350 Mass. 433 | Mass. | 1966
By this bill in equity the plaintiff, an Ohio corporation, seeks to establish its right to payment for materials furnished by it for use in the construction of a school building in Framingham (the town). No appeal has been taken from a final decree dismissing the bill as against the town. It does not appear from the record that
The plaintiff appealed the final decree dismissing its bill. The judge allowed a bill of exceptions relating to his interlocutory decrees sustaining the pleas in bar.
No evidence was offered by any party and none was requested by any party or by the judge. There was no agreement or stipulation as to any fact. The “pleas in bar” introduce no new matter which if proved, would defeat the bill. They merely point to allegations in the bill which, they averred, when read with the invoices annexed to the bill, would preclude the relief sought by the plaintiff. The so called pleas thus are directed to the alleged inadequacies on the face of the bill. Despite the captions, the “pleas in bar,” in legal substance and effect, are demurrers and we treat them as such. Greene v. Springfield Safe Deposit & Trust Co. 295 Mass. 148, 149. Spadea v. Stewart, ante, 218, 222, and cases cited. See Becker v. Zarkin, 292 Mass. 359, 361 and Kalmus v. Kalmus, 330 Mass. 41, 42.
The only question before us is whether the bill was properly dismissed.
The bill alleges that on May 16,1962, the town contracted with the Wexler Construction Company, Inc. (Wexler) for the construction of a school building at a cost of $5,652,481. The Contract provided for payment security for all labor and materials used by subcontractors. This was to be accomplished by the town retaining a percentage of the amount owed to Wexler until completion of the work, and also by Wexler furnishing a payment security bond equal to the contract price, on which the defendant Travelers Indemnity Co. (Travelers) was surety.
Rusco thereafter subcontracted with Structural for the delivery of certain materials required by the Wexler-Busco contract, at a cost of $49,500. Structural, in turn, contracted with the plaintiff for the purchase of materials required by the Structural-Rusco contract. The price was $9,638.14. The materials were delivered to. Structural, but the bill does not specify the date. Notations on the invoices annexed to the plaintiff’s bill indicate that the plaintiff shipped the materials from its plant in Ohio to Structural, in Connecticut, on October 25 and November 14,1962.
The bill alleges that Structural was adjudicated a bankrupt in the United States District Court for the District of Connecticut on an unspecified date subsequent to March 21, 1963. Structural, however, completed its work under its contract with Busco and made delivery to Busco at the school site on or about May 13, 1963. The plaintiff has never been paid by Structural. It notified Travelers and Providence on May 24, 1963, of its intention to enforce its claim under the payment security bonds. On the same day, the plaintiff wrote Busco that it claimed a lien under G-. L. c. 254, § 31, added by St. 1961, c. 530.
So far as now relevant, Busco, Wexler, Providence, and Travelers are the defendants. Their pleas in'bar, pointing solely to the dates of shipment as appearing in the invoices annexed to the bill (October 25, 1962, and November 14, 1962) and to the date of notice to the town clerk (June 4, 1963) , ask that the bill be dismissed on the ground that Gk L. c. 149, § 29, requires that a sworn statement of- claim under a payment security bond in a public contract be filed with the town clerk “prior to the expiration of ninety days after the claimant ceases to . . . furnish . . . materials . . . for which claim is made . . ..”
The only questions are whether the bill was properly dismissed as to all the remaining defendants. Before considering these questions, however, we should untangle the various asserted rights of the plaintiff, indicate their proper origins and single out those that are properly before us. We need not, of course, consider the claims against the town since there is no appeal from the decree dismissing the bill as against it.
(1) The plaintiff asserts that under Gk L. c. 149, § 29, its claim is secured by the payment bonds provided by Wexler for the benefit of the town (the WexIér-town-Traveler s bond), and by Busco for the benefit of Wexler (the Wexler-Busco-PrOvidence bond). Section 29, however, covers only bonds given by the general contractor and does not affect a payment security bond from a subcontractor to the general contractor. Marinucci Bros. & Co. Inc. v. Semper Constr. Co. Inc. 343 Mass. 738, 740. Thus, only the Wexler-townTravelers bond may be reached by a claim under § 29.
