89 Ct. Cl. 226 | Ct. Cl. | 1939
delivered the opinion of the court:
.Plaintiffs, and the United States, through its contracting officer, entered into a contract on December 7, 1933, whereby plaintiffs agreed to furnish all labor and materials and perform all work required for the construction of the substructure of the Vertical Lift Railway Bridge over the Cape Cod Canal, at Buzzards Bay, Massachusetts, in accordance
It is stated in Article 133 of the specifications that wash borings have been made at various points at the site of the work; that these borings were made in the usual manner and with reasonable care arid their locations, depths, and the character of material apparently encountered ■ have been recorded in good faith on the contract plans. It is further stated in Article 133 that there is no expressed or implied agreement that the depths or the character of the material have been correctly indicated and that bidders should take into account the possibility that conditions affecting the cost or quantities of work to be done may differ from those indicated.
Article No. 134 states that borings apparently indicate that boulders may be encountered in varying numbers and sizes at any or all the excavations to be made for the work.
Article 303, as to method of construction, in part provided:
The contractor may construct the piers by . such method as he may elect, subject to the approval of the contracting officer both as to general method and as to details. Each bidder must describe in his bid, in 'writing, the general method he proposes to use, and must be prepared at the time of submitting his bid to submit to the contracting officer full information as to the method,, and consideration will be given to the method proposed, in determining the award of the contract.
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For the construction of these piers it is expected that the contractor will elect to rise one of two methods, either:
(a) the open cofferdam method, involving the usé of steel sheet piling, driven to proper alignment and depth, and adequately braced; or
(b) the caisson method, involving the use of a caisson, presumably of, the open well type to permit excavation in the open, but with provision- for sealing wells and applyiny compressed air if same be found necessary or desirable.
'The open cofferdam method of operation entails the driving around a driving frame and down to the specified elevation of interlocking steel sheeting. This forms the perimeter of the particular pier to be constructed. The dimensions of the main channel piers were 44 x 88 feet. As the-sheeting is driven down, the enclosed area is excavated, and when finally excavated to the required depth, the area is poured with concrete and the pier constructed in it. In the operation, the toe of the steel sheething must always be from 8 to 10 feet below the excavation, and the enclosed area is kept free from water or seepage of other subsurface material.
The plaintiffs commenced work promptly and as the work progressed the presence of boulders and impacted gravel seriously hampered the plaintiffs in the driving of the steel sheet piling. This necessitated the removal of boulders at the bottom or toe of the sheeting, and when this was done the outside pressure caused blow-ins or boils which
Plaintiffs started work on the change orders for the main piers June 16, 1934. -Based on the original contract price and the work completed at that time, apportioned to the total amount to be done to form the complete structure, their earnings on the main piers, as shown by the United States engineers’ certificates and. vouchers of payment, amounted to $86,380. The actual cost of the work to them on the piers up to this time was $206,595.21, for which they had estimated $66,879.14 in their bid, a claimed loss of $139,-716.07. Adding to this amount their anticipated rate of profit of 10%, raises the loss to $153,687.68. Plaintiffs seek to recover the amount of this loss, which it is contended was the excess cost of completing that portion, of the entire job that was completed up to the date of the first change order, over and above what would .have been the cost of
The basis of plaintiffs’ claim is that the defendant’s responsible officers in inviting bids for the work made various, deceptive and misleading representations as to the subsurface conditions at the site of the piers; that plaintiffs relied on these deceptive and misleading representations in the submission of their bid and in the proposal to use the cofferdam method in constructing the channel piers, and that the loss claimed resulted directly therefrom; that these deceptive and misleading representations had to do with the subsurface conditions at the site as affirmatively set forth in the invitation to bid and in ,the specifications, and also the failure of the contracting officer to inform plaintiffs and prospective bidders as to material facts within the defendant’s knowledge with respect to the subsurface conditions likely to be encountered in the prosecution of the work, which, if known to the plaintiffs, would have materially controlled them in the submission of their bid.
