Guy H. Briscoe v. The United States

442 F.2d 953, 194 Ct. Cl. 866, 1971 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 128
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMay 14, 1971
Docket224-66
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 442 F.2d 953 (Guy H. Briscoe v. The 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
Guy H. Briscoe v. The United States, 442 F.2d 953, 194 Ct. Cl. 866, 1971 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 128 (cc 1971).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

As this case comes before us, it involves two separate counts and two coun *956 terclaims. Count I (which comprises the original petition) and the counterclaims were the subject of an opinion and recommendation by Trial Commissioner Mastín G. White. Both parties have sought review of aspects of the commissioner’s report. Count II was added to the petition in October 1969, by leave of the court, very shortly before the commissioner filed his report on the claim in the original petition (and the counterclaims). Defendant has moved for summary judgment on Count II. Desiring that this old case be disposed of as soon as possible, we ordered that that motion be argued together with the requests for review on Count I. Oral argument has now been had. We adopt the commissioner’s recommendation on Count I and the counterclaims and, with some changes in regard to Count I, also adopt his opinion. On Count II we grant the defendant’s motion for summary judgment dismissing that claim. Under Part I, infra, we set forth the commissioner’s opinion as modified by the court. In Part II, we discuss Count II of the amended petition.

I — COUNT I AND COUNTERCLAIMS

Trial Commissioner White’s opinion, as modified by the court, is as follows:

This case arose in connection with the performance by the plaintiff of Contract No. 12-10-410-6619 (“the contract”) between the plaintiff and the defendant (represented by the Soil Conservation Service, Department of Agriculture).

The parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment on the count (Count I) set out in the plaintiff’s original petition — i. e., on the petition as it stood prior to the amendment of October 3, 1969 — and the defendant has also moved for summary judgment on the second counterclaim asserted in the defendant’s answer to the original petition.

Introduction

The contract called for the construction by the plaintiff of an earthen dam across a creek located in Runnels County, Texas, and within the Middle Colorado River Watershed. It contained the standard “changed conditions” and “disputes” provisions customarily found in Government construction contracts. The plaintiff was to receive $139,351.80 from the defendant for his work under the contract.

Mrs. Dora Spreen, rather than the defendant, owned the land on which were located both the dam site and the borrow area from which the earth fill for the dam was to be taken. Mrs. Spreen had granted to the Central Colorado Soil Conservation District — with which the Soil Conservation Service was cooperating in a conservation program — an easement which authorized the placement of the dam at the particular site and the use of earth from the borrow area as fill in the construction of the dam. The borrow area, as depicted on the contract drawings, was adjacent to, and upstream from, the dam site.

After the plaintiff received a copy of the invitation for bids on the contract, and before the plaintiff’s bid was prepared, a representative of the plaintiff visited the site of the proposed project. He was interested in (among other things) the availability of water for construction purposes, since the use of water is essential for the proper compaction of the earth fill in an earthen dam. The plaintiff’s representative noted that the creek was then dry at the project site, except that there was a natural basin or water hole within the limits of the borrow area, as shown on the contract drawings, and this natural basin contained water. (The natural basin had been created in a limestone formation which constituted the bottom of the creek at one point, whereas the creek bottom elsewhere consisted of gravelly material mixed with clay and would not hold water when the creek stopped running in dry weather.)

In preparing his bid on the contract, and in entering into the contract, the plaintiff believed that the water in the natural basin previously mentioned would be available for his use in connee *957 tion with the construction of the dam. The plaintiff’s bid was based in part upon this belief.

The plaintiff was the lowest responsible bidder on the contract, and the contract was awarded to the plaintiff on April 9, 1964. It expressly placed upon the plaintiff the responsibility for providing and maintaining an adequate supply of water for construction purposes.

On or about April 20, 1964, the plaintiff was told by the landowner’s representative and lessee that, in the construction of the dam, the plaintiff could not use water from the natural basin within the limits of the borrow area. The landowner’s representative and lessee reiterated this position on subsequent occasions.

The plaintiff filed a suit in the District Court of Runnels County, Texas, against the landowner’s representative and lessee in an attempt to establish the plaintiff’s right to use the water in the natural basin for construction purposes. That case was not tried until August 1, 1964, and the plaintiff’s objective of obtaining water for the construction of the dam was not accomplished as a result of the litigation.

In the meantime, the plaintiff commenced the work under the contract. He dug a sump in the creek bed at a point upstream from the natural basin, and through seepage obtained some water for construction purposes. On July 2, 1964, however, the plaintiff was compelled to discontinue operations temporarily because of a lack of water for the compaction of earth in the earthen dam. The plaintiff then began to make serious efforts to obtain water from sources other than the water hole within the borrow area, and he expended a substantial amount of money in the quest for water. Although some water was obtained as a result of these efforts, the plaintiff did not have an adequate water supply with which to carry on uninterrupted construction operations until ample rains fell in August along the watershed of the creek and caused the creek to flow. This ended the plaintiff’s water problem.

The plaintiff filed with the contracting officer a claim for an increase in the contract price to compensate the plaintiff for the extra costs incurred because of the unavailability of the water in the natural basin for construction purposes. The contracting officer denied the plaintiff’s claim, whereupon the plaintiff took an appeal under the “disputes” provision of the contract to the Department of Agriculture Board of Contract Appeals (“the Board”), which had been designated to act for the Secretary of Agriculture in the disposition of contract appeals.

The attorney representing the Government in the administrative proceedings filed with the Board a motion to dismiss the plaintiff’s appeal, on the ground that the Board “has no jurisdiction in this action” because the “appeal involves an alleged misrepresentation, which is a breach of contract.” The plaintiff vigorously opposed the motion to dismiss, filing an 18-page brief in which he contended that the Board had jurisdiction to consider his claim and make a determination with respect to it. The Board overruled the Government attorney’s motion.

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Bluebook (online)
442 F.2d 953, 194 Ct. Cl. 866, 1971 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 128, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/guy-h-briscoe-v-the-united-states-cc-1971.