Where a contract for the manufacture of guns for the United
States provided for a preliminary test subject to the decision of
the Chief of Ordnance and the Secretary of War, those officials
were to decide, not arbitrarily, but candidly and reasonably,
whether the test had been satisfied.
The findings of fact justify the conclusion that the test gun
did not meet the contract requirement; the report of the Chief of
Ordnance, viewed as a whole in the light of the circumstances, is
consistent with this conclusion; there is no ground for the charge
that the Chief of Ordnance and the Secretary of War, in annulling
the contract, acted in bad faith or under gross mistake, or for
holding that the government, by delay injurious to the contractor,
waived the right to annul.
51 Ct.Clms. 22 affirmed.
Page 246 U. S. 611
The case is stated in the opinion.
MR. JUSTICE CLARKE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal to review a judgment by the Court of Claims in
favor of the government on a claim for damages growing out of a
written contract dated May 18, 1898, for the manufacture of 50
wire-wound rapid fire guns, 25 of 5-inch caliber and 25 of 6-inch
caliber. No guns having been delivered under the contract, it was
annulled by the Chief of Ordnance, with the approval of the
Secretary of War in an order, notice of which was given to the
claimants on January 17, 1901. The appellant is the administrator
of the survivor of one of two claimants, to whom we shall refer in
this opinion as "the claimants."
The essential parts of the contract to be considered are as
follows:
"The muzzle velocity shall not be less than 2,600 f.s., with a
good smokeless powder that shall not give a pressure of over 40,000
pounds per square inch, using a projectile of 55 pounds weight for
the 5-inch gun and 100 pounds weight for the 6-inch gun. . . . The
system of rapid-fire breech mechanism employed will be either the
Brown or Dashiell, and must meet with the approval of the Ordnance
Department. . . . It must permit of being easily and conveniently
operated, and permit the same man to traverse, elevate, sight and
fire, without moving the eye from the sight. . . . The first gun
manufactured will be fired with full service charges of powder,
such as that used in testing other rapid fire guns
Page 246 U. S. 612
of similar caliber, and with not more than the regular service
pressure for ordnance, and the gun must be fired for endurance 300
rounds or less as rapidly as practicable at the proving grounds of
the manufacturers, commencing as soon as the gun is completed and
continue firing as the Department may require, 5 rounds to be fired
with pressure of about 45,000 pounds, and shall not exceed 50,000
pounds, these to be included in, but at the close of, the test, and
the acceptance of the remainder of the same caliber will depend
upon the type gun passing its test satisfactorily. . . ."
"Both gun and carriage must endure these tests in all respects
satisfactorily, both as to the strength of material and facility of
operation. . . ."
"It is stipulated and agreed that the party of the first part
shall deliver for test the first complete gun with mount, etc.,
within three months from the date of execution of this contract. .
. ."
"If any doubts or disputes arise as to the meaning of anything
in this or any of the papers hereunto attached and forming this
contract, the matter shall be at once referred to the Chief of
Ordnance, U.S. Army, for determination. If, however, the party of
the first part shall feel aggrieved at any decision of the Chief of
Ordnance, it shall have the right to submit the same to the
Secretary of War, and his decision shall be final."
"5th. If any default shall be made by the parties of the first
part in delivering all or any of the guns, etc., mentioned in this
contract, of the quality and at the times and places herein
specified, then, in that case, the said party of the second part
may supply the deficiency by purchase in open market or otherwise
(the articles so procured to be of the kind herein specified as
near as practicable), and the said parties of the first part shall
be charged with the expense resulting from such failure. Nothing
contained in this stipulation shall be construed to prevent the
Chief
Page 246 U. S. 613
of Ordnance at his option, upon the happening of any such
default, from declaring this contract to be thereafter null and
void, without affecting the right of the United States to recover
for defaults which may have occurred."
