The Trane Company, a Division of American Standard, Inc. v. Whitehurst-Lassen Construction Company United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company

881 F.2d 996, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 12581, 1989 WL 88354
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit
DecidedAugust 24, 1989
Docket88-7543
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 881 F.2d 996 (The Trane Company, a Division of American Standard, Inc. v. Whitehurst-Lassen Construction Company United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eleventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
The Trane Company, a Division of American Standard, Inc. v. Whitehurst-Lassen Construction Company United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, 881 F.2d 996, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 12581, 1989 WL 88354 (11th Cir. 1989).

Opinion

CLARK, Circuit Judge:

This appeal arises from an action that a supplier, The Trane Company (“Trane”), filed against a general contractor, White-hurst-Lassen Construction Company (“Whitehurst-Lassen”), and the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company (“USF & 6”) on September 10, 1987. The suit alleges a breach of a labor and material payment bond required under the Alabama Public Works Statute, Ala.Code § 39-1-1 (1975). The district court entered judgment for the general contractor and surety. We reverse.

I. Background

A. Facts

Whitehurst-Lassen and the Shelby County Board of Education entered a contract for the renovation of a cafeteria at the Montevallo Middle School in Shelby County, Alabama (“the Montevallo job”). Whi-tehurst-Lassen was the prime contractor on the Montevallo job. As required under *998 Alabama’s Public Works Statute, Ala.Code § 39-1-1, Whitehurst-Lassen and USF & G executed a labor and material payment bond on May 5, 1986 (“payment bond”). The payment bond secured payment to persons furnishing labor or materials on the Montevallo job.

Trane is a supplier of air-conditioning and heating equipment and had successfully bid to provide equipment to Adams & Kilgore, Inc. (“Adams & Kilgore”), the mechanical subcontractor on the Montevallo job. 1 Adams & Kilgore’s bid was for approximately $84,400. Although White-hurst-Lassen was unaware that Adams & Kilgore was experiencing financial difficulties at the time it accepted Adams & Kil-gore’s subcontractor bid, it became aware of these problems early in the Montevallo project.

On May 19, 1986, Adams & Kilgore submitted a purchase order to Trane for six “fan coil units,” two “air handling units” (“the air-conditioning equipment”) and a “chiller.” At that time, Adams & Kilgore owed Trane about $60,000 on other jobs unrelated to the Montevallo job which was more than sixty days past due. Trane’s credit department placed a “credit hold” on Adam-Kilgore’s account which prevented the production of the equipment requested in the May 19, 1986 purchase order. Because of the importance of completing the cafeteria for the fall school year, Trane’s sales engineer, William Faulkner (“Faulkner”) requested during June that the credit status of Adams & Kilgore be changed to “credit hold at ship dock.” This action permitted the production of the air-conditioning equipment and the chiller but prevented its shipment until the “credit hold” had been lifted. When the air-conditioning equipment was ready for shipment, Faulkner spoke to Jerry Adams (of Adams & Kilgore) and informed him that Trane was holding the air-conditioning equipment at its shipping dock due to the past due condition of Adams & Kilgore’s account. Faulkner requested that Adams contact White-hurst-Lassen and inform them that Trane would be contacting Whitehurst-Lassen soon.

Thereafter, Faulkner telephoned White-hurst-Lassen and spoke with Paul B. Whi-tehurst, Jr. (“Whitehurst”), Whitehurst-Lassen’s vice president. Faulkner told Whitehurst that because Trane was having credit problems with Adams & Kilgore’s account, the account was subject to a credit hold. Faulkner stated that Trane would require a purchase order directly from Whi-tehurst-Lassen before this equipment would be shipped. Neither Faulkner nor Whitehurst testified that they discussed the chiller in their conversation. 2 White-hurst testified that he thought the purchase order was for all the remaining equipment on the Montevallo job and that Trane would not conduct any further business with Adams & Kilgore. 3

Whitehurst then connected Faulkner with his son, Mark Whitehurst, with whom Faulkner discussed the details of the purchase order. Faulkner stated that he did not discuss the chiller with Mark White- *999 hurst in their phone conversation. 4 White-hurst-Lassen provided Faulkner with a purchase order number and later issued a purchase order dated August 15, 1986 for the air conditioning equipment in the amount of $9,952.00. The chiller, however, was not included in this purchase order. 5 Trane shipped the air conditioning equipment to the job site as it was completed on August 8, 12, and 15, 1986. Trane did not ship the chiller or submit a purchase order to Whitehurst-Lassen for the chiller at this time. Whitehurst-Lassen did not remit to Trane the $9,952.00 owed.

Whitehurst-Lassen terminated its contract with Adams & Kilgore on September 2, 1986 and immediately replaced Adams & Kilgore with an independent contractor at a cost of $35,000. R.2-135. Whitehurst-Lassen, however, did not inform Trane of Adams & Kilgore’s termination or the substitution of the new subcontractor. White-hurst-Lassen then withheld the sums due “known suppliers,” including the $9,952 due Trane for the air-conditioning equipment, and settled with Adams & Kilgore. Whitehurst-Lassen provided no evidence that it had paid Adams & Kilgore for the chiller in the settlement. 6

Trane states that because Adams & Kil-gore had brought its account forward, it lifted the “hold at ship dock” status on the chiller and shipped it to the job site on September 2 where it arrived on September 7. 7 At this time, Trane was still unaware that Whitehurst-Lassen had terminated Adams & Kilgore. Trane billed Adams & Kilgore for the chiller on September 2. Trane soon discovered that Adams & Kil-gore were no longer on the Montevallo job and submitted the $15,649.52 chiller bill to Whitehurst-Lassen on September 4, 1986. Upon receipt of the bill, Whitehurst telephoned Trane’s credit department for an explanation of why Whitehurst-Lassen had been billed for an amount in excess of its August 15th purchase order. During this conversation he claims the Trane representative stated, “Gee, you know, we have just made a terrible mistake here,” implying that Trane should have notified White-hurst-Lassen about the chiller bill and that the bill was erroneously sent to White-hurst-Lassen. R. 2-120.

Whitehurst-Lassen failed to pay for either the air conditioning equipment or the chiller. In March, 1987, Trane wrote a demand letter to Whitehurst-Lassen demanding payment on the air-conditioning equipment (not including the chiller). Whi-tehurst-Lassen did not pay and Trane instituted this litigation.

B. District Court Proceedings

Trane filed a two-count complaint on September 10, 1987. Count I claimed that Whitehurst-Lassen and USF & G owed Trane $26,000 under the payment bond for both the air-conditioning equipment and the chiller plus interest and attorney’s fees. Count II claimed that Whitehurst-Lassen breached an agreement to pay for the air conditioning equipment under the purchase order.

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881 F.2d 996, 1989 U.S. App. LEXIS 12581, 1989 WL 88354, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/the-trane-company-a-division-of-american-standard-inc-v-ca11-1989.