State Ex Rel. Kingsley v. Carterville Construction Co.

284 S.W. 150, 220 Mo. App. 244, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 78
CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedMay 27, 1926
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 284 S.W. 150 (State Ex Rel. Kingsley v. Carterville Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Kingsley v. Carterville Construction Co., 284 S.W. 150, 220 Mo. App. 244, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 78 (Mo. Ct. App. 1926).

Opinion

*247 BRADLEY, J.

— This is a suit by an employee of a subcontractor on the bond of an original road construction contractor. The cause was tried before the court without a jury. Plaintiff recovered and defendants appealed.

We shall refer to relator Kingsley as plaintiff. Defendant Carter-ville Construction Company in 1923 contracted with the state highway department to do certain work on state highway No. 14 in Lawrence county, and said construction company gave bond ‘as required by section 1040, Revised Statutes 1919. The construction company sublet to a firm styled Williams & Ward, and this firm employed plaintiff to work upon the road. Plaintiff put in' 220 hours pulling a grader with his traction engine and was to receive the agreed compensation of $2 per hour for this service. The construction company paid Williams & Ward, but this firm did not pay plaintiff, and this suit upon the bond followed.

Defendants filed separate answers to the effect that plaintiff’s relations were with the subcontractor and that said subcontractor had been paid in full and that, therefore, plaintiff had no recourse on the bond. The further defense was made that neither the statute nor the bond covers the hire of the traction engine.

The bond follows the statute and one of the conditions is that the principal “shall pay all lawful claims for materials or labor performed in the construction of said highway. ’ ’

At the close of the case defendants asked declarations to the effect (1) that under the law and the evidence plaintiff could not recover; and (2) that in no event could plaintiff recover for the use of his traction engine. Both of these declarations were refused.

Defendants rely upon Berger Manufacturing Company v. Lloyd, 209 Mo. 681, 108 S. W. 52, and plaintiff relies upon Kansas City to use, etc. v. Youmans, 213 Mo. 151, 112 S. W. 225 and St. Louis to use, etc. v. Hill-O’Meara Construction Company, 175 Mo. App. 555, 158 S. W. 98. In the Lloyd case it appears that Lloyd entered into a contract for the erection of a school house and gave bond. The Querheim Sheet Metal Works Company contracted with Lloyd to furnish the metal work called for in Lloyd’s contract with'the board of education. The metal works company purchased from the Berger Manufacturing Company the metal that went into the building. Lloyd paid the metal works company, but that company did not pay the Berger Manufacturing Company and that Company brought suit on Lloyd’s bond on the theory that it was a materialman within the perview of Lloyd’s contract and bond. It was held that plaintiff could not recover. In making disposition of Lloyd’s ease the Supreme Court used this language: “If Lloyd is liable under the bond to plaintiff for the material it sold to the metal company, then.under the same process of reasoning he would also be liable to the jobber *248 or manufacturer who sold the materials to the plaintiff and so on ad infinitum, and he and his securities would never reach the end of their liability. ’ ’

St. Louis to use of Contracting & Supply Company v. Hill-O’Meara Construction Company, 175 Mo. App. 555, 158 S. W. 98, above referred to, on the facts is somewhat similar to the cause at bar. In that case it appears that the Hill-0 ’Meara Construction Company entered into a contract with the city of St. Louis for the construction of certain additions to the insane asylum of said city. The contract contained the bond, a condition of which was that the construction company would faithfully perform the contract and pay to the proper parties all amounts due for material and labor. The Hill-0’Meara Construction Company sublet to Smith & Watson Company the plastering provided for in the contract. The opinion recites that after the subletting of the plastering portion of the contract the Contracting & Supply Company, the relator, in reliance upon the contract of Smith & Watson Company with the Hill-0’Meara Construction Company and the contract of the Hill-0’Meara Company with the city and also the bond, furnished certain material which went into the building. Smith & Watson Company, the subcontractor, did not pay relator for the material furnished, and relator sought recovery on the original contractor’s bond.

Defendant in the Hill-0’Meara case also relied upon the Lloyd case. Judge Allen the author of the opinion in the Hill-0’Meara case distinguished his case from the Lloyd case as follows:

“Appellants rely solely upon the decision of the Supreme Court in Berger Manufacturing Co. v. Lloyd, 209 Mo. 681, 108 S. W. 52. The facts of that case do not fully appear in the opinion of the Supreme Court just referred to, but may be ascertained by reference to the statement of facts therein by Goode, J., when the cause was in this court (113 Mo. App. l. c. 208, 91 S. W. 468), from which it will appear that there the plaintiff did not furnish anything to the building in question, but sold the subcontractor raw material (galvanized iron and solder) by the pound, which was delivered at the subcontractor’s place of business and which the latter used in manufacturing the guttering, spouting, hot air pipes, etc., to be furnished by it under its contract with the contractor. The subcontractor actually furnished and delivered to the building the manufactured articles called for by the contract for the erection of the building. It does not appear that the plaintiff sold the raw material to the subcontractor in reliance upon the contractor’s bond or with any reference to the particular building into which it might ultimately enter but evidently in the ordinary course of business and upon the subcontractor’s general credit.

*249 In the light of these facts, it is at once apparent that the Berger case does not sustain appellant’s-position. There, had the building been privately owned, the Mechanics’ Lien Law would have afforded no protection to the plaintiff who thus sold raw material to a subcontractor. The plaintiff delivered nothing to the building; the raw material which it furnished the subcontractor at its place of business was manufactured. into the various articles which the subcontractor was required under its -contract to supply and which it did supply by delivering the same to the building.”

Learned counsel for plaintiff in the cause at bar in their brief illustrate the holding in the Lloyd- case thus:

“A contracts with B to erect a dwelling- house, and B executes a bond, as is customary, that the house shall be- erected' within a stipulated time, according to the specifications in said contract, and further conditioned that B will pay all claims for labor and material in the construction of said house B subcontracts to C, who is engaged in the lumber business and furnishes the.lumber to -build said house; and A pays B in full, and in turn B pays C in full. Can it be said that the mill man who sold lumber to C in the lumber busiuess on C’s general credit, can maintain an action on the bond? Certainly not because if such result could occur the lumber jack who cut down-the trees would have the same remedy. This, in effect, is the decision of the Supreme Court and the St. Louis Court of Appeals in the Berger-Lloyd ease.”

We think that the illustration well presents the holding in the Lloyd case.

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Bluebook (online)
284 S.W. 150, 220 Mo. App. 244, 1926 Mo. App. LEXIS 78, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-kingsley-v-carterville-construction-co-moctapp-1926.