Koehler & Newhouse, a firm of builders, entered into a written contract with J. Gr. Higgins, one of the plaintiffs, to construct a house for the latter in the city of Helena, and defendant, Massachusetts Bonding & Insurance Company, at the instance of said contractors, undertook by written contract or bond, to “indemnify and save harmless the said obligee from any pecuniary loss resulting from the breach of any of the terms, covenants, and conditions of the said contract on the part of the said principal to be performed. ’ ’ The contract of the defendant was executed at the instance of Koehler & Newhouse, .and for a consideration, and recited the contract between said parties and the plaintiff Higgins. Mary W. Higgins, the wife of J. Gr. Higgins, was the real party in interest, she being the owner of the property, and the contract was made in her husbandcs name for her benefit. In other words, she was the undisclosed principal. Koehler & Newhouse failed to comply with their contract .and quit the work bef ore the building was completed, and damage was sustained in that.the house was completed by Mrs. Higgins at a cost in advance of the contract price, and also liens were asserted against the property. Mrs. Higgins .and her (husband.instituted this action in the, chancery count of Phillips County against the defendant bonding company, and certain parties who asserted liens were made parties to the action. No question has been raised as to the action being properly brought in the chancery court. The ease was heard upon the testimony and the chancellor found in favor of the plaintiff, Mrs. Mary W. Higgins, and rendered a decree against the bonding company, after having ascertained the 'amount of the liens against the building.
(1-2-3) The principal contention on behalf of the defendant is that there is no liability because of the fact that J. Gr. Higgins, the party with whom the contract was made, had no interest in the subject-matter, and that an action could not be maintained on the contract by an undisclosed principal. In ether words, they invoke the rule laid down by Mr. Mechem that “an undisclosed principal ©an not enforce a guaranty running to the agent alone.” 2 Mechem on Agency (2 ed.) § 2059. Other authorities are cited in the brief which sustain that rule. Conceding the force of that rule, it does not follow that it is applicable to the facts of this case. The ¡bonding company is neither a guarantor nor a surety in the ordinary sense of the word, but is a compensated insurer. This court has so held in many cases. American Bonding Co. v. Morrow, 80 Ark. 49. The eases on this subject are collected in the note to the case of Hormel v. American Bonding Co., 33 L. R. A. (N. S.) 513, and the following is stated as the rule deducible from those cases: “The overwhelming weight of authority supports the proposition that the rule of strictissimi juris, by which the rights of uncompensated sureties are determined, is not applicable to the contracts of surety companies, which make the matter of suretyship a business for profit; that their business is essentially that of insurance; and that therefore their rights ¡and liabilities under their contract will be governed by the laws of insurance. ’ ’ This statement is directly in line with our decisions on that subject. In an exhaustive note to the case of Shields v. Coyne, 29 L. R. A. (N. S.) 472, the rule as to actions by undisclosed principals is stated as follows: “The general rule has frequently been stated and applied that an undisclosed principal may sue on any contract not under seal, made by his agent in his behalf. This doctrine apparently originated as corollary to the proposition that an undisclosed principal was liable upon any contract made in his behalf by his agent at the option of the other party thereto, the theory being that inasmuch .as the principal wias liable upon such contracts he should be permitted to sue thereon.”
That doctrine was recognized by this court in the case of Frazier v. Poindexter, 78 Ark. 241.
(4) In the note last referred to, exceptions are stated to the general rule about suits maintainable by an undisclosed principal. One of the exceptions to the general rule is that an undisclosed principal can not maintain a suit upon the contract of guaranty or indemnity .for the reason that ‘ ‘ such contracts are personal in their nature, and there is a mutual trust between the parties thereto which renders the general rule inapplicable.” Now, the answer to this statement of the exception to the rule is that while a contract of guaranty or of suretyship in the ordinary sense of the words is personal, a contract of insurance, such as in this case, is in no sense personal. Being merely .a contract of insurance, there is no reason why the general rule should not prevail permitting an undisclosed principal to sue. It certainly is the just rule, for the undisclosed principal in this case was liable for the contract made by her agent and there is no reason why she should not reap the fruits of the contract. There were no personal undertakings on her part in the contract of insurance, which was an obligation based upon certain conditions precedent whereby the company undertook to indemnify or insure the plaintiff against any loss. We think the contention of learned counsel for defendant is therefore unsound, and that it affords no reason for denying liability under the contract.
(5-6) The next contention is that the bond does not insure against liens. It is true, the bond is only to “indemnify iand save harmless the said obligee from any pecuniary loss resulting from the breach of any of the terms, covenants and conditions of the said contract on the part of said principal,” hut the law of the State with respect to mechanics ’ Mens is read into any contract that is made concerning the construction of a house, and the contract necessarily carried with it an obligation to construct a house and deliver it free from liens. In fact, the contract contains an express stipulation “that it includes all of the labor and materials for the building except mantels and electric fixtures.” It would be a very narrow construction of the contract to say that the bond was not intended to cover any liens, for unpaid claims on the building causing a pecuniary loss directly from the breach of the contract on the part of the principal. That construction would indeed be a strict one in accordance with the old rules applicable to accommodation sureties, but it is not in accord with the liberal rules of interpretation placed upon contracts of insurance.
(7) The only other contention is that the amounts paid out for liens of subcontractors should not be included in the liability on the bond for the reason that the principal contractors were not made parties to the suit. It was not essential that the validity of the lien should be first adjudicated in a suit against the principal contractor, for the obligee in the bond had the right to pay off bills which constituted liens on the building without a suit. Federal Union Surety Co. v. McGuire, 111 Ark. 373. The 'Correctness of the bills was proved however, in this suit, and a finding by the trial court, .upon sufficient evidence, that the bills were correct and constitute a lien on the building, was sufficient to justify the inclusion of the amounts in the award against the bonding company.
The liability of the defendant was clearly established by the evidence, and the decree of the chancellor was correct. Affirmed.