Indiana Carpenters Central and Western Pension Fund (Carpenters) appeals the trial court's dismissal of its complaint pursuant to Ind.Trial Rule 12(B)(6).
We reverse and remand for further proceedings.
ISSUES
1. Whether a pension and benefit plan has standing to file a claim against a statutorily-required payment bond for unpaid fringe benefits owed to the plan's members for work performed on a public works project.
2. Whether a pension and benefit plan has stated a claim upon which relief can be granted when its complaint fails to allege compliance with the notice provisions of IC 36-1-12-18.1(d) and (e) (1988).
FACTS
The City of Indianapolis (City) contracted with BMW Constructor, Inc. (BMW) to construct an odor control system at the Belmont and Southport Advanced Wastewater Treatment Plants (Construction Contract). BMW obtained a payment bond (Bond) from Seaboard Surety Company (Seaboard) pursuant to IC 86-1-12-13.1. BMW subcontracted with J. Chris Construction, alk/a J. Chris Corporation (Chris), to perform work related to the Construction Contract. A collective bargaining agreement between Chris and its employees union obligated Chris to pay fringe benefits to Car *354 penters as a portion of the employees' wages.
Carpenters is an employee welfare benefit plan which receives contributions from employers on behalf of employee- members. Carpenters filed an action against Seaboard's bond to recover fringe benefit contributions that Chris failed to pay from September 1988 through November 1988. Seaboard moved to dismiss Carpenters' claim pursuant to TR. 12(B)(6). The trial court sustained Seaboard's motion and entered a final judgment as provided in Ind.Trial Rule 54(B), finding that Carpenters was not within the class of persons entitled to recover on the Bond and that it did not plead compliance with all conditions precedent.
Carpenters appeals.
DISCUSSION
The purpose of a T.R. 12(B)(6) motion is to test the legal sufficiency of the claim, not the facts that support it. Bowman v. Bowman (1991), Ind.App.,
I.
Carpenters argues the trial court erred when it dismissed Carpenters' claim because Carpenters lacked standing. We agree and hold that, under the facts before us, Carpenters is within the class of person covered by the Bond.
This question came before the United States Supreme Court in United States v. Carter (1957),
We find the court's reasoning and interpretation of the Act persuasive and applicable to the issue before us 3
*355
First, the court in Carter examined the purpose of the Act which required payment bonds on public works projects where traditional payment mechanisms for laborers, such as mechanic's liens, are not allowed. The Carter court found that the Act represented a congressional effort to protect laborers and materialmen for the construction of federal buildings and that "[the essence of its policy is to provide a surety who, by force of the Act, must make good the obligations of a defaulting contractor to his suppliers of labor and material." Id. at 217,
Similarly, in Indiana, statutory provisions require payment bonds on public works projects to secure payment for subcontractors, labor, materialmen and those performing any service because mechanic's liens are not available to those who work on public works projects. See MacDonald v. Calumet Supply Co. (1939),
Second, the court in Carter discussed the intended beneficiaries of the Act. Under the federal law, the intended beneficiaries are the laborers and materiaimen owed compensation from their employment on public works projects. See 40 U.S.C. § 270b(a). Thus, "(als long as [the contractor's] obligations relating to compensation for labor have not been satisfied, his employees will not have been paid in full, and the Miller Act will not have served it purpose." Carter,
Under the Indiana statute, the beneficiaries are the same. The bond secures "the payment of all indebtedness to a person for labor and service performed ... [and tihe payment bond must state that it is for the benefit of the subcontractors, laborers, material suppliers and those performing services." IC 86-1-12-18.1(b).
Third, the court in Corter looked at the relationship between the trustees of the benefit fund and its employee-members.
Assignees of the claims of persons furnishing labor or material come within the protection of the statutory bond.... If the assignee of an employee can sue on the bond, the trustee of the employees' fund should be able to do so.... The trust agreement gives the trustee the exclusive right to enforce payment. The trustees stand in the shoes of the employees and are entitled to enforce their rights.
Moreover, the trustees of the fund have an even better right to sue on the bond than does the usual assignee since they are not seeking to recover on their own account. The trustees are claiming recovery for the sole benefit of the beneficiaries of the fund, and those beneficiaries are the very ones who have performed the labor.
In Indiana, assignees of employees have the right to recover under a payment bond. Smiley v. State (1916),
Finally, Carter notes the lack of equity that would result if the trustees were denied standing to sue on the bond: "[DJjenial of an assignee's right to sue on the bond might deprive those for whom the security was intended of a fair chance to realize upon their claims by assignment."
