United States Gypsum Co. v. American Surety Co.

14 Tenn. App. 367, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 48
CourtCourt of Appeals of Tennessee
DecidedDecember 16, 1931
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 14 Tenn. App. 367 (United States Gypsum Co. v. American Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Gypsum Co. v. American Surety Co., 14 Tenn. App. 367, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 48 (Tenn. Ct. App. 1931).

Opinion

HEISKELL, J.

This suit involves the following alleged state of facts. The complainant, United States Gypsum Company, sold to Kaucher-Hodges & Company, general contractors, who were then engaged in the construction of the Tivoli Hotel at Biloxi, Mississippi, fifty-eight tons of a roof insulation material called pyrocell for the sum of $1269. This material was sold to the general contractor on the faith of a contractor’s bond, executed by the defendant, the Ameri.can Surety Company, a solvent and nationally known concern, as surety. The pyrocell was received by Kaucher-Hodges & Company in good order during the month of November, 1926, and applied to the hotel roof. Kaucher-Hodges & Company made no payment whatsoever on the contract price of the pyrocell, and went into bankruptcy within a few months after completion of the building. Complainant thereupon brought this suit, against the American Surety Company, a New York corporation, doing business and maintaining an office in) Shelby County, Tennessee, upon the contractor’s bond, executed to the hotel company, which under the statutory laws of the State of Mississippi, inured to the benefit of the complainant and of any and all furnishers of material and labor on said building. No lien against the realty is sought and no attachment is prayed for. The suit is for a money judgment in an action ex contractu against *368 tbe surety on the contractor’s bond. Personal service of process was bad upon the defendant by service upon the manager of its office in Memphis, Shelby County, Tennessee, who is also a resident vice-president of defendant company.

Defendant filed a plea in abatement to the original bill, averring that since the hotel company was a non-resident of the State of Tennessee with its hotel building located in Mississippi, the contract sued on was to be performed in that state, and since the remedy for breach of contract was sought to be enforced under a Mississippi statute, the Chancery Court of Shelby County had no jurisdiction to determine the rights of the parties under said contract. Simultaneously with the filing of its plea in abatement, defendant filed an answer, in which it admitted the execution of the bond and of the contract for pyrocell, but denied the other material allegations in the bill and denied that it was indebted to complainant in any amount on account of said contract or bond.

The Chancellor sustained defendant’s plea in abatement, holding that although the statute “giving the claimant a right of action against the surety does not in so many words provide that the action on the bond can be maintained only in the county in which the building is erected, yet this is clearly implied.” The Chancellor further held complainant had failed to sustain its contentions on the merits of the case, in that the pyrocell did not dry quick enough for the application of a tar roof which was to be applied on top of it; that complainant’s recovery would therefore be limited to $69.50, even if it Were' entitled to recover anything on the bond, as the general contractor had to expend $1199.10 in remedying the defect. Ftom this decree complainant has appealed and assigned errors.

The first assignment of error is that the court erred in sustaining defendant’s plea in abatement. It is the contention of complainant that this is a suit for breach of contract; that such an action is always transitory and follows the person of the defendant. The brief of counsel for complainant contains this:

“The complainant, a corporation of the State of Illinois, sued the defendant, the surety on the contractor’s bond, who agreed in said bond to save harmless all furnishers of material to the contractor. The contractor and principal on the bond, a Tennessee partnership, had gone into bankruptcy a few months after the completion of the job. Personal service of process was had upon the defendant surety company, which is a New York corporation, doing business in Tennessee and maintaining an office and agency in this State. This suit was brought under a Mississippi statute, which provided that such a contractor’s bond as the one sued upon inured to the benefit of all furnishers of *369 material and labor. Tbe statute made no provision that the suit would have to be brought in Mississippi, but in fact expressly and broadly provided that ‘any person supplying therein labor or materials shall have a right of action on said bond for his use and benefit against said contractors and the sureties thereon.”

The plea in abatement sets out the portions of the Act of 1918 considered material and insists that the contracts for construction of said hotel were Mississippi contracts and the bond a statutory bond, could be sued on only in the courts of that State. That inasmuch as complainant relies upon said Act of 1918 for his right of action, that he must bring suit in the manner and place contemplated by said statute and that the present suit is not so brought.

A court of equity can and will go far in enforcing the contract rights of one litigant against another where the question involved is merely a personal matter between the two. Nothing is farther from the scope of a court of equity’s jurisdiction than to deal with real property in another State. Yet if the court has jurisdiction of the party who has by binding contract in writing contracted to convey real property in another State, he may be compelled to execute, the deed by a decree in personam to be enforced by process of contempt. But here the court is dealing with the right of one party to have another do a particular thing. The right and the remedy are not complicated by the rights or interests of others. The cases cited by counsel for complainant Mattix v. Swepston, 127 Tenn., 683, 157 S. W., 64, and Anderson-Tully v. Thompson, 132 Tenn., 80, 177 S. W., 66, go no further than this. They recognize the authority of a court of equity in this State by an in personam decree to enforce a liability which accrued in another State, provided the decree does not affect rights, parties and interests not before the court in per-sonam. No stronger illustration of this jurisdiction can be imagined than the one with which we started out, that in which a court of equity in this State by a decree in personam compels the transfer of title to land in another state. The question is in the present case, does the statute of Mississippi invoked by complainant as creating his right of action, so complicate the remedy as to justify the Chancellor in refusing to entertain this suit.

Counsel for complainant does not controvert the holding of U. S. v. McCord, 233 U. S., 157, that where a statute creates a new liability or gives a special remedy, the remedy must be enforced in exact compliance with the statute. It is insisted that the statute has been complied with. This presents two questions: (1) Could this statute be complied with except by a suit in Mississippi in the County of the contract? (2) If it could be by a suit in another state, does the present suit so comply? The statute provides that if the *370

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
14 Tenn. App. 367, 1931 Tenn. App. LEXIS 48, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-gypsum-co-v-american-surety-co-tennctapp-1931.