Newark Fireproofing Sash & Door Co. v. United States

69 F. Supp. 121, 107 Ct. Cl. 606, 1947 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 85
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJanuary 6, 1947
DocketNo. 46097
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 69 F. Supp. 121 (Newark Fireproofing Sash & Door 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
Newark Fireproofing Sash & Door Co. v. United States, 69 F. Supp. 121, 107 Ct. Cl. 606, 1947 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 85 (cc 1947).

Opinion

LittletoN, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Shortly prior to November 10, 1943, plaintiff, a manufacturer of-sheet metal products, received information from two manufacturers’ representatives, who had previously conferred with the Procurement Division of the Maritime Commission, that plaintiff might obtain a contract or purchase order from the Commission for a supply of a certain type of metal blanket container for use on life rafts on merchant [622]*622vessels (finding 2). Following this meeting at plaintiff’s Newark, New Jersey, office, and after plaintiff had made and delivered to the manufacturers’ representatives, for delivery to the Commission, a sample container (without the waterproofing rubber gasket) as representative of the product which plaintiff would undertake to provide and furnish, the plaintiff on November 10, 1943, prepared a sketch (described in findings 11 and 12) explaining the specification of the metal blanket container which it was prepared to manufacture, and sent the same to the Commission at Washington, with the following proposal:

We hereby submit a rough sketch explaining the specification of the “special metal box,” which is to hold two blankets. Production on said box can be started within two days of receiving the materials necessary to manufacture same. The price is as follows:
24 gauge galvanized iron, soldered on both ends, watertight, in lots of 1,000 to 5,000 $3.60 each. F. O. B. Plant. * * *.

The proof is uncertain as to whether the sample container reached the Commission.

The evidence shows that the phrase “soldered on both ends, watertight” had a special meaning in established usage in the sheet metal trade, which was that the joints between sides, bottom, and ends would be soldered and thereby made watertight. Plaintiff intended this meaning in its proposal and in the sketch attached thereto as a specification, and there' is no evidence to show that defendant otherwise understood the use of the phrase mentioned.

Under this specification the removable top of the container, as shown, could not be soldered to the body, or top end, of the container. Therefore the phrase “soldered on both ends, watertight” could not have been interpreted to mean that plaintiff was proposing to furnish a “watertight” metal container. Plaintiff did not expressly propose or represent in its letter or specification that the described container would be “waterproof.” Plaintiff’s proof is to the effect that it intended by its sketch and proposal that the container would be watertight at the soldered seams and waterproof around the removable top. However, by the express terms of the contract entered into by the parties on November 29,1943 (find[623]*623ing 5), pursuant to plaintiff’s proposal, plaintiff agreed to furnish “waterproof” containers. The contract, of November 29, called for 1,000 containers at $3.60 each, and on December 14, 1943, the defendant, by written order, increased the quantity to 2,000. So far as material here, the contract provided as follows:

Containers, blanket, metal, 24 gauge, waterproof, size 10 x 10 x 17, for life rafts, to be painted outside, furnished with lock closures and handle on top, in accordance with rough sketch furnished with quotation. * * *.
In accepting this order it is understood that you agree to all the terms and conditions expressly written or referred to herein including General Provisions, Form 4584 which are made a part hereof. * * *.

Neither the contract nor the General Provisions contained any plans or specifications for the containers other than the requirements that they should be “waterproof,” and neither did they contain particulars relating to inspection and tests other than as set forth in article 3 of the General Provisions, as follows:

* * * Inspection and Tests.' — The Contract Products and all workmanship, equipment, materials, and articles incorporated therein shall be the best suited of their respective kinds for the work to be performed hereunder, and shall be subject to inspection and tests-by Buyer at any time, and by other agencies to the extent required by law or directed by Buyer. All materials, or workmanship not conforming to the plans and specifications rejected by the inspectors will be promptly replaced by Vendor at its own cost and expense. * * *

As the contract provided, and as plaintiff knew, the metal containers were being procured by defendant for use as receptacles in which to pack blankets and stow them on life rafts on board merchant vessels, to be used in an emergency in the manner set forth in finding 8. However, the nature of the intended use and the extent to which the containers would be exposed to water when life rafts were launched, and to the elements while on board vessels, were not such, in view of plaintiff’s specification which was accepted by defendant, as to require plaintiff to interpret the contract provision that the containers be “waterproof” to mean that they [624]*624must be “watertight” when submerged and subjected to a head water pressure of 18 to 36 inches for a period of five minutes or more.

The evidence and findings 21, 22, and 23, show that the terms “waterproof” and “watertight” are not used interchangeably either generally or in marine matters. While both terms generally signify imperviousness to water, the important difference between them, which is generally accepted and understood, is one of degree, “waterproof” signifying the lesser degree of imperviousness and “watertight” the greater degree.

Plaintiff bases its asserted right to recover damages of $3,316.40, made up of the figures set forth in finding 27, on the principal ground that defendant breached the contract by requiring that the blanket containers meet a watertight test made by submerging and holding the containers under water pressure of 1 to 36 inches for three to five minutes (see findings 16 and 17). Plaintiff contends that if the contract called for a test as a condition to the acceptance of the containers, a waterproof rather than a watertight test was intended by the contract and that a hose test, which was not used by defendant, was reasonable and adequate and should have been used for the purpose of determining whether or not the containers in question were waterproof. A hose test consists of playing a stream of water from an ordinary one-inch hose on the article to be tested from a distance of ten feet (findings 18 and 21). While it may be said that, under the definition of the word “waterproof,” a hose test is one method of ascertaining whether an article is waterproof, the question here is to what degree or extent did the contract require the containers to be waterproof. It cannot be said that the hose test is the best or only method to be used in a case where the contract does not set forth the particulars with reference to the test to be made, but does show the nature of the intended use of the article. Nor can it be said that, under .the facts and circumstances of this case, the contract in suit contemplated or required that a hose test be used in preference to some other reasonable method of testing the containers for the purpose of determining whether they were [625]*625sufficiently waterproof to satisfy the reasonable requirements of that term as used in the contract.

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Bluebook (online)
69 F. Supp. 121, 107 Ct. Cl. 606, 1947 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 85, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/newark-fireproofing-sash-door-co-v-united-states-cc-1947.