Where the right of one claiming under a contract with the United
States depends on whether the government inspector acted in good or
in bad faith in refusing to allow the work to proceed, the findings
of the Court of Claims should be specific in this respect, and, if
not, the case will be remanded with directions to make specific
findings. Findings, which simply state that the inspector in
immediate charge of the work acted with knowledge, other inspectors
being also referred to in the findings, and which do not make a
direct and unequivocal finding as to the good or bad faith of the
inspector in giving
Page 222 U. S. 145
the order, do not conform to the order of this Court heretofore
made in this case,
220 U. S. 220 U.S.
491, and the case is remanded for further compliance therewith.
The facts, which involve the sufficiency of findings of the
Court of Claims, are stated in the opinion.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
Ripley recovered the sum of alleged losses occasioned by the
delay consequent on the refusal of the inspector in charge of
certain jetty work, being performed under contract with the United
States in Aransas Pass, Texas, to permit the placing of certain
crest blocks on the foundation intended to receive them. Both the
United States and Ripley appealed. At the last term, when the case
was before us, it became necessary to ascertain how far the
findings of fact established the good or bad faith of the inspector
in refusing to permit the crest blocks to be placed in position,
and, even upon the hypothesis of bad faith, to determine whether
Ripley had been so negligent in notifying the engineer officer who
was in charge of the work of the refusal of the inspector as to bar
a right to recover for loss occasioned by such refusal. Concluding
that the findings of fact on these subjects were so inadequate and
possibly so misleading as to render it impossible for us to decide
the cause on the merits, our action was stayed, and the court below
was directed to make and transmit as
Page 222 U. S. 146
speedily as possible additional findings on the subjects
referred to, as follows:
"First. Whether, when the claimant was laying the slope stones,
and during the months of December, 1903, and January, February,
March, and April, 1904, as recited in finding VII, the inspector in
charge knew 'that large parts of the work done by the claimant had
fully settled and consolidated.'"
"Second. Whether, in the various refusals to permit the laying
of crest blocks, stated in finding VII, the inspector in charge
acted in good faith."
"Third. Whether at any time the claimant notified the engineer
officer in charge or the chief of engineers that the inspector in
charge wrongfully refused to permit the laying of the crest blocks,
and, if such notice was given, whether it was oral or written, when
the notice or notices were given, and what action, if any, was
taken by such superior officer."
[
See 229 U. S. 220
U.S. 491.]
The case is now before us upon additional findings made by the
court below in assumed compliance with our previous order. These
findings are as follows:
"(1) When denying permission to the claimant to lay crest
blocks, as stated in finding VII, the inspector in charge knew,
from the time which had elapsed, that large parts of the core
therefore completed by the claimant had fully settled and
consolidated, and were ready for the crest blocks to be laid
thereon."
"(2) The refusal of said inspector to allow crest blocks to be
laid at the time requested in said finding VII, thereby
unreasonably delayed the work, and was, on his part, a gross
mistake. There is no other evidence of bad faith on the part of the
assistant engineer in immediate charge."
"(3) There is no evidence to show that any protest or notice was
ever made to the engineer in charge (whose office
Page 222 U. S. 147
was in Galveston), or to the Chief of Engineers (whose office
was in Washington), or to any officer other than the assistant
engineer in immediate charge of the work of inspection."
But when we again approach the duty of deciding the case on its
merits in the light afforded by these additional findings, we are
constrained to the conclusion that they fail to comply with our
previous order, directing a finding as to knowledge on the part of
the inspector, and an unequivocal finding as to his good or his bad
faith.
A few words will suffice to indicate the reasons which compel us
to this conclusion. Thus, in the first place, while paragraph 1
finds that the inspector knew at the time he made the refusal to
permit the placing of the crest blocks upon the foundations, that
they had sufficiently consolidated to be able to receive the
blocks, this is qualified by the statement that such knowledge on
the part of the inspector was but derived from the period which had
elapsed between the building of the foundations and the time when
the refusal to permit the laying of the crest blocks was made. But
this qualification causes the paragraph to be ambiguous as to the
existence or nonexistence of good faith on the part of the
inspector, since there is nothing in the paragraph which directly
or indirectly establishes that the mere lapse of time, in view of
the nature and character of the work, the materials which had
entered into it, and the situation in which it was placed, caused
it to be impossible for the inspector to have been in good faith
when he refused to permit the crest blocks to be laid.
And the same result arises from an accurate consideration of the
second paragraph. This is true because, although that paragraph
states that the refusal to permit the laying of crest blocks
unreasonably delayed the work and was a gross mistake on the part
of the inspector, these statements are qualified by the finding
that there is no other evidence of bad faith "on the part of the
assistant
Page 222 U. S. 148
engineer in immediate charge" -- a qualification which
necessarily correlates the two paragraphs, and again causes the
inference of gross mistake to depend upon the lapse of time
referred to in the first paragraph, without any finding whatever
justifying the deduction that the lapse of time, in view of the
other proof in the case, excluded the possibility of the exercise
of an honest judgment on the part of the inspector.
Again, while the third paragraph is clear when considered in and
of itself, it nevertheless, when read in connection with the two
other paragraphs, exhibits such an inaccuracy of statement as may
tend to mislead, and therefore requires to be corrected. The
refusal to permit the laying of the crest blocks, as shown by the
original findings, was made by the inspector in immediate charge of
the work, and it was as to the good or bad faith of that person to
which our previous order was directed. Evidently, recognizing that
fact, the first paragraph of the additional finding speaks solely
with reference to the assumed knowledge of the inspector in charge,
and yet the second and third paragraphs, by referring, the one to
"the assistant engineer in immediate charge," and the other to "the
assistant engineer in immediate charge of the work of inspection,"
may give rise to confusion by suggesting that these two findings,
by, their change of language, refer to a different person than the
mere inspector in charge.
Concluding, for the reasons stated, that the additional findings
do not conform to our previous order, since they do not make a
direct and unequivocal finding as to the good or bad faith of the
inspector, it becomes necessary that such findings be returned to
the court below, to the end that our previous direction may be
complied with, and an order to that effect will be therefore
entered.
The case will therefore be remanded for compliance with our
previous order.