197 P. 941 | Cal. | 1921
The plaintiff, who claims to have furnished materials used in certain street improvement work performed in the city of Los Angeles, brought suit upon the contractor's bond to recover the purchase price of said materials. Plaintiff's right to recover is not disputed; the controversy upon the present appeal is the result of issues raised by the cross-complaint.
Defendant Coast Construction Company, hereinafter referred to as the contractor, entered into a contract, in accordance with the provisions of the Vrooman Act (Deering's Gen. Laws 1915, p. 1714, Act 3930), for the performance by said contractor of street work in the city of Los Angeles. Concurrently with the execution of the contract, *588 the contractor, as principal, and the defendant and cross-complainant, American Surety Company of New York, as surety, executed and delivered to the city of Los Angeles the bond required by section 6 1/2 of the Vrooman. Act for the benefit of those performing labor upon and furnishing materials for said street improvement work. Thereafter the plaintiff furnished certain material used in said street work and, receiving no part of the purchase price thereof, filed with the board of public works of Los Angeles a verified statement of its claim, which contained the averment that it was filed pursuant to the provisions of the Vrooman Act and also to section 1184 of the Code of Civil Procedure, and purported to require said board to withhold payment from the contractor until plaintiff's claim was paid. Immediately after the filing of this notice, plaintiff brought suit against the contractor and the surety for the recovery of the said purchase price. In that action the defendant Surety Company filed a cross-complaint against the following, as cross-defendants: The plaintiff materialman, the contractor, the city of Los Angeles, the board of public works of said city and the Empire Securities Company, a corporation. The cross-complaint alleges that, prior to the commencement of this suit and prior to the filing of plaintiff's claim, the contractor had assigned to the Empire Securities Company its right to the warrant, assessment, and diagram which, by the terms of the Vrooman Act, are issuable to the contractor upon the completion of the contract and make it possible for the contractor to collect the assessments levied upon the property benefited by the street improvement work. The assignee filed this assignment with the city and with the board of public works prior to the filing of plaintiff's claim. The cross-complaint admits the validity of plaintiff's claim and seeks an injunction restraining the city and its board of public works from delivering to the contractor, or its assignees, the warrant, assessment, and diagram and to enforce the delivery thereof to a receiver to be appointed by the court, to the end that the assessment against the property benefited by the street improvement work may be collected and applied first in payment of the claim of plaintiff and "all other claims similarly situated." The aggregate amount due the contractor on account of said contract is $15,310. Plaintiff's claim *589 amounts to $2,083.70, and it does not appear that any other claims remain unpaid. The trial court granted the injunction as prayed for, but denied the motion for the appointment of a receiver, without prejudice to the right of cross-complainant to renew the same or of the court to grant such relief should equity require it. Upon the present appeal from the order granting the injunction, prosecuted by the Empire Securities Company, the city of Los Angeles and the board of public works of said city, appellants contend that the right of the Empire Securities Company, the assignee of the contractor, to the proceeds of the contract is superior to any claim of the contractor's surety.
