Bethlehem Corp. v. United States

462 F.2d 1400, 199 Ct. Cl. 247, 1972 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 116
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 14, 1972
DocketNo. 162-67
StatusPublished
Cited by19 cases

This text of 462 F.2d 1400 (Bethlehem Corp. v. 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
Bethlehem Corp. v. United States, 462 F.2d 1400, 199 Ct. Cl. 247, 1972 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 116 (cc 1972).

Opinion

Per Curiam :

This case was referred to Trial Commissioner Lloyd Fletcher with directions to prepare and file his opinion on the issues of plaintiff’s motion and defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment under the order of reference and Buie 166 (c). The commissioner has done so in an opinion and report filed on February 22, 1972, wherein such facts as are necessary to the opinion are set forth. Plaintiff filed a request for review by the court of the commissioner’s opinion and recommended conclusion and the case has been submitted to the court on oral argument of counsel and the briefs of the parties. Since the court agrees with the opinion and recommended conclusion of the trial commissioner it hereby adopts the same as the basis for its judgment in this case as hereinafter set forth. Therefore, plaintiff is not entitled to recover, its motion for summary judgment is denied, defendant’s cross-motion is allowed, and the petition is dismissed.

[249]*249Fletcher, Commissioner:

Under a fixed-price contract with the Department of the Army, plaintiff agreed to furnish, deliver, install, and test an environmental test chamber. Plaintiff now asks the court to reverse a decision of the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals which denied plaintiff’s appeal from a default termination of the contract by the contracting officer. The parties are in agreement that the Board’s findings of fact contained in the first eight paragraphs of its opinion are correct, and they are therefore treated as stipulated by the parties. Those findings are as follows:

The appeal is from a default termination of a contract to furnish, deliver, install and test an environmental test chamber at the Army Cold Regions Research and Engineering Laboratories ( CREEL). The contract price was $24,950. The award was made in dime 1963. Appellant seeks conversion to a termination for convenience and a remand for submission of a claim. We have no claim before us by the Government for damages or excess. costs. After termination another procurement of an environmental chamber was begun under somewhat altered specifications but no contract was awarded, apparently because of a lack of funds.
CREEL, or the Laboratory as we shall call it, had a requirement for conducting experiments to determine the effect of certain environmental conditions on the age hardening or metamorphism in properties of snow and possibly ice and frozen ground. These conditions were temperature, relative humidity and a reduced atmospheric pressure. The Laboratory had very little competence concerning the state of the art or knowledge of what equipment might be available to simulate the necessary environment. Therefore, the Laboratory wrote to several environmental chamber manufacturers. The replies included brochures but none of the brochures showed shelf items of equipment that entirely met the Laboratory’s needs. Every response showed standard items that could simulate the necessary altitudes and temperatures but none that could simulate the relative humidity conditions at temperatures below freezing down to very low temperatures.
[250]*250Mr. Wuori, Chief of the Applied Research Branch at the Laboratory then began to contact certain of the manufacturers including the appellant. He filled out a Bethlehem Corporation questionnaire form, showing the type of chamber and performance requirements desired. The relative humidity requirements that he specified on the form, not counting the tolerance, were 10% to 95% from — 100°F to + 100°F. Adjacent to these requirements he asked the question, “Not std is this possible.”
The answers on questionnaire showed what the Laboratory wanted to achieve. After the Laboratory filled out and sent the form to appellant, correspondence and telephone calls followed. Appellant wrote to the Laboratory saying that humidity could not be simulated or controlled below a temperature (or dew point) of 35°F. Mr. Wuori then had telephone conversations with Mr. Rosenblatt, a Bethlehem employee. Mr. Rosenblatt is a mechanical engineer and has been Chief of Bethlehem’s Environmental Division since several months after the award of the contract.
In these conversations Mr. Wuori asked Mr. Rosen-blatt if Bethlehem could develop a system of controlling humidity below freezing even though such a system was not then a shelf item. Mr. Rosenblatt replied that he was not sure, but would check on the components, sensors and that sort of equipment and would call back and let Mr. Wuori know if it was possible. He did call back and advised that he had checked with several firms, such as Minneapolis-Honeywell and it would be possible to simulate relative humidity conditions below freezing, but limited to a minus 40°, not down to minus 100°, which was completely impossible. Mr. Wuori also received the same information from another firm. Thereafter Mr. Wuori prepared the specifications based on the information that it would be possible to simulate the specified conditions, i.e., down to —40°.
Bethlehem, as well as other firms, then received an invitation for bids. The firm knew what the Laboratory wanted and decided it could be done. Mr. Rosenblatt was not the individual chiefly responsible for deciding that the firm could furnish equipment that would meet the performance requirements of the specifications. The individual who was responsible is no longer with the firm.
Bethlehem submitted the only bid and was awarded the contract. The equipment was produced and delivered but it never met the requirement for control of relative [251]*251humidity at the low temperatures specified. Appellant did not adequately test the ability of the equipment to meet the performance requirements before shipping it to the Laboratory in February 1964. Throughout the year until termination in December 1964 a series of mechanical breakdowns occurred. We will not discuss in detail these breakdowns, nor appellant’s contention that the Laboratory never furnished test reports and details of the operation of the equipment by Laboratory personnel. There is no evidence of any improper operation of the equipment that is material to the case. It is obvious from the evidence of repeated and extensive visits by appellant’s personnel to repair and test the equipment that appellant had the opportunity to know how the equipment was being operated, what tests were being run and what difficulties were continually being encountered.
That evidence, which tended to show mechanical unreliability of the equipment, is essentially irrelevant. The reliability of the equipment was, of course, important to the parties in the administration of the contract because it was initially assumed that the equipment would meet the performance requirements if it operated reliably. 'In addition it seems probable that the Laboratory would have arranged for an amendment to the contract to accept the im.it if it could have met less difficult but still useful requirements and if it had also been reliable. But by the time of the hearing it was clear to both parties that, irrespective of the reliability of the equipment, it was incapable of meeting the contract requirements. In fact appellant’s case is based upon impossibility of performance.

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Bluebook (online)
462 F.2d 1400, 199 Ct. Cl. 247, 1972 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 116, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bethlehem-corp-v-united-states-cc-1972.