United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. City of Los Angeles

203 P. 151, 55 Cal. App. 209
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedNovember 15, 1921
DocketCiv. Nos. 3198, 3199.
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 203 P. 151 (United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. City of Los Angeles) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. City of Los Angeles, 203 P. 151, 55 Cal. App. 209 (Cal. Ct. App. 1921).

Opinion

CRAIG, J.

These two actions between the same parties and involving the same issues were tried together. Pur *210 suant to stipulation, the appeals from the two judgments in favor of the plaintiff are being taken and heard together. There is but little controversy concerning the facts which, in so far as they are material, to this decision, except as they concern findings bearing upon the good faith of defendant, are as follows: One H. V. Gentry entered into two separate contracts with the board of public works of the city of Los Angeles for street improvement work. This was done pursuant to the Voorman Act. One contract concerned Sunset Drive and the other Marathon Street, in Los Angeles. They were executed on the twenty-ninth day of June, 1916, and the United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company, a corporation, on the same date became surety thereon. Also, contemporaneously with- this transaction, the Municipal Securities Company entered. into an agreement to finance the contractor Gentry in the carrying out of each contract and to receive an assignment from him as security therefor of his rights to the diagrams, warrants, and assessments issuable under section 7 of the Vrooman Act (Stats. 1885, p. 152, as amended by Stats. 1911, p. 627). At the same time that this last-mentioned contract was made, Gentry, by a separate instrument, assigned said diagrams, warrants and assessments to the Municipal Securities Company. Thereafter this company advanced to Gentry $4,778.74 in the Sunset Drive case and $7,325.51 in the Marathon Street contract. Gentry eventually completed both contracts; this being accomplished on Sunset Drive December 20, 1916, and on Marathon Street February 20, 1917. After completion the Municipal Securities Company assigned all its right, title, and interest in the warrant, assessment, and diagram issuable on the Sunset Drive contract to the Pacific Bond and Mortgage Company. This was done at the request of Gentry and the assignee paid ninety-five per cent of the amount of the warrant for the same. The warrant, assessment, and diagram evidencing the contract price for the Marathon Street improvement had not been issued at the time of the filing of this action.

Gentry left unpaid claims for- labor and material on the Marathon Street contract amounting to $924.72 and on the Sunset Drive contract aggregating $1,587.29. He is conceded to have been practically insolvent when perform *211 anee of the contract was completed. It appears that the surety did not know of the principal’s financial condition until January 22, 1919, and at that date caused notice to be served on the city of the contractor’s default in payment for labor and materials and directing the city to withhold the delivery of the warrant, assessment, and diagram in connection with each contract until the city should have proof filed with it of the payment by the contractor of his obligations incurred in the carrying out of the contracts. Nevertheless, as heretofore stated, the city delivered one warrant, etc., as to the Sunset Drive improvement which was subsequently withdrawn, and had issued and was about to deliver a new warrant thereon, and also one for the Marathon Street contract when this suit was instituted by the surety.

The purpose of the action is to restrain the payment of the proceeds of the contracts to the contractor or his assignees and to compel their application to the satisfaction of the labor and material claims incurred in the performance of the work.' Certain of those to whom G-ehtry owed claims were made defendants and during the trial, when their claims were established, plaintiff Surety Company paid the amounts thereof.

Pursuant to stipulation entered into after the actions were begun, the Municipal Securities Company was appointed receiver to take over the warrants and to hold $2,500 in the Sunset Drive ease and $2,300 in the Marathon Street case of the proceeds collected thereunder until the issues in the proceedings were finally determined. The court gave judgment for plaintiff and directed the receiver to pay the plaintiff sufficient to reimburse it for the payments which it had made as surety for the contractor to discharge the obligations of the latter for labor and material. It is from this judgment that the defendants appeal.

[1] The principal question involved is this: Has the plaintiff, as a surety on the contractor’s labor and material bond, given pursuant to section 6% of the Vrooman Act, a right to claim the benefit of the diagram, warrant, and assessment issued under that act to reimburse itself by reason of it having been called upon to pay claims for labor and material furnished under the contract, as against defendants who are assignees of the contractor for value and *212 before the plaintiff sought to compel payment f This question and principles affecting it as applied to the facts of this case have been passed upon partly in Adamson v. Paonessa, 180 Cal. 157 [179 Pac. 880], and partly in Los Angeles Rock & Gravel Co. v. Coast Construction Co., 185 Cal. 586 [197 Pac. 941].

Adamson v. Paonessa established the law to be that the surety on such a contract as the one here involved possesses no right of subrogation to the lien or claims of material-men and laborers. Plaintiff asserts that it does not base its cause upon the theory of subrogation, but that the suit is to enforce an equitable exoneration. The first fact necessary to the maintenance of such a cause of action is the existence of funds or property belonging to the principal. If the principal has such an estate, the surety may, in a proper case, subject it to the payment of the debt. (Pomeroy’s Equity Jurisprudence, see. 1419.) In the instant case, the contractor had assigned his right to the proceeds of the contracts before these actions were instituted. In so far as the surety might have a claim to exoneration against such proceeds they are not distinguishable from any other property which the principal might have formerly owned but have sold before action was begun. The assessments to be collected under the Yrooman Act “are the property of the contractor free from claims arising in connection with work called for by the contract.” (Los Angeles Rock & Gravel Co. v. Coast Construction Co., supra.) “There is no provision of the Yrooman Act which gives such claimant any right or lien, equitable or otherwise .upon money or bonds coming to the contractor.” (Adamson v. Paonessa, supra.) Where the contractor has assigned before the surety sues to require the application of the debt, the surety cannot succeed as against the assignee. (L os Angeles Rock & Gravel Co. v. Coast Construction Co., supra.) But the respondent calls attention to the fact that in the case just cited the court said, “there is nothing to indicate that the assignee had any knowledge that any claim would not be paid by the contractor.” From this it is argued that had the assignee in that ease possessed such knowledge the proceeds in its hands might have been followed by the surety for the purpose of exoneration. The language quoted mentions such lack of knowl *213 edge as incidental only to the statement made previously that “the

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Bluebook (online)
203 P. 151, 55 Cal. App. 209, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-v-city-of-los-angeles-calctapp-1921.