Seaboard further argues that Carpenters could not assert a valid claim against the Bond unless, had the construction project been a private project, it would have been entitled to assert a mechanic's lien pursuant to IC 82-8-3-1 (1988). Seaboard cites Edwards v. Bethlehem Steel Corp. (1988), Ind.App.,
II.
Carpenters contends it was not required to plead compliance with the notice provisions found in IC 86-1-12-18.1(d) (1988). Therefore, according to Carpenters, the trial court erred in dismissing its claim on the ground that Carpenters failed to comply with those provisions. The particular provisions in question read:
(d) A person to whom money is due for labor performed, material furnished, or services provided shall, within sixty (60) days after the completion of the labor or service, or within sixty (60) days after the last item of material has been furnished, file with the board signed duplicate statements of the amount due. The board shall forward to the surety to the payment bond one (1) of the signed duplicate statements. However, failure of the board to forward a signed duplicate statement does not affect the rights of a person to whom money is due. In addition, a failure to forward the statement does not operate as a defense for the surety.
(e) An action may not be brought against the surety until thirty [80] days after the filing of the signed duplicate statements with the board. If the indebtedness is not paid in full at the end of that thirty [80] day period the person may bring an action in court. The court action must be brought within sixty [60] days after the date of the final completion and acceptance of the public work.
IC 36-1-12-18.1(d) and (e).
Seaboard argues the statutory notice is a condition precedent to maintaining a judicial action and the trial court correctly dismissed the action because Carpenters failed to notify the board 4 prior to its action against Seaboard.
*357
Statutory notice is a procedural precedent which must be performed prior to commencing an action but which need not be pled under our notice pleading, i.e., it is not an element of plaintiff's claim. See Thompson v. City of Aurora (1975),
[tlhe question of compliance with the statute is not a question of fact for the [fact finder]. It is a procedural precedent which need not be pleaded but may be raised as a defense in a responsive pleading. If so raised the plaintiff then has the burden of proving compliance. The trial court must make the determination of whether proper notice was given and must do so prior to trial.
City of Indianapolis v. Satz (1978),
However, a T.R. 12(B)(6) motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, the vehicle used by Seaboard, is not the appropriate vehicle to present the issue to the court for the determination. That motion is limited to the face of the complaint and cannot reach the sufficiency of the plaintiff's proof on an issue which plaintiff need not allege. Therefore, the trial court erred in dismissing Carpenters' claim for failing to state a claim because the alleged deficien-ey, the claim's failure to allege compliance with a procedural precedent, need not be alleged. The complaint is not facially deficient for failing to contain such an allegation.
However, we proceed to address an issue which the parties address and which will arise upon remand-the nature of this procedural precedent and, in particular, when the sixty (60) days in which the duplicate statements must be filed with the public works board begins to run.
IC 36-1-12-18.1(d) is part of a statutory scheme which provides for the payment of contractors, laborers, material suppliers, and those who perform services for public work projects. See Concrete Steel Co. v. Metropolitan Casualty Ins. Co. (1930),
Generally, the public works board is required to withhold sufficient monies from the contractor to pay subcontractors, laborers, material suppliers, and those performing services. 6 Accordingly, the board is required to withhold the contractor's final payment until the contractor has paid these several persons. A subcontractor, laborer, material supplier, or service provider obtains payment by filing a claim with the *358 public works board "within sixty (60) days after the last labor performed, last material furnished, or last service rendered by them." IC 836-1-12-12(b) (emphasis added).
If there is no dispute between interested parties, the claimant shall be paid by the board from the money due to the contractor and the amount paid is deducted from the contract price. However, if there is a dispute, payment is not made and the "board shall retain sufficient money to pay the claims until the dispute is settled and the correct amount is determined." IC 86-1-12-12(d). Also, even if there is not a dispute, "if there is not a sufficient sum owed to the contractor to pay [claims filed by subcontractors, material suppliers, laborers, or service providers], the sum owed to the contractor shall be prorated in payment of the bills among the parties entitled." IC 86-1-12-12(a).
Of course, whether there are sufficient contract funds to pay these various claims may not be known until all the claims are filed, including the claim filed by the last person to perform labor, furnish material, or perform a service on the public works project. As explained later, the legislature was cognizant of this delay when it enacted an alternative statutory protection for the unpaid sub-contractor, laborer, material supplier or service provider on a public works project. In public works contracts where the cost of the public work is expected to exceed seventy-five thousand dollars ($75,000), the contractor is required to execute a payment bond, in the amount of the contract price, for "the payment of all indebtedness to a person for labor and service performed, material furnished, or services rendered. The payment bond must state that it is for the benefit of the subcontractors, laborers, material suppliers, and those performing services." IC 86-1-12-18.1(a).
