59 N.E.2d 912 | Ind. Ct. App. | 1945
The appellant was the plaintiff below. A demurrer to his amended complaint was sustained and, upon his refusal to plead over, judgment was entered accordingly and this appeal followed. The appellant's assignment of errors is as follows: "(1) The court erred in sustaining appellees' demurrer to appellant's amended complaint. (2) The court erred in rendering judgment against the appellant and in favor of the appellees, that appellant take nothing by his amended complaint as against the demurrer of the appellees and that appellees recover their costs of and from the appellant."
The second assignment presents no question. If the pleader, against whom the ruling on a demurrer goes, elects to stand on the pleadings, judgment follows such ruling as a matter of 1. course and if there is error involved it lies in sustaining or overruling the demurrer, as the case may be.
The appellant's amended complaint alleges in substance *455 that on June 18, 1940, the appellee, Warren Brothers Roads Company, entered into a written contract with the State Highway Commission of Indiana, whereby said appellee undertook to build a section of State Highway No. 36 between the towns of Modoc and Moreland, to furnish all the materials therefor and do the work according to the plans and specifications on file in the office of said State Highway Commission. As required by law said appellee, Warren Brothers Roads Company, filed with its proposal a bond duly executed by itself and the appellee, United States Fidelity Guaranty Company, as surety thereon, which bond is conditioned on the faithful performance of said contract and payment of all lawful claims of subcontractors, materialmen and laborers for labor performed and materials furnished or other services rendered in carrying forward and completing said contract. That thereupon the appellee, Warren Brothers Roads Company, entered into a contract with Mid-West Rock Products Corporation and one Fred Stewart wherein the said Stewart and Mid-West Rock Products Corporation agreed to furnish all the crushed stone needed for the job and transport the same to various points along State Highway No. 36 as the work thereon progressed. That at the special instance and request of said Mid-West Products Corporation and Fred Stewart the appellant furnished a truck and performed the labor involved in the transportation of 7,093 tons of crushed stone from a quarry operated by Mid-West at Ridgeville, Indiana, to various points along the route of said Highway No. 36, as such points were designated from time to time by the appellee, Warren Brothers Roads Company. That as said stone was so delivered by appellant he spread the same upon the roadbed at the direction and request of said appellee and that his *456 services so performed were of material assistance in carrying forward and completing the prime contract as guaranteed by said bond above described. That, for the use of his truck and services in the transportation and delivery of 7,093 tons of crushed stone at 60 cents per ton, there is now due and owing the appellant the sum of $425.58. That within 60 days from the delivery of the last load of said stone the appellant filed a claim with the State Highway Commission against the appellees for the unpaid account so due him but the same was disallowed and still remains due and unpaid. That by reason of the refusal of the appellees to pay such claim they have breached the conditions and terms of said bond to the appellant's damage in the sum of $750.
The demurrer to this amended complaint, which we will hereafter call the complaint, is for want of facts constituting a cause of action and by memorandum it is charged that said complaint shows on its face that the services rendered by the appellant and for which recovery is sought were not rendered to the appellee, Warren Brothers Roads Company, or any of its subcontractors but on the contrary it affirmatively appears that such services were rendered to Mid-West Rock Products Corporation and Fred Stewart who were not subcontractors but materialmen only, and, whatever liability there is in the premises, it is the liability of said Mid-West and Stewart and not that of the appellees.
The major question thus presented is this: Has the appellant pleaded facts that bring him within any of the classes of individuals protected by the terms of the appellees' bond 2. upon which his actions rests? § 36-112, Burns' 1933 (Supp.), § 8651, Baldwin's Supp. 1934, requires that any person proposing to enter into a contract with the State Highway Commission for the construction of a road shall submit, *457
with his proposal, a bond "conditioned upon the faithful performance of the work, in accordance with the profile, plans and specifications therein set forth, and conditioned also upon the payment by the contractor and by all subcontractors for all labor performed or materials furnished or other services rendered in the construction of the highway." The bond sued upon is so conditioned except that it protects payment for "other services rendered in carrying forward, performing and completing said contract" instead of "other services rendered in the construction of the highway." The provisions of the statute must be read into the bond as though actually there, Ohio Oil Co. v. Fidelity Deposit Co. (1942),
The appellant contends that the services he performed, as set out in his complaint, were clearly rendered in "carrying forward, performing and completing *458 said contract" and therefore he has brought himself within a class of persons protected by the bond.
On the other hand, the appellees insist that the test to be applied in determining the right of a party, such as the appellant, to have recourse to the prime contractor's bond for the payment of his account is one of privity of contract between him and such contractor or subcontractors and that the phrase "other services rendered in the carrying forward" of the contract refers and is strictly limited to such services as may be performed by those in privity with the prime contractor or a subcontractor, but which services, however, cannot be classified as labor or the furnishing of materials. The appellant's complaint, the appellees contend, shows that he is neither a materialman nor in privity with the prime contractor or a subcontractor and, therefore, is beyond the protection of the bond upon which he sues.
