Southern Surety Co. v. Nalle & Co.

242 S.W. 197, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 981
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedJune 12, 1922
DocketNo. 321-3661
StatusPublished
Cited by83 cases

This text of 242 S.W. 197 (Southern Surety Co. v. Nalle & Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Southern Surety Co. v. Nalle & Co., 242 S.W. 197, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 981 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1922).

Opinion

GALLAGHER, J.

This suit was instituted by Nalle & Co., one of the defendants in error, against the Blazilmar Hotel Company, Howard Bland, T. W. Marse, A. J. Zilker, the Capitol City Building Co., John W. Hood, and F. J. Strassel, defendants in error, and Southern Surety Company, plaintiff in error, to recover the sum of $5,107.25 for material furnished in building the Blazilmar Hotel in Taylor, Tex., and for the foreclosure of mate-rialman’s lien on the hotel property. Various subcontractors and other materialmen intervened as hereinafter shown. The case was tried before the court without a jury, and judgment rendered in favor of the plaintiff, interveners, and defendant Hotel Company against the defendant Capitol City Building Company, John W. Hood, and Southern Surety Company for the indebtedness established by each as hereinafter shown.

The Southern Surety Company alone "appealed. The Court of Civil Appeals in a majority opinion sustained the trial court in rendering such judgment, and affirmed the same. 231 S. W. 402. The Southern Surety Company obtained a writ of error. The Court of Civil Appeals made findings of fact, which, so far as they are uncontested in this proceeding, are as follows:

“On March 23, 1917, Howard Bland, T. W. Marse, and A. J. Zilker, .hereinafter called the ‘owners,’ entered into a contract with John W. Hood, John W. Hood, Jr., F. J. Strassel, and F. Greenwell, composing the ■Capitol City Building Company, hereinafter referred to as the contractors, for the erection of a three-story fireproof hotel building, on certain lots in the town of Taylor, Williamson county, in accordance with plans and specifications drawn by Henry T. Phelps architect, for the sum of $47,825. The contractors were to provide and pay for all material and work done, and complete the building in 125 days. Payments to the amount of 85 per cent, of the work done and material placed on the ground were to be made on the 1st and 15th days of each month, as the work progressed.
“Of even date with the contract, the contractors executed to the owners a bond, in the sum of $23,912.50, with the Southern Surety Company, hereinafter referred to as the ‘surety company,’ as surety, conditioned for the faithful performance of the contract, and specially that those who furnish material for or perform labor thereon should be paid for same, and might bring suit thereon as though specially mentioned therein. F. M. Coleman, of San Antonio, was the general agent of the sure.ty company. The contractors entered at once upon the performance of their contract.
“On May 10, 1917, the owners formed a corporation, under the name of the Blazilmar Hotel Company, hereinafter called the ‘hotel company,’ and subscribed for all of the stock of said hotel company, and thereafter remained the sole owners of such stock.
“On the 10th day of May, 1917, the owners conveyed the lots upon which the hotel was to be built, and the contract for building the same, to the hotel company. On August 3, 1917, the hotel company entered into a contract with thé contractors wherein it was agreed that they should build a fourth story to the hotel, and receive for the walls thereof $8,211.55, with the option of the hotel company to have the same finished in accordance with the specifications for the third story; for which, if so finished, the contractors wore to be paid the further sum of $6,740.45. This contract declared that it was a part of the original contract, and the work was to be done as therein provided, and the time for the completion of the building was extended 45 days. * * *
“On or about the- day of-, 1917, the contractors assigned to the surety company all funds and estimates due or to become due for work done or material furnished, or to be furnished or done in the performance of their contract; and on April 20, 1917, the contractors and the surety company notified the owners of such assignment, and that thereafter all money due on said contract should be paid to the surety company, which was done, including work and material for the fourth story. The contractors abandoned work on the hotel, and the same was finished by the hotel company at a loss of $1,343.69.
“The following parties intervened in this cause, and there was due them by the ■ contractors, at the time of the trial hereof, the amounts set opposite their respective names, to wit: The Blazilmar Hotel Company, $1,343.-69; Nalle & Co., $5,107.25; James A. Thompson, $2,954.62; F. B. Seward, $239.13; Fair-child Lumber Company, $454.31; Prewitt Hardware Company, $345.60; Elgin Standard Brick Company, $518; J. Deseo & Sons, $1,499.85; Torbett & Germond Company, $410.06; 0. M. Gossett, $464.33; K. J. Peterson, $48.10; Federal Glass & Paint Company, $828.15; Mosher Manufacturing Company, $350; Southern Architectural Cement Stone Company, $165; Austin Builders’ Supply Company, $160.85. For which sums the court rendered judgment against the contractors, in favor of said re[199]*199spective parties. Judgment was also rendered in favor of said parties for said respective amounts against the surety company.”

The Court of Civil Appeals, in addition to the findings of fact above set out, found that the surety company had no knowledge of the execution of the contract for the fourth story at the time of its execution, but that it did learn that the fourth story was being added and received additional pay by reason of the increased cost of the same, and by receiving such pay for the increased risk consented to and ratified the change from a three-story building to a four-story building. This finding is assailed by plaintiff in error as being without support in any competent evidence.

E. M. Coleman was the general agent in Texas for the Southern Surety Company, a foreign corporation. The bond sued on in this case was executed by said Coleman as attorney in fact for the Southern Surety Company in consideration of the payment by the contractor of a specific premium. Phelps, the architect, was permitted, at the instance of the hotel company, to testify without objection that some time in December, 1917, he, said Coleman, and one Kroeger, were in a car going from San Antonio to Medina Dam on a pleasure trip to hunt and fish; that somewhere on the way they were talking about contracts, and that the defendant Hood had gotten along nicely with his said hotel contract and was making good in every way; that Coleman volunteered the information that when extras were added he charged the same rate of premium as on the original contract, and that when deductions were made he credited them; that he had collected on this additional story on the Blazilmar Hotel; that he did not say anything about requiring a new bond in such cases.

Said Coleman testified in the case, and denied making the statement so attributed to him, and also denied the receipt of any additional premium on the bond sued on, and denied the receipt of any premium from anybody for the supplemental contract for the additional story to said hotel. He denied that said supplemental contract was ever presented to him for approval, and testified that he would not have approved it if it had been presented. He also presented his books and checks, and showed from them that no additional premium had been charged or received. Kroeger, the only other party in the car on the trip to Medina Dam, was not called as a witness.

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Bluebook (online)
242 S.W. 197, 1922 Tex. App. LEXIS 981, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southern-surety-co-v-nalle-co-texcommnapp-1922.