A subсontractor for electrical work (Wolfe) on a Cambridge apartment house owned by Frederick and Thomas Dupree (the owners) seeks, in an action at law, to recover from the general contractor (Baltimore) for amounts due under the subcontract and for extras and, by a bill in equity, to reach and apply a bond given by The Aetna Casualty and Surety Company (Aetna). The law action and the bill in equity were consolidated for trial and, after
The trial judge made somewhat summary findings which he later adopted as a report of material facts. Baltimore and Aetna appealed from the order of fusion and from what appears to be only an order including a form of final decree (a) awarding Wolfe $39,576.23 plus interest and costs, and (b) stating that, if Baltimore does not pay Wolfe in full, then Wolfe may resort to Aetna’s bond for payment. The evidence is reported. The parties have treated the order as embodying a final decree. We do so also, although appropriately a final decree should have been prepared by counsel and entered on the docket by the clerk. Rule 82 of the Superior Court (1954). Seе Bressler v. Averbuck,
The action at law was commenced in the Superior Court for Suffolk County against Baltimore by writ dated December 6, 1965. It sought recovery of $39,576.23 alleged to be due under the subcontract. Baltimore’s answer included (in addition to a general denial) an allegation of breaches of the subcontract by Wolfe, references to certain terms of the subcontract (see fn. 7 and related text of this opinion), and averments that the owners had not made final payment to Baltimore and that a dispute had arisen between Baltimore and the owners concerning Wolfe’s work.
On February 13, 1967, Wolfe, in the action at law, by special precept purported to attach funds to the value of $44,000 owed to Baltimore by the owners both of whom were alleged to be of Cambridge (which is in Middlesex County). Baltimore filed a motion to dismiss the spеcial precept on the ground that neither owner, served as trustee, dwelt or had a place of business in Suffolk County. See G. L. c. 246, § 2; Daniels v. Clarke,
On April 14, 1967, Wolfe filed against Baltimore and
The bond, entitled “Bond to Dissolve Trustee Attachment,” bears the file number of the equity suit. It recites the service of the special precept and that Baltimore, by giving bond, desires to "dissolve Ethel trustee attachment."
The trial judge found (a) that Wolfe had “fully . . . performed all . . . services and furnished all . . . labor and materials . . . [[under] its subcontract” and that Baltimore owes Wоlfe $9,348.70 on the subcontract; (b) that for change orders and extras, Baltimore owes Wolfe $30,227.53; (c) that Wolfe had paid the owners $500 and received a release from them on account of “minor and unintentional deviations” in Wolfe’s performance; (d) that Wolfe is entitled to interest on the sums and from the dates listed in the margin;
Baltimore and Aetna defend on two principal grounds: (a) that the evidence does not justify the finding that Baltimore was under liability to Wolfe, because (in effect) Wolfe did not produce evidence that the owners ever paid Baltimore amounts due to Baltimore for the several classes of work
1. Article II (a) of the subcontract provides that payment will be made on monthly requisitions for progress payments “within 10 days after . . . [the owners’] payment of such monthly progress payments . . . [has] been received by” Baltimore.
We interpret art. II (a) merely as setting the time of payment and not as creating a condition precedent to payment. In the absence of a clear provision that payment to the subcontractor is to be directly contingent upon the recеipt by
Although no Massachusetts case directly controls the present situation, our decisions, in somewhat comparable situations, generally support our interpretation. See E. Van Noorden Co. v. Hartford Roofing & Sheet Metal Co. Inc.
