76 Ct. Cl. 599 | Ct. Cl. | 1933
delivered the opinion of the court:
The plaintiff is trustee in bankruptcy for the Bickel Dredging Corporation and brings this suit to recover $62,166.12 alleged to have been due the Bickel Corporation for dredging done under a contract made with the defendant. The defendant denies any liability.
The contract provided in substance that the material excavated must be transported and deposited within the limits of certain established dumping grounds, that material deposited elsewhere would not be paid for, and the contractor might be required to redredge such material and deposit it where directed. The contract further provided that if, in the opinion of the contracting officer, any material was dumped so as to be dangerous to or obstruct navigation, the contractor should give notice thereof and remove the same with the utmost dispatch, and in case it neglected or delayed so to do, the material could be removed by the contracting officer and the cost of such removal be deducted from any money due or to become due the contractor. (See latter part of finding IV for exact language used in the contract.)
There was also a provision in the contract for liquidated damages in case of delay. (See finding IV.)
It will be observed on consideration of the case that the issue between the parties is primarily one of fact, the question being whether any dumping was done contrary to the provisions of the contract, and if so to what extent and quantity. It is contended on behalf of the defendant that the contractor did such dumping and to such an extent that considering the payments made there is now nothing due on the contract. On behalf of the plaintiff it is contended that there was no such dumping and that in any event it was very much less than the quantity for which deductions were made by the defendant.
It would serve no useful purpose to undertake to review at length the testimony given in the case. The testimony as to dumping is conflicting and the evidence as to the quantity thereof indefinite, where it would seem it might well have been made reasonably exact and it would seem that the wrongful dumping could not have been done without the
The plaintiff, however, contends that even if there was short dumping the contractor could not be charged with the cost of removal unless it had been notified to remove the material by defendant and that no such notice was ever given. We do not so construe the contract. As we view its provisions, if the contractor deposited any material where it would obstruct navigation, it was required forthwith to remove such material and in event of its failure so to do the
As before stated, the contract provided that material deposited elsewhere than at the established dumping ground would not be paid for. This may seem a- harsh provision but what occurred in this case presents a reason for its being in the contract. The contractor well knew the location of the established dumping grounds, and the price a cubic yard of material excavated was fixed upon the assumption that the contractor would carry out the agreement and so deposit the material dredged. It is manifest that when so much of the dumping was done at night, it would be extremely difficult to determine how much material had been improperly dumped and that the contractor had a good chance of escaping detection as to any. The contractor was manifestly perpetrating a fraud upon the defendant by doing this short dumping, except in a very few instances where it might have been done to avoid sinking the scows in stormy weather. The evidence shows definitely that 158,352 cubic yards were deposited in the Elizabeth Kiver channel where it was a danger to navigation. Undoubtedly considerable more short dumping was done, but how much we cannot determine from the evidence. The contract price for this yardage was $27,394.90, which the engineer officer properly deducted from the December payment. The Comptroller General in settling with the bonding company also deducted $2,350 as liquidated damages for delay, or, in other words, for forty-seven days at $50 a day, the rate fixed in the contract. It is urged on behalf of the plaintiff that the contractor was justified in stopping the work for the reason that its pay had been stopped. We do not agree with this contention. When the engineer officer found the contractor was so carrying on its operations as to work a fraud on the defendant, we think he had the right to stop the pay of the contractor until the amount actually due the contractor could be ascertained. The contractor had violated the contract and its claim that payment should be made just the same as if it were performing the contract instead of violating
The case in one respect presents a peculiar situation. Settlement was finally made with the bonding company and not with the contractor or plaintiff, and the bonding company was paid $88,340.27. The bonding company having performed part of the work was obviously entitled to pay for what it did, but no reason has been given for paying the bonding company money that was due the contractor. In the settlement, the amount of liquidated damages was deducted and also $51,694.55, representing the cost to defendant of its redredging operations. What we have said above shows that the evidence does not sustain the charge for re-dredging and that only $13,644 can be deducted on this account. As before stated, the work which the contractor did amounted, at the contract price, to $150,553.43. As against this there are three set-offs or deductions: For liquidated damages $2,350, for redredging material wrongfully deposited $13,644, and $27,394.90 on 158,352 cubic yards of material under the nonpayment clause of the contract, total $43,388.90. After making these deductions and offsets it appears that the contractor was entitled under the contract to $107,164.53 for the work which it had done. It was paid $88,387.31,.leaving $18,777.22 unpaid and due the plaintiff as trustee in bankruptcy for the contractor. Judgment will accordingly be rendered in favor of plaintiff for the sum last named.