It is apparent from these excerpts that the contract
contemplates the making and testing of a "type gun" of each
caliber; that the acceptance of additional guns was dependent on
this one "passing its test satisfactorily," and that the Chief of
Ordnance and his superior officer, the Secretary of War, were to
decide, not arbitrarily, but candidly and reasonably, whether the
gun had satisfied the required test.
Ripley v. United
States, 223 U. S. 695,
223 U. S.
701-702.
The 5-inch test gun was to have been completed within three
months from the date of the contract, but there were delays,
assented to by the government, such that it was not completed for
ten months, so that the first test began on March 8th of the
following year (1899).
The finding by the Court of Claims as to what occurred during
this firing test, to which the type gun of 5-inch caliber was
subjected, is as follows:
"The test firing began with a pressure of 18,000 pounds per
square inch, which was raised on the second round to 21,050 pounds,
and on the third round to 32,800 pounds, with a muzzle velocity of
2,705 feet per second, and on the fourth round to 35,750 pounds
pressure, with a muzzle velocity of 2,821 feet per second,
on
which round the carriage was injured, it not being strong
enough to stand such high muzzle velocities."
"The claimants then protested against the increases made in the
powder charge and insisted that any charge that was sufficient to
produce a muzzle velocity of 2,600 feet per second was all that was
required by the contract, except for the five high-pressure rounds
required at the close of the test. This question was submitted to
the Chief of Ordnance before firing was continued, and by him
Page 246 U. S. 614
decided in favor of the claimants. Thereafter the powder charge
was so adapted as to give this muzzle velocity of 2,600 feet per
second as a general rule, except in the said five high-pressure
rounds at the close of the test, which were fired with pressures of
between 45,000 and 50,000 pounds per square inch.
On one of
these high-pressure rounds, the 293d round, the breach bushing and
jacket of the gun were cracked, and the breech could not be opened
by hand."
"These breaks were repaired, but
the mechanism repaired did
not operate satisfactorily thereafter."
"During the course of the test, the gun was star-gauged by the
government inspector about every 50 rounds, and these gaugings, at
different times throughout the tests and at different points in the
bore,
indicated varying and shifting changes, both
increases and decreases, in the diameters of different
cross-sections of the bore, the gauging at several times and places
indicating a reduction of the normal diameter of 5 inches
down to 4.99 inches, and as a precaution against the danger of
rupture or explosion of the gun by a reduction of the bore
sufficient to cause the projectile to stick in the bore when the
gun was fired, an iron plug of the diameter of the projectile was
passed through the bore about every 10 or 12 rounds,
on one of
which occasions, about the 100th round, it stuck in the bore so
tight at one point as to require the efforts of three men to force
it through with a pole."
"At all times, with this exception, the plug passed through
freely."
"These reductions and variations in the diameter of the bore of
the gun were to some extent due to deposits of metal on the walls
of the bore by abrasion from the projectile in its passage from the
gun,
but were principally due to changes in the cross-section
of the bore from a round to an elliptical form, resulting from a
shifting of the segments enveloping the liner tube by the explosion
of the charge, and also to an
Page 246 U. S. 615
actual contraction of the bore by the compression of the liner
tube forming the walls of the bore by the elastic tension of the
wire with which the tube and its enveloping segments were wound and
bound together, which tension, with the further increase therein
resulting from the explosion of the charge upon reaction after the
explosion, exercised a compressing effect upon the liner tube."
"In large guns of ordinary types of construction, there is
usually a slight contraction of bore during the first few
rounds of firing, after which the gun settles down to a new
condition, and thereafter
the changes of bore diameter in a
normal gun are almost entirely in the way of increase of diameter
from erosion and abrasion."
