Zipkin v. Investors Syndicate

152 F.2d 678, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 302, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2339
CourtCourt of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit
DecidedDecember 24, 1945
DocketNo. 8960
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 152 F.2d 678 (Zipkin v. Investors Syndicate) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Zipkin v. Investors Syndicate, 152 F.2d 678, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 302, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2339 (D.C. Cir. 1945).

Opinion

PRETTYMAN, Associate Justice.

Appellee Investors Syndicate was plaintiff in an action for damages for breach of two bonds. Appellants were sureties on the bonds. Trial was had before a jury. The verdict and judgment were for the plaintiff. Defendants appealed.

The Harland Corporation, a building concern, entered upon the construction of certain houses. Investors Syndicate engaged to lend The Harland Corporation monies, at interest, for use in the project. The Harland Corporation gave to Investors Syndicate first deeds of trust on the real estate to secure the loans. It also executed two bonds in favor of Investors Syndicate. Appellants were sureties on these bonds. The obligations of the bonds were identical and as follows:

“Now, Therefore, the condition of this obligation is such, that if the said above bounden, The Harland Corporation, as Principal, and Harry A. Harris, David B. Smith, Cecelia Smith, Max Zipkin, and Eva Zipkin, jointly and severally, as Sureties, or either or any of them, their respective heirs, executors, administrators, successors or assigns, shall within five (5) days after notice thereof, at their cost and expense cause the said land and premises and improvements to be forever released and discharged from any and all and every lien and claim which may be presented or filed, at any time within six (6) months after the final completion of said improvements, by any person or persons or body corporate, for any work, labor, or service done, or material or any other thing supplied or furnished in connection with the construction or erection of said dwellings, and further shall complete the same in accordance with said plans and specifications, (or as the same may be modified in the manner aforesaid), within four (4) months after the date hereof, then this obligation to be null and void, otherwise to remain in full force and virtue in law.”

The first bond was dated August 4, 1937, and the second September 2, 1937. Four months from the first date was December 4, 1937, and four months from the second date was January 2, 1938. The houses were not completed by January 2, 1938. Beginning March 16, 1938, and from time to time until June 6, 1938, mechanics’ liens were filed against the houses. On May 19, 1938, upon petition of creditors, a receiver for the property of The Harland Corporation was appointed by the Circuit Court of the County of Arlington, Virginia, where the property was located. Notice of the liens was given appellants on May 27, 1938. The liens were not removed within five days thereafter. Under order of the court the receiver secured bids for the completion of the houses, completed them and sold them. Investors Syndicate claimed that it suffered a loss by reason of the breach of the bonds and, for that reason, filed its complaint against appellants as sureties on the bonds.

The court instructed the jury that if it found that the plaintiff had suffered a loss of any part of the principal of, or interest on, the loans it made to The Harland Corporation, and that such loss, if any, was caused directly by the failure to complete the dwellings within four months from September 2, 1937, they should award the plaintiff as damages the amount of such loss, if any; and, similarly, that if they found that the plaintiff had suffered a loss of principal or interest as the direct result of the defendants’ failure to discharge the liens within five days after notice, they would award plaintiff as damages the amount of such loss. The court made [680]*680these instructions clear by repeating them, at one point saying:

“When I said directly caused, I meant directly caused, and I assume that you understood that. If you conclude that any part of the plaintiff’s alleged loss was directly caused by some other thing or event, then the loss could not have been directly caused by a breach of the bond in these two particulars, and in the latter event the plaintiff may not recover from the defendant for any loss except those, if any, which were directly caused by a breach of the bond.”

The court withdrew from the jury the question as to whether the receivership proceedings prevented the defendants from completing the construction of the houses. It declined to instruct the jury concerning a waiver alleged by defendants. It also declined to instruct the jury that as a matter of law, the interest on the loans ceased at the date of the sale of the houses by the receiver, or that, unless a jury found that the first trusts had been released by deeds of release, the verdict must be for the defendants.

The gist of the action was the loss caused by the delay in the completion of the houses and in the removal of the liens. The bonds recited that Investors Syndicate was apprehensive that delay in completion might occur and that liens might be filed. Delay, either of completion or of removal of the liens, was an obvious potential cause of loss to the lender of the money. Protection against such loss was the objective of the bonds. Appellants do not deny that the houses were not completed by December 4, 1937, or January 2, 1938, the dates which were, respectively, four months from the dates of the bonds; or that the mechanics’ liens were not removed within five days after the notice of May 27, 1938. Their defenses are by way of denial of liability for the breach.

Appellants contend that Investors Syndicate had valid first trusts upon the property and, therefore, could suffer no damage from the breach of the bonds. Investors Syndicate presented the testimony of the receiver and of its attorney in the transaction, who said that the property was sold by the receiver by order of the court free and clear of any lien whatsoever. It fortified this testimony with references to a court order directing the receiver to complete the houses with money secured by a first lien upon them. Appellants presented no contrary evidence, but rely upon the failure of appellee to prove that the deeds of trust have been released by formal deed of release or to present any order of the Virginia court directing the sales. The receiver’s testimony as to the nature of the sales made by him was competent, and there was no contrary evidence. Appellee explained the absence of a formal deed of release by presenting the opinion of counsel that such a deed was unnecessary in view of the order of the Virginia court. The trial court clearly instructed the jury that they must determine whether there was a loss, and such evidence as the parties cared to present concerning the first trusts was before the jury as bearing upon the fact of loss. In the light of the evidence presented by appellee, it was incumbent upon appellants to present such contrary evidence as there might be, and thereafter the matter was for the jury.

Appellants contend that Investors Syndicate waived the breach as to the completion of the houses by continuing to make payments to the contractor after the expiration of the specified four-months periods. The court held that mere payment to the contractor did not constitute waiver and that, therefore, there was no evidence of waiver. We agree with the trial court that where a bond unequivocally requires completion of a project within a specified period, mere payment thereafter to the contractor, with nothing more, could not constitute a waiver of a breach of the bonds. If it were shown that such payments increased rather than reduced the loss, they might be material upon the question of damages. It was not so shown in this case. In their brief in this court, appellants couple their contentions on this point with an assertion that notice of failure to complete was required by the terms of the bonds.

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Bluebook (online)
152 F.2d 678, 80 U.S. App. D.C. 302, 1945 U.S. App. LEXIS 2339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/zipkin-v-investors-syndicate-cadc-1945.