109 So. 644 | Fla. | 1926
This cause is here on writ of error to review a judgment at law obtained by the defendant in error, who was plaintiff below, against plaintiff in error as surety upon the bond of a contractor engaged in the performance of public work. The bond purports to have been executed pursuant to the provisions of Section 3533, Revised General Statutes, 1920. The amendment of 1925 (Chap. 10035, Acts of 1925) is not material to the controversy.
S. L. Fulghum, having entered into a contract with the State of Florida for the construction of a public road in Escambia County, also executed a bond, dated December 19, 1922, to the State of Florida, as obligee. The said contractor, S. L. Fulghum, executed the bond as principal, and his co-defendant below, Union Indemnity Company, as surety. The bond contained the condition, amongst others, *664 that if the principal "shall promptly pay all just claims * * * for labor and materials incurred by said principal in or about the construction or improvement contracted for, then this obligation to be void, otherwise to be and remain in full force and virtue in law."
The contractor, Fulghum, entered upon the work, and sub-let to the plaintiff, Merritt, as a sub-contractor, certain portions thereof, namely, certain grading, sub-grading and excavating, at a stated price per cubic yard; certain clearing and grubbing, at a stated price per acre; and certain hauling to be done by teams, at stated prices. The principal contractor later abandoned the work, and defaulted in the payment of certain indebtedness due Merritt under the sub-contract, to recover which this suit is brought against the principal contractor and his surety.
Upon authority of J. B. McCrary Company v. Dade County,
But in the case now before us we have a materially different situation. The bond here sued on, besides the usual obligation to comply with and carry out the contract, contains the additional obligation that the principal contractor "shall promptly pay all just claims * * * for labor and materials incurred by said principal in or about the construction or improvement contracted for." The latter language, it is true, is not identical with that of the statute. The statute, however, prescribes the additional "obligation" to be included in the bond, not the precise language or formula of words which shall be used to create that *666
obligation. An "obligation" is that which one is legally bound to do. The obligation does not inhere and subsist in the contract itself, proprio vigore, but in the law as applied to the terms of the contract. Ogden v. Saunders, 12 Wheat. (U.S.) 213, 216,
Although, as was said in J. B. McCrary Company v. Dade County, supra, a surety's obligation will be strictly construed, and will not be extended by implication to conditions not clearly within the conditions of the undertaking, that rule does not prevent a construction of the bond with a view to determining its fair scope and meaning in the light of the language used. See United States, to use *667
of Hill v. American Surety Co. of New York,
The sole remaining question for determination is whether or not a sub-contractor on public work who, by himself and through other persons in his employ, or by the use of teams and mechanical equipment, has furnished labor in the prosecution of the work for a stated consideration agreed upon with the principal contractor, may recover that consideration in his status or capacity as such sub-contractor from the surety upon a bond executed pursuant to and containing the additional obligation required by Section 3533, Revised General Statutes, 1920. Plaintiff in error, the surety, contends that the sub-contractor can not recover his gross compensation based upon the unit prices agreed upon with the principal contractor, because those prices apparently included, in addition to the wages paid the laborers employed by the sub-contractor, the hire of his teams, scrapers, tools, the sub-contractor's profit on the job, his over-head expense for bookkeeping, accounting, etc., and depreciation on his stock and equipment, and that such a recovery is not contemplated by the statute or the bond.