"While the variations and reductions in the diameter of the bore
of the type gun indicated by the star gauging during the firing
test
did not quite reach a point of actual danger to the gun
from rupture or explosion by sticking of the projectile in the
bore in the process of firing,
they did reach the limit of
safety in this respect, and created a reasonable apprehension of
danger in the minds of the Chief of Ordnance and other officials of
the War Department connected with the execution of the contract for
the guns, and caused the Chief of Ordnance and the Secretary of War
to refuse to pass and accept the type gun unless it should
satisfactorily pass a further test of 100 additional rounds,
as proposed and recommended by the Chief of Ordnance in his
indorsement of November 3, 1899, hereinafter set forth. This
apprehension was heightened by the fact of the new and
comparatively untried type of construction of the gun, and by its
reversal of the usual behavior of guns of the ordinary types of
construction in the way of its continued contractions and changes
of bore in the course of extended use."
These findings of fact, which, under the circumstances of this
case, must be accepted as final (
173 U. S. 173 U.S.
464,
173 U. S. 470;
239 U. S. 239 U.S.
221), if considered independently of the report
Page 246 U. S. 616
of the Chief of Ordnance, yet to be discussed, obviously justify
the conclusion that the test gun did not meet the contract
requirements.
The carriage of this new and experimental type gun failed on the
fourth round of firing, with a pressure well within the contract
maximum; the gun itself developed such cracks in the breach bushing
and jacket that the breech could not be opened by hand and did not
work satisfactorily after repairs were made, and it showed unusual
and abnormal changes in the bore which, while not resulting in an
explosion, created, in the mind of the Chief of Ordnance, a
reasonable apprehension of danger in the use of the gun, and in his
judgment required that it be modified and that it be subjected to
an additional firing test before it could be accepted as having
satisfactorily passed the test prescribed by the contract.
The report of the Chief of Ordinance to the Secretary of War on
the result of this contract test is dated November 3, 1899, and is
as follows:
"In the opinion of this office, while the type 5-inch gun is not
deemed as satisfactory a gun as is desirable for service,
yet
its test has apparently met the contract requirements, and if
certain modifications in the gun and its carriage shall be made in
their further manufacture to remedy defects developed in the test,
and in other respects be made to meet more fully the requirements
of the department,
to which propositions the company willingly
agrees, it is recommended that the 5-inch type gun and its
mount be accepted,
subject, however, to the condition
that, in view of the moderate pressure to which this gun has been
subjected, the department fire it 100 additional rounds, or less,
as it may deem expedient, with charges giving higher pressures and
assimilating more nearly
the pressures that would be
experienced in actual service, and that, in the further
manufacture of the guns, they shall be modified at the expense of
the company,
Page 246 U. S. 617
so as to remedy any further defects that may be developed in
these additional firings."
The claimant's contention is rested largely upon this clause in
the above paragraph,
viz.: "Yet its test has apparently
met the contract requirements." And their argument is that the test
which the gun must meet was prescribed by the contract; that the
facts found, and especially this clause, show that it proved equal
to the required test; that the subsequent annulling of the contract
by the Chief of Ordnance, with the approval of the Secretary of War
"was not made and taken in good faith, but under a mistake so gross
as to justify an inference of bad faith," and that therefore the
claimants are entitled to recover the damages prayed for.
If this expression, so much relied upon, stood as the
unqualified conclusion of the Chief of Ordnance and had been
approved by the Secretary of War, the interpretation claimed for it
might be justified, but the contextual setting of the clause shows
clearly that, in the opinion of the Chief of Ordnance, "defects
[had] developed in the test" which could be remedied only if
certain modifications were made in the manufacture of both the gun
and carriage, and that his understanding when making the report was
that the claimants concurred in this conclusion and willingly
agreed to conform to it.
The clause of the report so emphasized is the expression of a
soldier, not of a technical lawyer, and the paragraph of the report
in which it is found, taken altogether, conveys to us the
conviction that the Chief of Ordnance, while concluding that the
gun was defective in design and construction, nevertheless believed
that it contained elements of invention which, modified and
improved, would make of it a weapon of value to his country, and
that he was eager to lend official assistance to its further
development, which he believed the claimants were equally eager to
receive and profit by. In the interpretation most favorable
Page 246 U. S. 618
to the claimants, the report is an acceptance conditioned upon
development and improvement of the gun which the Chief of Ordnance
thought possible, but which conditions, as we shall see, the
claimants, perhaps because of less confidence in their invention,
never attempted to satisfy.
