Paragon Energy Corp. v. Williams & Davis Boiler

549 F. Supp. 813, 30 Cont. Cas. Fed. 70,665, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9846
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Missouri
DecidedOctober 22, 1982
DocketNo. 80-1035-CV-W-7-1
StatusPublished

This text of 549 F. Supp. 813 (Paragon Energy Corp. v. Williams & Davis Boiler) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Missouri primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Paragon Energy Corp. v. Williams & Davis Boiler, 549 F. Supp. 813, 30 Cont. Cas. Fed. 70,665, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9846 (W.D. Mo. 1982).

Opinion

JOHN W. OLIVER, Senior District Judge.

I.

The above case was commenced in the Circuit Court of Jackson County, Missouri by Paragon Energy Corporation (Paragon), the prime contractor for the construction and modification of a new heating plant in a Veterans Administration hospital at Muskogee, Oklahoma, against Williams & Davis Boiler, Inc., (Davis Boiler), one of its subcontractors on that construction project. The case was promptly removed to this Court. Davis Boiler filed a Miller Act cross-claim against Paragon, joining Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company, (Fireman) the surety on the Miller Act Bond, as an additional cross-claim defendant. Under procedures followed by the parties in this Court which need not be stated in detail, it is apparent that this case was reduced to and was tried as a typical Miller Act action by a subcontractor against the prime contractor and its surety on a Miller Act Bond.

Shortly before a jury-waived trial, the parties agreed upon a joint stipulation of facts. The area of factual dispute was, for the most part, eliminated by counsels’ commendable cooperation with the Court in regard to admissions made in regard to findings of fact which were proposed in accordance with the requirements of Standard Pretrial Order No. 4 of this Court. Davis Boiler, the subcontractor, proposed sixty separate findings of fact. Paragon admitted the vast majority of Davis Boiler’s proposed findings.

The record further shows that the parties rely in large part on the same documentary evidence, disagreeing, of course, in regard to what inferences should be drawn in regard to that evidence. While there was some conflict in the testimony of the witnesses, the record establishes that neither Paragon nor Davis Boiler had any substantial experience in the execution of standard government contracts and that most of their difficulties arose from that fact and from the role that Whitney M. Kerr Company (Kerr) played in inducing Davis Boiler to furnish material and labor to the construction project.

We shall adopt the findings proposed by Davis Boiler which are admitted by Paragon and make additional findings to cover material questions of fact which were not mentioned in any of the findings proposed by any of the parties.

Our independent findings will carry the same paragraph number as an admitted finding, except that we will add letters of the alphabet to that number to designate our independent finding. For example, paragraph 7 will reflect a fact proposed by Davis Boiler which has been admitted by Paragon and Fireman. Paragraphs 7(a), 7(b), and 7(c) will reflect independent findings made by the Court.

II. Findings of Fact

1. During 1976 and thereafter, Paragon was a contractor for the construction and modification of a new heating plant in a hospital operated by the Veterans Administration (V.A.) at Muskogee, Oklahoma (the construction project).

2. Paragon’s bid for the construction project was accepted by the V.A. on June 15,1976. Paragon contracted with the V.A. to complete the construction project for $747,000.00.

3. As required by 40 U.S.C. § 270a (the Miller Act), Paragon as principal and Fireman’s Fund Insurance Company as surety executed a standard government form of payment bond.

[815]*8154. In accordance with the payment bond, Paragon and Fireman bound themselves jointly and severally in the sum of $373,000.00, conditioned upon Paragon’s making payment to all persons supplying labor and materials in the prosecution of the work for the construction project.

5. Paragon was notified by the V.A. to proceed with the project on June 30, 1976. Work was to be completed within 730 calendar days from the date of the receipt of the letter notifying Paragon of the notice to proceed.

6. Sometime prior to July 7, 1976, Whitney M. Kerr Company was furnished with an incomplete set of the V.A. project specifications for the boiler-burner units.

7. On July 7, 1976, Kerr submitted a quotation to Paragon for the furnishing of three (3) standard design 300 horsepower boiler-burner units; the quotation provided that the payment terms were “one percent ten days — net thirty.” The quotation also provided that “prices firm for 30 days; subject to review thereafter.” By such quotation, Kerr offered to provide three (3) standard design Williams & Davis boilers for $82,071.00 (inclusive of certain spare parts). Kerr’s July 7,1976 quotation took exception to certain of the V.A. boiler specifications for the project.

7(a). Kerr’s July 7, 1976 quotation to Paragon was introduced in evidence as Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 4 and Defendant’s Exhibit No. 5.

7(b). Confusion between the parties was introduced at the outset by the fact that Kerr was attempting to act on behalf of Davis Boiler. The large number of “exceptions” stated by Kerr in the quotation submitted to Paragon almost ensured future difficulty in regard to compliance with the specifications of the prime government contract.

7(c). Kerr, for example, stated in Exception No. 5 that “we do not see the necessity in furnishing complete shop drawings since you have ordered an ASME boiler, Section I with National Board stamping and registration. It will be supplied in complete accordance with, or exceeding, this Code. All engineering designs, calculations, etc., have been approved by the ASME Boiler Code.”

7(d). Subsequent undisputed facts establish that substantial difficulty was encountered in regard to the furnishing and approval of shop drawings which were, of course, insisted upon by the Veterans Administration in accordance with the prime contract.

8. On August 20, 1976, Paragon issued its purchase order No. 875-2 to Davis Boiler for three (3) Williams & Davis boiler-burner units for a total price of $82,071.00. The purchase order did not incorporate Kerr’s exceptions to the V.A. project specifications which were set out in its July 7,1976 quotation.

8(a). Paragon’s purchase order No. 875-2 was introduced as Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 5 and as Defendant’s Exhibit No. 8. The second page of that purchase order directed attention to the “Samples and Shop Drawings” paragraphs contained in Paragon’s prime contract with the Veterans Administration, all of which were expressly incorporated in the purchase order, and also stated that “this order becomes valid upon receipt of signed copy in our office.”

8(b). Plaintiff’s Exhibit No. 6, Kerr’s August 23,1976 letter to Davis Boiler which transmitted Paragon’s purchase order No. 875-2 to Davis Boiler noted the various “differences between the specifications and what we have offered” and cautioned Davis Boiler that “three items on the customer’s purchase order ... should be cleared up prior to acceptance of the order.”

9. Davis Boiler refused to acknowledge (accept) Paragon’s purchase order No. 875-2 as written since the exceptions to the boiler specifications set out in Kerr’s quotation of July 7,1976 to Paragon had not been incorporated in such purchase order, and as such purchase order stated “this order is for equipment and/or materials, all as set forth here-in in strict accordance with the engineering drawings and specifications as prepared by V.A. hospital, including but not limited to the sections, articles and paragraphs referred to here-in-after.”

[816]*81610.

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549 F. Supp. 813, 30 Cont. Cas. Fed. 70,665, 1982 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9846, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/paragon-energy-corp-v-williams-davis-boiler-mowd-1982.