Marshall-Jackson Company contracted with Glades county, Fla., to build a courthouse, with Detroit Fidelity & Surety Company, as surety on its bond. The county failed to pay when due certain sums owing to the contractor, he terminated the contract, and becoming, bankrupt left a number of debts to materialmen unpaid. The surety *451 eompany filed a bill in the District Court in which the bankruptcy case was pending to have the sum owed by the county accounted for and paid to the materialmen in exoneration of the bond, making the trustee in bankruptcy a party by consent of his court, together with the county and the ma-terialmen. The rigid to exoneration was upheld as against the county’s motion to dismiss the bill and against its answer that it owed nothing, and the county appeals. Two of the materialmen, I. W. Phillips & Company and Union Metal Manufacturing- Company, were awarded tes sums than they claimed, and they also appeal.
Glades county moved to dismiss the bill (1) because without equity; (2) because it sought to enjoin proceedings in a state court by the trustee against the county,to collect the balance in dispute; and (3) because the jurisdiction of the bankruptcy court was invaded. The second ground was recognized, and the suit in the state court was left to take its course, but was after-wards abandoned. As to the first ground, the ease is pleaded in two aspects. In the one aspect the surety eompany coni ends that the county has broken the contract by failure to pay the contractor as promised, and also has made changes in and additions to the work, whereby the surety is released, and that this makes a common defense against the suits threatened by the numerous materialmen, and to avoid a multiplicity of suits the defense should be established against all by one bill. In this aspect the bill has no merit. The exhibited contract for the work which is referred to in the bond and made a part of it provides that the county without invalidating the contract may make changes by altering, adding to, or deducting from the work, the contract price to bo adjusted accordingly. The surety cannot complain at that being done which it was agreed might he done. The county’s alleged broach of the contract by failing to pay might relieve the surety of obligation to the county, but is no defense against the claims of the materialmen. This is a contract for public work under the laws of Florida. By statute, Comp. Gen. Laws, § 5397, there is required of the contractor a penal bond “with the additional obligations that such contractor * * * shall promptly make payments to all persons supplying * * labor, material and supplies, used directly or indirectly by the said contractor *
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or sub-contractors in the prosecution of the work provided for in said contract,” and provision is made for a suit on the bond by such persons. The bond exhibited by the hill is conditioned that the contractor shall fulfill its contract with the' county “and shall fully and promptly pay the wages of all laborers, workmen and mechanics employed by it or its subcontractors on said work, and shall fully and promptly pa.y the claims of all persons who furnish materials and supplies used in the construction of said building.” The bond is plainly given under the statute and to be construed in the light of it. It operates as a security to the county for the performance of the contract, and also as a security to the laborers and materialmen for their payment, and in this sens© embraces two bonds. Although the county may have,so acted as to release the surety from obligation to it, the release does not affect the obligation to the materialmen. Having sold and delivered their materials on tlie faith of the bond, they are entitled to the benefit of it unless forfeited by some act of their own. The obligation to them is severable. Equitable Surety Co. v. United States,
Coming to the third ground of the motion to dismiss, if the bankruptcy court through the trustee as its officer had possession of the fund in dispute, the jurisdiction to determine the liens and equities against it and to dispose of it would have been in that court, and it could not over objection of parties before it have resigned jurisdiction to another court. United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. Bray,
The evidence sufficiently supports the equity asserted, but, touching the amount due by the county, we think the court erred in holding as conclusive the architect’s monthly certificates of work done and material furnished, and the resolution of the county commissioners passed November 24, 1926, after default in payment whereby they undertook to provide means for paying the indebtedness of $37,322.15 appearing from estimates approved by the architect and presented to them. By a paragraph of the signed contract it is provided: “On or before the tenth day of each month 80% of the value proportionate to the amount of the contract of labor and materials incorporated in the work up to the first day of that month as estimated by the architect” is to be paid. By article 51 of the attached general conditions “the contractor is to be paid 80% of the estimated value of the work (done and material furnished less previous payments at intervals agreed upon.” By articles 9 and 10 the architect is given general supervision and direction of! the work, and made in the first instance the judge of its performance, but all Ms decisions are made subject to arbitration. By article 38 the contractor is given the right to terminate the contract 90 days after default in payment by the county “and to recover from the owner (the County) payment for all work executed and any loss sustained upon any plant or material, and reasonable profit and damages.” The contractor terminated the contract for default in payment by a notice presented on December 29, 1926, and the county’s present liability is under the provision last quoted. The architect’s monthly certificates were to fix tentatively the proportionate value of the work executed for purposes of installment payment and not to fix the final liability of the county for work and material upon the premature ending of the contract. Ilis certificates have an evidentiary value, but are not conclusive for the present purpose. So the resolution of the commissioners is an admission having value as such, but is not conclusive. The issue presented by termination of the contract had not arisen at the date of the resolution,' ami the resolution is not a settlement or compromise thereof with the contractor. See City of St. Petersburg v. Meyers (C. C. A.)
Much building material was on the ground when the work ceased in August. Some of it was lost in a'hurricane during September, but most of it remained until during the following .year the county resumed building through another contractor and furnished this material to him for use in completing the building. The county's liability for the material thus used is in question. The first architect’s certificate made under the first contract did not include payment for material on the ground but not built into the building because not “incorporated in the work” as stated in the contract. The contractor thereupon contended that it was “material furnished” under article 51 of the general conditions. The contractor’s contention prevailed with the architect, who thereafter included materials on the ground in his certificates for payment, and the commissioners with knowledge of the facts paid them. This was a practical con-st ruction of the contract by the parties to it that materials on the ground were to bo considered as incorporated in the work, though not built into the building. The provisions of the contract are sufficiently doubtful to make this construction controlling. City of Chicago v. Sheldon,
Whether other contested items, such as an allowance for money lost by the contractor in a bank failure and for his bond premium, were included or not, or whether they should be, we cannot satisfactorily tell from this record, and we leave them for further inquiry in the reopened accounting which must be had.
Upon the appeal of the material-men it appears they were allowed recovery against the surety for such material as the first contractor built into the building, but not for such as the county used through the second contractor. We think they should recover for all material used by either. The statute under which the bond was given speaks of “material and' supplies, used directly or indirectly by the said contractor * * * or subcontractors in the prosecution of the work.” The bond says “material and supplies used in the construction of said building.” The material in question was sold on the faith of the bond and was used in the building in terms of the bond, and, when delivered by the contractor to the county and by it used in furthering the work, the material was indirectly used by him in the terms of the statute as truly as though he had turned it over to a subcontractor to use. The materialmen were correctly held to have no right to a personal judgment against the county. They sold and delivered the material tó the contractor and thereby lost title to it. The county acquired it from the contractor and owes him and not them for it.
The judgment on both appeals is reversed, and the cause remanded for further -proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Reversed and remanded.
