International Harvester Company, a Corporation v. The United States

342 F.2d 432, 169 Ct. Cl. 821, 1965 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 74
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 12, 1965
Docket436-58
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 342 F.2d 432 (International Harvester Company, a Corporation 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
International Harvester Company, a Corporation v. The United States, 342 F.2d 432, 169 Ct. Cl. 821, 1965 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 74 (cc 1965).

Opinion

*433 DURFEE, Judge.

This is an action to recover $1,780,375.-20 deducted by defendant from a total of $17,307,183.67 which plaintiff was entitled to receive under a contract 1 for the manufacture of military vehicles for defendant. Defendant has asserted affirmative defenses and counterclaims against plaintiff which arose out of earlier vehicle procurement contracts, and thereby contends that plaintiff has been paid in full by offset.

In support of this offset, defendant first contends that plaintiff was paid $249,919.47 by defendant, under one of the earlier contracts primarily in dispute, for Federal excise taxes, but that plaintiff retained these monies despite the fact that plaintiff had been relieved from paying said taxes by the Bureau of Internal Revenue. We will refer to this hereafter as the Excise Tax Issue.

Defendant, by counterclaim, also claims entitlement to $490,533.08 which it contends it would have recovered in price re-determination proceedings under Contract 1216 had not such proceedings been thwarted by misrepresentations by plaintiff. This will be referred to as the Price Redetermination Issue.

Defendant further contends in support of its offsets that during the performance of the same earlier contract, 2 plaintiff received a refund of $1,529,737.90 from its subcontractor, the Rockwell Spring and Axle Company for the use of defendant, but that plaintiff did not pay this to defendant. Two counterclaims in the respective sums of $35.09 and $24,806.21 are also involved in this issue which will hereinafter be referred to as the Rockwell Issue, and which will be dealt with now.

The Rockwell Issue

During the period 1950 through 1957 plaintiff produced many thousands of motorized heavy-duty military vehicles and parts pursuant to a series of contracts between it as prime contractor, and defendant. The earlier contracts are not directly involved in this case except by way of background. Essentially, they provided for retroactive or prospective price redetermination, upward or downward, within specified limitations hereinafter referred to.

Contract 297 was executed on June 30, 1951, between plaintiff and defendant, and contained an additional provision for price redetermination of plaintiff’s subcontracts with suppliers of truck components, including axles. This contract contained a “pass through” provision that if the price of any subcontract was redetermined during a period when the prime contract price was fixed, the prime contract price would be correspondingly increased or decreased, notwithstanding the provision of the price redetermination article. Under this latter provision, the prime contract price remained fixed for a 90-day period following price revision.

During the entire period covered by this litigation, the sole source of axles for the trucks involved was Rockwell Spring and Axle Company and its predecessor corporation, Timken Axle Company. Under Contracts 11447 and 11448 dated May 18, 1951, defendant furnished facilities for manufacturing military truck axles at Timken’s new Newark, Ohio, plant. Tim-ken, in turn, agreed to maintain a specified axle capacity and to price redetermi-nation to be negotiated by defendant at prices Timken charged prime contractors for axles.

On June 26,1952, plaintiff and defendant executed Contract 983 which contained price increase or decrease rede-termination clauses, retroactive or prospective, and a repricing of subcontracts article, including the “pass through” provision, as in Contract 297.

On March 31, 1953, Contract 1216 for 854 trucks was executed by plaintiff and defendant. It contained a price redeter-mination article, under which contract prices could be redetermined downward *434 only, but both prospectively and retroactively. Unlike Contracts 8292, 3 297 and 983, Contract 1216 contained no repricing of subcontracts article and no provision with respect to passing through price refunds received by plaintiff from suppliers to defendant during the period when the prime contract price was fixed.

On July 3, 1953, defendant sent plaintiff an invitation to bid on 3,750 trucks, stating that only one producer of these trucks would remain in production after December 31, 1953, and that in determining which producer would be retained, “price would be the most important consideration.”

Plaintiff submitted its bid proposal, which was accepted by the execution of Supplement 3 to Contract 1216 on September 11, 1953. Supplement 3 eliminated the retroactive, downward price re-determination in the original Contract 1216 and provided only prospective downward price redetermination. Like original Contract 1216, it contained no provision for repricing of subcontracts or “pass through” to defendant of any refunds received by plaintiff from subcontractors.

The crux of the Rockwell Issue results from the omission in Contract 1216, as amended, of these hitherto included contract provisions. Plaintiff contends that this omission establishes that defendant thereby waived any claim for refunds received by plaintiff from subcontractors arising from repricing of their subcontracts. Defendant contends that this provision for repricing of subcontracts was not included in Supplement 3 to Contract 1216 because in the earlier Contracts 297, 983 and 8292, plaintiff had advised the Chicago Ordnance District in July of 1952, that various subcontractors, including Timken, had objected to the inclusion of this clause in their subcontracts or purchase orders. Timken objected to such price redetermination provision being included in purchase orders because it was already subject to price redetermination under its own Contract 11448 with defendant’s Detroit Ordnance District. As to these earlier contracts, the Chicago Ordnance District then, in order to facilitate production, authorized plaintiff to place its orders for axle sets with Timken unconditionally on the basis that such orders would be repriced by the Detroit Ordnance District under its Contract 11448 with Timken.

During the negotiations leading to Supplement 3 to Contract 1216, plaintiff was again informed by defendant that Timken was subject to price re-determination under its Contract 11448 with the Detroit Ordnance District, which would continue to administer the contract and any price redetermination proceedings thereunder.

Prior to the merger of Timken with Standard Steel Spring Co. to form Rockwell Spring and Axle Company on October 1, 1953, no formal price redeter-mination proceedings had been held under Timken’s Contract 11448 with defendant. However, Timken in order to divest itself of excess profits, had first issued credit memoranda to the prime contractors, and later made advance payments to the Renegotiation Board. These latter payments went into general receipts of the United States Treasury, and were not available to Ordnance for further procurement purposes. Standard however, under a similar contract, had followed instructions of the Detroit Ordnance District by making voluntary refunds, in anticipation of price redetermination proceedings, to its prime contractors, who in turn remitted said refunds to Army Ordnance, thereby “keeping the funds in the procurement stream” in the words of the Government.

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Bluebook (online)
342 F.2d 432, 169 Ct. Cl. 821, 1965 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/international-harvester-company-a-corporation-v-the-united-states-cc-1965.