1. In order to comply with the demand of government officials
that it deliver goods at a port in this country, as required to do
by its contracts of sale with the United States, claimant was
obliged to forego a profitable disposition of a vessel it owned and
prepared her for the transportation, before the contracts were
cancelled.
Held, that there was no taking of the vessel
under eminent domain, and that the United States was not liable for
the depreciation of her sale value. P.
266 U. S.
540.
2. There can be no recovery on an agreement of the United States
to pay the amount by which the cost of equipment provided for
performance of a war contract exceeds its value at termination of
the contract, as determined by appraisers, where cost and appraisal
are not alleged and depreciation is not shown.
Id.
3. A contract adjusting a claim under cancelled war contracts,
which, by its terms, was not binding until approved by a board of
contract review, was of no force without such approval. P.
266 U. S. 541.
58 Ct. Clms. 718 affirmed.
Appeal from a judgment of the Court of Claims dismissing a
petition on demurrer.
Page 266 U. S. 538
MR. JUSTICE SANFORD delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is an appeal from a judgment dismissing, on demurrer, a
petition filed by Kunhardt & Co., Inc., against the United
States, 58 Ct.Cls. 718.
The material facts alleged in the petition and shown by the
accompanying exhibits, are these: the claimant is a New York
corporation, engaged in importing. On September 10, 1918, the
Director of Aircraft Production issued to it a purchase order for
the growth of 50,000 to 75,000 bushels of castor beans, to be
delivered by the claimant at a specified price at Puerto Cortez,
Honduras, or at the option of the government at a specified higher
price at any United States port on the Gulf of Mexico. On September
16, this order was incorporated in a contract between the United
States and the claimant. In October, the government officers
insisted that, as they were having difficulty in finding
transportation, and the claimant had a schooner, the
Herbert
May, it should provide transportation for the beans from
Honduras and Guatemala to New Orleans -- as it could be required to
do under the option reserved respecting the place of delivery. The
claimant, having no use for the schooner, was then negotiating its
sale, and had received an offer of $75,000. But, as this was the
only means of transportation available to it, the claimant, it is
alleged, was "forced" to retain possession of the schooner, and had
it prepared for the trip to the West Indies. On November 6, the
Director of Aircraft Production issued to the claimant a second
purchase order for 75,000 to 100,000 bushels of castor beans, to be
grown or purchased in Honduras or Guatemala and delivered at New
Orleans at a specified price. This order was incorporated in a
second contract between the United States and the claimant, dated
November 12, although executed later. This contract contained a
provision that, if the Director
Page 266 U. S. 539
of Aircraft Production should terminate it prior to completion,
the United States should, among other things, pay the claimant "on
account of depreciation of plant, facilities, and equipment"
provided by the claimant for the performance of the contract, the
amount by which their cost to the claimant should exceed their fair
market value at the time of such termination, as determined by
three appraisers. On November 14, the Director of Aircraft
Production suspended the second contract, and a few days later
cancelled both contracts. The claimant, then having no use for the
schooner, sold it for $40,000, the highest price obtainable, thus,
it is alleged, suffering "a loss from depreciation in the value of
the schooner of $35,000." Negotiations were subsequently had for
settlement of the losses caused to the claimant by the cancellation
of the contracts. In January, 1919, the contracting officer and the
claimant executed a contract providing that its claim should be
settled for $35,000, including $10,521.22 for depreciation loss on
the schooner. This contract provided that it should not become
binding until approved by the Board of Contract Review, and it was
not so approved. In May, 1919, the contracting officer and the
claimant executed another contract of settlement -- which was duly
approved -- under which the United States paid $24,478.78 as full
compensation for the services rendered and expenditures and
obligations incurred by the claimant under both of the purchase
contracts,
* and in discharge
of all its claims thereunder except that "for depreciation on
schooner," which was reserved.
The petition prays judgment for $35,000, the amount of the loss
alleged to have resulted to the claimant from depreciation in the
value of the schooner, and for general relief.
Page 266 U. S. 540
The demurrer to the petition is based on the ground that the
facts therein set forth do not state a cause of action against the
United States.
This demurrer was properly sustained. It is clear that, on the
facts alleged, the depreciation in the sale value of the schooner
cannot be recovered on the theory which the claimant here urges --
that this is compensation for a taking of the schooner "under
eminent domain" in the performance of "obligatory orders or
requisitions" for the sale and delivery of the castor beans. The
United States did not requisition or take over the schooner, or
appropriate its use. The first purchase contract gave the United
States the option to require the castor beans to be delivered at
any Gulf port in the United States, and the second specifically
required them to be delivered at New Orleans. The United States
therefore was entirely within its contract rights in insisting that
the claimant should deliver the beans at New Orleans, as agreed,
and if the claimant had no other means of so delivering them than
by using its own schooner for that purpose, it was, in preparing so
to do, merely conforming to its contract obligation.
There can be no recovery under the provision in the second
contract that, if terminated before completion, the United States
would pay the claimant for depreciation of the plant, facilities,
and equipment provided for its performance. Even if the use for
transportation purposes of a schooner previously owned by the
claimant could be regarded as the providing of a facility or
equipment within the meaning of the contract, the obligation was
merely to pay the difference between the "cost" of the facility or
equipment to the claimant and its value at the termination of the
contract, as determined by appraisers. There is no allegation as to
the cost of the schooner, and no averment that its value at the
termination of the contract was determined by appraisers. And, for
all that appears, its
Page 266 U. S. 541
cost to the claimant may have been less than the amount for
which it was sold.
Nor can there be any recovery on the theory that, under the
contract executed by the contracting officer in January, 1919, the
United States agreed to pay $10,521.22, or any other sum, for
depreciation loss on the schooner. This contract, not having been
approved by the Board of Contract Review, became, by its own terms,
of no binding force or effect whatever.
The petition does not state a cause of action against the United
States, and the judgment is
Affirmed.
* This contract recited that the second purchase contract had
superseded the first. This does not otherwise appear from the
allegations of the petition.