United States of America, Intervenor v. Seaboard MacHinery Corporation

270 F.2d 817
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedNovember 25, 1959
Docket17238
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 270 F.2d 817 (United States of America, Intervenor v. Seaboard MacHinery Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States of America, Intervenor v. Seaboard MacHinery Corporation, 270 F.2d 817 (5th Cir. 1959).

Opinions

TUTTLE, Circuit Judge.

On December 14, 1951 Seaboard Machinery Corporation and the United States entered into a contract under which the United States leased to Seaboard specified equipment to be used at the shipyard of Seaboard in its plant at [818]*818Panama City, Florida. This contract was denominated an “Equipment Lease.” It provided for an annual rental payment of $9,074.79, later increased by $421.75 per year for additional equipment.

Included in the terms of the Equipment Lease was the following:

“9. The Hirer covenants and agrees to use the said machines in a careful and prudent manner during the term hereof, to keep and maintain the same in a good state of condition and repair, to replace and/or repair any and all damage thereto to the extent that upon the termination of this lease all of said machines shall be returned to the owner in as good condition as when the Hirer received the same saving only ordinary wear and tear, that is, deterioration resulting from normal use.”

During an extension of the lease, on December 22, 1952, the shipyard and a substantial portion of its contents were destroyed by fire. It must be taken on this record that such destruction was without fault or negligence on Seaboard’s part.

Seaboard had obtained three “special floater policies” which insured Seaboard (and only Seaboard) against loss including fire, of three specific lots of property. One of these policies, No. SFP33771, in the face amount of $100,000 covered movable equipment owned by Seaboard, another, No. SFP33777, in the face amount of $97,008.30 covered movable equipment owned by the United States and leased to Seaboard through General Services Administration. The third policy, No. SFP33799, in the face amount of $68,-374.80 covered equipment which was owned by the United States and leased to Seaboard through the Maritime Administration. This was the property whose loss gives rise to this litigation. It was in face amount equal to the original acquisition cost of the equipment to the United States.

Seaboard filed suit against the insurance company on the three policies. The United States Government intervened as a claimant to part of the proceeds expected to be recovered by Seaboard from the insurance company. A settlement was worked out between Seaboard and the insurance company, under the terms of which Seaboard was to receive $150,-000 on all three policies. Since the admitted loss under policy No. SFP33799 was $67,488.30, this amount of the total settlement was placed in escrow with a Tallahassee bank to protect the insurance company against any claim to all or part of this sum by the United States, acting through the Maritime Administration. Seaboard’s suit against the insurance company was then dismissed, leaving the litigation pending between Seaboard and the United States.

In the claim filed by the United States it was asserted that under the provisions of Paragraph 9, quoted above, and Paragraph 10,1 Seaboard became absolutely liable to respond to the Government upon its failure to replace the burned equipment. It was on this issue as to the meaning of these provisions of the contract that the case was tried by the district court after both parties filed affidavits suporting their respective motions for summary judgment. Both affidavits undertook to state the view of the respective affiants as to the meaning of these terms. There was thus before the court only the problem of construing the language of the written contract.

In a memorandum opinion the trial court examined the provisions in question, compared them with the bailment contract before this Court in R.F.C. v. Peterson Bros., 5 Cir., 160 F.2d 124, and [819]*819concluded that the obligation of Seaboard was merely that of an ordinary bailee for hire and was not enlarged by the requirements of Paragraph 9 that Seaboard “replace and/or repair any and all damage” to the leased property.

A careful consideration of the differences between the bailment agreement before the Court in the Peterson case and that which is before us here for construction, constrains us to disagree with the decision of the trial court. Because of our views on this requirement of the contract it is not necessary for us to discuss the further contention of the Government that Seaboard’s insuring of the leased property was at least to some extent for the benefit of the United States, and that Seaboard held the proceeds in trust for the Maritime Commission.

The language in the Peterson Bros, case, which it was contended created an absolute liability on the part of a bailee to make good for the loss or destruction of leased equipment where there was no negligence or other fault on the part of the bailee, is as follows:

“On the termination of the rental term of any items of the Equipment, Contractor will return the same in as good condition as when delivered at the job site, usual and ordinary wear and tear excepted.” 160 F.2d 124, 125.

It will quickly be noticed that the language in the present Equipment Lease is quite different. Here Seaboard obligated itself not only to return the equipment to the owner in as good condition as when it received the same, saving only ordinary wear and tear, but it stated this in terms which make it unmistakably clear that it assumed the responsibility of making good any loss or damage to the equipment. It provided not only that “the Hirer covenants and agrees to use the said machines in a careful and prudent manner during the term thereof,” which would have been sufficient to state the common law liability of a bailee, but it further agreed:

“to keep and maintain the same in a good state of condition and repair.”

And then furthermore, which is most significant :

“to replace and/or repair any and all dam'áge thereto to the extent that upon the termination of this lease all of said machines shall be returned to the Owner in as good condition as when the Hirer received the same, saving only ordinary wear and tear.” (Emphasis added.)

The provision went even further, significantly adding a description of ordinary wear and tear as:

“that is deterioration resulting from normal use.”

We think it quite clear that general contract law, to the extent that it can be distilled from the federal decisions, is the proper law to apply rather than the law of any particular state. It does not appear that any different rule would be applicable and appellee does not here argue for a rule of law as to any particular jurisdiction. In Priebe & Sons, Inc. v. United States, 332 U.S. 407, 411, 68 S.Ct. 123, 125, 92 L.Ed. 32, the Court stated:

“It is customary, where Congress has not adopted a different standard, to apply to the construction of government contracts the principles of general contract law.”

In Sun Printing & Publishing Ass’n v. Moore, 183 U.S. 642, 22 S.Ct. 240, 242, 46 L.Ed.

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270 F.2d 817, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-of-america-intervenor-v-seaboard-machinery-corporation-ca5-1959.