211 Pa. 388 | Pa. | 1905
Opinion by
By the ordinance of the city of Philadelphia approved March 30, 1896, providing for a bond from a contractor for municipal work, to secure the prompt payment to all persons supplying him with labor or materials, whether as a subcontractor or otherwise, there is a direction that before any person shall have a right to institute suit on the bond as the
In his contract with Pierson the appellee agreed to give him a bond to indemnify him against defects in workmanship and materials for one year after the city’s acceptance of the building, and there is an averment in the affidavit of defense that such bond had not been given. There is no averment that Pierson ever exacted it, or that any loss had been occasioned by the failure to give' it. Though he is sued with the appellant, he makes no defense to this action, which is brought for the recovery of materials furnished. The affidavit of defense is made by The Lincoln Savings and Trust Company alone. It is sued on a bond which was not given to the appellee to secure the faithful performance of Pierson’s contract with him, but to the city of Philadelphia, to secure the payment of materials and labor furnished in the erection of the school building, and, so far as can be gathered from the affidavit of defense, the failure of the appellee to give the bond of indemnity to Pierson is not involved in this issue between the use plaintiff and the defendant on its bond, given to the city for the purpose stated.
A credit of $14.00 is claimed under the averment that the defendant is entitled “ to a further credit of fourteen dollars for moneys expended by the said George W. Pierson in repairing a pave-wash broken by teams belonging to the use plaintiff and driven by a servant of the use plaintiff.” This is insufficient to establish a set-off in this action of assumpsit. From all that appears from the averment, if there is any liability from Watson to Pierson on this item, it is on a technical tort and cannot be used as a set-off to appellee’s claims: Ahl v. Rhoads, 84 Pa. 319; Jenkins v. Rush Brook Coal Co., 205 Pa. 166.
There is nothing in the affidavit of defense which would have justified the court below in withholding judgment for the reason that time had been given by Pierson to the plaintiff in discharge of the surety, and the assignment as to this is dismissed.
One of Pierson’s subcontractors was Lucas Peters. The
By the terms of the contract Pierson was to retain five per cent, of the bill for stone until one year after the city had made final payment for the building. There is an averment in the affidavit of defense that final payment was made April 23, 1903. This suit was brought October 21,1903. At that time the five per cent, which Pierson had a right to retain was not yet due, and the plaintiff could not have included it in his claim. On June 4,1904,—the date of the entry of judgment by the court below—more than a year had expired from the time final payment was made, and for this reason the court was of opinion that the affidavit of defense as to the five per cent, item was not good. This is the only error in the record. The right of a plaintiff to judgment on a rule for it for want of a sufficient affidavit of defense must be determined from it and the plaintiff’s statement. The court can consider nothing else in disposing of the rule. The appellee was entitled to payment of only such an amount as he had a right to sue for when he brought his action. At that time, and even when the affidavit of defense was filed, on April 2, 1904, he was not, according to its averment, entitled to $305, or five per cent, of the $6,100—the contract price for the stone ; and the fact that the whole sum may have become due when he asked for judgment is no reason for awarding it to him, if, in the first instance, he had no right
Tbe judgment below must, therefore, be modified, and the record is remitted with direction to the court to reduce the judgment entered for $2,704.91, by deducting from it $805, with leave to the plaintiff to proceed for the collection of that item, if, under the proofs, he is entitled to recover it.