Opinion
Nominal plaintiff East Quincy Services District (the District) filed a “Complaint in Intervention” [sic],
1
which interpled General Accident Insurance Company of America (the Surety) and the Division of Labor Standards Enforcement (the Division) as defendants contesting entitlement
The gist of the dispute was whether the District should deduct penalties for prevailing wage and overtime violations 3 on its public works project from the balance of the contract price otherwise owing to defendant Surety. (The Surety funded the сompletion of the project after its principal defaulted.) The defendants filed' cross-motions for summary judgment. The superior court denied the Division’s motion and granted defendant Surety’s motion, ruling the funds were no longer owed to the contractor and thus were not “payments to the contractor of money due under a contract” out of which the penalties are forfeited by operation of law. 4 The Division challenges this conclusion. We agree and shall reverse with directions.
Facts
We review the superior court’s ruling on a motion for summary judgment de novo. 5 As there are no material disputes and the few evidentiary objections are waived for failure to obtain rulings on them at the hearing, 6 we will depart from the usual paradigm in which we compare the showings of the parties 7 and focus on the pertinent facts. The Division’s notice of appeal is from a judgment that ruled on both motions, and thus the totality of the facts before the trial court are part of this appeal.
The District and P & M Pipelines (the contractor) entered into a contract for a sewer project in April 1996. The original contract cost for the project was $2,289,000. 8 This amount was later increased to $2,304,000 as a result of change orders. The contract expressly incorporated an Invitation to Bid and Information for Bidders. The latter noted the application of statutory prevailing wage and overtime requirements for public works projects and the penalties for violations.
Defendant Surety issued payment and performance bonds on the contract for the original amount of the project. The contract expressly incorporated these bonds. In the performance bond, defendant Surety expressly agreed to “cause the obligations and duties of the Principal, as set forth in the Contract referred to herein, to be carried out in full.”
According to its accounting, the District had paid the contractor $1,346,000 for $1,854,000 in completed work as of October 31, 1996. The contractor, experiencing financial diffiсulties, defaulted in November 1996. It assigned its right to contract proceeds to defendant Surety. In accordance with its obligations under the bonds, defendant Surety reimbursed all unpaid creditors and engaged another contractor in December 1996 to complete the contract. Defеndant Surety’s expenses were $1,059,000 and its payments from the District were $492,000. The District filed a notice of completion for the project in September 1997.
During an unspecified period of time, the Division had conducted an investigation, and determined the contractor had failed to pay the prevailing wage. Although not articulated explicitly, it appears the Division also found violations of the
The District then filed the instant action. As we reаd defendant Surety’s statement of undisputed facts, the District deposited the disputed amount with the superior court, retaining an additional $9,000 of the contract price.
Discussion
Under the statutes, a contractor forfeits wage and overtime penalties out of money due under a contract fоr public work. 12 We confront two questions—determining when defendant Surety extinguished the contractor’s rights to unpaid construction funds, and when the penalties accrued.
A
The trial court reasoned there was no money due the contractor under the contract out of which to withhold the pеnalties after the point of default and defendant Surety’s assumption of the contract. In an application of subrogation to this case, the court apparently found defendant Surety could not be considered to be subrogated to the right of the contractor to compensation under the contract because the District was its principal (“[h]ad there been no bond the District would have taken the hit”) and the contractor had “lost any rights to which [defendant Surety] could have been subrogated.”
In point of fact, the contractor was the principal—having paid for the bond—and the District was a creditor of the principal to whose rights against the principal defendant Surety succeeded after it paid its principal’s debt to the creditor, 13 which would presumably include the right under principles of setoff to charge the costs of completion against the unpaid balance of the contract pricе. 14
The trial court also cited
Harsco Corp.
v.
Department of Public Works,
15
which held that a supplier’s stop notice claim against funds “due or to become due” a contractor
16
(an equitable equivalent of a mechanic’s lien on a public works project that imposes a trust on the funds held by the agency rather than the public property itself)
17
did not reach funds an agency
B
The doctrine of subrogation understandably consumes much of the briefs in light of this ruling. In essence, defendant Surety argues that once it undertook its principal’s obligations under the contract, it succeeded to the rights of the District, including setoff. Since the District could set off its costs of completion against any retained amount, defendant Surety contends it could do so as well. As the costs exceeded the retained amount, there were no funds payable under the contract to the contractor from which to withhold the stаtutory penalties. The Division raises many arguments against applying subrogation. As we shall explain, in the end the issue of subrogation is extraneous.
