282 Mass. 100 | Mass. | 1933
This is a bill in equity brought by the plaintiff surety company seeking reimbursement for the amount paid by it to a lien claimant upon a bond given by the plaintiff, as surety, and the defendant Thomas D. Murphy, as principal, as security under G. L. (Ter. Ed.) c. 149, § 29. The case was heard on agreed facts, a final decree was entered for the plaintiff, and the case is before this court on the appeal of the Standard Oil Company of New York, an intervening petitioner. The agreed facts are as follows: “On May 5, 1930, the defendant Thomas D. Murphy entered into a contract with the defendant town of Winthrop to build and surface certain streets in the town of Winthrop. The plaintiff Commercial Casualty Insurance Company was the surety on the bond in the penal sum of $10,000 given by the defendant Murphy in connection with this contract. The bond was conditioned upon the obligation to pay all claims for all labor performed or furnished and to indemnify and save harmless the town of Winthrop from all such claims. This bond was the security
The single issue presented by the record in this case is whether the plaintiff as surety upon the bond representing the statutory security, having paid the claim of the only subcontractor which filed a notice, is entitled to a priority in the retained percentage held by the town as against the Standard Oil Company of New York, an attaching creditor.
The plaintiff claims priority upon two distinct grounds: (1) “The plaintiff acquired by assignment, prior in point of time to the Standard Oil Company attachment, all interest of the defendant Murphy in the retained percentage”; and (2) “The provision in the contract for a retained percentage was an indemnity upon which the plaintiff, as surety, justly relied, and by payment of the sole hen claimant it acquired an equitable priority in this fund superior to the rights of assignors of the contractor and attaching creditors.” In this Commonwealth a prior assignee for value prevails over a subsequent attaching creditor who attempts by trustee process to attach the funds in the hands of the debtor, even though no notice of the assignment has been given to the trustee debtor prior to the attachment. Thayer v. Daniels, 113 Mass. 129. Dix v. Cobb, 4 Mass. 508. Cosmopolitan Trust Co. v. Leonard Watch Co. 249 Mass. 14, 19. It appears, however, by the agreed facts that notice of the assignment of Murphy to the plaintiff was given to the town on or about October 27, 1930, which was coincident in time
The Standard Oil Company of New York contends that the defendant Murphy could not assign his interest to the plaintiff for the reason that art. I of the contract provided that the contractor “shall not, except as the Board [board of selectmen] shall authorize in writing, assign or let any part of the contract or of anything to be done thereunder”; and contends that the payment by the defendant town to the defendant Murphy was clearly something to be done under the terms of said contract and that no assignment of it (i.e. “all the deferred payments and retained percentages . . .”) could be made without the authorization in writing of the board of selectmen of the town; that no such authorization in writing was ever obtained, and no question of waiver as a matter of fact is raised, citing New-bury v. Lincoln, 276 Mass. 445, 450. The short answer is that the payment of the deferred payments and the retained percentages was a thing to be done by the town and not by Murphy. More specifically, the provisions of arts. VII and IX of the Murphy contract with the town show clearly that the amounts retained were to cover damages or claims for which the town might be hable. Art. VII reads: “The Contractor agrees to indemnify and save harmless the Town from all claims against said Town by mechanics, laborers and others, for work performed or materials furnished for carrying on the contract, and until said claims shall have been satisfactorily discharged the Town may retain from any money due, or that may become due the Contractor under this contract, such sum or sums as may be sufficient to cover such claims”; and art. IX: “The Town, within sixty-one days after the work shall have been entirely completed in accordance with the contract and upon certification thereto by the Engineer, provided the Contractor shall have in all respects faithfully performed the contract, shall allow and pay to the Contractor the balance of the contract sum, first deducting such sums paid for
The Standard Oil Company of New York further contends that the assignment of Murphy was void in that it purported to assign money to be earned in futuro under the terms of a contract that at the time the assignment was executed and delivered was not in existence, citing Williston on Contracts, § 414, at page 770, Eagan v. Luby, 133 Mass. 543, Raulins v. Levi, 232 Mass. 42. The principle relied on is well established in the law and is not questioned by the plaintiff, the position of the plaintiff being that the application for the contract, the execution of the bond, and the contract with the town all related to the same subject matter and should be treated as essential parts of one transaction. So considered the application, which was dated May 2; 1930, was a contract to execute an assignment, which would not be effective until the bond was executed and delivered to the town concurrently with the execution of the construction contract between Murphy and the town. The application bears date as of May 2, 1930, the construction contract bears date of May 5, 1930, and the bond is dated May 6, 1930. It is plain that these
It is agreed that the figures $2,230.10 as they appear in the second paragraph of the final decree shall be amended to read $2,330.10. The final decree as amended is
Affirmed with costs.