ROYAL SCHOOL LABORATORIES, INC., Appellee,
v.
TOWN OF WATERTOWN and Classen P. Perkins, Appellants.
TOWN OF WATERTOWN, Appellant.
v.
NEW ENGLAND MERCHANTS NATIONAL BANK OF BOSTON and Royal
School Laboratories, Inc., Appellees.
Nos. 103, 104, Dockets 29706, 29799.
United States Court of Appeals Second Circuit.
Argued Oct. 28, 1965.
Decided March 14, 1966.
Philip R. Shiff, New Haven, Conn., for appellants Town of Watertown, Classen P. Perkins.
Arnold J. Bai, Bridgeport, Conn. (David Goldstein, Robert S. Cooper), Bridgeport, Conn., for appellee Royal School Laboratories, Inc.
Donald Lee Rome, Hartford, Conn., for appellee New England Merchants Nat. Bank of Boston.
Before LUMBARD, Chief Judge, and FRIENDLY and SMITH, Circuit Judges.
FRIENDLY, Circuit Judge:
Late in 1962 Classen P. Perkins, Chairman of the School Building Committee of the Town of Watertown, signed an agreement with Twombly Associates, Inc., a Massachusetts corporation, for the furnishing and installation of science laboratory equipment and furniture for the new town high school. The total contract price was $59,628.62. Notwithstanding a statutory requirement that a bond be obtained to protect materialmen,1 Perkins did not request and Twombly did not furnish such a bond. Thereafter Twombly engaged Royal School Laboratories, Inc., a corporation organized and having its principal place of business in Virginia, to supply equipment and furniture valued by the latter at $48,118. Royal delivered the goods, which are now in the school, but received only 10% Of its bill. Twombly became insolvent and never paid the balance of $43,307. The Town admitted an obligation to pay for the material and labor but, confronted by conflicting claims of the materialman and an assignee of the contractor, refused to pay either until the dispute was resolved.
Royal thereupon sued the Town and Perkins in the District Court for Connecticut, in quasi-contract for the unpaid price of the equipment supplied, and in tort for breach of a statutory duty to secure a bond from Twombly. The assignee of Twombly, New England Merchants National Bank of Boston, sued the Town in the same court for the contract price of $59,626.62 as 'justly due and owing' for work performed by the contracotor.
The two actions precipitated a rain of motions. Before the New England Bank's suit was commenced, the Town and Perkins together and Perkins individually had moved to dismiss Royal's action on the merits, and Royal had moved for summary judgment against them. Thereafter the defendants filed separate motions to consolidate Royal's action with the bank's, to postpone the hearing on Royal's summary judgment motion, and for leave to deposit $58,670.55 into court on condition that they be discharged from liability to all concerned; later they counterclaimed for interpleader and filed a motion for a stay of all proceedings pending a determination of the interpleader claim. In the New England Bank suit, the Town also moved separately for consolidation and for leave to deposit, and filed a similar counterclaim for interpleader and a motion for a stay.
Judge Zampano denied the Town's claim for interpleader and granted Royal's motion for summary judgment, awarding a recovery of $43,307 in quasicontract and tort against the Town and Perkins.
As to recovery in quasi-contract, the Connecticut decisions do say, as the judge noted, that while no valid contract can be made without furnishing the required bond, City of Norwalk v. Daniele,
The desirability of interpleader is not negatived by the presence of Royal's alternative claim in tort, disposition of which not only poses the same threat of double payment by the Town but involves serious danger of a federal court's misinterpreting the state law on sovereign immunity. No Connecticut decision clearly supports, although none clearly opposes, the finding of tort liability reached by the district judge. The general rule in Connecticut and elsewhere is that, except as provided by statute, municipal corporations are not liable for tortious conduct in the exercise of 'governmental' functions, including the establishment and maintenance of schools. See Lambert v. City of New Haven,
It is true that a federal court generally is not allowed to shirk the determination of unsettled questions of state law, even as regards so sensitive an area as the liabilities of municipalities and their officers, when this is necessary for the disposition of an action properly before it. Meredith v. City of Winter haven,
The Connecticut surety statute itself, Conn.Gen.Stat. 49-41, manifests a legislative solicitude for materialmen and a public policy that those who contribute labor and material under a public contract should be compensated for their services. See Pelton & King, Inc. v. Town of Bethlehem,
The order granting Royal's motion for summary judgment and denying the Town's petition for interpleader is reversed, the order dismissing the Town's action for interpleader is vacated, and the causes are remanded to the District Court for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.
Notes
'Public structures. Bonds for protection of employees and materialmen. Before any contract exceeding one thousand dollars in amount for the construction, alteration or repair of any public building or public work of the state or any subdivision thereof is awarded to any person, such person shall furnish to the state or such subdivision a bond in the amount of the contract which shall be binding upon the award of the contract to such person, with a surety or sureties satisfactory to the officer awarding the contract, for the protection of persons supplying labor or materials in the prosecution of the work provided for in such contract for the use of each such person.' Conn.Gen.Stat. 49-41
After judgment was entered, the Town brought a separate suit against Royal and the New England Bank for interpleader, 28 U.S.C. 1335; it acknowledged that it had received equipment worth $58,670.55 and paid into court the full price of its order to Twombly, $59,628.62. The district court granted a motion by Royal to dismiss. The Town's appeal from that judgment was consolidated with the pending appeal from the prior judgment. Since, in our view of the case, the court should have granted the petition for interpleader in the first suit, this further action was unnecessary
Whatever the scope of the doctrine that interpleader may not be invoked by a plaintiff with unclean hands, see Mallory S.S. Co. v. Thalheim,
