DocketNumber: No. 43289
Citation Numbers: 89 Ct. Cl. 279, 1939 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 200, 1939 WL 4288
Judges: Booth, Green, Jvdge, Littleton, Whaley, Williams
Filed Date: 5/29/1939
Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 10/19/2024
delivered the opinion of the court:
The contract between plaintiff and the defendant, represented by the Quartermaster Corps, United States Army,
The documents used by the supply officer at Camp Funston on which he entered from time to time schedules of delivery calls for coal, which were furnished to plaintiff through .the Depot Quartermaster at St. Louis, Mo., with shipping directions, were printed form “Q. M. C. Form 108G,” authorized July 20, 1918, for use under the standard form contract for the furnishing of supplies and materials on which the supply officer filled in the schedule for the delivery, as needed, of the supplies or materials covered by the contract.
Plaintiff contends, first, that the total of 30,000 tons of coal specified in the contract was called for by the supply officer at Camp Funston within the meaning of the provision for schedule of delivery calls in Schedule A of the contract and that shipping directions therefor were furnished by the Depot Quartermaster at St. Louis, Mo., and that the defendant breached the contract- on December 21,1920, by refusing
It is clear from the record in this case that the supply officer at Camp Funston did not issue and deliver to plaintiff schedule of delivery calls for the entire quantity of 30,000 tons of coal specified in the contract within the meaning of the provisions of paragraph 2 and Schedule A of the contract. The entry by the supply officer on the printed forms of “Schedule of Delivery” calls of the total tonnage of coal specified in the contract under the heading “Quantity” in some of the calls issued by him was not a “Schedule of Delivery” call for the entire amount of coal. Under the printed heading “Point of Delivery and Schedule” the supply officer, in the early calls, which were at plaintiff’s request modified by subsequent calls, issued schedule of delivery at the rate of a certain number of cars a month. In later calls he furnished a schedule of delivery for a certain number of cars a week, and in subsequent calls and in the calls in effect at the time deliveries were suspended under directions from the contracting division of the office of the Quartermaster General, the supply officer furnished plaintiff with schedule of delivery calls month by month for a certain number of cars per day. If the contention of the plaintiff that the entry by the- supply officer under the heading “Quantity” of the printed form of schedule of delivery calls of the total tonnage of each class of coal specified in the contract was the furnishing by such supply officer of a “Schedule of Delivery Call” for that amount within the meaning of the contract, the contracting officer issued calls to the plaintiff for 95,650 tons of coal which was 65,650 tons in excess of the amount specified in the contract. The entry on the schedule of delivery forms of information other than as to the schedule of delivery of the coal was for information purposes only. The schedule of delivery of the coal, ns specified by the supply officer, was the important and
The evidence shows that the letter of the Depot Quartermaster at St. Louis, Mo., dated December 21, 1920, to plaintiff (finding 10), which plaintiff contends was a breach of the contract, was written by the Depot Quartermaster pursuant to instructions issued by the War Department to abandon Camp Funston and that such letter was written as the agent of the contracting officer. But in any event the evidence shows that the Depot Quartermaster at St. Louis did not cancel the contract but merely gave plaintiff notice to suspend deliveries awaiting action by the Quartermaster General with reference to termination of the contract. At the time the notice of December 21, 1920, was sent to plaintiff by the Quartermaster at St. Louis, Capt. Hal T. Vigor was the procuring, purchasing, and contracting officer of the Quartermaster Corps, and instructions from.- the Quartermaster’s Department to discontinue further purchases and shipments of supplies to Camp Funston had been issued by reason of the transfer therefrom of the 7th Division of the Army. Subsequently, as shown by finding 13, the Quartermaster General determined that the public interest required the termination of: plaintiff’s contract and he, thereupon, terminated the same under the authority contained in section 2 after his office had determined that the undelivered portion of the total tonnage of coal specified in the contract could not be diverted or used by the Govermnent at some other army camp:
The petition must therefore be dismissed. It is so ordered.