United States v. Carl Geupal Construction Co.

423 F.2d 818
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit
DecidedApril 7, 1970
Docket17490_1
StatusPublished

This text of 423 F.2d 818 (United States v. Carl Geupal Construction Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Seventh Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Carl Geupal Construction Co., 423 F.2d 818 (7th Cir. 1970).

Opinion

423 F.2d 818

7 UCC Rep.Serv. 446

UNITED STATES of America for the Use of Lawrence GAUNT and
Lina K. Gaunt d/b/a Gaunt and Son, Wabash,
Indiana, Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
CARL M. GEUPAL CONSTRUCTION CO., The Western Casualty &
Surety Co., The Western Fire Insurance Co., The
American Casualty Company, Defendants-Appellants.

No. 17490.

United States Court of Appeals, Seventh Circuit.

March 16, 1970, Rehearing Denied April 7, 1970.

R. Stanley Lawton, Indianapolis, Ind., Edward N. Kalamaros, South Bend, Ind., Ice Miller Donadio & Ryan, G. Daniel Kelley, Jr., Indianapolis, attorneys for defendants-appellants.

Donald R. Metz, Plummer Tiede Magley & Metz, Wabash, Ind., for appellees.

Before KNOCH, Senior Circuit Judge, and KILEY and CUMMINGS, Circuit judges.

KNOCH, Senior Circuit Judge.

Defendant-appellant Carl M. Geupel Construction Company contracted with the United States of America to construct a dam at the Huntington Reservoir outside Huntington, Indiana. Certain types of gravel were to be used in the construction. Geupel was to be paid per cubic yard on the quantity to be determined as the material was in place at the dam site.

Geupel then contracted with plaintiffs-appellees Lawrence and Lina K. Gaunt doing business as Gaunt and Son to furnish material

Pertaining to construction of Dam, Huntington Reservoir, Wabash River, Indiana. Contract DA-15-029-CIVENG-65-162.

Furnish and deliver the following material as directed by our job superintendent, F.O.B. jobsite in trucks:

Item #45-- Subbase Type II $1.35/cy

Item #14-- Horizontal and Inclined Drain Material $1.90/cy

All material to be in accordance with the applicable provisions of Sections 30 and 6 respectively of the Contract Specifications, including Amendments 1 thru 8.

The purchase order also provided: 'Shipping instructions: Deliver to jobsite in trucks.'

After partial delivery of the first type of material a dispute arose respecting the method for determining the number of cubic yards of material delivered. Geupel admitted liability only for material as determined by the U.S.Corps of Engineers on the basis of computations of the amount in place at the dam site. Gaunt sought payment on the amount of gravel as delivered loose in the trucks, which would measure a greater number of cubic yards than when compacted in the dam and would include materials used in work which might ultimately be rejected by the government and for which Geupel would therefore recover no payment.

Gaunt refused to continue performance and pursuant to the Miller Act 40 U.S.C. 270a et seq. brought suit in the U.S. District Court against Geupel, and its sureties, alleging delivery of 54,024 1/2 cubic yards of materials on which about $14,135.00 was still due and owing.

In their answer defendants-appellants alleged that only 32,541 cubic yards had been supplied on the basis of in-place measurement and counterclaimed for wrongful refusal to continue deliveries.

After briefing the question whether the contractual documents were ambiguous on the method of measurement (and the Trial Judge having ruled (1) they were not ambiguous and (2) they supported Gaunt's view) the parties entered into a stipulation agreeing that the court consider the stipulation a motion for summary judgment by Gaunt for $13,435.00 on the theory the contractual documents unambiguously required measurement of the material as delivered loose in the trucks. The parties stipulated the amount of the damages. They further stipulated that the trial court consider the stipulation a motion for partial summary judgment by Geupel that the contractual documents unambiguously required measurement of the material in place through cross section measurements, leaving the issue of damages for trial.

It was further agreed that if the contractual documents were ambiguous then both parties would be entitled to introduce evidence relevant to resolving the ambiguity.

The District Judge adopted the stipulation as a finding of fact. He concluded that the contract between the parties was contained in the Purchase Order of June 30, 1965, (the vital portions of which are quoted above) together with 30 and 6 of the contract specifications to which the Purchase Order refers.

He found the contract unambiguous. So do we. He concluded that it required Geupel to pay Gaunt for materials measured by the cubic yard in trucks at the jobsite and that Geupel's refusal to pay except on the basis of cross-section measurements in place in the dam constituted an anticipatory breach and repudiation of the contract which excused Gaunt from further performance. He denied Gaunt attorneys' fees as prayed in the Complaint.

It is Geupel's position that the terms 'F.O.B. jobsite in trucks' were delivery terms only and had no reference to measurement and payment as indicated by their repeated use in the Purchase Order, and use of 'F.O.B.' as a delivery term under the Uniform Commercial Code, whereas Specifications 30 and 6 incorporated by reference clearly provide for in-place measurement.

Geupel cites Garrett v. Northwestern Mut. Life Ins. Co., 1942, 111 Ind.App. 515, 520, 38 N.E.2d 874, 876, for the proposition that the same words may be used in a different sense in different parts of the same instrument but that there is no logic in interpreting their meaning differently unless some reason is disclosed in the context or in the different purposes sought to be accomplished. Here both conditions occur. The words 'Deliver to jobsite in trucks' appear first under the printed heading: 'Shipping Instructions'. Then after a printed heading: 'Please ship the following material in accordance with terms and directions above' we find in typed form the terms previously quoted where the words 'F.O.B. jobsite in trucks:' are immediately followed by designation of the materials and their prices per cubic yard.

If, on the other hand, measurement for payment is to be found only in the contract between Geupel and the United States then we do see an ambiguity in the Purchase Order which calls for furnishing the material as directed by the job superintendent. 'F.O.B. jobsite in trucks' at the stated prices per cubic yard. If 'F.O.B. jobsite trucks' is solely a delivery term, it is not only redundant because, as indicated, at the top of the Order under the heading 'Shipping Instructions:' we have already been told that Gaunt is to 'Deliver to jobsite in trucks' and midway in the Order, that material is to be shipped in accordance with those terms and directions, but it is also ambiguous.

The reference to the government contract reads:

All material to be in accordance with the applicable provisions of Sections 30 and 6 respectively of the Contract Specifications * * *'

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