164 P. 1041 | Utah | 1917
The real controversy in this action is between the Kamas State Bank, hereinafter called appellant, and the claimants, who assert claims against the South high school district of Summit county, hereinafter designated plaintiff, for labor performed and material furnished to Mortensen & King, a co-
The pleadings cover 115 pages of the printed abstract, and hence are too voluminous to be inserted here, even in condensed form. The findings of the court are, however, quite full and sufficiently reflect the issues covered by the pleadings. We shall, however, supplement the findings in the course of the opinion on such matters as may require further elucidation to give the reader a clear understanding of the points decided.
After the Eio Grande Lumber Company, which claimed a balance due it for materials furnished the contractors for said high school building, had commenced an action pursuant to Comp. Laws 1907, section 1400x, to which we shall more particularly refer hereinafter, the plaintiff commenced this action in which it prayed that all of those who asserted claims for labor performed and materials furnished said contractors, or who claimed some interest in the money due to the contractors, be required to appear in the action and set forth their claims. Accordingly all of those who asserted claims against the contractors, including said Eio Grande Lumber Company and the appellant, interpleaded in this action and set forth their claims.
The appellant, who claimed to be the assignee of the contractors, as will hereinafter more fully appear, appeared and set forth its claim against the contractors and against the plaintiff to recover so much of the contract price as it alleged was owing by said contractors to the appellant.
The cause was tried to the court without the intervention of a jury, and there is practically no dispute with regard to the salient facts, which are reflected in the findings, and which, in substance, are: That on the 6th day of August, 1914, the plaintiff entered into a written contract with said contractors in which they agreed to furnish all the labor and materials necessary to construct and complete a certain high school building for the plaintiff at Kamas, Summit county, Utah, for the sum of $20,913; that the plaintiff, in addition to certain moneys paid out to complete the high school building,
Upon those findings the court made conclusions of law wherein it found that the claims of those who had performed labor or furnished materials, or both, were superior to the claims of the appellant as assignee, and entered judgment in favor of the claimants authorizing payment of their claims in full out of the balance found due on said contract as aforesaid, and also entered judgment in favor of appellant for the amount due it on said promissory notes, but made that judgment subject to the claims of those who performed labor or furnished materials, or both, to said contractors for said high school building.
The assignment from the contractors to appellant reads as follows:
“Know all men by these presents that we, J. P. Mortensen and C. E. King, copartners doing business under the firm name and style of Mortensen & King, for value received, do hereby sell, assign, transfer, and set over to the Kamas State Bank all payments and sums now earned or due or that may hereafter be earned or become due to us under the provisions of a certain contract bearing date August 6, 1914, between the undersigned and South high school district, Summit county, Utah, a copy of which said contract is hereto attached*483 and marked Exhibit ‘A/ wherein and whereby the said undersigned agree to furnish and pay for all materials and labor required in the erection and completion of the proposed high school building to be erected at Kamas, Utah, according to plans, drawings, details, and specifications made and prepared by Scott & Welch, architects and engineers. And we hereby authorize and direct the said South high school district to pay all amounts and sums to said Kamas State Bank as rapidly as the same become due under the provisions of said contract.
“This assignment is made as collateral to secure the-payment of all sums now due by us or either of us, as well as by the partnership of Mortensen & King, and also to secure all indebtedness which we or either of us or said partnership may hereafter owe Kamas State Bank for money hereafter advanced by it to us or said partnership, as well also as by reason of any matter or thing whatsoever.”
The portions of the contract which are deemed material to this controversy are as follows:
“The contractors shall and will provide all the materials and perform all the work for the erection and completion of a two-story high school building, except plumbing, heating, located at Kamas, Utah, as shown on the drawings and described in the specifications. # * * It is hereby mutually agreed between the parties hereto that the sum to be paid by the owners to the contractors for said work and materials shall be twenty thousand nine hundred thirteen dollars ($20,-913), subject to additions and deductions. as hereinbefore provided, and that such sum shall be paid by the owners to the contractors, in current funds, and only upon certificates of the architect, as follows: Payment to be made upon eighty per cent. (80%) of the work in place on September-5, 1914, October 5, 1914, and November 5, 1914, upon receipt of receipted bills in duplicate for materials and signed pay rolls for labor. The final payment shall be made within thirty days after the completion of the work included in this. contract, and all payments shall be due when certificates for the same are issued. If at any time there shall be evidence of any lien or claim for which, if established, the owners of*484 the said premises might become liable, and which is chargeable to the contractors, the owners shall have the right to retain out of any payment then due or thereafter to become due an amount sufficient to completely indemnify them against such lien or claim. Should there prove to be any such claim after all payments are made, the contractors shall refund to the owners all moneys that the latter may be compelled to pay in discharging any lien on said premises made obligatory in consequence of the contractors’ default.”
