137 So. 36 | Ala. | 1931
The appellant was permitted to intervene along with the Roquemore Gravel Company, in a suit filed by the Andalusia Manufacturing Company against R. S. Taylor, the contractor, and United States Fidelity Guaranty Company, the surety on his bond given in pursuance of the provisions of section 28, subdivision (a), of the Act approved August 23, 1927, Acts of 1927, p. 356, known as "the Alabama Highway Code," for the faithful and prompt performance of the contract and all conditions and requirements thereof, in respect to project No. S-273, for the building of 3.30 miles of paved road in Covington county, and obligating the principal and surety to "promptly make payment to all persons supplying him or them with labor, material, feedstuffs, or supplies, in the execution of the work provided for in such contract."
The trial resulted in a judgment in favor of the plaintiff, and the intervener Roquemore Gravel Company, and against the appellant, for the reason, as the judgment recites, that appellant's claim "is not a proper charge against the bond."
From the judgment against it, appellant on April 16, 1930, appealed. Thereafter the surety company, appellee in this case, on June 20, 1930, appealed from the judgment against it in favor of the Roquemore Gravel Company.
The suggestion in brief that this appeal should be dismissed, because the appellant did not join in the appeal taken by the surety company, is without merit for two reasons: (1) The appeal in this case was first in order, and no duty rested upon the appellant here to abandon its appeal and join in the later appeal; and (2) the case was submitted on the merits without motion to dismiss, and, if any irregularity intervened, it was waived. Robinson v. Murphy,
The suggestion that the transcript filed on this appeal should be stricken is also without merit. The transcript was substituted for the original by written agreement of the parties before the submission of the case.
The claim of the appellant in part is for freight incurred in carrying sand and gravel supplied by the Roquemore Gravel Company, consigned to the contractor, R. S. Taylor, and on cement shipped by the state highway department to said contractor, all of said materials being shipped for use by the contractor in the performance of the contract. And in part for demurrage on cars used in the shipment of said materials which the contractor failed or neglected to unload within the free time allowed for unloading by the established traffic regulations and the "average contract" in respect thereto, entered into by the carrier and the contractor, and as authorized by such regulations.
The evidence shows that said materials were received and receipted for by the contractor; that the freight and demurrage charges were made in the usual course, and at the authorized rate, and have not been paid.
The question of controlling importance, and the one ground on which the trial court apparently denied the appellant's claim, arises on the contention of appellees that the claim is not for "labor or material," and therefore is not within the purview of the statute and the obligation of the bond. On this question the decisions are not in agreement.
As has been stated in several of our cases. the Alabama statute is in the main the same as the federal law, and we have treated the federal decisions as highly pursuasive, if not controlling, in the construction of our statute. United States Fidelity Guaranty Co. v. Benson Hardware Co.,
The reasoning of the cases holding nonliability is clearly stated in Mandel et al. v. United States, to Use of Wharton
N. R. Co. *460
et al.,
The following cases are to the same effect: American Surety Company v. Lawrenceville (C. C.) 110 F. 717-721; Wisconsin Brick Company v. National Surety Company,
In Franzen v. Southern Surety Company,
And in United States Fidelity Guaranty Co. v. Benson Hardware Co., supra, "A bond under the federal act also includes work done at the quarry, fifty miles away, and the labor of men who stripped the earth to get to the stone, and carpenters and blacksmiths who repaired the cars in which the stone was carried to the dock for shipment, and of stablemen who fed and drove the horses which moved the cars, United States Fid. Guar. Co. v. U.S.,
This court has held that claims for hauling material and transporting workmen by ferryboats are covered by the bond. Union Ind. Co. v. State, for Use of McQueen Smith Farming Co.,
In the City of Stuart, for Use and Benefit of Florida East Coast Ry. Co. v. American Surety Co. of New York,
"The precise point here presented has not been ruled on by the Florida Supreme Court, but that court recognizes that the Florida statute is an adoption of the statute of the *461
United States on the subject, 40 U.S. Code, § 270 (40 USCA § 270), and that the authoritative construction of the latter prior to the enactment of the former was adopted with the statute, and that federal rulings since are highly persuasive as to the meaning of the Florida statute. Kidd v. Jacksonville,
"Besides the narrow meaning given the word 'labor,' the main reasons advanced for the holding are that the common carrier has a lien, and does not need protection by a bond, and that on delivering the goods without payment he destroys the lien, and prejudices the surety in his right of subrogation. As to the first reason, we find in the statute no reference to liens. Protection is expressly extended to all persons who furnish the named things, whether under lien or not, whether individual or corporation, rich or poor, supplying in person or through agents and representatives. As to the last see Fulghum v. Florida,
"The decisions of the Supreme Court reject the theory of strict construction, and adopt that of liberal construction in the allowance of claims above alluded to. Illinois Surety Co. v. John Davis Co.,
