Austin v. Ransdell

230 S.W. 334 | Mo. Ct. App. | 1921

The School Board of the Gower School District in Clinton County, Missouri, contracted with a firm of contractors, composed of George W. Wright and George G. Wright doing business under the name of George W. Wright Son, for the erection of a high school building. The bond exacted of the contractors by the board was not "conditioned for the payment of material used in such work" as required by section 1040, Revised Statutes 1919.

After erecting the building, Wright Son failed to pay one, Agard, for materials alleged to have been sold *76 to and used by said contractors in the erection of said building. Agard brought suit against the contractors and obtained a judgment for $808.70. Thereafter George W. Wright went into bankruptcy. Whether the other member of the firm is a bankrupt or is solvent does not appear. Nor does it appear whether anything could be realized on said judgment against the bankrupt estate of George W. Wright or whether the son, the other member of the contracting firm, could be made to pay said judgment.

Thereafter Agard, according to plaintiff's claim, assigned said judgment to the plaintiff, and the latter brought this suit against the members of the School Board based on their failure to perform the ministerial duty, required of them by said section 1040, of taking the proper bond.

A failure to perform the duty required by the aforesaid statute renders the members of the board, or at least those failing to perform their duty, liable in damages to one injured thereby. [Burton Machinery Co. v. Ruth, 194 Mo. App. 194; Same v. Same,196 Mo. App. 459.]

In this case, however, there is no evidence, binding upon defendants, as to the amount of materials sold the contractors nor that such materials went into the building. The plaintiff introduced a certified copy of the judgment against Wright Son, but the defendants were not parties to that proceeding and are not bound thereby. [15 R.C.L. 1006; Rigler v. McClure,189 Mo. App. 710, 716; Hoerr v. Meihofer, 79 N.W. 964.] The letter written by Agard stating the amount of his claim and the failure of the president of the school board to deny or dispute the amount thereof, cannot have the effect of rendering the plaintiff's claim an account stated as it would were the correspondence between the original parties to the account.

The defendants herein sustain no relation as sureties or guarantors of the contractors, and their liability arises solely because of their failure to obey the statute whereby *77 a loss occurred to the materialmen in furnishing to the contractor materials used in the construction of the building. Plaintiff's right of recovery and his measure of damages is the actual loss sustained by his assignor for materials furnished the Wrights and used in the construction of the building. [Board of Education v. United States Fidelity, etc., Co., 155 Mo. App. 109, 121; 27 Cyc. 416.]

We think that before these defendants can be held upon the cause of action herein sought to be enforced, the plaintiff should show the material his assignor sold to the contractors and that the same entered into the construction of the building. Again, plaintiff should, before requiring defendants to respond in damages, show affirmatively that recourse against the contractors is unavailing, and this was not done, at least so far as concerns George G. Wright, the son. So far as the record discloses, an execution on the judgment against him would obtain the money. If so, it is hard to see how plaintiff can demand of the individual members of the Board that they pay the bill.

As the case will have to be retried, we note that there is an absence of any showing of authority on the part of Agard'sManager to assign the judgment to plaintiff. Also that this is not a suit on contract but is one based upon a failure or neglect to perform a duty. Hence interest is not allowable. [Jordan v. Chicago, etc., R. Co., 226 S.W. 1023, 1027.] The cause of action does not bring the claim herein demanded within either section 4222 or section 6491, Revised Statutes, 1919, relating to interest.

The judgment is reversed and the cause is remanded for a new trial. All concur. *78