Winters v. United States

84 F. Supp. 756, 114 Ct. Cl. 394, 1949 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 77
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 11, 1949
DocketNo. 47719
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 84 F. Supp. 756 (Winters 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
Winters v. United States, 84 F. Supp. 756, 114 Ct. Cl. 394, 1949 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 77 (cc 1949).

Opinion

Madden, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the Court:

The plaintiffs sue for $17,893.34, which is the difference between the contract price and the amount actually paid [404]*404them under a contract which they performed for the Government. The contract was for the clearing of some 400 acres of land at Homestead, Florida, for the Civil Aeronautics Division, Department of Commerce. It was dated April 11, 1941, and contained a unit price of $97.50 per acre for the work. The work was performed, but, as we have said, a part of the contract price was not paid to the plaintiffs, because, the Government claims, the plaintiffs were liable to the Government in damages for the nonperformance of another contract, and the amount withheld was the amount of those damages.

On February 8, 1941, the Government had issued invitations for bids on the same work involved in the later contract here in suit. The plaintiffs were the low bidders, their bid being $48.89 per acre. The next lowest bid was $119.00 per acre and other bids ranged up to $271.50 per acre. The Government’s estimate of the probable cost of the work, made in advance of the receipt of bids, was $75.44 per acre- The bids were opened on February 28, and on March 7 the Government sent the plaintiffs a telegram accepting their bid, and on March 8 a letter confirming the telegram and containing copies of the contract, and of performance and payment bonds for execution by the plaintiffs and by a surety. The plaintiffs’ bid had been accompanied by a bid bond executed by a surety, in the amount of $1,800, the condition of which was that if the plaintiffs did not withdraw their bid and if they executed a contract, if one should be tendered them, with bonds for its faithful performance, or if they failed to do so, they paid the Government the difference between what it cost the Government to get the work done, and the amount of the bid, the obligation should become void, otherwise it was to remain in effect.

The plaintiffs, after diligent efforts, were unable to get a surety to execute the necessary bonds, because investigation by the first surety approached convinced it that the plaintiffs could not perform the contract for their bid price. On April 4,1941, the Government wrote the plaintiffs terminating their right to proceed with the contract because of their failure to furnish the requisite bonds.

In the meantime, on March 27, anticipating that the plain[405]*405tiffs would probably be unable to secure tbe necessary bonds, the Government had readvertised the same project, inviting bids, and advising the plaintiffs that if they could secure the requisite bonds before April 1, the new invitation would be withdrawn.

The plaintiffs bid again in response to the new invitation. This time they bid $97.50 per acre, and again they were the low bidder. The Government on April 14, 1941, wrote the plaintiffs accepting their bid, enclosing the formal contracts and bonds for signature and stating that this acceptance did not relieve the plaintiffs or their surety of any liability in connection with the failure to furnish proper bonds in connection with their former bid for the same work. The plaintiffs obtained the necessary surety, executed the contracts, and returned them. By a letter dated April 28, the Government sent a signed copy of the contract to the plaintiffs and notified them to proceed. The contract provided that it should be completed within 60 days after the receipt of notice to proceed. It was completed, but as we have said, a part of the contract price was withheld by the Government and set off against the plaintiffs’ alleged liability to the Government for its failure to secure the requisite bonds pursuant to its former bid, which failure, the Government says, was a breach of contract.

The plaintiffs urge, in the alternative, three reasons why the Government should not be permitted to keep the money that it deducted from the contract price. We consider the plaintiffs’ contention that, assuming that a contract binding upon them resulted from the first set of events, all rights and liabilities thereunder were superseded and waived when the parties entered into the second contract covering the same subject matter, but for a different price and with a guaranty of performance by a surety.

The Government urges that it did not intend to waive its rights under the earlier contract, and that, even if it had intended to waive them, its intended waiver would not have been binding because of a lack of consideration.

The question is hard, and, in some respects, unique. The weight of authority is that when an owner later promises a building contractor more than the originally agreed price, [406]*406in order to get him to proceed with and complete a contract on which he is losing money, the owner is not bound by his promise. There is a respectable minority which takes the op-* posite view. The cases are collected in 25 A. L. E. 1450 and 138 A. L. E. 136. The majority view has been influenced by the fact that in many cases the building contractor’s refusal to perform his contract has amounted to economic coercion of the owner to promise an additional payment. In the instant case, there was no such element. The plaintiffs were, so far as appears, ready and willing to perform according to their first bid, but were not permitted to do so by the Government, which had the right to insist that they furnish the agreed bonds before they undertook the work.

The parties to an unperformed contract may rescind it, no matter what advantages one of them may give up in the rescission. Here there is no clear showing of an intention to rescind, at the time that the Government denied the plaintiffs the privilege of performing. It readvertised the work, and may have intended to attempt to hold the plaintiffs responsible for any increased cost resulting from having it performed by someone else. But when it received a new offer from the plaintiffs, and, in the most formal way, entered into a new contract with the plaintiffs, it created a situation that, at least on its face, was impossible, that is, that two separate contracts should exist concurrently, between the same persons, for the same work, one of which contracts fixed a price twice as high as the other. As the Government has administered the second contract, it was, in effect, a mere repetition of the first, since it entitled the plaintiffs not to the $97.50 per acre stated in it, but to that sum less the difference between that sum and $48.89, the amount of the first bid. So that, again, the plaintiffs had a contract for $48.89 per acre. This time, however, the Government had the advantage of the guaranty of the plaintiffs’ performance by a surety.

The Government’s caveat, contained in its letter of April 14, 1941, accepting the plantiffs’ second bid, requires our consideration. It said:

You are further notified that this acceptance does not relieve you or your surely of any liability in con[407]*407nection with your failure to furnish, acceptable performance and payment bonds and execute contract papers in accordance with your previous bid in the amount of $17,996.41 under Invitation No. 436-41-228 covering the same work.

The liability of the plaintiffs and their surety on the bid bond on the previous bid was $1,800.00. It was, to be sure, a condition of the bond that

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Bluebook (online)
84 F. Supp. 756, 114 Ct. Cl. 394, 1949 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/winters-v-united-states-cc-1949.