reasoning seems to us unsound. A consideration of the statutes shows clearly that the rights of the subcontractors thereunder are subject to the rights of the contractors under their contract and can be no greater or different with the following exception: During the 20 days after material is furnished by the subcontractor, the corporation would pay over money to the contractors at the corporation’s risk because, if, within such 20 days, the subcontractor files his lien, it is good against the corporation to the extent of any moneys that have become due the contractors at any time after the material was furnished. If the lien is filed after the 20 days, it is then good against any sum then due or that thereafter becomes due the contractors. The sole question then is: After these liens were filed, was there ever any sum due the contractors? There certainly was not. The provisions for estimates and payment of 80 per cent, merely provided a basis upon which an amount could be determined, which amount should then become due and payable on demand, which amount was the 80 per cent., the other 20 per cent, by the specific terms of the contract not being due until the building was finished, and then due only in case the contractors had fully complied with their contract, or, if the corporation was compelled to complete the building, in case the whole of such 20 per cent, was not used .in such completion. The corporation had a right to protect itself, not only against loss through the failure of the contractors to complete the contract, which failure would naturally result in extra cost in such completion, but the corporation would have shown itself negligent, if it had not protected itself against a too low bid. If the bid was too low, and yet the full amount of each estimate was due when estimate was made, then, before the building was fully constructed, the whole contract price would have become due. The fixing the amount due at 80 per cent, was at least a partial protection against such a contingency. The case is entirely different from some of those cited by appellants wherein, at different stages of the work, certain parts of the whole contract price became due and payable. In those cases no sum out of such parts could be held back from [43]

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Related

Loveland v. Perriton
220 N.W. 874 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1928)
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173 N.W. 448 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1919)
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172 N.W. 683 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1919)
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139 N.W. 339 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1913)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
125 N.W. 291, 25 S.D. 36, 1910 S.D. LEXIS 41, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sioux-falls-pressed-brick-co-v-board-of-education-sd-1910.