United States ex rel. Soby v. Johnson

147 F. Supp. 523, 16 Alaska 601, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4258
CourtDistrict Court, D. Alaska
DecidedJanuary 9, 1957
DocketCiv. No. A-10628
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 147 F. Supp. 523 (United States ex rel. Soby v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Alaska 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. Soby v. Johnson, 147 F. Supp. 523, 16 Alaska 601, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4258 (D. Alaska 1957).

Opinion

McCARREY, District Judge.

In substance, this is an action by an individual painting subcontractor against the prime contractor under 40 U.S.C.A. § 270a et seq.,. more popularly referred to as the “Miller Act”.

The case was tried before the court and with the pre-trial conference consumed 18 days, during which time some 90 exhibits were admitted, with myriads of some 110 sub-divisional exhibits, such as change orders, modifications, invoices, correspondence, etc., while 26 witnesses were called, a number of them being called several times.

The plaintiff entered into two sub-painting contracts with the defendant Kuney Johnson Company, a partnership prime contractor. One was known as the Ladd contract and the other as the Eielson contract.

The scope of the work to be performed under the Ladd contract, known as DA-95-507-eng-384, by the plaintiff, was for the “painting of 14 eight-family quarters including the washing of the windows but not including the painting of the kitchen cabinets or the finishing of the wood floors, $78,293.00, taping all of the plaster board for such job, $30,-820.00”, for a total of $109,113. The scope of the work to be performed under the Eielson contract, known as DA-95-507-eng-385, was for the furnishing of all the labor, material, equipment and services required to perform all the painting and taping of five 3-story airmen dormitory buildings and one 1-story mess and administration combination building, being constructed by the prime contractor, in the lump sum of $95,070, subject to certain specific deductions (which are not material to the determination of this case) if they were approved by the contracting officer.

These contracts are more in the form of purchase orders than standard form contracts, and are classic examples of false concepts of economy as to legal assistance.

In plaintiff’s first cause of action he sued the defendants for $102,160.80 for damages he allegedly sustained in performance of his contracts with the defendants, due to their use of improperly sized and applied sheetrock and because the defendants used lumber containing moisture content in excess of that allowable in the specifications, resulting in shrinkage, warping and structural movement of the buildings, thus causing him to do additional work and in several instances, to completely do his work over a number of times, which deprived him of the profit he normally would have made had the defendants com[525]*525plied with the specifications of the contract.

On the second cause of action, the plaintiff sued the defendants for $31,-501.59 by way of special damages he allegedly sustained in the payment of taxes, penalty, interest, travel expenses and loss on taping contract, and for extra equipment rental which he had to pay upon his contract for the same reasons.

The defendant Kuney Johnson Company counterclaims for $81,009.85 on the Ladd contract, for damages it allegedly sustained because of plaintiff’s willful failure to complete his contract, and, in a second cause of action, for the sum of $53,955.43 on the Eielson contract for the same reasons as on the Ladd, and for the additional sum of $4,839.39 which the defendant contractor either had paid or was legally required to pay in order to protect its credit for supplies, labor and materials of claims filed with the defendant which were purportedly obligations of the plaintiff. This claim was subsequently dismissed upon oral motion made by the defendants.

The additional defendant, United States Fidelity and Guaranty Company is plaintiff’s bondsman.

The plaintiff Eric Soby was born in Denmark and completed four years of apprenticeship before emigrating to Canada in 1928. He later moved to the United States where he was engaged in painting most of the time, coming to Alaska in 1950, where he continued to be employed in the painting business. These two contracts were his first jobs of such proportions.

Work was commenced by the plaintiff on or about the 11th day of June 1053, and because of his inability to obtain the number and quality of tapers in Alaska at that time, he flew to Seattle and entered into another subcontract with one Minor Bottorff, who was to do all of his taping for 3%£ per foot.

Portions of the taping were performed by a taping machine which was relatively new in use in Alaska, but which had been in use in the states for several years.

Since the plaintiff had other painting contracts at the time, he placed one Garfield Carlson in direct charge of the work as general superintendent, under his supervision, who remained in this capacity until he was fired by defendants on the 23rd day of October 1953, at which time one Harry Garvik, son-in-law of the plaintiff, took over, with one Ballard Dean, who was foreman under Carlson, being directly in charge of painting from that date forward.

While plaintiff made frequent trips to Fairbanks to oversee the work, the work was always under the immediate supervision of another person.

Plaintiff had between six and eight men on the job most of the time, however, at one time he had a peak employment of 34 employees.

Harry Garvik had been sent by the plaintiff to Fairbanks on June 12, 1953, and had worked in the office, handling the payroll, correspondence, and signing most of the checks until October 23,1953, when Carlson was fired.

Some of the items were painted in Seattle (i. e. the doors) prior to their shipment to the job site.

The plaintiff had labor problems arise at these jobs on at least three occasions.

The defendant Kuney Johnson Company had been engaged in the construction business for a number of years and had commenced its first construction work in Alaska in 1948. The company, in fact, had built one eight-family unit similar to the one specified in contract 384, the previous year (1952) for the Alaska Communications System at Ladd Field, Fairbanks, Alaska.

The plaintiff ordered the lumber to be used on the project in December 1952 from Newport, Oregon, and had it shipped to Alaska, where most of it arrived the latter part of March or the first part of April 1953 (plaintiff’s exhibit 6). The plaster board, generally referred to in the building trade as sheetrock, was shipped from the states via boat to Seward, [526]*526thence by rail to Fairbanks, as was also the lumber. There were some 430,976 square feet of plaster board originally ordered, of which 208,104 square feet were damaged enroute, due to extremely heavy seas and winds which were encountered by the vessel enroute to Alaska. As a result, the cargo shoring was broken which allowed the cargo to shift (plaintiff’s exhibits 10 and 11).

The plaintiff took the position throughout the trial that the moisture content in the lumber used by the general contractor was excessive and above the minimum set forth in the specifications, and that after it had been installed in place it shrank, which shrinking pulled the sheetrock and taping, necessitating his repainting and retaping his work excessively. His witnesses further testified that the damaged sheetrock was not properly culled and, further, that it was not properly applied, which caused a most unusual amount of “popping of nails”, a term commonly applied in the application of sheetrock when it pulls away from the studs.

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Bluebook (online)
147 F. Supp. 523, 16 Alaska 601, 1957 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 4258, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-ex-rel-soby-v-johnson-akd-1957.