United Surety Co. v. Summers

72 A. 775, 110 Md. 95, 1909 Md. LEXIS 50
CourtCourt of Appeals of Maryland
DecidedFebruary 10, 1909
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 72 A. 775 (United Surety Co. v. Summers) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United Surety Co. v. Summers, 72 A. 775, 110 Md. 95, 1909 Md. LEXIS 50 (Md. 1909).

Opinion

*104 Pearce, J.,

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an action upon a bond executed by the United Surety Company, the defendant below, to Clinton Summers, the plaintiff below, given to secure the faithful performance by Engelbert C. Lawrence of a certain agreement in writing between him and said Summers, under seal, for the furnishing and erection of all the re-inforced concrete work in and about a certain building then in course of erection for said Summers upon the northeast corner of Eutaw street and Cider alley in the City of Baltimore, “said building to have a frontage of forty-nine feet and ten inches on Eutaw street and one hundred and three feet on Cider alley.”

The declaration contained five counts. The first count set out in full the said agreement between Summers and Lawrence, dated May 17th, 1906, which is in the usual form of such contracts adopted in Baltimore, and it also alleged that on the same date the said Lawrence, for the purpose of ’securing the due performance of his said agreement, delivered to said Summers a bond in the penalty of $30,000, executed jointly by himself and said Surety Company, and then set out the same in the precise words and figures thereof. This was signed and sealed by the Surety Company, and was signed, but not sealed by said Lawrence.

The first count then further averred that “said Lawrence entered upon the performance of said contract, and did work and furnished materials in and about said building, but did not well and truly keep and perform his said contract, but on the contrary broke the same in the particulars following, to wit, that he did not do his work in a good, workmanlike, substantial and efficient manner, nor did he furnish good and satisfactory material in and upon said building, and that the work and materials, so far as the same were furnished by him, were not satisfactory to J. H. Walsh & Bro. the architects and builders named in said contract, to whom, by the express terms of said contract, said work and materials were to be satisfactory, to the great damage of the plaintiff, whereby a right of action hath accrued to the plaintiff against the *105 defendant upon the said bond to recover in respect of said damage.”

The second count, “for a further breach of said bond,” alleged that after entering upon the performance of said contract, said Lawrence “wrongfully and wilfully abandoned the performance of said contract” whereby a right of action had" accrued upon said bond.

The third count, “for a further breach of said bond,” alleged that the work specified in said contract, and in the accompanying specifications forming a part of said contract, was not completed and finished in seventy working days as stipulated in said contract, “whereby the plaintiff became entitled by way of liquidated damages to the sum of $50 for each and every day in excess of seventy working days (the said number of days so in excess amounting to 250 days'), which said liquidated damages the said Lawrence had failed and refused to pay,” whereby a right of action had accrued upon said bond.

The fourth count, “for a further breach of said bond,” alleged that after said Lawrence abandoned said contract, notice thereof was thereupon given to said Surety Company by the plaintiff by registered letter, as required by the terms of said bond, and that thereupon the defendant assumed said contract and sublet the same for completon, but did not complete the same and left the same unfinished, whereby a right of action had accrued upon said bond.

The fifth count, “for a further breach of said bond,” alleged that the defendant after assuming said -contract as alleged in the fourth count, proceeded in the completion thereof in an unskilful and unworkmanlike manner, using inadequate and insufficient materials in a negligent way, and unreasonably delayed the work, so that it was not done in accordance with the specifications nor within the stipulated time, whereby a right of action had accrued upon said bond.

The declaration then alleged that as to each of said five counts, and each and all of the breaches of said bond therein mentioned, the plaintiff had performed all the conditions re *106 quired of Mm in said contract and bond, and that by reason of said breaches of said contract by Lawrence', and the breaches of said bond by the defendant, a right of action had accrued upon said bond to recover in respect of each and every breach set out in said five counts, and claimed $30,000 damages.

The defendant demurred to the declaration and to every count thereof, and this demurrer was overruled. We have fully outlined the structure of every count in this declaration, in order that the demurrer might be the better understood when considered.

A bill of particular’s was then demanded and furnished, in which was itemized all the work and materials done and furnished to make the building conform to the contract, with the date of each item.

The defendant then pleaded sixteen pleas, some alleging breaches by the plaintiff of the covenants on his part in said contract, and of the conditions of the bond imposing obligations upon him, and others denying the breaches of said contract by Lawrence, and of said bond by the defendant, complained of in the declaration. Upon some of these pleas the plaintiff joined issue, and replied to others, and the defendant rejoining, joined issue upon these replications. The case went to trial before a jury, and a verdict was rendered for the plaintiff for $5,088.06, and! judgment was entered thereon in proper form, from which both parties have appealed.

The plaintiff took three exceptions, two to the rulings of the Court upon motions to strike out certain testimony admitted subject to exception, and one to the rulings on the prayers; and the defendant also took three exceptions, two to rulings upon the evidence and one to the rulings on the prayers.

The plaintiff offered two prayers. The first, in substance instructed the jury that if they found certain enumerated facts, the plaintiff was entitled to recover such sum as the jury should find to be reasonably necessary to be expended in strengthening the first and second floors, and the back stair *107 way; in temporarily covering and protecting the collapsed roof, and permanently restoring the same to conform to the contract; and also to make the first and second floors as completely fireproof as they would have been if the contract had been fully performed in every respect so far as the said first and second floors were concerned.

This prayer was granted. The second prayer asked an instruction that the plaintiff should recover, by way of additional damages, the sum of $50 for every day in excess of seventy working days occupied by Lawrence and the defendant upon said work, excluding from said seventy days all other working days during which the jury should find the work was delayed by the architects and builders of the plaintiff, from the time of the commencement of the work down to the time when the jury found the plaintiff took possession of the building, and this prayer was refused. We shall request the reporter to set these out in full.

The defendant offered twenty-eight prayers.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
72 A. 775, 110 Md. 95, 1909 Md. LEXIS 50, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-surety-co-v-summers-md-1909.