W. H. Putegnat Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland

29 S.W.2d 1004
CourtTexas Commission of Appeals
DecidedJune 28, 1930
DocketNo. 1176—5499
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 29 S.W.2d 1004 (W. H. Putegnat Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Texas Commission of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. H. Putegnat Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland, 29 S.W.2d 1004 (Tex. Super. Ct. 1930).

Opinion

SHORT, P. J.

R. H. Milton', doing business under the name of Milton Construction Company, made a contract in writing with W. H. Huitt, the owner of a certain town lot, by the terms of which R. H. Milton obligated himself to construct a dwelling on the said lot, it being the homestead of Huitt and wife, for the sum of $6,200, in accordance with certain plans and specifications, Milton to furnish all labor and material necessary to build said dwelling and also a bond, with approved security. The defendant in error, Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, with its principal office at Baltimore in the state of Maryland, as surety, executed the bond, as surety, required by the contract, between Huitt and Milton, in the sum of $3,000, conditioned that Milton “shall indemnify the owner against any and all losses of damage directly arising, by reason of the failure of the principal to faithfully perform said contract,” provided that (1) “the owner shall faithfully and punctually perform all the terms and conditions of said contract to be performed by the owner”; (2) “that if the principal .shall abandon said contract or be lawfully compelled, by reason of a default, to cease operations thereof, the surety shall have the right, at its option, to complete said contract or to sub-let completion thereof.” The contractor, before the building was completed, abandoned the enterprise, and the surety, having been duly notified of this fact, through its office at Baltimore, notified the owner that it would not avail itself of its option to complete the contract. However, the trial court found as a fact that it did complete the building, and the Court of Civil Appeals adopted this finding of fact as its own. After the building had been completed and the owner had paid to the defendant in error the balance of the money in his hands, which was due by reason of his contract with the contractor, the plaintiffs in error, who had furnished the contractor certain material, which the contractor had used in the construction of the' building, brought this suit to recover the value of the material furnished, making the owners, the contractor, and the defendant in error parties defendant. Upon a trial before the court, without the intervention of a jury, and after R. H. Milton, who had not been served except by publication, was dismissed from the case, and upon a showing that the ' owner had complied with his part of the contract, and that the property was the homestead of the owner and wife, judgment was rendered in favor of the owner and against the plaintiffs in error, and against the defendant in error and in favor of the several original plaintiffs, the original suit having been consolidated by agreement of the parties. Upon appeal to the Court of Civil Appeals by the defendant in error, this judgment was reversed and judgment rendered that the original plaintiffs take nothing, whereupon writ of error was granted to . the plaintiffs in error. A more detailed statement of the nature of the case is made in the opinion of the Court of Civil Appeals, 15 S. W.(2d) 729.

The plaintiffs in error contend that, where a surety takes over the completion of any work, upon the default of the original contractor, and accepts the balance due the said contractor, under the original contract, the surety assumes the liability of said original contract, inasmuch as the surety has been subrogated to all the benefits accruing to the contractor. They also contend that the un-contradieted evidence is that the defendant in error promised to pay for the material furnished by the plaintiffs in error, but the* Court of Civil Appeals evidently found that no such promise, legally binding upon the defendant in error, was made, and, from a reading of the testimony on this subject, we have reached the conclusion that the defendant in error is not bound by any promises, such as the testimony shows were made, so as to make the defendant in error legally responsible, and have concluded that, if the defendant in error can be made liable, upon any theory, the liability must arise under the first contention made by the plaintiffs in error, as stated by us above.

The Court of Civil Appeals, in its opinion, refused to hold the defendant in error liable- upon the ground that the record shows the owner was not personally liable for any debts of the contractor, and, inasmuch as the bond was given to indemnify the owner against loss or damage, by reason of the’ failure of the contractor “to faithfully perform said contract,” and there having accrued no damage to the owner, the defendant in error was not bound to pay any damages. In other words, the bonds were given to indemnify the owner and not to pay the creditors of the contractor, gene'rally, for all debts due by him.

The bond recites the fact that the contractor had entered into a certain contract with the owner, giving the date, and specifying the location of the building to be erected. A copy of this contract seems to have been attached to the bond and made a part of it, and, according to- its terms, the contractor obligated himself to furnish all labor and material to build the dwelling in consideration that the owner would pay the contract price. The owner paid the contract price, and, while the contractor furnished to the owner the material, represented "by the demands of the plaintiffs in error, he did not pay for the same. Evidently it was the intention of the parties to the'contract that the contractor should procure, at his own expense, this material. The Court of Civil Ap-, peals found, as a fact, that the defendant in error did exercise this right.

[1006]*1006 The first paragraph in the bond executed by the defendant in error clearly imposed an obligation upon the defendant in error to pay to the owner any loss or damage resulting from the failure of the contractor to comply with the provisions of’ his contract made with the owner. Since the testi- ' mony establishes the fact beyond contradiction that the owner did not suffer any loss or damage, on account of the failure of the contractor to comply with the terms of his contract, no liability was established against the defendant in error in favor of the owner.

Following the paragraph we have discussed is this recitation: “This bond is executed and accepted upon the following express conditions precedent,” and then the conditions heretofore stated, together with others not necessary to state, are specified to the effect (1) that the owner shall perform his part of the contract with the contractor; and (2) that should the principal abandon the contract the surety shall have the right, in its option, to complete said contract or to sublet the completion of it. This part of the bond, executed by the defendant in error, secured to it a right, evidently considered a valuable one, as the bond expressly states that the obligation of the defendant in error to the owner should depend for its validity upon the fact that this right was reserved to’ be exercised, in case the defendant in error so elected.

The testimony shows, without dispute, that at’ the time the defendant in error elected to exercise this right, to complete the contract, after the contractor had abandoned the contract, it' had information that the contractor . had,' in pursuance of his obligation with the owner, procured from the plaintiffs in error the material necessary to construct the building, but that the contractor had not paid for this material. The testimony further shows, without dispute, that this material was actually used by the contractor in the furtherance of his efforts to perform his part of the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
29 S.W.2d 1004, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-h-putegnat-co-v-fidelity-deposit-co-of-maryland-texcommnapp-1930.