Transamerica Insurance Co. v. Carter Equipment Co.

206 So. 2d 632, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1581
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 5, 1968
DocketNo. 44705
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 206 So. 2d 632 (Transamerica Insurance Co. v. Carter Equipment Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Mississippi Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Transamerica Insurance Co. v. Carter Equipment Co., 206 So. 2d 632, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1581 (Mich. 1968).

Opinion

PATTERSON, Justice:

This appeal arises from a judgment of the Circuit Court of the First Judicial District of Hinds County in favor of plaintiff-appellee, Carter Equipment Company, Inc., in an action against appellant, Trans-america Insurance Company, on its surety bond. The judgment was for an amount representing two months rent for one John Deere tractor with a “dozer” blade and “ripper” attachments furnished by appellee to the contractor, E. W. McLellan, doing business as McLellan & Randle, for use in performance of its contract with the State Highway Commission for construction of a segment of highway in Copiah County. Appellant, an insurance company doing business in Mississippi by virtue of a merger with American Surety Company of New York, assumed the obligations of American Surety Company of New York under a highway bond issued by that company guaranteeing faithful performance by McLellan & Randle of its contract with [633]*633the Highway Commission, and conditioned, as required by Mississippi Code 1942 Annotated section 8041 (1956) on payment to persons furnishing the contractor with labor, materials, equipment, and supplies.

Upon completion of its contract relating to this Federal Aid Project, final notice of acceptance and final settlement was published February 16, 1966, in the manner provided by Mississippi Code 1942 Annotated section 9016 (1956).

On August 18, 1966, John H. Moon & Sons, Inc. filed suit against the contractor McLellan and appellant insurance company seeking to recover for certain labor and materials allegedly furnished McLellan for use in the highway construction project. A judgment was rendered in that suit dismissing Moon’s claim with prejudice, and that claim is not involved in this appeal. However, Carter Equipment Company, ap-pellee, intervened in the action between Moon and appellant, alleging that it was in the business of selling and leasing road machinery and tractors, that it had furnished McLellan with a John Deere crawler-type tractor with attachments to be used in performance of his contract with the State Highway Commission, that McLellan so used the tractor and failed to pay for two months of its use. Appellee’s rent claim was based on invoices which were attached to its intervention petition.

Appellant surety company alleged affirmatively that it was not liable under its bond since the tractor and attachments were not specialized units or items, since there was no emergency leading to the rental of the equipment, and since the equipment should have been part of the contractor’s regular plant and the contract by its terms contemplated slope work, for which the tractor was used, at the time it was entered into. Appellant further contended that the contractor had in fact paid appellee the two months rent which appel-lee now claimed from appellant, alleging that appellee received sufficient sums in December 1965 to pay the invoices and that appellee applied the sums so received to the full payment of the invoices for the two months in question, but several months later reapplied the funds received to other accounts to the appellant’s detriment. Appellant also contended that there was no coverage afforded under its bond since ap-pellee furnished the tractor to the contractor under a lease and purchase agreement.

Appellee on the other hand contended that the tractor was equipped for a specialized use, having been specially equipped with “dozer” and “ripper” attachments for use in finishing slope work on the highway. Appellee urges that not all contractors have such specially equipped tractors because they are used only for certain types of jobs, and that McLellan & Randle ordered the tractor in question especially to suit this emergency need because its regular tractors were unsuited for the slope work required by the contract.

Relative to appellant’s second contention, appellee maintains that the $10,000 payment received from McLellan & Randle on December 8, 1965, on the open account, was not applied to payment of any particular invoices, but was simply deposited in the bank and entered initially as a simple temporary bookkeeping credit on the account. Neither McLellan & Randle nor anyone else, according to appellee, knew of the entry or changed their position in reliance thereon. In short, testimony for ap-pellee was to the effect that the bookkeeping credit was only temporary and that it did not consider the invoices as being paid in full.

After a hearing on the merits before the court without a jury, the trial court permitted recovery against appellant on its bond.

The appellant assigns as error that the lower court erred in finding that appellee’s claim was of the type protected by the bond and that appellee had not in fact been paid for the rent. We agree with appellant that appellee’s claim was not protected by the bond.

[634]*634Appellee cites Shuptrine v. Jackson Equipment & Service Company, 168 Miss. 464, 468, 150 So. 795, 796 (1933), as authority for the proposition that rental on such equipment was included in the coverage of public bonds. However, that case is readily distinguishable from the case at bar. The Court in that case said:

How far the word "equipment” renders the bond liable for expensive machinery purchased by the contractor with which to do the work contracted for, and which may be used thereafter for the same purposes under other construction contracts, is not now before us, and we express no opinion thereon, for if the word means anything, it must be held to include rental on such equipment for the time it is used under the contract.

Reference to the “equipment rental agreement” in the case at bar shows that the arrangement between appellee and McLellan & Randle was in the nature of a rent-purchase agreement rather than a mere rental as in Shuptrine, supra. This contract provides, in part: “Lessee is granted option to purchase machine at any time with ail rentals paid less six per cent simple interest on unpaid balance, to apply toward purchase price.” Moreover, it does not appear that the tractor was obtained due to a need not anticipated by the terms of the project contract; indeed the construction contract by its terms contemplated slope work for which this basic equipment was needed. Further, the evidence indicates without contradiction that the minimum life use of the tractor was not less than five years.

Appellant correctly contends that this Court in Euclid-Mississippi v. Western Casualty & Surety Company, 249 Miss. 779, 163 So.2d 904 (1965), has construed highway bonds so as to deny recovery thereunder to those furnishing equipment to contractors under circumstances similar to those involved in this appeal. The principal question in that case was “whether the surety is liable to a conditional vendor for the balance due by the contractor-vendee (or the rental, or depreciation plus cost of repairing after repossession) of expensive, heavy construction equipment used on the public work, but which upon completion would become part of the contractor’s permanent capital plant, and would serve other contracts as well.” Id. at 784, 163 So.2d at 905. The Court held that the surety was not so obligated under the Mississippi bond statute. After reviewing pertinent authorities in this and other jurisdictions, including Shuptrine, supra, the Court concluded.

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Bluebook (online)
206 So. 2d 632, 1968 Miss. LEXIS 1581, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/transamerica-insurance-co-v-carter-equipment-co-miss-1968.