Town of Gastonia v. McEntee-Peterson Engineering Co.

42 S.E. 858, 131 N.C. 363, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 296
CourtSupreme Court of North Carolina
DecidedNovember 25, 1902
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 42 S.E. 858 (Town of Gastonia v. McEntee-Peterson Engineering Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of North Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Town of Gastonia v. McEntee-Peterson Engineering Co., 42 S.E. 858, 131 N.C. 363, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 296 (N.C. 1902).

Opinion

Clark, J.

The defendant engineering company entered into a contract with the town of Gastonia, to construct a water works and sewerage system and an electric lighting system in and for said town of Gastonia, and with its co-defendant, the American Surety Company, of New York, entered into a bond to pay claims for materials used and work and labor done in the construction of said systems,and there is a balance due on said contract by the town of Gastonia, which is claimed by the said engineering company, and also by persons who furnished material and performed work and labor in the construction of the said systems, under the contract between the town and the engineering company, the said balance being $1,560.86; and the other plaintiffs seek, by this action, to charge the other defendant, the American Surety Company, upon its indemnity bond for $3,000, given as aforesaid, for the amounts alleged to be due them for work and labor performed and materials furnished in the construction of said systems, and to the end that the amounts due for materials and labor may be determined, all persons holding such claims were properly made co-plaintiffs.

The contract between the town of Gastonia and the engineering company contains the following: “Section 1 of the contract provides that the contractor is required to furnish all materials and labor required in the construction of the public works embraced in s'aid contract.”

Section 5 provides that “the contractor further agrees that he will, and concurrent with this contract, does execute a bond in the penal sum $3-,000, in such form and with such *365 sureties as may be approved by the Mayor and Aldermen of tbe town of Gastonia, conditioned to indemnify and save harmless said town and Board from all suits * * * brought against said town or said Board, or both, * * * for or on account of any injuries' or damages sustained or received by any person, structure or property by or from said contractor, * * * or by or in consequence of any act or omission of said contractor, his servants or agents; and the faithful performance of this contract, and for the payment of all material used and wages of all laborers employed by said contractor

Section 10 provides that the said contractor hereby further agrees that it “shall not be entitled to demand or receive payment except in the manner set forth in this agreement, and further agrees that it will produce full releases of all claims from all persons who have furnished machinery or labor for the work, whenever the board may require it.”

The bond executed by the surety company provides that “if the above bounden, the McEntee-Peterson Engineering Company, its heirs, executors, administrators, successors or assigns shall in all things stand to and abide by, and well and truly keep and perform the terms, covenants, conditions and agreements in such contract contained, on its part to be kept and performed and each of them, at any time and in the manner and form therein specified, then, said obligation shall be null and void.”

Though no mechanic’s lien could be filed against the property, in the hands of the town, it was competent for the parties to contract, and they did contract that the engineering company should pay for “all materials used and wages of all laborers employed by said contractor,” and the surety company became responsible for the execution of that stipulation. The engineering company has defaulted in this respect to an amount greater than the penalty of the bond executed against *366 the American Surety Company, to-wit, in the sum of $3,907.64, for material furnished by several parties who have been made co-plaintiffs in this action for the purpose of ascertaining and determining the amount of the indebtedness severally due them.

Tbe town desired to know whether it should pay said balance to tbe engineering company or (in view of tbe fact that it bad stipulated with said company, and required surety, that tbe company should pay off all claims for labor and materials before calling on tbe town for settlement), whether it was not its duty to require compliance with this requirement in favor of the claimants for labor and material. Those claimants, being the beneficiaries of tbe contract, could have brought their separate actions on said contract against the engineering company and its surety, and it was eminently proper, and saves multiplicity of suits, the time of the Court and unnecessary Court costs; that they should he co-plaintiffs in this action, to the end that the entire matter should be settled and determined in one action.

In Gorrell v. Water Co., 124 N. C., 328; 46 L. R. A., 513; 70 Am. St. Rep., 598, it was held, after careful consideration and full discussion, that the beneficiaries of a contract, though not a party or privy thereto; can maintain an action thereon. In that case the beneficiaries, the citizens of the town, were ascertained by reference to the nature of the contract, but, in this case, the contract is more specific and points out those who shall furnish labor or material as specially designated to be protected. The contract requires surety for such stipulation, and provides that the town can not be called upon for settlement by the engineering company, until receipts for such claims are furnished by the company. It was a wise, thoughtful and considerate provision inserted by the town requiring the engineering com *367 pany, a non-resident corporation, to pay the labor and material men, who are usually residents of the town or vicinity, before it could claim any balance due on the work. This is just to such parties, whose amounts claimed for labor and material are usually small, and who should not be forced to attachment or other legal proceedings when the town, whose funds are raised by taxation, can protect its own people by such a stipulation as this, requiring payment of these just claims before receiving the town funds to> be carried off where they can not be reached. It would be well if every municipality which has public works executed should insert a similar provision in its contract for the protection of labor and material men, who 'are usually its own citizens. Indeed, in this contract it is further provided that all labor employed shall be “home labor,” except as to such skilled labor as could not be found there, thus showing throughout that the labor and material men are beneficiaries in contemplation of the contracting parties.

The proposition laid down, with citation of authority in Gorrell v. Water Co., supra, had been intimated, without actual decision in Haun v. Burrell, 119 N. C., at page 548, and Sams v. Price, Ibid., 572. It has since been expressly held in Shoaf v. Insurance Co., 127 N. C., 308; 80 Am. St. Rep., 804, which holds that a policy holder in an insurance company can maintain an action for a loss on property covered by his policy against another company in which the first company reinsured its risks. In that case, it was expressly stipulated that the contract was only effective between the two companies, and that no holder of a policy in the first company should be entitled to enforce the reinsurance against the reinsuring company.

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Bluebook (online)
42 S.E. 858, 131 N.C. 363, 1902 N.C. LEXIS 296, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/town-of-gastonia-v-mcentee-peterson-engineering-co-nc-1902.