IC 86-1-12-18.1 further provides that any unpaid subcontractor, laborer, material supplier, or service provider, who wishes to proceed under this alternative statutory remedy shall file with the board signed duplicate statements of the amount due "within sixty (60) days after the completion of the labor or service, or within sixty (60) days after the last item of material has been furnished...."
Assuming payment in full is not forth coming within an additional thirty (80) days of the date the duplicate statements are filed with the public works board, the unpaid person may initiate an action in court against the surety. However, in all events, the "court action must be brought within sixty (60) days after the date of the final completion and acceptance of the public work." 7 IC 36-1-12-18.1(e).
The pertinent question is when does the sixty (60) day period commence within which the duplicate statements must be filed with the public works board. The time commences from that date when the last material is provided. or the last labor or service is performed by any subcontractor, laborer, service provider, or material-man, on the public works project. This time frame is the only one that provides the protection intended by the legislative scheme. As explained earlier, a subcontractor, material provider, laborer, or service performer will not necessarily know within sixty (60) days of the date of their last labor or services or material whether their claim will be paid. Therefore, the sixty (60) day period for filing duplicate statements of an amount due, in order to seek payment from the surety, must commence at a later time than the commencement of the sixty (60) day period within which a claim for payment commences. This conclusion is reinforced by the distinction in language between IC 86-1-12-12(b) and IC 836-1-12-13.1(d); the former refers *359 to claims which must be filed within sixty (60) days of the date that the claimant last performed any labor, furnished material, or provided service, while the latter refers to duplicate statements which shall be filed with the board "within sixty (60) days after the completion of the labor or service, or within sixty (60) days after the last item of material has been furnished." 8 (emphasis added).
In summary, if a subcontractor, material provider, service performer, or laborer desires payment from the board, out of funds retained by the board, the subcontractor, material provider, service performer, or laborer must file a claim with the public works board within sixty (60) days of the date that entity last performed labor, furnished material, or rendered service. If payment is not made, or is not made in full, the subcontractor, material provider, service performer, or laborer has until sixty -(60) days after the last labor or service is performed, or the last item of material furnished by any subcontractor, material provider, service performer, or laborer, to seek payment from the surety by filing duplicate statements of the amount due with the public works board, and then must wait thirty (30) days before initiating an action against the surety. 9
The trial court erred in sustaining Seaboard's TR. 12(B)(6) motion. Accordingly, the order dismissing the second count of Carpenters' complaint is reversed and the cause remanded for further proceedings.
Notes
. 40 U.S.C. § 270a et seq. (1935).
. The Court found that even though contributions to the benefit fund were not wages, the Act did not limit recovery on the statutory bond to wages. The contributions, agreed to by the contractor under the terms of the employment agreement, were part of the compensation for the work done by the employees and those employees would not be "paid in full" until such contributions were made. Carter,
. Other states have interpreted their state public works statutes using the principles enunciated in Carter. See Trustees, Florida West Coast Trowel Trades Pension Fund v. Quality Concrete Company, Inc. (1980), Fla.Dist.Ct.App.,
. IC 36-1-12-1.2 (1988) states: "As used in this chapter 'board' means the board or officer of a *357 political subdivision or agency having the power to award contracts for public works."
. "Every defense, in law or fact, to a claim for relief in any pleading ... shall be asserted in the responsive pleading thereto if one is required." TR. 12(B).
. The contract between the public works board and the contractor must "contain a provision for the payment of subcontractors, laborers, material suppliers, and those performing services. The board shall withhold money from the contract price in a sufficient amount to pay the subcontractors, laborers, material suppliers, and those furnishing services." IC 36-1-12-13 (1988).
. This latter date is significant only in the rare situation where the public work is completed and accepted within thirty (30) days of the date that the last labor or service is performed or the last material provided. In that rare situation, the duplicate statements of the amount due would have to be filed in less than sixty (60) days after the labor or service is performed or the material provided in order to initiate the action within the sixty (60) day limit and yet fulfill the mandatory thirty (30) day waiting period between the filing of the statements and commencing the action.
. This distinction is emphasized by the phrase by them which appears in IC 36-1-12-12(b) and does not appear in IC 36-1-12-13.1(d).
. Of course, the action against the surety must be filed within sixty (60) days of the date that the public works projects is finally completed and accepted. Therefore, it is conceivable that an unpaid subcontractor, laborer, materialman, or service provided would have to file its duplicate statements in less than sixty (60) days from the date labor or service is last performed or material is last provided, in order to initiate a timely action.
