90 S.E. 1010 | N.C. | 1916
On the trial it was made to appear that in July, 1914, the board of school commissioners of Concord, N.C. contracted with the Brown Construction Company to provide the material and labor for erection and completion of a public school building in said city at a cost of $11,236 and required said contractor to enter into a bond in the sum of $5,000 for the proper performance of the contract, etc. This bond was given by the construction company with the individual defendants as sureties and said building has been "erected, constructed, and completed," and same has been duly accepted by the board and paid for. That during construction of said building, plaintiffs, under a contract with the construction company, furnished the material and labor to put on and complete the roofing on said building, to the amount of $771.41, and the same and every part thereof is now due and owing plaintiff from the construction company. That later the construction company became insolvent and plaintiff instituted the present action against said company and the sureties on the bond to recover the amount claimed to be due.
The court charged the jury, in effect, that if they believed the evidence, both the company and the individual defendants, sureties on the bond, were liable for the debt.
There was verdict for plaintiff against all of defendants for (710) $771.41. Judgment, and the individual defendants excepted and appealed. The contract for the erection of the building makes stipulation, among other things, "That the contractors shall and will provide all the material and perform all the work for the erection and completion of a high school building on the lot of the owners in the city of *764 Concord, etc., at the price of $11,236," etc. And further: "If at any time there shall be evidence of any lien or claim for which, if established, the owners of the said premises might become liable, and which is chargeable to the contractors, the owners shall have the right to retain out of any payment then due or thereafter to become due an amount sufficient to completely indemnify them against such lien or claim. Should there prove to be any such claim after all such payments are made, the contractors shall refund to the owners all moneys that the latter may be compelled to pay in discharging any lien on said premises made obligatory in consequence of the contractor's default." And again: "The contractors further agree to furnish the owners, free of cost to the owners, a satisfactory indemnity bond in the sum of $5,000, to guarantee the faithful performance of the contract and to indemnify the owners against liability from accidents to persons or their property during the erection of the building." The conditions of the $5,000 indemnity bond, signed by defendant, is as follows: "Now, therefore, if the above bounden R. A. Brown Construction Company shall well and truly perform and fulfill all the covenants and agreements mentioned in said contract and specifications for the erection and completion of the said building, to be performed and fulfilled as therein set forth, and to the written approval of the said architects, and will and shall save and keep harmless the said board of school commissioners of the city of Concord and the said building and the land on which the same is erected from all and every claim for materials, labor, or otherwise incurred by reason of erection and completion of said building, and shall turn over the said building to the said board of school commissioners of the city of Concord free and clear from all liens or claims for material or labor, and faithfully perform the said contract and save the said board of school commissioners of the city of Concord against all liability from accident to person or property during the erection of said building, then this obligation to be void; otherwise, to remain in full force and virtue."
(711) Upon these, the portions of the contract and bond more directly relevant, we are of opinion that plaintiff has shown no cause of action against the sureties. There are many decisions with us to the effect that in case of these guarantee bonds or written contracts of indemnity third persons interested and having claims, though not named, may institute action thereon and recover when it appears by "express stipulation or by fair and reasonable intendment that their rights and interests were contemplated and being provided for." Morton v. WaterCo.,
In case of building contracts with bonds guaranteeing performance on the part of the contractor, it is held that in determining the question of the sureties' liability to third persons the contract and bond shall be construed together. Mfg. Co. v. Andrews,
On careful consideration of this contract and the bond to secure same, it is clear that, so far as the sureties on the bond are concerned, the obligation is one strictly of indemnity towards the owner, and that the claims of laborers or materialmen were in no way considered or provided for except in so far as necessary to effect the primary purpose. In the contract, the stipulation is, first to provide the material and labor to complete the building, simply the usual form of obligation between the *766 owner and contractor, and otherwise has no special significance. Mfg. Co.v. Andrews, supra.
Further on the subject, there is provision if at any time there shall be evidence of any lien or claim for which, if established, the owner might become liable and which is chargeable to contractors; and, again: "The bond is to guarantee the faithful performance of the contract and to indemnify the owners against liability from accidents," etc. And the bond given, providing for the faithful performance: "and will save and keep harmless the said board of school commissioners of the city of Concord, and the saidbuilding and the land on which the same is erected, from all and every claim for material, labor, or otherwise incurred, etc., and shall turn over the said building to said board free from all claims for material," etc. Not a word in either contract or bond, or the two together, looking to any obligation assumed to the materialmen or for their benefit, but only so far as required to protect the owners and the building and land on which it is situate from liens or claims which might be made effective against them.
The facts in evidence showing that every condition of the bond has been met, the building completed according to specifications and turned over to public authorities free from any and all claims against them, the building or the land on which the same is situate, no liability should attach to the sureties, and the judgment as to them must be reversed. Townsend v.Cleveland Co., 18 Ind. App., supra.
We are not inadvertent to a line of authorities cited for plaintiffs that in claims of this kind statutes and bonds looking to the protection of materialmen and laborers should receive a liberal interpretation, notably, the case of United States to the use of Hill v. Surety Co.,
There is error, and the judgment against the sureties is reversed and action dismissed.
Reversed.
Cited: Lumber Co. v. Johnson,
(714)