In this diversity action, Twombly Associates, Inc.', a Massachusetts corporation, entered into a contract with the defendant Town of Watertown and its agent, defendant Perkins, chairman of the Watertown School Building Committee, for the furnishing and installation of certain science laboratory furniture and' equipment in the Watertown High School. Plaintiff, a Virginia corporation, supplied and delivered equipment and furniture to the defendants pursuant to its obligations as a subcontractor and materialman under the contract.
. Being unpaid and finding. Twombly now in bankruptcy, plaintiff sues the defendants in contract and in tort.- Counts 1 and 3 of the сomplaint seek recovery on--theories of quasi-contract and quantum,-meruit respectively; count 2 sounds in- tort and is based on the failure of the .defendants to obtain-a payment bond from Twombly for the protection .of subcontractors and materialmen, as required
There is no dispute that the defendants received and are presently using the plaintiff’s equipment and that the amount owed the plaintiff is $43,307.00. Moreover, defendants admit they have retained $59,628.62 which is due and owing for materials and services rendered under the contract with Twombly. However, they refused to pay a portion of it to plaintiff because of an alleged conflicting claim by the New England Merchants National Bank of Boston. In a separate suit also pending in this Court, Civil No. 10,650, the bank seeks recovery from the Town of Watertown in the amount of $59,628.62, based upon an assignment from Twombly to it of all proсeeds due Twombly for work performed in the Watertown High School.
Plaintiff in the instant case has filed a motion for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure. Defendants have filed a motion to dismiss for failure of the complaint to state a cause of action and a motion to interplead the bank, with related motions to consolidate this action with the bank’s action, for leave to deposit money into court, and an order discharging the defendants from any further liability. The bank has filed no motion to intervene.
Initially it might appear appropriаte to grant the interpleader, allow the defendants to deposit the money into court, discharge the defendants from further liability, and thereafter resolve the conflicting claims between the plaintiff and the bank. Sound public policy dictates where possible a municipality should be exempt from exposure of double liability in the interest of protecting taxpayers’ money. On the other hand, justice demands safeguarding the rights of persons who render valuable services to a municipality, particularly when they do so with the expectation they are protected by statute from financial loss.
Weighing the competing interests of all the parties, and after careful review of the relevant authorities as well as the historical purpose of the applicable statutes, it is decided that the contentions between the plaintiff and the defеndant in the instant case present independent and distinct claims from those of the bank in Civil No. 10,650 and therefore should be determined separately.
As indicated, in counts 1 and 3 of the complaint there are set forth causes of action in quasi-contract based on unjust enrichment and in quantum meruit. The plaintiff’s claims for relief proceed on the ground that the contract purportedly entered into between the defendants and Twombly is void because of their failure to obtain a payment bond in the amount of the contract price as required by Section 49-41 of the Connectiсut General Statutes (1958). In view of the invalidity of the contract plaintiff alleges that as a materialman it is entitled to recover the reasonable value of the supplies on quasi-contract theories.
Defendants concede their failure to obtain the statutory payment bond rеnders the contract void as a matter of law, City of Norwalk v. Daniele,
Defendants misconceive the legal difference between an illegal contract, that is, one ultra vires, and a contract authorized by law but void due to an irregularity or omission in form or execution. If a contract is unlawful, against public policy, or beyond the corporate powers conferred upon a municipality, there can be nо recovery against the public corporation. But a municipality may be held liable for retaining the benefits under an imperfectly executed contract which was within its power to make. By application of the doctrines of quasi-contract, implied contract, ratification, unjust enrichment or estoppel, the
In Loomis v. Fifth School District,
In the instant case, the town has accepted and has retained the goods supplied by the plaintiff. No complaint is made of the quality of the equipment and the price is reasonable. Under the circumstances the defendants сannot now say “We.shall not pay”. Leverty & Hurley Co. v. City of Danbury,
Tort is the basis of recovery in count 2 of the complaint. Plaintiff contends that the defendants’ failure to obtain the payment bond from Twombly was a tortious breach of a ministerial duty impоsed upon them by statute for which they are liable in damages.
