Barnard-Curtiss Company v. The United States

301 F.2d 909
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 18, 1962
Docket491-59
StatusPublished

This text of 301 F.2d 909 (Barnard-Curtiss Company v. The United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barnard-Curtiss Company v. The United States, 301 F.2d 909 (cc 1962).

Opinion

JONES, Chief Judge

This case was submitted to us on stipulated facts, and without oral argument, for our determination.

Plaintiff Barnard-Curtiss Company seeks to recover additional costs incurred as a result of flood damage, occurring during the course of its performance of a construction contract with defendant.

Plaintiff contracted with the Bureau of Reclamation on November 27, 1953, to construct and complete the earthwork and structures necessary for the rehabilitation of the Vermejo Diversion Dam, the Vermejo Canal, and the Eagle Tail Canal, all of which were located in the vicinity of Maxwell, New Mexico. Plaintiff received notice to proceed on December 12, 1953, and the work was scheduled for completion by June 15, 1955. This completion date was subsequently extended to October 22,1955, at which time *910 the project was actually completed and accepted by defendant.

We are, for the purposes of this suit, concerned only with that part of the work plaintiff agreed to accomplish at the Willow Creek Wasteway. This was a structure built into a large earthen dam situated at the confluence of Willow Creek and Eagle Tail Canal. The dam itself extended across the valley of Willow Creek at this site, and rose to a height of approximately 36 feet above the creek bed. The wasteway structure, built into the dam, consisted of a concrete intake located toward the mid-point in the height of the dam and a monolithic concrete pipe leading downward at an angle to a concrete outlet. The intake structure was situated some 6 or 7 feet higher in the dam than the outlet.

The passage of time had caused the reservoir formed by the dam to become so silted that, by December of 1953, the silt bed was actually higher than the intake structure of the wasteway. Consequenty, plaintiff was required under the contract to remove the existing wasteway structure and build a completely new one higher in the face of the dam.

The contract documents first called for the removal of the existing wasteway by excavation. When this had been accomplished, plaintiff was then required to fill in the resulting wedge with compacted earth to the extent needed so that the intake portion of the new wasteway would be several feet higher than that of the old wasteway. A new outlet was to be constructed at a level approximately 22 feet lower in the dam than the new intake, and the two structures were to be connected with precast concrete pipes.

After plaintiff had been awarded the contract, it subcontracted the work to be performed at Willow Creek. By November 29, 1954, this work had been apportioned among three different subcontractors. 1 The various subcontracts specified that the old wasteway at Willow Creek was to be removed, the excavation for the new structures completed, the precast pipe laid and the concrete for the new structures poured no later than December 31, 1954. However, at that time the only work actually accomplished at the site was the removal of the old structures, the excavation for the new structures, and the erection of an earthen dike in front of the earthen dam for the purpose of protecting the opening in the latter created by the excavation.

All work apparently ceased at Willow Creek on December 31, 1954, and was not resumed until sometime in April of 1955. Thus, concrete was not poured for the new structures, nor was the precast concrete pipe laid, until May 15 or 16, 1955. The excavated opening in the earthen dam therefore still existed at this time.

On May 17-18, 1955, an unprecedented and unforeseeable amount of rain 2 fell in the watershed covered by the Vermejo project. As a direct result of this, a large amount of water from the Willow Creek watershed flowed into the site of the wasteway structure, overtopped the protective dike and flowed through the excavated opening in the earthen dam, thereby eroding a large part of the dam. Thereafter, plaintiff was directed by appropriate Government personnel to repair the flood damage and to continue with its performance of the contract. On June 22, 1955, plaintiff notified the Bureau of Reclamation that it would complete the Willow Creek work, but protested the requirement of rehabilitating the construction site without additional compensation.

Repair of the flood damage at Willow Creek was in fact accomplished by plaintiff. It was first necessary to recover the concrete pipe which had been buried in silt. Then the side banks of the excavation had to be re-sloped to prevent cave-ins and to provide a solid base for back-fill. The eroded area of the dam was then replaced back to the elevation upon which the intake and outlet structures were required to be set. The total amount of fill needed to build up the eroded area as indicated was 5,250 cubic *911 yards, and it is the cost of this item of the repair work that is here in issue.

On January 6, 1956, after the project had been completed and accepted, plaintiff executed a document releasing defendant from all but certain specified claims it might have under this contract. One of the exceptions related to the cost of repairing the damage wrought by the flood of May 17-18, 1955. Also made an exception to the release was a claim for certain dewatering work performed at the Eagle Tail Headworks by one of plaintiff’s subcontractors.

On March 22, 1956, plaintiff furnished the contracting officer with data in support of its claim for the cost of repairing the flood damage at Willow Creek and the dewatering work performed at the Eagle Tail Headworks. The contracting officer sustained the claim, in the amount of $719.55, as to the latter work, but denied the claim as to the former on the ground that this item constituted costs for which plaintiff was responsible under Article 10 of the contract. 3

Plaintiff appealed this determination by the contracting officer to the Interior Board of Contract Appeals. The Board, rafter finding that plaintiff was in no way responsible for the erosion of the dam, held that it was entitled to reimbursement for a part of the costs incurred in replacing the eroded area. That, is of tiie 5,250 cubic yards of earth needed to rebuild the eroded area, 1,530 cubic yards were found to have been physically placed by plaintiff in a part of the dam which remained defendant’s responsibility under the contract. However, reimbursement was disallowed for the replacement of earth in the remainder of the eroded area (amounting to 3,720 .cubic yards) on the ground that this ,part of the dam was plaintiff’s responsibility under the contract since it was reasonably necessary to form the foundation or support for the new structures ;plaintiff was to build into the dam. The Board further found that $2.20 per cubic yard, plus an allowance of 10 percent for superintendence, general expense and profit, was a reasonable payment for the 1,530 cubic yards of earth plaintiff put into the eroded area in behalf of defendant. The pertinent parts of the Board’s decision are set forth in findings 24 and 27.

Insofar as this suit is concerned, the parties agree that all of the 5,250 cubic yards of earth required to build up the eroded area of the dam were placed by plaintiff in areas beyond the “neat or pay lines” shown on the contract drawings.

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Related

Donovan Construction Co. v. United States
149 F. Supp. 898 (Court of Claims, 1957)

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Bluebook (online)
301 F.2d 909, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barnard-curtiss-company-v-the-united-states-cc-1962.