Russell & Pugh Lumber Company v. United States

290 F.2d 938, 154 Ct. Cl. 122, 1961 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 108
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 7, 1961
Docket322-59
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 290 F.2d 938 (Russell & Pugh Lumber Company 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
Russell & Pugh Lumber Company v. United States, 290 F.2d 938, 154 Ct. Cl. 122, 1961 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 108 (cc 1961).

Opinion

DURFEE, Judge.

The plaintiff and the Bureau of Land Management, Department of the Interior, entered into a contract for the sale of an estimated quantity of standing timber on designated public lands. After *939 the full contract price had been paid it was discovered by the contractor that there was a deficiency of about twenty percent between the number of board feet estimated in the contract and the number of board feet contained in the designated trees actually cut and removed. Administrative claim on the Department of the Interior for the amount of the shortage was properly made and has been denied.

The position of the defendant is that the contract reflects a lump-sum transaction which, by its very terms, places the risk of shortage on the purchaser. The plaintiff insists that the contract which it signed was a unit-price contract and, that having paid for each of the estimated units of timber it is entitled to a refund to the extent that the actual production fell short of the estimate. By this suit for money damages representing the alleged overcharge the plaintiff relies on its interpretation of the agreement as the correct one.

In any event, the plaintiff vigorously contends that this action cannot be appropriately disposed of on motion for summary judgment because, among other reasons, there are material issues of fact. It becomes necessary, then, to assay the factual setting of this case to determine whether the solution of this problem will require a trial before a commissioner of the court.

In furtherance of its desire to clear certain standing and fallen timber from public lands in Idaho, the Bureau of Land Management in June 1953 gave public notice of a proposed sale of a specified number of trees estimated to contain 6,715 thousand board feet of lumber. The notice which was published on several occasions in a weekly newspaper listed quantities of different species of trees and stated that the board foot volumes given were estimates and might be more or less than the actual amounts. The notice further said that a total purchase price of $68,080.25 would be considered with a minimum deposit of $4,050.00.

The day before the notice of sale first appeared in public print, the defendant’s District Forester wrote to four timber operators, including the plaintiff. It informed the addressees that the trees which were the subject of the sale had been cruised by the defendant and a summary of the cruise and appraisal data, giving numbers and species of trees, volume of board feet, and price per thousand board feet, was included.

The letter enclosing the cruise summary advised that a standard form contract would be used to consummate the sale but that certain special stipulations including the following would apply to the sale:

“All trees that are to be cut are marked. They were cruised 100 per cent and are sold by tree measurement. No scaling is done by the Bureau. You pay for the advertised volume by species. No additional charge is made if you cut out more and no refund is allowed if you cut out less than the advertised volume.”

A similar statement was also included in the summary of cruise and appraisal data.

The plaintiff bid orally and offered the exact total price and downpayment suggested in the public notice. The contract prepared by defendant on a standard form was sent to the plaintiff which was given thirty days to complete and return it. Section 3 of the contract pertains to the amount and price of materials and contains (a) and (b) subsections, both of which are marked with the same footnote. That footnote says, “Strike out (a) or (b), which ever is inapplicable.” The defendant followed this instruction and drew ink lines through subsection (b) which provides that total price is to be determined by multiplying the total quantity of each kind of tree by its unit price. Subsection 3(a) which remains intact in the contract reads as follows:

“The total estimated amount of materials sold under this contract, and the total price, therefor, subject to modification by reappraisal are as follows: [here each variety of tree *940 is listed with the estimated number of board feet for each, the unit price and total price for each variety, the total estimated quantity of board feet and the total contract price.]
“The Purchaser shall be liable for the full purchase price shown above except as it may be changed by reappraisal, even though the quantity of materials actually severed, extracted, or removed or designated for taking is less than the estimated quantity set forth above.”

The plaintiff complains of several physical irregularities in the contract. The first concerns Section 3. Although the defendant struck out one of the subsections, as Footnote 2 directed, the tabular listing of quantities and prices which forms a part of 3(a) was attached in such a manner that a flap of typed material conceals parts of 3(a) and the stricken 3(b). This flap is not, however, permanently affixed and it can be lifted to reveal both subsections in their entirety. We have examined the contract which is on file as Defendant’s Exhibit A and we are convinced, contrary to the contention of the plaintiff, that anyone looking at the contract, be he casual reader or prospective purchaser, would lift the flap to see what, if anything, appears beneath.

If this were the only unusual feature of this particular contract we would have no hesitancy in saying that no reasonable and prudent party thereto could have understood it to be anything other than a lump-sum sale. However, subsection (b) to section 4 contains a footnote to the effect that that subsection should be stricken if subsection 3(a) is applicable. Although subsection 3(a) was clearly made applicable, to the exclusion of subsection 3(b), the defendant failed to strike out subsection 4(b), apparently through inadvertence. Section 4 covers payments, passage of title, risk of loss and reappraisals. The important provision of the (b) paragraph recites that “[t]he total purchase price, whether more or less than the ‘estimated total price,’ shall equal the sum of the total quantities severed or extracted, or designated therefor, multiplied by their respective unit prices.” The failure of the defendant to delete the 4(b) provision from the standard form contract has created a cloud on an otherwise' clear document.

We have alluded to the public notice of sale and the informational letter addressed to plaintiff not as a means of showing what plaintiff intended or believed when it entered into the contract. As the plaintiff has pointed out, there has been no showing that the lumber company officials received those items or relied on them. Our consideration of these items is, on the other hand, for the purpose of showing what the seller, the Government, understood the terms of sale to be. The public utterances of the defendant contain numerous references to the fact that no adjustment would be made if the trees cut out at less than the estimated quantity and that the purchaser was to pay for the advertised volume. But for the erroneous inclusion of provision 4(b) this intent was clearly reflected in the formal contract.

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Bluebook (online)
290 F.2d 938, 154 Ct. Cl. 122, 1961 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 108, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/russell-pugh-lumber-company-v-united-states-cc-1961.