The defendant has made a motion, in each of these three cases, to dismiss the plaintiff’s petition upon the ground that it does not state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
The petitions allege that the plaintiffs were contractors with the United States which acted through the Department of the Army. As such contractors they were engaged in rebuilding engineering equipment in Japan, for the Army. Under their contracts, they were to be paid for work upon its completion. While many items of work were partly finished, the contract periods expired, and new contracts were made, under which payments for future work were to be made upon a percentage of completion basis, as the work progressed.
The new contracts did not make express provision for the cases of the then unfinished work. Negotiations ensued which resulted in satisfactory agreements as to the amounts to. be paid for that work. Those amounts were paid, but, because of the delay involved in *950 the negotiations, the payments were not made until several months after the work had been done and after the time when, the plaintiffs assert, the money was due. Because of the delay in payment it was necessary for the plaintiffs to borrow money in order to continue their operations for the defendant. They sue for the amounts actuálly paid out by them for interest on the borrowed money, claiming these amounts as damages resulting from the failure of the United' States to pay for the work at the time' payment was due according to the contracts. " ' ■
The Government points to the Act of June 25, 1948, c. 646, § 1, 62 Stat. 978, 28 Ú.S.C. § 2516(a), which says:
"Interest on a claim against the United States shall be allowed on a judgment of the Court of Claims bn- . ly under a contract or Act of Congress expressly providing for payment thereof.”
This statute, and earlier legislation to the same effect, have been strictly applied by the Supreme Court of the United States. United States v. Thayer-West Point Hotel Co.,
The general doctrine that the United States is not liable for interest on its failure to pay money at the time it' contracted to pay it was well stated in Myerle v. United States,
In the recent case of Continental Illinois National Bank v. United States,
■ The Government’s motions are 'granted, and the plaintiffs’ petitions are dismissed.
It is so ordered.