In the first place, defendant Surety’s reasoning creates a renvoi. 22 In order for defendant Surety to claim an offset to extinguish the contractor’s right tо compensation under the contract, the funds must in fact be owed to the contractor under the contract and thus available for withholding the penalty. Subrogation thus only begs the vital question of determining the amount of the funds owing to the contractor at the time of defendant Surety’s acquisition of the District’s right, i.e., whether the penalties were already forfeit. 23
A more important principle than subrogation is that once a surety assumes the contract of its principal, it stands in the same position to the contract as the principal, including all liabilities', a surety is thus liable for all liquidated damаges accruing before it assumed the contract, and is no longer limited to its bond in completing the contract thereafter. 24 Thus, the important question is when the penalties in the present case accrued.
In an effort to postpone the accrual of the violations until after it had completed the contract and thus exhausted the contractor’s right to any remaining funds, defendant Surety suggests the penalties did not arise until the Division sent the District the notice to withhold funds to pay them. However, this requires a misreading
Defendant Surety also argues that once it assumed the duties of its principal under the contract, its contractual entitlement to all funds arose ab initio. In support, it cites a 19th-century United States Supreme Court decision 29 and the general principle that a surety is entitled to. the benefit of every security for performance that the creditor might hold. 30 As we repeatedly remind litigants, on questions of state law even United States Supremе Court decisions are not controlling; 31 in any event, this case involves a question of priority between a surety and a lender to construction proceeds and does not address the question of funds forfeited for statutory penalties. As for a surety’s entitlement to security in a creditor’s possession, this once again begs the question of whether the penalties work a forfeiture before the funds accrue as a security payable to the contractor. As the forfeiture occurred at the time of the violations, the encumbered funds no longer were part of the security the District held for the contractor’s performance.
This leaves defendant Surety’s reliance on
Harsco Corp.
and
Dorris.
Neither is apposite. Both rely on statutory language that limits a stop notice claim to funds due or to become due the contractor.
32
In
Harsco Corp.,
statutory provisions extinguished the defaulting contractor’s rights to unpaid contraсt funds where there were penalties for delay and where the agency incurred greater costs in completing the contract, and thus there were no funds for the stop notice to reach after its filing.
33
Dorris
reached the same conclusion based
Disposition
The judgment is reversed with directions to enter judgment for defendant Division. Defendant Division shall recover its costs of appeal.
Kolkey, J., concurred. Hull, J., concurred in the result.
Plaintiffs’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied June 30, 2001.
Notes
Code of Civil Procedure section 386.
Code of Civil Procedure section 386.5.
Labor Code sections 1771, 1775, 1813, 1815. Further undesignated statutory references are to this code.
Section 1727.
Rio Linda Unified School Dist.
v.
Superior Court
(1997)
Code оf Civil Procedure section 437c, subdivision (b), fifth paragraph;
Ann M.
v.
Pacific Plaza Shopping Center
(1993)
E.g., Rio Linda School Dist., supra, 52 Cal.App.4th at pages 734-735.
All figures are rounded.
Section 1811 (eight hours per day, 40 hours per week).
Sections 1727, 1775 ($50 per day per underpaid worker), 1813 ($25 per overtime violation per worker).
Section 1733.
Sections 1727, 1775, 1813; J
& K Painting Co. v. Bradshaw
(1996)
11 Witkin, Summary of California Law (9th ed. 1990) Equity, section 169, pages 848-849.
See
A. Farnell Blair Co. v. Hollywood St. Bk
(1951)
Harsco Corp. v. Department of Public Works
(1971)
Civil Code sections 3084, 3085, 3103, 3186.
United States Fid. & Guar. Co. v. Oak Grove Union School Dist.
(1962)
Public Contract Code section 10261 (former Gov. Code, § 14402).
Harsco Corp., supra, 21 Cal.App.3d at pages 276-277; Public Contract Cоde section 10258 (former Gov. Code, § 14399).
Public Contract Code section 10226 (former Gov. Code, § 14376).
Harsco Corp., supra,
Cf. Black’s Law Dictionary (7th ed. 1999) page 1300 (phrase describing recursive problems in choice of law analysis).
Pacific Employers Ins. Co. v. City of Berkeley
(1984)
Pacific Employers, supra,
J
& K Painting, supra,
J & K Painting, supra, 45 Cal.App.4th at pages 1404-1405.
J
& K Painting, supra,
Purdy & Fitzpatrick
v.
State of California
(1969)
Prairie State National Bank v. United States
(1896)
Civil Code section 2849.
9 Witkin, California Procedure (4th ed. 1997) Appeal, sections 941-943, pages 982-985.
Harsco Corp., supra,
Harsco Corp., supra, 21 Cal.App.3d at pages 276, 277.
Dorris, supra, 25 Cal.App. at pages 31, 33.
Section 1775.
Public Contract Code section 10258 (former Gov. Code, § 14399);
Dorris, supra,
