Van Buren County v. American Surety Co.

115 N.W. 24, 137 Iowa 490
CourtSupreme Court of Iowa
DecidedFebruary 19, 1908
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 115 N.W. 24 (Van Buren County v. American Surety Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Iowa primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Van Buren County v. American Surety Co., 115 N.W. 24, 137 Iowa 490 (iowa 1908).

Opinion

Weaver, J.

On June 20, 1900, the American Bridge Company entered into written contracts with Yan Burén county to erect two steel bridges known in the record as the “ Selma Bridge ” and the “ Kilburn Bridge.” The agreed price of the Selma Bridge was $11,950 and of the Kilburn Bridge was $14,950, the former to be completed on November 19, 1900, and the latter on December 1, 1900. In other respects the two contracts are substantially identical in their terms and conditions, to which, so far as material to the present controversy, more specific mention will be hereinafter made. To secure the faithful performance of these contracts, . the bridge company executed and delivered to the [492]*492county its two several bonds with the appellant herein as security. On March 30, 1901, the county brought an action at law upon said bonds to recover damages for the alleged failure of the contractor to construct the bridges according to the terms of the agreement. While the petition originally specified various particulars, in respect to which it was alleged that the bridges had not been constructed according to contract, all seem to have been eliminated, except the claim that the bridge company fraudulently substituted lighter and less valuable materials in the construction of each of said bridges than were called for by the contract, with the result that the amount of metal in the completed structures is less by many tons than it would have been had the contracts been fairly and honestly performed. A jury being waived, the cause was tried to the, court, which found the charge of fraud as above indicated in the substitution of lighter and inferior materials in said bridges had been established by the evidence, and that the county had been damaged thereby in the sum of $4,845.24. It appearing, however, that the county still had in its hands an unpaid balance of the contract price of the bridges to the amount of $3,905.67, the court applied this sum in reduction of the proved damages, and entered judgment in plaintiff’s favor for the difference $939.67.

I. The bonds in suit attach certain conditions to the liability of the surety company, among which are the following : First. That, in the event of any default on the part of the principal in the performance of any of the terms or conditions of said contract, written notice thereof, with a verified statement of the facts showing such default and the date thereof, shall, within ten days after such default, be mailed to said surety at its office in the city of Chicago, No. 704 Marquette Building. Second. That no suit, action, or proceeding shall be brought or maintained against the principal or surety upon or by reason of any such default, after the expiration of four months after such default, nor, [493]*493in any event, after the 1st day of April, 1901.” This action was begun March 30, 1901.

It is the claim of appellant that plaintiff failed to give notice of the contractor’s default within the time thus fixed, and therefore this action cannot be maintained. It is also claimed that, so far as the plaintiff’s demand has reference to the construction of the Selma Bridge, the action was not begun within four months after the alleged default, and is therefore barred by the contract limitation. That the surety in a bond may prescribe reasonable conditions for notice of the principal’s default, and for the release and discharge of such bond upon failure to comply therewith, may be admitted for the purposes of this ease; but the question what shall be deemed due ■ notice within the true meaning and intent of the contract is another consideration, which requires more particular examination of the proved or conceded facts. The trial court has found that the Selma Bridge was not completed until some time in January, 1901, when a majority of the hoard of supervisors, acting individually, only, undertook to accept it, and caused the county auditor to issue warrants to the bridge company for the remainder of the agreed price of that structure, but such acts were done by the supervisors without any knowledge or notice of the fraud which had been practiced by the contractor.- The other bridge was not completed or tendered to the county until after March 1, 1901. Prior to that date, and immediately prior to February 14, 1901, the wrongful substitution of the lighter and less valuable materials in the construction of the bridges was discovered by the county, and thereupon and within less than ten days it caused written notice of the fact to be given to the surety company. Unless the action of the supervisors above mentioned with respect to the Selma Bridge is to be construed as an acceptance, neither structure has ever been formally accepted, though both have ever since been in use as part of the public highway.

The contention of the appellant that the aforesaid writ[494]*494ten notice of the contractor’s fraud was not given within ten days after the default complained of is sought to be maintained on the following grounds: It is first said that, as the contract was by-•its terms to be completed on or before November 19, 1900, notice should have been given the surety of the failure so to do, and, such notice not having been given within ten days from said date, the surety was thereby discharged; or, in any event, that action as to the Selma Bridge is barred by the contract limitation of four months. We do not so construe the undertaking. It is true that the contract named November 19, 1900, as the date for the completion of the Selma Bridge, but it evidently contemplated the possibility, if not probability, that the work would be hindered or delayed, and that the actual completion might not be accomplished until a later date. To provide for such contingency, it was agreed that for any delay beyond the time fixed the contractor should be subject to a stated per diem penalty. To hold the surety for such penalties, ■ it may be that notice of the failure to complete the bridge within the stipulated time should have been promptly given, but the appellee is making no claim in this court for any recovery on that ground, and the judgment appealed from includes no allowance of that nature. Nor would the four-months limitation begin to run as between the county and the contractor until the fraud on which recovery is claimed was discovered, and the surety in this respect occupies no stronger position than the principal.

It is further argued, if we understand counsel, that the default, if any of the contractor, occurred when the inferior materials were delivered on the ground or placed in the bridges, and that, to hold the surety liable, notice thereof should have been given within ten days thereafter.

[495]*4951. Principal and surety: surety companies: nature of business. [494]*494Preliminary to a discussion of these propositions, it is to be said that, while the relation of appellant herein is spoken of as that of surety or guarantor, counsel upon both sides cite and rely upon precedents afforded by the decisions [495]*495of this and other courts in actions growing out of contracts of life, accident, fire, and fidelity insurance. These authorities are fairly in point, f0r the business of corporations organized for purposes of profit in assuring the performance of contracts of various kinds partakes largely of the nature of insurance, and is carried on in much the same manner. Lumber Co. v. Peterson, 124 Iowa, 615; American Surety Co. v. Pauly, 170 U. S. 143, 144, (18 Sup. Ct. 552, 42 L. Ed. 977) ; Shakman v. Credit Co., 92 Wis. 366 (66 N.

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Bluebook (online)
115 N.W. 24, 137 Iowa 490, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/van-buren-county-v-american-surety-co-iowa-1908.