Michael A. Zielinski Co. v. United States

167 Ct. Cl. 416, 1964 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 130, 1964 WL 1568
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 17, 1964
DocketNo. 204-59
StatusPublished

This text of 167 Ct. Cl. 416 (Michael A. Zielinski 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
Michael A. Zielinski Co. v. United States, 167 Ct. Cl. 416, 1964 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 130, 1964 WL 1568 (cc 1964).

Opinion

Pee Curiam :

This contract case was referred pursuant to Rule 45 (since April 1, 1964, Rule 57) to C. Murray Bernhardt, a trial commissioner of this court, with directions to make findings of fact and recommendations for conclusions of law. On March 19, 1964, the commissioner filed a report stating that by agreement and stipulation of the parties, the separated issue of liability was to be adjudicated on the basis of the administrative record alone without submission of further evidence and the entire record of proceedings before the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals was thus admitted into evidence. Such facts as are necessary to decision of the case are found in the commissioner’s opinion. No exceptions to the report or briefs were filed by the parties and it appears that the time for filing such exceptions and brief by the plaintiff has expired. Since the court is in agreement with the opinion, findings and recommendations of the trial commissioner, as modified by the court and as hereinafter set forth, it hereby adopts the same as the basis for its judgment in this case. Plaintiff is therefore not entitled to recover and its petition is dismissed.

[418]*418On June 16, 1964, defendant filed herein a motion to dismiss the petition for default under Rule 68. In view of this dismissal of the petition no action is required to be taken on defendant’s motion.

OPINION OP COMMISSIONER

In 1958 the plaintiff partnership contracted to manufacture 300,000 white Navy jumpers (i.e., tops to enlisted men’s uniforms) to be made from bleached cotton twill cloth furnished by the Government. The plaintiff duly appealed four contract disputes to the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals. On January 29, 1960, the Board sustained the appeal (ASBCA No. 2454) as to three of the four claims but denied the appeal as to the fourth claim, whereupon the plaintiff filed its petition here contending that the Board’s action in denying the appeal was arbitrary and capricious.

The entire record of proceedings before the Board was admitted in evidence by stipulation of the parties, and they agreed that the separated issue of liability was to be adjudicated on the basis of the administrative record alone without submission of further evidence to the court. The plaintiff filed an Assignment of Errors setting forth its contentions as to wherein the adverse decision of the Board was arbitrary and capricious, no allegation having been made there or in the petition of lack of substantial evidence being a ground for review. The defendant duly responded and the controversy is ripe for decision.

The issue is whether the contract required plaintiff to shademark the Government-furnished cloth (GFP). The specifications required the contractor to “Mark all component parts to insure uniform shade throughout the garment.” This would seem to end the inquiry, but the plaintiff claims that if the GFP had been white cotton twill “fully bleached and tinted with vat Blue”, as relevant specifications required, it would not have had to shademark the cloth for cutting and sewing. The plaintiff contends that it justifiably did not contemplate the expense of shademarking in computing its bid, and that shademarking became necessary only because [419]*419most of the white cloth furnished by the Government did not comply with the color specifications, but was slightly tinted in varying hues of yellow, green, red and blue. In order to decide the disputed issue some general background information is essential.

A commercial garment manufacturer engaged in mass production will unfold and lay out one or more bolts of the cloth to be used on a cutting table, piling it up in a number of layers or, “plies”. A pattern is placed on top of the pile outlining the shapes of the component parts of the garment, and all of the plies are cut simultaneously by a special cutting device. If there are color or shade variations among the bolts of cloth laid out for cutting, each separate bolt is marked with an identifying number so that all of the component parts of each individual garment to be assembled and sewn together will come from the same bolt and the garment will thus be uniform in shade throughout. Otherwise, for example, an arm cut from one bolt of a certain shade might be mismated to a pocket cut from another bolt of the same color but of a slightly different shade, and the resulting garment will not be uniform in shade.

Lack of uniformity in shade is not peculiar to colored cloth; white cloth also varies in shade. Thus in the present case the cloth furnished the plaintiff by the Government had been manufactured under earlier Government contracts by several different manufacturers. The manufacturer of cloth will produce a pilot run of material and submit it to the Government for preproduction compliance testing. From the pilot run the Government will select a standard sample to be the bench mark for that manufacturer’s subsequent production, and the manufacturer will be given an acceptable shade range over and under the shade of the standard sample. The manufacturer’s production must thereafter conform to the standard sample within the tolerances allowed by the shade range. If several manufacturers are producing the same cloth under separate contracts (as happened in this case), each manufacturer will have his [420]*420own. standard sample and shade range, and there is no exact correspondence in the color standards required of each manufacturer, although the comparison is quite close. But the variations in shade of white cloth produced by several manufacturers will cover a broader spectrum than the shade range prescribed for any manufacturer in a given contract. Thus, in being furnished white cotton twill by the Government which had actually been produced by several different mills, the plaintiff had to work with cloth of greater shade variations than if the cloth furnished it had all come from a single mill.

The inability of a manufacturer of white cotton twill tinted with vat blue to produce cloth of an exactly uniform hue is inherent in the process, is normal, and is unavoidable. Various factors are responsible, such as the native yellowness of different types of cotton in varying degrees, and variations in the bleaching, desizing and finishing processes. Also, white goods tend to yellow in storage, even when not exposed. The result is that even though the manufacturer of the fabric complies rigidly with manufacturing specifications there will still be shade variations in successive lots of the material produced. The slight yellowness of the raw cotton, if not successfully bleached out, will remain in the finished product to darken it to a white-cream, or will combine with the vat blue dye to cause a greenish cast in the material. Sometimes chemical reactions cause a slight reddish or brownish shade. Or the cloth may be white with a bluish tint. These shade variations are subtle, but they become readily apparent in comparing one batch of cloth with another. Textile testing methods employ special controlled lighting conditions to test for color compliance, but the ultimate judge of compliance is the human eye.

In its submission of alleged errors the plaintiff has recited in detail the progress of the contract in suit, the difficulties it encountered because of shade variations of the GFP, the complaints it made to the contracting officer, and the disposition of those complaints. It has related its submission of random samples of the GFP to an independent textile test[421]

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Bluebook (online)
167 Ct. Cl. 416, 1964 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 130, 1964 WL 1568, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/michael-a-zielinski-co-v-united-states-cc-1964.