Soderhamn MacHine Manufacturing Company, a Corporation v. The Martin Bros. Container & Timber Products Corp., a Corporation

415 F.2d 1058
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 24, 1969
Docket22281
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 415 F.2d 1058 (Soderhamn MacHine Manufacturing Company, a Corporation v. The Martin Bros. Container & Timber Products Corp., a Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Soderhamn MacHine Manufacturing Company, a Corporation v. The Martin Bros. Container & Timber Products Corp., a Corporation, 415 F.2d 1058 (9th Cir. 1969).

Opinion

HUFSTEDLER, Circuit Judge:

Soderhamn Machine Manufacturing Company (“Soderhamn”) brought this action against The Martin Bros. Timber & Container Corp. (“Martin”) for the unpaid balance on a contract by which Soderhamn agreed to install a log debarking and chipper system at Martin’s plywood plant and sawmill in Oakland, Oregon. Martin counterclaimed for damages allegedly incurred by reason of Soderhamn’s defective performance of the contract. Following a prolonged trial, the District Court entered judgment for Martin in the amount of $120,716.25, the amount of damages found to have been caused by Soder-hamn’s defective performance less the unpaid balance due on the contract. Soderhamn appeals, contesting the sufficiency of the evidence to support the judgment on the counterclaim. Federal jurisdiction was founded on diversity.

The system which Soderhamn agreed to install consisted of machinery designed to remove bark from logs before they are sawed, to saw logs to be made into plywood, and to chip and remove the resulting debris. Here is the layout : A large conveyor brings logs out of the mill pond and onto a deck where the logs are to be debarked by a Soderhamn debarker. A “kicker” system is used to separate those logs to be used for plywood from those for the sawmill. Logs for the sawmill are kicked back into the pond, and logs for plywood are kicked across the deck to be cut by a series of saws. The smaller plywood lengths, after cutting, are kicked back into the pond or taken away by fork lift. One convey- or runs under the debarker and another under the saws to collect waste. These two conveyors empty into a third which carries the waste to a pulverizing machine called a “hog.” The resulting debris is taken to a bin and metered through a pneumatic system to the burner. Large pieces of waste material are fed into two “chippers,” reducing them into smaller chips for sale to paper mills. Another pneumatic system con *1060 veys these chips to waiting railroad cars.

Soderhamn installed the system, 1 and Martin paid $423,186.42 of the $484,-582.40 contract price. Martin claimed that the system failed to fulfill the contract, and this action followed.

In upholding Martin’s counterclaim for damages for defective performance, the District Court made extensive findings of fact relating to a number of the elements of the log debarking-chipping installation. The findings resolved three issues of fact as to each element: (1) what did the contract require? (2) did Soderhamn’s performance meet the contract’s requirements? and (3) if not, what expenses were reasonably incurred by Martin in order to make the installation conform to the contract ? 2 We review the findings seriatim. The scope of our review is, of course, limited to determining whether the findings are “clearly erroneous.” Fed.R.Civ.Proc. rule 52(a). We cannot overturn a finding unless, after considering the entire evidence, we are left with the definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed. (Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Research, Inc., 395 U.S. 100, 89 S.Ct. 1562, 23 L.Ed.2d 129 (May 19, 1969).)

1. Barker Foundation Structure

The District Court found that Soder-hamn agreed to install a barker foundation structure, that the structure as installed was defective, and that Martin reasonably expended $11,609.73 for labor and materials in order to make the structure conform to the contract. Although there were conflicts in the testimony about the adequacy of the structure built by Soderhamn, we cannot say that the District Court’s finding on the issue is clearly erroneous.

The finding of $11,609.73 damages was based primarily on a number of invoices allegedly covering welding and bracing of the barker structure. It was clear error to include invoice D 1141, to-talling $3084.32 because this invoice unmistakably covers work unconnected with the barker foundation structure. The finding is corrected by reducing the damages from $11,609.73 to $8525.41.

2. Log Haul Drive

The District Court found that Soder-hamn agreed to construct a log haul, that the log haul as installed was defective, and that Martin reasonably expended $2969.03 to make the structure conform to the contract. None of these findings is clearly erroneous.

3. Kickers, Kicker Shafts, and Kicker Arms

The District Court found that Soder-hamn agreed to install a kicker system, that the kicker system as installed was defective, and that Martin reasonably expended $5480.38 to make the system conform to the contract.

Although the finding that the kicker system was defective can be sustained, the finding of damages is reduced by $53.13, the amount expended by Martin in routine maintenance work, which cannot be attributed to the defects. The finding is corrected by reducing the award for this item from $5480.38 to $5427.25.

4. Transfer Deck, Walkways, and Stairways

The District Court found that Soder-hamn agreed to install a steel transfer *1061 deck with steel walkways and stairways, that Soderhamn proposed to install a wooden transfer deck, and that Martin installed a steel deck with steel walkways and stairways, incurring $4,116.00 in labor and materials for the steel deck over and above the reasonable cost of a wooden deck, and $2348.00 for steel walkways and stairways.

The written agreement did not specify the type of materials to be used. It provided: “This deck to be furnished and installed as shown, to receive debarked logs and transport them horizontally to the gang cut-off saws.” But the drawings show the decking to be 3-inch planks, a figure later changed by Martin’s agent to 4-inch planks. There is no evidence that the parties contemplated steel, rather than wood, when the contract was executed. Rather, the evidence is that Martin changed its mind after the contract was executed because its insurer had informed Martin that steel would be required for insurance purposes. Martin, not Soderhamn, must bear the cost of the changes.

5. Concrete Pits Under Hog and Surge Bin

The District Court found that Soder-hamn agreed to construct concrete or steel pits beneath the hog, surge bin, and feeder, that Soderhamn failed to construct such pits, and that Martin reasonably expended $1,833.10 in order to make the structure conform to the contract.

The contract contains no express provision for these pits, and the evidence does not support a finding that these pits were necessary to the unit as it was conceived in the contract. On the contrary, the evidence indicates that the pits became necessary only after Martin’s postcontract decision to move the hog closer to the saw conveyor. The District Court’s finding that Soderhamn agreed to construct these pits is clearly erroneous. The finding of $1833.10 in damages for this item is clearly erroneous.

6. Sheer Aprons

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
415 F.2d 1058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/soderhamn-machine-manufacturing-company-a-corporation-v-the-martin-bros-ca9-1969.