Sims v. United States

263 F. 48, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 2153
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedDecember 16, 1919
DocketNo. 5299
StatusPublished

This text of 263 F. 48 (Sims v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sims v. United States, 263 F. 48, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 2153 (8th Cir. 1919).

Opinion

STONE, Circuit Judge.

This is an action by the United States against the administrator of a contractor and the sureties upon a bond given to secure the performance of a contract to build a portion of a levee along the Mississippi river. To a joint second amended answer the government filed a demurrer, upon the ground that the answer was insufficient to constitute any defense, set-off, or counterclaim. The demurrer was sustained, and defendants declined to plead further, electing to stand upon, their answer. After evidence of the amount of loss claimed by the government, judgment was entered in its favor for $35,683.42, against the administrator, and for the penalty of the bond, $10,500, against the sureties. From this judgment, defendants bring this writ of error.

This case was in this court (237 Fed. 80, 350 C. C. A. 282) on a previous writ of error, and the record in that writ is made part of this writ by stipulation.

[1] The petition declared upon the bond and contract which were made parts of the petition. After the case returned to the trial court, the answer was amended once by filing a second amended answer, the one here involved, which is as follows:

“By leave of the court first had and obtained, now come the defendants and for tiieir second amendment to their answer state:
“Defendant ,T. B. Lewis entered upon, the performance of the contract, by building the levee into the end of the old levee and extending it towards the other side of the gap, where it was intended to tie the newly constructed levee into the end of the old levee there, and thus close the gap, so that, as defendant’s work proceeded, it was a complete lovee of the size and character provided in the contract, to the point where defendant was at a given time engaged at work upon its construction.
“Defendant, had so constructed said levee up to station 692, and was at work on that station in January, 1913, when the flood came in the river and inundated the lands. Plaintiff, through its authorized officials and without defendant’s permission, took possession of all of defendant’s work and the premises on which the work was to be constructed, not because of any default of the defendants in the performiance of the contract, but for the purpose of using the same in making a high-water fight to protect the country adjacent and on the land side of the levee from inundation by the threatened flood.
“The flood rise in January and in February did not destroy defendant’s levee. After the flood had partially subsided, the plaintiff, waiving the time limit named in the contract for. the completion of the work, on March 3, 1913. granted defendant Lewis permission to proceed with the performance of th® contract within a reasonable time thereafter, and returned to defendant Lewis the possession of the work which ho had done and the premises for that purpose, and ho continued performance of the contract in the manner already described, and completed all of the work covered by the contract, except a small section of the levee, when further prosecution and the completion of the work by defendant Lewis was prevented by the plaintiff, who then and there [50]*50forcibly took possession and control of the levee, which had been so partially completed, and of all of the premises on which the construction of the levee had been and was to be built, and excluded defendant therefrom. Plaintiff so took over said work and premises, not because of any default of defendant under said contract, but for the purpose of using said work and premises for plaintiff’s own benefit and purposes; that is to say, for the purpose of making a high-water fight against the overflow of the lands behind the levee by the flood of the Mississippi river, and for the purpose of using said work and premises to protect the country adjacent thereto from an unprecedented flood from overflow of the river which was threatened. Plaintiff thereafter kept possession of said work and premises, to the exclusion of the defendants, and used the same for the purposes aforesaid, until all of the levee which the defendant Lewis had constructed under his contract was totally washed away and destroyed by the flood of March and April, 1913.
“The levee which defendant Lewis had constructed under the contract was destroyed by reason of the act of the plaintiff in using it for flood protection before it had been fully completed and the gap closed. Plaintiff, for the purpose of protecting the country from inundation by the flood, endeavored to stop the flood flowing through the gap at the end of the partially completed levee'by erecting a temporary and partial levee across the gap, but was unable to build the levee across the gap high enough or strong enough, before the flood came against it, to withstand the flood, but was able to build it higli enough to raise the water on the river side of the levee and hold it there much higher than its level on the land side, and so as to cause, and which did cause, said flood, when it broke through the gap, to wash away and destroy the levee which defendant Lewis had constructed; whereas it would not have been so washed away and destroyed, except for plaintiff’s acts in taking the levee from defendant and preventing him from protecting it at the end, and in temporarily filling the gap with a levee insufficient to hold the flood. The act of plaintiff in thus using defendant’s work and premises was the cause of the defendant’s work being destroyed, and prevented him from performing his contract.
“If the plaintiff had not taken said levee and premises away from the possession of the defendant Lewis, he could and would have protected the end of the levee at the gap by riprap work and other protective work, so that his levee would not have been washed away or injured by the gradual rise and flow of tiie flood through the gap, had the gap been left open, as it would have been left by him, if the plaintiff had not taken possession of the premises away from him.
“After the destruction of the levee by defendant Lewis, as aforesaid, the plaintiff offered to permit the defendant Lewis to complete performance of his contract, but upon the condition that he replace and reconstruct, at his own expense, the levee which he had built under the contract, and which had been so destroyed by said flood, and the plaintiff would not permit said defendant to enter upon or complete said contract, otherwise than upon that condition.”

The issues here presented can be more conveniently considered by discussing the contentions urged by the government in support of the demurrer. These are (1) that the last (second amended) answer is the same in substance as the answer (first amended) involved in the former writ of error; (2) that the former decision of this court, resulting in the sustaining of a demurrer to that answer, is the law of the case, and conclusive as to the sufficiency of the answer here in question; (3) that if the above positions are not well taken, yet the government had a right to take possession of the work, even to the complete exclusion of the contractor, under the terms of the contract which is part of the petition in the case.

The first inquiry is as to the claimed identity of the answer in the [51]*51former writ of error, and that here involved.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

United States v. Lewis
237 F. 80 (Eighth Circuit, 1916)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
263 F. 48, 1919 U.S. App. LEXIS 2153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sims-v-united-states-ca8-1919.