L. I. Waldman & Co. v. United States

106 Ct. Cl. 159, 1946 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 35, 1946 WL 4411
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 4, 1946
DocketNo. 45772
StatusPublished

This text of 106 Ct. Cl. 159 (L. I. Waldman & Co. 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
L. I. Waldman & Co. v. United States, 106 Ct. Cl. 159, 1946 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 35, 1946 WL 4411 (cc 1946).

Opinion

J ones, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff under contract furnished the material and performed the work required for installing an electrical distri[178]*178bution system in the State Department building in Washington, D. C. The contract was dated June 1, 1939. The time allowed for completion was 270 days from the date of receipt of notice to proceed, which was received on June 13, 1939, thus fixing March 9, 1940, as the date for completion. The contract price was $93,230. Liquidated damages in the sum of $50 per day were stipulated for each day of delay in completing the work as scheduled. The work was not completed until August 10, 1940, but by virtue of extensions granted by the defendant, no liquidated damages were •assessed.

The object of the work was a change-over from the old direct current to a new alternating-current electrical system.

The contract provided that the work be done during regular working hours of regular working days while the building was occupied and with a minimum of noise and as little as possible interference with the work of the occupants of the building, and that the electric service should be maintained in the building during the operations.

Soon after the work began the activities of the State Department were considerably increased, several presidential secretaries and their office help were installed in the building, the Director of the Budget established offices in the building, a number of extra partitions were erected and floors were sanded and polished.

Plaintiff claims that these increased activities and changes in the building caused extra work and interfered with the regular sequence of operations, delayed completion and in numerous ways added to the expense of installation. For these various items of extra costs the plaintiff sues.

The main switchboard was located in the basement. From this board feeders ran to about 99 panelboards, each panel-board serving to distribute energy to several branch circuits which supplied lighting and other fixtures in areas of a few rooms to each circuit. The panelboard wires were enclosed in flexible conduits run through the subbasement to flues in the interior walls of the building and thus to the various floors.

Under the contract 16 new conduits of rigid construction were to be run from the new main switchboard in the sub[179]*179basement to tlie lower ends of 16 flues and thence vertically through such flues to the various floors of the building. On each floor the conduit was to be connected with a panel box. There were to be 88 panel boxes in the entire new system. When the new alternating-current system had been installed and was in operation, the wire, conduits, panelboards and main switch of the old direct-current system were to be removed from the building.

The contract provided that plaintiff should submit in writing to the contracting officer a program of construction. This was not done. Plaintiff had intended to pursue -the usual, orderly, and economical sequence of work in the changeover from direct current to alternating current. However, when its president orally informed the chief of the Survey and Construction Division what its plans were, he was directed to confer with Mr. Barr, defendant’s electrical engineer, and with Mr. Thompkins, defendant’s engineer in direct charge of the job. These engineers advised plaintiff that his proposed plan of operation could not be used since changes were contemplated, among other things in the panelboards, in the feeder conduit system, and in the main switchboard. Plaintiff protested on the ground that these changes would upset his plans.

After considerable discussion five classes of changes were agreed to affecting the main lighting switchboard, the feeder cables and conduits and some of the panelboards. These were embodied in change' order No. 1. These conversations and the subsequent change order made the submission of a formal written program of operations unnecessary.

Except in connection with the 16 flues the amount of labor and material required for the temporary wiring as actually performed was not substantially greater than it would have been under the program planned by, the plaintiff. As to the 16 flues, plaintiff’s plan could not have been effectuated even though it had been pursued. There was not room enough in the flues to permit installation of the rigid conduits of the new system and at the same time leave the old «direct current wires and conduits intact in the flues. In any event, the plaintiff would have been obliged to do a sub[180]*180stantial amount of temporary wiring to make up for the loss of the old supply through these flues. It is not proved that the additional cost in providing the temporary wiring exceeded the amount it would have cost under plaintiff’s original program.

A large part of the work consisted of installing the branch circuits. This included the removal of the old direct current wiring and conduits in the separate rooms and halls and installing the new wires and conduits for alternating current.

At the time of the making of the contract the building was normally occupied and the activities were the normal activities of the State and War Departments. Soon thereafter some of the rooms were made available by the defendant to new presidential secretaries and to the Director of the Budget. Also the activities of the State Department were tremendously increased by the spread of the war in Europe. Because of these increased activities defendant required plaintiff to switch its work from place to place and to do it piecemeal, as well as to switch from floor to floor. The plaintiff claims damages for the increased costs occasioned in this manner.

Under the contract plaintiff was to proceed while the activities of the State Department were being carried on. In view of the plain provisions of the contract and specifications plaintiff is not entitled to charge the defendant with the result of the increase of the activities of the State Department as such.

We do feel, however, that plaintiff has a right to complain of the installing of outside activities like presidential secretaries and their office forces, as well as the activities of the Bureau of the Budget. These were not activities of the State Department. Plaintiff had no notice of this contemplated use of the building by outside activities and the extra expense which the added crowding of an already over-crowded building would cause the plaintiff.

Unfortunately for plaintiff, it lumped all these claims in one batch. It offered no proof whatever as to the added labor or other extra costs which these extradepartmental activities had occasioned. If it had offered any reasonable proof, or [181]*181any evidence on the basis of which a reasonable estimate could be made, we would be inclined to allow it compensation for such extra costs, but since they are all lumped together and no effort whatever was made to link such activities to any item of increased costs, and since there is no evidence on the basis of which any reasonable estimate can be made, any effort on the part of the court to make an allowance would he pure guesswork, which certainly cannot form the foundation for recovery.

In installing the new system it was necessary to cut into masonry walls of the building in order to install pull boxes, panel boxes, and certain conduits. Eecesses for some 88 panel boxes 40 inches long, 30 inches wide, and 4 inches deep had to be cut.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
106 Ct. Cl. 159, 1946 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 35, 1946 WL 4411, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/l-i-waldman-co-v-united-states-cc-1946.