285 P. 1045 | Cal. | 1930
This cause requires a construction by the court of the language of a surety bond, considered in connection *99 with the contract to which it relates. The facts are not disputed.
Defendant Shannahan, under a written contract dated January 23, 1925, agreed to do certain work for Blue Diamond Company, a corporation, in connection with the construction by it of a branch railroad line in Nevada. Said defendant covenanted to furnish "all necessary material, superintendence, labor, tools, plant, equipment and transportation for and to perform, lay, execute, finish and complete in the most expeditious, substantial and workmanlike manner," all grading, pipe culverts, et cetera, for said branch line, as detailed in the general conditions and specifications constituting a part of the agreement of the parties. The general conditions of said contract provided: "The documents forming the Contract are complementary. . . . They are intended to include all detail of labor and material reasonably necessary for the proper execution of the work. . . ." They also provided: "The Contractor . . . shall protect and indemnify The Company from and against all claims against the said work for labor, material and/or supplies furnished the Contractor. . . ." They further required that said defendant deliver to the corporation a good and sufficient surety company bond "as security for the faithful performance by the Contractor of all the covenants and agreements on the part of the Contractor contained in said Contract, as well as for the payment in full of all claims of all persons performing labor upon or furnishing materials to be used in said work, which bond shall have its terms to be made to inure as well as to the benefit of the Company, to the benefit also of such persons so as to give such persons a right of action to recover upon said bond in any suit brought to foreclose liens, or in a suit brought on said bond."
On the same day, pursuant to the above requirement, defendant Shannahan, as principal, and defendant and appellant, Fidelity Deposit Company of Maryland, as surety, executed a bond, to which was attached a copy of said contract, in the sum of $15,000, conditioned as follows: "The condition of the above obligation is such, that whereas the above principal has entered into a written contract with the above named obligee, dated January 23, 1925. . . . Now, therefore, if the said principal shall well and truly keep and *100 perform all of the terms, covenants and conditions of the said contract, to be by him completed and performed and shall pay in full, claims of all persons performing labor upon or furnishing material to be used in such construction work, then this obligation shall be null and void, otherwise to remain in full force and effect."
On January 21, 1925, two days prior to execution of the above documents, plaintiff and said Shannahan executed a written agreement whereby plaintiff rented to the latter a gasoline shovel — monthly rental $650, all transportation charges to be paid by the renter — which shovel was transported to the place of and used by Shannahan in connection with the work performed under said construction contract with the Blue Diamond Company. Shannahan, however, failed to pay to plaintiff a balance of $1,000, admittedly due as rental upon said shovel, and $618.97 transportation charges advanced by plaintiff to procure its return. Plaintiff, therefore, instituted this action against both Shannahan and appellant surety company to recover said sums.
Upon the trial, defendant Shannahan did not question the said sums adjudged to be due plaintiff. In fact, he testified that he was ready and willing to pay said obligation and had the money therefor but, under his contract with said surety, it had the right of assignment on money still due him from the Blue Diamond Company, which right of assignment it exercised; therefore, in order to pay plaintiff, it was necessary to have the surety's signature as well as his own on the check and the surety had refused to sign. The court found that the bond covered said two items due plaintiff and gave judgment in his favor as against both defendant Shannahan and the bonding company. Said company has alone appealed, disclaiming any liability on the bond for said indebtedness to plaintiff. The sole question presented by the appeal is whether or not its contention in this behalf is meritorious.
To state the matter another way, relying mainly upon the cases of Wood, Curtis Co. v. El Dorado Lumber Co.,
[1] We, of course, recognize the well-settled principle that the liability of a surety is measured and bounded by the express terms of its contract and that courts are not swift to extend that liability by construction (County of Glenn v. Jones,
"Our Civil Code (sec. 2837) provides that, in interpreting the terms of a contract of suretyship, the same rules are to be observed as in the case of other contracts. In Sather BankingCo. v. Briggs Co.,
In the case of W.P. Fuller Co. v. Alturas S. Dist.,
See, to the same effect, Hollenbeck-Bush etc. Co. v. Amweg,
[2] This bond is expressly conditioned upon performance by the contractor of "all the terms, covenants and conditions of the said contract, to be by him completed and performed." *103 One of the covenants of the contract was that the contractor furnish "all material, superintendence, labor, tools, plant, equipment and transportation" for the performance of said work. Further, the contract was "intended to include all detail of labor and material reasonably necessary for the proper execution of the work." Can it be denied that the rental and transportation of this equipment by said contractor was not the furnishing of "equipment" and "transportation" for use in performing said work, within the meaning of said provisions of the contract?
Furthermore, as above stated, a copy of the contract was attached to the bond and it is impossible to properly construe the language of the undertaking other than in the light of the contract, the faithful performance of which it secured. When considered in such light, it is plain that the bond was intended to "protect and indemnify . . . against all claims against the said work for labor, material and/or supplies furnished the Contractor." The word "supplies" has been expressly held to include rental items. (Sherman v. American Surety Co.,
Prior to its amendment in 1911, section
The determination of this cause, however, is not governed by the construction placed by said authority upon the clause in question as found in said section
The opinion in the case of French v. Farmer, supra, also relied upon by appellant, is based solely upon the holding of the Wood, Curtis case, recovery being therein denied under a common-law bond for rental of mules, upon the ground that the renter was not a person "to whom any part of such work" was given. It is not in point because the provisions of the contract there under consideration were utterly unlike the provisions of the document before us. Furthermore, the court there recognized the rule above set forth, for it said: ". . . If it can be fairly said from either the contract or the bond, which are to be construed together, that the parties intended to and did agree to pay such third person, a suit could be brought on such bond by such third person to recover the promise so made for his benefit (citing many cases)."
The authorities just discussed are reviewed in Bricker v.Rollins Jarecki, supra, which case upholds the conclusion we have reached. It also expressly approves the doctrine of French
v. Powell,
The judgment is affirmed.
Curtis, J., Richards, J., Seawell, J., and Waste, C.J., concurred.
Rehearing denied.
All the Justices present concurred.