ALASKA STATE BANK, Appellant, v. GENERAL INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA, Appellees. GENERAL INSURANCE CO. OF AMERICA, Cross-Appellant, v. ALASKA STATE BANK, Cross-Appellee.
Nos. 2638, 2713.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
Feb. 10, 1978.
As Amended on Grant of Rehearing June 16, 1978.
576 P.2d 1362
John Anthony Smith, Anchorage, for appellee-cross-appellant.
OPINION
Before BOOCHEVER, C. J., and RABINOWITZ, CONNOR, ERWIN and BURKE, JJ.
BURKE, Justice.
The dispute in this case centers on whether a bonding company‘s interest in earned progress payments qualifies as a security interest subject to the filing and priority provisions of the Alaska Uniform Commercial Code.1
The events leading to this controversy began when Gilman‘s Construction, Inc., formerly Gilman‘s Excavating, Inc., contracted with the State of Alaska to construct Project No. F-046-1(16) and LSF-046-1(4), commonly known as the Tok Cut
The agreement contained a provision for perfection by the bonding company, under the Uniform Commercial Code, of the alleged security interest granted to it by Gilman‘s.
[The parties] [a]gree that this agreement may at any time be completed and filed by [the bonding company] in such a manner that it will qualify as a financing statement under the applicable provisions of any statute of any state which has adopted the Uniform Commercial Code, and that [the bonding company] may add such schedules to this agreement, describing specific items of security covered hereunder as shall be necessary under such statutes.
The bonding company, however, chose not to file the agreement or any other document as a financing statement.2 Subsequently, the bank, in financing Gilman‘s operations, acquired security for its loans by inducing Gilman‘s to execute on July 23, 1970 a security agreement assigning to the bank, inter alia, all of Gilman‘s contract rights. The bank attempted to perfect this security interest by filing a financing statement on August 5, 1970 with the Alaska Department of Administration, as required by the Uniform Commercial Code.
In mid-September the State was informed by telegram and letter from the bonding company and Gilman, respectively, that Gilman‘s was in default; had suspended work on the project; was unable to complete the contract with the State; and was unable to pay its laborers, materialmen and suppliers. The State was further informed that the bonding company was completing the project. Nine days later, on September 29, the State issued a check in the amount of $169,895.00 payable to the bonding company. The check was sent to the bank where it was deposited in the trust account without signature and collected. On October 11, 1971, a cashier‘s check in the amount of $169,895.00 was sent by the bank to the bonding company. When subsequent investigation revealed that the bonding company had failed to perfect its alleged security interest in the earned progress payment, the bank commenced this action.
The respective positions of the parties can be summarized as follows:
The bonding company argues that when a contractor defaults and a bonding company steps in to complete the job and pay laborers and materialmen, it is subrogated to the rights of the owner, the contractor, the laborers, and the materialmen. Since the owner could have used funds still in its hands to complete the job, there would have been no sums available for the contractor and, therefore, for the contractor‘s secured creditor who stands in the contractor‘s shoes. Under this view the bonding company has first rights to the progress payment, although it may have been fully earned by the contractor‘s prior performance.
The bank argues that progress payments are contract rights and that the bonding company‘s subrogation theory merely purports to impose on them a hidden lien. The bank urges that both it and the bonding company had the power to take advantage of Article 9 of the Uniform Commercial Code and perfect their respective security interests. Under this view, the bank had prior rights since it utilized the U.C.C. while the bonding company did not.
Judge Eben Lewis, in a Memorandum Decision handed down on February 10, 1975, accepted the bonding company‘s view. He utilized as his standard the Fifth Circuit Doctrine which holds that only when the bank‘s money can be shown to have gone into a project to earn an undisbursed progress payment does the bank have a superior equitable claim since it relieved the bonding company of a burden that it would otherwise have had to bear.
Judgment was entered for the bonding company on cross motions for summary judgment when Judge Lewis found that the bank had failed to establish that its money was traceable to the Tok Cutoff job.