In view that the claims of those who performed labor or furnished materials for the construction of the high school building are based upon Comp. Laws 1907, Section 1400x, we append that section in full:
"Any person, partnership, or corporation who has done work or labor or furnished materials to any principal contractor for the construction or repair of any public work of any character for any county, town, city, village, or school district, may maintain an action therefor in the county in which such work, labor, or materials were done or furnished, against such principal contractor and such county, town, city, village, or school district, jointly, for the recovery thereof; but no judgment shall be rendered against any defendant therein, other than such principal contractor, for any amount greater than the amount due from it to such principal contractor at the tim e of the commencement of such action. Such county, town, city, village, or school district, when served with the summons in any such action, may give notice thereof to such principal contractor, and on so doing need not further defend such action. On rendition of judgment in such action against such principal contractor, the court may also render judgment against such county, town, city, village, or school district for the amount due from it to such principal contractor at the time of the commencement of such action, or for a sufficient amount to pay the judgment recovered against the principal contractor, and payment thereof shall discharge its indebtedness to such principal contractor, to the amount so paid: Provided, that costs shall not be taxed against such county, town, city, village, or school district. Such principal contractor may, in such action, file in the*485 court in which such aetion is commenced a bond, in such sum and with such sureties as the judge of such court shall approve, conditioned for the payment of any judgment that may be recovered in such aetion, and thereupon the liability of such county, town, city, village, or school district hereunder shall cease, and the action as to it shall be discontinued without costs to it.”
There is another statute (chapter 68, Laws Utah 1909, p. 115) whichas discussed by counsel, and in view that it has a bearing on some of the phases of this controversy we copy the material parts, which áre as follows:
“Any person or persons entering into a formal contract with the state, any state institution, county, eity, town, village, or school district, for the construction of any public building, or the prosecution and completion of any public work or improvement, or for repairs upon any public building, public work or improvement, shall be required before commencing such work to execute a penal bond, with good and sufficient surety or sureties, for the faithful performance of said contract, with the additional obligation that such contractor or contractors shall promptly make payment to all persons supplying labor and material used in the prosecution of the work provided for in such contract; and any person, company, association or corporation who has furnished labor or material used in the construction or repair of any public building, public work or improvement, payment for which has not been made, shall have the right to intervene and be made a party to any action instituted by the obligee on the bond of the contractor, and to have their rights and claims adjudicated in such action and judgment rendered thereon, subject, however, to the priority of the claim and judgment of the obligee therein. ”
Appellant assails some of the findings of the court as not being supported by the evidence. As before stated, there is little, if any, dispute concerning the salient facts, and the findings of fact made by the court are all supported by the. evidence. Appellant’s counsel in their assignments of error, however, also vigorously assail the conclusions of law and judgment, and the real questions for decision arise upon those assignments.
“The assignee acquires by reason of the assignment no greater rights against the debtor than those of the assignor against the debtor at the time of notice to him. The rights of the assignee are subject to the performance of the conditions by which the assignor was bound, even where the assignment was with the consent of the debtor, or was accepted by him.’’
It is “highly remedial, and must thus, in furtherance of justice, receive a liberal construction and application so as to accomplish its real object and purpose.” Mellen v. Vondor-Horst Bros., 44 Utah 300, 140 Pac. 130.
It was there further held that:
Under Section 1400x “any person who has furnished any materials or has performed any labor for such contractor for the construction of such building may, at any time before the contract price has been fully paid, bring an action setting forth the foregoing facts, and, if anything is due from such contractor to such person for such materials or labor, the latter may obtain pay directly from the fund held by the public corporation for which the building is constructed to the extent that there is anything in the hands of such corporation which is due on the contract. Under the statute, where the contract is conceded, the only two questions to be determined are: (1) Is there anything due by the contractor to the claimant for materials furnished or labor performed for the construction of the public building or structure? and (2) Was there any part of the contract price in the hands of the public corporation at the commencement of such action which is to be paid on the contract?”
