Blake Construction Co. v. United States

252 F.2d 658
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 25, 1958
DocketNo. 16766
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 252 F.2d 658 (Blake Construction Co. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Blake Construction Co. v. United States, 252 F.2d 658 (5th Cir. 1958).

Opinion

JOHN R. BROWN, Circuit Judge.

This is a minor, but heated, controversy growing out of the missiles program. To be sure, its resolution calls for no heady formulae in the field of astronautics. Ours is the more earthbound task of determining whether the plans and specifications for five missile assembly buildings called for one thing rather than the other. Launching this controversy into decisional finality, we must determine too the stage at which it orbitted into a liquidated demand for the commencement of interest. Subsidiary to this is the question whether a Court, rather than some other agency (Board of Arbitration) is to perform the count-down.

Except for the difficulty, spectacularly present in the comparable field of patent law, of portraying intricate structural detail by words, the main dispute is not too complex. In terms, it is whether the Subcontractor is entitled to $3,054.75 as an extra for furnishing and laying additional insulation block in the inside longitudinal walls on the mezzanine floor of these five buildings.

The Contractor1 had the prime contract with the Government on the multimillion dollar project for the construction of vertical launching facilities and missile assembly buildings at the Joint Long Range Proving Ground, Missile Test Center, Cape Canaveral, Florida. Subcontractor,2 for a bid of $138,000, had the masonry subcontract on the five buildings requiring it to furnish “ * * all labor and materials * * * and equipment” and to perform “ * * * all work necessary to complete the erection of all concrete block and insulating block walls and partitions, setting of all precast concrete sills and glass block and caulking * * *.”

Each of the five missile assembly buildings was a large hangar-like structure approximately 185 feet in width, 170 feet in depth, and an extreme, center, height of 47 feet. On the front and back, it was open for a width of about 130' feet. On each side of this opening, there was a long enclosed structure, approximately 27 feet in width consisting of a first and mezzanine floor. It is this part of the building with which we are concerned. In this enclosed part, the extreme outside wall was approximately 28 feet high. But the roof over this portion inclined slightly so that the inside wall was about 29 feet in height. At this point, this wall rose vertically for another 17 feet, so that the fiat roof over the “hangar” door opening was approximately 47 feet above the ground level.

At the ends of the enclosed structure, on both first and mezzanine floors, were stair wells and substantial spaces separated by interior partitions for toilet, washroom and lounge facilities. These areas were so situated that of the 170 feet depth in the whole structure, that portion of the “inside” wall (next to the open hangar space) which actually enclosed the working area was about 140 feet in length. The similar part of the opposite (i.e., extreme “outside”) wall was about 130 feet long. This area between these two side walls and the internal partitions separating it from adjacent stair wells and toilet areas was entirely enclosed with no movable windows or openings. It is undisputed that the plans and specifications called for the wall enclosing this area to be made up of concrete blocks of specified size on the “outside” laid adjacent to 4" insulating non-load bearing blocks on the [660]*660“inside.” Another company was to, and did, apply a bituminous vapor seal on the inside parged3 surface of the concrete blocks prior to the time the Subcontractor laid the insulating block. In other words, whether in law this is considered as a single wall or, as Subcontractor contends, two adjacent “partitions”, it is undisputed that Subcontractor was to install the concrete blocks and insulating blocks to make what was in fact a single wall.

The plan drawings plainly show that this double wall (of concrete block and adjacent insulation block), on the first floor, shall run from the ground level floor to the underside of the mezzanine floor beams, and for the mezzanine, from that floor to the underside of the structural ceiling-roof beams. The written specifications prescribed similar requirements.4 On the first floor, this carried the double wall for the height precisely indicated on the plans, lS'á". On the mezzanine floor, the height for the outside wall was 12'0", but with the incline of the overhead roof, the inside (toward the hangar space) wall was 13'0".

It is here where the rub comes. For Subcontractor contends, as he always has, that while the plans and specifications called for the insulating block to run up to the underside of the floor or beams above, all this was either changed, or at least made obscure, by special notes written on the face of the sheets showing the floor plan for the first5 floor and mezzanine6 respectively.

Subcontractor’s argument runs somewhat like this: (1) the special notes on the plans (see notes 5 and 6, supra) refer expressly to “masonry partitions of 4" concrete or insulating block” and presumably the disjunctive “or” was purposefully used; (2) while there are many (approximately 21) partitions in the toilet-lounge areas of 4" concrete blocks, there are none made exclusively of insulating blocks; (3) the only interior “partitions” of 4" insulating block are those which are laid immediately adjacent to the concrete blocks and separated only by the bituminous vapor seal; (4) therefore, it must have been intended that Contractor would install a poured concrete cap on the top of the 4" insulating block; and (5) since the Government did not require that this be done, Contractor has gained by the saving of the cost of the concrete cap, whereas Subcontractor has lost to the extent that it was necessary to furnish and lay insulating blocks for the vertical space which [661]*661would have been occupied by the concrete cap.

As a corollary Subcontractor also contends that these notes made the plans ambiguous and thus authorized resort to parol evidence. In our disposition we need not determine whether, as is most doubtful, the conversations between Contractor and Subcontractor immediately preceding the signing of the formal contract had the claimed effect of an agreement that Subcontractor’s interpretation was correct, or whether it was error7 for the Court to have received the parol testimony. For we are of the clear opinion that no cap was called for and what the Subcontractor furnished and installed was exactly what the plans obliged him to do.

We start with the firm conclusion that “partition” as it is used in the notes (see notes 5 and 6, supra) obviously did not refer to that portion of the side walls made up of concrete blocks and insulating blocks laid together. While it may be true that to assure a perfect vapor seal, the two were not mechanically bonded together, this structure constituted a single wall and not a partition to separate one space off from another. The plans themselves show that “partition” was used in this sense. For in the toilet-lounge areas, there were, in each building, 21 free-standing 4" partitions which all agree were to be made up of concrete blocks without an adjacent course of insulating blocks. Unlike the concrete blocks of the side walls which were bonded on each side and top and bottom into the adjacent strength members of the main structure, these partitions were free standing. To afford added stability, a concrete cap was prescribed.

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Blake Construction Company v. United States
252 F.2d 658 (Fifth Circuit, 1958)

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Bluebook (online)
252 F.2d 658, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/blake-construction-co-v-united-states-ca5-1958.