McGowan Bros. Hardware Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland

Washington Supreme Court
McGowan Bros. Hardware Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland, 84 Wash. 470 (Wash. 1915)
147 P. 44; 1915 Wash. LEXIS 1233
Ellis

McGowan Bros. Hardware Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co. of Maryland

Opinion of the Court

Ellis, J.

This is an action to recover upon the same surety bond given to secure the performance of the same contract as involved in the cases of Wheeler, Osgood Co. v. Fidelity & Deposit Co., 78 Wash. 328, 139 Pac. 53, and Union Iron Works v. Strauser, 82 Wash. 51, 143 Pac. 446.

The contract was let by the state, through its board of control, to T. Strauser and Son, for the erection of the administration building of the Northern Hospital for the Insane, at Sedro Woolley. For the facts touching the character and provisions of the contract, the completion of the building by the contractor, and the acceptance thereof by the architect, reference is made to the opinion in the Wheeler, Osgood Co. case, in which a detailed statement appears.

The plaintiff in the present action furnished material for the building aggregating $2,260.43, and filed its claim against the bond with the state board of control on January 8, 1913. The case was tried to the court without a jury. Judgment was entered for the plaintiff. The defendant, Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland, appeals.

In the Wheeler, Osgood Co. case, as pointed out in the Union Iron Works case, the principal question involved was whether the board of control, in the contract made with Strauser and Son, delegated to the architect the power to accept the building. In the first mentioned case, that question was decided in the affirmative, and on the evidence it was held that the architect did, in fact, accept the building as completed on December 6, 1912. A petition for rehearing was denied.

In the Union Iron Works case, the further question of law, whether the board could legally delegate to the architect the right to accept the building when it should conform to the contract, was involved. We held that:

“The board of control had the power to authorize the architects to determine whether the building conformed to the plans and specifications, and if they found that the contract was satisfied in that regard, to accept the work.”

*472We further held that:

“The board having constituted the architects its agent while acting within the powers conferred, the act of the architects becomes the act of the board.”

An exhaustive petition for rehearing was filed in that case, seeking a review of the question of law involved, and of the evidence as to when in fact the architect accepted the work. After a careful consideration, that petition was denied.

The evidence in this case was, in every material particular, the same as that in the TJmon Iron Works case. The same questions, both of law and fact, presented in that case are presented here. We have again reviewed the evidence. It is clear that the entire board of control, with one of the architects, inspected the building on December 2, 1912, and found it complete with the exception of certain minor items. The architect remained on the ground for two or three days, and after returning to Seattle, was informed by telephone by Dr. McLeish, the superintendent of the hospital, that the items of work above referred to had been performed, whereupon the architects, on December 6, 1912, made their final certificate, and on December 7, 1912, transmitted it to Dr. McLeish with direction to hold the same until a release was obtained by the contractors from their surety. If this was not an acceptance, then there has been none to this day, so far as the record shows. The fact that, on December 17,1912, the board notified the Union Trust & Savings Bank of Spokane, through which the contractors had secured their bond, that the building had been accepted and that the final estimate would be paid as soon as the contractors had made settlement of the premiums due the state industrial insurance commission, does not alter the matter further than as tending to show that the surety had notice that the building had in fact been accepted prior to that time.

The fact now urged, that a labor report of the state’s construction superintendent was received on December 13, advising that the final work on the building had been done *473after the date of the architects’ certificate, we regard as immaterial. It could not impeach the certificate in the absence of some showing of fraud on the architects’ part. Nothing of the kind appears. •

We find nothing in the record which warrants a reversal of the holding in the Wheeler, Osgood Co. and Union Iron Works cases that the building was accepted on December 6, 1912, and that the respondent’s notice filed on January 8, 1913, was tardy.

Following those decisions, we reverse this judgment and remand the cause for dismissal as to the surety company.

Crow, Fuluerton, Mount, and Main, JJ., concur.

Reference

Full Case Name
McGowan Brothers Hardware Company v. Fidelity & Deposit Company of Maryland
Cited By
6 cases
Status
Published
Syllabus
States — Building Contracts — Performance — Final Acceptance —Action on Bond — Materialmen. The architect’s final certificate of construction is a conclusive acceptance of a building erected under the direction of the state board of control, where the contract gave the architect complete control of the work, and provided for payments on the architect’s certificates, the final payment to be made when the work was completed, and accepted by the “owner and architect,” and that no certificate except the final one shall be conclusive evidence of the performance of the contract; hence a material-man, in order to maintain an action on a bond given to secure the performance of the contract, must file a claim within thirty days after such acceptance of the work, as required by Rem. & Bal. Code, § 1161. Same — Contracts — Final Acceptance — Delegation to Architects. Where the state board of control has been given power to contract for public buildings, without limitations forbidding such delegation, it may delegate to the architects the right to determine when the work contracted for conforms to the contract and specifications, and to finally accept the work if the contract was satisfied in that regard. States — Contracts — Acceptance by Architect — Impeachment. An architect’s certificate of the completion of a state building cannot be impeached, in the absence of a showing of fraud on his part, by the fact that the date of completion was recited as of a later day in a labor report of the state’s construction superintendent.