36 Wash. 553 | Wash. | 1905
This is an action upon a contractor’s indemnity bond. The complaint shows that the contract price for the construction was $5,940, and avers that the contractor violated the terms of the contract by failing to pay the claims for labor and material which entered into the construction, and thereby allowing such claims to be assessed against the property to the extent of $3,314.06 in. excess of the contract price. It is also averred that, immediately after such default became known to the property owner, he duly notified the surety company thereof, and demanded that it pay, or cause to be paid, the asserted demands, and should save him harmless therefrom. Demands, as asserted in various filed lien notices, are set out, and it is alleged that suits were brought to foreclose the same; that immediately thereafter the property owner notified the surety company in writing thereof, tendered it the defenses to said actions, and demanded that it should defend the same, and save the owner harmless from the ex
Several assignments of error relate to the same general subject and will be discussed together. The local representatives of appellant in Seattle were Calhoun, Denny & Ewing, while its general agents were Clemens & O’Brien, located in Portland, Oregon. It is urged that the court erred in admitting evidence tending to show that the local representatives waived conditions in the bond, and in hold
It is contended by appellant that no authority is shown from it to Calhoun, Denny & Ewing, the agents in Seattle, to receive and disburse the money as was done. It is not disputed, however, that Clemens & O’Bryan, the general agents in Portland, had the power to authorize such a
“Nor is it necessary to prove an express agreement to waive. On the contrary it may be inferred from the acts and conduct of the insurer inconsistent with an intention to insist upon a strict performance of the condition.”
See, also, Ovington v. Aetna Indemnity Co., ante p. 473, 78 Pac. 1021.
What is said above applies also to the necessity ior formal notice of failure to complete the building at the contract time. The evidence shows that, when that time arrived, the work was still in progress, and both the contractor and appellant, through its said agents, were working in harmony in the endeavor to hasten the completion and close the contract without loss. To that end they wera then both directing the respondent as to how he should make his payments under the contract, and this course was continued for some time thereafter, as we have seen. Respondent might have complained of the failure to complete the building on time, but he waived the default, and the conduct of appellant, in its subsequent supervision and receipt and disbursement of accruing payments under the contract^ shows that it, also, waived the default, and impliedly, at least, consented to an extention of the time. Moreover this record discloses no attempt to show that appellant was damaged by the contractor’s failure to complete the building on time. Often such an extention may result in actual benefit to the assured, and since no damage is shown to have resulted from it in this instance, it is not ground for release of a compensated surety, within the decision in Cowles v. United States, etc., 32 Wash. 120, 72 Pac. 1032.
What has been said applies to the futility of a formal notice of probable default in payment of labor and mate
The appellant also assigns as error that the court refused the introduction of evidence as to the value of the claims which were satisfied by respondent, and also refused to permit appellant to show that certain of the claims reduced to judgment were neither binding nor valid against respond-
Appellant does not dix’ectly assign that the court erred in holding that this suit was brought within six months of the first breach of the contract as provided in the bond, but that subject was made an issue by the pleadings, and is pi’obably involved in the assignment that the court erred in refusing a nonsuit. The action was brought within six months of the time the wox*k was to be completed, and was, therefore, within the contract time, as far as that breach of the contract was concerned. Under the coxxrt’s fixxding as to knowledge on the part of respondent of the breach by failure to pay labor and xnaterial claims, the action was also brought far within six months of the time respondent came into possession of such knowledge.
The judgment is affirmed.
Fullerton,' O. J., and Mount, Anders, and Dunbar, JJ., concur.