(3) Finally, the plaintiff seeks to establish a lien, under Gr. L. c. 254, § 31, added by St. 1961, c. 530 (see fn. 2), on funds allegedly held by Busco as retainage for payment security in its contract with Structural. Statute 1961, c. 530, does not apply to contracts with the Commonwealth or its political subdivisions. Whether it applies to contracts between subcontractors under a general contract for public works has not yet been decided by this court. As will appear, the present record offers no basis for a decision on the question now.
In summary, the plaintiff has the following theories of recovery: Under No. (1) above, a right under the statutory Wexler-town-Travelers bond and a right under the non-statutory Wexler-Busco-Providence bond; under No. (2) above, a nonstatutory, contractual claim to funds retained for payment security purposes by Wexler in its contract with Busco; and under No. (3) above, a statutory right to a lien on funds retained by Busco in its contract with Structural.
The pleas in bar, treated by us as demurrers, filed by Wexler and Travelers and by Busco and Providence invoke only the provisions of Gr. L. c. 149, § 29, relating to filing of a sworn statement of claim. Thus, what was put in issue by the defendants were only those claims of the plaintiff relating to statutory payment security bonds. The Wexler-Busco-Providence bond, however, was not a statutory bond. A defence applicable to a statutory bond, therefore, was of no avail to those defendants. It follows that there was error in sustaining the pleas of Busco and Providence, treated as demurrers, on that ground. The interlocutory and final decrees in favor of Busco and Providence must be reversed.
Wexler and Travelers cite the shipping dates of October and November, 1962, in the invoices and, on the premise that those dates mark the running of the ninety day period, argue that the filing with the town clerk on June 4, 1963, came more than ninety days after the plaintiff had ceased to furnish its goods. Hence, these defendants contend, lack of a seasonable sworn statement of claim appears on the plaintiff’s bill and the suit fails for noncompliance with the statutory provision.
If, indeed, the plaintiff, in the statute’s terms, had ceased to furnish its materials when they were shipped, the ninety day period would begin to run at that time. Shipping dates have, in fact, been used to determine the time before which the statement could not be filed by the claimant with the designated public official. Lock Joint Pipe Co. v. Commonwealth, 331 Mass. 346, 352. The reason for this is that the claimant cannot be said to have ceased to furnish the materials before shipping them. On the other hand, it accords with the broad construction given this remedial statute (C. C. Smith Co. Inc. v. Frankini Constr. Co. 334 Mass. 379, 385; Cohen v. Henry N. Worthington Co. 334 Mass. 509, 514) to allow the phrase “ceases to furnish” to embrace the sequence of shipment and delivery so that the time period may run from the last date of receipt of the materials by the consignee. See Westinghouse Elec. Corp. v. J. J. Grace & Son, Inc. 349 Mass. 664, 666-667.
The plaintiff’s bill relates that the goods were delivered to Structural and that a sworn statement of claim was filed
Inasmuch as the defendants’ “pleas in bar” were addressed only to the claim for recovery under the statutory bond, the claims under the Wexler retainage, the Busco bond, and the lien under Gr. L. c. 254, § 31, remain to be considered by the Superior Court. Peerless Unit Ventilation Co. Inc. v. D’Amore Constr. Co. 283 Mass. 121, 125-126.
The interlocutory and final decrees are reversed, and the exceptions of the plaintiff are sustained.
So ordered.
“In the event that a general contractor or a subcontractor on any construction work is adjudged a bankrupt ... at a time when there are sums due or which later become due from the person contracting for the work on account of the work of such general contractor or when there are sums due or which later become due from the general contractor on account of the work of such subcontractor, each person furnishing labor or labor and materials to such general contractor or such subcontractor shall have a lien each in proportion.to the amount of his respective claim on all such sums due or which later become due in connection with the particular construction work .... The provisions of this section shall not apply to any contract "with the commonwealth or with any political subdivision, thereof or any other public instrumentality. ’ ’