170 P. 148 | Cal. | 1917
It has been stipulated that one transcript be used in the appeals from the judgment in these consolidated actions. *161
The appellants, except R. Bradley and Bradley Company (appellants in the appeal numbered Sac. 2470), are material-men or laborers who commenced separate actions for the foreclosure of mechanics' liens upon certain real property in the city of Porterville, Tulare County. Bradley Company is the owner of the property on which is the building for the construction of which the liens were asserted. Defendant, F.J. Amweg (doing business as F. J. Amweg Company) was the contractor who undertook the erection of said building, and the National Surety Company executed the bond in behalf of the contractor under the provisions of section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
In the five actions consolidated for trial a personal judgment was rendered against the contractor (who did not defend) for the full amounts of the asserted indebtedness, and liens for these sums were declared upon the real property upon which the building was erected. It was also adjudged that the owner, materialmen, and laborers could recover nothing from the National Surety Company. We will first consider the appeal from that portion of the judgment thus exonerating the Surety Company.
The contractor Amweg and the appellant Bradley Company entered into two written agreements for the construction of the building. Both were made on July 19, 1913. One covered all of the labor and material except the brick work. The contract price was $8,222. This instrument was filed in the recorder's office on July 21, 1913. The second agreement was for the labor and material to be used in the construction of the brick work in the building, and was for the sum of three thousand dollars. This was recorded on July 25, 1913.
On July 19, 1913, the National Surety Company executed and delivered the bond here in controversy, in the sum of $5,611, one-half of the aggregate amount of the two contracts for the construction of the building. In this bond it is recited that under date of July 19, 1913, Amweg entered into "a certain contract" for the erection of a building in Porterville for the sum of $11,222. This is the aggregate of the two sums specified in the two writings of that date. The agreement for the construction of the building is described in the singular throughout the bond. This bond was filed August 9, 1913. It was avowedly executed for the purpose *162 of complying with the provisions of section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure, as amended in 1911 [Stats. 1911, p. 1313].
Respondent Surety Company contends that the bond in the singular number refers to an entirely different contract from the two agreements for the construction of the building; and that if as a matter of fact the parties intended it as one having application to those two writings, there should have been a demand and, if necessary, an action for the reformation of said bond before plaintiffs could recover upon it. Both of these contentions are without merit. It is true that the liability of a surety is measured by the terms of the agreement, and that courts are not swift to extend that liability by construction; but a surety is not hedged by any sanctity which prevents the application of the same rules to the construction of its agreements as are used to admeasure the obligations arising under other contracts. The extent of the surety's liability must be gathered from the language used when read in the light of the circumstances attending the transaction. (5 Elliott on Contracts, sec. 3941.) The circumstances surrounding the execution of this bond were such that there can be no rational doubt regarding the intention of the surety to indemnify its principal for certain losses which might arise under the two building contracts of the same date. The use of the singular rather than the plural amounts, at most, to a mere clerical error which could not have operated to the prejudice or injury of the surety. Hence it is not relieved from liability. (32 Cyc. 69; Stiewell v. American Surety Co.,
We conclude, therefore, that the court properly found the bond to have been executed and delivered "in order to secure the faithful performance of said two contracts by the said defendant, F.J. Amweg."
The court having reached a conclusion of law to the effect that the bond of the National Surety Company was invalid, that respondent seeks to uphold that conclusion upon the theory that section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure, providing for such a bond, is unconstitutional, its counsel expressing a hope that this court will take "a new view-point" upon the subject and one different from that of *163
the court in Bank when Roystone Co. v. Darling,
It is further argued that the provisions exempting the owner from liability beyond the contract price if he file a bond and making him liable for liens to the extent of the value of the labor and materials if he do not provide such bond is in violation of constitutional inhibitions of the imposition of penalties by legislative enactment. The constitution (section 15, article XX) guarantees a lien to the mechanic and materialman extending to the full value of all labor bestowed and material furnished. But the legislature may, under authority given by the constitution, provide certain conditions, upon compliance with which the owner may restrict recovery to the sum mentioned in the contract. Such provision does not impair any existing right of the owner — does not, in short, penalize him — but the effect is "to confer a right not previously existing by which his liability may, under certain circumstances, be curtailed." (Stimson Mill Co. v. Nolan,
Nor does the statute in question discriminate against the owners of real property. Respondent by way of illustration refers to work which might be done upon a gold dredger of equal value with that bestowed upon a building attached to real property, implying that the owner of the dredger would not be compelled to protect himself by filing a bond while the owner of the building would be required to furnish such security. The illustration proves no unconstitutional discrimination. In either case a lien for the full value of the labor would attach if the owner did not protect himself by a bond. In the one case the lien would attach incidentally to the hand as well as to the building, but that is due to the constitution itself and not to anything in the criticised statute. Other points made by respondent are fully met by the authorities cited above and require no further discussion. If the court's determination that the contract was invalid *165 was based upon the supposed unconstitutionality of section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure, such conclusion was erroneous.
