W. H. Edwards Engineering Corp. v. United States

161 Ct. Cl. 322, 1963 WL 8578
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedApril 6, 1963
DocketNo. 218-59
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 161 Ct. Cl. 322 (W. H. Edwards Engineering Corp. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
W. H. Edwards Engineering Corp. v. United States, 161 Ct. Cl. 322, 1963 WL 8578 (cc 1963).

Opinion

Davis, Judge,

delivered tbe opinion of the court:

This action arises out of a subcontract, later assigned to the Department of the Army, calling for rehabilitation of the central heating plant of the Hoosier Unit of the Hoosier Ordnance Plant (a portion of the Indiana Arsenal, Charles-town, Indiana). Plaintiff seeks an equitable adjustment to the contract price in the amount of $51,489.55, because of defendant’s refusal to shut down all three boilers in the heating plant simultaneously during the rehabilitation work. The chief issue is whether the agreement required the complete shut-down of the heating plant while plaintiff was conducting its rehabilitation effort.

In 1952, the Whittenberg Construction Co. held a prime contract with the Army for the rehabilitation of the entire Hoosier Ordnance Plant. The Plant had been reactivated during the Korean hostilities for the manufacture of ammunition — mainly propellant charges composed of smokeless, black base and double base powder — as well as of the bags into which the powder was loaded. Until September 1952, the Plant was operated on two shifts of eight hours each, but because of the increasing urgency in obtaining ammunition, around-the-clock operation was instituted at that time. Rehabilitation of the Plant was planned so that when a batch of explosives was completed in a particular production line, the line was deactivated and necessary repairs and reworking were accomplished on that line without idling the entire plant.

Within the Hoosier Unit there was a central heating plant, consisting of three large boilers, their stokers, headers, and feed pipes, as well as a water softening unit used to treat “raw” water before introducing it into the boilers (in order to prevent scaling of the boiler tubes). This central heating plant supplied steam through high pressure steam mains to all of the buildings in the Administrative and Inert Storage Areas. Generally, the heating plant was shut down from late spring until early fall for overhauling. The only building then requiring heat was the cafeteria, which was [325]*325supplied with steam from a small separate unit adequate for its needs. With this exception, there were no other existing heating plants or boilers which could be utilized to heat properly the buildings in the areas served by the central heating plant. Because of the vital part the Hoosier Unit was playing in the Korean emergency, it was not feasible to close the central heating plant completely during the period from September 1952 through March 1953, unless, of course, an alternative source of steam could be provided.

On September 12, 1952, the Whittenberg company issued an invitation for bids for a subcontract for the rehabilitation, in accordance with specifications prepared by the Government, of this central heating plant. In response to the invitation, representatives of plaintiff (an Indiana corporation which has been principally engaged in the erection, maintenance, and repair of steam power plants for many years) and of one other firm inspected the heating plant, accompanied by representatives of Whittenberg, of the Corps of Engineers, and of the contractor operating the Ordnance Plant for the Army. During this inspection, one of the three boilers in the heating plant was in operation, the other two being shut down due to the warm weather. Defendant’s representative orally informed the other prospective bidder, and thought he told them both, that one boiler at a time should be tom down, and the other two kept operating. Plaintiff’s representative, however, was not so instructed or failed to understand the direction, for plaintiff says that it prepared its bid upon the assumption that all three boilers of the central heating plant would be shut down during the anticipated mild temperatures in the next sixty days, so as to complete the rehabilitation work before colder weather would require the resumption of simultaneous operation; and that the small steam requirement being met by the one boiler then in operation (during the September inspection) could be taken care of by small boilers which were located on the production lines. The invitation for bids and the specifications contained no express provisions as to whether the entire heating plant would or would not be shut down during the rehabilitation, but (as we shall see) other contract [326]*326clauses implied that a full shut-down, at least for a period, was contemplated.

When the bids were opened, in the presence of the two bidders, plaintiff was asked to review its bid for error, since it was so low, particularly in comparison with the other bid. After reviewing the bid, plaintiff affirmed its correctness, and on September 26,1952, Whittenberg notified plaintiff that it could proceed with the work. The accepted bid promised that work would be completed 45 days after delivery of the pumps called for in the specifications; it stated further that plaintiff had received a quotation from the supplier indicating that the pumps would be received within 150 days, i.e., by the end of February or early March 1958. Nothing was said by either side, at this stage, about the complete shutting down of the central heating plant, and the other bid did not mention this matter.

The award resulted in construction subcontract No. 72 between plaintiff and Whittenberg, dated September 30, 1952, but not formally signed on behalf of the plaintiff until December 17, 1952. It bound plaintiff to furnish all plant labor, materials, and equipment, and to perform all operations necessary for the rehabilitation of the boilers in the central heating plant, in accordance with the plans and specifications, and to complete the work within the agreed time. Immediately upon receiving notice to proceed, plaintiff began to assemble the necessary men, materials, and equipment at the work-site.1 • Early in the life of the contract, plaintiff was advised by the defendant that it would not be allowed to perform the contract with the central heating plant completely shut down; one boiler was to be maintained in full operation at all times. Between the 1st and 10th of December, 1952, plaintiff made the first of many requests that the heating plant be wholly shut down in order that the necessary work might be scheduled in what plaintiff considered a customary and orderly manner.- Subsequently, a meeting of the interested parties was held to see if a schedule could be drawn up for a shut-down of the plant. Efforts [327]*327were made to obtain steam from sources other than the heating plant, but they were not successful, and ultimately, except for weekend shut-downs to permit performance of some portions of the work, the central heating plant remained in at least partial operation until May 1953, when warmer weather permitted closing down its operation, as in other summers. About March 5, 1953, plaintiff received delivery of six of the seven pumps ordered.2 Plaintiff did not complete performance of its subcontract, as supplemented and modified, until the latter part of November 1953.

In May 1953, well before the subcontract was fully performed, plaintiff proposed that consideration be given to entering into a “supplemental contract” to cover the additional costs due to the inability to shut down all three boilers simultaneously. Defendant declined such an agreement, and advised plaintiff that any claim it had for losses or increased costs should be submitted to the contracting officer after completion of the work.

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Bluebook (online)
161 Ct. Cl. 322, 1963 WL 8578, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/w-h-edwards-engineering-corp-v-united-states-cc-1963.