41 Misc. 2d 864 | N.Y. Sup. Ct. | 1964
After trial before the court, judgment is directed for the defendants dismissing the plaintiffs’ amended complaint, with costs.
The action is at law. Of nine separately stated causes of action in the amended complaint, six were eliminated before commencement of the trial, leaving the first, second and ninth causes to be tried.
Details of the three separate causes of action for an aggregate of demanded damages of $125,053.08 are related in the findings and conclusions. The first two causes deal with mixed questions of fact and law. Each required interpretation or construction of the PAB-13 contract, determining whose obligation it was to supply respectively air intake and exhaust facilities and also a bank of electric storage batteries with charger, both to serve as auxiliaries to the diesel engines. The plaintiffs claim both were complements of the Government-supplied diesel engines. The ninth cause represents a claim for damages for delay attributable to the defendants and involves solely fact questions regarding the course of the work as affected by the parties’ performances.
The subcontract contained these provisions pertinent to the lawsuit. Payment was guaranteed by the United States Government. It was stipulated that 1 ‘ any dispute concerning a question of fact arising under this contract which is not disposed of by agreement” between them should be adjudicated administratively by appeal to the officer in charge of construction of the Naval Bureau of Yards and Docks or his representative (hereinafter OIOC). The latter’s decision, it was further agreed, was to be final and conclusive “unless determined by a court of competent jurisdiction to have been fraudulent or capricious or arbitrary or so grossly erroneous as necessarily to imply bad faith, or not supported by substantial evidence.” It was also stipulated that if the defendants delayed in delivering to plaintiffs materials required to be supplied by the defendants, then relief would be limited solely to administrative procedure and “ The Prime Contractor shall not be liable to suit for breach of contract by reason” of such delays.
The quoted portion of the “Disputes” clause, providing for self-adjudication first by the defendant, one of the interested
This trial opened on the plaintiffs’ position for a trial de novo of their claims against the defendants. Initially those claims
The following are apt quotations from the majority opinion of the Supreme Court, per Mr. Justice Haelau, in Bianchi (supra, pp. 712, 714):
“ We granted certiorari, 371 U. S. 939, to resolve a conflict among the lower courts on the important question of the kind of judicial proceeding to be afforded in cases governed by the Wunderlich Act. * * *
“It is our conclusion that, apart from questions of fraud, determination of the finality to be attached to a departmental decision on a question arising under a 1 disputes ’ clause must rest solely on consideration of the record before the department. This conclusion is based both on the language of the statute and on its legislative history.”
That branch of the plaintiffs’ attack, lack of due process because of an incompetent administrative record, without sworn or recorded testimony, is newly raised here. Submission and even resubmission before the OICC was voluntary, unlimited and without objection. No point was then made there that those proceedings were faulty. Submission was
“ The issue is clearly an afterthought, brought forward at the last possible moment to undo the administrative proceedings without consideration of the merits and can prevail only from technical compulsion irrespective of considerations of practical justice. * * *
“We have recognized in more than a few decisions, and Congress has recognized in more than a few statutes, that orderly procedure and good administration require that objections to the proceedings of an administrative agency be made while it has opportunity for correction in order to raise issues reviewable by the courts * * * Simple fairness to those who are engaged in the tasks of administration, and to litigants, requires as a general rule that courts should not topple over administrative decisions unless the administrative body not only has erred but has erred against objection made at the time appropriate under its practice.” (United States v. Tucker Truck Lines, 344 U. S. 33, 36-37 [1952].)
The statement by the Court of Appeals for the Second Circuit in United States v. Hamden Co-Op. Creamery Co. (297 F. 2d 130, 133 [1961]) is peculiarly applicable here: “ Inasmuch as the appellant has appeared, briefed, and argued its case before the Contract Disputes Board without reservation and in compliance with Article 22 [the ‘ Disputes ’ clause], it is now too late for it to assert that the Board could not decide the factual issues presented in appellant’s dispute with the G-overnment. This disputes clause provided a method of arbitration by which factual disputes arising between the contracting parties were to be resolved.”
However, the ultimate course taken by the defendants actually afforded a trial de novo. This is how it comes about. Although initially objecting to a trial de novo on the basis of their affirmative defense in paragraphs XXXIII and XXXIV of their amended answer invoking the Wunderlich Act, when the court reserved ruling, the defendants went forward after the plaintiffs’ direct case and put in their complete case on the merits. On their posttrial submission no mention is made of the reserved ruling and instead defendants seek and they now have favorable rulings on two separate sets of alternative findings and conclusions, that is, on the administrative record before the agency and also after the trial here.
Finally, there is the plaintiffs’ contention charging mistakes in law to the administrator. There, as here, none of the plaintiffs’ claims or causes of action were proven. Distinction between question of law and question of fact often is not readily discernible, often imprecise, subtle, and abstruse (cf. Allied Paint & Color Works v. United States, 309 F. 2d 133, 137, supra). Interpretation of the contract of the parties, paramountly, is a question of ascertainment of their intent. If ambiguity is susceptible to interpretation within the four corners of the instrument, it is purely a question of law. But if there be need to resort to extraneous evidence, for construction rather than interpretation, then it is a mixed question; the ultimate law question depending for its resolution upon the preliminary determination of the fact question (Barrand v. Quinn, 277 App. Div. 938; 4 Williston, Contracts [3d ed], § 616, p. 660). There is no such mistake of law on the determination of the facts construing the contract as to the first two causes of action and the ultimate conclusions of law by the administrator; and that is confirmed as tried out here. Nor is it any different on the straight questions of fact as to delays involved in the ninth cause of action.