State ex rel. State Bank of Seattle v. Scott

173 P. 498, 102 Wash. 510
CourtWashington Supreme Court
DecidedJune 6, 1918
DocketNo. 14504
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 173 P. 498 (State ex rel. State Bank of Seattle v. Scott) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Washington 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. State Bank of Seattle v. Scott, 173 P. 498, 102 Wash. 510 (Wash. 1918).

Opinions

Holcomb, J.

A motion, made by respondent Armstrong to strike the statement of facts and dismiss the [511]*511appeal because the statement of facts comprises somewhat more than one hundred pages and no abstract thereof was prepared, served and filed, was passed for consideration on the merits. It is now denied as not proper remedial procedure under Laws of 1915, p. 303, § 8 (Rem. Code, § 1730-8).

This action was brought to compel the treasurer of the town of Westport to pay certain warrants, issued by the town against the fund of a local improvement district of the town, which are held by relator.

On December 28, 1914, the town entered into a contract with one Christiansen for the construction of certain street improvements specified in an ordinance creating local improvement district No. 1. The parts of the contract which are material in this controversy provided that the contractor should commence work within twenty days after the execution of the contract, and prosecute the work with a sufficient force of men and sufficient tools and machinery and complete the whole and every part thereof within the period of ninety days, or on April 1, after the execution of the contract; that, in consideration of the full performance of the work by the contractor, the town agreed to pay the contractor in warrants drawn by the town against the special fund provided by the town in the enlarged local improvement district No. 1, at the following rates and measurements:

Clearing .................................. $75.00

Grading 100 cubic yards at 35c.............. 350.00

Bridge and culverts, concrete............... 150.00

7535 square yards of concrete roadway at $1.14 per square yard.................... 8,578.50

Total.............................$9,153.50

It was agreed that payment to the contractor should be made in the following manner: Warrants should [512]*512be drawn by tbe town clerk upon the special fund above described, on the first day of each calendar month as the work progressed. Warrants were to be issued for eighty per cent of the work estimated by the city engineer in charge, both for labor and material performed and used upon the job during the preceding calendar month, and the remaining twenty per cent should be retained until thirty days after the work should have been finally accepted by the town of West-port through its duly qualified officers. The contractor was required to furnish a surety bond in the penal sum of $9,153.50, conditioned for the faithful performance of the contract and for the protection of all laborers, mechanics, subcontractors and materialmen, and all persons furnishing the contractor, or any of his subcontractors, labor, provisions and supplies for the carrying on of the work, and all persons who would be entitled to liens if the work were not being done for a municipal corporation.

In accordance with the provision therefor, Christian-sen gave a bond in the sum required with the Guardian Casualty & Guaranty Company as surety. The bond obligated the surety, in the event of the default of the principal, to indemnify against any loss under the contract according to its terms, and provided that, in the event of any default on the part of the principal, a written statement of the principal facts showing such default and date thereof should immediately be delivered to the surety by registered mail at its address, and that the surety should thereupon have the right to proceed, or procure others to proceed, with the performance of the contract; and that the surety should also be subrogated to all the rights of the principal, and any and all moneys or properties that may, at the time of such default, be due, or that thereafter may become due, to the principal under the contract should' [513]*513be credited upon any claim which the obligee might make upon the surety, and the surplus, if any, applied as the surety may direct, to indemnify it against loss or damage by reason of its suretyship.

Christiansen entered upon the work and furnished material and labor which, at the unit prices specified in the contract, amounted to $652 in the month of January; in February, $208.72; in March, $2,547.50. On February 19,1915, Christiansen borrowed about $2,000 from one B. F. Armstrong, for which he gave a note payable on demand, with interest at eight per cent per annum, and on February 23, 1915, Christiansen executed an assignment to Armstrong of all warrants due or to become due to Christiansen for and in consideration of the performance of the contract with the town, and authorized and directed the proper officers of the town to make and deliver such warrants to Armstrong to the extent of $2,074.18. This assignment was not filed by Armstrong with any officer of the town at the time it was given, but the court found, with evidentiary support therefor, that, shortly after February 23,1916, Armstrong notified the town of Westport of the assignment to him by Christiansen in the sum of $2,-039.60; that the town had actual notice and knowledge thereof during the whole of March. The council took no action upon this information, and no record was made thereof in the records of the council or otherwise.

At a meeting of the council held March 29, a letter from Christiansen was read notifying the town of Westport that he had voluntarily thrown up his contract for paving the streets on account of not being able to finance the same. Thereupon a motion was adopted that the clerk be instructed to notify the bonding company by registered mail of the facts contained in the notice from Christiansen, and also telephone [514]*514their agent at Seattle. In obedience to this instruction, the clerk notified Mr. Aylmore, the attorney in fact of the bonding company, that Mr. Christiansen had abandoned the contract and that the town required the bonding company to immediately proceed to the completion of the contract. Mr. Aylmore went at once to Westport and consulted with the mayor and the town clerk. He found that there were six claims filed against the contractor for about $1,000 for labor and about $3,500 for material, and that the town officers were retaining $2,039.60, being the eighty per cent under the contract upon the estimate for work done in March. It was thereupon agreed between Aylmore and the mayor and town clerk that, if the bonding company would pay the bills which had been filed and proceed with the work, they would issue to him warrants for the above sum. In accordance with this agreement, the mayor and town clerk issued and delivered to Mr. Aylmore warrants against the fund amounting to $2,039.60; and Mr. Alymore, for the surety company, then paid the bills and completed the contract, all at an aggregate expense of about $12,300, for which they received from the town, including the above warrants, the sum of $9,210, making a loss to the surety company of about $3,000. At the next meeting of the town council after the transaction between Aylmore and the mayor and clerk, the council passed a resolution or motion ratifying the action of the mayor and clerk in delivering to the bonding company warrants for the March estimate under the contract amounting to $2,039.60. This was all done, of course, upon the theory that the surety was substituting itself for its principal and entitled to take all sums due him. At the time of receiving the warrants, Aylmore had no knowledge or notice of the Armstrong assignment or any claim on the part of Armstrong, and there was [515]*515no record of any such claim.

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Bluebook (online)
173 P. 498, 102 Wash. 510, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-bank-of-seattle-v-scott-wash-1918.