Compania Constructora Bechtel-McCone v. McDonald

157 F.2d 749, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2795
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 11, 1946
DocketNo. 11222
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 157 F.2d 749 (Compania Constructora Bechtel-McCone v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Compania Constructora Bechtel-McCone v. McDonald, 157 F.2d 749, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2795 (9th Cir. 1946).

Opinion

ORR, Circuit Judge.

In May 1944 appellant, a corporation citizen of the Republic of Venezuela, to whom we shall hereafter refer as1 the ■ Company, was building a refinery on Bah-rein Island in the Persian Gulf. Appelleé, a citizen of California, who was previously under a temporary employment agreement executed in California with Bechtel-Mc-Cone Corporation (which was engaging employees in the United States to work for the Company), arrived on Bahrein Island on May 28, 1944, and there entered into a permanent written employment agreement with the Company. In this agreement ap-pellee agreed to work for the Company for 18 months as a boilermaker at a salary of $450 per month. In clause 6 of the contract appellee agreed:

“To comply with and abide -by all general regulations and instructions from time to time issued by Company, * * * including those governing hours and conditions of work, and to obey all lawful orders given by the Company, its manager, or other duly authorized person or persons.”

Clause 9 of the contract provided that the Company might terminate appellee’s service at any time without notice on payment of thirty days salary, and Clause 10 permitted the Company to terminate ap-pellee’s “service hereunder at any time for cause, such as insubordination , * * .* non-compliance with Company’s regulations or instructions * * Clause 12(b) provided that if appellee’s service was terminated for cause, the Company would be under no obligation to pay any of appellee’s expenses for transportation back to the United States.

Appellee was assigned to work as a boilermaker, along with 30 to 40 others, under one Tam, who was one of three or four boilermaker foremen. These foremen in turn were under one Gratz, the general boilermaker foreman. Appellee, as the other boilermakers, had a crew of A*ab laborers assigned to him to carry tool's and do other manual, labor.

A few days prior to July 9th, Tam ordered appellee to take some of the Arabs and bring turnbuckles and other tools which Tam said were needed for the construction of a bubble tower on which appellee was then working. Appellee, after protesting that the turnbuckles and tools were too heavy to carry without a truck, failed to obey his foreman’s order, and left the tools where they were. The turnbuckles weighed about 10 to 12 pounds each and two would have sufficed for the work at the bubble tower. The turnbuckles were approximately, “a long city block and a half” of “approximately a quarter of a mile,” from appellee’s place .of work at the bubble tower.

On July 9th appellee was working overtime assembling another section of the tower so that a crane could be released [751]*751for work elsewhere the next day. Tam came up to appellee during the overtime period and demanded to know where the turnbuckles were. Appellee replied to the effect that they were not the proper tools to use, and that he had virtually finished the job with key plates rather than turnbuckles. Appellee also said he had sent his Arabs after the turnbuckles some days previously but that they could not find them. Tam again ordered appellee to get the turnbuckles and appellee again replied that it was not necessary. The argument then, in appellee’s words, became “more heated,” but, although there was some testimony that appellee gave Tam a shove, and “put up his [appellee’s] dukes,” no blows were struck. Appellee testified that he intended to hit Tam but did not. Tam told appellee he was discharged, although Tam had no authority to discharge boilermakers.

Appellee then left the job and went over to wait for a bus to return to his living quarters. Tam testified that he took some of appellee’s Arab laborers, got the turnbuckles, and completed the job within about 30 minutes.

While waiting for the bus, appellee told McAuliffe and Vessels, the Company’s project manager and assistant manager, the two men in charge of the Bahrein Island project, of his altercation with Tam, and requested to be transferred to another job. They told appellee they disapproved of transfers in general, but McAuliffe stated he “would see.” McAuliffe testified that he said he would investigate the circumstances, and for appellee to report back to Vessels the next morning.

The next morning, July 10th, when ap-pellee reported back to the office he met Gratz, the general boilermaker foreman. Gratz, who had authority to discharge, subject to written approval of McAuliffe, after some conversation indicating displeasure because appellee had spoken to McAuliffe before coming to him (Gratz), told appellee, “You are fired.” Appellee requested McAuliffe to transfer him for work under the supervision of another foreman. McAuliffe refused and ordered appellee to go back to work under Tam. Appellee declined to’ obey the order and went to his living quarters to await transportation to the United States.

The trial court, sitting without a jury, found that it was appellee’s duty to comply with Tam’s order to get the turnbuckles, and that appellee had not obeyed that order and had no intention of obeying it, and further, that the disobedience amounted to insubordination.

The court also found that on the evening of July 9th, the day of the altercation, McAuliffe and Vessels elected to overlook the insubordination when they ordered appellee to report back the next day. Further, the court found that the Company did not accept Gratz’ action in discharging appellee.

On these findings the court held that when McAuliffe ordered appellee to return to work under Tam appellee could not have been expected to comply because an impossible condition had been created by Tam; that the Company thereby breached the contract and, therefore, ap-pellee was entitled to recover in this action.

On appeal the Company contends that, (1) there is no support in the record for the trial court’s finding that Tam had created an impossible condition of employment for appellee, and further, that this finding is inconsistent with the court’s pri- or finding that appellee disobeyed Tam’s lawful instructions; (2) that no support is found in the record for the court’s finding that McAuliffe, by his order that ap-pellee return to work under Tam, prevented appellee from further performance of the contract; and (3) that the Company was within its rights in refusing to transfer appellee to work under another foreman ; and, further, that appellee voluntarily abandoned his rights under the contract by refusing to obey McAuliffe’s order to return to work under Tam.

The contention of appellant that the record fails to sustain a finding that it was impossible for appellee to resume work under Tam because he, Tam, had created an impossible situation, is well taken.

Stripped of non-essentials, the record shows that Tpm, as he was clearly entitled [752]*752to do, instructed appellee to get certain tools for use on a job of which Tam was foreman. Appellee suggested a different method of handling the work, of which method Tam did not approve, whereupon appellee disobeyed the order, substituting, his own judgment for that of his foreman. The resulting dispute, occurring after a day’s work in the intense heat of the area, became bitter but no blows were struck (although appellee stated he intended to hit Tam).

It was appellee’s refusal to obey orders that brought on the dispute. Notwithstanding the method suggested by appellee of performing the work may have resulted in a more expeditious and satisfactory handling of the job, it was his duty to obey lawful orders.

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Bluebook (online)
157 F.2d 749, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 2795, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/compania-constructora-bechtel-mccone-v-mcdonald-ca9-1946.