This сase was referred pursuant to former Rule 45(a), now Rule 57(a), to Trial Commissioner C. Murray Bernhardt with directions to make findings of fact and recommendation for a conclusion of law. The commissioner has done so in an opinion and report filed on March 3, 1964. Exceptions were filed by the defendant, briefs were filed by the parties and the case was submitted to the court on oral argument of counsel. Since the court agrees with the commissioner’s findings, his opinion, and his recommended conclusion of law, as hereinafter set
forth, it hereby adopts the same as the basis for its judgment in this case. Plaintiff is therefore entitled to recover and judgment is entered for the plaintiff in the amount of thirty-nine thousand, seven hundred fifty-four dollars and two cents ($39,754.02) *
OPINION OF COMMISSIONER
The central question here is whether a manufacturer of rubber terrain maps under contract with the Army may recover the increased costs of latex, the principal raw material ingredient, brought about as an economic byproduct of the Korean war during a period of Government-caused delay in inspection and approval of a preproduction model, where despite the delay the contractor still managed to perform within the contract time limits. United States v. Blair,
Antecedent to this is whether the plaintiff prime contractor may maintain this action on behalf of its subcontractor Toyad, for the uncompensated loss was Toyad’s. The subcontract contains no provision resembling the exculpatory type of clause which freed both the prime contractors and the Government from liability in such cases as Severin v. United States,
The Government misled and then delayed the plaintiff unreasonably. While desiring the production of latex terrain maps with a smooth surface, the Government inadvertently led the plaintiff astray at the outset by advising it to bid on the basis of a prototype produced by the Army Map Service which had a rough and pebbly surface! The plaintiff predicated its low bid 6n a fixed-price subcontract with Toyad for latex, which Toyad in turn based on the prevailing market price with a reasonable margin for normal increases. All of this was in 1950 on the eve of the Korean war which started June 25, 1950, although the contract itself was entered into in July and backdated to June 26, 1950. The price of latex advanced rapidly from then to the end of the year when price controls were instituted. Toyad could not adequately protect itself against price advances by purchasing and storing all of its contract requirements for latex, for although it had sufficient storage facilities it is not considered feasible to store latex for longer than four months because of its perishable nature, even under controlled conditions. • Toyad actually ordered its total latex requirements prior to the Korean war and so insured its availability when needed, but the price at the time of delivery gоverned, and naturally Toyad was reluctant to run the risk of spoilage should circumstances prevent use of the latex during its storable life. The plaintiff submitted for inspection a preproduction sample map on August 30, 1950, which was eventually rejected because of the discovery.....by_ Army afterthought that the surface wаs too rough to permit marking of roads, etc., yvith an ink roller, even though it was faithful to the surface texture of the prebid Army prototype. The contract nowhere described the desired surface • texture, nor did it affirmatively require the texture to be such as to take markings from an ink roller. The inference that the cоntractor should have divined this requirement from the fact that it was to provide ink rollers as part of the map kit is more than countervailed by the direction to copy the prebid prototype, the only tangible clue the Government had provided as to the surface texture it wanted.
The plaintiff’s preproduеtion sample rejected by the Government following the inspection on August 30,1950, represented the end product of an elaborate sequence of models, plaster molds, and cast aluminum production molds. Rejection on grounds of surface texture meant the scrapping of the aluminum molds and the repreparation of a new surface for the plaster mold, followed by recasting the aluminum molds. These were expensive and time-consuming operations. Their difficulty was enhanced by the inexplicable failure of the Government to advise the plaintiff of the surface it wanted or how it was to be achieved. By Dеcember 1950 the plaintiff prepared additional preproduction samples having a smoother surface texture, but through further procrastination on the Government’s part the final approval for production was withheld and not issued until February 19, 1951, while under conditions of reasonable cooperation approval should have been forthcoming about November 1, 1950. On the one hand the Government expressed to the contractor its urgent need for the maps for military training purposes, on the other by its failure to act it delayed the contractor’s performance, and all the while the cost of latex was zooming until it was stabilized by a *588 pnce freeze on January 1, 1951. By issuing a change order in June 1952 offidaily defining for the first time desired surface texture and providing for the payment to plaintiff of $5,505.51 as an equitable adjustment for the cost of changing molds the defendant by1 strong implication admitted not only that it had changed its original surfaсe texture requirements, but also that it was capable of reducing the description of the desired surface texture to writing. It did not, of course, admit to unreasonable delay in the circumstances surrounding the change, but this is abundantly clear in the report of facts accompanying this opinion.
