United States v. Mailet

294 F. Supp. 761, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9821
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedDecember 31, 1968
DocketCiv. A. No. 64-464
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 294 F. Supp. 761 (United States v. Mailet) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Mailet, 294 F. Supp. 761, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9821 (D. Mass. 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

JULIAN, District Judge.

This is an action for conversion of a roller bearing jaw rock crusher having an hourly capacity of between 70 and 100 tons of rock. The case is brought by the Government against a bona fide purchaser from a fraudulent vendee of government surplus materials. The parties submitted the case upon stipulated facts.

FINDINGS OF FACT

On May 14, 1958, the plaintiff, United States of America (hereinafter the “Government”), issued an Invitation to Bid (Exh. A) offering for sale various items of surplus automotive and construction equipment located at the Naval Construction Battalion Center in Davis, Rhode Island (hereinafter the “Navy Base”). Among the items so offered, all of which . were to be f. o. b. at the Navy Base, was a Model 1951 roller bearing jaw rock crusher manufactured by Pioneer Engineering Works in Minneapolis. The machine (hereinafter called the “crushing plant”) was described as having an hourly capacity of 70 to 100 tons and as being “used” and in “poor” condition.

The bids were opened on June 10, 1958. Twenty-three bids had been submitted for the crushing plant, including an unsuccessful $25,000 bid by defendant Martin Mailet (hereinafter “Mailet”), who owned and operated a construction business in Salisbury, Massachusetts. The highest bid, in the amount of $29,-900, was submitted on behalf of A. Forte & Sons, Inc. (hereinafter referred to as “Forte, Inc.”), of Berkeley, Rhode Island, by its president, James A. Forte (hereinafter referred to as “Forte”), and was accepted by the Government (Exhs. B and C).

On that same day Mailet or one of his agents telephoned the Navy Base and learned that Forte, Inc., had been the successful bidder. Thereupon Mailet’s wife, who was active in her husband’s' business, telephoned James A. Forte and inquired whether he would be interested in selling the crushing plant. As a result of that conversation, Mailet and Forte entered into an oral agreement whereby the Forte corporation agreed to sell the crushing plant for $35,000 to Mailet, who in turn agreed to make a $200 deposit pending the Navy’s approval of the release of the crushing plant. Mailet paid the deposit two days later on June 12, 1958, on which date Forte signed a memorandum of the agreement (Exh. H).

[763]*763In the meantime, on June 11, the Government issued to Forte, Inc., a “Notice of Award” advising it that its bid had been successful and that payment must be made within five days. The Notice of Award also stated that a “Notice of Release” would be forwarded to Forte when the goods were ready for delivery. Finally, the Notice of Award informed Forte, Inc., that

“title to the property will vest .in, the purchaser only after payment and loading of the property has been completed.”

That warning conformed to the provisions of the “General Sale Terms and Conditions” set forth in the Invitation to Bid (Exh. A), which provided that Forte, Inc., as purchaser was entitled to obtain the crushing plant upon the passing of title,1 which would occur only after “full and final payment” and after the loading of the goods had been completed.2

The parties agree, and I therefore find, that, under the Government’s standard equipment disposition procedures then in effect,3 a Surplus Property Release Notice (Exh. F) should not have been issued until the Government had received full payment for the crushing plant.

In this case Forte, Inc., made no payment. Nevertheless, on or about June 11, 1958, the Government issued the “Surplus Property Release Notice” to Forte, Inc., which released the crushing plant for delivery and which required that the crushing plant be removed from the Navy Base by June 25, 1958. In addition, the Government issued a “Invoice/Shipping Document” (Exh. E) stating that the crushing plant was to be marked for and shipped to Forte, Inc.

During the following week Mailet’s employees removed the entire crushing plant, in three stages, from the Navy Base and transported it to Mailet’s place of business in Massachusetts. James A. Forte personally accompanied them to the Navy Base on the day the removal began and authorized Mailet’s employees to remove the plant. All of the loading was done by Navy Base personnel using government equipment, including two Navy Base cranes. All of the transportation was performed by Mailet’s employees using Mailet’s trucks, except on June 17 when they were accompanied by two flatbed trucks hired, with drivers, by Forte, Inc., at Mailet’s expense. Valid “Visitor’s Passes” (Exh. J) were issued to each person and vehicle entering the Navy Base. Each truckload of parts which was removed was authorized to be removed by validly issued “Property Passes,” (Exh. K) and Navy Base guards supervised and approved the entire removal process.

On each occasion when parts of the crushing plant were removed from the Base, standard heavy-equipment removal procedures were followed. The documents issued to Forte, Inc., comprised [764]*764all the documents which were issued in the ordinary course to any purchaser of surplus property, and were regular in form and fully completed.

Upon completion of the removal of the crushing plant, Mailet on June 19, 1958, paid Forte the balance of the agreed price, $34,800, and Forte, Inc., executed and delivered to Mailet a bill of sale.

Mailet acted in good faith throughout, and in purchasing the crushing plant from Forte, Inc., relied upon the Government’s release of the plant and upon the documents issued by the Government. He did not know until about a year and a half later that Forte, Inc., had not paid for the plant, or that there had been irregularities in the transaction.

The only difficulty arose from the fact that, unbeknown to Mailet, Forte, Inc., had never paid the Government for the crushing plant. Forte, Inc., instead had obtained the premature issuance of the Surplus Property Release Notice by means of a fraudulent scheme participated in by the Government civilian employee charged with the responsibility for the whole transaction, one Donald J. Boisvert, who at all times pertinent to this case was assistant contracting officer, assistant sales contracting officer, and assistant property disposal officer. He was also supervisor of the surplus property disposal unit. His official title was Disposal Officer.

Boisvert’s duties included contracting for the sale, transfer and disposal of surplus government property, collecting deposits and payments on bids and negotiated contracts, and authorizing payments, refunds and allowances. Under regulations then in effect he had continuous and complete responsibility for surplus material from time of receipt to time of disposal. In this case he issued every relevant document from the original bid itself to the Surplus Property Release Notice. The parties agree and the Court finds as a fact that, in an ordinary transaction of this type where fraud was not present and the buyer of surplus goods had in fact paid the full contract price, Boisvert as Disposal Officer was authorized by the Government to issue a Surplus Property Release Notice similar to that issued here.

A year and a half passed. On December 4, 1959, the Government brought suit against Forte, Inc., and James A. Forte in the United States District Court for the District of Rhode Island. The second amended complaint in that action contained two counts (Exh. R).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
294 F. Supp. 761, 1968 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 9821, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-mailet-mad-1968.