Under the standard provision of a government contract that all
disputes involving questions of fact shall be decided by the
contracting officer, with the right of appeal to the head of the
department, "whose decision shall be final and conclusive upon the
parties thereto," a finding by the head of a department on a
question of fact may not be set aside by the Court of Claims,
unless it was founded on fraud, alleged and proved. Pp.
342 U. S.
98-101.
(a) By fraud is meant conscious wrongdoing, an intention to
cheat or be dishonest. P.
342 U.S.
100.
(b) A finding by the Court of Claims that the decision of the
department head was "arbitrary," "capricious" and "grossly
erroneous" is not sufficient to justify setting it aside. P.
342 U.S. 100.
117 Ct.Cl. 92 reversed.
The Court of Claims set aside a decision of a department head on
a question of fact arising under a standard form government
contract. 117 Ct.Cl. 92. This Court granted certiorari. 341 U.S.
924.
Reversed, p.
342 U. S. 101.
MR. JUSTICE MINTON delivered the opinion of the Court.
This Court is again called upon to determine the meaning of the
"finality clause" of a standard form government contract.
Respondents agreed to build a dam for the United States under a
contract containing the usual
Page 342 U. S. 99
"Article 15."
* That Article
provides that all disputes involving questions of fact shall be
decided by the contracting officer, with the right of appeal to the
head of the department, "whose decision shall be final and
conclusive upon the parties thereto." Dissatisfied with the
resolution of various disputes by the department head, in this
instance, the Secretary of the Interior, respondents brought suit
in the Court of Claims. That court reviewed their contentions and,
in the one claim involved in this proceeding set aside the decision
of the department head. 117 Ct.Cl. 92. Although there was some
dispute below, the parties now agree that the question decided by
the department head was a question of fact. We granted certiorari,
341 U.S. 924 to clarify the rule of this Court which created an
exception to the conclusiveness of such administrative
decision.
The same Article 15 of a government contract was before this
Court recently, and we held, after a review of the authorities,
that such Article was valid.
United States v. Moorman,
338 U. S. 457. Nor
was the
Moorman case one of first impression. Contracts,
both governmental and private, have been before this Court in
several cases in which provisions equivalent to Article 15 have
been approved and enforced "in the absence of fraud or such gross
mistake as would necessarily imply bad faith, or a failure to
exercise an honest judgment. . . ."
Kihlberg v. United
States, 97 U. S. 398,
97 U. S. 402;
Sweeney v. United States, 109 U.
S. 618,
109 U. S. 620;
Martinsburg &
P.R.
Page 342 U. S. 100
Co. v. March, 114 U. S. 549,
114 U. S. 553;
Chicago, S.F. & C. R. Co. v. Price, 138 U.
S. 185,
138 U. S.
195.
In
Ripley v. United States, 223 U.
S. 695,
223 U. S. 704,
750, gross mistake implying bad faith is equated to "fraud."
Despite the fact that other words such as "negligence,"
"incompetence," "capriciousness," and "arbitrary" have been used in
the course of the opinions, this Court has consistently upheld the
finality of the department head's decision unless it was founded on
fraud, alleged and proved. So fraud is, in essence, the exception.
By fraud, we mean conscious wrongdoing -- an intention to cheat or
be dishonest. The decision of the department head, absent
fraudulent conduct, must stand under the plain meaning of the
contract.
If the decision of the department head under Article 15 is to be
set aside for fraud, fraud should be alleged and proved, as it is
never presumed.
United States v. Colorado Anthracite Co.,
225 U. S. 219,
225 U. S. 226.
In the case at bar, there was no allegation of fraud. There was no
finding of fraud, nor request for such a finding. The finding of
the Court of Claims was that the decision of the department head
was "arbitrary," "capricious," and "grossly erroneous." But these
words are not the equivalent of fraud, the exception which this
Court has heretofore laid down and to which it now adheres without
qualification.
Respondents were not compelled or coerced into making the
contract. It was a voluntary undertaking on their part. As
competent parties, they have contracted for the settlement of
disputes in an arbitral manner. This, we have said in
Moorman, Congress has left them free to do.
United
States v. Moorman, supra, at
338 U. S. 462.
The limitation upon this arbitral process is fraud, placed there by
this Court. If the standard of fraud that we adhere to is too
limited, that is a matter for Congress.
Since there was no pleading of fraud, and no finding of fraud,
and no request for such a finding, we are not
Page 342 U. S. 101
disposed to remand the case for any further findings, as
respondents urge. We assume that, if the evidence had been
sufficient to constitute fraud, the Court of Claims would have so
found. In the absence of such finding, the decision of the
department head must stand as conclusive, and the judgment is
reversed.
Reversed.
*
"ARTICLE 15.