The trial judge (see fn. 5) found that Wolfe was entitled to $18,353.48, thе balance due on monthly requisitions, on October 26, 1965, the date when Wolfe demanded final payment. There was evidence of monthly requisitions (including requisitions for extra work) in June, July, and August, 1965, still remaining unpaid, in an amount in excess of $18,353.48. The principal (if not the only) definitive statement of a claim by the owners that any of Wolfe’s work was not properly done appeared in a letter from Baltimore to Wolfe dated February 25, 1966. This letter referred to Baltimore’s disputes with the owners (and the pending arbitration of them) apparently as delaying release of final payments. Disputes involving Wolfe’s work represented only a minor portion
2. The trial judge found that $17,751.75 was due on January 24, 1966 (ninety days after Wolfe’s demand for
This was a reasonable application of what appears to be the intention of the rider provision. The provision clearly avoids the unfair result of having final payment tо Wolfe delayed by any dispute between Baltimore and the owners not involving Wolfe’s work. It does not expressly cover, however, a situation like that before us, where $21,222.75 is owed to Wolfe of which only $3,471 is in dispute. In the absence of explicit language requiring us to dp so, we do not interpret the provision as calling for unnecessary withholding of funds, which a subcontractor fairly has earned, merely because a minor рortion of its work is the subject of a dispute (even if the matter is not de minimis as in Chas. T. Main, Inc. v. Massachusetts Turnpike Authy.
3. The trial judge found the amount in dispute ($3,471, fn. 9) was not payable until November 18, 1966, thirty days following the owners’ release of the five claim items. This
4. Baltimore gave Wolfe written orders for extra work. Some contained stated prices. Others called for payment on a time and materials basis, essentially a fixed price. See James B. Rendle Co. v. Conley & Daggett, Inc.
Baltimore’s contention appears to rest on art. Ill of the subcontract, pertinent portions of which are set out in the margin.
5. The defendants further contend that there were submitted to arbitration two claims (X135 and X138) involving amounts for extra work done by Wolfe in addition to the five items mentioned by Baltimore in its letter (fn. 9) to Wоlfe of February 25, 1966. In what appears to have been an effort to show that these two claims were the subject of arbitration, Baltimore offered in evidence, and the trial judge excluded, a copy of the arbitration award. Evidence concerning the award did not show with any clarity that Wolfe’s work was involved in the two disputed items, a circumstance which (in view of what has been said in part 4 of this opinion) was nоt relevant in any event. The award itself reflects Wolfe’s settlement of the five items mentioned in the letter of February 25, 1966 (fn. 9), but does not discuss the two additional items (X135 and X138) in detail or show that Wolfe’s work was involved in the dispute about them. Wolfe was not a party to the arbitration. In the circumstances, the trial judge in his discretion properly excluded the award.
6. Baltimore and Aetna (apart from the issue whether Wolfe may proceed against Aetna’s bond) show no prejudice arising from the order by which the law action and the equity proceeding, consolidated before trial, were (in the judge’s order for a decree) "fused into a single proceeding.” See Lumiansky v. Tessier,
The defendants, however, assert that the fusion caused prejudice with respect to the bond, originally prepared to dissolve the purported attachment pursuant to the special precept. The special precept was improper because the law action was in Suffolk County and the persons named in the precept as trustees had no residence or place of business there. This was a matter of venue as to which a motion to dismiss the special precept lay. Brown v. Webber,
Wolfe does not show, however, that the bond was ever filed in the law action to dissolve the attachment, or that it ever was delivеred to Wolfe. It was apparently brought into court in the equity proceeding only as the result of an interlocutory decree, “restraining Baltimore . . . from cancelling . . . [(the] bond other than by order of [(c]curt.” This filing of the bond did not seem to be a compliance with the provisions of G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 223, §§ 120, 123. In Smith v. Meegan,
It may be that the bond will prove to be wholly unimportant. At the arguments counsel indicated that this was likely. Accordingly, at this stage of the proceedings, we do not decide, upon an inadequate record, the issues concerning the bond.
7. Other points are not sufficiently argued in the briefs to require discussion.
8. The final decree is to be modified by striking out paragraph 2 and inserting in place thereof: “2. In the event that the defendant Baltimore Contractors, Inc. does not pay the amounts mentioned in paragraph 1 of this decree to the plaintiff within thirty days after entry of a final decree (or a final decree after rescript from the Supreme Judicial Court) then the plaintiff may apply [in the Superior Court] for reopening of the- hearings concerning the bond executed by The Aetna Casualty and Surety Company and the circumstances in which it was given and delivered. If, however, Baltimore Contractors, Inc. within thirty days after such decree shall pay the indebtedness mentioned in paragraph 1, the bill shall be dismissed as against The Aetna Casualty and Surety Company.” As so modified the final decree is affirmed. Wolfe is to have costs of appeal.
