56 Colo. 64 | Colo. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court:
This action involves the interpretation of certain portions of a contract between The Otero Irrigation District and Noonan and O’Neill. The court found that the district has in its possession $12,908.64 due Noonan and O’Neill, which the decree holds was a fund created by express agreement for the express purpose of satisfying claims for labor and material furnished to, and used by, Noonan and O’Neill in the construction of a reservoir for the district. By reason of these findings it was held that the appellees (who were subcontractors, material-men and laborers under the contractors Noonan and O’Neill) were entitled to have most of this fund applied in payment of their claims against the contractors. Judgments were entered accordingly.
The case was disposed of upon the admissions contained in the pleadings and an agreed statement of facts. They disclose that the district was organized under our irrigation district statutes; that it entered into a written contract with Noonan and O’Neill for the construction of a reservoir for which it agreed to pay a certain sum; that the contractors entered upon the construction of this work, during which period they were paid eighty-five per cent of their estimates, fifteen per cent being reserved under the provisions of the contract; that the contractors failed to comply with the terms of the contract, on account of which the district gave them notice to discontinue the work, which they did, all as provided
Sec. 2. “The work embraced in the contract shall be commenced within fifteen days after the execution of the*68 contract, - * * * and carried on regularly and uninterruptedly thereafter with sufficient force to insure its completion on or before the first day of January, 1908. Failure to shall render the contractor liable to the Otero Irrigation District in the sum of twenty-five dollars ($25) as.liquidated damages for each and every day’s delay in commencing the work: For reasons satisfactory to the board, said board may waive any claims upon the contractor for damages here referred to.”
Sec. 12. “Should the contractor fail to begin the work within the time stipulated, or fail to prosecute the work in such manner as to insure a full compliance with the contract within the time limit, or fail to perform the said work in compliance with the terms of the contract and the specifications hereto annexed, and the directions of the engineer, or neglect or refuse to remove or rebuild such work as shall have been rejected by the engineer as being defective or unsuitable, the board shall notify the contractor to that effect in writing; and if the contractor shall not within ten days thereafter take such measures as will insure the satisfactory performance or construction of the work within the time limit, the board may notify the contractor to discontinue all work under his contract, and the contractor shall immediately respect said notice and stop work, and cease to have any rights to the possession of the ground and shall forfeit his contract. The board may, thereupon, advertise and let a contract for the uncompleted work in the same manner as was followed in the letting of this contract and charge the cost thereof to said original contractor upon this contract. It is distinctly understood that £time,’ whenever mentioned in this contract, is of the essence of this agreement. ’ ’
Sec. 16. ‘ ‘ The contractor shall be subject to the laws of the state of Colorado regarding liens for labor and*69 materials furnished for said work, and shall protect and indemnify the boárd against all legal claims or liens against the work for labor and materials furnished to the contractor, or to parties who may have furnished labor or materials for said work, out of any moneys due or to become due him, and the board shall charge the same to the contractor as so much paid on this contract and the board may from time to time retain such reasonable sums as it may deem necessary for its protection in this behalf, and the contractor shall pay the deficiency arising therefrom upon demand.”
Sec. 20. “Payments shall be made, monthly, to the contractor, on or about the fifteenth day of each month, in installments of eighty-five per cent of all moneys due for the work done or materials delivered under this contract, up to and including the last day of the preceding month, under and in accordance with the provisions and stipulations of this contract based on estimates of work completed, made and certified to by the engineer and approved by the board.”
The appellees claim it is also necessary to take into consideration a part of section 23 of the irrigation district act of 1905, which reads:
“The person or persons to whom a contract may be awarded shall enter into a bond, with good and sufficient sureties, to be approved by the board, payable to said district for its use, for not less than ten per cent of the amount of the contract price, conditioned for the faithful performance of said contract.”
The district contends that section 21 of the contract should also be considered in arriving at the intention of the parties; it reads:
Sec. 21. “When all the work embraced in this contract is fully completed agreeably to the stipulations and*70 specifications of this agreement, and accepted by tbe board, the board shall cause a final estimate to be made of the amount and value of said work, according to the terms and prices of this agreement; and in making such final estimate, neither the board nor the contractor shall be estopped by the monthly estimates theretofore made, as aforesaid. From the total amount so found, there shall be deducted, firstly, all previous payments made to the contractor, and secondly, all damages and other proper charges under this agreement not theretofore charged to the contractor, and the balance, if any, shall be paid to the contractor, but not until sixty (60) days after completion of his work and contract, upon the giving by the contractor, to the board of directors, a release from all claims whatsoever growing out of this agreement.”
Counsel have stipulated that the district’s property is not subject to mechanics’ liens. A stipulation of counsel as to what the law is, would not be binding upon this court; but, as the record discloses that in a former trial it was thus held, from which no appeal was taken, the question is not before us for determination, and we express no opinion concerning it, but will treat the stipulation and the judgments in the former case (for the purpose of this action) as conclusive of the fact that the district’s reservoir could not be held for the payment of these claims, without approving or disapproving of the agreement pertaining to what the law is upon the subject.
