Ozark Dam Constructors v. United States

153 Ct. Cl. 120
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedApril 7, 1961
DocketNo. 143-54
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 153 Ct. Cl. 120 (Ozark Dam Constructors 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
Ozark Dam Constructors v. United States, 153 Ct. Cl. 120 (cc 1961).

Opinions

MaddeN, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Tbe plaintiffs sue for damages alleged to have been caused them by the wrongful failure of the Government to furnish cement needed by them to maintain progress in their work of constructing the Bull Shoals Dam in Arkansas. They allege in their petition that the contract provided that the Government would supply the cement for the project; that the Government had contracted for the cement with a cement mill in Independence, Kansas, and had arranged for its transportation via the Missouri Pacific Railroad from Independence to Cotter, Arkansas, where the plaintiffs were to accept delivery of it on a railroad spur; that the plaintiffs had given due notice of what their cement needs would be for the period beginning September 19,1949; that on November 3, 1948 the employees of the Missouri Pacific Railroad had voted to authorize a strike and on July 6,1949 actually called a strike; that because a Presidential Emergency Board was appointed, the strike was postponed; that the employees rejected the settlement proposed by the Emergency Board and called the strike for September 9, on which date transportation over the Missouri Pacific Railroad ceased.

The petition alleged that although they were aware of the possibility of the strike, the defendant’s agents took no steps to investigate alternative means of delivering cement; that the strike continued until October 24; that the operations of the plaintiffs were slowed down and finally almost completely closed down until October 31 when a shipment of cement was received; that the interruption of the plaintiffs’ work increased their costs by $473,352.97.

We quote paragraph 14 of the plaintiffs’ petition:

14. During the Missouri Pacific Railroad strike it would have been practicable to have delivered the cement in bulk by another railroad to West Plains, Missouri and to have hauled the cement by truck 68 miles to the dam site. It would also have been practicable either to have transported the cement in bulk by truck from point of manufacture to the dam site or to have transported the same in bags by ordinary truck trailers from that distance, or any part thereof. Plaintiffs endeavored to be of assistance to defendant and expressed a willingness to undertake delivery of the cement to the site upon modifi[123]*123cation of the contract. Plaintiffs also brought to the site a trucker who investigated the possibility of delivery by truck. Defendant never made known to plaintiffs the quantity of the cement that it would permit to be trucked or hauled by other means or whether it would permit such transportation to continue for any period after the railroad strike had ended.

The Government made a motion to dismiss the plaintiffs’ petition. The motion was based upon paragraph SC-11 (c) (1) of the specifications of the contract, which said:

The Government will not be liable for any expense or delay caused the contractor by delayed deliveries except as provided under Article 9 of the contract.

The court denied the Government’s motion, 130 Ct. Cl. 354, and in its opinion said, in effect, that the allegations of the plaintiffs’ petition described a situation in which the possible damage to the plaintiffs, if a strike occurred and no alternative means of delivering cement had been arranged, was so great, and alternative means were so readily available, that the Government’s inaction was so inconsiderate of the plaintiffs’ interests that it was inexcusable. We held that the exculpatory clause quoted above, interpreted in the light of the reasonable intention of the parties, and of public policy, did not necessarily apply to the facts recited in the petition.

The Government’s motion having been denied, the case went to trial before a commissioner of this court. The plaintiffs did not prove what we understood them to have alleged in their petition.

Paragraph 14 of the petition, quoted above, first alleges that “it would have been practicable to have delivered the cement in bulk by another railroad to West Plains, Missouri and to have hauled the cement by truck 68 miles to the dam site.” Our commissioner, in his finding 52, speaking of the West Plains alternative, said, “The haul from that point, however, would have been practical, if at all, only in bags.” And in his finding 55 he said:

* * * trucks suitable for hauling cement in bags were not sought by either party, nor inquiries made about them at the time in issue, nor was this possibility seriously discussed, if at all, between the parties.

[124]*124The quoted portion of finding 52 is not excepted to by the plaintiffs. No part of the quoted portion of finding 55 is excepted to, except the statement that the possibility was not seriously discussed. That exception is not well founded. It is worth noting that the commissioner found in his finding 55 that Brown & Boot, the first-named plaintiff, itself owned or could have leased a fleet of 30 or 40 flatbed and pole trailer trucks of a type suitable for hauling cement in bags and that “there is no evidence that defendant knew this or that their availability was offered to defendant.” No exception is taken to this finding. The commissioner’s finding 67 ended with this sentence: “It is repeated that shipment by train to West Plains of bulk cement for its transfer to trucks would not have been feasible.” The plaintiff does not except to this finding.

Thus the first alternative method of delivery alleged to have been practicable would not have been feasible, and had never even been seriously thought of by any of the parties.

The second alleged alternative method of delivery was that the cement could have been hauled from the mill in Independence, Kansas, to the damsite “in bulk by truck” or “in bags by ordinary truck trailers.” The discussion above shows that the plaintiffs never gave any consideration to the possibility of hauling the cement in bags from Independence, Kansas, to the damsite.

Paragraph 14 of the petition, quoted above, said:

Plaintiffs endeavored to be of assistance to defendant and expressed a willingness to undertake delivery of the cement to the site upon modification of the contract.

The expression referred to was made on October 7, when the strike had been in effect nearly a month. Eleven days later the plaintiffs knew that the strike was about to be settled. No action upon this suggestion could have been taken in time to have expedited the delivery of cement. Further, the suggestion was made at the same meeting at which the plaintiffs introduced to the Government a trucker whom they, with the Government’s assent, authorized to investigate the feasibility of trucking the cement. As we shall see hereinafter, the plaintiffs thereafter made no effort to learn the results of this man’s investigation.

[125]*125There remains for discussion the problem of hauling the cement in bulk, in trucks, from Independence, Kansas, to the dam site. If that was a practicable alternative method of delivery, the Government was under a duty to investigate it and make use of it, if prudence and due consideration of the interests of the plaintiffs required it, and if the Government’s failure to do so caused damage to the plaintiffs, it should compensate them.

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Bluebook (online)
153 Ct. Cl. 120, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ozark-dam-constructors-v-united-states-cc-1961.