Notwithstanding what we said in the Mellen Case, counsel nevertheless contend that, in view that a lien is not expressly mentioned in Section 1400x, therefore none exists in favor of those who have performed labor or furnished material for a public building. While it is true that the word “lien” is not expressly mentioned in that section, yet it is equally true that a preferential right is there given which is tantamount to a lien. Speaking of legal liens the author in 1 Jones on Liens (2d Ed.), Section 4, says:
“A lien at law is an implied obligation whereby property is bound for the discharge of some debt or acknowledgment. It is not the result of an express contract; it is given by implication of law.”
See, also, sanie volume, Sections 104, 105.
“The word ‘lien’ is of the same origin as the word ‘liable,’ and the right of a lien expresses the liability of certain property for a certain legal debt, or a right to resort to it in order to enforce the debt.”
It is not necessary to multiply definitions, since it is manifest that by Section 1400x a preferential right (the equivalent of a lien) to a certain fund while it remains in the hands of a public corporation is clearly intended for, and is as clearly given to, all laborers who have performed labor and all materialmen who furnished material for a contractor who constructs a public building. The mere fact that no preliminary notice or affidavit is required to be given and filed in some public office in order to perfect the lien constitutes no objection to the lien or preferential right there given. No such notice or affidavit is required in order to enforce the preferential rights given in Comp. Laws 1907, Section 1344, as amended by Chapter 24, Laws Utah 1913, p. 26, by which the claims for wages due laborers are given preference over all other claims. The same is true of Comp. Laws 1907, Section 85, as amended by Chapter 23, Laws Utah 1913, p. 26, where wages are preferred in case of general assignments. All of said claims are in the nature of special preferred rights or liens and may be enforced as indicated in the statutes creating them. Under Section 1400x preferential rights exist by virtue of the statute, and nothing is required from the laborer or materialman, except to bring the action mentioned in said section to enforce the right. It is not the action, however, that creates the preferential right. The right exists independently of the action. The action is merely to enforce the right; that is, to compel payment of the fund and to discharge the public corporation from liability to the contractor to the extent that the fund is appropriated for the payment of laborers’ and materialmen’s claims. The only requirement imposed by the statute is that the action be commenced while the contract price, or a part thereof, remains in the hands of the public corporation. In some states having similar provisions the action is required to be brought within a certain limited time. Where, therefore, preferential rights are so
As against the claims of the laborers and materialmen, the contractors, therefore, could not assign the contract price while it remained in the hands of the plaintiff, except such portion as might be in excess of the claims of the laborers and materialmen,, or unless the contractors executed the bond we have referred to.
As we have seen from the quotation from 5 C. J., supra, the appellant, as assignee, could acquire no greater rights in or to the contract price than the contractors had, and in view that they could not assign the same to the prejudice of the laborers and materialmen, then appellant, as against their claims, acquired no right in or to the contract price except to the excess after the claims aforesaid are fully satisfied. No doubt, if the laborers and materialmen had not commenced the action provided for in Section 1400x, or had intervened in some other action and had claimed the contract price, while the same, or a part thereof, remained in the hands of
We have refrained from discussing the other reasons, equitable and otherwise, argued by counsel, why the assignment in this case should not prevail as against the laborers and ma-terialmen for the reason that we prefer to base this decision squarely upon the statutes of this state as we understand them, and thus avoid any misunderstanding respecting the scope and effect of this decision respecting the claims of laborers and materialmen against contractors who have bound themselves to construct public buildings and to furnish and pay for all the labor and material required to complete such buildings. While counsel have not cited any case precisely in point, and by an independent search we have been unable to find any such ease, yet the following cases will be found to fully sustain
It is further contended that, inasmuch as the appellant advanced money to the contractors with which to pay for labor performed and material furnished in the construction of plaintiff’s school building, for that reason appellant should be subrogated to the rights of the laborers and materialmen to
The judgment of the District Court is therefore affirmed, with costs.-