John A. Johnson & Sons, Inc. v. United States

153 F.2d 534, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3158
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 6, 1946
DocketNos. 5437, 5438
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 153 F.2d 534 (John A. Johnson & Sons, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fourth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
John A. Johnson & Sons, Inc. v. United States, 153 F.2d 534, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3158 (4th Cir. 1946).

Opinion

GILLIAM, District Judge.

This litigation, now consisting of two controversies, one between the Baltimore Brick Company on the one hand and John A. Johnson & Sons, Inc., American Surety Company of New York, and J. Friedman Company on the other, and a second controversy between J. Friedman Company on the one hand and John A. Johnson & Sous, luc. and American Surety Company of New York on the other, had its inception [536]*536when a suit was filed in the District Court of the United States for the District of Maryland under the Miller Act, 40 U.S.C.A. §§ 270a to 270c, in the name of the United States of America, to the use of Baltimore Brick Company, to recover a balance alleged to be due for-brick furnished and delivered by the Baltimore Brick Company under a contract between John A. Johnson & Sons, Inc., general contractor, and the United States of America, for the construction of certain buildings at Jarboesville, Maryland. The American Surety Company of New York bound itself as surety for the performance of the contract by Johnson.

The J. Friedman Company, a subcontractor which made a contract with Johnson to do the masonry and concrete work, having expressed a desire to be made a third party defendant, Johnson moved the Court for such an order and J. Friedman Company was made a party to the action.

There was no dispute about the balance due by Johnson and Friedman to the Brick Company, if anything should be found to be due, but Friedman defended and set up a counterclaim against the Brick Company, alleging that the Brick Company had breached its contract to furnish and deliver “new common brick made from clay or shale and (which) comply with A. S. T. M. Specification C 62-41T, Grade MW,” as provided for in the specifications and as agreed by the Brick Company in its 'letter to Friedman and Johnson, dated January 10, 1944, reading as follows: “This Company certifies that all the Grade M (synonymous with Grade MW) bricks that have been or will be delivered to you for the construction of the masonry work on the above mentioned project have been and will be in accordance with A. S. T. M. Specification C 62-41.” Besides, Friedman contends that should it be held he is not entitled to recover of the Brick Company for the additional expense incurred by him in tearing down and replacing brick work wrongfully condemned by the Project Engineer representing the Government, and in purchasing higher priced brick in order to comply with the instructions of Johnson, who acted upon the wrongful condemnation, then he is entitled to recover for such additional expense of Johnson.

Johnson denied any liability to Friedman, assigning four reasons: first, Friedman by his contract agreed to assume the same obligation concerning the work, labor and material involved under the subcontract, as Johnson assumed in his contract with the owner (United States of America— Federal Public Housing Authority) ; second, Friedman failed to properly protect the brick from the elements; third, Friedman failed to comply with the terms of his contract in that he neither obtained a written order from Johnson for the extra work, nor informed him in writing of any claim as required by the contract; fourth, the substitution by Friedman of a more costly type of brick was his voluntary act and he is not legally entitled to the excess cost thereof.

The District Court concluded that the burden of proving that there was a breach of the warranty as to the quality of the brick furnished by the Brick Company rested upon Friedman, that this burden had not been met and that, therefore, the Brick Company is entitled to recover its claim against Johnson, the Surety Company, and Friedman. Friedman, Johnson and the Surety Company appealed.

The District Court also held that Johnson had breached his contract with Friedman, had been guilty of a wrongful act, and that Friedman is entitled to recover of him and his surety for the extra work and expense occasioned by the wrongful condemnation of the brick furnished by the Brick Company and Johnson’s instructions to replace certain completed work and furnish brick in accordance with the specifications. Johnson and the Surety Company appealed.

We hold that the District Court correctly decided both controversies.

Case No. 5437

While the formal contract between the Brick Company and Friedman was not completed until December 27, 1943, when Friedman returned to the Brick Company the contract signed in duplicate and requested the Brick Company to furnish Johnson a warranty that the brick to be delivered “ * * * shall be new common brick made from clay or shale and comply with A.S.T.M. specifications C 62-41T, Grade NW”, or, maybe, not until January 10, 1944, when the Brick Company actually furnished such warranty to Friedman and Johnson, it appears that negotiations were had between Friedman and the Brick Company as early as November or early December of 1943. The record discloses that on December 8, 1943, the same date on which deliveries under the con[537]*537tract began, the Project Engineer, representing the National Housing Agency, Federal Public Housing Authority, wrote Johnson as follows: “In accordance with your letter of December 2, 1943, concerning samples of concrete units and brick submitted to this office, the same are hereby approved to be according to plans and specifications. Kindly furnish manufacturer’s certificate of compliance with federal specifications as soon as possible.”; also, strangely enough, that on January 12, 1944, Johnson wrote the Project Engineer as follows: “We submit herewith for your approval samples of brick to be used on the above projects. Also attached herewith are certifications by the manufacturers, Baltimore Brick Company, to the meeting of the A.S.T.M. specifications.” The Project Engineer testified, in referring to the letter of January 12, 1944, from Johnson to him: “* * * It was strictly a typographical error. He did not submit any brick. I did not require any brick at that time.” However, the record discloses a letter from the Project Engineer to Johnson, also dated January 12, 1944, in which he says, “ * * * In connection with the above subject, samples of these bricks were approved by the undersigned ‘to be according to plans and specifications’ under date of December 8.”

The evidence in this respect is very confusing and it is not possible to determine exactly what occurred, but it is definitely established by the evidence that insofar as Friedman is concerned the only evidence tending to prove a breach of the warranty that the delivered brick would come up to A.S.T.M. specifications is a test made for the Project Engineer by the Bureau of Standards subsequent to January 17, 1944, from which the Bureau found the compressive strength of three brick out of twelve delivered by the Brick Company to be below the allowable individual minimum of 2200 pounds per square inch. It is not seriously controverted if this test be accepted as determinative of the controversy that there was a breach of the warranty and that this question should be decided in favor of Friedman, but the circumstances indicate that this test should not be accepted as determinative.

It is to be noted that the Specifications for Building Brick adopted by the American Society for Testing Materials, which is identical with the A.S.T.M. specifications, etc. referred to in the warranty and likewise in the specifications for the construction of the project, contain the following prescribed method for sampling and testing: “Fig.

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Bluebook (online)
153 F.2d 534, 1946 U.S. App. LEXIS 3158, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/john-a-johnson-sons-inc-v-united-states-ca4-1946.