250 Mass. 193 | Mass. | 1924
This was a suit in equity brought against the trustee in bankruptcy of the Flynt Building and Construction
The trustee in bankruptcy in a cross bill seeks to recover of the plaintiff the sum of $25,028.40, which he claims is due the estate of the bankrupt under “ Clause 8 ” of the contract, less the aggregate amount of all payments made to the bankrupt prior to the bankruptcy proceedings. The plaintiff seeks to deduct the amounts paid by it after the institution of bankruptcy proceedings for the purpose of cancelling obligations incurred by the bankrupt under the contract, $13,258.53; and in addition thereto the further sum of $12,352.87 to certain creditors of the bankrupt.
By reason of the law that the estate of a bankrupt is in custodia legis from the filing of the petition, and that the title of the trustee relates back to that date, Alexander v. F. L. Smithe Machine Co. 248 Mass. 436, Acme Harvester Co. v. Beekman Lumber Co. 222 U. S. 300, Everett v. Judson, 228 U. S. 474, Bailey v. Baker Ice Machine Co. 239 U. S. 268, Fairbanks Steam Shovel Co. v. Wills, 240 U. S. 642, the plaintiff could not lawfully have made such payments, unless it was required to do so by an express contract or by a non-contractual obligation which was imposed by virtue of some mechanic’s lien, by virtue of some special statute, or by virtue of the doctrine of subrogation. No contention is made that the bankrupt or the trustee authorized these payments; and the master finds that there is in Connecticut, where the building was erected, no lien on public buildings such as this, for labor performed, or labor and materials furnished in the erection thereof.
Section 5221 of Gen. Sts. of Connecticut, concerning claims for labor and materials used or employed in and for the construction of public buildings, reads as follows: “Any officer or agent contracting in behalf of the State or
It is further found by the master, and it is not disputed by the plaintiff, that the plaintiff acts through a school committee of five members, who are duly elected officers of the district; that the agreement was signed on behalf of the plaintiff by three members of the school committee; and that the officers acting for the plaintiff district did not comply with the statute in that they failed to require from the bankrupt the bond called for by the provisions of the above quoted statute. As a rule of law it is indisputable that contractors, subcontractors and every person, firm or corporation furnishing or receiving materials and labor used or to be used in the construction of any public building in the State of Connecticut are chargeable with knowledge of all general laws of that State, and consequently know that a subcontractor., as such, has no legal enforceable claim against the plaintiff for materials and labor furnished the contractor or used in the construction of a public building unless the officers of the district received of the contractor “ a bond with sufficient surety . . . conditioned for the faithful execution of the contract according to its provisions and for the payment for all materials and labor used or employed in the
But the defendant cannot recover the amount which the master finds unpaid by the plaintiff under either “ Clause 8 ” or “ Clause 9-A ” of the contract. The statute above quoted is mandatory in the provision that “Any officer . . . contracting in behalf of the State or any subdivision thereof for the construction of any public building shall require from each contractor, as a condition precedent to the execution of a contract for any such construction, a bond with sufficient surety ...” The requirement of a bond is in the terms of the statute quoted a “ condition precedent to the execution of a contract.” The authority of the officers of the district to make the contract was conditional upon a receipt of the bond. The absence of a bond was the absence of a fact or condition without the presence of which no contract could be legally made by officers acting for the State or any subdivision thereof. United States Drainage & Irrigation Co. v. Medford, 225 Mass. 467. Simpson v. Marlborough,
It becomes unnecessary to consider other matters argued in the briefs.
It results that all decrees, interlocutory and final are affirmed.
Interlocutory decrees affirmed.
Final decrees affirmed.