La Societe Nationale De Construction v. United States

149 F. Supp. 335, 137 Ct. Cl. 633, 1957 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 167
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 6, 1957
DocketNo. 606-52
StatusPublished

This text of 149 F. Supp. 335 (La Societe Nationale De Construction 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
La Societe Nationale De Construction v. United States, 149 F. Supp. 335, 137 Ct. Cl. 633, 1957 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 167 (cc 1957).

Opinion

JONES, Chief Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

This is a suit by a French corporation to recover damages which it allegedly suffered under two contracts which it entered into with the American Graves Kegistration Command. One of these contracts was for the grading of a permanent cemetery at Saint Avoid, France. The second was for the removal of a temporary combat cemetery at Andilly, France.

The invitation for bids was issued by the American Graves Kegistration Command on June 15, 1948. While the invitation for bids covered both contracts, the work was clearly in two parts. The contracts were signed separately, involved different matters, and will be treated separately.

The first contract provided for the grading of a permanent cemetery at Saint Avoid, France, to which bodies were to be moved from temporary combat cemeteries. Plaintiff was to grade the rolling terrain in accordance with the design made for the cemetery by the American Battle Monuments Commission. According to the terms of the contract the topsoil was first to be removed and stored in windrows, then the terrain was to be graded by a eut-and-fill operation pursuant to the plans and specifications. The pertinent provisions of the contract are set out in findings 5 and 6. Article 15 of the contract was as follows:

Article 15. UNIT prices : The unit prices contained in this contract are the complete price or cost per unit and include all incidental costs and charges, including any and all direct, indirect or other forms of taxes levied or assessed thereon.

The contract called for common excavation of an estimated quantity of 78,500 cubic yards of earth at 74 French francs per cubic yard. Articles 106 and 107 of the contract provided for the material to be used, the nature and distance [635]*635of the hauling, and provided that the price and payment set out should constitute just compensation for all labor, equipment, tools, and incidentals necessary to complete the work.

The contract provided that plaintiff was to commence work on August 10, 1948, and that the work was to be completed by November 10, 1948. The schedule of work had been thus arranged so that plaintiff’s contract would be finished by the time the reburial contractor began the interment of the bodies in the cemetery. The reburial contract had been entered into by the defendant with another contractor for the reburial of the soldiers’ bodies at Saint Avoid, and reburials in that cemetery were scheduled to commence on December 6,1948, at the rate of 175 per working day.

The time for the completion of the work at Saint Avoid was important for several reasons. Most of the temporary cemeteries were located in agricultural fields and it was necessary that the lands be returned to their former function of producing food. Also the French Government desired to resume the collection of taxes on the lands temporarily used for cemeteries. Accordingly, Congress had prescribed a time limit for the completion of the reburial program as a courtesy to the French Government, which was asking for the return of the property. The coffins of the deceased soldiers had been unearthed from the temporary cemeteries and had been placed above the ground. There was danger that the coffins might catch fire, and there also appeared to have been some danger of a resumption of military operations in Europe, and the temporary cemeteries were rapidly deteriorating.

The plaintiff’s progress with the work was very slow. By the completion date, November 19, 1948, only 20 percent of the grading had been finished in the Saint Avoid permanent cemetery. The delay was caused by plaintiff’s lack of equipment and its failure to provide proper supervision. It provided only one bulldozer, and although a second machine was later brought to the project, one of the two machines was being repaired and not in use most of the time until January 1, 1949. The foreman had only four or five men working [636]*636under Mm and lie had some difficulty getting them to report for work on time.

As a result of the delay, plaintiff’s representatives were called into conference with the command engineer of the American Graves Kegistration Command in the hope of expediting the work. The Army agreed to and did furnish to plaintiff on a rental basis one eight-cubic-yard scraper, two tractors, one sheepsfoot roller, and 500 feet of steel cable for the repair of plaintiff’s equipment. Plaintiff was directed to provide better supervision. A new schedule was agreed to and adopted by the parties and plaintiff completed operations. The new schedule provided for work in certain parts of the cemetery to be finished in time to permit the reinterment operations to begin in December 1948.

To complete the grading under the revised plan it was necessary for the plaintiff to go outside the particular area being worked on in order to obtain the necessary fill material for that area. In doing so the haul was in some instances for a greater distance than it would have been had plaintiff been able to stay within the area. If, however, plaintiff had provided the equipment, labor, and supervision needed for completion of the work in accordance with the schedule made at the time the contract was entered into, the additional hauling would not have been necessary.

The plaintiff submitted invoices to the American Graves Eegistration Command for overhaul of earth moved a distance of more than 500 feet within the project boundaries. The contracting officer refused to pay these invoices and instructed plaintiff to submit its invoices for the regular work separately from the invoices for the amount sought for the overhaul.

On the basis of a report made by the resident engineer, the contracting officer prepared and issued an amendment to the contract to cover additional excavation hauled from the borrow area, and pursuant to this amendment plaintiff was paid 2,502,828 French francs for the 18,790 cubic yards of borroiv and the overhaul in connection therewith. This was in addition to the regular stipulated payments under the contract.

[637]*637Plaintiff’s director of works who prepared the claim which is set out in finding 19 is no longer employed by plaintiff and did not testify at the trial. Apart from the statements made in plaintiff’s claim, there is no evidence as to the amount of overhaul performed by plaintiff, or is there any evidence of the cost incurred in such overhaul.

The claim was rejected originally by the contracting officer and on appeal by the command engineer, on the ground that no overhaul was payable under the terms of the contract for hauling within the project boundaries.

Plaintiff’s claim was also reviewed and rejected by the Commanding General of the American Graves Eegistration Command. There is no evidence that any representative of the defendant agreed to pay the plaintiff for overhaul claimed in connection with this contract.

In addition, since any excess costs that may have been incurred were due to plaintiff’s delay in furnishing the equipment and the necessary personnel to do the work within the time specified in the contract, and since there is no evidence in any event as to the amount of any overhaul or the cost thereof, there is no basis for the recovery of any damages in connection with the contract for the grading of the permanent cemetery at Saint Avoid.

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149 F. Supp. 335, 137 Ct. Cl. 633, 1957 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 167, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/la-societe-nationale-de-construction-v-united-states-cc-1957.