36 Ind. App. 595 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1905
The appellants, as partners, sued the appellees and Charles Steinke to recover the value of certain materials furnished by the appellants to Steinke, under a contract between him and the appellants, to be used by him, and which were used by him, in the construction and building of a dwelling-house upon a certain lot in South Bend,
The questions properly before the court relate to the second paragraph of the answer of Quimby E. Taggart, a demurrer to which was overruled, and to the third paragraph of the reply of the appellants to that paragraph of answer, a demurrer to the third paragraph of reply having been sustained.
In the second paragraph of the answer of Quimby E. Taggart it was in substance shown that he was the owner of the real estate in question. September 19, 1901, he entered into a contract in writing with Steinke for the erection of the house mentioned in the complaint, a copy of this contract being set. out in the answer. Steinke wholly failed to comply with or perform this contract, but refused to do so, and left the State of Indiana. Said defendant “has complied with and performed all the provisions and agreements on his part to be performed, and contained in said contract.” After the making of this contract the appellants, to secure and insure to said defendant the performance and fulfilment by Steinke of said contract, on September 20, 1901, entered into, an undertaking, set out, being a bond executed by Charles Steinke, as principal, and the appellants as sureties, to appellee Taggart in the sum of $1,000, conditioned as follows: “The condition of the above obligation is such that, whereas, by certain articles of agreement bearing date September 19, 1901, between the above-bounden principal and the
The contract between the owner and the contractor, Steinke, contained a provision that the latter should provide all the materials and perform all the work mentioned in the specifications and shown on the drawings prepared by the architects for the erection and completion of the building, and the contract made provision for the payment by the owner to the contractor for the work and materials in a certain aggregate sum.
The bond, whose condition is quoted above, not only purports to have been given for the due performance of the articles of agreement between the owner and the contractor, and for the purpose of saving the owner harmless from any and all liability and damage and injury on account of any
Having thus obligated themselves to the owner, the appellants can not be permitted to enforce a mechanic’s lien filed by themselves to secure payment for materials sold by them to the principal obligor, for use in the building contemplated in the bond. This conclusion is well sustained-by McHenry v. Knickerbacker (1891), 128 Ind. 77. See, also, Closson v. Billman (1904), 161 Ind. 610; Interior Woodwork Co. v. Prasser, (1901), 108 Wis. 557; 84 N. W. 833 ; Rynd v. Pittsburg Natatorium (1896), 173 Pa. St. 237, 33 Atl. 1041; Gannon’s Executors v. Central Presbyterian Church, (1896), 173 Pa. St. 242, 33 Atl. 1043.
Judgment affirmed.