It is clear that the bond in suit is intended to insure the payment of all just claims of three classes of individuals: (1) subcontractors, (2) materialmen, and (3) laborers. Any 3. claimant properly classified in any one of these three groups may look to the bond for payment if his claim is for labor performed, materials furnished, or other services rendered, in the carrying forward, performing and completing of the contract to secure the faithful performance of which the bond is executed. The cases in Indiana construing this exact type of bond are not numerous and we believe we have examined all of them. SeeTitle Guaranty, etc., Co. v. State, ex rel. (1916),
There is much to be said for the doctrine of privity of contract as determining liability on a prime contractor's bond and such has been the test applied in many jurisdictions. In Missouri the rule has been announced as follows: "It is beyond question that the surety of a contractor is only liable to those who have done work or furnished material, by contract, under the original contract; that the liability of the surety extends only to those in privity by contract with the original contractor. While the privity of contract is necessary it need not be directly with the original contract but it must spring out of it. . . . Those are in privity of contract with the original contractor who do labor and furnish material for the subcontractor under the original contract, provided that labor and material fall within the original contract." Board ofEducation v. Fidelity Guaranty Co. (1912), 166 Mo. App. 410, 422, 149 S.W. 46, 49.
"But it is at this point that privity of contract ends, and one who supplies material to a materialman, who in turn supplies the subcontractor, is to be relegated to the status of a stranger to the original contract, since such person's contract or undertaking is neither with the principal contractor, nor with one who, as in the case of a subcontractor, deals directly with the principal contractor. Such person's contract is therefore but indirect and collateral to the original contract, and for want of privity does not serve to bring such party within the purview of the principal contractor's bond." City of St. Louis v.Kaplan-McGowan Co. (1937), 233 Mo. App. 789, 108 S.W.2d 987.
The reasoning underlying the privity rule is forcibly *461
expressed by the United States Supreme Court in the case ofMacEvoy v. United States (1944), 88 L. Ed. 795, wherein the court said: "Congress cannot be presumed, in the absence of express statutory language, to have intended to impose liability on the payment bond in situations where it is difficult or impossible for the prime contractor to protect himself. The relatively few subcontractors who perform part of the original contract represent in a sense the prime contractor and are well known to him. It is easy for the prime contractor to secure himself against loss by requiring the subcontractors to give security by bond, or otherwise, for the payment of those who contract directly with the subcontractors. United States use ofHill v. American Surety Co., supra, (
In Indiana, however, our courts are committed to the doctrine that bonds of the type in suit are contracts made for the benefit of certain classes of unnamed third persons and the fact 4, 5. that no privity of contract exists between such beneficiaries and the contractor seems to be immaterial.Nash Engineering Co. v. Marcy Realty Corp. (1944),
In the case before us the appellee, Warren Brothers Roads Company, was the prime contractor. It bought crushed stone, for use in the construction of the road, from Mid-West Rock 6. Products Corporation and Fred Stewart who were materialmen engaged in the business of quarrying and selling crushed stone. Their contract with said appellee called for delivery of such stone to the construction site and they employed the appellant to perform that service and he did so in the discharge of such contract of employment.
We do not believe the doctrine announced in Title Guaranty,etc., Co. v. State, ex rel., supra, can be extended to include services rendered by the employee of a materialman in the discharge of the duties of such employment under the facts set out in the complaint *463 in this case. Such services were rendered for the principal purpose of discharging his own contract of employment rather than that of the prime contractor and do not bear such "intimate, immediate and exclusive relation to the building of the road" that the obligation to pay for them is a debt "incurred in the prosecution of that work."
We have in mind the words of Justice Storey in Miller v.Stewart (1824),
What we have said should dispose of this appeal and would do so except for the appellant's contention that his complaint is rescued from the demurrer by an allegation to the effect 8, 9. that after he had hauled the stone to the road site in discharge of his employment with the materialman he spread it upon the roadbed at the special instance and request of the appellee, Warren Brothers Roads Company. He insists that thereby he became a laborer employed by the prime contractor and engaged in the actual construction of the highway. If that were the theory of his complaint and if he were seeking to recover for such services alone, either upon a quantum meruit basis or an agreed sum, clearly he would be entitled to the relief sought. But we cannot so construe the complaint. The theory of *464
a complaint is determined by its leading and salient allegations and its general scope, not fragmentary allegations, gives it character. Armstrong v. Illinois Bankers Life Ass'n. (1940),
Judgment affirmed.
NOTE. — Reported in