The items for which recovery was had by the sub-contractor are thus stated in his bill of particulars:
"October 25th, to balance due on clearing, grubbing and grading ........................... $ 926.35
"October 25th, to clearing and grubbing 10.30 acres, at $35.00 ............................... 360.50
"October 25th, to 1489 cu. yds. excavating at 32c ............................................ 475.84
"October 25th, to hauling gravel and sand and teams for subgrading ........................... 813.80
"November 8th, to hauling gravel and repairing washouts ....................................... 29.56 *668
"November 25th, to 3706 cu. yds. excavating at 32c ............................................ 1,185.92 __________
Total ........................................ $3,791.97"
The items shown by plaintiff's bill of particulars, and for which he recovered as sub-contractor, are clearly within the protection of the statute and the bond. The protection of the statute is not limited to those who "perform" labor, but it expressly extends to those who "supply" labor. To supply is to provide or furnish. One may supply labor by performing it himself. But he may also supply labor by providing others to do the work. In either case the labor is "supplied." Kerby v. Road Improvement Dist.,
The following observation of the court in United States v. Port Deposit Quarry Co., 272 Fed. Rep. 698, is pertinent here in connection with the use by this plaintiff of teams and other equipment in accomplishing his work:
"Whether you shall call the transportation and the hoisting a part of the materials in place, or part of the labor in putting them in place, seems to me to afford opportunity for interesting exercise in intellectual gymnastics, but in this case it would scarcely seem that it would make any difference how it was answered. If a sub-contractor had undertaken to deliver the material in place for a total price, his undertaking would have been covered by the bond. The work might have been done by putting the stones by hand on rafts or galleys propelled by oars. Hand power might have been used to lower the stones into place. That is doubtless what an ancient Egyptian contractor would have done. The pay of the rowers and the laborers in putting the stones where the government wanted them would have been labor supplied under the contract. Whether, on the whole, you prefer to call it the one or the other, would not affect the result."
It would indeed be a strained construction of the statute to hold that one who performs or otherwise supplies manual or physical labor alone is protected, while one who is aided in his labor by a team of horses and a wagon, or by mechanical devices or equipment, may not recover the agreed value of his work, but only that part represented by the physical labor alone. Carried to its ultimate conclusion such a construction would in many cases exclude artisans who employ tools or machines in their labor. Clearing a right of way, excavating and grading, and hauling materials to and debris away from a road building project clearly involves the performance of labor. It would be reductio ab absurdum to say *671 that the parties to this sub-contract contemplated that the sub-contractor would himself, and with his own hands, clear the right of way and do the necessary excavating and grading for a road ten miles long. It is a matter of common knowledge, and was within the contemplation of both the statute and the bond here sued on, that the character of labor provided for in the principal contract is performed with the aid of others and with teams and mechanical appliances and devices. If a sub-contractor agrees with a principal contractor to perform a portion of that labor, and does so, he has indubitably supplied labor in the prosecution of the work. The fact that it was accomplished with the aid of others, and with teams and mechanical equipment, does not alter its essential character as labor. How the sub-contractor conducts his organization, whether he must pay out sums for "over-head expenses" and how he came into possession of the equipment he used, whether he owned it or hired it, is all beside the point. The fact that these costs to the sub-contractor may, and probably do, form component elements of his agreed price with the principal contractor for doing the work does not defeat his right to recover on the bond for the labor at the agreed price, where there is no charge of fraud or collusion.
The broad general purpose of the statute is to afford a means of protection to those supplying labor and material in public work in lieu of the lien afforded by other statutes on private work. Under a former lien statute in this State (Sec. 2 Chap. 3747, Laws of 1887), providing a lien in favor of those "performing any labor upon or for the benefit of any railroad," it was held that it was not the intention of the legislature to confine the benefits of such statute to wage workers to the exclusion of contractors, but that under the statute mentioned, a contractor was entitled to a lien. Couper v. Gaboury, 69 Fed. Rep. 7. See *672
also Owen v. Chicago, B. L. R. Co.,
In its essential provisions, Section 3533, Revised General Statutes, 1920, is the same as the Act of Congress of August 13, 1894, 28 U.S. Stat. at Large, 278; U.S. Comp. Stat. (1901) page 2523, Chap. 280, as the same existed prior to the amendment of 1905, and our statute was designed to serve the same relative purpose as the Federal Statute. The Federal Courts, both prior and subsequent to the original enactment of Chapter 3533, Revised General Statutes, 1920, which was Chapter 6867, Laws of 1915, in construing the Federal Statute have repeatedly decided or recognized the right of sub-contractors to recover at the agreed price.
In Illinois Surety Co. v. John Davis Co.,
And in construing State statutes of similar import, the State courts have reached the same conclusions. See United States v. Jack,
Judgment affirmed.
BROWN, C. J., AND WHITFIELD AND BUFORD, J. J., concur.