Electric Boat Co. v. United States

66 Ct. Cl. 333, 1928 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 297, 1928 WL 3060
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 3, 1928
DocketNo. D-795
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 66 Ct. Cl. 333 (Electric Boat 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
Electric Boat Co. v. United States, 66 Ct. Cl. 333, 1928 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 297, 1928 WL 3060 (cc 1928).

Opinion

Booth, Chief Justice,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff is a New Jersey corporation. In the years 1915, 1916, and 1917 plaintiff entered into 32 separate contracts with the defendant to construct and deliver 32 submarine torpedo boats. The total original consideration for the entire undertaking was $23,806,000.00. Under the contracts the vessels were to be delivered at stated times, and express provision was made reserving to the defendant the right to make changes in plans and specifications. Changes were made and the vessels were not delivered upon the contract dates. Time for completion of the vesesels was duly extended by the Government, and they were accepted without the imposition of deductions as meeting requirements under this stipulation. This case is due exclusively to the interposition of war conditions, and the amounts claimed as losses are predicated upon alleged contracts of reimbursement for such losses, recognized by and due wholly to acts of the Government whereby the cost of completing the contracts was greatly enhanced. The facts, not particularly involved but somewhat extensive, are as follows: The President on March 22, 1917, issued a proclamation suspending the provisions of the eight-hour law in Government contracts and thereby established a new standard for labor, resulting in the authorization of overtime work and wages. This was immediately prior to our entrance into the war. Subsequent to this latter event the Navy Department adopted the policy of constructing destroyers and giving this form of construction precedence over all other construction work. The plaintiff had sublet to the Fore River Shipbuild[363]*363ing Company and ilie Union Iron Works certain construction work under its Government contracts for submarines, and the Government had made eighty-five contracts with the above-named corporations for the immediate construction of destroyers. We need not advert in detail to contemporaneous labor conditions and the strenuous effort to procure immediate augmentation of naval vessels. As a matter of fact, the necessity for the program which followed April, 1911, was in a large measure anticipated prior to that date. The plaintiff beyond doubt was faced with a condition in nowise contemplated when its fixed-price contracts for submarines were entered into. The Navy Department recognized the existing state of affairs and with commendable expedition set up the Shipbuilding Labor Adjustment Board. This board was the result of agreements dated August 20, 1917, and December 8, 1917, between the Secretary of the Navy, the chairman of the United States Shipping Board, the general manager of the Emergency Fleet Corporation, and officers and representatives of several of the labor unions involved. Within the purview of the board’s jurisdiction under the agreement were the vital and important subjects of the adjustment of labor disputes concerning wages, working hours, and working conditions in shipyards having contracts for the construction or repair of vessels for the Emergency Fleet Corporation and the Navy Department. On November 4, 1917, the board established a minimum wage scale for the Pacific coast, retroactive to September 22, 1917 — a wage scale affecting the Union Iron Works Company, plaintiff’s subcontractor — and from time to time thereafter issued decisions affecting the general wage scale. The plaintiff, while not a party to the above agreement, put into effect the board’s decisions respecting wages and working conditions. When bonuses were paid by other contractors the plaintiff adopted the same policy, and without exception the plaintiff observed the decisions of the board and paid wages accordingly.

On March 29,1918, the plaintiff in writing brought to the attention of the Secretary of the Navy the seriousness of the situation respecting the increase in cost and financial [364]*364loss involved in the continuance of its subcontractors’ work under their contracts with the plaintiff, and expressly pointed out that both the Union Iron Works, of San Francisco, California, and the Fore Kiver Shipbuilding Company, as well as the plaintiff’s own subsidiary, the New London Ship & Engine Company, of Groton, Connecticut, were faced with increased cost of construction which the fixed price of its contracts could not absorb. This letter was never answered. It was followed by a personal interview between the vice president of the plaintiff company and the Secretary of the Navy. The result of the interview is admittedly found in the reference of the matter to Admiral Capps, in control of matters respecting cost-plus contracts, the plaintiff’s vice president seeking a change of contractual relationship as to compensation to be paid for the work from fixed-price contracts to a cost-plus basis. The Secretary of the Navy assured the plaintiff’s vice president that the plaintiff would be dealt with on a fair and equitable basis. Admiral Capps, as senior member of the Compensation Board, transmitted to the Secretary of the Navy his report and recommendations covering the subject matter of the reference on April 29, 1918. This recommendation concretely stated in five precise paragraphs may, we think, be epitomized as follows:

The department, to meet the unusual situation on an equitable basis, should authorize reimbursement to both the prime contractor and its subcontractor on a basis substantially equivalent to the increase in wages authorized for other shipyards in the vicinity; that the adjustment should be determined under the stipulation in the contracts authorizing changes therein, after the plaintiff had submitted its original estimate of actual cost under its fixed-price contracts in such detail as to enable the department to accurately determine the increased costs. Overhead expense was to be so adjusted under changed conditions as to preclude allowance of profits, and in no event to include profits in excess of 10%, including bonuses on the basis of the plaintiff’s fixed-price contracts.

On April 29, 1918, the same day the Oapps report was received, the Secretary of the Navy indorsed thereon a ref[365]*365erence of the same to the solicitor of the department, via the “ Bureaus of Construction and Repair and Steam Engineering and Compensation Board,” in which the secretary expressly stated that the cost of the changes involved would be determined by either the Board of Changes or the Compensation Board, in accord with the applicable contract provisions of the various contracts. Plaintiff received a copy of the above recommendations on May 13, 1918, and on June 4, 1918, was officially advised of the action taken. Immediately thereafter another letter was addressed to the secretary by the plaintiff, pointing out the necessity for interpreting certain provisions in the report, and soliciting from the secretary authorization for ad interim, payments on account of the additional cost of both direct and indirect labor, emphasizing the importance of the latter allowance because of the obvious delay in reaching final adjustments in detail. Later on the above letter was supplemented by a personal interview with the secretary, in which the plaintiff stated its inability to submit estimates of the original cost of the vessels under its contracts, due to the fact that its original bids were lump-sum bids submitted without segregation of this item, and therefore had no available data from which it might be obtained.

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Bluebook (online)
66 Ct. Cl. 333, 1928 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 297, 1928 WL 3060, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/electric-boat-co-v-united-states-cc-1928.