135 So. 349 | Miss. | 1931
Burkes entered into a contract with the Natchez Investment Company to construct a building for it, executing to it an indemnity bond with the Hartford Accident Indemnity Company as surety thereon. The investment company received the building from Burkes after paying him all but about four thousand dollars of the amount for which he agreed to construct it, under an agreement that Burkes would make good any defects which the architect might find in the building. Afterwards, in October, 1927, the Natchez Investment Company sued Burkes and the indemnity company on this bond, making as party defendants thereto a number of subcontractors and materialmen to whom Burkes was indebted for labor and material in the construction of the building, most of whom had notified the indemnity company of Burkes' indebtedness to them. One of these materialmen, the Acme Engineering Company, accepted from Burkes a sixty-day promissory note in settlement of the amount due it, secured by a transfer to it of bank stock certificates. This note was purchased from the Acme Engineering Company for value by the appellee, the N.O. Nelson Manufacturing Company. The Acme Engineering Company was made a defendant to the investment company's bill of complaint, and publication was made for it, but the Nelson Manufacturing Company was not referred to in the bill of complaint, nor made a party defendant thereto.
Demurrers to the bill of complaint were overruled, and the decree so doing was affirmed by this court on *509
appeal thereto, to settle the principles of the case, in September, 1928. Hartford Accident Indemnity Co. v. Natchez Investment Co.,
This opinion will be strictly limited to the questions discussed by counsel, and must not be considered as having any bearing on any other question that might arise on the record.
The court below committed no error in overruling the motion to dismiss, for, until its final decree was entered, it had full control over the procedure, and the record presents no question of prejudice to the indemnity company because of the permission given the Nelson Manufacturing Company to intervene after the case had been submitted on its merits.
The limitation of time within which intervention in suits of this character must be filed is prescribed by sections 5 and 6 of chapter 128, Laws of 1918, sections 2278 and 2279, Code of 1930, which is "one year after the performance and final settlement of said contract;" and, according to this record, there had been, when the Nelson Manufacturing Company intervened, neither performance nor final settlement of the contract.
The contentions of counsel for the appellant, the Hartford Accident Indemnity Company, on the demurrer, are: First, the bond executed to the Natchez Investment Company by Burkes and the indemnity company does not inure to the benefit of the appellee, the Nelson Manufacturing Company, as assignee of the note executed to the Acme Engineering Company by Burkes for the material furnished for the construction of the building; second, the Acme Engineering Company released the Hartford Accident Indemnity Company as surety on the bond executed by Burkes from any liability to it when it accepted from Burkes the promissory note thereby extending the time for the payment of the debt from Burkes to it, without the consent of the indemnity company; and, third, the appellee, Nelson Manufacturing Company, is entitled to recover on the bond, if at all, only the difference between the amount of the note and *511 the money realized by it on the collateral thereto, and its cross-bill does not set forth what amount of money, if any, was realized by it on this collateral.
A subcontractor or materialman does not waive his lien on a building for labor and materials furnished in the construction thereof by accepting a promissory note for money due him therefor, and the right to assert the lien inures to an assignee. Dodds v. Cavett,
It does not appear from this record whether the indemnity company consented to the execution of the note, and the extension thereby granted to Burkes for the payment of the debt due the Acme Engineering Company; but, aside from that, the rule that the extension of the time for the payment of a debt, without the consent of a surety therefor, releases such surety from further liability, has no application to a compensated surety, in the absence of a showing that the surety was materially prejudiced thereby. Maryland Casualty Co. v. Ohio River Gravel Co. (C.C.A.)
Moreover, the guaranty here is not of a particular debt, but for the payment of any and all debts incurred by the contractor for labor and material that enter into the construction of the building. "The guarantor," in the language of the Supreme Court of the United States, *512
in the case of United States F. G. Co. v. United States,
It was not necessary for the appellee to set forth in its cross-bill what disposition it has made of the collateral received by it with the note sued on. Any right which the appellant may have relative thereto must be made to appear when its answer comes in.
Affirmed and remanded, with leave for the appellant to answer within thirty days after the filing of the mandate in the court below.
Affirmed and remanded.