89 F. 921 | U.S. Circuit Court for the District of Maryland | 1898
This is a suit by Heise, Bruns & Co. against the American Bonding & Trust Company, as surety for Minor & Bro. Minor & Bro., on June 12, 1895, contracted with the United Stales to erect, a hospilal building at Ft. Myer, Va., for the sum of §18,200, and gave a bond, dated Jone 13, 1895, in the penalty of §6,500, with the American Banking & Trust Company (now the American Bonding & Trust Company of Baltimore City), as surety, for the performance of the contract, and conditioned also that the contractors would “make full payments to all persons supplying them labor or materials in the prosecution of the work provided for in said contract.” This clause was inserted in accordance with the provision of the act of congress approved August 18, 1894. Minor & Bro. performed their contract with the United States, and received payment in full;
Minor & Bro. performed their contract with the government, and received the contract price, the final payment being June 15, 1896; and on July 24, 1896, being insolvent, Minor & Bro. made a deed of assignment. They owed at that date to Heise, Bruns & Co., in all, a balance of $3,517.48, for materials furnished for several different buildings, of which $2,474.51 was for the materials furnished for the hospital building, being the mill work mentioned in the original estimate, and other special work. It appears, therefore, that although the materials were supplied from July, 1895, to May, 1896, and payments were made by the government to Minor & Bro. from month to
In Blest v. Brown, 3 Giff. 450, it was held by Vice Chancellor Stuart that a surety who executes a bond on a misrepresentation by the obligee of a material fact is entitled to relief; and in that case, because the plaintiff was induced to execute a bond on a representation by the obligee that the principal was not indebted to him, which statement was untrue, the court directed the bond to be canceled. See, also, Graves v. Bank, 10 Bush, 23-29; 1 Story, Eq. Jur. § 215; 2 Pom. Eq. Jur. § 907.
It is claimed by Mr. Heise, who wrote the answer to question 13, that he supposed the question referred to debts of any considerable amounts to other persons, which Minor & Bro. were not able to pay in the regular course of business. But, considering the high degree of candor which is required of a party who is to profit by the liability about to be assumed by a surety, this explanation is not sufficient.
It is also claimed that (he statement on the printed questions to which answers were requested, that “your replies hereto will be hold strictly private and confidential, and as not making you in any way responsible,” prevents the defendant company from using them to defeat a recovery on the bond. But this stipulation, obviously, is not applicable to a case where the party replying attempts to sue on the bond, and profit by it. In this case the materials supplied were sold on the faith of the bond, and the case, in its circumstances and result, is just as if Heise, Bruns & Co. had been the named obligees in the bond. The answer to the thirteenth question was not matter of opinion, but a misstatement of a material fact, of which the party answering had knowledge, and the existence of which, if disclosed, was well calculated to influence the defendant to decline to go upon the bond, or to see to it that the money paid by the government to the contractor was applied to the payment of the debts for the materials, for the payment of which the company
It is also contended that the defendant is released because of the dealings between Heise, Bruns & Co. and Minor & Bro., by which the time for the payment of the materials was extended beyond the time, when the work was finished, and the government had paid for it. This is a bond of a rather unusual character, involving the surety in a possible liability to persons of whom it may have no knowledge. It is conceded in this case that the defendant had no knowledge that the plaintiffs were furnishing materials until after Minor & Bro. had made the deed of trust of July 24, 1896, the final payment having been made by the government June 15, 1896.
The promissory notes outstanding were as follows:
$ 800, dated June 25, 1890, at 60 days.
700, “ 30 days.
.100, April 7, 1896, 4 months.
400, July 10, 1896, 4 months.
400, June 16, 1896, 4 months.
330, June 10, 1896,. • 3 months.
300, May 22, 1896, 60 days.
.$3,430.
$310.45, open account.
The last items of material were furnished May 14, 1896; the last payment by the government, June 15, 1896; and the promissory notes all matured after the latter part of July.
It is urged that there was no extension of time, because the terms- of the original sales are testified to have been indefinite, viz. that, according to usage, Minor & Bro. were to pay as they had money on hand, and were to give notes on account for the accommodation of the plaintiffs as called for. It is true that it would appear from plaintiffs’ testimony that there never were any settled terms of payment. The expectation is claimed to have been that, as the materials were delivered, Minor & Bro. would pay cash if they had it, and, if not, would give notes, and, when all the material was delivered, would settle the account, either with cash or note, as should be then agreed upon; and it is claimed that there was no extension of the time of payment, for the reason that the original terms of payment contemplated the giving of notes. Mr. Shelley, who made the sale, testified that his understanding was that Minor & Bro. would pay as they received money on account of the building. It would seem that there must be a reasonable limit put to the credit which the material man may give to the contractors without losing his right to look to the surety. If the surety is kept in ignorance he is greatly damnified by a long credit extending beyond the time of payment by the government. An important protection which the surety has is to intercept the payment about to be made by the government. Under the United States statute, the contractor cannot make a valid assignment of the money coming to him from the government; and notice by the surety that the material men are not being paid by the contractor leads to the appropriation of the government payments to that purpose. But this could not be availed of if the
The circumstances of this case are different from those of a continuing guaranty of sales to be made on customary commercial credits. This bond has reference to one specific contract, and the condition of the bond was that Minor & Bro. should make full payments to all persons supplying them materials in the prosecution of the work provided for in that contract. This, it seems to me, precludes the idea of the surety being bound for materials, the debt for which the creditor has voluntarily postponed beyond the termination of the contract. The fact that no limit of time is found in the bond, or in the act of congress authorizing the bonds, tends, I think, to show that only cash transactions were contemplated; and it would seem from the testimony that the sale of materials was not, in fact, made upon credit, but was to be paid for as the con-trad or received the money. I think that the defendant’s prayer should he granted to the effect that the taking of promissory notes extending the time of payment beyond the time of the completion of the contract and tlie payment by the government prevents the plaintiffs from recovering on the bond.
Verdict for tlie defendant.
Affirmed in circuit court of appeals, Fourth circuit, November 1, 1898. Infra.