■ The main contention of the appellees is, that under the contract the fund in question was specifically and expressly created and appropriated to satisfy claims for labor and material used in the construction of the reservoir; that by the terms of the contract this fund was in equity assigned by the contractors for this purpose; that the district accepted the assignment and expressly agreed
Counsel place considerable stress upon the language contained in section 16, which provides that the contractors shall be subject to the lien laws of the state, and that they shall protect and indemnify the board against all such claims or liens, etc. It further provides that the board may, from time to time, retain such reasonable sums as it may deem necessary for its protection in this behalf and the contractor shall pay the deficiency arising
It is true, as contended that section 20 does not of itself show for what purpose the fifteen per cent is retained, but it is clear that it was not retained for the sole purpose of protecting the district against the claims of the creditors of the contractors; there is no statement therein that it would retain any amounts and pay it to this class of creditors; no trust in this manner is declared. Reading this section in connection with section 21 following, it becomes apparent the intention was that the contractors should, up to the end, receive only so much of the fund retained as they should have earned over and above any damages which the district might suffer by breach of the contract. Section 21 says that from the total so found due there shall be deducted,
Had the fund been reserved under the provisions of section 16 it would not be subject to disposition as contended for by the appellees, for the reason that the reservation was for the benefit and protection of the district, and not for the benefit of the subcontractors, materialmen, etc. Language quite similar was in the contract involved in School District v. Thomas, 51 Neb. 740, 71 N. W. 731, where the contract provided that eighty-five per cent of the estimates due the contractor be paid at certain times; that fifteen per cent be retained by the district for a stated period for the express purpose of insuring the district that all claims of subcontractors and laborers or others had been fully paid by the contractor. It was there claimed that this fund was created by express agreement for the purpose of satisfying such claims for labor and that upon account thereof the district became a trustee for the subcontractor and thus a right originated by which the subcontractor became vested with the claim
“Neither can it be said that the retention of the amount of the estimates as they were made, presented, and in part paid, raised the right in the subcontractor to demand any part of such sum as his due, because it had its source in labor performed or materials furnished by him. Nor did the district become a trustee for the subcontractor, and thus a right originate by which the subcontractor became vested with a claim against the district for such sum.”
In Steele v. McBurney, 96 Iowa 449, 65 N. W. 332, the contract contained a provision that the owner should hold a- certain percentage of the contract price until the completion of the work. Held that this was for the benefit of the owner and did not afford a ground of personal liability by the owner to a subcontractor. In commenting upon this subject, at page 333, the court said:
“The provision for holding a part of the contract price until the conditions of the contract were fully complied with was for the benefit of the lodge, to secure the performance of the contract, and to protect it against such claims as might be enforced against it. The provision did not of itself give to the plaintiff any right against the lodge.”
A similar announcement is to be found in Lawrence v. United States (C. C.), 71 Fed. 228, where the United States let a contract for the construction of a courthouse, where a similar trust was sought to be forced by the assignee of the laborers, wherein the court, at page 230, said: “Nor have they (speaking of the subcontractors) any specific interest in the money so withheld.”
In Roussel v. Matthews, 62 App. Div. 1, 70 N. Y. Supp. 886, the plaintiff furnished material to the build
In Shorthill v. Bartlett, 131 Iowa 259, 108 N. W. 308, the owner agreed with the contractor to pay for the materials and labor to the parties entitled thereto, etc., thus placing himself under obligations to them.
In Bates v. Birmingham Paint & Glass Co., 143 Ala. 198, the owner promised to reserve and pay, out of the contract price, for the material furnished. These cases are not applicable to the facts here where the owner only reserved the right to retain certain sums for its protection.
The fact that the district was by statute required to take a bond from the contractors for the faithful performance of the contract is no reason why it could not otherwise protect itself by retaining a certain amount of the monthly estimate or provide in the contract for such other protection as it might require. In our opinion this requirement in no way militates against the construction which we have placed upon the contract, but to the contrary, although not disclosed in the record, it evidently was a wise precaution upon behalf of the district to make other provisions for its protection, as it is conceded in the briefs that the bond taken in this case has become
The court having erred in holding that this fund was by agreement reserved for the express purpose of paying a certain class of creditors, and that the district therein agreed so to do, and that this agreement constituted an assignment of this fund, it follows that it cannot be disposed of in this manner. Neither can it be reached by assuming that this action is in the nature of a creditor’s bill for the reason that_ a creditor’s bill will not lie to reach assets of the debtor which the debtor cannot recover in an action in his own name.—Bonte v. Cooper, 90 Ill. 440; Nolting v. National Bank, 99 Va. 54, 37 S. E. 804; Weckerly v. Taylor, 74 Neb. 84, 103 N. W. 1065; Browning v. Bettis, 8 Paige’s Ch. 568.
In German Nat. Bank v. First Nat. Bank, 59 Neb. 14, 80 N. W. at page 49, in commenting upon this question it was said:
“ ‘This action’ say counsel, ‘as it now stands, is an action on the part of a creditor to subject to its claim assets of a debtor not reachable by execution.’ This being the character of the case, it is evident the plaintiff’s rights are precisely the same as those of the hardware company. The plaintiff cannot succeed unless its debtor had an actionable demand against the appellant when' this suit was instituted.”
The language of the Nebraska case is applicable here. According to the agreed statement of facts the contractors have no claim against the district which could
For the reasons stated the judgment is reversed and the cause remanded.
Reversed.
Chief Justice Musser and Mr. Justice Gabbert concur.