Stone, Sand and Gravel Co. v. United States

234 U.S. 270, 34 S. Ct. 865, 58 L. Ed. 1308, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1148
CourtSupreme Court of the United States
DecidedJune 8, 1914
Docket302
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 234 U.S. 270 (Stone, Sand and Gravel Co. 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
Stone, Sand and Gravel Co. v. United States, 234 U.S. 270, 34 S. Ct. 865, 58 L. Ed. 1308, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1148 (1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lurton

delivered the opinion of the court.

This was an action by the United States against the Stone, Sand and Gravel Company, a corporation, hereinafter styled the contractor, and its surety, the American-Surety Company of New York, to recover the excess cost of completion of a certain contract for excavating 7,500,000 cubic yards of earth within certain designated localities in the work of improving the harbor of Vicksburg, Mississippi. For this work the United States' agreed to pay 8.49 cents per cubic yard as the work progressed and the contractor agreed to begin active work .on or before December 5, 1899, with sufficient force and plant for an output of not less than 260,000 cubic yards per month, to be increased on or before June 5, 1900 to a plant adequate for an output of 330,000 cubic yards per month. Subsequently, upon application of the contractor, the time for beginning was extended to January 24, 1900- While by *275 January 24 the contractor had made large expenditures in preparing to commence work it had not on that day assembled the necessary force or plant. For this reason the Chief of Engineers on the following day confirmed a prior, anticipatory, recommendation of the engineer in charge that the contract should be annulled. An application for an extension of time was denied by the Secretary of War and on March 7, 1900 formal notice was given to the contractor, as required by the contract, that it had failed to prosecute the work of excavation, etc., “in accordance with specifications and requirements . . . and the said contract is hereby annulled.” The work was relet at price of 12.4 cents per cubic yard, making an excess cost of $228,201.91, and an action was brought and judgment had against the contractor for that sum, minus a credit of $6,206.69, on account of certain voluntary work of an experimental character, which sum had been retained by the United States. There was also judgment against the Surety Company for $75,000, the full penalty of the bond.

The only breach of contract alleged was the failure to begin active operations on the day stipulated with a plant and force adequate to produce the monthly output required. The breach is confessed, but the error insisted upon here is that the contract, for such a breach, limits the measure of recovery to liquidated damages, namely, a -forfeiture of all money or retained percentages due or to become due under the contract, and that the court below erred in allowing as damages the excess cost of the work under the reletting.

The clauses of the contract which give rise to this contention occur in the standard form of contract used by the War Department, known as form 19, and are the same clauses construed by this court in- United States v. O’Brien, 220 U. S. 321. The clauses involved for purposes of reference may be described as clauses A and B. In clause A *276 it is expressly provided that if the contractor “fail to commence with the performance of the work on the day specified herein, or shall, in the judgment of the engineer in charge, fail to prosecute faithfully and diligently the work in accordance with the specifications and requirements of this contract, then, in either case, the party of the first part, or his successor legally appointed, shall have power, with the sanction of the Chief of Engineers, to annul this contract by giving notice in writing to that effect . . . and upon the giving of such notice, all money or reserve percentage due or to become due- ... by reason of this contract shall be and become forfeited to the United States. . . .”■ The engineer in charge is thereupon authorized, if an immediate performance of the work, “be, in his opinion, required by the public exigency, to proceed to provide for the same . . .”, as prescribed in § 3709, Revised Statutes.

Following clause A are three other clauses dealing with changes in the work, cost of extra work and liabilities for labor and material furnished. Then comes clause B, which reads as follows:

“It is further understood and agreed that in case of failure on the part of the party of -the second part to complete this contract as specified and agreed upon, that all sums due and percentage retained, shall thereby be forfeited to the United States, and that the said United States shall also have the right to recover any or all damages due to such failure in excess of the sums so forfeited and also to recover from the party of the second part, as part of said damages, whatever sums may be expended by the. party of the first part in completing the said contract, in excess of the price herein stipulated to be paid to the party of the second part for completing the same.”

That there was no abandonment of the contract by the ■ plaintiffs in error is too plain to need discussion. Large expenditures were made to get ready, and further exten *277 sions of time were sought both before and after notice of annulment. The explanation of the failure to get ready lies in the obvious fact that the contract was larger than the financial capacity of .'the contractor, and the United States was plainly within its contract right in putting it off the job and in reletting the work.

What is the measure of recovery against the contractor where the Government “annuls” the contract for failure to commence the work upon a stipulated day? The right to “annul,” that is, to prohibit the contractor from going on under the contract, is plainly conferred in two distinct cases by clause A, — first, when the contractor fails to begin upon the day stipulated, and, second, when, having commenced the work, the contractor fails, “in the judgment of the engineer in charge to prosecute the work faithfully and diligently.” In either case the same section specifically declares that upon the giving of the notice of annulment, “all money or reserve percentage due or to become due to the contractor . . . shall be and become forfeited to the United States.”

It is therefore obvious that if the right to annul this contract depends upon clause A, the measure of damages recoverable in this action is limited by that clause to the forfeiture of all moneys or retained percentages due or to become due under the contract. United States v. O’Brien, supra. This is plainly conceded in the brief of the Solicitor General.

To escape confession' of error in the judgment below, in So far as the United States was permitted to recover the excess cost of reletting the job, it has been argued that the right to annul the contract did not arise out of clause A, but was “a right inherent” in this and every other contract when time is of the essence, and that when there was, as in this case, a breach of an express agreement to begin the work upon a certain day, the- right to annul was complete; and upon annulment the right to *278 recover all actual damages followed. Of course, this so-called “inherent right” to annul a contract with the consequent right to recover all actual damages as for a complete breach, are rights supposed to arise not out of any express agreement but out of the . common law.

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Bluebook (online)
234 U.S. 270, 34 S. Ct. 865, 58 L. Ed. 1308, 1914 U.S. LEXIS 1148, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/stone-sand-and-gravel-co-v-united-states-scotus-1914.