Miller v. United States

140 F. Supp. 789
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMay 1, 1956
Docket49220
StatusPublished

This text of 140 F. Supp. 789 (Miller 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
Miller v. United States, 140 F. Supp. 789 (cc 1956).

Opinions

WHITAKER, Judge.

This is an action to recover damages for the alleged breach of a contract between defendant and plaintiff’s assignor, under the terms of which the Office of Foreign Liquidation Commissioner, Department of State (hereinafter referred to as OFLC) agreed to sell and plaintiff’s assignor agreed to purchase 50 surplus Government aircraft. Plaintiff also seeks to recover just compensation for 10 of the aircraft which he alleges were delivered to him under the contract and then repossessed by defendant.

Defendant denies liability because it says its refusal to perform its contract was a lawful exercise of its sovereign power, for which it is not liable to respond in damages.

Plaintiff and Victor M. Oswald on May 14, 1947, entered into an agreement to purchase in Mr. Oswald’s name certain surplus aircraft which defendant had on hand in Europe, and to share all profits resulting from the transaction. Pursuant thereto, on May 21, 1947, a contract was entered into between a representative of OFLC and Mr. Oswald for the purchase of fifty UC-64A type aircraft. The contract provided, inter alia, that the price of the aircraft would be $150,-000, payable in $30,000 installments, the first payment to be made 15 days after the signing of the contract. Upon the receipt of the first $30,000, the OFLC was to deliver 5 of the aircraft to the purchaser. Upon the delivery of the fifth plane the purchaser was to pay a second $30,000 to the OFLC, which was then to deliver 10 more planes, bringing the total delivered to 15. Upon the delivery of the fifteenth plane the purchaser was to make a third payment, after which he was to receive 10 more planes, bringing the total to 25. After his fourth payment, the purchaser was to receive another 10 planes, bringing the total to 35, and for his fifth and final payment the purchaser was to receive the last 15 of the aircraft, making up the total of 50 planes contracted for. Schedule A attached to the contract listed fifty UC-64A aircraft by serial number and engine number and stated that they were located at Oberpfaffenhofen, Germany. The contract further provided that all property was sold “as is” and “where is.”

The initial payment of $30,000 was made by Mr. Oswald sometime between June 10 and 15, 1947. Although the sales were made on an “as is” and “where is” basis, the Air Force decided, for reasons of safety, to sufficiently recondition each plane so that it might be [791]*791flown out of the occupation zone to a point designated by the purchaser. The first 5 planes sold under the contract were delivered in this manner, the first 2 being delivered in Paris, as directed by the purchaser, on August 16 and September 15, 1947,, and the last 3 being delivered in Amsterdam on about March 16, 1948.

Late in 1947 or early in 1948, Mr. Oswald became dissatisfied with the slow rate of deliveries and assigned his interest in the contract to the plaintiff. The OFLC recognized that assignment and continued to deal with the plaintiff as the contracting party throughout the remainder of the contract.

At all times material to this proceeding the United States Civil Aeronautics Authority (hereinafter referred to as the CAA) required that each American owned and operated aircraft, whether located in this country or in Europe, be registered with the CAA and thereafter be identified by the registration or NC number assigned to it. Also, before his plane could be operated, the owner had to receive a certificate of airworthiness from an authorized agent of the CAA who had inspected the aircraft. In accordance with this procedure plaintiff applied for registration and received in his name NC numbers and certificates of airworthiness for the first five planes delivered under the contract.

In March 1948, plaintiff entered into negotiations with a Mr. Tursz-Fredkens for the sale of some of the aircraft listed in his contract with the OFLC. Tursz-Fredkens represented himself to plaintiff as a Belgian national residing in the Belgian Congo, and as the representative of Somaco, a Belgian firm located in Brussels, Belgium, and indicated that Somaco desired the planes for export to the Belgian Congo. The negotiations led to a contract between plaintiff and Somaco under the terms of which plaintiff agreed to sell Somaco 20 of the planes at a price of $6,500 each, for which Somaco paid plaintiff $130,000. Thereupon plaintiff delivered to Somaco the first five planes which he had received from the OFLC.

On April 5, 1948, plaintiff made the second payment of $30,000 to the OFLC. However, because of the slow rate of delivery of the first five planes delivered, and in an effort to expedite future deliveries, plaintiff arranged with the OFLC to have the planes repaired and tested at Oberpfaffenhofen by persons employed by him, so that the planes could receive certificates of airworthiness before being moved. Accordingly, upon receipt of that payment the OFLC issued a disposal document authorizing the release of 10 more aircraft, and the 10 aircraft specified in the document were then separated by the OFLC representative at Oberpfaffenhofen from the remaining aircr-aft, placed in a separate position on the field, and made available to plaintiff so that he could do the work on them necessary to prepare them for flight.

After the necessary work had been completed at plaintiff’s expense, on or about May 19, 1948, certificates of airworthiness and registration numbers for the 10 planes were issued by the CAA at Oberpfaffenhofen. Between June 8 and June 15, 1948, the 10 planes were flown to Amsterdam by pilots employed by plaintiff and were there turned over to Somaco.

On May 26, 1948, plaintiff made the third payment of $30,000, as required by his contract. The next day the OFLC transmitted to Oberpfaffenhofen a disposal document covering 10 more planes; the OFLC representative notified the Air Force of its receipt, and it moved the second group of 10 planes into position, so that plaintiff could begin work on them. .This work began on or about June 14, 1948, and was substantially completed by the latter part of June 1948. The planes were in the process of being test-flown for final CAA approval as to their airworthiness when the OFLC representative at Oberpfaffenhofen received instructions from the OFLC in Paris to suspend further deliveries to plaintiff.

[792]*792Although the plaintiff had substantially completed all work necessary to have the second group of 10 planes flown out of the German military zone, further work on the planes was suspended and plaintiff was not permitted to remove them.

Defendant alleges it was justified in doing so because of the following:

About the middle of June 1948, the United States Civil Air Attaché in Paris was told by a CAA inspector that he had seen a picture in a London pictorial review, The Sphere, showing aircraft in Rome which bore NC registration numbers that had been assigned to plaintiff, and that the caption under the picture stated that the aircraft were reportedly destined for Palestine. The Civil Air Attaché reported the matter to the Department of State, which instructed him to suspend further deliveries of aircraft to plaintiff until further notice. This action was taken, because about the time when plaintiff’s assignor executed the contract with the OFLC an armed conflict broke out between an Arab Government and the Israeli Government in the Middle East, and shortly thereafter the United States had agreed to a United Nations Security Council resolution condemning the sending of men or materials of war (including aircraft) to either side.

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Horowitz v. United States
267 U.S. 458 (Supreme Court, 1925)
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115 F. Supp. 457 (Court of Claims, 1953)
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128 F. Supp. 136 (Court of Claims, 1954)
Derecktor v. United States
348 U.S. 926 (Supreme Court, 1955)

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Bluebook (online)
140 F. Supp. 789, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/miller-v-united-states-cc-1956.