The question here is whether health, welfare and pension trusts may make public improvement lien claims for unpaid sums which subcontractors on the public improvement were obligated to pay for their employees. The trial court held they may not. We reverse and remand.
Knudson, Inc., contracted with the Iowa Department of Social Services (“the Department”) to construct a building at the Glenwood State Hospital School. Knudson furnished a performance bond as required by § 573.2, The Code, with Universal Surety Company (“Universal”) as surety. William *694 H. Dobbs and Bourke Lumber were subcontractors on the project. Each of them had collective bargaining agreements which required them to pay sums to health, welfare and pension trusts based on hours their employees worked. These trusts were the Contractors, Laborers, Teamsters and Engineers Health and Welfare Plan, the Contractors, Laborers, Teamsters and Engineers Pension Plan, the Omaha Construction Industry Health and Welfare Plan, and the Omaha Construction Industry Pension Plan (“the trusts”).
Disputes arose between Knudson and the subcontractors. Dobbs and Bourke filed claims with the Department under section 573.7 for payments allegedly in default on their contracts. The trusts filed claims for payments which Dobbs and Bourke allegedly owed to the trust funds pursuant to the collective bargaining agreements for work of their employees on the project.
The present action was initiated by Dobbs against Knudson, Universal, the trusts and other parties, pursuant to section 573.16, to determine the rights of the claimants to the retainage held by the Department in accordance with section 573.12. The trusts cross-claimed against Knudson and Universal for judgment on their claims. Knudson filed a bond to secure any possible judgments as provided in section 573.16 in order to obtain payment of the retainage.
Subsequently Knudson moved for summary judgment on the trusts’ cross-claims. The trial court sustained the motion, and the trusts appealed.
Even though the summary judgment did not dispose of the entire case, it was final as to the trusts. Their claims are based on different contracts than those of other claimants. Therefore the summary judgment was final and appealable as to them under principles delineated in
McGuire v. City of Cedar Rapids,
The appeal involves section 573.7, which provides in material part:
Any person . . . who has, under a contract with . . . subcontractors, performed labor, or furnished . service ... in the construction of a public improvement, may file, with the officer, board, or commission authorized by law to let contracts for such improvement, an itemized sworn, written statement of the claim for such labor, or . service .
We are obliged to construe the statute liberally with a view to promoting its objects and assisting the parties in obtaining justice. § 4.2, The Code;
see Gollehon, Schemmer & Associates, Inc. v. Fairway-Betten-dorf Associates,
Knudson’s motion for summary judgment was based on its allegation that “the items for which claim is made by said trusts are not claims for ‘labor or service’ within the meaning of section 573.7, Code of Iowa,” and the trial court sustained the motion on that ground. The court reasoned that the claims did not come within the section because they were for “fringe benefits” rather than wages. We disagree with this construction of the statute.
Section 573.7 requires that the claim be for “labor” or “service.” Whether a claim is for labor or service is determined not by the nature of what the claimant receives but rather by the nature of what is done to be entitled to receive it. The issue, therefore, is not whether the payments to the trust funds are fringe benefits or wages but whether the employees of Dobbs and Bourke performed labor or service to become entitled to the payments on their behalf.
See Forsberg v. Loss Construction Co.,
The employees were laborers, carpenters and bricklayers who indisputably performed labor for Dobbs and Bourke on the project and thereby earned the right to have the payments made to the trusts pursuant to the collective bargaining agree *695 ments. Thus we hold that the payments to the trusts are for labor within the meaning of section 573.7.
This holding is consistent with prior cases decided under both chapter 573 and under chapter 572, the general mechanics’ lien statute, which this court has said is analogous, to chapter 573.
Cities Service Oil Co.
v.
Longerbone,
This result is supported by authority from other jurisdictions. In
United States ex rel. Sherman v. Carter,
In the present case, we hold that the trial court erred in ruling that the contributions to the trusts are not cognizable claims under section 573.7.
The remaining problem in this case concerns the right of the trusts rather than the individual employees to file the claims. The courts of other jurisdictions which have addressed this problem have uniformly held that the trusts in this kind of situation may file and enforce the claims.
Sherman,
Whether the trustees of the fund are, in a technical sense, assignees of the employees’ rights to the contributions need not be decided. Suffice it to say that the trustees’ relationship to the employees, as established by the master labor agreements and the trust agreement, is closely analogous to that of an assignment. The master labor agreements not only created Carter’s obligation to make the specified contributions, but simultaneously created *696 the right of the trustees to collect those contributions on behalf of the employees. The trust agreement gave the trustees the exclusive right to enforce payment. The trustees stand in the shoes of the employees and are entitled to enforce their rights.
Similar reasoning supports the same conclusion in the present case. Although the right to make the claim for labor furnished on the public improvement is given in section 573.7 to the person who furnishes it, the trusts have the contractual right to make the claim for those persons. Any other result would frustrate the legislative purpose in allowing such claims to be made and would unjustly enrich the party with the obligation to make the payments.
The trial court erred in entering summary judgment against the trusts on their cross-claims. We find it unnecessary to address the other contentions of the parties.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