Section 49-41 of the Connecticut General Statutes provides in pertinent part:
“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 of 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 аwarding 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.”
Initially, the Court must determine whether the defendants owed a duty to the plaintiff to obtain the рayment bond, and, if so, whether they are liable in tort for their failure to do so.
There is no Connecticut case directly in point, and an extensive review of the authorities in other jurisdictions reveals that the issue is far from settled.
A compilation of the leading cases, through the year 1929, is found in
Under these circumstances, this Court must look to the same sources which a Connecticut court would presumably consult in order to determine the law of Connecticut even though as yet unannounced by a Connecticut court. Deveny v. Rheem Manufacturing Company,
Section 49-41 originated in Chapter 118 of the Public Acts of 1917 as a result of the Supreme Court of Errors of Connecticut ruling, in 1909, that a mechanic’s lien for materials furnished' or "services rendered did not attach to, and could not be enforced against, the public property of a state, county or municipality. Norwalk v. Daniele, supra,
Defendants maintain, however, that the duty imposed by the statute is a discretionary one for which there is no liability in its breach. The Connecticut law is to the contrary. In Nor-walk v. Daniele, supra, the Court, in-interpreting the statute in question, states: “[T]he furnishing of a bond is mandatory, and no valid contract could be made without compliance with this requirement.”
In tort law, the failure to perform a ministerial duty imposes liability only if the duty is owing to the individual plaintiff bringing the action. When the duty is general as owing to the public at large, it cannot be made the premise of an individual’s action in tort. Stated another way, where a statute creates a duty for the benefit or protection of the public generally, a violatiоn of the duty does not make the public body or employee liable to an individual. Redress, if at all, is by public prosecution, removal, or reprimand Of- the public official responsible. On the other hand, if the-i-mproper performance of the duty imposed will affect an individual, or a сlass, of which the individual is a member,differently than it affects the public at-large, liability will be imposed upon the municipal body and its employee. Leger v. Kelley, supra,
Section 49-41. provides for the furnishing of distinct types of bonds in the construction of a public work: 1)> a payment bond and 2) a performance-bond or similar security. The performance bond or security is designed to-protect the public body from the- failure of the contractor to perform or complete the work according to the сontract. The
Any doubt that the requirement of a payment bond is designed for the benefit >of an individual such as the plaintiff is dissipated by the statutory language declaring its enactment was “for the protection of persons supplying labor or materials in the prosecution of the work * * * ” on a public project. The Connecticut courts have long recognized that those who furnish materials and labor to a contractor on a public work should be assured of payment without defeat or undue delay. See, Pelton & King, Inc. v. Town of Bethlehem,
This Court concludes, therefore, that there was a mandatory duty upon the defendants to obtain the payment bond as required by Section 49-41; that the duty imposed was ministerial; that the failure to do so was a breach of the duty directly owed the plaintiff and that the plaintiff has a remedy for its losses against the defendants in tort.
Inasmuch as the Court has found that the plaintiff has alleged and proven an actionable tort, there now remains the question whether therе are defenses which would prohibit the grant of summary judgment. To be sure, such factual defenses as estoppel, contributory negligence and assumption of risk may successfully defeat the motion. But, contrary to the rules of practice in this State, Conn. Practice Book, Part II, secs. 120, 123, defеndants allege no special defenses. In oral argument on the motion, defendants claimed at trial they “might” be able to prove the plaintiff was an agent of Twombly with implied notice that the bond had not been furnished. However, despite the additional time granted the defendants to chаllenge the plaintiff’s claims, the allegation that the plaintiff was an independent contractor and materialman under the statute remains uncontroverted. A mere wistful hope on defendants’ part that at trial they “might” adduce evidence to the contrary is insufficient. Engl v. Aetna Life Ins. Co.,
Therefore, plaintiff’s motion for summary judgment is granted, and plaintiff shall recover of defendants the amount of $43,307.00 and costs. Accordingly, defendants’ motions are denied.
