W. P. Fuller & Co. v. Alturas School District

153 P. 743, 28 Cal. App. 609, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 398
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedOctober 20, 1915
DocketCiv. No. 1390.
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 153 P. 743 (W. P. Fuller & Co. v. Alturas School District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. P. Fuller & Co. v. Alturas School District, 153 P. 743, 28 Cal. App. 609, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 398 (Cal. Ct. App. 1915).

Opinion

HART, J.

This is an action on a bond executed by one A. E. Pearson, as principal, and the appellants, as sureties, and given for the purpose of guaranteeing the faithful performance of a certain contract entered into by said Pearson and the defendant school district, for the construction by Pearson of a two-story school building for said district.

A number of persons who had either furnished material for or bestowed labor upon the work of construction assigned their respective claims to the plaintiff, and the action here is by the plaintiff on a claim of its own for materials alleged to have been furnished by it to Pearson and on the several assigned claims referred to, the same being set up in the complaint in different counts by appropriate averments.

The plaintiff was awarded judgment against Pearson and the appellants (sureties on the bond upon which the action is founded) in the total sum of $1,262.29.

This appeal is prosecuted from said judgment by the sureties on said bonds, A. B. Estes, A. W. Toreson, W. Wade Williams, B. L. Kelley, and C. W. Williams.

The contract, to insure the/performance of which the bond sued on was given, was entered into on the sixth day of June, *611 1911, and by its terms Pearson agreed to construct a two-story school building for the school district and “at his own expense and cost find and provide” all the materials and furnish all the labor necessary to its completion in conformity to the plans and specifications according to which it was to be constructed for the sum of twenty thousand three hundred and fifty dollars.

Pearson entered upon the execution of the terms of the contract in due time, but, for reasons not disclosed by the record before us, abandoned the contract before completing the construction of the building according to his agreement. It appears that, of the contract price, he was paid a trifle over the sum of fourteen thousand dollars, which constituted approximately seventy-five per cent of the contract price. Upon the abandonment of the contract by Pearson, the school district itself took charge of the same and completed the construction of the building according to the Pearson contract and the plans and specifications. The total amount expended in the construction of the building, as finally completed, exceeded by a few hundred dollars the contract price.

It is not claimed that the undertaking was executed and given in pursuance of the provisions of the act of 1897, entitled “An act to secure the payment of the claims of materialmen, mechanics, or laborers, employed by contractors upon state, municipal, or other public work.” (Stats. 1897, pp. 201, 202; see, also, Stats. 1911, p. 1422, whereby said statute was amended in certain particulars.) It is, on the contrary, conceded that the undertaking is a common-law bond.

The part of the said undertaking important to the inquiry here reads as follows: “The condition of the above bond is such that, if the said above bounden A. E. Pearson, his heirs, executors and legal representatives, shall in all things stand true and abide by and well and truly keep and perform the covenants, conditions and agreements in that certain contract this day made and entered into by and between the said A. E. Pearson and the said Alturas School District, for the construction and completion of the Alturas public school building, as described therein, which the said A. E. Pearson, by said contract has agreed to do and perform, and shall in all respects fully carry out and perform his part of said contract, *612 as therein stipulated, then the above obligation shall be void; otherwise to remain in full force and effect. ’ ’

It is not disputed that the materials and the labor to recover the value of which is the ultimate object of this action were furnished by the plaintiff and its assignors to Pearson, the contractor, and used in and upon the construction of the building.

The defendants demurred to the complaint for want of sufficient facts, and the same was overruled. Thus, and by an attack upon the finding involving a construction of the undertaking and its scope and effect, the first point urged against the legality of the judgment is presented, viz: That the plaintiff failed to state or establish a cause of action against the sureties named as defendants herein for the reason, so it is asserted, that the bond upon its face shows that it was given to the school district and not to materialmen, mechanics, and laborers furnishing materials and labor to the contractor, and that the sole purpose of the bond was, therefore, to bind the contractor to carry out and perform the terms of the building contract made by him with said district and to furnish at his own expense the labor and material necessary to complete the building according to the contract and plans and specifications. In other words, it is the contention that the bond was not intended to bind the contractor to pay for the materials and labor used in and upon the building, and that, therefore, with the completion of the structure by the contractor conformably to the terms of the contract and the plans, drawings, and specifications terminated the liability of the sureties, notwithstanding that some of the materials and labor used and employed in the construction of the building might not have been paid for by the contractor. Hence, it is argued that the trial court erred in overruling the demurrer and in its interpretation of the undertaking.

It is elementary that “sureties are never bound beyond the strict letter of their contract; that they have the right to stand upon the precise terms of their agreement, and that there is no authority for extending their liability beyond the stipulation to which they have chosen to bind themselves.” (Callan v. Empire State Surety Co., 20 Cal. App. 483, 485, [129 Pac. 978, 981].) But it is also elementary that a bond given to guarantee the execution of a contract according to its terms becomes a part of such contract, and to that eon- *613 tract the sureties become parties the same as though they had actually made and executed the contract itself. ■ Therefore, in interpreting the language of the undertaking for the purpose of gathering its scope or the measure of the liability of the sureties, we must do so by treating or viewing the contract and the undertaking as a whole or as constituting an indivisible contract. In other words, we must, in order to ascertain the nature and extent of the liability to which the sureties have bound themselves, examine the undertaking by the light of the agreement of whose terms it guarantees the faithful performance.

Thus construing the undertaking in the present case, it seems to us that there is no escape from the conclusion that the same was not given for the sole benefit of the school district, as is the contention of the appealing defendants, but that it was intended to inure as well to the benefit of third parties providing materials and furnishing labor to be used in the construction of the building.

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Bluebook (online)
153 P. 743, 28 Cal. App. 609, 1915 Cal. App. LEXIS 398, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-p-fuller-co-v-alturas-school-district-calctapp-1915.