211 F. 561 | 9th Cir. | 1914
(after stating the facts as above).
“The contractor cannot prevent the effect of this notice as to any payments that may mature after it is given, but its effect upon payments that have matured before it is given, but which have not been made, is to be determined by the rights of the contractor in reference to them. If he is still entitled to demand their payment from the owner, such payment is intercepted by the notice; but, if he has already assigned them to a third party, the'notice will be inoperative to prevent their payment to such party.”
And referring to the contract under consideration in that case, the court said:
“The contract provided that the work should be doné to the satisfaction of ' the board of trustees, and the contractors were not entitled to demand payment of the amount of the estimate until after such approval and acceptance. Their approval of the estimate and direction for its payment implied their satisfaction with the work without any formal declaration to that effect. Upon such approval .and direction the obligation of the state which had been created in favor of the contractors by the trustees became complete, and the*564 right of the contractors to immediate payment became vested in them and was subject to their disposition. The provision in the contract for payment of the contract price in Comptroller’s warrants on the State Treasurer did not affect this power of disposition, or right to immediate payment, or suspend its exercise until such warrants should be obtained.”
“A contract to pay money may doubtless be assigned by tbe person to whom tbe money is payable, if there is nothing in tbe terms of tbe contract which manifests the intention of the parties to it that it shall not be assignable.” Delaware County v. Diebold Safe Co., 133 U. S. 473, 488, 10 Sup. Ct. 399, 404 (33 L. Ed. 674).
“Parties may, in terms, prohibit the assignment of any contract and declare that neither personal representatives nor assignees shall succeed to any rights in virtue of it, or be bound by its obligations.”
The appellee cites cases to the proposition that a provision whether contained in'the instrument itself, or expressed in a statute, forbidding the assignment of the contract, or of any interest therein, does not stand in the way of a transfer of the moneys which have become due or are to become due the contractor thereunder. Mueller v. Northwestern University, 195 Ill. 236, 63 N. E. 110, 88 Am. St. Rep. 194; Lowry v. City of Duluth, 94 Minn. 95, 101 N. W. 1059; Norton v. Whitehead, 84 Cal. 263, 24 Pac. 154, 18 Am. St Rep. 172. Those decisions are based upon the proposition that the thing assigned is not the precise thing which is forbidden to' be assigned. They are not directly applicable to the contract under consideration here, for the reason that here the prohibition is not against the assignment of the contract, but against the assignment of the moneys payable thereunder without the consent of the board of public works. Cases are cited also which hold that, where the contract prohibits assignment, an assignment for security is not within the prohibition. Fortunato v. Patten, 147 N. Y. 277, 41 N. E. 572; Crouse v. Mitchell, 130 Mich. 347, 90 N. W. 32, 97 Am. St. Rep. 479; Butler v. Rockwell, 14 Colo. 125, 23 Pac. 462. Those cases are not in point for the reason that here the prohibition is against both the legal and the equitable assignment of the moneys.
It is contended further that such a provision against assignment is intended for the benefit of the city alone, and that no one else can complain of its breach. Fortunato v. Patten, 147 N. Y. 277, 41 N. E. 572, is cited as a case in which it was so held. But in Burck v. Taylor, 152 U. S. 635, 14 Sup. Ct. 696, 38 L. Ed. 578, where a contract with a state for the erection of a public building was made unassignable by express stipulation, it was held that an attempted transfer of an interest in the contract without the state’s consent was ineffectual further than to give a right of action against the contractor for a measure of the profits. It is argued, however, that that case is to be distinguished from the case at bar in that there was an absolute covenant on the part of the contractor in that case that the contract should not be assigned in whole or in part without the consent of the state. But the contract in the present case having been assented to in all its terms by the contractor is as binding upon him as if his obligations had been affirmatively expressed in a covenant to abide by the same. In Burck v. Taylor, the court said of the provision against assignment:
“It may be conceded that, primarily, it was a provision intended, although not expressed, for the benefit of the state, and to protect it from interference by other parties in the performance of the contract, to secure the constant and sole service of a contractor with whom the state was willing to deal, and to relieve itself from the annoyance of claims springing up during or after the completion of the contract in favor of parties of whose interest in the contract it had no previous knowledge, and to the acquisition of whose interests it had not consented. Concede all this, and yet it remains true that*566 it was a stipulation which was one of the terms of the contact and binding upon the contractor, and equally binding upon all who dealt with him.”
We see no reason why this provision of the contract under consideration shall not be given the meaning and effect which its words import. It plainly stipulates against the assignment of the payments. There must have been substantial grounds for embodying such a provision in the contract. We may assume that one of the purposes, and probably the principal purpose thereof, was to protect subcontractors in their equitable rights to the unpaid funds in the -hands of the city in case notice should be given under section 1184, and to afford such subcontractors better opportunity to secure payment for that which they might contribute to the work which was under construction, as well as on behalf of the city to avoid the possible complications and litigation that might attend the transfer to another of the payments accruing under the contract. In a similar case the Supreme Court of Nebraska said:
“But it is needless for us to speculate on tbe motives for tbe city’s action. It is enough for us to know—whatever its reasons may have been—that it has, in plain language, stipulated against an assignment of the contract. * * * To hold that it covers some, but not all, of the rights and obligations arising out of the contract, would be, it seems to us, an inexcusable perversion of its terms.” City of Omaha v. Standard Oil Co., 55 Neb. 337, 75 N. W. 859.
And again in Murphy v. City of Plattsmouth, 78 Neb. 163, 110 N. W. 749, that court held that, where a contract with a city for a public improvement expressly provides that it shall not be assigned, such provision is enforceable, and an assignee thereof cannot recover the money due thereunder, or any part thereof. In 20 Am. & Eng. Enc. of Law, 1156, it is said:
“It is frequently provided by charter or statute, or the contract itself, that a contract with a municipality shall not be assigned without the consent of the city, and such a provision is valid and operative according to its terms” citing Deffenbaugh v. Foster, 40 Ind. 382; Suburban Electric Bight Co. v. Hempstead, 38 App. Div. 355, 56 N. Y. Supp. 443.
In the first of the cases so cited it was held that, where a contract for street improvement contained a provision that the contract should not be assigned without the consent of the common council, no one besides the contractor can maintain an action thereon in the absence of the common council’s consent. The second case is of similar import.
The decree is reversed, and the cause is remanded, with instructions to enter a decree for the appellant Welles.