On January 31, 1900, this report of the Chief of Ordinance was
approved by the Secretary of War, and, a week later, the decision
and recommendation thus approved were communicated to the
claimants.
But, instead of the cooperation which the Chief of Ordnance
thought assured, the government next heard from the claimants
through lawyers, and then through a letter from the claimants
themselves, asking the Secretary of War to suspend further action
until argument could be heard, and stating that "they had not as
yet assented to any modification of the gun or carriage."
The Secretary of War replied to the lawyers that there was no
question before him open to argument, but what, if any, reply was
made to the letter of the claimants does not appear.
However, long prior to this, on May 18, 1899, after the test
firing had been suspended and three months before it was completed,
it was suggested by the government to the claimants that they
should furnish
"the mathematical computations and engineering considerations
upon which their claim of strength of construction and other
qualities of their gun were based."
No notice was taken of this suggestion for almost a year, and
not until after claimants were officially notified of the approval
by the Secretary of War of the report of the Chief of Ordnance of
November 3, 1899. Thereafter, on February 17, 1900, the claimants
notified the Chief of Ordnance that they had employed two expert
mathematicians to work out the various problems connected with the
construction of their gun, and suggesting that they would like
to
Page 246 U. S. 619
have "an army officer of practical experience with artillery"
assigned to cooperate with their selected experts, and that they
would compensate him for the service. Two days later, the
government acceded to this and authorized a major in the army to
join in making the computations as suggested by the claimants.
The finding of the Court of Claims does not show that anything
further was done until, on January 17, 1901, almost three years
after this three months' contract was to have been completed, when,
after the claimants had permitted almost a year to pass without
accepting the suggestion of the government that modifications
should be made in the gun and carriage to cure the defects which
the firing test had disclosed, the Chief of Ordnance, with the
approval of the Secretary of War, notified the claimants that, for
failure to deliver an acceptable gun, their contract had been
declared null and void. Against this conclusion the claimants
protested, and appealed to the Secretary of War for a revocation of
the annulment order, but, after hearing the claimants and their
lawyers several times, the Secretary of War refused to revoke this
order.
A month after the revocation order, the experts, employed almost
a year before by the claimants, rendered to their employers a
report on the technical problems connected with the construction of
the gun, which the government had called for almost two years
before. This report the Court of Claims finds was,
"upon the whole, favorable to the style of construction of the
gun, but defects of construction were pointed out and remedies
therefor suggested in the way of modifications in the
construction."
This discussion of the findings of fact by the Court of Claims
leads us unhesitatingly to the conclusion that the claim that the
Secretary of War and the Chief of Ordnance acted in had faith or
under a gross mistake is wholly
Page 246 U. S. 620
unfounded and gratuitous; that, on the contrary, they dealt
candidly, generously, even helpfully, with the claimants, and that
the annulment of the contract under the circumstances was
abundantly justified. The cause of the misfortune which the
claimants undoubtedly suffered is not to be found in their
treatment by the officials of the War Department, but in their own
refusal, from whatever cause, to accept the encouraging suggestion
of the Chief of Ordnance that the Department was willing, by
generous dealing and cooperation, to assist them in carrying
forward their experimental gun to a successful development.
The claims made in argument that, by various delays on its part
the government, in some indefinite way, waived its right to annul
the contract, and that this right to annul was suspended until
report should be made on the technical problems involved, by the
experts selected by the claimants, it is true with the cooperation
of the government, but almost a year before, cannot be seriously
considered. In the matter of delays, the claimants were as much at
fault, and more, than the government, and the delay of the
technical report for almost a year was reasonable ground for
assuming that no report was likely to be made, or that, if made it
would not be favorable to the acceptance of the gun, which last, as
we have seen, is shown by the finding of facts by the Court of
Claims, to have been proved to be the case.
The judgment of the Court of Claims must be
Affirmed.