Each of the parties in this action has filed a motion for summary judgment and has stipulated to the facts which follow.
George Danko, Inc. contracted with the Mount Pleasant Area School District to construct an addition to the Mount Pleasant Junior High School. As the prime contractor, George Danko, Inc. was required by state law to furnish a labor and material payment bond to the school district. The bond was obtained from the defendant, Fidelity and Deposit Company of Maryland. George Danko, Inc. subsequently ordered a total of 144,500 bricks from
Plaintiff instituted the present action against the surety on the payment bond, seeking to recover the balance of the purchase price of the bricks which were delivered to the construction site.
The salient issue involved in this case is whether or not plaintiff is a proper claimant under the terms of the labor and material payment bond. The bond defines the term “claimant” as “one having a direct contract with the Principal [prime contractor] or with a subcontractor of the Principal for labor, material, or both, used or reasonably required for use in the performance of the contract. ...” Given this language, it is clear that plaintiff can only recover from the surety if Ideal was a “subcontractor” of George Danko, Inc.
In order to resolve this issue, the term “subcontractor” must be accurately defined. The language contained in the payment bond was taken almost verbatim from the Public Works Contractors’ Bond
• Two main cases analyzing the Miller Act offer some insight into the meaning of the Pennsylvania Bond Law and the specific language containéd in the payment bond which is now at issue before the court. In Clifford F. MacEvoy v. U. S. for the use and benefit of Calvin Tompkins,
In Rich, supra, the middleman who agreed to supply custom millwork for a government housing project was determined to be a “subcontractor” because he shared a “special, integral, almost symbiotic relationship with” the prime contractor.
The United States Court of Appeals considered MacEvoy in Aetna Casualty and Surety Company v. U.S.,
In Aetna, supra, the court declined to follow the holding in U.S. v. John A. Johnson & Son,
While the parties would have us reconcile or choose from the two conflicting rulings by the U.S. appellate courts, such action is unnecessary. The product which Ideal agreed to supply to the prime contractor in the present case was neither custom-made to the prime contractor’s specifications, nor was it a complex installation of relatively great importance in relation to the entire project. We can think of few building materials which are more interchangeable and less customized than a brick. Plaintiff has not indicated that the bricks it supplied were anything other than ordinary, generic bricks, so, apparently, there is no factual question which must be resolved concerning that matter, and this case is ripe for disposition by way of summary judgment.
The relationship between the prime contractor and the middleman in this case was not an “integral,” “symbiotic relationship” and the middleman had not assumed the responsibility for manufacturing a large and definable part of the construction project. In short, Ideal was merely a materialman
ORDER
And now, May 16, 1983, defendant’s motion for summary judgment is hereby granted; plaintiff’s cross-motion for summary judgment is denied.
Notes
George Danko, Inc. refused to pay for 8,840 bricks which had been delivered in excess of the number ordered. These bricks were eventually buried at the job site when Ideal failed to remove them as requested.
