A contract was entered into between one S. Dufy -and appellee, Treller, whereby the former undertook to erect a house for the latter -according to the plans and specifications of an architect, and Duty also executed a bond in the sum o-f $1,500 to appellee, with appellants, Thompson and Coffman, as sureties, for the performance of the contract. The obligors in the bond, by the terms thereof, acknowledged themselves to be indebted to appellee in said sum of $1,500, on condition that, if the principal should faithfully perform his contract, the obligation should be void. The -bond contained a further provision allowing alterations in the original plans and specifications not to exceed $500 in the cost of the building, and that the said sureties expressly assented to any alteration not exceeding that sum and waived notice of any such alterations.
Appellee brought suit on the bond against the sureties, alleging that Duty had abandoned the contract before completion of the building, had failed to perform his contract, and that plaintiff had been compelled to pay out the sum of $1,287.70 in excess of the contract price in completing the building and discharging liens thereon of material men and laborers. Judgment against said sureties was asked in the sum named above.
Duty was not sued, and appellee alleged in his complaint that Duty, about the time of the completion of the building, had left the State and never returned, and that he had no property in the State.
The defendants answered, denying that Duty had failed to perform his contract or that the plaintiff had paid out any sum in excess of the contract price for the completion of the building to discharge liens thereon; and they also alleged, by way of defense, that after Duty left the State they notified appellee to institute suit on the bond within thirty days thereafter, and that he had failed to do so.
Trial before jury resulted in a verdict and judgment in favor of plaintiff for the sum of $1,201.32, and the defendants appealed.
There was no controversy as to the amount which- appellee was entitled to recover, if he could recover at all, and the amount paid out by him for work and material in excess of the contract price was expressly admitted by appellants during the progress of the trial. „
Appellants notified appellee after Duty had abandoned the work and left the State to bring suit on the bond, but the proof shows that Duty never returned to the State, and had no property therein, and that executions issued after he left, upon judgments obtained against him by other creditors before he left the State, were returned unsatisfied.
The court instructed the jury on this branch of the case that if Duty had absconded from the State and left no property therein, the failure of the plaintiff to bring suit pursuant to the demand of the sureties did not' -operate as' a release; but that if Duty was in the State, or was solvent or had property sufficient to satisfy the claim, then plaintiff was bound to sue within thirty days, and his failure to do so released the sureties.
The statute (Kirby’s Digest, § § 7921, 7922), if it applies to bonds of this kind, was not intended to require an impossible thing of the obligee, and it should not be so construed. If the principal had absconded, was out of the State, and his whereabouts unknown to the obligee, and if he had no property in the State, it was impossible for the obligee to comply with the demand of the sureties to sue hi-m. Ordinarily, the question of solvency or insolvency of the principal is immaterial, as the sureties have the right to require suit to be brought and diligently prosecuted in order to test his ability to pay, whether he is in fact solvent or not; but where he left the State and has no property here, there are no mean-s of getting service of process so as to maintain an action. There are no mean's, under those circumstances, of testing his solvency or ability to pay by an action. Even if it appeared that appellee knew where Duty could be found in some other State, he could not be required to go out of this State, where he resided, and where the sureties resided, in order to sue the absconding principal. Hightower v. Ogletree, 114 Ala. 94; Phillips v. Riley, 27 Mo. 386; Conklin v. Conklin, 54 Ind. 289; Davis v. Hatcher, 10 Am. Law Reg. 519.
The statute in question is in derogation of the common law and of the contractual rights of the obligee on the bond, and should be strictly construed. Cummins v. Garretson, 15 Ark. 132; 27 Am. & Eng. Ency. Law, pp. 513, 515; 2 Brandt on Sur. & Guar. § 771.
We are therefore of the opinion that the court did not err in construing the statute and in giving the instruction complained of.
There was evidence tending to show some departure from the contract in the construction of the building, but the bond expressly authorized alteration not exceeding in cost $500 from the original contract price. The evidence does not show that the alteration came up to that amount. On the contrary, the evidence, or a preponderance thereof, establishes the fact that the alterations were slight, and varied the cost of the budding very little. There appear also some inconsistencies and conflicts in the specifications, caused by a mistake of the architect in preparing the same. For instance, while the building was to be ceiled and papered, there is a clause giving specifications for plastering, and it is obvious that this was included in the specifications by inadvertence. It became necessary to reconcile these conflicts and discard a portion of the specifications, but the evidence showed that there was no alteration which exceeded $500“ over the contract price. We think the only question on this branch of the case was whether the alterations exceeded the limits prescribed in the bond, and this question was submitted to the jury upon proper instructions.
The evidence was sufficient to warrant the verdict, and we find no error in the instructions or in the ruling of the court refusing appellant’s requests for instructions. The case seems to have been submitted on instructions exceptionally well framed so as to confine the attention of the jury, to the real issues in the case.
The judgment is therefore affirmed.