From Casetext: Smarter Legal Research

Indemnity Insurance Co. v. Nelson

The Supreme Court of Washington
Jun 14, 1933
22 P.2d 984 (Wash. 1933)

Opinion

No. 24185. En Banc.

June 14, 1933.

MUNICIPAL CORPORATIONS (159, 163) — PUBLIC IMPROVEMENTS — CONTRACTOR'S BONDS — LIABILITY OF SURETIES — ASSIGNMENT. Where a city contract provides that the contractor shall not assign any moneys payable or claims thereto without the consent of the city, an assignment without consent, for advances to be made nearly equal to the contract price, is without effect as to other claims, since it renders nugatory the statutory protection for such claims, Rem. Rev. Stat., § 1159, the proviso to which expressly declares the act shall not apply to any money loaned or advanced to any such contractor.

Appeal from a judgment of the superior court for Pierce county, Remann, J. entered June 25, 1932, establishing priorities against a fund remaining unpaid upon a public improvement contract, after a trial on the merits to the court. Affirmed.

Wayne W. Keyes, for appellant.

Wright Catlett, for respondent.


H.E. Nelson entered into a contract with the city of Tacoma, on August 12, 1931, to perform the work and furnish all labor, tools, materials, equipment and supplies in cleaning and painting a stand pipe belonging to the city, the contract price being $2,211. At the same time, he executed and delivered to the city his bond, as contractor, for the performance of the work and as security for the payment of laborers, mechanics, materialmen, etc., as required by Rem. Rev. Stat., § 1159, with the Indemnity Insurance Company of North America as surety. Two days later, the contractor executed and delivered to W.P. Fuller Co. (who will be hereinafter spoken of as Fuller Co.) a written assignment of any and all moneys due or to become due to him under the contract. The assignment was filed with the controller of the city, but it was not accepted by the city or any of its officers.

On the faith of the assignment, Fuller Co. furnished the contractor $2,045 in money, which it appears was used by the contractor in the performance of the work. Fuller Co. filed a claim for this item, and also filed a claim in the sum of $376.85 for material furnished to be used, and which was used, in the performance of the contract. Eight other claims for labor and material furnished were filed in the sum of $939.18.

The contract was fully performed, and the work accepted by the city. The time for filing claims expired. The city had paid no part of the contract price. The surety company, to lessen or protect its liability on its bond, then brought this action against the contractor, the city and all the claimants, to recover a judgment requiring the payment of claims for labor and material out of the funds owing by the city, in preference to any right of Fuller Co. under the contractor's written assignment upon which Fuller Co.'s claim of $2,045 was made. Issues were made up between the parties. At the trial, the city, by directions of the court, paid the whole contract price into court, to be distributed according to directions in the judgment to be entered.

A judgment was entered allowing a small premium to the industrial insurance department, and allowing all claims for labor and material, including Fuller Co.'s claim in the sum of $376.85, to which no one objects, except Fuller Co., who contends that its claim for $2,045 should be preferred over all claims for labor and material. To the extent of that adverse decision, Fuller Co. has appealed.

[1] The contract provides that the contractor shall not, either legally or equitably, assign any of the moneys payable under the contract, or his claims thereto, unless with the consent of the city. This is a plain, important provision of the contract, which was known to Fuller Co. when it took the assignment. To permit Fuller Co. to recover its so-called superior or preferred claim of $2,045, nearly equal to the total amount of the contract price, would render nugatory the specific prohibition in the contract against the assignment of moneys due under it; thus necessarily, though indirectly, resulting to the detriment of a contract upon which there is a surety, as required by statute, for the performance of a contract which specifically provides against assignment of moneys due under the contract.

Still further, we are persuaded to reach the same conclusion because of the last clause or sentence in Rem. Rev. Stat., § 1159, providing for a bond with surety to perform the public works contract and to "pay all laborers, mechanics and sub-contractors and materialmen," etc., which last clause or sentence is as follows:

"Provided, however, that the provisions of this act shall not apply to any money loaned or advanced to any such contractor, subcontractor or other person in the performance of any such work."

The purpose and intent of that statute would be destroyed if, in a case like this, one against whom the provision runs were allowed to take practically all of the funds derived from the performance of the contract.

Appellant cites and relies on Hall Olswang v. Aetna Casualty Surety Co., 161 Wn. 38, 296 P. 162. That was a case in which an assignee who had furnished money to a contractor to carry on the work was allowed to recover. However, as we look into that case from this one, it is easy to discover material differences that render the doctrine of that case inapplicable to this one. In that case, it does not appear that the contract provided against assignments by the contractor of moneys falling due; here, the contract does so provide. In that case, the public body, the school district, accepted the written assignment made by the contractor of moneys falling due, and made payments thereon; here, the assignment was not accepted by the city of Tacoma. Other questions discussed in that case are not involved in this case as finally presented in the superior court and argued on the appeal.

That portion of the opinion in Fidelity Deposit Co. v. Auburn, 150 Wn. 114, 272 P. 34, relied on by appellant here, relating to the right of subrogation claimed therein by the surety company, is not applicable here, because no such claim is made in this case.

The assignment in the case of National Surety Co. v. American Savings Bank Trust Co., 101 Wn. 213, 172 P. 264, was a qualified assignment, and the decision in that case is not helpful or applicable here.

The case of Northwestern National Bank v. Guardian Casualty Guaranty Co., 93 Wn. 635, 161 P. 473, Ann. Cas. 1918D, 644, cited by the appellant, is not in point. The contract in that case contained no provision against assignment, an assignment was accepted by the city, and the case arose prior to the 1915 session of the legislature, which enacted the proviso already referred to that moneys loaned to a contractor in the performance of a public contract are not within the terms of that act.

Authorities from other jurisdictions cited by appellant are not applicable to this case, in our opinion.

The claimants who furnished labor and material which was used in the public work were entitled to preference over the appellant out of the funds deposited in court by the city. That was the judgment of the superior court.

Judgment affirmed.

BEALS, C.J., MAIN, TOLMAN, HOLCOMB, MILLARD, STEINERT, and BLAKE, JJ., concur.


Summaries of

Indemnity Insurance Co. v. Nelson

The Supreme Court of Washington
Jun 14, 1933
22 P.2d 984 (Wash. 1933)
Case details for

Indemnity Insurance Co. v. Nelson

Case Details

Full title:INDEMNITY INSURANCE COMPANY OF NORTH AMERICA, Respondent, v. H.E. NELSON…

Court:The Supreme Court of Washington

Date published: Jun 14, 1933

Citations

22 P.2d 984 (Wash. 1933)
22 P.2d 984
173 Wash. 294

Citing Cases

North Pacific Bank v. Pierce County

"We find no merit in the claim that the bonding company has a superior equity in this fund over that of the…

Levinson v. Linderman

( New Amsterdam Casualty Co. v. City of Astoria, supra, 256 F. 560.)" [4] The assignment is void under…