U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Bank of Brewton

4 F. Supp. 272, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1484
CourtDistrict Court, S.D. Alabama
DecidedAugust 5, 1933
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 4 F. Supp. 272 (U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Bank of Brewton) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, S.D. Alabama primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
U. S. Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Bank of Brewton, 4 F. Supp. 272, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1484 (S.D. Ala. 1933).

Opinion

ERVIN, District Judge.

The Gillis Bros. Construction Company had a contract with the state of Alabama to build three road projects. The complainant signed the bond of the construction company to the state guaranteeing the completion of one of these projects, namely S-90 and payment of the bills. The Bank of Brewton, respondent, advanced money to finance the three projects, taking assignments from the construction company of all sums payable to it by the state from all those projects and containing a power of attorney to indorse the name of the construction company on all of the pay cheeks issued by the state as the work progressed. These assignments were filed with the road department of the state. The proof shows that the bank made advances to the construction company without reference to the project, and, when advances-were made, notes were taken by the bank for the amount of these advances, and, when the pay cheeks came in, again without reference to the project, these notes were paid out of the checks received by the bank.

It therefore does not appear what, if anything, was owing the bank for advances on project S-90 when the final cheek was received and appropriated by it.

The cashier of the bank testified that no account was kept by the bank of these advances showing the different projects for which the advances were made, and they had no means of proving this fact. He testified further that no entries were made on the books of the bank showing the cash the bank received from the state on the various projects or what moneys the bank advanced to the construction company; that, when the pay cheeks came, notes were taken up with the proceeds of the cheek and the notes returned to the construction company.

The contractor seems to have gotten behind with the bank which then took a mortgage on .contractor’s plant, including the mules, and on certain real estate.

The last two cheeks before the final one which were for comparatively small sums were placed by the bank to the credit of contractor’s cheeking account in the bank.

When the work was finally completed and the publication dulv made of that fact, as required by the contract, the state mailed to the bank a check payable to the construction company for the 15 per cent, held out from the pay cheeks.

The president of the bank had managed for the bank the whole transaction. After the completion of the work, and before its acceptance, one of the subcontractors, whose bill for about $7,000- had not been paid, discussed with the president of the bank this bill, and threatened to stop the final cheek, and the president told him that, if he would not do so, the bank would pay his bill out of the cheek when it came.

Such payment, however, was not made.

[273]*273The cheek was received and indorsed in the name of the contractors and! collected by the bank.

The next day it credited the mortgage that had been given it by the contractors with $11,-000, and gave each of the two partners in the contracting firm its cashier’s check for $1,-000, and to the firm $752.36 in cash, and released the mules and contracting plant and the other two projects from the mortgage.

One of 'the subcontractors who had not been paid wrote the state complaining, and the state informed the surety of this fact.

The testimony showed: That the complainant- made no effort to keep up with the progress of the work by the construction company as it progressed, but relied solely on reports made to it by the state as the state received notice of the failure of the construction company to pay the bills for labor and materials. That it had no notice of any default on the part of the construction company until after the final payment of $14,746.84 was made on January 26, 1929. This check was for $14,746.84, but only $13,843.49 was the percentage held up> and only that sum is involved. Its agent then went down to Montgomery and had an interview with the road department, and ascertained what payments had been made to the construction contractor, and from there to Brewton, where the agent had an interview with the president of the bank and with parties who claimed that the contractor owed them for labor and materials amounting to about $19,288.22. That he then learned that the bank had received the final payment and notified the bank that, if called on to pay these bills, they would look to the bank for reimbursement to the amount of this reserved percentage which had been received by the bank.

Suit was brought on the bond by the various parties who claimed amounts due them by the contractor and subcontractor, which resulted in judgment, and was paid by the surety, who then filed this bill, claiming subrogation.

The bank denies liability because: (1) It claims priority in right to the money; (2) that in effect the money has been paid to the contractors under the terms of the contract; (3) that the surety, by negligently failing to ascertain the fact of failure of the contractors to pay their bills, and stopping the final payment, have permitted it, in reliance upon the issue of the final check and its payment to them, to release security they held in the mortgage of the contractors.

As to the first question: This was considered in Prairie State Nat. Bank v. United States, 164 U. S. 227, 17 S. Ct. 142, 145, 41 L. Ed. 412, which holds two things, viz.:

“That a stipulation in a braiding contract for the retention, until the completion of the work, of a certain portion of the considera^ tion, is as much for the indemnity of him who may he guarantor, of the performance of the work, as for him for whom the work is to be performed, that it raises an equity in the surety in the fund to be created.”

That the right of a surety on a contract to subrogation dates back to the execution of the surety contract.

We are not here concerned with the question of application of payments. That question arises only where the one who received a payment had the right as against his adversary to receive such payment, but equity required him at the instance of such adversary to apply such payment in a particular manner.

Here the question goes deeper and questions the right as between the two parties to receive the payment. Of course, if, as between the surety and the bank, the surety had a prior equity in the fund or percentage held baek by the state, then the bank had no right to such payment, and that is the holding of the Prairie State Nat. Bank Case.

It is true that in that case the surety took over and completed the performance of the work called for in the contract, while in this one the failure of the contractors was to pay their bills, but this makes no difference; in each ease there was a failure of the contractor to do what its contract required, and the surety was called on and required to make good this failure of the contractor, and was so subrogated to the rights of the subcontractors. Many other eases might be cited but this is the leading ease and settles the proposition.

In the Prairie State Nat. Bank Case the final payment was still held by the government, while in the instant case the bank has collected it before the surety knew there had been a default by the contractor, and the surety, having been compelled to pay the subcontractors, is'now seeking to require the bank to account to it for such money.

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Bluebook (online)
4 F. Supp. 272, 1933 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 1484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/u-s-fidelity-guaranty-co-v-bank-of-brewton-alsd-1933.