The first major issue that confronts this court is whether the lower court erred in finding that the unperfected assignment by Gilman‘s to its bonding company, of earned progress payments, was a security interest governed by the Uniform Commercial Code, as adopted in Alaska.
The bank urges the court that this classic dispute between bank and bonding company should be resolved under the Uniform Commercial Code. It cites various cases3 decided by this court in an attempt
Monies due or to become due Contractor on any Contract, including all monies earned or unearned which are unpaid at the time of notification by [the bonding company] to the Obligee of [the bonding company‘s] rights hereunder.
It follows, the bank stresses, that the bonding company has by assignment intended to enter a transaction6 creating an interest in personal property that secures payment or performance of an obligation7 subject to the filing9 and priority10 provisions of the U.C.C. When this position is coupled with the fact that there is no mention of this type of agreement in the U.C.C. provisions excluding certain transactions,11 the Bank proposes that the U.C.C. scheme is applica-
The bonding company counters that the equitable principle of subrogation should control and that the court properly found that a surety‘s right of subrogation is not a security interest governed by the U.C.C.
As one court has stated:
Our effort will be to see what subrogation means in the transaction before us, to see what extent Article 9 [of the U.C.C.] is devised to deal with such a transaction, and to apply relevant case law. Subrogation is an old term, rooted in equity, and semantically stemming from words meaning ‘ask under‘. Today we use the parallel phrase, ‘stand in the shoes of‘. The equitable principle is that when one, pursuant to obligation—not a volunteer, fulfills the duties of another, he is entitled to assert the rights of that other against third persons.12
(1) to a security interest subject to any statute of the United States such as the Ship Mortgage Act, 1920, to the extent that the statute governs the rights of parties to and third parties affected by transactions in particular types of property; or
(2) to a landlord‘s lien;
(3) to a lien given by statute or other rule of law for services or materials except as provided in § 750 of this chapter on priority of the liens;
(4) to a transfer of a claim for wages, salary, or other compensation of an employee;
(5) to an equipment trust covering railway rolling stock;
(6) to a sale of accounts, contract rights, or chattel paper as part of a sale of the business out of which they arose, or an assignment of accounts, contract rights, or chattel paper which is for the purpose of collection only, or a transfer of a contract right to an assignee who is also to do the performance under the contract;
(7) to a transfer of an interest or claim in or under a policy of insurance;
(8) to a right represented by a judgment;
(9) to a right of setoff;
(10) except to the extent that provision is made for fixtures in § 756 of this chapter, to the creation or transfer of an interest in or lien on real estate, including a lease or rents under the interest;
(11) to a transfer in whole or in part of any of the following: a claim arising out of tort; a deposit, savings, passbook, or like account maintained with a bank, savings and loan association, credit union, or like organization; or
(12) to a security interest created by or on behalf of the state or any of its political subdivisions (including but not limited to the unorganized borough or any city or borough of any class, whether home rule or not) or any service area, public enterprise, public corporation, agency or instrumentality of the state or of any of its political subdivisions.
In attempting to address the problem presented we find that the majority of American jurisdictions which have considered the question have accepted the theory of equitable subrogation as the rule in situations such as the one before us.
In National Shawmut Bank of Boston v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co.,13 Anderson Bros., Inc., a general contractor, entered into three construction contracts with the United States Air Force for work at Otis Air Force Base in Massachusetts and Dow Air Force Base in Maine. As required by the Miller Act,14 Anderson Bros., Inc. applied to a surety for payment and performance bonds. Contained in the application for the bonds was an assignment to the surety of earned monies that may be due or become due under the contract. This assignment to the surety was not recorded under the U.C.C.15 The contractor thereafter defaulted.
