delivered the opinion of the court.
This is an action against the surety on a bond given under the Act of August 13, 1894, c. 280, 28 Stat. 278, as amended by the Act of February 24, 1905, c. 778, 33 Stat. 811. The claim of Brogan, an intervening petitioner, was allowed by the District Court; but the judgment was reversed by the Circuit Court of Appeals and judgment entered against him upon the undisputed facts (228 Fed. Rep. 577). The case comes here on writ of error under § 241 of the Judicial Code.
*260 The facts undisputed or as found by the lower court and accepted by the Court of Appeals were these: The Standard Contracting Company undertook to deepen the chanr nel in a portion of St. Mary’s River, Michigan, located “in a comparative wilderness at some distance from any settlement. There were no hotels or boarding houses” and the contractor “was compelled to provide board and lodging for its laborers.” Groceries and provisions of the value $4,613.87, furnished it by. Brogan, were used by the contractor in its boarding house; and were supplied “in the prosecution of the work provided for in the contract and the bond upon which this suit is based. They were necessary to and wholly consumed in such work.” The number of men employed averaged 80. They were “boarded” partly on the dredges, partly in tents supplied by the contractor; all under an arrangement made with the labor unions — by which the contractor was to board the men. and deduct therefor $22.50 a month from their wages. The contract and the bond executed by the National Surety Company bound the contractor to, “make full payment to all persons supplying him with labor or materials in the prosecution of the work provided for in” the contract.
The supplies furnished by Brogan under these circumstances were clearly used in the prosecution of the work, just as supplies furnished for the soldiers’ mess are used in the prosecution of war. In each case the relation of food to the work in hand is proximate. But the surety contends that the words “in the prosecution of” the work are not used in the bond and. the act in their natural sense, but should be given a conventional meaning so as to exclude labor and materials which contribute to construction only indirectly, as do the supplies consumed by a contractor in operating his plant. In support of thi§ position, attention is called to the fact that while the Act of 1894 provided that the bond should have “the additional
*261
obligations that such contractor or contractors shall promptly make payments to all persons supplying him or them labor and materials in the prosecution of the work;” and that suit might be brought and recovery had upon this bond by any person who had supplied “labor or materials for the prosecution of such work”; the Act of 1905 specified that recovery could be had by the persons who had “furnished labor or materials
used
in the construction or repair” of the work. But the change in phraseology is not significant. The purpose of the amendment was merely to secure to the United States preference over others in the satisfaction of its claim against the conr tractor.
Illinois Surety Co.,
v.
Peeler,
This court has repeatedly refused to limit the application of the act to labor and materials directly incorporated into the public work. Thus in
Title Guaranty & Trust Co.
v.
Crane Co.,
The Circuit Court of Appeals deemed immaterial the special circumstances under which the supplies were furnished and the findings of fact by the trial court that they were necessary to and wholly consumed in the prosecution of the work provided for in the'contract and bond. In our opinion these facts are not only material, but decisive. They establish the conditions essential to liability on the bond. The bare fact that the supplies were furnished to the contractor and were, consumed by workmen in its employ would have been immaterial. A boarding house might be conducted by the contractor (like some company stores concerning which States have legislated,
Keokee Coke Co.
v.
Taylor,
Reversed.
