delivered the opinion of the Court.
On June 24, 1931, one John V. Grogan entered into a contract
1
with the United States to construct certain public buildings at the United States Inspection Station at
The United States brought this suit in the District Court to recover the excess cost and also to recover liquidated damages of $9,875 for the delay occasioned by Grogan’s default. The liquidated damages were computed on the basis of an agreed $25 per day for thе 395 days between June 20, 1933, the extended date for completion, and July 20,1934, when the contract right to proceed was terminated. Grogan was not served and never appeared. The District Court denied respondent’s motion to strike from the complaint the paragraph alleging a right to liquidated damages.
United States
v.
Grogan,
Article 9, set out in the margin,
3
provides in effect that: (1) if the contractor refuses or fails to prosecute the work
The impact of Article 9 on the facts of this case is clear. The contractor having failed to complete his work within the specified time, the Gоvernment exercised its option under the first part of Article 9 to terminate his right to proceed. This power to terminate could be exercised before or on the stipulated completion date or, as in this casе, at any date thereafter. The Government then made other arrangements to complete the construction work and was entitled to, and did recover, the excess cost occasioned thereby. It thus waived its right to liquidаted damages under the second part of Article 9. That right is conditioned upon the Government not terminating the contractor’s right to proceed. Where there is such a termination, even though it be subsequent to the stipulated completion date, the right to liquidated damages disappears. Such has been the uniform and correct result heretofore reached in the application of this type of contract provision. See
United States
v.
Cunningham,
The Gоvernment has urged us to read the second part of Article 9 as though the right to liquidated damages were
But we are confronted here with an unambiguous contract that cleаrly limits the right to liquidated damages to situations where the Government does not at any time terminate the contractor’s right to proceed. That it may be wiser to expand the right to such damages to every case of delay, regardless of whether there is a termination, is of course not relevant in interpreting and applying clear words of limitation in the contract. We find nothing, moreover, in § 21 of the 1902 Act that fills in interstices deliberately left open by the рarties. No statutory language or policy forbids the Government and a contractor from stipulating for liquidated damages in
Affirmed.
Notes
The form of contract used was U. S. Standard Form No. 23 construction contract, approved by the President on November 19, 1926, and used between 1926 and 1935.
C. 1036, 32 Stat. 310, 326; 40 U. S. C. § 269. This provides: “In all contracts entered into with the Unitеd States for the construction or repair of any public building or public work under the control of the Treasury Department, a stipulation shall be inserted for liquidated damages for delay; and the Secretary of the Treasury is authorized and empowered to remit the whole or any part of such damages as in his discretion may be just and equitable; and in all suits hereafter commenced on any such contracts or on any bond given in connection therewith it shall not be necessary for the United States, whether plaintiff or defendant, to prove actual or specific damages sustained by the Government by reason of delays, but such stipulation for liquidated damages shall be conclusive and binding upon all parties.” See H. Rep. No. 1794, p. 8 (67th Cong., 1st Sess.); 35 Gong. Rec. 4935.
“Delays
— Damages.—If the contractor refuses or fails to prosecute the work, or any separable part thereof, with such diligence as will insure its сompletion within the time specified in Article 1, or any extension thereof, or fails to complete said work within such time, the Government may, by written notice to the contractor, terminate his right to proceed with the work or such part of the work as to which there has been delay. In such event, the Government may take over
The directions for the preparation of construction contracts upon the form here involved state that “The specifications should include a paragraph stating the amount of liquidated damages that will be paid by the contractor for each calendar day of delay, as indicated in Article 9 of the contract.” It was pursuant to this direction that paragraph 5 of the specificаtions in the instant case was inserted. This instruction indicates that the specifications are to include no more than “the amount” or rate of per diem damages that are to be applied “as indicated in Article 9 of the contract.”
