Steele v. United States

113 U.S. 128, 5 S. Ct. 396, 28 L. Ed. 952, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1659
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJanuary 19, 1885
Docket1138
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 113 U.S. 128 (Steele v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of the United States primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Steele v. United States, 113 U.S. 128, 5 S. Ct. 396, 28 L. Ed. 952, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1659 (1885).

Opinion

Me. Justice Woods

delivered the opinion of the court.

The appellant was the claimant in the Court of Claims. He. brought his suit April 30, 1880, to recover from the United States the sum of $3,400 for plumbing done by him on the United States Steantship Quinnebaug under a contract made with I. Hanscom, the'Chief of the Bureau of Construction and Repair of the Navy Department, on behalf of the government, in the year 1875. There was no dispute that there was due to him on his contract for work done the sum sued for. The controversy arose on a plea of cross-demand, filed by the United States, which alleged that the officers of the government delivered to the appellant a large amount of old material to be utilized and reworked by him for the plumbing of . the Quinnebaug; that a small portion of the material thus, delivered he reworked for that purpose, but the greater portion thereof ; . . he sold to third parties, realizing therefrom . the sum of $20,000.

■ The Court of Claims found that during the spring and summer of the year 1875, there were delivered to the appellant, by R. W. Steele, who was a naval constructor in the United States Navy, 103,949.. pounds of old material resulting from the *130 breaking up of certain monitors; that beforé such delivery there had been no survey or inspection of the old material, and that of the amount so delivered the appellant sold and disposed of 98,748 pounds, for which he received money and property to the amount of $8,975.56, and the residue was lost in breaking up, handling, and sorting. These findings fully established the cross-demand of the government for $8,975.56. . The court, therefore, in adjusting the controversy,- after charging the appellant with a payment on his claim of $3,900 and another item for $300, about neither of which there was any dispute, held him liable for the amount so received by him for the old material, which was sufficient to extinguish his claim' and leave a balance of. $3,575.56 due the United States. The court therefore rendered judgment against him for that amount, and from that judgment the present appeal is taken.

Upon the facts above stated, it is clear that the judgment of the Court of Claims was right. But the appellant insists that the other facts found by the court show that it was in error, and that its judgment should have been for the appellant for the amount of the claim for which his suit was brought. These facts were as follows: In the. latter part of March or early in April, 1875, the appellant had an interview, in the city of Washington, with Isaiah Hanscom, Chief of the Bureau of Construction and Repair in- the Navy Department, at which the .two came to some verbal understanding that the appellant was to do the necéssary plumbing on the United States Steamship Quinnebaug, which was then on the ways in the Philadelphia Navy Yard, and that Hanscom gave the appellant verbal instructions to go on with the work. In the same interview the matter of using on the Quinnebaug old material taken out of other véssels was talked of, and Hanscom spoke of the material £ts being worth $2,000, but it did not appear what material or what quantity of material was referred to. Afterwards, on April 6,1875, the appellant-wrote a letter to- Hanscom, in which he offered to furnish all the material and labor necessary for the plumbing of the Quinnebaug for $14,500, and take m whole or part payment any brass or lead from old vessels that he could use for that purpose.

*131 On the receipt of this letter, Hanscom directed Edward Hartt, who was a naval constructor on duty at the Philadelphia Navy Yard, to draw up specifications for the plumbing to be done ' on the Quinnebaug, and to solicit proposals therefor. Proposals were accordingly called for and received by the Bureau of Construction and Bepair, but the proposal contained in the appellant’s letter of April 6th was the lowest bid for the work.

On April 15, 1875, Hanscom sent an order in writing to Naval Constructor B. ~W. Steele tQ have all the old lead, brass and composition arising from the breaking up of the monitors, naming them, weighed, boxed up, and sent to Philadelphia, and to report the amount to the Bureau. The officer to whom the order was addressed, interpreting it as authority from the Bureau to deliver to the appellant the old material therein referred to, delivered it to him, and the appellant received the 103,949 pounds of such material heretofore mentioned as' the property of file United States. On July 9, 1875, Naval Constructor B. W. Steele wrote to Hanscom that he had delivered the old material to the appellant, that it was estimated to be worth $2,000, which sum would be deducted from the first payment due him for his work. He added : “ I beg to say that it was impossible to arrive at a satisfactory estimate of its value when appraised; there was much alloy ,and dirt mixed with it, and the cost of transportation and labor in separating and preparing it for use is not known, which makes it necessary to correct the value after I obtain full information on the subject, and before His contract is completed and adjusted.” Naval Constructor Steele was led to put this estimate upon the value of the old material by the statement made to him by Naval Constructor Hartt, who was superintending the plumbing on the Quinnebaug, that he supposed its value to be $2,000. But it did not appear that Hartt had ever seen any of the 103,949 pounds of old material, but he assumed its value to be $2,000, and so set it down in an . account book in his office, and so charged it against the Appellant in the settlement of the account of -the latter.

On July 30, 1875, Hanscom, as Chief of the Bureau of Construction and Bepair, wroté to the appellant declining his proposal to do the plumbing work on the Quinnebaug for $14,500, *132 and offered to pay him therefor the sum of $12,000, but with the following stipulation: “ The old materials the government will furnish you to be reworked', which have accumulated from the breaking up of the light-draft monitors,” naming them, will go towards the materials used in this workthe balance to be paid in two equal payments, in money, on the certificate of the naval constructor superintending the work that the work is satisfactorily completed, according to the specifications which will be furnished.” The appellant accepted this proposition by letter, dated August 2, 1875. There ivas no proof' that he did any work on the Quinnebaug until after this correspondence.

Upon these facts the contention of the appellant is that the court should have charged him with the value of the old material at $2,000, and not at $8,975.56. This contention is based on the ground that Naval Constructor R. W. Steele, in his letter to Hanscom, dated July 9,1875, estimated the old material, delivered to the appellant, to be worth $2,000, and stated tkht this sum would be deducted from his first payment, and that Naval Constructor Hartt so charged it against him at that sum in the settlement of appellant’s account.

• We think this an inadequate reason for allowing the appellant to appropriate for $2,000 property of the United States, which it is shown he disposed of for $8,975.56.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
113 U.S. 128, 5 S. Ct. 396, 28 L. Ed. 952, 1885 U.S. LEXIS 1659, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/steele-v-united-states-scotus-1885.