The plaintiff proceeded with dispatch on receiving production approval on February 19, 1951, and met all the delivery requirements of the original contract which specified deliveries commencing March 28, 1951. The requirement of the original contract for a production test model to be ready on or before Februаry 28, 1951 was also met, in spite of the delays which had been experienced. Obviously the Government in fixing these dates last referred to either overestimated the time requirements badly, or underestimated the plaintiff’s capacities, for had it not been for the delays the plaintiff would have been able to complеte the contract long before its formal requirements.
It is this circumstance that causes the defendant to rely on United States v. Blair, supra, where it was held that nothing in the contract required the Government to aid plaintiff in completing his contract
prior
to the contract completion date and that damages claimed for delay could not thus be sanctioned. In that case a delinquent Government contractor delayed the plaintiff, and the court ruled that “Nowhere is there spelled out any duty on the Government to take affirmative steps to prevent a contractor from unreasonably delaying or interfering with the аttempt of another contractor to finish ahead of his schedule.” This is readily distinguishable from the case under consideration, for here it was the Grovernment.its.elf which was at fault for delays and not* another contractor. The plaintiff’s contract required the Government to make inspections and tests “in such mannеr as not to unduly delay the work.” This promise, plus the obligation implied in every contract that the Government shall not hinder the contractor in his performance, have been breached through no fault of an intervening or independent third party. In Metropolitan Paving Co. v. United States, supra, a case more cоmparable to the present, the court distinguished the Blair precedent in these words,
But a close reading of Blair, supra, does not support defendant’s position. While it is true that there is not an “obligation” or “duty” of defendant to aid a contractor to complete prior to completion date, frоm this it does not follow that defendant may hinder and prevent a contractor’s early completion without incurring liability. It would seem to make little difference whether or not the parties contemplated an early completion, even whether or not the contractor contemplated an early completion. Where defendant is guilty of “deliberate harassment and dilatory tactics” and a contractor suffers damages as a result of such action, we think that defendant is liable.
On June 11, 1954, the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals dismissed plaintiff’s appeal from the adverse decision of the сontracting officer. The decision was based on a rigid application of the Blair decision. Thus the Board decision was purely on a question of law and offers no barrier of finality under the disputes clause.
Time and events have somewhat eroded much-maligned doctrine of United States v. Rice,
* * * It is settled that the defendant is allowed under the contract only a reasonable time within which to make permitted changes in the specifications and that the defendant is liable for breach of its contract if it unreasonably delays or disrupts the contractor’s work.
The final issue is whether the increased latex costs which the plaintiff seeks as a measure of his damages were the proximate result of the defendant’s breach, or were consequential to the Korean war and thus not recoverable under one way of construing Hadley v. Baxendale, 9 Ex. 341, 156 Eng.Rep. 145 (1854), and Ramsey v. United Statеs,
Findings 53 through 70 relate to the ascertainment of the plaintiff’s damages. Based on the conclusion that the Government’s approval of the plaintiff’s produсt for production on February 19, 1951 was due on November 1, 1950, and that the plaintiff’s damages are measured by the increased cost of its latex purchases in the later period, the plaintiff is entitled to recover the sum of $39,754.02 as damages for the defendant’s breach of contract.
Notes
There was no objection to
de novo
evidence at the trial in the сourt and both parties introduced considerable
de novo
evidence. The court can therefore consider all the evidence including that produced
de novo.
Stein Bros. Mfg. Co. v. United States,
. In fact, neither this issue nor any others of a legal nature discussed in this opinion were raised by the defendant in its brief to the commissioner, who concluded that they needed consideration nevertheless.
