Charles H. Blanchard, Jr., Doing Business as Blanchard Construction Company v. The United States

347 F.2d 268, 171 Ct. Cl. 559, 1965 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 131
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 11, 1965
Docket376-59
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 347 F.2d 268 (Charles H. Blanchard, Jr., Doing Business as Blanchard Construction 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
Charles H. Blanchard, Jr., Doing Business as Blanchard Construction Company v. The United States, 347 F.2d 268, 171 Ct. Cl. 559, 1965 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 131 (cc 1965).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This case was referred pursuant to former Rule 45(a), now Rule 57(a), to Trial Commissioner Saul Richard Gamer with directions to make findings of fact and recommendation for a conclusion of law. The commissioner has done so in an opinion and report filed on April 10, 1964. Plaintiff and defendant filed exceptions to the commissioner’s report, briefs were filed by the parties, and the case was submitted to the court on oral argument of counsel. Since the court is in agreement with the findings and recommendation of the commissioner, subject to the deletion of two sentences, it adopts the same, as amended, and as hereinafter set forth, as the basis for its judgment in this case. The plaintiff is therefore entitled to recover and judgment is entered for plaintiff in the sum of thirty-six thousand seven hundred fifty-seven dollars and forty-eight cents ($36,757.48). Defendant’s counterclaim is dismissed. *

OPINION OF COMMISSIONER

A construction contractor here complains that the Government deprived him of $75,000 worth of timber which, under his contract, rightfully belonged to him. The contract called for a certain wooded part of the project area to be cleared, and plaintiff contends that, under a proper interpretation of the applicable specification provisions, the timber generated by such clearing operations belonged to him.

Plaintiff’s contract with the Eglin Air Force Base in Florida called for the construction of a “Bombing Range.” Certain structures had to be erected, and some 4,000 acres of land had to be cleared. About 1,000 acres thereof were, in addition, required to be grubbed. Generally, clearing consisted of cutting the trees no higher than 12 inches above the ground, and grubbing consisted, in addition, of the removal of all stumps and large roots.

Sheets 1 and 2 of the contract drawings delineated, by legends consisting of hatch and cross-hatch lines within boundary lines, the specific areas which were to be cleared only, and to be both cleared and grubbed. Sheet 1 referred to the “Cleared Area” and the “Cleared and Grubbed Area.” Sheet 2 referred to the “Area to be Cleared to Stumps Only” and the “Area to be Cleared & Grubbed.” Sheet 3 described the outside boundaries of the rectangular area to be cleared only by arrows leading to the words “Limits of Clearing to Stumps Only,” and, within such limits, another rectangular area, the boundary lines of which were similarly designated as “Limits .of Clearing & Grubbing.”

The outside boundaries of these two distinct areas were also visibly marked out on the project site.

The specification provision about which the controversy revolves reads as follows:

SECTION II

CLEARING AND GRUBBING

* -X- # * * *

2-04. DISPOSAL OF CLEARED AND GRUBBED MATERIAL:

(a) Merchantable Timber. All timber from within the limits specified to be cleared and grubbed measuring 8 inch diameter and larger at breast height shall be trimmed of limbs and tops and stock piled at locations within the area as designated by the Contracting Officer. This timber shall remain the property of and will be disposed of by the Government. All the other merchantable timber shall become the property of and shall be disposed of by the contractor.

*271 Plaintiff contends that he reasonably construed this provision as retaining in the Government the title to the 8 inch and larger trees “within the limits” of the area specified on the drawings to be both “cleared and grubbed”, i. e., the cross-hatched area, and as vesting in the contractor, pursuant to the provisions of the last sentence that “All the other merchantable timber shall become the property of * * * the Contractor,” the title to the trees of such dimension within the limits of the other area specified on the drawings to be cleared only, i. e., the hatched area. It seems clear that plaintiff is correct.

There were two distinct areas for the clearing and grubbing operations. In one, only clearing was to be done. In the other, both clearing and grubbing were to be done. The only places where a contractor could ascertain the “limits” of these different areas were the drawings and the marked boundaries on the site itself. As to this there is no dispute. A previous paragraph, 2-02, of the same section of the specifications, which described the requirements of the “Clearing” operation in detail, specifically referred the contractor to a certain drawing (Sheet 26) to ascertain the areas “designated by cross-hatching” for a special type of clearing operation. 1 Accordingly, when paragraph 2-04(a), being the only paragraph specifying what timber was to belong to whom, used, in describing the timber to belong to the Government, the almost identical area language as was used on the drawings, the contractor naturally thought the timber in the other area belonged to him. The specification said “all timber from within the limit specified to be cleared and grubbed * * * shall remain the property of * * * the Government.” The drawings used the exact “cleared and grubbed” phrase, as distinct from “clearing only,” and Sheet 3, designating the “Limits of Clearing and Grubbing,” used the almost identical language of 2-04(a). “Limits specified” could rationally refer only to the areas and boundaries shown on the drawings, and “cleared and grubbed” reasonably meant the “cleared and grubbed” area shown on the drawings, which specified such area in such exact language and as separate and distinct from the “cleared only” area. Certainly plaintiff’s reading of the specification is logical and natural.

Defendant argues that when paragraph 2-04(a) referred to the timber “within the limits specified to be cleared and grubbed,” it referred to the entire project area because the whole area had to be cleared, including the part to be grubbed also. It contends it should not therefore be necessary for the provision in question to refer to “clearing only” and “clearing and grubbing,” as two distinct operations. It points out that other parts of section II of the specifications, which include paragraph 2-04(a), make no distinction between “clearing only” as one operation, and “clearing and grubbing” as another.

However, the language of each part of the specifications must be studied in its particular context. Where other parts of the specifications, including the other paragraphs of section II, headed “Clearing and Grubbing,” used these terms separately, and defined them, and made no reference to areas or geographical limits, there was no need to use the separate terminology of the drawings. The different operations themselves, as operations, were being defined. But when 2-04(a) referred to ownership of certain timber in certain areas as defined on drawings, and used the same area language as the drawings, a different situation is presented. It is not an operation that is here being discussed. It is, instead, a geographical demarcation. It could also be pointed out that where, as under “Statement of Work,” the specifications themselves referred to these operations in connection with areas, it did use the terms “Clearing” and “Clearing and Grubbing” separately. But most importantly, these separate and distinct terms were so used on the drawings to which 2-04(a) obviously sent the reader.

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Bluebook (online)
347 F.2d 268, 171 Ct. Cl. 559, 1965 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 131, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/charles-h-blanchard-jr-doing-business-as-blanchard-construction-company-cc-1965.