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Mr. William G. Johnson for appellant. [237 U.S. 38, 39] Assistant Attorney General Thompson for appellee.
Mr. Justice Holmes delivered the opinion of the court:
This is a claim for the profits that would have been realized on sand that the claimant alleges to have been contracted for by the United States, but that the United States refused to receive, and for the cost of additional plant alleged to have been provided for the purpose of furnishing the sand. The court of claims rejected the claim. 48 Ct. Cl. 427. The facts are as follows:
By a contract approved on April 20, 1903, the claimant undertook to furnish for the Washington filtration plant 140,200 cubic yards, more or less, of filter sand, to be deposited in twenty-nine filter beds, at $2.65 per yard. The contract and specifications showed explicitly that the quantities mentioned were approximate only, and in October, 1904, there was a discussion in the claimant's presence as to the probabilities of an increase over the 140,200 yards to meet shrinkage, which had not been taken into account. The delivery began in August, 1904, but the claimant's progress was not satisfactory to the government engineers. By January 3, 1905, 15 of the [237 U.S. 38, 40] 29 beds were completed and the engineer in charge wrote to the claimant directing him to complete the deliveries in the 15 beds by placing there before May 15, 70,000 yards in addition to 20,936 yards then in place. The claimant replied, holding out prospects of performance, and saying that he had another plant under way. But on February 17, the total sand in place was 28,231 cubic yards.
On that date the engineer in charge wrote to the claimant saying that he had 'laid down a general program of work of be done during each of the months from now on,' with the following particulars among others:
April . . . filter sand, complete 15, 16, 20, about 18,000 cubic yards.
May . . . filter sand, complete 3, 4, 5, begin 1, 21,000 cubic yards.
June . . . filter sand, complete 1, 2, 9, 14, 21,000 cubic yards.
July . . . filter sand, complete 7, 8, 13, begin 12, 21,000 cubic yards.
August . . . filter sand, complete 10, 11, 12, 6, 21,000 cubic yards.
September . . . filter sand, complete 25, 26, 27, 18,000 cubic yards.
October, filter sand, complete 28, 29, 12,000 cubic yards.
This letter is relied upon by the claimant as a contract making definite the amount that was stated only approximately by the original one. It called for 151,000 yards in addition to the 28,231 yards in place, or, in all, 179,231, as against the 140,200, more or less, originally mentioned. The actual amount needed after allowing for shrinkage ultimately was fixed by the engineers at about 157,000 cubic yards, but the claimant was not notified until May 29, when he immediately entered a protest. He actually supplied 157,725 yards. The claim is for the net profit upon the 21,506 yards that would have been furnished had the figures of the letter been exact. As to the duplicate plant, it is found that it was erected to provide for such increased deliveries per month as were necessary under the claimant's contract. There is no justification in the finding for the attempt to attribute the second plant to the letter of February 17, and therefore so much of the claim may be dismissed. It is not necessary to consider whether the claimant would fall under the general rule that in contracts for sale and delivery the purchaser is not concerned with the steps that his vendor may take in order to enable himself to perform. United States v. O'Brien,
The appellant admits that neither claim can be maintained unless the letter quoted bound the United States as an unqualified contract. We agree with the court of claims that it neither purported to modify the formal agreement originally made, nor had that or any effect upon it. The letter was a spur to a tardy contractor and
[237 U.S. 38, 42]
a sketch of what was expected, but it said nothing to indicate that the engineer in charge was attempting to affect the agreement made by his superior, if he could have done so, or if, notwithstanding the reasons given by the court of claims, the claimant could recover for anything but the work actually done in any event. The obviously dominant measure of the sand to be furnished was what was needed for the filters, and the figures in the letter on their face were the engineer's estimate of what would be needed, not an order for those amounts whether needed or not. Brawley v. United States,
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Justice McReynolds took no part in the consideration or decision of this case.
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Citation: 237 U.S. 38
No. 208
Decided: April 05, 1915
Court: United States Supreme Court
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