It is claimed by plaintiffs that the defendant failed to inform them of the existence of material facts in respect .to the subsurface conditions at the site of the work prior to the submission of their bid, all of which were in the knowledge and possession of the defendant, as follows: (1) That the defendant’s consulting engineers, Parsons, Klapp, Brinckerhoff, and Douglas, who had supervised the building of the original Cape Code Canal in the years 1910 to 1915, had recommended to the contracting officer that the core-boring method be used in testing the subsurface conditions and that the caisson method only be adopted for the construction of the channel piers; (2) that prior to the submission and acceptance of their bid considerable quantities of dynamite were used by the defendant in the making of the wash borings; and (3) that throughout the year 1933 another contractor was engaged in widening the canal throughout the greater part of its length; that it had considerable difficulty in the prosecution of its contract due to the fact that it was encountering boulders and boulder conditions, making it difficult for it to carry on the work, and
It is urged by plaintiffs that the consulting engineers, by reason of the fact that they had superintended the construction of the original canal, possessed superior knowledge as to the subsurface conditions throughout the area of the canal and knew that boulders large and small were distributed throughout the entire area, and that their recommendations that the core-boring method be used in testing the subsurface conditions at the site of the work and that the caisson method be used in the construction of the piers were based on this superior knowledge, all of which, if made known to the plaintiffs, would have influenced their judgment to the extent that they would neither have submitted a bid nor undertaken to construct the main channel piers by the cofferdam method.
The proof does not support the claim that the consulting engineers of the defendant possessed superior knowledge as to the distribution of boulders throughout the area of the canal or at the site where the piers in question were constructed. They knew, of course, that boulders large and small were distributed throughout the entire area of the canal and that they might be encountered at any point in varying numbers and sizes. This knowledge was likewise in the possession of plaintiffs. One of the officers of the plaintiff companies had been engaged in the vicinity of the proposed bridge in work similar to that'called for in the present contract and in the construction of the old railroad bridge approximately 75 feet distant from the piers involved, and also in construction of other bridges at the Cape Cod Canal some distance from the site of the present work. The plaintiffs possessing the same knowledge in respect to the distribution of boulders throughout the area of the canal as that possessed by the consulting engineers of the defendant were therefore neither damaged nor misled by the failure of the contracting officer to inform them as to the recommendations made by the consulting engineers as to the methods that should be adopted in the performance of the work.
The further contention that plaintiffs were misled by the failure of the contracting officer to inform them of the boulder difficulties then being encountered by a dredging contractor in widening and deepening the canal at another point is without merit. Plaintiffs knew that boulders were distributed throughout the entire area of the canal and were liable to be encountered at any point. This information if imparted would have added nothing to the knowledge already possessed by plaintiffs and would in no way have aided them in reaching a conclusion as to what the situation in respect to the presence of boulders might, be in this case.
Plaintiffs were informed in the specifications for the work which accompanied the invitation to bid that wash borings had been made under the direction of the contracting officer and the engineers at various points at the site of the work and that dry samples had been made. They were experienced contractors and knew what the wash-boring method was. They were further informed in Article 134 of the specifications that borings apparently indicate that boulders may be encountered in varying numbers and sizes at any or all the excavations to be made for the work. They were further informed in Article 706 of the specifications that the material to be removed is believed to be mostly sand with
Plaintiffs base their right torecover on the decisions in Hollerbach v. United States, 233 U. S. 165; Christie v. United States, 237 U. S. 234; United States v. Atlantic Dredging Co. 253 U. S. 1; United States v. Smith, 256 U. S. 11, and Levering & Garrigues Co. v. United States, 73 C. Cls. 566.
In Hollerbacv. United States, supra, the claimants brought suit upon a contract for the repair of a dam in Green River, Kentucky. The case turned upon the question of the right of claimants to recover because of certain damages suffered by them which would not have accrued had the dam been backed with broken stone, sawdust, and sediment, as was stated in the specifications attached to the contract. As claimants proceeded with the work it was found that the dam was not backed with broken stone, sawdust, and sediment, as stated in the specifications, and below 7 feet from the top to the bottom there was a backing of cribbing of an average height of 4.3 feet consisting of sound logs filled with stone. This made the cost of the work much greater than if the representation inserted by the Government in the specifications had been true. It was held that the claimants, upon these facts, were entitled to recover.