(1) The Code‘s definition of a security interest as an interest in personal property or fixtures which secures payment or performance of an obligation . . . [and which] includes any interest of a buyer of accounts . . . or contract rights does not seem to fit the construction contract surety. The essence of the security is the opportunity, on default, to finish the job and apply any available funds against its cost of completion. This was held not to fall within the purview of personal property.17
(2) The term surety does not fit into the definition of a buyer of contract rights. The right to finish a job is not the kind of independently valuable asset that such synonyms as goods, documents, instruments, general intangibles [and] chattel paper suggest.18
(3) Section 9-102(2) [
(4) The drafters of the U.C.C. rejected a proposed § 9-312(7) to the Code which would have provided that a security interest which secures an obligation to reimburse a surety . . . secondarily obligated to complete performance is subordinate to the claim of a later lender with a perfected security interest.20
The view that the right of equitable subrogation is not a security interest for the purposes of Article 9 of the U.C.C. has been adopted by the Eighth Circuit Court of Appeals in In Re Gleason Co.21 and by the United States Court of Claims in Home Indemnity Company v. United States.22
We note that one of the basic policies embodied in the Uniform Commercial Code is a desire to make the law of commercial transactions uniform throughout the various jurisdictions.29 To that end we hold that a surety‘s right to earned progress payments does not qualify as an interest in personal property30 subject to the filing provisions of the Alaska Uniform Commercial Code31 since the surety has the right to complete the job it has bonded and apply any earned funds against its costs. This does not secure the payment or performance of an obligation as a security interest as that term is defined in
The bonding company contended in the lower court that a letter executed by the President of the Bank constituted a waiver of the bank‘s right to any earned progress payment. Judge Lewis after hearing testimony on that issue found there had been no waiver. The second major issue presented in this case arises on a cross-appeal and concerns the failure of the lower court to award costs to the bonding company for expenses it incurred in litigating that waiver issue.
The bonding company‘s argument that the court abused its discretion in failing to award it its costs on the waiver issue is without merit.
In DeWitt v. Liberty Leasing Company of Alaska, 499 P.2d 599, 600-01 (Alaska 1972) we held:
Under
AS 09.60.010 and Civil Rule 54(d), the prevailing party is entitled to costs, including an award for attorney‘s fees. The determination of which party prevailed is committed to the discretion of the trial court and is reviewable on appeal only for abuse. (footnotes omitted).
Our opinion in that case quoted Buza v. Columbia Lumber Company, 395 P.2d 511, 514 (Alaska 1964), where we discussed the meaning of the term prevailing party:
The dictionary states that ‘Prevailing applies esp. to that which is predominant,’ and it has been established by case law that the prevailing party to a suit is the
As a secondary argument the bank claims that the bonding company‘s theory of equitable subrogation should be rejected because equity will only intervene where there is no adequate remedy at law. The Massachusetts Supreme Judicial Court answered this argument in Canter v. Schlager, 358 Mass. 789, 267 N.E.2d 492, 494 (1971). In affirming its view that the U.C.C. was inapplicable to a surety‘s right to equitable subrogation, the court stressed Section 1-103 [
Applying the standard of DeWitt,35 it can be seen that the bonding company is the “prevailing party,” and an award of attorney‘s fees was appropriate. However, it does not follow that the superior court abused its discretion by declining to award attorney‘s fees on each of the contested issues comprising the litigation. The superior court ruled against the bonding company on the waiver question, and it is not “manifestly unreasonable”36 that it should take that factor into consideration in determining what overall amount of attorney‘s fees and costs should be awarded to the prevailing party. Such an approach is consistent with the observation we made re-
garding denial of costs to a prevailing party in Cooper v. Carlson, 511 P.2d 1305 (Alaska 1978). There we said:
[W]e do not believe that this is an appropriate case to authorize a denial of all costs to the prevailing party. . . . [T]he trial court should determine whether particular items on the cost bill should be disallowed as unnecessary to the litigation, but should award proper items of costs.37
As a second argument the bonding company asserts that Judge Lewis was in error in awarding only $5,000 for its attorney‘s fees, refusing to calculate the amount of attorney‘s fees according to the schedule contained in Civil Rule 82(a)(1).38 The bonding company urges that Civil Rule 82(a)(1), which provides for a schedule of attorney‘s fees when a money judgment is recovered, should have been applicable since the result in this case had the same practical effect as a money judgment in its favor. We find such argument unpersuasive. The
The determination of attorney‘s fees is committed to the discretion of the trial court and reviewable on appeal only for abuse.39 That abuse, is present only where it appears the trial court‘s determination was manifestly unreasonable,40 arbitrary41 or designed for a purpose other than justly deserved compensation.42 Our review of the record has led us to conclude that the trial judge properly considered those factors43 which are salient to such a decision on attorney‘s fees. Therefore, we find there was no abuse of discretion in the court below.
