(аfter stating the facts as above). The record is full of informalities. No effective notice of the proceedings was ever given to the contractor. We might well dispose of the appeal for this or similar reasons; but the underlying merits of the matter have been so fully presented and argued by counsel for the parties
Mechanic’s liеn statutes evidence a general recognition of the thought that those who contribute the labor and material going into a structure should have a claim against it for what they have furnished in preference to other creditors of the builder, though the equitable distinction, between those materialmen who are unpaid to-day and the banker who furnished the money which was usеd to pay those who furnished material yesterday, seems rather arbitrary. It is commonly held that this lien or priority is wholly statutory, and we are not aware of any case (unless those hereafter discussed) where, without the aid of any contract or statute, this vague equity of materialmen and laborers has been thought sufficient to put the owner of the property under obligatiоn to see that they were paid before he settled with the contractor.
It seems, however, that the desire to see this class of claims given some preference was sufficient, so that the United States had some-works that it should have the right to withhold payments in case the times thought proper to provide expressly in a contract for public
It is not necessary to consider which of these views would seem the better one, if the question were open. We think it has been foreclosed by the decision of the Supreme Court in Henningsen v. U. S.,
If this is the true principle of the decision, it may not be clear what the rights of the parties would be in the various situations that might arise, e. g., as between a surety who had performed the contract and claimants of this class unpaid when the surety took it over, or as between a surety who had paid claims of this сlass to the limit of his bond and the unpaid remainder of the same class; but those questions can be met when they arise. The same result was reached in Re McGarry (C. C. A. 7)
In reaching the conclusion to which the Henningsen Case leads us —that the statute leaves unimpaired an existing obligation by the United States to рrotect such claimants—we get no help from the fact that the bond which is executed runs to the United States as the nominal obligee. The provisions of the act of 1894 as to bringing suits
“9. The contractor shall be responsible for and pay all liabilities incurred in the prosecution of the work for labor and materialand
“12. Payments shall be made to the contractor as prescribed in paragraph 20 of the specifications hereto attached and forming part of this agreement.”
The introductory part of the contract says that it is “in conformity with the advertisement and specifications hereto attached which form a part of this contract.” In the copies filed as exhibits with the bill, the advertisement and specifications were not included. Appellant produced at the hearing a copy of such advertisement and specifications, certified by the War Department, and asked that it also be in-' eluded in the record. We do not clearly see how wе can thus bring in a paper which was never presented to the court below, but, as its authenticity does not seem to be questioned, and in order that we might not overlook something inconsistent with the result which we have reached, we have examined this additional paper. We find nothing in it which, as it seems to us, could be thought to bear on the question, save the part which is copied in the margin.
The Hermingsen Case was decided under the statute of 1894, and substantial changes were made in 1905, but they <lo not affect the principle of that case. The chief change is tо give, the United States priority in the full satisfaction of all its claims under the bond, for completion of the contract or for delay, before the labor and material claimants get their protection. This indicates a less tender care for the interests of such claimants, but we do not see that it affects the question of the underlying obligation of the government to give this protection, in so far as it can be given consistently with the government’s priority.
We therefore conclude that the labor and material claimants are entitled to priority in the distribution of the fund in the receiver’s bands, as against other creditors. Our order will be that the decree be reversed, with costs, and that the case he remanded, in order that the claimants may recast their pleadings, so as to he in form either an intervention in the receivership case, or an independent bill expressly ancillary to that case, as they may be advised, and that thereafter further proceedings be had in accordance with this opinion.
Notes
“20. Payments. When funds are available, payments will be made monthly on estimates of work accepted. Ten per cent, will be reserved from each payment until the amount so reserved shall equal $75,000. Upon completion and acceptance of the entire work, all reserved payments will be paid to the contractor. Should payments be discontinued for a period of one year, owing to a lack of funds, one-half of the reserved percentagе will be paid to the contractor, it being understood that such payment shall in no manner release the contractor from his obligations under this contract, and that the contract and the accompanying bond shall remain in full force and effect the same as if such reserved percentage had not been paid. When work is resumed, 10 per cent, will be deducted from each monthly payment as before until the total amount reserved again equals $75,000.”