The failure to file the surety bond before work was commenced and at the time of the filing of the contractor's bond did not invalidate the contract of the Surety Company. (Hammond LumberCo. v. Willis, 171. Cal. 565, [
It follows that the portion of the judgment relieving the National Surety Company from all liability under its bond must be reversed.
We now come to the consideration of Sac. No. 2470, which is the appeal of the Bradley Company. R. Bradley, the other appellant, is but a nominal party and will be disregarded in the following discussion.
The liens foreclosed by the judgment amount to $4,731.92, exclusive of interest and costs. The unpaid balance of the contract price remaining in the hands of the owner, after deducting the necessary outlay for completing the building — the contractor having abandoned it — amounts to $2,913.60. This appellant, the owner of the property, contends that the judgment of foreclosure is erroneous and excessive to the extent of the discrepancy between these two amounts, conceding its liability and the binding effect of the liens upon its land up to the amount last specified, namely, $2,913.60.
Appellant contends that it has complied substantially with the provisions of section 1183 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and so has limited its liability to the unpaid portion of the contract price. It also contends that section 15 of article XX of the constitution of California, interpreted by our decisions as authorizing liens for work and material in excess of the contract price, is itself in violation of the fourteenth amendment of the constitution of the United States, which forbids any state to deny to anyone within its jurisdiction the equal protection of its laws or to deprive any such person of property without due process of law.
Considering the latter contention first, we find Californian authority in Stimson Mill Co. v. Nolan,
Similar doctrine is contained in the opinion inJones v. Great Southern Fireproof Hotel Co., 86 Fed. 370, [30 C. C. A. 108], written by the late Judge Lurton, who afterward became a justice of the supreme court of the United States. Commenting upon the lien statute of the state of Ohio, the learned judge said: "Such statutes rest upon the principle of natural justice which lies at the foundation of the many liens or preferences among creditors which we have cited *167
from both the common and civil law. It is true that a lien is created in favor of one with whom the owner has no direct contractual relations. But, if the owner makes the contract with the law before him, the law enters into and becomes a part of the contract. The legal effect of the contract is to give a lien to all who, at the instance of his contractor, shall be employed to furnish labor or materials for the work which he has let out. So far as such a statute is limited to future contracts, it cannot be said to impair the obligation of a contract. If the law be subject to no other objections, it impairs no contract, for all thereafter made are entered into upon the basis of the law. The inhibition of the constitution is wholly prospective. The states may legislate as to contracts thereafter made as they see fit. It is only those in existence when the hostile law is passed that are protected from its effect.' (Edwards v. Kearney,
The weight of authority is in favor of the validity of statutes and constitutional provisions like our own, and in this *168
behalf respondents have cited the following cases which amply support their views: Henry v. Evans, 97 Mo. 47, [3 L. R. A. 332, 10 S.W. 868]; Mallory v. La Crosse Abattoir Co.,
To the contention that the appellant, who is the owner of the property, is entitled to relief in equity notwithstanding its failure to file the bond at the time indicated by the statute, respondent cites the case of Hammond Lumber Co. v. Willis,
That part of the judgment in the appeal known as "Sacramento No. 2503" which exonerates the National Surety Company from all liability is reversed, with directions to the superior court to enter judgment in accordance with the *169 views herein expressed. That part of the judgment from which the Bradley Company appeals is affirmed.
Henshaw, J., and Victor E. Shaw, J., pro tem., concurred.
Hearing in Bank denied.