So ordered.
Notes
Baltimore states that the motion to dismiss was marked for hearing but was allowed to go off the list when Wolfe filed its bill to reach and apply. The motion to dismiss has not been decided.
The bill also named as defendants certain other persons alleged to have owed sums to Baltimore. Against these defendants the bill was dismissed.
The bond states as the condition, “that if . . . Baltimore . . . shall, within thirty days after final judgment in . . . [the] action [at law], pay to the party claiming the same . . . $44,000 ... or so much of said sum as may be necessary to satisfy any amount for which said attachment may be found to be subject, then this obligation shall be void, otherwise it shall be . . . in full force.”
The interest computation was based on the following findings, viz. Wolfe was entitled to receive with interest (a) on monthly requisitions, a balance of $18,353.48 due under the subcontract on October 26, 1965; (b) on account of ten per cent retention, $17,751.75, due on January 24, 1966; and (c) on work in which there was a dispute between Baltimore and the owners, $3,471, due on November 18, 1966.
Four principаl types of payment are involved in Wolfe’s claims (see fn. 5), as follows: (a) unpaid monthly progress payments; (b) the final payment (from retained funds) due for undisputed work; (c) the final payment due to Wolfe on disputed work; and (d) the amount owed for extra work, which the trial judge, in most respects, dealt with in connection with his discussion of amounts due under the subcontract itself.
Under art. II (a) payments were to be made (emphasis supplied) “[rQpon presentation by . . . [Wolfe] to . . ._ [Baltimore] of monthly requisitions . . . and, upon approval of such requisitions by . . . [Baltimore] and . . . [the owners] and within 10 days after . . . {the owners’2 payment of such monthly progress payments . . . [has] been received by . . . [Baltimore]. Such progress payments will be made to . . [Wolfe] of eighty-five per cent ... of the approved amount of the requisition; any dispute regarding the approved amount of the requisition to be resolvеd by . . . [the owners]. The balance of the contract price shall be paid . . . within thirty . . . days after full and final payment for the work by . . . [the owners] to . . . [Baltimore]. . . . [Baltimore] shall be free to make payments to . . . [Wolfe] on account of the subcontract price, in such additional amounts and at such other times as . . . [Baltimore] may elect . . ..”
Other authorities dealing with somewhat comparable problems are consistеnt. See Nunez v. Dautel,
The letter listed five claims by the owners (nos. 31, 64, 67, 68, 73) of a total amount of $3,471 for alleged deficiencies involving work by Wolfe. All of these (except no. 68 for $300) were released by the owners by releases dated October 18, 1966, running both to Wolfe and to Baltimore. For claim no. 68 the owners released Wolfе. These releases were given in consideration of a payment of $500 by Wolfe to the owners, as the trial judge found.
The rider provided, among other things, that progress payments were to be ninety per cent instead of eighty-five per cent.
“ . . . [Baltimore] may at any time . . . require any changes in the work (including extras ...)... but no change shall be made by . . . [Wolfe] except upon the written order and receipt of a duly authorized [c]hange [o]rder from . . . [Baltimore]. . . . Unless the parties otherwise agree in writing, these requisite allowances shall be made in the subcontract prices as follows: (a) [a]ny applicable unit prices . . . shall govern without limitation; (b) [•£]/ there are no applicable unit prices the sum to be paid for extras shall be no more basically than the actual amount received . . . for such extra by . . . [Baltimore] from . . . [the owners]. ... In no event shall . . . [Wolfe] be entitled to receive any additional compensation for making any change or extras unless . . . [it] shall malee claim therefor in writing within forty-eight . . . hours after . . . [it] receives the written order to make such change from . . . [Baltimore], . . . [Wolfe] shall not in any instance have any greater right against . . . [Baltimore] for extra work . . . than . . . [Baltimore] shall have against. . . [the owners]. ... If the parties hereto fail to agree on value of additions . . . [Wolfe] shall. . . proceed diligently with the work as changed leaving prices for future determination under the contract documents” (emphasis supplied).
