We are of opinion that the complaint states a cause of action against the Surety Company.
Section 10 of the three-party contract provides that Fidelity guarantees, covenants, and agrees with the city that Donlen will well and truly perform the contract; “and that the said party or parties of the second part [Fidelity] will well and truly pay on demand to the said city of Milwaukee any and all damages, and sums of money, which the said party of the first part [Donlen] shall be liable to pay to the said city under this contract or any clause or agreement therein; and shall promptly make payment to each and every person or party entitled thereto of all the claims for work or labor performed and material furnished for or in or about this contract.” (Italics ours.)
In the absence of anything to the contrary in the contract, we construe the italicized clause as a promise by Fidelity to pay directly any claim against Donlen for “work or labor performed and material furnished for or in or about this contract,” if Donlen shall fail to pay the same. It is thus a contract for the benefit of the third persons who furnish work, labor, or materials to Donlen “for or in or about” the contract, and as such is enforceable in an action at law by a third-party beneficiary who brings himself within its terms.
Fidelity argues that the only purpose of section 10 of the contract is to protect the city, and that it should not be construed as a contract for the benefit of third-party suppliers of services or materials for the contract. We think, however, that the express words of section 10, that the defendant shall “promptly make payment to each and every person or party entitled thereto of all the claims for work or labor performed and material furnished” are too clear to admit of any such construction.
Ozaukee Sand & Gravel Co. v.
Milwaukee,
It remains to consider whether plaintiff brings himself within the class of persons to whose benefit the quoted promise extends. Does one who performs the service of hauling and delivering the sand and gravel which the principal contractor has contracted to furnish to the city have a claim “for work or labor performed and material furnished for or in or about this contract?” We think he does.
In our view the transportation of sand and gravel to the buyer is “work . . . performed for or in or about” the con
While Fidelity is a surety, it is a paid surety, and hence its obligation is not to receive the strict construction to which gratuitous sureties are entitled, but on the contrary has the essential features of an insurance contract and is subject to the rules of construction applicable to such contracts.
Building Contractors’ L. M. L. Ins. Co. v. Southern S. Co.
In sustaining Fidelity’s demurrer, the circuit court relied on a number of decisions holding that a surety’s obligation under a performance bond on a public improvement executed pursuant to the requirement of sec. 289.16 (1), Stats. (formerly sec.
3327a),
and in substantially the statutory language, is limited to payment of such claims as are described in that statute.
Wisconsin Brick Co. v. National Surety Co.
Under the rationale of those cases claims of many kinds for services or commodities furnished to public contractors were held to be “nonlienable” and not recoverable from the contractor’s bondsman. To the cases cited may be added
White v. United States F. & G. Co.
We do not think that that line of cases is controlling of the present one. Here the bond is not given pursuant to the requirement of sec. 289.16 (1), Stats., which applies only when the contract “pertains to or is for or in or about any public improvement or public work of whatsoever kind.” The contract now before us is not directly related to any public improvement or public work, but merely calls for the sale and delivery of commodities not earmarked for use on any particular project. Hence it is not a contract for a “public improvement or public work.”
Ozaukee Sand & Gravel Co. v. Milwaukee,
Since the obligation now in suit was not required by sec. 289.16 (1), Stats., there is no reason to construe it as limited in coverage to the statutory requirement. Moreover, it is broader in terms than sec. 289.16 (1), which requires that
The provision of section 16 of the present contract, that the contract is made expressly subject to the provisions of ch. 261, Laws of 1882, and laws amendatory and supplemental thereto, is immaterial to the construction of section 10. The statute thus referred to, now sec. 26.11, Milwaukee city charter (1934 ed.), provides that any person furnishing “supplies or materials” for the use of a contractor in the performance of any contract made with the board of public works of the city of Milwaukee, in the name of the city, or that shall do any labor for such contractor in the performance of such contract, shall have a lien, enforceable according to a prescribed procedure. This statute requires no bond, and the contract is not made with the board of public works, but instead with the central board of purchases. See
Worden-Allen Co. v.
Milwaukee,
By the Court. — The order sustaining the demurrer of the defendant Fidelity & Casualty Company of New York and the judgment dismissing the complaint as to said defendant are reversed, with directions to overrule the demurrer.
