Mandel v. United States

4 F.2d 629, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3052
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Third Circuit
DecidedMarch 19, 1925
Docket3218
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 4 F.2d 629 (Mandel v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Mandel v. United States, 4 F.2d 629, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3052 (3d Cir. 1925).

Opinion

BUFFINGTON, Circuit Judge.

On September 26, 1917, the Columbus Circle Construction Corporation gave a bond to the United States, with Henry Mandel'and Edward J. Zahner as sureties, conditioned for the performance of its contract, 2427-B for the construction of a naval ammunition depot at Lake Denmark, Dover, N. J. On the failure of that company to fulfill contract 2427-B, the surety, Mandel, entered into a supplemental contract, 2427-B-X, to complete the same. On Mandcl’s failure to complete his supplemental contract, 2427-B-X, the Speedwell Contracting Company, by contract, undertook to, and did, complete the work and fulfilled contract 2427-B of the Columbus Circle Construction Corporation.

Quoting from the opinion of the court *630 below, we here note that “it is to be borne in mind that this contract, No. 2427-B-X, was the supplemental agreement between the original contractor, the surety, and tjie government for the performance of the contract 2427-B in accordance with the requirements set by the original instrument, and amounted to no more than an agreement between the original contractor, the surety, and the government that payments were to be made to the surety rather than to the contractor.” Such, being the case, and the several claims here involved being based on the present suit on the contractor’s bond, the general underlying question is whether such suit was begun within the time limit fixed by the statute.

On the part of Mandel, the surety and plaintiff in error, it is contended the date of settlement was January 24, 1920, and that the suit on the bond, brought October 18, 1921, was after the year limit provided by statute. On the other hand, it is contended the date of settlement was April 15, 1921, and therefore the suit was begun in due time. The provision of the statute is'that suit on the bond shall be commenced “within one year after the performance and final settlement of said contract, and not later,” and as touching a question later discussed we here note that “only one action shall be brought, and any creditor may file his claim in such action and be made party thereto within one year from the completion of the work under said contract, and not later.”

The contention that January 24, 1920, was the date of the statutory “performance and full settlement” of the contract is based on the letter of that date addressed to the commandant of the Third naval district, and signed by two lieutenants and an expert aide. The court held this letter was not the settlement meant by the statute. We agree with that view. While this letter shows the data for making a settlement, and indeed one that was adopted and affirmed in the settlement when made, yet it is quite apparent that the letter neither was a settlement nor purported so to be. It was, as we have said, addressed to the commandant of the Third naval district. It states that the paper is a board report on amounts still due contractors, etc., and, instead of stating it was a settlement, as that term is regarded under the law, 1 the letter states: “It is reeommended that the addition and deductions as submitted in this report be included in the modification of the contract price of contract No. 2427-B and 2427-B-X, and that authority be granted for settlement of this contract upon the above basis, without deduction for liquidation.”

It will thus be seen that the letter is a recommendation of a settlement, and not the making of one. And this estimate of the nonfinality of the letter is proved by the uncontradieted evidence- of May, a government employee familiar with the workings of the department, who says that the final making of settlement rested with C. W. Sparks, of the Civil Engineer Corps of the Navy, and that he made such final settlement by his letter of April 15, 1921, which states: “The findings and recommendations of the board (reference A) are approved; * ** * accordingly final payment under Contract No. 2427-B-X in the sum of $1,-465.75 is authorized, subject to the execution by the contractors of an unqualified release of claim.”

In view of these facts, we agree with the court below in holding April 15, 1921, the date of final settlement.

Claim of the Wharton & Northern Railroad.

The railroad has two claims—one for freight and the other for demurrage arising on ears consigned to the contractors. These claims arose under the following circumstances: The land where the contracting company was building this ammunition depot was situate in a large government reservation. Through this reserve the government operated its own engines on its own tracks. The tracks of the Wharton & Northern Railroad extended only to the reserve border, and consequently it delivered at that point the ears consigned to the contractors, and the government railroad undertook delivery from that point. There was, therefore, no opportunity for the claimant railroad to collect its freight when the -contraer tor came to remove it; and after the ear was delivered to the government railroad, control of the contractor’s ear passed away from the Wharton & Northern Railroad, and such ear was returned to use, not when the contractor unloaded it, but only when the *631 government railroad returned it to the Wharton & Northern.

The question therefore is: Was the claim of the railroad for freight and demurrage recoverable under the statutory bond, conditioned that the contractors “shall promptly make payments to all persons supplying him or them labor and materials in the prosecution of the work provided for in such contract”? The court below allowed these items, but we cannot accede to this view. The words “labor and material,” used by Congress in this statute, are plain words of well-understood meaning, and in the common use and acceptance car demurrage and ear freight are not described or embraced by the words “labor and material.” Moreover, there is no call for the exercise of judicial construction to give to demurrage and freight the protection of this statutory bond. There was a real hardship to labor and material men who worked upon, or furnished material for, a structure or improvement on government property. They could have no lien and no way of protecting themselves. Accordingly the statute required from the contractor a statutory bond and approved surety responsibility for the protection of unprotected labor and material. But the railroad required no such protection. It could refuse to deliver to the contractor until both freight and demurrage were paid. Hence neither the words of the bond allow, nor the spirit and purpose of the law require, that judicial construction to enlarge or construe the words “labor and material” so as to include freight and demurrage. We agree with what was said by the Circuit Court of Appeals of the Fifth Circuit in United States v. Hyatt, 92 F. 445, 34 C. C. A. 447: “Congress could not have intended to include in the term labor,’ as used in this act, the freight charges of a railroad on materials carried by it. The railroad is abundantly protected by its lien on freight.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
4 F.2d 629, 1925 U.S. App. LEXIS 3052, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mandel-v-united-states-ca3-1925.