Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. v. United States

115 F. Supp. 892, 126 Ct. Cl. 631, 1953 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 126
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedNovember 3, 1953
DocketNo. 45741
StatusPublished
Cited by20 cases

This text of 115 F. Supp. 892 (Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. 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
Continental Illinois National Bank & Trust Co. v. United States, 115 F. Supp. 892, 126 Ct. Cl. 631, 1953 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 126 (cc 1953).

Opinion

Madden, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:1

The plaintiff is the successor to each of the partners of the N. P. Severin Company, a partnership whose members are now deceased. The partnership, which will be called the plaintiff in this opinion, on June 22,1935, entered into a contract with the United States, which acted through the agency of the Federal Emergency Administrator of Public Works. The contract was for the construction of a low-cost community housing project at Indianapolis, Indiana, which project became known as the Lockefield Garden Apartments. The contract price was originally $2,440,921, and was later reduced by change orders to $2,311,652.22. The contract provided that the work was to be completed within 400 calendar days after the receipt by the contractor of the notice to proceed. The notice was given on July 8, 1935, which made August 10, 1936, the completion date. For late completion, not excusable under the terms of the contract, liquidated damages of $250 per day were agreed to.

The contract was completed more than a year after the originally set completion date. The delay was excused by the officials of the Government, and no liquidated damages were assessed against the plaintiff. But the plaintiff asserts in this suit that the delays were not only excusable, so far as the plaintiff was concerned, but that most of the delay was caused by conduct of the Government which constituted [634]*634breaches of contract on its part and thus rendered the Government liable to the plaintiff for the damages which the plaintiff suffered because of the delays.

The delays involved in this suit fall into three categories: foundation delays, leaking wall delays, and delays by the Government in accepting the project when, the plaintiff claims, it was completed.

FOUNDATION DELAYS

The work contracted for consisted of the construction of 24 buildings, 8 of which were two-story row houses, 15 were three-story apartment houses, and one was a building containing twelve stores and some office space. The site covered some 22 acres, 5 blocks long and 3 blocks wide, from which slum dwellings had been cleared. There were on the site, as both parties knew when they made the contract, old streets and sidewalks, cesspools, cisterns, foundations and basements. The first work to be done was to excavate for the basements, foundations walls, and piers for the new buildings. The general excavation was done by machines. Then, at the foot of the foundations, and at the location of the piers, deeper excavation was done by hand so that concrete footings could be poured on which the foundations and piers would rest. This excavation had to go to solid ground, in order to make the foundations safe, and, because of the old basements, cisterns and cesspools which were on the site, places were encountered in nearly all the buildings where the hand excavation had to go to considerable depths in order to reach solid ground.

The plaintiff claims that the Government should have entrusted its agents on the job with the authority to determine when excavation to additional depths was required, and when a satisfactory depth had been reached, so that the work could go forward promptly, the amount of the additional excavation could be measured, the forms could be installed, the concrete footings poured, and the foundations and piers formed and poured. But, says the plaintiff, the Government’s agents on the job were not authorized to make these decisions. They were frequently required to communicate [635]*635with their superiors in Washington, sending in sketches and waiting for instructions as to whether the conditions which they described were proper for construction. In the meantime, says the plaintiff, the work on the particular building Was held up, it was necessary to move men and equipment to other buildings and later bring them back, and orderly and planned progress on the job as a whole was disrupted. The Government urges that not much disruption or delay was caused by the practices of which the plaintiff complains, and that such delay as there was was unavoidable under the terms of the contract. The Government points to Drawing B-326, which was a part of the contract and which contained the following note:

All footings shall rest on original natural undisturbed bearing material which is assumed as follows: — Foot- . ings for Buildings #1 to 8, East Wing of 11 and 13, and Garages — Clay. Footings for all other buildings— Gravel. In any case where the assumed bearing material is not found at the elevations shown, or old basements are not found in the exact location indicated, or any other contingency is encountered which might affect the assumed safe bearing value of the soil, or its future integrity as such, the Contractor, before executing any Foundation work, shall notify the Contracting Officer, who will consult with the Architect and issue instructions for the necessary adjustments. All changes of level of footings shall be constructed in detail as shown on Detail No. 40.

The contracting officer was in Washington. The Government’s interest was twofold; first, to make sure that the excavation was carried to soil which was safe, and, second, to avoid unnecessary excavation because it had to pay for the excavation, and for the form work and concrete placed in it, as extras to the contract. The Government says that if submission of these problems to the contracting officer took time and delayed and disrupted the plaintiff’s work, nevertheless the plaintiff was required by the contract to endure the delay and disruption.

We think that the contracting officer, who had authority to delegate to others his functions under the contract, was required by a decent consideration for the interests of the [636]*636plaintiff, to authorize someone on the project to make these •decisions. The problems were not difficult and the instances were numerous. The decisions in Washington were probably made almost entirely upon the basis of recommendations from the project manager and the architect, both of whom were in Indianapolis. The advantage to the Government in insisting upon the letter of the contract was so slight in comparison with the disruption and damage which was caused to the plaintiff by that insistence, that the Government’s conduct amounted to a breach of the contract, when the contract is fairly construed. Indeed, by Change Order No. 1, issued by the contracting officer on September 25, 1935, and shown in our Finding 13, the project manager does seem to have been authorized to approve these changes in the depth or design of footings. But even after this modification of the contract, many such problems were submitted to Washington.

The extent of the delay caused by the Government’s practices in regard to footing excavations is hard to determine. We can tell when the formal notices were given, but it seems that in many cases oral authorizations to the plaintiff to proceed were given, and the plaintiff did proceed, before the formal notice was issued. Then, too, there were strikes and bad weather which interrupted progress. Our best judgment is that the project was delayed 80 days by the Government’s breaches of contract in regard to foundation changes.

LEAKING WALL DELAYS

Above the foundations, the buildings were constructed as follows. A concrete slab, resting on the foundations and piers, constituted the floor of the buildings and the ceilings of the basements.

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Bluebook (online)
115 F. Supp. 892, 126 Ct. Cl. 631, 1953 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 126, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/continental-illinois-national-bank-trust-co-v-united-states-cc-1953.