Germain School of Photography, Inc. v. United States

150 Ct. Cl. 841
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 15, 1960
DocketNo. 450-56
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 150 Ct. Cl. 841 (Germain School of Photography, Inc. 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.

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Germain School of Photography, Inc. v. United States, 150 Ct. Cl. 841 (cc 1960).

Opinions

Durfee, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This case concerns a claim and a counterclaim which involve the correct rate at which plaintiff ought to have been paid for the period from May 1, 1950, to April 30, 1951, for the training of veterans in camera repair and mechanics under the Servicemen’s Readjustment Act of 1944.1 The plaintiff was incorporated in New York State and was approved by the State authorities to receive tuition payments for training veterans. Prior to March 1949 plaintiff gave courses in portrait photography, commercial photography, airbrush technique, natural color photography, and retouching. That month it added a course in “Camera Repair and Mechanics” to its curriculum.

It is the plaintiff’s position that the rate appearing in contract V3006V-899 for the period of camera repair instruction from May 1, 1950, to April 30,1951, as modified by the action of the Veterans’ Education Appeals Board (VEAB), was illegally arrived at and that plaintiff is entitled to a higher rate per student hour. It sues for the difference between the amount received and what the court may find to be a fair and reasonable rate for 94,280.5 hours of instruction. The defendant counterclaims on the ground that the VEAB was without authority to set a “fair and reasonable” contract rate, as it purported to do, inasmuch as the tuition rate had become “frozen” at the rate embodied in the previous contract, V3006V-837 for the period September 1,1949, to April 30,1950.

Plaintiff signed contract V-837 containing a rate of $0,406 per student hour in August 1950. The same rate was used in contract V-899 signed by plaintiff in October 1950 and by the [843]*843Veterans Administration (VA) in November 1950, notwithstanding the fact that the plaintiff was not satisfied with these rates. The following written contracts were entered into by the plaintiff for the training of veterans under P.L. 346 in its camera repair course, and two of the contracts were modified to reflect what the VEAB considered to be “fair and reasonable” rates:

VJWAB VA Tuition Tuition Contract No. Period Covered Per hour Per hour
VA 6r-ve 549_Mar. 23,1949-Apr. 30, 1949_$0,813
V3006V-517_May 1,1949 -Aug. 31, 1949_ .813
V3006V-837_Sept. 1,1949 -Apr. 30, 1950_ . 406 $0.497
V3006V-899_May 1, 1950 -Apr. 30, 1951_ . 406 .523
V3008V-1157_May 1, 1951 -Apr. 30, 1952_ . 406
V3006V-1866_May 1, 1954 -Apr. 30, 1955_ . 406

Plaintiff appealed to the VEAB for higher rates on contracts V-837 and V-899. Two different hearing examiners returned decisions as to what they considered to be a fair and reasonable rate of tuition for the two periods and in each case the rate was higher than that appearing in the contract. In the course of the hearings, cost data for both of the periods involved was furnished by plaintiff. The VA excepted to each hearing examiner’s decision and the final administrative determination was made by the VEAB on July 13, 1955. The Board held that a fair and reasonable rate for contract V-837 was $0,497 per student hour and $0,523 per student hour for contract V-899. The Board further said that the rate of $0,523 per student hour “effective May 1,1951, is the customary cost of tuition established by sequence of contracts as defined in Public Law 610.”

Public Law 610, 81st Cong.,2 in addition to providing for appeal to the VEAB of tuition rates allowed by the VA, contains the following provisions:

For any course of education or training for which the educational or training institution involved has no customary cost of tuition, a fair and reasonable rate of payment for tuition, fees, or other charges for such cost shall be determined by the Administrator. In any case in which one or more contracts providing a rate or rates of tuition have been entered into in two successive years, the rate established by the most recent contract shall be [844]*844considered to foe the customary cost of tuition notwithstanding the definition of ‘customary cost of tuition’ as hereinbefore set forth. * * * (Emphasis supplied.)

The statute was effective on the date it was enacted, July 18, 1950, and it repealed that portion of the Act of August 24,1949 (P.L. 266, 81st Cong.) which pertained to veterans’ training.3 P.L. 266 had provided for the payment of a fair and reasonable rate of tuition in the absence of a customary cost of tuition. It had also provided that the most recent negotiated tuition rate would become the customary cost in certain instances. It will be noted that the effective date of P.L. 610 was prior to the signing of either contract V-837 or V-899. The original procedures for establishing or determining fair and reasonable tuition rates were contained in Change 4 to VA Manual 7-5, dated July 1, 1948 (38 CFE 21.530).

Plaintiff, in this action, seeks review of the rate of $0,523 per student hour determined to be fair and reasonable by the VEAB for contract V-899 covering the period May 1, 1950, to April 30, 1951. Plaintiff apparently believes that the rate as finally set for that contract will be the customary cost of tuition within the meaning of P.L. 610. The defendant, however, maintains that the question of whether or not the VEAB was arbitrary and capricious in setting a rate of $0,523 is irrelevant and need never be reached in this suit. If, as the defendant insists, neither the VEAB nor the VA had the right to fix a fair and reasonable rate for the period from May 1, 1950, to April 30, 1951, since there was a customary cost then in existence, then the counterclaim must be granted extinguishing the plaintiff’s legal right to any amount in excess of the final figure of contract V-837 covering September 1, 1949, to April 30, 1950.

We believe that the rate of $0,497, which became the V-837 contract rate upon the action of the VEAB, was the customary cost of tuition within the meaning of P.L. 610 and that the plaintiff’s claim must be denied and the Government’s counterclaim granted.

The language of P.L. 266 differs from that of P.L. 610 in that, before a contract rate can become the customary cost, [845]*845there must have been contracts executed “for two successive years.” This would seem to have required that any given course must have been in existence for 24 months or more before a customary cost would come into being. P.L. 610, however, provides that there must have been contracts entered into “in two successive years” before there can be a customary cost. In other words, P.L. 610 is satisfied if there have been contracts in effect during more than one calendar year while P.L. 266 required that there be contracts executed covering at least two twelve-month periods.

It is true, of course, that there was no customary cost of tuition for plaintiff’s camera repair course on May 1, 1950, the beginning date of contract V-899, since P.L. 266 was still in effect on that date and the camera repair course had not been carried on for twenty-four months. But, in November 1950 there was

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