215 F. 263 | E.D.N.Y | 1914
A trial has been had upon the cause of action, and the parties have proceeded, by order of the court, as if the pleading originally filed had been called a bill in equity. This was done in pursuance of the decision of the Circuit Court of Appeals in this case (212 Fed. 136, 129 C. C. A. 584, on February 10, 1914), to the effect that the cause of action set up under the statute should have
For these reasons no statement or findings of fact will be made other than those set forth in the record, except that each claimant will be held to have performed the work and furnished the services and to be entitled to the amount with interest from the date specified in each case, in accordance with the results reached upon the previous trial and there covered by the verdict directed.
The conclusions of law will be disposed of as indicated upon the various rulings on the trial, with respect to objections, and on motions during the course of the case, and the general objections by the defendants, on which ruling was reserved at the close of the case, will be separately overruled. The motions for a decree in favor of the defendants on each separate claim and on the various items of those claims will be denied.
The objection based upon changes by the United States in details of the contract after work was started was properly overruled. In the case of the Equitable Surety Co. v. United States, for the Use of McMillan & Son, 234 U. S. 448, 34.Sup: Ct. 803, 58 L. Ed. 1394, decided by the Supreme Court upon the 8th day of June, 1914, it was held that the surety was not released by changes on the part of the United States which did not affect the general character of the contract, citing U. S. v. National Surety Co., 92 Fed. 549, 34 C. C. A. 526.
But one’point of law not previously disposed of is presented by these motions. It appears that the plaintiff and the intervening creditors published notice of the pendency of the action in a newspaper for the time and within the dates specified by the statutes, but that they obtained an order dispensing with and did not send' out a personal notice to known creditors. It is now urged that the affidavit by which the order was made dispensing with the sending out of this pérsonal notice was insufficient, in that it did not state facts showing what efforts had been made to learn the names of such creditors, and that the court was therefore not justified 'in dispensing with the notice.
In the absence of concealment or fraud, the plaintiff is only required to send notice to the creditors who may at that time actually be known, and, if other creditors do intervene, jurisdiction would not seem to be lost, if they should happen to know of other creditors to whom notice had not been sent. The advertising would he depended upon to meet the requirement.
The separate plaintiffs may recover the amount of their respective claims, with interest, and a decree may be entered providing therefor.