Pine Mountain Lumber Co. v. United States

153 F. Supp. 411, 139 Ct. Cl. 164, 1957 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 97
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 12, 1957
DocketNo. 150-55
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 153 F. Supp. 411 (Pine Mountain Lumber 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
Pine Mountain Lumber Co. v. United States, 153 F. Supp. 411, 139 Ct. Cl. 164, 1957 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 97 (cc 1957).

Opinion

Laramoke, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff brings suit to recover the amount of $23,523.81 claimed to be due by reason of two contracts it had with the Government. The defendant does not defend the correctness of the claims, but resists recovery here on the ground that plaintiff is barred from bringing suit because its cause of action accrued more than sis years prior to the filing of its petition on April 8,1955,28 U. S. C. 2501.

The two contracts under which plaintiff is seeking recovery are No. W-09-026-eng-(MSP) 10448 calling for the furnishing of lumber to the Naval Air Station, Jacksonville, Florida, hereafter referred to as the “purchase order” contract, and No. W-09-026-eng-(MSP) 10363 providing for harvesting and manufacturing of trees located on Government land into lumber and crossties, and will be hereinafter referred to as the “lumber” contract. The “purchase order” contract was entered into on June 26, 1941, and numerous shipments were made thereunder by the plaintiff, but most of them were rejected and returned as not meeting contract requirements. A total of 56,301 FBM was accepted by the defendant and the amount due the plaintiff thereby aggregated $2,604.56. The “purchase order” contract was terminated by the Government for failure of the plaintiff to make deliveries, but no liquidated damages were assessed. Plaintiff has never received any part of the $2,604.56 due it for the deliveries that were accepted. The stipulation of fact filed by the parties with the commissioner of this court fails [166]*166to show the exact date that this contract was terminated, hut the last delivery accepted by the Government was on August 1,1947.

The “lumber” contract was entered into on June 16, 1947, and called for the plaintiff to furnish all plant, labor, materials, supplies and equipment necessary to manufacture approximately 36,000,000 FBM of lumber and crossties from standing timber owned by the Government at Camp Stewart Military Beservation, Hinesville, Georgia. The contract completion date, as extended, was January 31,1951. Plaintiff would fell the Government-owned trees, manufacture them into the specified lumber products and haul them to a storage area for further processing or storage for future shipment. As deliveries were made, plaintiff would submit an itemized invoice, usually covering a week’s production, showing the quantities manufactured during that week. Certain other deliveries were made from the sawmill site direct to a railroad siding and loaded on cars for shipment direct to a designated consignee. Invoices were also prepared on these shipments. Both the invoices covering the shipments to the storage area and those to the railroad siding were processed by the Government for payment to the plaintiff.

Plaintiff was paid in full the contract unit price for shipments made direct to consignees while on shipments made into the storage area plaintiff was paid 70 percent of the unit contract price at the time of such delivery and later paid the remainder (30%) when the material was further processed, loaded on cars or trucks, and accepted by the carrier for delivery to the consignee. The last shipment under the “lumber” contract from the storage yard to a consignee was made January 30, 1951. Payment on $20,919.31 worth of invoices dated during the year 1948 for lumber delivered pursuant to the contract has been withheld by the Government and remains unpaid.

The invoices covering the $2,604.56 due on the “purchase order” contract and the $20,919.31 due on the “lumber” contract were referred by the Navy Central Disbursing Office and the Army Finance Officer, Atlanta, Georgia, respectively, to the General Accounting Office for application [167]*167against a claimed indebtedness of Pine Mountain Lumber Company to the United States in the sum of $23,523.87.

The Pine Mountain Lumber Company was a partnership consisting of John J. Neely and Boy E. Neely as copartners doing business in Manchester, Georgia. On June 7, 1946, the plaintiff corporation was formed and issued all of its capital stock to the partnership in exchange for some of. the partnership assets. At the time of incorporation of the plaintiff the partnership retained assets, including real property, and it was at all times pertinent to this opinion solvent. The partners themselves have always been financially able to respond to any claims of the Government. In 1947 John J. Neely and Boy E. Neely sold their stock in the plaintiff corporation to the present owners, B. C. Brooks and J. Lester Souter who are the sole stockholders in the Pine Mountain Lumber Company, Inc. Neither at the time of incorporation, nor at any time thereafter, did the plaintiff corporation make any agreement with either the partnership or the partners to pay any of the liabilities of the partnership or its partners.

In refusing the plaintiff payment of the $23,523.87 due on the two contracts, and forwarding invoices for that amount to the General Accounting Office for application against an alleged indebtedness of the partnership, the Government was apparently of the opinion that the Pine Mountain Lumber Company and the Pine Mountain Lumber Company, Inc. were one and the same entity. In accordance with its belief that the alleged debt of the partnership should be satisfied by the plaintiff, the General Accounting Office under date of April 11,1949, issued certificates of settlement to the plaintiff in connection with the “lumber” and “purchase order” contracts. These certificates were signed for the Comptroller General of the United States and certified that there was owing the plaintiff the amount of $23,523.87. However the certificates further stated that the amount therein allowed was being applied to an indebtedness claimed to be due the United States oh previous contracts with the partnership.

In defending plaintiff’s suit at this time, the Government does not argue that the General Accounting Office was cor[168]*168rect in crediting amounts due the plaintiff on its contracts against an alleged indebtedness claimed due from the partnership, and does not claim, should we find that plaintiff’s suit was timely filed, that it is entitled to offset any recovery by the amount of the partnership debt. There is ample evidence in the record to show that the Government should have determined that its claim lay against the partnership and or partners and not against the plaintiff corporation, a separate legal entity. Defendant only argues that plaintiff’s claim is now time barred and therefore no recovery can be had.

It is the position of the plaintiff that it has filed a timely suit, i. e., within six years of the time its claim first accrued. For support of this position plaintiff relies on two basic propositions: (1) that the certificates of settlement issued by the Comptroller General on April 11, 1949, represent an account stated and since plaintiff’s petition was filed within six years of the rendering of the account the suit is timely; and (2) even if the certificates do not represent an account stated the suit is still timely with respect to the “lumber” contract because the completion date thereunder was less than six years prior to the time it filed its petition.

We think that plaintiff is correct in its contention that the certificates of settlement are an account stated. An account stated is a contract upon which suit may be brought.

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Bluebook (online)
153 F. Supp. 411, 139 Ct. Cl. 164, 1957 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 97, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pine-mountain-lumber-co-v-united-states-cc-1957.