City of New York v. United States

106 Ct. Cl. 141, 1946 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34, 1946 WL 4437
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 4, 1946
DocketNo. 46085
StatusPublished

This text of 106 Ct. Cl. 141 (City of New York 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
City of New York v. United States, 106 Ct. Cl. 141, 1946 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34, 1946 WL 4437 (cc 1946).

Opinion

Whitaker, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a suit by the City of New York to recover the value of food stamps which had been stolen while in its possession. These stamps were of different kinds designated by two different colors, orange and blue. Both kinds were stolen. The National Surety Corporation paid to the City the value of the orange stamps which had been stolen, but not of the blue stamps; it sues as the subrogee of the City of New York.

The “Food Stamp Plan” was adopted pursuant to the Act of August 24, 1935, as amended (49 Stat. 774; U. S. C. Title 7, sec. 612 (c)). Pursuant thereto the defendant entered into a contract with the City of New York, under the terms of which the City deposited with the Surplus Marketing Administration, hereinafter referred to as the “Administration,” money equivalent to the face value of the orange colored stamps issued to the City by the Administration. At the same time the Administration also issued to the City, gratis, blue stamps in an amount approximately equal to one-half the amount of orange stamps issued. The City of New York then issued these books containing orange and blue stamps in the ratio of two orange to one blue to persons in need of relief.

The orange stamps were good for any article of food. The blue stamps were good for only those articles of food which from time to time were designated by the Administration as surplus commodities. The Government redeemed from [152]*152tbe food dealer the orange stamps with the money deposited with it by the City, and it redeemed the blue stamps with money appropriated by the Congress for this purpose.

While the plan was in force the City received from the Administration a total amount of $63,216,500 worth of orange stamps, and $30,991,750 of blue stamps. While some of these stamps were in the City’s possession three of its offices were burglarized and a total of $12,138 worth of orange stamps and $21,069 worth of blue stamps were stolen.

At the termination of the agreement between the Administration and the City, the City had in its possession $174,290 worth of orange stamps, and $76,569 worth of blue stamps.1 It presented the orange stamps to the Administration for redemption. The Administration redeemed all the orange stamps presented, except $21,069 thereof, which was the value of the blue stamps which had been stolen while in the possession of the City. The City sues to recover both the value of the blue stamps and the orange stamps which were stolen while in its possession.

The City insists that the rights of the parties are to be determined by the law of bailments and, it having been found that the stamps were lost through no fraud or negligence of the City, that the loss must fall on the owner of the stamps, and it insists that the owner of both the orange and the blue ones was the defendant. We think, however, that the liability of the parties is to be determined by the contract they entered into.

This contract in article III provides:

The Administration shall furnish to the City such orange colored and blue surplus stamps as may be required to carry out the terms and conditions of this agreement. The City shall deposit, or cause to be deposited, without recourse, with the Administration a sum of money equal to the face value of the orange colored stamps to be obtained, which money shall become Administration funds to be used by the Administration in such manner as it shall deem necessary and proper to pay claims upon stamps. No deposit shall be required of the City at any time for blue surplus stamps, but the [153]*153City shall be legally responsible to the Administration at all times for blue surplus stamps in its possession.

Article YII provides for the redemption of the orange colored stamps in possession of the City at the termination of the agreement. It reads:

The Administration shall redeem, at face value, from the City all orange colored stamps remaining in the possession of the City at the termination of this agreement, provided, however, that the City shall return to the Administration, in the same ratio as received, all unissued blue surplus stamps obtained from the Administration.

The right of the City to recover for the orange colored stamps is determined by the defendant’s agreement to redeem, as contained in article VII. This promise was to redeem “all orange colored stamps remaining in the possession of the City at the termination of this agreement.” It did not agree to redeem stamps that had been in the possession of the City, but had been stolen from it, whether with or without the City’s negligence. It agreed to redeem such stamps as might be presented to it for redemption. 'Otherwise stated, its agreement to redeem was conditioned upon presentation of the stamps. A refusal to redeem without presentation is not a breach of defendant’s contract, whether or not plaintiff’s failure to present the stamps for redemption was due to an event for which it was in no way responsible.

It is said in WilUston on Contracts:

As a general rule, conditions which are either expressed or implied in fact must be exactly fulfilled or no liability can arise on the promise which such conditions qualify. The reason for this is obvious. The promisor can only be held liable according to the terms of the promise which he makes. * * * The condition is part of his promise qualifying and limiting it, and his promise, as matter of plain fact, is not broken until the condition has happened or has been performed [§ 675, p. 1940].
* * * * *
Where, therefore, A promises B to do something if .a certain contingency happens or if B renders some [154]*154performance, there is no breach of promise, and logically, therefore, no liability unless that contingency happens or that performance is rendered, even though this result is due to no fault of the promisee and could not have been prevented by him * * * [§ 808, p. 2269].
Hi H* H* H* H*
As the basis of the defendant’s excuse where the plaintiff has failed to perform, or is obviously going to fail to perform, is failure of consideration, the reason why the plaintiff fails to perform is immaterial. Even though his failure is caused by excusable impossibility, the result is the same. The defendant has not got what he bargained for and need not perform * * * [§ 838, pp. 2346, 2347].

The defendant further undertakes to justify its refusal to redeem the stamps that were stolen by the assertion that the Administration was under no obligation to redeem any of the orange stamps until all of the unissued blue stamps-were turned in. We, however, do not so read article VII. Under this article the Administration agrees to redeem the orange colored stamps provided the City shall return all unissued blue surplus stamps “in the same ratio as received.” The defendant’s argument disregards this expression. We think the use of this phrase shows that the agreement to redeem was conditioned upon turning in blue stamps in the same ratio to the orange colored stamps turned in as that in which they had been received by it. In other words, if there had been issued to the City two orange colored stamps' for every blue stamp, then when the City sought to redeem the orange colored stamps it had to turn in one blue stamp for two orange stamps.

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Bluebook (online)
106 Ct. Cl. 141, 1946 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 34, 1946 WL 4437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-new-york-v-united-states-cc-1946.