The decision of Adamson v. Paonessa,
Under sections 7, 8, and 9 of the Vrooman Act the assessments of the property benefited must be made upon the completion of the work by the contractor, and the warrant, assessment, and diagram must be recorded in the office of the superintendent of streets. Thereupon the contractor, or his assignee, is entitled to receive the said warrant, assessment, and diagram "on demand, but not until after the payment to the said superintendent of streets of the incidental expenses not previously paid by the contractor, or his assigns." The term "incidental expenses" is defined in section 34 of the act as including the cost of printing and advertising required by the act, expenses of making assessments authorized by the act and the compensation of the city engineer and superintendent. Upon the payment of "incidental expenses" and regardless of whether the claims of materialmen and laborers have been discharged, the contractor, or his assignee, becomes, by virtue of the express provisions of the act, entitled to the warrant and assessment, and, upon receiving the same, he is authorized to immediately demand and receive from the respective property-owners the amounts of the several assessments. [1] There is no provision for the withholding of the warrant until the claims of the materialmen and laborers have been discharged. Since a precisely similar method of procedure was prescribed by the act under consideration in Adamson v.Paonessa, supra, the language of the court in that case is equally applicable to the case at bar. In the Vrooman Act, as in the "Improvement Act of 1911," the sole provision for the security of materialmen and laborers is the requirement "that every contractor to whom a contract is awarded under the act must file with the superintendent of streets a good and sufficient bond inuring to the benefit of any and all persons performing labor on or furnishing materials used in the work or improvement. There is no provision which gives such claimants any right or lien, equitable or otherwise, upon money or bonds coming to the contractor. In particular, there is no provision in the act authorizing or permitting the retention by the municipality, or by the owners whose lands are assessed, of anything which may be due the contractor in order to pay the claims *591
of materialmen or laborers, or permitting the deduction of the amount of such claims from anything that may be due the contractor. . . . It contemplates that the contractor be paid directly by the property owners whose property is assessed for that purpose each paying for himself his own assessment. . . . It is manifest that under such circumstances there is no single fund out of which the contractor is to be paid, and it is likewise clear that in view of the fact that payment may be made to the contractor without the interposition of the city treasurer or any other city official or common conduit of payment, any right to have moneys or bonds coming to a contractor retained to meet claims against the contractor would be quite impracticable." (Adamson v. Paonessa,
From what has been said, it is also obvious that, in the present case, as in Adamson v. Paonessa, supra, the provisions of section 1184 of the Code of Civil Procedure cannot be invoked. This section provides for the withholding of money by the owner, or person who contracted with the contractor, after receiving notice from one who has performed labor or furnished materials. [2] The Vrooman Act provides a comprehensive, self-sufficient, and exclusive plan for the improvement of streets, etc., which covers not only the doing of the work and the protection of laborers, materialmen, the city, and owners of property, but likewise provides a complete and comprehensive scheme for the payment of the contractor which, as previously stated, is irreconcilable with any process for withholding the funds such as that provided in section 1184 of the Code of Civil Procedure. But this is not the only reason that said section must be held inapplicable to proceedings under the Vrooman Act. That section is, by its own terms, limited in its application to "the persons mentioned in the preceding section," and none of the persons there mentioned are persons performing labor or furnishing materials for work of the character of that dealt with by the Vrooman Act, namely, work upon "streets, lanes, alleys, courts, places, sidewalks, and . . . sewers." (Kreuzberger v. Wingfield,
[3] It is clear that the decision in Adamson v. Paonessa,supra, is conclusive upon the point that the funds due the contractor upon completion of work contracted for under the Vrooman Act are free from any claim or lien of materialmen or laborers, and, consequently, that the contractor's surety cannot trace any claim thereto through such creditors of the contractor to the prejudice of intervening bona fide assignees of the said funds. [4] Respondent, however, seeks to distinguish the present case upon the ground that the surety in the instant case does not claim to be subrogated to rights of creditors of the contractor but is seeking exoneration. That is to say, respondent claims that, by virtue of its right to compel the principal to perform an obligation when due (Civ. Code, sec.
[5] Respondent surety calls attention to a clause in the contract for the street work in question which provides that the contractor is to turn over the work free and clear of all claims of laborers and materialmen. It is urged that this clause gave such claimants and the surety the right to resort to the proceeds of the contract for payment of the claims, and that, as regards this right, the assignee of the proceeds of the contract is in no better position than the original contractor, for it took with notice of the rights under this clause of the contract. We need not consider the question of the validity of a clause inserted in a contract for the purpose of imposing upon the contractor's right to demand the warrant a restriction not sanctioned by the act. The clause in question merely expresses the general legal duty on the part of the contractor to pay all materialmen and laborers. It imposes no additional burden upon the contractor, but simply reduces to writing the nature of the legal duty in regard to such matters assumed by the contractor and which would exist whether in writing *594 or not; it does not attempt in any way to increase the security for the performance of that legal duty on the part of the contractor or provide any additional protection in any form for the claimants in question, but leaves them to their right to sue upon the bond required by the act. The surety can enforce the performance of this obligation by the principal, but it cannot compel the performance by a third party who is a total stranger to the suretyship relation created by the bond. In other words, it cannot compel payment of the claims from the funds due under the contract after the right thereto has passed to a bona fide assignee.
The order granting the injunction is reversed.
Shaw, J., Wilbur, J., Sloane, J., Olney, J., Lawlor, J., and Angellotti, C. J., concurred.