Massachusetts College of Pharmacy v. United States

141 Ct. Cl. 775, 1958 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 106, 1958 WL 7350
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 5, 1958
DocketCong. No. 1-56
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 141 Ct. Cl. 775 (Massachusetts College of Pharmacy 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.

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Massachusetts College of Pharmacy v. United States, 141 Ct. Cl. 775, 1958 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 106, 1958 WL 7350 (cc 1958).

Opinion

MaddeN, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The plaintiff is a non-profit educational institution approved for the training of veterans under the act of March 24, 1943, 57 Stat. 43, known as Public Law 16, and the act of June 22, 1944, 58 Stat. 284, known as Public Law 346. It furnished laboratory coats to its veteran students, billed the United States, through the Veterans Administration (VA), for them, and the bills were paid. Later the United States required the plaintiff to refund the money.

A private bill for the relief of the plaintiff was introduced in the United States Senate, providing for the repayment of the money, $17,259, to the plaintiff. The Senate passed a resolution referring the bill to this court for proceedings pursuant to sections 1492 and 2509 of Title 28 of the United States Code.

The plaintiff school required its students to wear laboratory coats when working in certain of the laboratories. Students who were not veterans had, of course, to provide their own laboratory coats, just as they had to provide their own books and pay their own tuition. The Government, under the statutes cited above, paid for the tuition and books of the veteran students. The Government’s agent, the VA, [777]*777had the authority to pay for such student equipment as the laboratory coats. But it had a discretion as to where to draw the line as to the kinds of student equipment which the Government would pay for.

Public Law 16 provided for the training of disabled veterans. Under that statute the VA made formal contracts with the schools. It had such contracts with the plaintiff from September 7, 1944 to August 31, 1951. The contracts extending down to June 30, 1946 expressly provided for the payment by the VA for laboratory coats as uniforms. The subsequent Public Law 16 contracts made no mention of laboratory coats or of uniforms. They did provide for the payment for student supplies up to a stated maximum per year.

The great majority of the veteran students were not disabled veterans. The non-disabled veterans were trained under Public Law 346. Under that statute the VA did not make contracts with the schools. Operations were carried on according to the statute and the rules written and administered by the VA.

In submitting its bills to the VA the plaintiff, like other schools, put in a lump sum for supplies, without listing details. However, it maintained supply sheets, which the veterans signed showing the receipt of the supplies. On these supply sheets for the years 1944-1945 and 1945-1946 the laboratory coats were designated as “uniforms.” After December 1946, they were designated as “protective garments.” The reason for the change was that the VA on October 3,1945 wrote a letter to its regional offices prescribing certain administrative standards which should be used in fixing the line beyond which payments for supplies would not be made. This letter said that since the Government paid to each veteran a subsistence allowance out of which he was supposed to buy his clothes as well as to pay his rent and buy his food, therefore uniforms worn in place of ordinary clothes, even though the school required them to be worn, would not be paid for. The letter said:

Consequently, gymnasium clothing, laboratory coats and trousers, nurses’ or technicians’ uniforms, school or military uniforms, coveralls and other similar articles will [778]*778not be provided, notwithstanding the fact that it may be a requirement of the training establishment that clothing of a certain type or style shall be worn by all students or employees.

The letter further stated that articles worn primarily for the purpose of protecting the wearer from physical harm, as distinguished from protecting his clothing, would be paid for.

A VA representative advised the dean of the plaintiff school of the contents of the letter. The dean said that the laboratory coats were worn primarily for the purpose of protecting the wearer from harm. The VA representative would have had no opinion as to that, and probably said that if that was so the coats should be designated as “protective garments” on the supply sheets. The school continued to include the cost of the laboratory coats in its lump sum bills for supplies, and, as we have said, the VA paid the bills.

We think the dean was right in classifying the laboratory coats as protective garments. The body of a student working in a laboratory would be well protected from casual spat-terings of acids or other chemicals if he kept on his $50 suit of clothes. But it would be foolish for him to do so if he would be equally well protected by a $2.50 smock. Hence, when we put him in the laboratory, we assume that he has sense enough to take off his expensive coat. Having taken off his coat, which he had better do if he hopes to clothe himself respectably within his fairly meager VA subsistence allowance, we find his body unprotected. We require him to wear a smock, not primarily to protect his shirt, which he may also have removed if the weather or the state of his finances recommended that, but primarily to protect his body. Granted, his $50 suit would have protected him as well, or better. A $50 overcoat on top of the suit would have protected him still better. None of these coverings would have protected him as well as an impervious apron, but they would protect him from casual spatterings and annoying small burns. A garment, in order to be protective, need not be adequate to protect against disasters.

The contents of the VA letter of October 3 to its staff were substantially repeated in a Veterans Administration [779]*779technical bulletin dated February 28, 1947, a copy of which was mailed to the plaintiff. Subsequent similar regulations were mailed to the plaintiff. The plaintiff continued to furnish the laboratory coats to the veterans without charge, included their cost in its lump sum bills for supplies, and received payment for them, until March 1951. At that time a contract officer of the VA inspected the school’s books and records. The staff of the VA in the Boston area was not large enough to enable it to make this detailed kind of inspection sooner. After the inspection, the VA declared that all payments that had been made to the plaintiff for laboratory coats constituted overpayments, and must be repaid to the Government. The plaintiff sought administrative relief from the General Accounting Office, but that office denied relief. The plaintiff thereupon repaid the $17,259 to the Government.

As indicated above, we think the garments in question were protective garments. But the VA letter in 1945, and its official bulletin in 1947 expressly named laboratory coats as articles which the VA would not pay for. That meant that they were not protective enough to be covered by the further statement in the letter that “protective articles such as laboratory aprons, rubber gloves, etc.” and the statement in the technical bulletin that “protective items” would be paid for. The plaintiff’s dean was imprudent, if not careless, in continuing, in the face of these warnings, to supply the laboratory coats to students without collecting their cost from the students, or without obtaining specific assurance from the VA that it would pay for them.

The dean no doubt acted in good faith. No profit to the school was involved in collecting the money from the VA rather than from the students, except possibly a small handling charge.

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141 Ct. Cl. 775, 1958 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 106, 1958 WL 7350, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/massachusetts-college-of-pharmacy-v-united-states-cc-1958.