United States Ex Rel. Baltimore Brick Co. v. John A. Johnson & Sons, Inc.

65 F. Supp. 514
CourtDistrict Court, D. Maryland
DecidedMay 2, 1945
DocketCivil Action 2364
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 65 F. Supp. 514 (United States Ex Rel. Baltimore Brick Co. v. John A. Johnson & Sons, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States Ex Rel. Baltimore Brick Co. v. John A. Johnson & Sons, Inc., 65 F. Supp. 514 (D. Md. 1945).

Opinion

WILLIAM C. COLEMAN, District Judge.

This is a suit under the Miller Act § 1, 40 U.S.C.A. § 270a, brought by the manufacturer and supplier of the material, Baltimore Bride Company, against the subcontractor, J. Friedman Company, and the general contractor’s surety, in connection with work, on a government project involving the construction of certain dormitories and other buildings at Jarboesville, St. Mary’s County, Maryland.

For the reasons about to be stated I find that the Brick Company is entitled to recover in this case the amount of its claim, namely, $5,655.20, with interest from the date of suit, namely, October 14, 1944.

There is a written contract in this case by which the parties must be controlled, represented by the letter of the subcontractor to the Brick Company, dated December 27, 1943, and by the letter of implied acceptance of Mr. Brown, President of the ¿Brick Company, dated January 10, 1944, sent to the subcontractor.

The letter first referred to, from the subcontractor, after reciting that the contract contemplated between the parties has been signed and is enclosed, covering the order for the brick, reads as follows:

“Will you please send a letter in quadruplicate to John A. Johnson & Sons, Inc., Pearson, Maryland (the contractor) and one copy to us stating that the brick that you are delivering complies with the following :

“ ‘Brick shall be new common brick made from clay or shale and comply with A. S. T. M. Specification C-62-41T, Grade MW.’ ”

The amount and grade of brick had been previously determined, as disclosed by the order form of the Baltimore Brick Company signed by the subcontractor and accepted by the signature of Mr. Brown, of the Baltimore Brick Company. This order called for approximately 1,300,000 brick, either of Grade M common clay, dumped, at $20 per thousand, or Grade H common clay, dumped, at $27 per thousand, with no designation as to any particular quantity *517 of either; in other words, it was optional with the purchaser as to whether all of one grade was to be supplied, or some of each, and in what proportion.

In the letter of implied acceptance, with the warranty requirement just referred to, as requested in the subcontractor’s letter of December 27, 1943, Mr. Brown, President of the Brick Company, under date of January 10th, stated as follows: “This Company certifies that all the Grade ‘M’ Bricks that have been or will be delivered to you for the construction of the masonry work on the above mentioned project have been and will be in accordance with A. S. T. M. Specification C-62-T-41.”

In view of the contract between the parties, as evidenced by the writings just analyzed, I find that the Brick Company was not bound by the government contract and related specifications which covered the government proj ect. The Brick Company was not a party to that contract and specifications, and the knowledge that was brought home to the Brick Company with respect to the use of the brick was not in any sense to bind the Brick Company to any of the government requirements or specifications that might be contrary to the separate contract with the subcontractor, whatever the subcontractor’s obligation with respect to his main contractor might be, or the obligation of the main contractor to the Government. Therefore, for the purposes of this feature of the case, that is, the obligations of the three parties — and the only three parties now before us — the manufacturer and supplier of the material, the subcontractor and the surety, it is not material whether the brick met the requirements of the government contract or not.

The Brick Company sues for the unpaid purchase price, the brick having been delivered according to order and accepted, but later declared by the subcontractor to be subgrade and not in accordance with the warranty. Therefore, the only question before the Court in. the present suit is: has there been a breach of this warranty ?

Initially, it must be determined upon whom rests the burden of proof that there has been a breach. I find that this burden rests in the present case upon the defendant, the subcontractor, because the Brick Company has made delivery, all the bricks ordered were accepted, and must be paid for, but if the warranty has been breached, then the defendant may not be required to pay, or at least may recover under his counterclaim, against the purchase price as agreed. So we come at once to the question: Has the defendant sustained the burden of proof? I find from the weight of the credible evidence that the defendant has not, for the following reasons.

Since the subcontractor asked for a warranty of A. S. T. M. standards, it is obligatory upon him to show that those standards have not been met. The specifications for those standards call for samples to be taken by the purchaser, in the following language: “For purposes of tests, brick that are representative of the commercial product shall be selected by a competent person appointed by the purchaser, the place or places of selection to be designated when the purchase order is placed. The manufacturer or the seller shall furnish specimens for test without charge.”

If, as occurred in the present case, the subcontractor saw fit not to insist upon this form of procedure but to take an unverified certificate from the Brick Company, the subcontractor must be held to at least as strict proof as he would be held to if he had followed the specified procedure.

We then come to the question: What would that proof have been ? We find that the specification for these warranted standards, impliedly — though it is true not expressly — contemplate taking bricks that have been unweathered in the sense that they have not been weathered under conditions substantially different from those which would have existed had the brick been in place.

There is in evidence the complete analysis made in January by the Bureau of Standards of some twelve samples taken from a pile of brides which were among those delivered by the Brick Company at the project site. The subcontractor relies upon this analysis, and since it indicates— and the accuracy of it is not controverted — that three of the twelve bricks that were sampled did not meet the compressive strength requirement, in that they were below the allowable individual minimum of 2200 pounds, as required by the A. S. T. M. standards, the subcontractor says that in itsdf is a dear indication, apart from any *518 thing else, that there has been a breach of the warranty. However, these samples were taken from a pile that had been lying out in freezing winter weather for a considerable period of time, with many surfaces exposed that would not have been so exposed after being put in place in the buildings. Furthermore, the testimony is rather vague as to just what part of the pile these samples were taken from. All of them met all of the requirements of the A. S. T. M. test except three which, as has been stated, fell somewhat short of the minimum compressive strength requirement.

We are not willing to say that this analysis sufficiently meets the burden of proof imposed upon the subcontractor in order to satisfy the charge of breach of warranty.

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65 F. Supp. 514, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-baltimore-brick-co-v-john-a-johnson-sons-inc-mdd-1945.