United States v. Peerless Casualty Co.

255 F.2d 137, 34 Lab. Cas. (CCH) 71,481
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedApril 28, 1958
DocketNo. 15852
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 255 F.2d 137 (United States v. Peerless Casualty Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Peerless Casualty Co., 255 F.2d 137, 34 Lab. Cas. (CCH) 71,481 (8th Cir. 1958).

Opinions

WOODROUGH, Circuit Judge.

This action was brought under the Miller Act, 40 U.S.C.A. § 270a(a) (1, 2) and 270b(a), against the prime contractor for surfacing levees in the Omaha Levee System, and its payment bondsman to recover $10,000.02 due and owing the use plaintiff (referred to as plaintiff) on account of 6,014.2 tons of crushed rock supplied by it to the subcontractor, Leonard M. McDonald, d/b/a Omaha Rock and Excavating Company, and used on the work. The plaintiff was entitled to recover in the action if it had met the requirements of section 270b in respect to giving notice to the prime contractor within ninety days from June 16, 1953, when the last of the material was supplied. The District Court decided on the trial without a jury that the notice relied on by plaintiff was insufficient and dismissed the action on that ground. The plaintiff appeals.

Statement

It appears that the contract between the prime contractor and the sub-contractor called for the latter to furnish some 10,300 tons of the rock and that he purchased 6,014.2 tons of it from plaintiff. It was used on the work between May 19, 1953 and June 16, 1953, the agreed price and value being $10000.-02. On June 16, 1953, thirty days after the last material was received on the work, the contractor settled with the subcontractor and paid him in full for all sums due him under his contract without inquiring of him whether he had! paid for the material he used on the work. The plaintiff attempted without success to obtain payment from the subcontractor who was subsequently adjudged bankrupt with nothing for general creditors. On August 6, 1953, 51 days after plaintiff’s last delivery of the material, plaintiff wrote, signed and mailed the following letter to the prime contractor:

“Hopper Bros. Quarries
Lime and Rock Products Phone 2581
Pawnee City, Nebraska August 6, 1953
“Bill Curphy Contracting Co.;
Des Moines, Iowa.
“Attention Mr. Curphy
“We Hopper Brothers furnished Omaha Rock Ex. Co. 60142 Tons of rock in the months of May and June, for The Corps of Engineers, Omaha Levee Surfacing No. 1 Levee Project, with you Mr. Curphy the Prime Contractor.
“We are unable to collect for this rock, will you give us information as to why this bill is not paid?
“Truly yours,
Raymond Hopper, Hoppers Brothers.”

The actual amount of the rock furnished was 6,014.2 tons and the omission of the decimal point in the letter was as a result of a misprint or error.

In reply to the above letter, the contractor wrote plaintiff:

“Bill Curphy Co.
Contractors...
447 Insurance Exchange Building
Des Moines 9, Iowa
Telephone 8-0194
“August 7, 1953
“Hopper Bros. Quarries Pawnee City, Nebraska
“Attention: Raymond Hopper
“Gentlemen:
“After receiving your letter this morning we called Mr. McDonald of Omaha [140]*140.Rock & Excavating. Co. regarding your unpaid bill for rock placed on the Omaha .Levee for which we had the prime contract.
“He stated that there is some disagreement, over the rejection of some 500 tons of rock but that if you would come in and talk to him he would be glad to settle with you. He said that he had talked, to you by telephone several times but that you were reluctant to discuss the adjustment for the rejected rock. We ai'e not familiar with the dispute but would suggest that you drop in to see him and try to work out a settlement to your mutual satisfaction.
“He has been notified that unless he settles with you immediately the matter will be turned over to his bonding company.
“Very truly yours,
Bill Curphy Co.
Glen Lange /s/
Glen Lange
Assistant Secretary
“ec; Anton, Hammond Dunn, Inc.”

' Anton, Hammond, Dunn, Inc., of Des Moines, Iowa, referred to in the lower left hand-corner of the above letter, as having a copy of the letter sent to it, is the agent which wrote the payment bond sued on for the defendant Peerless Casualty Company and countersigned the same. It also wrote the contractor’s performance bond furnished by the same casualty company and both a payment and a performance bond of the Merchants Mutual Bonding Company given by the subcontractor, McDonald, to the prime contractor.

Raymond Hopper, one of the partners of plaintiff, testified that on August 8, 1953, while the witness was at the rock quarries he received a telephone call from a party who stated that he was a representative of the bonding company. The following Tuesday the witness received another long distance telephone call from the same party. On Monday, August 10th, following the first telephone call, the witness went to Omaha and contacted Mr. McDonald, the sub-contractor; and in the second call which the witness received on Tuesday, the party calling made reference to the conversation which the witness had had with Mr. McDonald on the Monday preceding. The party calling on Tuesday wanted to know how the witness had come out when he talked to McDonald, and the witness told this party that he had agreed to deduct $600.00 from the amount due, and to settle for $10,000.00 which was to have been paid that day. McDonald did not pay then, but agreed to pay within a week or ten days; and the witness so reported to the person calling him over the telephone. This party then told the witness that if the witness did not receive the money shortly, the witness should let him know. This conversation occurred on August 11, after the witness had talked to Mr. McDonald on August 10th. The party with whom the witness talked on August 11 had the same voice as the party who had called the witness the preceding Saturday, August 8th. The call came from Des Moines.

When the call was made to the witness on August 8th, the party calling wanted to know if the witness had received any payment on the rock which he had delivered, and the witness told him that he had not, and the party then wanted to know why. The witness told the party inquiring that he did not know why, but that he would go to Omaha on Monday and look up McDonald and find out what had happened. In that conversation the party calling stated that he was a representative of the bonding company, and inquired as to the amount due the plaintiff, and the witness told the party calling that the amount was $10,600.02 and that party then told the witness that he understood that there was a controversy over some of the material, and that was the reason McDonald was withholding payment. In that conversation the party calling told the witness that he had been notified by the contractor that it had received a letter from plaintiff to the effect that .plaintiff had not been paid and was making demand for payment.

[141]*141During the latter part of August, Mr.

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United States v. Peerless Casualty Company
255 F.2d 137 (Eighth Circuit, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
255 F.2d 137, 34 Lab. Cas. (CCH) 71,481, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-peerless-casualty-co-ca8-1958.