Disputes. -- Except as otherwise
specifically provided in this contract, all disputes concerning
questions of fact arising under this contract shall be decided by
the contracting officer subject to written appeal by the contractor
within 30 days to the head of the department concerned or his duly
authorized representative, whose decision shall be final and
conclusive upon the parties thereto. In the meantime, the
contractor shall diligently proceed with the work as directed."
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS, with whom MR. JUSTICE REED concurs,
dissenting.
Law has reached its finest moments when it has freed man from
the unlimited discretion of some ruler, some civil or military
official, some bureaucrat. Where discretion is absolute, man has
always suffered. At times, it has been his property that has been
invaded; at times, his privacy; at times, his liberty of movement;
at times, his freedom of thought; at times, his life. Absolute
discretion is a ruthless master. It is more destructive of freedom
than any of man's other inventions.
The instant case reveals only a minor facet of the age-long
struggle. The result reached by the Court can be rationalized or
made plausible by casting it in terms of contract law: the parties
need not have made this contract; those who contract with the
Government must turn square corners; the parties will be left where
their engagement brought them. And it may be that, in this case the
equities are with the Government, not with the contractor. But the
rule we announce has wide application, and a devastating effect. It
makes a tyrant out of every contracting officer. He is granted the
power of a tyrant even though he is stubborn, perverse, or
captious. He is allowed the power of a tyrant though he is
incompetent or negligent. He has the power of life and death over a
private business even though his decision is grossly erroneous.
Power granted is seldom neglected.
Page 342 U. S. 102
The principle of checks and balances is a healthy one. An
official who is accountable will act more prudently. A citizen who
has an appeal to a body independent of the controversy has
protection against passion, obstinacy, irrational conduct, and
incompetency of an official. The opinion by Judge Madden in this
case expresses a revulsion to allowing one man an uncontrolled
discretion over another's fiscal affairs. We should allow the Court
of Claims, the agency close to these disputes, to reverse an
official whose conduct is plainly out of bounds, whether he is
fraudulent, perverse, captious, incompetent, or just palpably
wrong. The rule we announce makes government oppressive. The rule
the Court of Claims espouses gives a citizen justice even against
his government.
MR. JUSTICE JACKSON, dissenting.
It is apparent that the Court of Claims, which deals with many
such cases, while we deal with few, has reached a conclusion that
contracting officers and heads of departments sometimes are abusing
the power of deciding their own lawsuits which these contract
provisions give to them. It also is apparent that the Court of
Claims does not believe that our decision in
United States v.
Moorman, 338 U. S. 457,
completely closed the door to judicial relief from arbitrary action
unless it also is fraudulent in the sense of "conscious wrongdoing,
an intention to cheat or be dishonest." Nor could I have believed
it.
Granted that these contracts are legal, it should not follow
that one who takes a public contract puts himself wholly in the
power of contracting officers and department heads. When we
recently repeated in
Moorman that their decisions were
"conclusive unless impeached on the ground of fraud,
or such
gross mistake as necessarily implied bad faith,"
Id.
at
338 U. S. 461
(emphasis supplied), I supposed that we meant that part of the
reservation for which I have supplied emphasis. Today's
Page 342 U. S. 103
decision seems not only to read that out of the
Moorman
decision, but also to add an exceedingly rigid meaning to the word
"fraud."
Undoubtedly contracting parties can agree to put decision of
their disputes in the hands of one of them. But one who undertakes
to act as a judge in his own case or, what amounts to the same
thing, in the case of his own department, should be under some
fiduciary obligation to the position which he assumes. He is not at
liberty to make arbitrary or reckless use of his power, nor to
disregard evidence, nor to shield his department from consequences
of its own blunders at the expense of contractors. He is somewhat
in the position of the lawyer dealing with his client or the doctor
with his patient, for the superiority of his position imposes
restraints appropriate to the trust. Though the contractor may have
convenanted to be satisfied with what his adversary renders to him,
it must be true that he who bargains to be made judge of his own
cause assumes an implied obligation to do justice. This does not
mean that every petty disagreement should be readjudged, but that
the courts should hold the administrative officers to the old but
vanishing standard of good faith and care.
I think that we should adhere to the rule that, where the
decision of the contracting officer or department head shows "such
gross mistake as necessarily to imply bad faith" there is a
judicial remedy even if it has its origin in overzeal for the
department, negligence of the deciding official, misrepresentations
-- however innocent -- by subordinates, prejudice against the
contractor, or other causes that fall short of actual corruption.
Men are more often bribed by their loyalties and ambitions than by
money. I still believe one should be allowed to have a judicial
hearing before his business can be destroyed by administrative
action, although the Court again thinks otherwise.
Cf. Ewing v.
Mytinger & Casselberry, 339 U. S. 594,
339 U. S.
604.