USA F/u/b/o Vulcan Materials, Counter Cross-Appellant v. Volpe Construction, Counter Cross-Appellees

622 F.2d 880, 27 Cont. Cas. Fed. 80,646, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 191, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 15186
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit
DecidedAugust 1, 1980
Docket78-2891
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 622 F.2d 880 (USA F/u/b/o Vulcan Materials, Counter Cross-Appellant v. Volpe Construction, Counter Cross-Appellees) 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
USA F/u/b/o Vulcan Materials, Counter Cross-Appellant v. Volpe Construction, Counter Cross-Appellees, 622 F.2d 880, 27 Cont. Cas. Fed. 80,646, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 191, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 15186 (5th Cir. 1980).

Opinion

TATE, Circuit Judge:

This controversy arises in the context of a contract for furnishing materials to a United States government project in Dade County, Florida. The plaintiff and counter- *882 defendant, Bob Young, Inc., 1 seeks reversal of the trial court’s judgment, which: (a) awarded $17,364.82 to Vulcan Materials Company, the defendant and counterplaintiff; and (b) denied Young recovery against Vulcan on its breach of contract claims. Vulcan cross-appeals from the denial of both prejudgment interest and attorneys’ fees. We affirm the trial court’s award of judgment in favor of Vulcan in both respects, but we reverse the denial to Vulcan of prejudgment interest and attorney’s fees.

Capsule Statement of Central Issue

The parties agree that, if applicable, the provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code, Fla.Stat. §§ 671.101 et seq. (1965), govern the transaction. In all respects relevant to the present transactions, the Florida provisions are identical to those of the Uniform Commercial Code (1962).

Young, the appellant, contends that the district court failed to make the requisite factual findings necessary to reject its claim that it is entitled to damages under the UCC for Vulcan’s anticipatory repudiation (breach) of the contract, Fla.Stats. §§ 672.-610, 672.711, 672.714, UCC §§ 2-610, 2-711, 2-714, or alternatively for failure to perform a severable and non-waived portion of an installment contract, Fla.Stats. § 672.-612, UCC § 2-612. Specifically, Young argues that the district court failed to find whether the contract was breached by Vulcan through its inability to deliver the material according to the contract specifications, or instead by Young through its failing to accept Vulcan’s sand as meeting the contract specifications (although nevertheless unsuitable to Young for the purpose for which bought). Young suggests that, therefore, a remand is necessary to make the necessary findings.

The district court found it unnecessary to reach these issues. In this bench trial, the court made findings that, before performance of the contract commenced, the parties mutually rescinded the contract after realizing that the materials under order did not meet Young’s needs. Under this finding, there was no breach of the contract by either party and the (lack of) meeting of the minds on the precise specifications was irrelevant. As summarized at 2 Anderson, Uniform Commercial Code, § 2-703:39, p. 349 (2d ed. 1971):

The fact that this “remedy” [of rescission] is not specifically listed in the Code is not controlling for the Code lists only the unilateral remedies of each party, that is, those which the seller may by himself exercise, and those which the buyer by himself may invoke. As mutual rescission is a bilateral agreement, it is manifest that it would not be listed as a unilateral remedy. Furthermore, the provision for the preservation of principles of contract law generally [citing UCC § 1-103; see Fla.Stats. § 671.103] and the recognition of an unlimited power to modify a sales contract [citing UCC § 2-209(1); see Fla.Stats. § 672.209(1) 2 ] amply confirm the conclusion that the parties to the sales contract may terminate the contract by mutual rescission.

Facts and Findings by the Trial Court

As we understand Young’s argument, it does not dispute as incorrect the factual findings of the trial court (insofar as those made); in any event, they are not clearly erroneous. Young’s contention, rather, is *883 that the district court erred as a matter of law in its choice of the principles used to decide the parties’ duties under those facts, and that it failed to make findings necessary to decide this case on the basis of the legal principles properly applicable.

The dispute arises out of a contract between Vulcan and Young whereby Vulcan was to supply Young with 220,000 tons of sand fill and 40,600 tons of road rock, at given prices of $1.16 per ton for “lake sand fill” and $1.28 per ton for road rock. Young was the earthwork and paving subcontractor to a general contractor, Volpe Construction Company, Inc., for a federal postal facility in Florida. 3 The contract between Volpe and Young incorporated the government specifications applicable to the project. In the contract at issue, Vulcan contracted with Young to supply lake sand fill and DOT rock for the facility. This sales contract was signed on September 3, 1976. The precise standards that the materials would have to meet to enable Young to comply with its contract with Volpe were not given to Vulcan or the testing laboratory until September 16,1976. 4 As a result of the soils classification tests conducted on that date, it became clear that the lake sand fill that Young had contracted to purchase from Vulcan would not meet the specifications for the postal facility project and a representative of Vulcan immediately so informed Young. The parties to the original contract therefore discussed the possibility of Vulcan supplying another product in whatever quantity it had available, if one could be found that met the government standards.

In the view of the district court, this series of events indicated that “the parties thereupon by mutual agreement rescinded the original agreement by their acts and conduct.” The district court considered the subsequent ad hoc sales of two products that had not been the subject of the sales order, manufactured sand screenings and shot rock, to be the consequence of new agreements.

Rescission of the Contract

Young urges on appeal that any rescission of the original contract resulted from Vulcan’s anticipatory breach of the contract by its disclosure to Young that the materials under order would not meet the specifications. Thus, under the relevant provisions of the Uniform Commercial Code, adopted in Florida as Florida Statutes § 671.101 et seq., Young had the right to accept substitute materials without jeopardizing its right to damages for the initial breach of contract. Fla.Stats. §§ 672.711, 672.610, 672.106, 672.720; UCC §§ 2-711, 2-610, 2-106, 2-720. Young maintains that, therefore, the trial court erred as a matter of law by not awarding damages in favor of Young. Young suggests that a part of the trial court’s error was its failure to make any finding with respect to the breach of the contract by either party and argues that the case must, therefore, be remanded for further findings to resolve this issue.

Young’s argument assumes that rescission was necessarily premised on one party’s breach of the contract 5 and that the *884 trial judge’s failure to make a finding as to breach is therefore a critical omission.

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622 F.2d 880, 27 Cont. Cas. Fed. 80,646, 30 U.C.C. Rep. Serv. (West) 191, 1980 U.S. App. LEXIS 15186, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/usa-fubo-vulcan-materials-counter-cross-appellant-v-volpe-ca5-1980.