ON MOTIONS FOR NEW TRIAL
delivered the opinion of the court:
Both plaintiff and defendant have filed motions for change in the findings of the court and for new trial, and defendant also filed a motion for judgment. The motions of defendant will first be considered.
There was no plea of fraud made on behalf of the defendant but it is contended that this was not necessary in order that the plaintiff’s petition should be dismissed and judgment rendered in favor of defendant. This matter of pleading, we think, depends upon the particular circumstances of the case, but it is not necessary to discuss this question any further than to show the error of defendant’s contention that the mere fact that fraud was practiced in the performance of the contract entitles it to judgment.
It is quite obvious that section 172 of the Judicial Code, which reads as follows:
“Any person who corruptly practices or attempts to practice any fraud against the United States in the proof, statement, establishment, or allowance of any claim or of any part of any claim against the United States shall, ipso facto, forfeit the same to the Government; and it shall be the duty of the Court of Claims, in such cases, to find specifically that such fraud was practiced or attempted to be practiced, and thereupon to give judgment that such claim is forfeited to the Government, and that the claimant be forever barred from prosecuting the same ” (36 Stat. 1141),
has no application to the case at bar. The fraud which was practiced was committed by the subcontractor. There is no evidence that the contracting corporation or any of its officials had any knowledge in relation thereto, and if there had been anything in the testimony from which such knowledge might be inferred it still would not affect the plaintiff,
But it is argued on behalf of the defendant that it is not necessary to show that section 172 of the Judicial Code applies, and that if any fraud was practiced or attempted against the defendant in the execution of the contract nothing can be recovered thereon. There may be some cases to which such a rule would be applied but we are quite clear that the case at bar is not one. There are indeed many cases in which it has been held that where it appears upon the trial of the case that the contract upon which it is founded is in its nature illegal or contrary to public policy, the case should be dismissed. See Trist v. Child, 21 Wall. 441; Tool Company v. Norris, 2 Wall. 45. Counsel for defendant contend that the same result follows if there is any fraud in the performance of the contract, citing Atlantic Contracting Co. v. United States, 57 C.Cls. 185; Michigan Steel Box Co. v. United States, 49 C.Cls. 421; New York Market Gardeners’ Assn. v. United States, 43 C.Cls. 114. But these cases have no application to the case at bar. In the Atlantic Contracting Co. case and the Michigan Steel Box Co. case, there was fraud in procuring the contract. In the New York Market Gardeners’ Assn. case, fraud was charged in the performance of the contract, which fraud, if it had been proved, would have been directly attributable to the plaintiff. All that the court held in the case was that the proof was insufficient. In Furay v. United States, 34 C.Cls. 171, the plaintiff, a United States marshal, sought to recover for certain fees and charges which were in part false and fraudulent. This case of course came directly under the provisions of section 172 of the Judicial Code. None of the cases cited support the defendant’s contention that judgment should be rendered in its favor on account of fraud in the performance of the contract, and a specific finding of fraud on the part of the subcontractor is not material or necessary.
Plaintiff also asks for a new trial on account of what is called newly discovered evidence, the nature of which is disclosed by an affidavit of the witness Peterson who testified on the trial that some of the dredged material was dumped in the channel opposite the Army base. In this affidavit he now says in effect that he did not understand the questions propounded to him and did not intend to so testify. This affidavit may cast some doubt upon the truth of his testimony, but there was other evidence that showed that dredged material had been dumped in this channel and the surrounding circumstances are such that we were led to conclude that the subcontractor did this dumping. The motion of plaintiff for a new trial is also overruled.