AFFIRMED.
RABINOWITZ, Justice, with whom CONNOR, Justice, joins, concurring.
I agree with the court‘s holding that the bonding company‘s claim based upon equitable subrogation has priority over the claim of a secured creditor even where the secured creditor has filed under Article Nine of the Uniform Commercial Code, as adopted in Alaska, and the surety has not.1
However, the court‘s opinion formulates the issue before us as whether “the unperfected assignment by Gilman‘s to its bonding company of earned progress payments was a security interest governed by the Uniform Commercial Code, as adopted in Alaska.”2 I think some additional observations are appropriate. In my view it is necessary to distinguish between an equitable subrogation analysis of the issues at bar and an analysis which focuses upon the assignment of monies due or to become due under bonded contracts and upon the priority of such assignments where there has been no filing under Article Nine of the Uniform Commercial Code.
In National Shawmut Bank of Boston v. New Amsterdam Casualty Co., 411 F.2d 843, (1st Cir. 1969), the contractor‘s application for payment and performance bonds contained an express assignment to the surety of “earned monies that may be due or become due under said contract.”3 On default, the surety completed the project. Suit was thereafter instituted by a secured party, the Bank, challenging the surety‘s right to earned but unpaid progress payments. The court held that the doctrine of subrogation had survived passage of Article Nine; therefore, no filing by the surety was necessary in order to protect its priority as against perfected security interests. However, the First Circuit did not address the question whether express assignments should be treated in a different manner than claims based upon subrogation.
If the surety were claiming the balance due under the contract by virtue of the assignment to it in the contractor‘s bond application, it would be fairly arguable that it was claiming a ‘security interest’ in a ‘contract right.’ . . . To perfect a security interest, a financing statement must be filed unless the case is within one of several exceptions. (citations omitted)7
Despite this recognition, the court in Canter did not deal with the problems created where the surety has obtained an express assignment.
The drafters of the Uniform Commercial Code rejected proposed § 9-312(7) which provided that [a] security interest which secures an obligation to reimburse a surety . . . secondarily obligated to complete performance is subordinate to a later lender that perfects its security interest.8 The official comments show the drafters’ con-
In the case at bar, the State of Alaska would have been entitled to apply the earned, undisbursed payments to completion of its project when Gilman‘s failed to perform fully—regardless of the Bank‘s perfected security interest. The bonding company was placed in the position of the state once it had completed performance and had paid all those whom the contractor owed in connection with the job. However, the surety is subrogated only to the extent of reimbursement or indemnification. The Bank stipulated that the cost to the surety of completing the Tok Cut-off project was substantially greater than the contract proceeds. The bonding company apparently incurred a deficit of approximately $700,000. Accordingly, I agree that the bonding company should prevail as to the $169,895.00 of earned, undisbursed progress payments—whether or not a prior filing of the indemnity agreement would have been required in order for the bonding company to prevail against the Bank‘s security interest in the absence of a subrogation claim.
Frederick RICHARDSON, Appellant, v. STATE of Alaska, Appellee. No. 3262. Supreme Court of Alaska. June 16, 1978.
Notes
| ATTORNEY‘S FEES IN AVERAGE CASES | |||
|---|---|---|---|
| Contested | Without Trial | Non-Contested | |
| First $2,000 | 25% | 20% | 15% |
| Next $3,000 | 20% | 15% | 12.5% |
| Next $5,000 | 15% | 12.5% | 10% |
| Over $10,000 | 10% | 7.5% | 5% |
