South Boston Iron Works v. United States

34 Ct. Cl. 174, 1899 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 105, 1800 WL 2141
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJanuary 23, 1899
DocketNo. 16790
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 34 Ct. Cl. 174 (South Boston Iron Works 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
South Boston Iron Works v. United States, 34 Ct. Cl. 174, 1899 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 105, 1800 WL 2141 (cc 1899).

Opinion

WeldoN, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court:

The claimant is a corporation under the laws of the State of Massachusetts, and doing business in the city of Boston.

By the act of March 3, 1883, chapter 96, for testing 12-inch cast-iron breech-loading cannon, a sum of money was appropriated for the manufacture of that class of ordnance. In pursuance of the power given by said act, communication was opened by the proper officer of^the defendants with the claimant for the purpose of having manufactured the kind and description of cannon contemplated by the act.

It is alleged that up to the time of the passage of the statute no such cannon had been manufactured, and the proposition to make such guns of cast iron was as to the claimant and the defendants experimental; that after the correspondence between the parties it was understood and agreed that the [198]*198experiment should be made, and that the defendants should not be at any more expense than the actual cost of such experiments ; no profit was to be allowed for the use of the claimant’s plant, and claimant was to rely upon future business to recompense it in the manufacture of guns which thereafter might be made for the defendants.

It is alleged that it was understood between the parties that, as the casting was experimental, the defendants were to reimburse the claimant for any outlay which it might be subjected to in the experiment; that with such understanding claimant put its plant in order for the work comtemplated; thereafter a contract was submitted to claimant by defendants; such contract cast upon claimant the risk of the experiment, whereupon it refused to sign the agreement upon the ground that it would rather abandon the expense which it had incurred than to assume the rest of the experiment. After such refusal and further correspondence, to wit, on the 24th of September, 1883, a contract for five guns was submitted, with the explanation that so far as the initial tension was concerned, the defendants would assume the responsibility, and its ordnance officer would be present and regulate the cooling’ process and the casting of the guns; that the cooling process, in pursuance of such arrangement, was under the personal direction of an ordnance officer of the defendants.

It is also alleged that in casting the guns the process was under the direction of said officer, and notwithstanding the suggestion of the officers of the claimant against the mode of casting, the officer in charge required that the guns should be cast with the “breech downward,” instead of the “breech upward,” as urged by the officers and agent of claimant.

As to the execution of the contract, the claimant alleges that, relying upon the explanations and inducements of several letters, it entered into the agreement on the 24th of September, as set forth in the fourth finding, with the understanding and agreement that as the casting of the guns was experimental, and at a price affording no profit, said casting was to be made at the sole risk and cost of the defendants.

It is further alleged as to the casting of one of the guns in the contract mentioned, to wit, in July, 1884, that against the judgment and protest of the claimant, it was required to be cast “ breech down,” instead of “ breech up.”

[199]*199It is farther alleged that by tbe terms of tbe contract tbe defendants were to furnish tbe flasks in which tbe gun was to be molded, and that tbe flasks so furnished were weak and unfit for tbe work, and so deficient that they were unable to sustain tbe weight of metal,- and when the casting was attempted to be made “breech down” the flask gave way and destroyed the casting and rendered the labor and material a total loss.

It is also alleged, as an additional grievance, that in December, 1884, the claimant further attempted to cast the gun under the direction of an ordnance officer of the defendants, whose duty it was to regulate the flow of water during the casting, so as to control tbe initial tension. That for such purpose he was in charge; the gun was cast “breech down,” not in accordance with the recommendation of your petitioner; that during the casting the ordnance officer failed to control the cooling process properly, but permitted the metal to chill or in some other manner to fail to adhere to the previous layers, and so produced cracks and crevices which rendered the gun valueless ; that the gun was placed in the lathe and developed cracks and crevices originating from the failure of the officer of the defendants to properly regulate the flow of water in the cooling process, and in consequences thereof the same was worthless.

Itis alleged that cost and expense of the unsuccessful attempts in July and December was the sum of $35,000, which was laid out and expended by claimant.

The twenty-second clause of the petition asks a reformation of the contract, so as to conform with the alleged agreement of the parties in casting the cost of the experimental work upon the United States.

These are the substantial allegations of the claimant’s cause of action, and from them it is to be deduced that a recovery is sought for the unsuccessful casting of the guns because of the general liability of the defendants to bear the expense of the experiment, and the further liability based on the improper interference and incompetent discharge of duty of the ordnance officer of the defendant in charge of tbe experimental casting, and the insufficiency of the flasks furnished by the defendants under the contract.

It is insisted by claimant that by the terms of the agreement as construed in the light of tbe antecedent correspondence, the [200]*200cost of an unsuccessful experiment was to be borne by tbe defendants, and that the contract is to be reformed in effect to that extent. The provisions of the contract affected by this contention relate to the casting of the “ 12-inch breech-loading rifled gun finished in readiness for the insertion of a wire wrapped steel tube and breech-bushing shall be made breech down ” specified as the fourth in the series of the contract.

It is insisted, in connection with the terms of the agreement, that as to that gun there shall be inserted as a part of the agreement in effect the words “at the risk of the United States.”

The findings show that as to that gun there were two unsuccessful efforts made, one in July, 1884, and the other in December, 1884, and for the cost of those two failures' this action is prosecuted.

Since the passage of the act of March 3, 1887 (24 Stat. L., 505), tiiis court has been clothed with equity power sufficient to deal with the question of the reformation of a contract, so as to effectuate the full intention of the parties, and the only question for us to determine in that connection is, was there a mutual mistake made in the reduction of the agreement to the terms employed in the exemplification of the written instrument?

The contract was executed by the Chief of Ordnance of the United States and the president of the company, between whom, as appears in the findings, the most, if not all the negotiations were conducted antecedent to the making of the written instrument. The testimony of the Chief of Ordnance was not taken, owing to his sickness and death, and it does not appear from the testimony of the president of the company that he signed the contract in the belief that it embodied in terms that the experiment as to the casting of the gun was to be at the risk of the defendants.

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Bluebook (online)
34 Ct. Cl. 174, 1899 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 105, 1800 WL 2141, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-boston-iron-works-v-united-states-cc-1899.