United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Parsons

112 So. 469, 147 Miss. 335, 53 A.L.R. 88, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 285
CourtMississippi Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 21, 1927
DocketNo. 25685.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 112 So. 469 (United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Parsons) 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
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Parsons, 112 So. 469, 147 Miss. 335, 53 A.L.R. 88, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 285 (Mich. 1927).

Opinion

*347 McGowen, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

Appellee Mrs. Edna Earl Parsons, hereinafter called “owner,” exhibited her bill against the defendant, the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, hereinafter called “surety,” and J. W. McNeill, hereinafter called “contractor,” and certain materialmen, to-wit, the Vicksburg Lumber Company, Enterprise Plumbing & Metal "Works, the Sanitary Plumbing Company, Cambre Bros., Wright Bros. Hardware Company, Success Sand & Gravel Company, H. H. Ludke, and Jones Drug Company, the aggregate of whose claims in a certain building contract totals four thousand one hundred forty dollars and eighty-four cents. The bill alleged that the building contract had been executed by J. W. McNeill and herself for the construction of a dwelling house on a lot owned by Mrs. Parsons, said contract being made Exhibit A to the bill and a part thereof, by which instrument the contractor agreed to furnish all labor and material at his own expense, and within a reasonable time to construct, complete, and deliver to the owner a dwelling house as described in the specifications and contract. The bill further alleged that on or about July 7, 1924, the con *348 tractor applied to the surety company to make his bond as required of him by said contract, and that the contractor and surety company delivered to the owner, as if in compliance with said contract, a bond in writing, for the principal sum of nine thousand dollars, which bond was attached to the bill and made a part thereof. The bill further charged that by inadvertence, oversight, and mistake, on the part of respondents J. W. McNeill and the United States Fidelity & Guaranty Company, the name “W. Ii. Parsons” was inserted in the bond instead of "Edna Earl Parsons,” and that the bond was accepted by the owner with the error and mistake therein, and relied on, without noticing said error and mistake, until some time after a fire which occurred November 3, 1924; that it was the intention of the contractor and the surety company to name Mrs. Edna Earl Parsons as obligee, and not her husband, and it was the full intention and purpose of all the parties that Mrs. Parsons should be the obligee in said instrument. In like manner, the bill charged that, by mutual mistake, the date of the contract mentioned in the bond was set forth as July 7,1924, when in truth and in fact it was the intention of said bond to guarantee performance of said contract, made Exhibit A to the bill, June 19, 1924; that all parties intended so to do; and that neither mistake was noticed by the owner until as, above stated. The bill further alleged that said bond should be corrected in these particulars so that it would conform to the mutual purpose and the mutual attempt and intention of said parties, owner, contractor, and surety company.

It was further alleged that the contractor undertook the performance of the contract, and that the owner, at all times and in every respect, promptly and faithfully observed, performed, and carried out to the letter and spirit each and every term, provision, agreement, condition, covenant, promise, or obligation made, assumed, and undertaken by her under said contract, as well as the conditions imposed on the owner by the bond, and that *349 before the house was completed by the contractor and accepted by the owner the partly constructed and unfinished dwelling house was totally destroyed by fire on or about November 3,1924, without any fault on the part of the owner; that up to the date of the fire the owner had, in strict accordance with said contract, paid the contractor in prescribed installments for labor and material furnished in and about the erection of said house and the specified price therefor, the total sum of nine thousand one hundred eighty-five dollars and twenty-six cents, leaving a difference of seventy-nine dollars and seventy-four cents due the contractor on the full amount of the contract price of said house completed, to-wit, nine thousand two hundred sixty-five dollars.

The bill charged the payment of nine thousand one hundred eighty-five dollars and twenty-six cents in performance of said contract on the part of the owner; the payment of four hundred sixty-three dollars and seventy-five cents for supervision of the construction of the destroyed house; two hundred seventy dollars for the architect whose 'services were used in the construction of said destroyed house; one hundred seventy-two dollars for insurance premiums on fire insurance issued by sundry companies for fire insurance; and for wiring said house one hundred seventy-seven dollars, making a iotal of one thousand eighty-three dollars and twenty-five cents expended by the owner on the house before its destruction.

The bill further alleged that as the construction of said dwelling house progressed, the owner duly effected insurance tliereon against fire, aggregating twelve thousand five hundred dollars, which had been collected by the owner, and that the contractor had been credited with nine thousand one hundred eighty-five dollars and twenty-six cents,- the total of the installment-payments made by the owner to the contractor prior to the fire, and that the contractor is indebted to the owner for his pro rata part of the premiums paid to the insurance company one *350 hundred twenty-six dollars and seventy-six cents. It further alleged that the contractor should have completed said house before the date of the fire, and after the fire the contractor further and completely breached said contract in that he failed and refused to give the owner another bond as required by the contract, with unimpaired penalty, or to rebuild and complete said house.

The bill further sets up the amounts claimed to be due by the contractor to laborers and materialmen mentioned, supra, alleging that the owner knew of these claims, but setting up that they had a right to recover on the contractor’s bond and were made parties for that purpose; that the surety has elected not to rebuild or complete said house, but at all times has failed and refused to make, as contractor, a bond with unimpaired penalty, or to deliver same to the owner, and likewise has failed and refused to pay the materialmen and laborers, and failed to pay the amounts mentioned as due to the owner; that November 15, 1924, was fixed as the date of the extreme limit of a reasonable time in which to construct and deliver said house to the owner, which, if it had been so completed and delivered, would have cost the owner the total sum of ten thousand one hundred seventy-five dollars and seventy-five cents.

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Bluebook (online)
112 So. 469, 147 Miss. 335, 53 A.L.R. 88, 1927 Miss. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-fidelity-guaranty-co-v-parsons-miss-1927.