In Christiv. States, supra, claimants sought to recover damages due under a contract with the United States for the construction of 3 locks and dams on the Warrior River in Alabama. One of the items of the contractor’s claim was for extra expenses incurred by claimant in the pile driving and the work of excavation on account of misrepresentation by the defendant of the materials to be penetrated and excavated. It was stated in the specifications, among other things, that “the- material to be excavated, as far as known, is shown by the borings, draw
In United States v. Atlantic Dredging Co., supra, the claimant entered into a contract with the Goverment for certain dredging operations in the Delaware River. The specifications and the map attached thereto showing tests made by the defendant as to the character of the material to be dredged described the material to be “mainly mud or mud with admixture of fine sand,” whereas the material to be dredged was in fact different and more difficult and expensive to dredge than that described in the specifications. The specifications were deceptive and misleading in that the test borings gave information to the Government, not imparted to bidders, of materials more difficult and expensive to excavate than those shown by the specifications and map. The claimant was awarded judgment.
In Levering & Garrigues v. United States, supra, the claimant, a corporation, entered into a contract to construct, at the United States Naval Academy, Annapolis, Maryland, an addition to an existing power house. The building was to be erected of reinforced concrete on a pile foundation. In driving the piling necessary to complete the work claimant encountered a sunken sea wall which greatly retarded and increased the cost of the work. This sunken sea wall was not shown on the plans and specifications for the work submitted to claimant although its presence was known to the defendant at the time the plans and specifications were submitted. The court held that the defendant misled the claimant as to the existence of the buried obstruction beneath the surface of the ground where the piles were driven and was liable to plaintiff for the extra cost incurred in doing the piling work occasioned by such obstruction.
It is clear that the facts in the cases cited and relied upon by plaintiffs are distinguishable from the facts shown in the instant case. We have found that the borings in this case were made in the usual manner and accurately reported to the plaintiffs and that no information concern
In each of the cited cases claimants were misled by inaccurate and deceptive specifications on which they had a right to rely in submitting their bids. Such was not the situation in the case before us. There was no knowledge of impediments to performance known to the defendant which was withheld from plaintiffs, and no misrepresentation of conditions existing at the site of the work. Seven out of the twelve borings made by the defendant disclosed the presence of boulders and plaintiffs were forewarned in the specifications that boulders large and small might be encountered at any point of the work in constructing the piers. Plaintiffs expected to encounter boulders during the progress of the work and took this fact into consideration in estimating the cost of the work before submitting their bid. That they underestimated the difficulties encountered because of the presence of boulders at the site of the work is quite evident and is indicated by the fact that out of the twelve bids submitted theirs was the lowest. This fact, however, under the rule long and uniformly laid down by the courts, caimot avail them in their claim for damages because of the increased cost of the work over what they estimated it would be in the submission of their bid.
The defendant having furnished to plaintiffs all the information in its possession in respect to the subsurface conditions existing at the site of the piers, without misrepresentation- or concealment in any respect, is not liable to plaintiffs for any loss incurred by them in the performance of the work.
The case, we think, falls within the decisions in MacArthur Brothers Co. v. United States, 258 U. S. 6; Trimount Dredging Company v. United States, 80 C. Cls. 559; Simpson & Co. v. United States, 31 C. Cls. 217 (affirmed 172 U. S. 372); Midland Land & Improvement Co. v. United States, 58 C. Cls. 671, and General Contracting Corporation v. United States, 88 C. Cls. 214, and is controlled by them.
The burden of proving misrepresentation rests upon the party making the allegation. It is not to be presumed, and one may not, either under the Christie or Hollerbach case, simply show a different condition in some respects from that which the chart or blue prints of borings discloses, and rest his case upon the theory that the court must infer a misrepresentation. There must be some degree of culpability attached to the makers of the maps and charts, either that they were knowingly untrue or were prepared as the result of such a serious and egregious error that the court may imply bad faith. The many contract cases in this court, too many to cite, sustain this principle.
In the recent case of General Contracting Corporation v. United States, supra, the court said:
A misrepresentation of the character of the one relied upon by plaintiff must be one that actually misleads the party aggrieved, * * *. We have no record showing that the drawings were false so far as they went. There is no proof of record that any official of defendant registered a condition, as disclosed by a boring, that was false. In order to sustain misrepresentation it must be proven that the defendant’s official made a boring and found a certain condition and did not register exactly what was found, but, on the contrary, registered a different condition from what the boring showed.
It follows that plaintiffs are not entitled to recover, and it is ordered that the petition be dismissed.