292 A.2d 273 | Conn. Super. Ct. | 1971
On or about March 8, 1968, the town of West Hartford, as owner, signed a contract with the defendant P. J. Carlin Construction Company, hereinafter referred to as Carlin, as general contractor for construction of a school in West Hartford. On or about the same day Carlin, as principal, and Aetna Casualty and Surety Company, hereinafter referred to as Aetna, as surety, signed a labor and material payment bond in favor of West Hartford for $6,402,000. The plaintiff is a claimant qualified to file suit under the terms of the bond. The bond specifically provides that a claimant must sue in a state court in the county where the project is situated, or in the federal District Court where the project is situated, "and not elsewhere." The bond was required under §
The contract between the plaintiff and Carlin contains a provision requiring the rights of the parties to be construed pursuant to New York law, and an agreement by the plaintiff that it will not commence any action, legal or equitable, against Carlin "or its sureties on bonds . . . because of any matter whatsoever arising out of the alleged breach or performance of this Subcontract Agreement in any Courts other than those in . . . New York, and the Subcontractor expressly waives any and all rights [it] might have by reason of the aforesaid bond provisions, if any, or by reason of any other cause whatsoever, to bring said action in any other court. The rights herein given the contractor shall also be deemed for the direct benefit of the aforesaid sureties . . . with the same force and effect as if they were parties hereto."
Our applicable statute, General Statutes §
Carlin demurs on the ground that its contract with the plaintiff requires the suit to be heard and decided only in New York courts. It argues that the modern rule is contained in Central ContractingCo. v. C. E. Youngdahl Co.,
In our case, we not only have a suit on a surety bond which by its terms requires suit to be brought in the county where the project is situated, but we also have General Statutes §
For the same reasons that Central, supra, falls by the wayside as support for Carlin's position, so doSchwartz v. Zim Israel Navigation Co.,
In our case, the plaintiff's claim under the bond against Aetna can only be pursued in Connecticut. Thus, pursuant to the language of Central, supra, 133, the private agreement between the plaintiff and Carlin would be considered "unreasonable . . . where its enforcement would, under all circumstances existing at the time of litigation, seriously impair plaintiff's ability to pursue his cause of action." In the instant case, a suit in New York by the plaintiff against Aetna on the surety bond would be met with defeat because of the terms of the bond itself and General Statutes §
Carlin seeks to distinguish Omega on the ground that it did not involve a written agreement in which, as here, the plaintiff waived his rights to sue on the bond in any court except New York. If such a provision in a private contract relating to public works were to be given effect, it would clearly deprive the plaintiff of his right to sue in any court, because New York would not entertain the suit and the plaintiff would be barred by contract from suing in Connecticut. Thus, the entire rationale of §
If in Omega, supra, the parties had a contract containing provisions like the one here, the result could not have been any different, because the statutory bond on which the plaintiff in Omega sought relief against the defendant surety company required, as here, a suit in Connecticut. What Carlin fails to acknowledge in its attempt to distinguishOmega is that the suit on the surety bond is governed by the terms of the bond itself, and these terms require a suit in Connecticut only. Had a provision similar to the one in the contract here been a part of the facts in Omega, it would not have created the right in the plaintiff to sue in the New York courts, because the defendant surety's rights were determined solely by the terms of the Connecticut statute and of its own bond.
The demurrer is overruled.