Gurley Lord Tire Co. v. Newgard
Before: Nourse
NOURSE, P. J.
The plaintiff sued and recovered on an express contract for the rental of forty-eight tires and forty-eight tubes supplied to a subcontractor and used by him on trucks employed in a public highway construction job.
The trial court found: “That said supplies and materials above mentioned, to-wit, use and rentals of Forty-eight tires and Forty-eight tubes were furnished to be used and were actually used in, upon, for and about the performance of the work contracted to be executed and performed by the terms of said contract between the State of California and Basich Brothers Construction Company on the main job and the Sunnyvale extension or ‘airport job’ under contract 44TC2; that said supplies and materials contributed to said work to be done; that the value of said tire rental is three thousand seven hundred sixty-eight and 96/100 ($3,768.96) dollars, which amount the court finds to be the reasonable value of said rental; ...”
Plaintiff’s claim rests on the statute of 1919 to secure payment of claims in relation to contracts for public works. (Deering’s Gen. Laws, Act No. 6423 [Stats. 1919, p. 487].) Section 2 of the act provides in part: “Any materialman . . . furnishing materials, provisions, provender or other supplies used in, upon, for or about the performance of the work contracted to be executed . . . or . . . renting or hiring teams or implements or machinery for or contributing to said work to be done, or . . . who supplies both work and materials, and whose claim has not been paid by the contractor, ... or by the subcontractors ...” may file a claim with the officer or body by whom the contract was let or with the disbursing officer. Section 1 of the act requires an indemnity bond from the contractor inuring to the benefit of all such persons entitled to file claims under section 2. The two bonding companies named herein as defendants were sued under these provisions of the act.
The appellants state two questions involved in their appeal —the application of the act to a rental of truck tires and tubes, and the alleged estoppel of respondent.
The wording of the act is clear. It expressly includes the furnishing of supplies and the rental of “teams
[40]
or implements or machinery”. The appellants argue that whatever is furnished under the act must be entirely “used or consumed in the construction”. But this could not be so in respect to the rental of teams, wagons, scrapers, etc. One who furnishes a wagon and a team is entitled to claim for the rental value of the wagon which would be classed as an “implement”. One who furnishes a motor-driven truck may file for the gasoline used.
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