United States for the Use and Benefit of Jinks Lumber Company, Inc. v. Federal Insurance Company, Charles Register and Robert B. Staats, Trustee

483 F.2d 153, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 8367
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 13, 1973
Docket72-2754
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 483 F.2d 153 (United States for the Use and Benefit of Jinks Lumber Company, Inc. v. Federal Insurance Company, Charles Register and Robert B. Staats, Trustee) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States for the Use and Benefit of Jinks Lumber Company, Inc. v. Federal Insurance Company, Charles Register and Robert B. Staats, Trustee, 483 F.2d 153, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 8367 (5th Cir. 1973).

Opinion

AINSWORTH, Circuit Judge:

This suit was brought under the Miller Act (40 U.S.C. § 270a et seq.) by Jinks Lumber Company, Inc., use-plaintiff, against Dyson & Company, a general contractor, and its surety Federal Insurance Company, to recover the unpaid balance of $11,202.79 for building materials (wallboard) furnished to Charles Register, a subcontractor who was also named a defendant. Register, therefore, became a..bankrupt and the Trustee in Bankruptcy was substituted in his place and filed a cross-claim against Dyson for additional amounts alleged to be due the subcontractor. The district judge in a nonjury trial held that Jinks was es-topped from asserting its claim against Dyson for nonpayment of materials furnished to Register; and further held that the Trustee for Register had not sustained his burden of proof and had shown “no wrongful conduct on the part of Dyson” which would support recovery of its claim.

I.

The Jinks Claim

Dyson was the general contractor under a government contract providing for construction of housing units at an Air Force base at Panama City, Florida. *155 Register was both the wallboard and painting subcontractor, under separate subcontracts, on the job. The wallboard was furnished to the subcontractor by Jinks.

Register was unable, because of apparent financial inability, to furnish a performance bond and at Dyson’s insistence an arrangement was made whereby all funds due under the wallboard subcontract would be paid by Dyson in progress payment checks issued jointly to Register and Jinks. Letters were exchanged between Register and Dyson and it was agreed that Jinks would furnish copies of invoices and each monthly statement of the Register account to Dyson. 1

Jinks began furnishing materials to Register to be used on Dyson’s Air Force job in April 1969 and continued until October 1969.

Jinks’ practice was to close its billing at the end of the business day of the 25th of each month and send its customer a statement which would be due and *156 payable by the 10th of the following month. Both Register and Dyson received these monthly statements. The manner in which progress payment checks issued by Dyson were handled thereafter is critical to a determination of whether the district judge correctly ruled that Jinks was estopped to enforce its claim for the unpaid balance of materials furnished to Register and used on the Air Force job. It is conceded that all amounts due Register under its wallboard subcontract with Dyson were paid in checks jointly payable to Register and Jinks. The Jinks position is that when such jointly payable cheeks were presented to it by Register, it took out all amounts then due and owing by Register and gave him the balance of the proceeds.

At the close of business on July 25, 1969, Register’s account with Jinks for materials supplied amounted to the sum of $5,153.81. The July monthly statement was then mailed to Register and Dyson showing that indebtedness and on July 29, 1969, Register paid $1,534.46 of his own funds to Jinks on account. Dyson then issued its first of three checks on account of the wallboard subcontract dated July 29, 1969, for $12,005.98 jointly payable to Register and Jinks. Sometime prior to the 10th of the following month, this check was brought by Register to Jinks which held out the sum of $3,619.35 thereof, thus paying the July account in full, and Jinks turned over the balance to Register. During the day on August 25, 1969, the second Dyson check for $9,935.10 jointly payable to Register and Jinks was endorsed by Jinks and turned over to Register since at that time Register’s account with Jinks was current. Jinks’ books were then closed at the end of the business day on August 25 and thereafter the August monthly statement was mailed to Register, copy to Dyson, showing a current balance due of $9,379.63. The third Dyson check dated September 10, 1969 jointly payable to Register and Jinks was for $9,187.29, and Jinks retained all of the proceeds thereof to apply on the Register account. The three Dyson checks payable jointly to Register and Jinks totaled $31,128.37. Materials furnished by Jinks to Register for the Dyson Air Force job, according to Mr. Pybus, Jinks’ executive vice-president, totaled $31,987.54.

The district court held that the total of the three cheeks issued by Dyson jointly payable to Register and Jinks was equal to the total of materials supplied by Jinks and that if Jinks had retained all of these funds and applied them to Register’s account Jinks would not only have been paid in full, it would have been overpaid. 2

We cannot agree with the court below that Jinks was estopped under the facts set forth to claim the balance due on its account. The joint payment procedure was initiated by Dyson because Register could not furnish a performance bond, and to insure payments to Jinks. But Jinks withheld such portion of the proceeds of the Dyson checks as was necessary to pay the amounts then due by Register under Jinks’ practice of closing its books at the close of business on the 25th of each month and payment being due by the 10th of the following month. This billing procedure is said by Jinks to be standard in industry at Panama City. That seems undisputed. Obviously Register required some portion of the proceeds since Dyson was issuing jointly payable checks to Register and Jinks for all amounts due during the progress of the job under the wallboard subcontract. For example, when Jinks endorsed and turned over to Register during the day of August 25, 1969, the Dyson check of that date for $9,935.-10, the transcript shows that Register put the proceeds in the Commercial *157 Bank and “started paying people with it or continued to pay them with it,” including some notes due the Commercial Bank. 3

The trial court’s citation of Graybar Electric Co. v. John A. Volpe Construction Co., 5 Cir., 1967, 387 F.2d 55, in rejecting Jinks’ claim is inapposite. We do not have a Graybar case here. In Graybar, a Miller Act case, the contractor did everything it reasonably could to protect itself to prevent diversion of funds intended for payment of building materials. But Graybar misrepresented and overstated to the general contractor the amount of its current balance with .the subcontractor. Graybar also falsely represented to the general contractor that the jointly payable checks would be endorsed over to Graybar for payment of materials supplied and in course of delivery, whereas in fact the checks were endorsed over by Graybar to the subcontractor. Thus the general contractor relied on Graybar’s representations to its prejudice and the subcontractor was able to obtain large sums from the general contractor by Graybar’s

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483 F.2d 153, 1973 U.S. App. LEXIS 8367, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-for-the-use-and-benefit-of-jinks-lumber-company-inc-v-ca5-1973.