"The entire subject is well analyzed, and the authorities reviewed, in the very recent case of State of Delaware v. Aetna Casualty Surety Co. (Del. Sup.) 145 A. 172. The claim that the surety is unjustly prejudiced by the surrendering of the carrier's lien is there fully examined and exploded. Additionally it may be remarked that the carrier's lien could not be of advantage to the surety by way of subrogation. If by payment he can be subrogated, he could enforce it only against the materials transported, thus keeping them out of the job. Yet the first and most important obligation of the bond is that the material shall be furnished, and the work done, according to the contract. If the materials whose transportation is not paid for are sold, either by the carrier or the surety, in order to satisfy the charges on them, the surety would still be bound to see that they were replaced by other material whose transportation would again have to be paid for. The broad obligation, assumed in the bond, that the contract shall be completed, results in all liens for labor and material being practically unimportant to the surety, except to see that they do not prevent the execution of the work." *462
A like result was reached in State of Delaware v. Aetna Casualty Surety Co. (Del. Sup.) 145 A. 172. The court in that case, answering the argument that the carrier is protected by its common-law lien, observed:
"The argument that it would be inequitable to allow a carrier to surrender the lien and collect from the surety does not appeal to us. What is a carrier's lien? It is simply the right to hold the consignee's cargo until payment is made for the work of transporting it. In simple terms it is the right to withhold the enjoyment by another of the fruits of work done in his behalf until he pays therefor. The carrier is authorized by the law of liens to say in substance what an ordinary laborer or vendor of goods is in position to say, viz., pay me for my labor in advance or for my goods before delivery, otherwise you shall not enjoy the benefits of the one or possess the other. The carrier, notwithstanding the cargo is the consignee's, can similarly say — before I complete the labor of transportation by delivery to you, pay me for my work. That is all the lien is. It does not follow the goods when delivered, nor can the consignee be compelled to pay until they are delivered. Now what reason can there be in holding that a laborer or a materialman may deliver his labor or materials on credit and go against the surety in case of nonpayment, but a transporter if he surrenders the cargo may not? If he may not, then this is the result, the very act of surrendering the cargo which will give rise to the debt, will relieve the surety company of its guaranty of payment, and carriers when they are afraid to extend credit to the contractor will therefore hold back the materials and obstruct the work, a result which must be inharmonious with the statute's purpose.
"The thought which underlies the supposed equity in favor of the surety is this — that it has a right of subrogation which it ought not be deprived of. It seems to be a sufficient answer to this thought to say, that if the contention we are criticizing be sound, there never could arise any right of subrogation. The right, if it exists, could not possibly arise until delivery had been effected and the freight paid by the surety. Yet the moment delivery has been made, the lien is gone. The carrier having no lien, what is there the surety can be subrogated to? And if delivery is withheld and the lien retained, the carrier has no claim for its discharge against the principal and hence there is nothing to which the surety can be subrogated. Whether delivery is made or not, therefore, there is no opportunity for a right of subrogation to arise. It would seem then that the situation is entirely different from that which prevails where the creditor has a continuing lien against a debtor's property, and after waiving the lien seeks to compel the debtor's surety to pay the debt." 145 A. 176, 177.
Union Indemnity Co. v. State, for Use of Armstrong,
The opinion here is, on the cases last above cited, that claim for freight and demurrage arising from the carriage of material for the work covered by the contract is chargeable against the bond, and this for the reason that such material is not available for the work unless it is carried to the place of the work, and its carriage is as much a part of the cost of the material as any other item of labor necessary to collect and prepare it for the work.
Another contention of appellees is that there is an absence of evidence going to show that there was any contract between the railroad company and the contractor to haul for any particular job, and that the cars involved in the claim carried everything shipped to the contractor who was then engaged in work on three different projects or jobs, and the materials were suitable for use in either or all of said projects. The answer to this contention is that the evidence is clear to the point that the sand and gravel shipped by Roquemore Gravel Company and the cement shipped by the state highway department were for use in project S-273; that the materials were delivered to the contractor and he receipted therefor. This made a prima facie case for the appellant-intervener. U.S. F. G. Co. v. Benson Hardware Co.,
The contention of appellees, that the suit is barred by the sixty-day statute, Acts 1927, P. 356, § 28(e), was considered and determined against appellee in U.S. F. G. Co. v. Andalusia Mfg. Co. et al., supra.
The result is that the court erred in denying the appellant a judgment, and for this error the judgment of the circuit court is reversed and the cause is remanded for further proceedings in accordance with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
ANDERSON, C. J., and THOMAS and FOSTER, JJ., concur. *463