State Ex Rel. Sauers v. C. J. Montag Co.

286 P. 995, 132 Or. 587, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 232
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 6, 1930
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 286 P. 995 (State Ex Rel. Sauers v. C. J. Montag Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Sauers v. C. J. Montag Co., 286 P. 995, 132 Or. 587, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 232 (Or. 1930).

Opinion

RAND, J.

Plaintiff brought this action in the name of the state for his own benefit under section 2991, Or. L., to recover from C. J. Montag company, a public contractor, and its surety, The Aetna Casualty and Surety Co., for lumber sold for the construction of certain public bridges on the Roosevelt highway for the construction of which said contractor had entered into a contract with the state highway commission. In alleging the value of the lumber, the complaint alleged that it was ‘ ‘ of the reasonable and agreed value of ” a stated amount. Defendants moved the trial court that plaintiff be compelled to elect whether he would rely upon the reasonable value or the agreed value. The trial court sustained the motion and plaintiff elected to rely upon the agreed value. After plaintiff had elected to rely upon the agreed value of the lumber, defendants then demurred to the complaint, claiming that in an action to recover upon a bond given to secure the payment for labor or material furnished on public work, *589 plaintiff would be entitled to recover only tbe reasonable value of the labor or material furnished and not the agreed value, and that the complaint, for that reason, as it then stood with the allegation of the reasonable value eliminated therefrom, did not state facts sufficient to constitute a cause of action. The learned trial court overruled the demurrer. The cause was then tried to a jury and plaintiff had verdict and judgment for the amount demanded in the complaint.

The only error assigned upon this appeal is the overruling of the demurrer to the complaint.

Defendants’ argument in support of the demurrer is that the right of a laborer or materialman, who has furnished labor or material for public work, to maintain an action upon the bond is a right conferred by statute in lieu of the right to a lien, which would exist if the labor or material had been furnished for the construction of a building privately owned and, for that reason, the law applicable to mechanics’ liens should be applied to a case where the laborer or materialman seeks to enforce a claim against a bond given by a public contractor. Based upon this contention, defendants further contend that since, in mechanics’ lien cases, the rule is that, unless the labor or material for which the lien is claimed was furnished at the instance of the owner of the building or of his common-law agent, the right to a lien is limited to the reasonable value of the thing furnished and not for the amount which some other person may have contracted to pay therefor, the same rule should be applied in this case and, therefore, after the motion was sustained, no reasonable value being alleged, the demurrer should have been sustained.

The rule relied on was held applicable to mechanics’ lien cases in Fitch v. Howitt, 32 Or. 396 (52 P. 192); *590 Beach v. Stamper, 44 Or. 4 (74 P. 208, 102 Am. St. Rep. 597); Quackenbush v. Artesian Land Co., 47 Or. 303, 306 (83 P. 787); Christman v. Salway, 103 Or. 666 (205 P. 541), and is a rule of decision in this state, but it has no application even in mechanics’ lien cases where the labor or material furnished was furnished at the instance of the owner of the building or his common-law agent and if the rule is applicable in an action against the bond to recover for labor or material furnished on public work, upon which we express no opinion, it could have no application here because the lumber was furnished to the original contractor and payment thereof was an obligation which the surety, upon default of the contractor, had agreed to perform.

The contract entered into by the C. J. Montag company and the state highway commission for the construction of the bridges for which the lumber in question was purchased contained an express provision whereby the contractor expressly contracted that it would “promptly, as due, make payment to all persons supplying to such contractor labor or material for the prosecution of the work provided for in such contract.” The insertion into the contract of this promise by the contractor is required by section 6718, Or.L., as amended by chapter 24, Laws 1923. In addition to this requirement that the contractor shall contract to pay laborers and materialmen for labor or material furnished for the prosecution of the work provided for in his contract, he is also required by section 2991, Or. L., to furnish a bond and this section requires that the bond shall contain a like provision obligating the contractor and his surety to make said payments. The purpose of these sections of the statute was to provide security for the payment of all persons who furnished labor or material on public *591 work by giving a claim under the bond in lieu of the lien upon the land and buildings or structures, which would have been granted to them if the property for which the labor or material was furnished had been owned by a private person. The obligation assumed by the contractor and his surety to pay for labor or material furnished for the prosecution of the work contracted for grows out of the purchase by the contractor of labor or material to enable him to perform the contract and it is wholly immaterial whether the obligation arises from a promise to pay a stipulated price therefor or to pay the reasonable value thereof. In either event, the contractor and his surety are liable for its payment. For this reason the complaint stated a good cause of action when it stated that the lumber had been purchased by the contractor for the prosecution of its work, regardless of whether the contractor had agreed to pay a stipulated price for the lumber or the reasonable value thereof.

We think that, for reasons which will now be stated, the trial court erred in compelling plaintiff to elect whether he would rely upon an express contract fixing the price, or upon quantum meruit. Our code provides that a plaintiff may unite several causes of action in the same complaint when they all arise out of contract, express or implied. But it also provides that when so joined in the same complaint they must be separately stated. Hence, if the transaction complained of — the sale and delivery of the same lumber, for which plaintiff could have but one recovery — entitled plaintiff to sue on the express contract fixing the price, or on quantum meruit, then the two causes of action, if separately stated, could be united in the same complaint. Assuming for the purposes of this decision that two *592 causes of action, one on the express contract and one on quantum meruit, were united in the complaint and not separately stated, then since both could be properly joined in one complaint if separately stated, defendants’ remedy was not by motion to compel the plaintiff to elect but was that stated in Pomeroy’s Code Bemedies (5th Ed.), §§ 340 and 341, as follows:

‘ The remedy is, therefore, not by a demurrer, but by a motion to make the pleading more definite and certain by separating and distinctly stating the different causes of action. The plaintiff can thus be compelled to amend his complaint or petition, and to state each cause of action by itself, so that the defendant may deal with it by answer or demurrer as the nature of the case demands.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
286 P. 995, 132 Or. 587, 1930 Ore. LEXIS 232, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-sauers-v-c-j-montag-co-or-1930.