On the 31st day of August, 1912, the Beckville Independent School District filed this suit against J. A. Heermans and the General Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company on a contractor’s bond, seeking to recover the sum of $2,500 as damages. The petition alleges that in July, 1911, Heer-mans entered into a written contract with the plaintiff to furnish all the material and construct in ■ the town of Beckville a two-story brick school building; the work to be finished within 4 months and 20 days, or before December 21, 1911. The house was to be built according to plans and specifications prepared and furnished by A. O. Watson, an architect. The consideration to be paid was $5,850. The contract provided that Heermans should give a bond in the sum of $2,500, conditioned for the completion of the building in accordance with his contract ; and the plans and specifications were made a part thereof. It is further alleged that the bond was executed by Heermans with the General Bonding & Casualty Insurance Company as surety, and was accepted and approved by the plaintiff’s board of *1162 trustees; that Heermans entered upon the performance of his contract, but failed to complete the building according to its terms ; that he had received of the consideration agreed upon the sum of $5,767.90, all of which is set out in detail. Copies of the contract and the specifications are attached as exhibits to the petition. It is also alleged that, by reason of the failure of Heer-mans to complete the building and perform his contract, the plaintiff had been damaged in the amount sued for, and for which it asked judgment against both Heermans and the bonding company.
On September 23, 1912, the bonding company filed its .amended original answer containing general and special exceptions and a general denial. It was also, specially pleaded that this defendant was only a surety on the bond, and that the plaintiff had in violation thereof paid Heermans more than SO per cent, of the purchase price without the surety’s consent; that the building contract had been materially changed after its execution, without defendant’s consent, in that Heermans was given more time for the completion of the building; that the contract under which Heermans undertook to erect the building was another and different contract from that to which the defendant had become a party. To this answer the appellees replied by a lengthy supplemental petition, which, after a general denial of all the facts set out by the bonding company in its original answer, pleaded certain provisions of the contract which authorized the school board in its discretion to pay out more than SO per cent, of the contract price. It was further alleged that the bond was executed by the bonding company with'full knowledge on its part that the following clause, “in the estimation of the supervising architect,” was omitted, and that the bonding company was informed and knew at the time the bond was executed that the plaintiff and the defendant Heer-mans had agreed to dispense with the services of a supervising architect; that the bond was written after said agreement was, made. The bonding company filed a supplemental answer alleging that, if such alterations were made in the original contract, it was done without its knowledge or consent, and also denying that notice to Nesbitt, a member of the board of trustees of the school district, was notice to it. J. A. Heer-mans answered by a general denial and adopted the answer of the bonding company. The verdict was rendered against Heermans for $2,830.30, and against the bonding company for $2,500, the full amount of the bond. The bonding company alone has appealed.
The first error assigned is based upon the refusal of the court to give a peremptory instruction directing a verdict in favof of the bonding company. That assignment is based upon the following proposition: “The undisputed evidence conclusively showing that the written building contract on which the bond was predicated had been materially changed and departed from by dispensing with the architect’s supervision of the work, and it not appearing that the surety on the bond consented to such change, the court should have instructed a verdict for the defendant surety.” There appears to be no controversy in this appeal about the truth of the material facts alleged in the appel-lee’s original petition, and no question is made of the sufficiency of the evidence as to the damages sustained to support the judgment recovered. Practically the only defense is that embraced in the proposition above stated. The building contract with Heermans is dated July 31, 1911, and the bond sued on is dated August 2, 1911. The specifications prepared by the architect were made a part of the building contract, and that contract is referred to and made a part of the bond sued on. The contract with Heermans contains the following provision: “That said contractor hereby agrees to furnish to the said owner, within a reasonable time, a good and sufficient bond in the sum of $2,500, payable to John A. Crawford, president of the board of trustees of Beck-ville school corporation, ‘an independent school district incorporated for free school purposes only,’ or his successors in office, for the use and benefit of said Beckville school corporation, conditioned that the said contractor shall well and truly comply, in the estimation of the supervising architect, with all the conditions and perform all the undertakings in this contract specified; and, in default of the execution and approval of said bond, this contract shall be of no force or effect.”
The first question to be considered is, Do the facts justify the contention that any material change, or any change at all, was made in this building contract after the execution of the bond by the surety? Neither the building contract nor the specifications expressly stipulate that Watson, or any particular person, was to be employed to supervise the construction of the building. It is only by inference from some of the requirements in the specifications that it can be said that such employment was contemplated.
The record shows that Nesbitt was appointed agent in April, 1911. The contract was made with Heermans during the latter part of the following July. From this it appears that, at the time this contract with Heermans was made and the alleged alterations agreed upon, Nesbitt was the agent of the appellant. He testified that he had been specially requested by appellant’s officers at Dallas to secure this particular application; that after the building contract was signed he solicited Heermans’ application, secured it, and sent it to the office of the bonding company at Dallas. He also sent a copy of the building contract, but did not send the specifications. He further testified that the bond itself was prepared in the office of the bonding company at Dallas. If it can be said that any material changes had been made in the provisions of the building contract at the time of its execution by Heer-mans and the school board, it is clear that such modifications were known to Nesbitt. He testified that he knew all about the agreement to dispense with the services of Watson when he sent in this application for Heermans. In dealing with his principal it was Nesbitt’s duty to fully inform it of all the material terms and conditions pertaining to the contract. The law will charge the principal with that notice, in a case like the present, whether it was actually received or not. Fire Ass’n of Philadelphia v. La Grange
&
Lockhart Compress Co.,
The judgment is affirmed.
