Wm. Eisenberg & Sons, Inc. ex rel. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. United States

75 F. Supp. 1006, 110 Ct. Cl. 388, 1948 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 33
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedMarch 1, 1948
DocketNo. 44772
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 75 F. Supp. 1006 (Wm. Eisenberg & Sons, Inc. ex rel. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. 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
Wm. Eisenberg & Sons, Inc. ex rel. Aetna Casualty & Surety Co. v. United States, 75 F. Supp. 1006, 110 Ct. Cl. 388, 1948 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 33 (cc 1948).

Opinion

Whitaker, Judge,

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiff sues for alleged breaches of contract in connection with the construction of the Beach City Dam in Ohio. Plaintiff claims (1) that it was required to place in the dam materials excavated from other portions of the work, instead of being allowed to waste these materials in spoil areas; (2) that the defendant permitted another contractor to interfere with its construction of a dike; (3) that defendant delayed securing the relocation of a railroad that ran through the dam site; and (4) that for a substantial amount of the trench excavation defendant refused to pay it the price specified therefor.

The dam was located immediately to the east of the confluence of Sugar Creek and a stream known as South Fork. It was an earthen dam. Upstream from it for about 400 feet the contract called for placing a blanket of earth in the bed of the streams to prevent the water from seeping underneath the dam. To the north of the dam, and as an extension of it, the contract called for the erection of a dike some 4,100 feet long.

1. Materials placed in the dam. — The question presented is whether the contracting officer required plaintiff to place in the dam materials not called for in the specifications.

Plaintiff was required to construct an approach channel at the upstream side of the dam, and an outlet channel on the [421]*421downstream side of the dam, and certain outlet structures and a spillway. It was also required to divert Sugar Creek into South Fork so that both streams would flow toward the dam through the approach channel.

The material removed from the approach channel, the outlet channel, the spillway, and the site of the outlet structures was to be used in the construction of the dam, or wasted in the spoil areas, as directed by the contracting officer.

Section 6-02 (d), relating to the spillway, provided in part:

The materials from this excavation, when approved by the contracting officer, shall be used in the embankment, in the blanket, or in the fill in the stream channel, as directed by the contracting officer. * * *

Section 6-02 (e), relating to outlet structures and channels, provided in part:

Materials from these excavations, when approved by the contracting officer, shall be utilized in the embankment or fills, or stock piled, for later use in the embankment * * *.

Such material for the dam as could not be secured from the required excavations was to be secured from borrow pit areas marked on the map D and G. Section 6-03 (b) relating to these areas provided:

The contractor will be required to excavate and haul from these areas as directed by the contracting officer. * * *

Section 8-02 provided in part:

* * * The materials for embankment will be secured from the borrow pit areas specified on the drawing and from other required excavations. The final deposit of these materials in the embankment shall be under the direction of the contracting officer. * * *

Finally, section 8-05 (a) provided:

* * * The required material shall be secured from the borrow pits designated in subparagraph (b) following, or from the excavation required under sectiqn VI of these specifications as directed by the contracting officer. * * *

[422]*422It will be seen, therefore, that the contract quite clearly lodged in the contracting officer the discretion of determining what was to be done with the materials excavated from the spillway and other works, and it committed to his discretion what materials were to be placed in the dam.

Plaintiff, however, contends that the contracting officer required it to mix unsuitable material obtained from the required excavation with suitable material obtained from the borrow pit areas. It says that the contracting officer should have allowed it to waste the alleged unsuitable material obtained from the required excavation and to have placed in the dam, instead, materials to be obtained from the borrow pit areas.

Plaintiff quite naturally would have preferred to handle the work in this way. Under the contract it was entitled to a certain number of cents per cubic yard for doing the required excavation, which included disposition of the material excavated. The contract also provided for a certain number of cents a cubic yard for excavating material in the borrow areas. If plaintiff was required to place in the dam the materials excavated from the required excavation areas, it could not secure payment for excavating an equal amount of material from the borrow pit areas. Besides, the spoil areas were closer to the required excavation areas than was the dam; hence, plaintiff would have had to haul the materials a lesser distance had it been permitted to waste them.

However, it was not for plaintiff to say whether or not the materials secured from the required excavation were suitable to go in the dam. This was the prerogative of the contracting officer, as is clearly stated in the excerpts from the specifications quoted above. As the defendant very aptly says in its brief, “Under the specifications it was the exclusive function of the contracting officer to determine the suitability of materal. As. far as plaintiff was concerned, if the contracting officer approved the material, it was suitable.”

Plaintiff was not required to mix materials obtained from the required excavation with materials secured from the borrow areas prior to placing the material in the dam, as was the case in Callahan Construction Co. v. United States, 91 C. Cls. 538. What it was required to do in certain instances [423]*423was to place in a certain part of the dam a load of materials obtained from the borrow areas adjacent to a load of materials obtained from the required excavation. This was entirely proper and within the authority granted the contracting officer by the constract.

A cross section of the dam shows that pervious material was to be used at the extreme upstream side of the dam, and then impervious materials were to be used from there to the center of the dam. From the center of the dam to the per-vious material on the downstream side of it, called the transition section, the materials were to be gradually less and less impervious. This was for the purpose of taking care of the water that of necessity would seep into the dam. The purpose was to let it run off, but to let it run off gradually without scouring out the dam. Hence, from the center of the dam to the downstream edge of it the materials were to become gradually less and less impervious.

In order to accomplish this the contracting officer from time to time directed that a load of impervious material be placed adjacent to a load of less impervious material, and, as they worked toward the downstream edge of the dam, there would be more and more of the less impervious materials used. Since some of the materials obtained from the required excavation were less impervious than some of the materials obtained from the borrow areas, or vice versa, plaintiff was required to place one or more loads obtained from the required excavation adjacent to a load obtained from the borrow areas, in order to accomplish the desired result. After the materials had been dumped, they were moistened and rolled with a sheeps-f oot roller in order to impact them.

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Bluebook (online)
75 F. Supp. 1006, 110 Ct. Cl. 388, 1948 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 33, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wm-eisenberg-sons-inc-ex-rel-aetna-casualty-surety-co-v-united-cc-1948.