Twombly Tree Experts, Inc. v. United States

168 Ct. Cl. 921, 1964 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 212, 1964 WL 8605
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedDecember 11, 1964
DocketNo. 175-62
StatusPublished

This text of 168 Ct. Cl. 921 (Twombly Tree Experts, Inc. 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
Twombly Tree Experts, Inc. v. United States, 168 Ct. Cl. 921, 1964 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 212, 1964 WL 8605 (cc 1964).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This case is before the court on plaintiff’s motions for summary judgment, or, in the alternative, to sus[923]*923pend proceedings pending further action by. the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals, and defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment, having been submitted on the briefs of the parties and oral argument of counsel.

The plaintiff is a small Maryland corporation, engaged primarily in the business of tree surgery.1

In February 1959, it undertook a fixed-price contract with the Department of the Air Force to “clear and grub 17.02 acres of ground on the golf course on the Andrews Air Force Base.” 2

The contract did not include “Changed Conditions” or “Suspension of Work” clauses of the sort commonly used in Standard Form 23 Construction Contracts. In essence it was an agreement to do a specified job within a specified time for a specified price.

It did contain a “Changes” clause under which the Contracting Officer might, by a written order, require additional work, or change the time required for performance, and might make equitable adjustments in the contract price in case such changes caused an increase in the cost of performance.

It included also a “Default” clause that excused the contractor from liability for excess costs in case of a termination for default resulting from causes beyond the contractor’s control.3

The contract also contained a typical “Disputes” clause making administrative decisions as to disputed questions of [924]*924fact (but not administrative decisions as to questions of law) conclusive unless found by a court to be fraudulent, capricious, arbitrary, so grossly erroneous as necessarily to imply bad faith, or not supported by substantial evidence.4

According to the terms of the contract, the job was to be finished late in April 1959, 60 days after the plaintiff received the notice to proceed on February 25,1959.

When the work commenced, the ground was frozen. The operation proceeded well until sometime in March. Thereafter the work was delayed. Initially, through March, April, and part of May, the delay was caused by thawing and rains which created a condition in the soil of the work area that impeded, and, at times, stopped the operation of the bulldozer the plaintiff was using and, when the bulldozer could be operated, impaired its effectiveness as a means of removing standing vegetation and extracting stumps and roots.5

Later, after the ground had dried, additional delays were caused by difficulties in getting equipment back on the job and by the necessity of removing trees belatedly designated for removal by the Government’s representatives.

The time for performance was repeatedly extended, and the work was finally completed and accepted in October 1959, about 6 months after the original completion date. The plaintiff was paid the full contract price.

[925]*925The plaintiff claims compensation additional to the contract price, however, on the ground that it was required by the defendant’s representatives to do more than it contracted to do.

The amounts it claims, and the alleged bases for them are:

1. Additional costs resulting from the defendant’s insistence that the plaintiff continue work when the work area had become a “quagmire”___$2,861.75
2. Costs of renting a “chipper” to dispose of material cleared from the area ($375) and sharpening chipper blades ($20), both necessitated by refusal of the defendant’s representatives to permit trucks to cross wet fairways to reach designated disposal areas_ 395.00
3. Cost of using a “brush hog,” in lieu of the bulldozer, at the “suggestion” of a Government representative, in an unsuccessful effort to clear and grub the work area when the bulldozer’s effectiveness was impaired by wet ground_ 80. 00
4. Cost of partially leveling a mound of earth in the work area_ 300. 00
5. Cost of removal of trees, belatedly designated by Government representatives for removal_ 408. 00
6. Cost of clearing and grubbing 1.68 acres in excess of the area covered by the contract 846.45
4,891.26
7. Profit at 10 percent on the foregoing operations_ 489.13
5,380. 39

Before it filed this suit, the plaintiff asserted its claims successively to the General Accounting Office, the Contracting Officer, and the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals.

On April 4, 1960, the General Accounting Office, by a “settlement certificate” (No. Z-2053811), denied the plaintiff’s claims, as they were presented to it.

[926]*926By a letter dated May 20, 1960, tbe Contracting Officer refused to exercise jurisdiction on the ground that the Comptroller General’s action foreclosed authority for further administrative decision on the claim.

■ The Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals acknowledged that the Comptroller' General’s decision limited its jurisdiction to some extent,6 but concluded that certain questions concerning the plaintiff’s claim had not been squarely presented to the General Accounting Office. It received and considered such evidence as the plaintiff offered at the two hearings before the Board, and decided on the merits all substantially contested questions affecting the plaintiff’s claims.7

The only question the Board specifically identified as beyond its jurisdiction was whether rain had been abnormally heavy in the spring and late winter of 1959. The Board held that the plaintiff had voluntarily submitted that issue to the General Accounting Office, and that the Comptroller General had conclusively decided it in the settlement certificate of April 4,1960.

The Board accepted, however, the plaintiff’s contention that during those months when the original terms of the contract required the work to be done, the work area became a “quagmire” and caused bulldozer operation to be slow, costly, and, in some places, impossible. There is no indication that the plaintiff now quarrels with the Board’s concurrence in the Comptroller General’s decision that the quantity of rain which contributed to. that condition was less than normal in March 1959 and slightly more than normal in April.

Having defined the issues it deemed itself barred from considering so narrowly as to leave itself free to decide "all seriously controverted issues affecting the plaintiff’s, claim, the Board received the evidence the plaintiff offered and rendered a comprehensive decision on the merits of each item of-its claim. ■ • .

[927]*927On three items, it sustained the plaintiff’s appeal and allowed recovery, including 10 percent profit on each. On the other three, it denied recovery.

The additional amounts allowed by the Board were as follows:

2.8 $375 as cost of rental of a “chipper,” $20 as cost of sharpening the chipper blades, and $39.50 as 10 percent profit on the total- $434. 50
5.

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Related

United States v. Carlo Bianchi & Co.
373 U.S. 709 (Supreme Court, 1963)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
168 Ct. Cl. 921, 1964 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 212, 1964 WL 8605, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/twombly-tree-experts-inc-v-united-states-cc-1964.