Tennessee Products & Chemical Corp. v. United States

108 F. Supp. 271, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2248
CourtDistrict Court, M.D. Tennessee
DecidedNovember 18, 1952
DocketCiv. Nos. 976, 977
StatusPublished

This text of 108 F. Supp. 271 (Tennessee Products & Chemical Corp. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, M.D. Tennessee primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Tennessee Products & Chemical Corp. v. United States, 108 F. Supp. 271, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2248 (M.D. Tenn. 1952).

Opinion

DAVIES, District Judge.

The above entitled consolidated cases were heard before the Court on July 22 and 23, 1952.

The causes were submitted upon the pleadings, evidence, exhibits, and argument of counsel for plaintiff and defendant, and, after due consideration thereof, the Court enters its Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law, as follows:

Findings of Fact

1. Plaintiff is a corporation incorporated under the laws of the State of Tennessee, having its principal office and place of business in the City of Nashville, County of Davidson, State of Tennessee, and in the Middle District of Tennessee. Effective June 1, 1947, plaintiff changed its name from Tennessee Products Corporation to Tennessee Products & Chemical Corporation.

2. These two actions which have been consolidated are brought under the “Tuckr er Act,” subparagraph (2) of paragraph (a) of sec. 1346 of Title 28 of the United States Code, effective September 1, 1948, as revised, codified and enacted into law by Act of June 25, 1948, Chapter 646, Public. Law 773.

3. Around the end of the year 1943, Mr. E. A. Adams, Director of the Rural Industries Branch of the War Manpower Commission of the United States Government, suggested to the plaintiff that the plaintiff employ enemy prisoners of war in cutting logs into suitable lengths for chemical wood near Hohenwald, Lewis County, Tennessee, and loading the chemical wood on trucks and cars for transportation to the plaintiff’s plant at Lyles-Wrigley, Tennes[272]*272see. Throughout the war said plant of the plaintiff was classified as a munitions plant and its products were on allocation, but despite this the plaintiff’s plant was short on the supply of chemical wood necessary to its operation due to the inability of the plaintiff to obtain sufficient free labor in the cutting of chemical wood. Mr. Adams, as representative of the War Manpower Commission, assured the plaintiff that the cost of prisoner of war labor would be equivalent to the cost of free labor performing the same services.

4. Relying on said assurance, the plaintiff entered into negotiations for the employment of prisoner of war labor with Mr. Adams, as representative of the War Manpower Commission, and with various representatives of the United States Army, during which it was agreed that the plaintiff would furnish free to the defendant a camp site near Lawrenceburg, Tennessee, for approximately 300 enemy prisoners of war and would run utilities, such as electric power, telephone and water and sewerage, to the camp site at which, point the Government would take the utilities and run them into camp and pay the cost of the.utilities; that the plaintiff might have to expend not more than $2500 for labor 'and materials in building a camp and that the plaintiff would be reimbursed for such housing costs at the rate of 2% per month and would be reimbursed in full for the cost of all utilities used at the camp and paid for by the plaintiff. It was agreed that the Government would put up a security fence and guard towers without assistance from the plaintiff.

5. On or about Ja/nuary 10, 1944, the War Manpower Commission of the United States Government certified plaintiff’s need for the employment of a minimum of 150 prisoners of war for a period of twelve months or for the war duration at a price of $2.25 per cord. This certification and the revised certification dated May 4, 1944, are in evidence. In paragraph 8 of the certification it is provided that “the price to be paid is equivalent to the cost of the job if done by free labor at wages prevailing in the locality for similar work.”

6. On or about April 17, 1944, the camp was completed, after both the United States Army and the plaintiff had contributed labor and materials to the construction thereof. The cost to the plaintiff of the labor and materials furnished by it for the construction of the camp, exclusive of the cost of the camp site, was $8,353.53.

7. From April 20, 1944, until September 15, 1945, the major portion of the prisoners of war stationed, at said camp were employed by plaintiff for the cutting and loading of chemical wood under the following contracts between plaintiff and defendant: W-40-095-PMG-6501, W-40-095-PMG-6517, W-40-095-PMG-6526, and W-40-095-PMG-6530, dated April 20, 1944, January 1, 1945, July 1, 1945, and August 16, 1945, respectively. (Plaintiff’s Exhibits B-l, B-2, B-3, and B-4.) During the period covered by said four contracts, from April 20, 1944, until September 15, 1945, the plaintiff paid the defendant the full contract price for all the work performed by the prisoners of war, amounting to a total of $94,082.13.

8. The first of sáid contracts (Plaintiff’s Exhibit B-l), covering the period April 20, 1944, to December 31, 1944, provided in Schedule A, attached thereto, that “transportation will be furnished by the contracting officer from the temporary prisoner of war camp to operation.” This was an agreement by the defendant to furnish the transportation of the prisoners of war and the guards from the prisoner of war camp-.to the work site and return. The uncon-troverted proof shows that the defendant breached the contract by failure to transport the prisoners of war and guards as it agreed to do, and it was so conceded in open-court by the United States District Attorney.

9. The plaintiff (not the defendant or the defendant’s contracting- officer) supplied the transportation for the prisoners of war and guards from the temporary prisoner of war camp to the place of operation, throughout the term of said first contract (Plaintiff’s Exhibit B-l), from April 20, 1944, until December 31, 1944. During such-period the plaintiff employed seven trucks, and drivers in the transportation of prison[273]*273ers of war and their guards over a distance of approximately forty miles a day on approximately twenty days each month, or a total of 170 days. Plaintiff’s average cost for such transportation amounted to $40.66 per day, or a total of $6,912.20.

10. None of said contracts -between the plaintiff and the defendant (Plaintiff’s Exhibits B-l to B-4, inclusive) obligated the plaintiff to furnish housing for the prisoners of war employed by it or to furnish any utilities used at the prisoner of war camp, nor did any of said contracts expressly provide that the plaintiff should be remunerated for the. cost of housing or utilities furnished by it to the prisoner of war camp. The total ’amount of $94,082.13 which the plaintiff paid the defendant under said contracts for the employment of prisoners of war was intended by the plaintiff and the defendant to be equivalent to what the cost of the work would have been if such work had been done by free labor at wages prevailing in the locality for similar work. It was not customary for the plaintiff or any other employers in the locality to furnish housing or utilities to free labor engaged in similar work.

11. The War Manpower Commission would never have approved or certified the need for the employment of prisoners of war by the plaintiff if the plaintiff had had to pay any part of the expense of constructing the camp or for utilities furnished the camp since this would have made prisoner of war labor cost more than free labor would have cost the plaintiff.

12.

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Related

United States as defendant
28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(2)

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Bluebook (online)
108 F. Supp. 271, 1952 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 2248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tennessee-products-chemical-corp-v-united-states-tnmd-1952.