Inter-Continental Engine Service, Inc. v. United States

462 F.2d 498, 199 Ct. Cl. 297, 1972 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 219
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 14, 1972
DocketNo. 8-70
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 462 F.2d 498 (Inter-Continental Engine Service, 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.

Bluebook
Inter-Continental Engine Service, Inc. v. United States, 462 F.2d 498, 199 Ct. Cl. 297, 1972 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 219 (cc 1972).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This case was referred to Trial Commissioner Mastín G. White with directions to make findings of fact and recommendation for conclusions of law under the order of reference and Kule 134(h). The commissioner has [299]*299done so in an opinion and report filed on October 21, 1971. Plaintiff filed exceptions to the commissioner’s opinion, findings of fact and recommended conclusion of law and defendant urged the court to adopt them as the basis for its judgment in the case. Plaintiff’s motion to submit the case to the court without oral argument has been allowed and the case has been submitted to the court on the briefs of the parties without oral argument of counsel.

Since the court agrees with the commissioner’s opinion, findings of fact and recommended conclusion of law, with minor corrections in the findings, it hereby adopts the same as the basis for its judgment in this case as hereinafter set forth. Therefore, plaintiff is not entitled to recover and the petition is dismissed.

OPINION OP COMMISSIONER

White, Commissioner:

The plaintiff contends in this case that the Immigration and Naturalization Service (“the Service”) of the U.S. Department of Justice breached a negotiated contract which the Service and the plaintiff entered into on May 29,1968, for the fiscal year 1969. According to the petition, the Service breached the contract “by utilizing * * * other private concerns to perform routine and daily pre-flight inspections” on Service-operated aircraft, instead of calling on the plaintiff to perform such inspections under the contract previously mentioned. The petition alleges that the inspections in question were improperly procured by the Service during the period September 1968-June 1969, that they numbered at least 126, and that they were procured by the Service principally from a firm located in El Centro, California.

It is my opinion that the contract in question was not breached by the Service, and, accordingly, that the plaintiff is not entitled to recover in the present action.

A routine daily and preflight inspection is a service which a passenger-carrying aircraft is required by the Federal Aviation Begulations to receive from qualified personnel within the 24-hour period immediately preceding any take-off [300]*300on a flight. The purpose is to determine the airworthiness of the aircraft. In the conduct of such an inspection, there are, on most occasions, repairs or other services to the aircraft which are related to, or accomplished as incidents to, the inspection by the personnel conducting the inspection, and for which an additional charge is made if the inspection and related work are performed by an independent private concern.

The plaintiff is a Texas corporation. Its business is the inspection, repair, overhaul, modification, refurbishing, and servicing of aircraft that weigh 12,500 pounds or more. The plaintiff operates a facility at Brownsville, Texas, and another facility at El Paso, Texas. Both of these facilities are FAA certified repair stations. The 1969 contract that is involved in the present litigation covered the performance by the plaintiff’s El Paso station of work on aircraft operated by the Service.

At the time when the contract for 1969 was entered into, and throughout the fiscal year 1969, the Southwest Region of the Service had three passenger-carrying aircraft based at El Paso, Texas — a DC-6A with a 97-passenger capacity, a Convair 340-440 with a 50-passenger capacity, and another Convair 340-440 with a 44-passenger capacity.

When the contract for 1969 was negotiated, and continuing through the first half of the fiscal year 1969, the aircraft mentioned in the preceding paragraph were operating regularly out of El Paso, Texas, and were being used by the Service principally in an air-lift of illegal Mexican immigrants from San Diego, California, and El Centro, California, to El Paso. Many Mexican immigrants had illegally crossed into Arizona and Southern California to work on farms in those areas, and substantial numbers of them had then gone into Northern California, Oregon, and Washington in search of further employment. When illegal Mexican immigrants were apprehended in Arizona, California, or the Pacific Northwest, they were generally assembled in San Diego, California, or El Centro, California, and from those places they were transported in Service-operated aircraft to El Paso, Texas. From El Paso, the illegal Mexican immi[301]*301grants were returned to Mexico through Juarez, and then were transported into the interior of Mexico by means of a Mexican-operated air-lift, train-lift, or bus-lift.

The air-lift from San Diego, California, and El Centro, California, to El Paso, Texas, as described in the preceding-paragraph of this opinion, turned out to be financially very burdensome to the Service, in the light of the funds available to it for the fiscal year 1969. As a means of saving expenses, the Service discontinued this air-lift at about the beginning of September 1968 and substituted for it a bus-lift, which involved the transportation of illegal Mexican immigrants in Service-operated buses from points in Arizona, California, and the Pacific Northwest to Andrade, California, where the illegal Mexican immigrants were transferred to Mexican-operated buses for transportation into the interior of Mexico. This bus-lift was continued throughout the remainder of the fiscal year 1969 (and up imtil the time of the trial in June of 1971).

As a result of the discontinuance of the air-lift from San Diego and El Centro to El Paso, there was no longer any great need during the remainder of the fiscal year 1969 for the Service’s aircraft on passenger-carrying flights to or from El Paso, and such aircraft and their crews were idle much of the time. This adversely affected the amount of work that the plaintiff would otherwise have been called upon to perform at El Paso on the Service’s aircraft under the contract for the fiscal year 1969.

The number of illegal Mexican immigrants apprehended in Northern California and the Pacific Northwest proved to be too great for the Service-operated bus-lift to be able to handle their transportation to the Mexican border with reasonable expedition. As a consequence, the Service adopted a plan in September of 1968 whereby, for the remainder of the fiscal year 1969, the Service’s two Convair 340-440’s and their crews were, with substantial regularity, detailed on a rotating basis from El Paso, Texas, to El Centro, California, for the purpose of supplementing the Service’s bus-lift.

[302]*302Under the plan of rotation, a Convair 340-440 and its crew would leave El Paso, Texas, on a Monday morning and would proceed to El Centro, California, on a detail lasting through Friday of the particular week. The aircraft would operate during the 5-day detail out of the El Centro Naval Air Station and would be used in the transportation of illegal Mexican immigrants from points in Northern California and the Pacific Northwest to El Centro, from which place the illegal immigrants were transported in Service-operated buses to Andrade, California, for transfer to Mexican-operated buses so that they could be transported into the interior of Mexico. The members of the aircraft crew were in a travel status, and received a per diem allowance in lieu of subsistence, during the 5-day detail. At the end of the 5-day detail, the crew would fly the aircraft back to El Paso.

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Bluebook (online)
462 F.2d 498, 199 Ct. Cl. 297, 1972 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 219, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/inter-continental-engine-service-inc-v-united-states-cc-1972.