Robinson v. United States

48 Ct. Cl. 454, 1913 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 85, 1912 WL 1210
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 2, 1913
DocketNo. 30800
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 48 Ct. Cl. 454 (Robinson 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
Robinson v. United States, 48 Ct. Cl. 454, 1913 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 85, 1912 WL 1210 (cc 1913).

Opinion

Howey, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff contracted with the United States for a consideration exceeding $1,000,000 to furnish all labor and materials and perform all work required for the interior finish of a new customhouse at New York City, with the stipulation that the work provided for in the contract should be completed on or before October 15, 1906. The pleadings show that certain work deemed desirable was not done under the contract by reason of lack of funds, but subsequently, and before the time for completion of the contract, appropriations were made by Congress and plaintiff was peremptorily ordered by defendants, on or about October 22, 1906, to furnish the labor and materials and perform all the work required for restoring to the interior finish of the building certain .items omitted therefrom under the original contract, though embraced in the original proposals. Defendants notified plaintiff that they would allow him an additional sum in excess of $200,000 for the work of restoration, which by order was fixed by the United States to be June 1, 1907. The contractor alleges that he was never [456]*456requested to, and in fact never did, assent to the modifications and changes whereby certain work was omitted and which involved him in other undertakings, but that he had no alternative but to submit to what he alleges to have been the arbitrary act of the Government. The contractor is undertaking to show that he faithfully endeavored to complete the contract, which, he says, was arbitrarily fixed by the Secretary of the Treasury under the supplemental order, but that he was prevented therefrom by acts of the Government and its agents.

It is further alleged by the contractor that he faithfully prosecuted the work provided for in the contract as originally executed, and also the work provided for “ in the supplemental or second contract ”; that he performed extra work and furnished extra material not provided for in either one of the contracts, for which he was partly compensated. He further says that the extra work and material were accepted and used; that defendants formally accepted the customhouse; that after acceptance of the building he demanded payment in full, but his demand was refused; that defendants unlawfully deducted $50,820 as and for liquidated damages or penalty, on the ground claimed by them that they could lawfully do so under the terms of the contract.

For damages on account of alleged delays caused by the Government; for unlawful deductions and retention of moneys on account of alleged omissions and defects in the work; for extra costs and expenses due to stated arbitrary rejection of certain work, labor, and materials; and for the extra work and materials ordered and accepted by the Government, but not paid for, in addition to the sums stated in the preceding paragraph retained as and for liquidated damages and penalties, the plaintiff contractor brings this action to recover the sum of $123,441.37.

The matter now before the court arises on the motion of the plaintiff for the order of the court to issue its call on the Secretary of the Treasury for true and certified copies of certain documentary evidence described in the motion and alleged to be among the official files of the Government.

[457]*457The documentary evidence called for consists of alleged letters to and from the Treasury Department relating to bids of the several contractors for the interior finish of the building under construction; reports and letters relating to the condition of the work and bearing upon the question of the delays for which the contractor was penalized; recommendations respecting deductions under the contract and the causes therefor; correspondence with reference to progress under the eight-day notice relative to expediting completion of the mechanical equipment and the installation of furniture; correspondence relating to the right of the Government to assess liquidated damages at $400 a day because of orders from defendants stopping the contractor from work on important parts of the same under his contract, and likewise relating to the delays which other contractors imposed upon plaintiff in his own undertaking. Besides which, the call embraces correspondence in reference to the withholding of payments, and the mode and manner of carrying on the work, and recommendations of allowances to plaintiff by those best in position to know; letters relating to allowances by the architect to the contractor for extras; information respecting the suspension of trim wood; instructions wherein the architect was required to keep a report of delays incident to suspensions of the work where the contractor had been ordered to suspend; reports and letters in reference to settlements with and in the matter of time penalties against other contractors on the general contract for the superstructure of the building and against other contractors for mechanical equipment, and as to whether any other contractors were penalized for delays which in turn delayed this plaintiff ; for daily audited cost reports and itemization of work performed in expenditure of those amounts retained from the contractor and alleged to have been expended by defendants in replacing defective work after the work of this contractor had been accepted; and, finally, the estimates of the architects submitted within certain dates to the Secretary of the Treasury with a view to obtaining from Congress appropriations for changes and new construction in the building.

[458]*458Defendants do not object to some parts of the proposed call, because the court has previously allowed similar requests over the objection of the United States. It is said, however, that plaintiff is merely fishing for evidence now, and that many of the letters and reports are only supposed by the plaintiff to be relevant and material. There are other objections for want of more specific dates and because certain of the documents called for are said to be so inadequately described as to call for an unreasonable expenditure of time and labor.

This court has power to call upon any of the departments for information or papers deemed necessary in the prosecution or defense of cases against the Government, under the provisions of section 1016 of the Eevised Statutes, but with the qualification that the head of any department may refuse to comply when, in his opinion, such compliance will be injurious to the public interest. Some of these calls are mere bills of discovery. These arise in cases where the parties do not specify or know what they want, while some requests are general in their nature and throw the responsibility of selecting documentary evidence upon the clerks of the departments. Some are for copies of papers presumably in claimant’s possession. These kinds of calls are not proper, because the matter can not be turned into a bill of discovery. Elting's case, 27 C. Cls. R., 158.

A call under the statute is in the nature of a subpoena duces tecum and is an absolutely indispensable writ to the administration of justice. Hale v. Henkel, 201 U. S., 43. It is in suits against the Government not unlike the writ of duces tecum used against the officer of a corporation having the books and papers of a company in his custody. Where the question of criminality is not involved, the officer of a corporation having such custody is bound to produce papers in obedience to the writ. Wertheim v. Continental Ry. & Trust Co., 15 Fed., 718.

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Related

Shakespeare Company v. The United States
389 F.2d 772 (Court of Claims, 1968)
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110 F. Supp. 430 (Court of Claims, 1953)
Robinson v. United States
50 Ct. Cl. 159 (Court of Claims, 1915)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
48 Ct. Cl. 454, 1913 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 85, 1912 WL 1210, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robinson-v-united-states-cc-1913.