Under the Government construction contract here involved, an
"equitable adjustment" for the extra work performed by the
contractor required merely the ascertainment of the cost of
digging, moving, and placing earth, and of a reasonable allowance
for profit. These were questions of fact, and, if they were
erroneously determined by the contracting officer, the contractor's
remedy was by appeal to the head of the department concerned, as
provided by Article 15 of the contract. P.
317 U. S. 61.
95 Ct.Cls. 314 reversed.
Certiorari,
316 U. S. 66, to
review a judgment against the United States in a suit by a
contractor upon a construction contract.
ROBERTS, Justice.
This case involves the meaning and application of the terms of a
standard form of Government construction contract.
The findings of the Court of Claims may be summarized. In 1931,
the War Department asked bids for the construction of a levee on
the east side of the Mississippi River. The respondent bid 14.43� a
cubic yard on a section of the work involving approximately
3,881,600 cubic yards of earthwork. A paragraph of the
specifications reserved the right to make such changes in the work
contemplated as might be necessary or expedient to carry out the
intent
Page 317 U. S. 57
of the contract or to meet unanticipated conditions, but added
that no such modification would be the basis for a claim for extra
compensation except as provided in the regular form of contract to
be entered into between the parties.
The respondent began construction at the south end of the
project, and proceeded northward. The length of the proposed levee
was divided by stations one hundred feet apart and numbered from
north to south. Sixty-eight percent of the construction between
Station 5123 and Station 5113 had been completed when portions of
the levee already constructed south of Station 5123 were found to
have a tendency to subside. For this reason, the Government
contracting officer, on October 7, 1932, ordered the work stopped
between the two stations while he sought to determine the cause of
the subsidence. He concluded that the placing of an enlarged false
berm, not called for in the original specifications, would prevent
subsidence in the sector between the two stations. On October 18th,
he gave respondent a written order to construct such a berm; the
order stated that respondent would be given one hundred percent
credit for the earth placed south of Station 5123 where the
subsidence had occurred, and that payment for additional yardage
required by the false term would be made at the contract price per
cubic yard. The additional yardage involved was about 64,000 cubic
yards. The work covered by the change order was necessary for the
completion of the project. The order was issued against the
respondent's protest that an extra price should be allowed, as the
additional work would cost the respondent more than 14.43� per
cubic yard, and that the order was not within the terms of the
contract. The respondent asserted it would later present a claim
for extra cost occasioned it by the additional work.
Article 3 of the standard form of construction contract signed
by the parties provides:
Page 317 U. S. 58
"Article 3.
Changes. -- The contracting officer may at
any time, by a written order and without notice to the sureties,
make changes in the drawings and (or) specifications of this
contract and within the general scope thereof. If such changes
cause an increase or decrease in the amount due under this
contract, or in the time required for its performance, an equitable
adjustment shall be made, and the contract shall be modified in
writing accordingly. . . . Any claim for adjustment under this
article must be asserted within ten days from the date the change
is ordered, unless the contracting officer shall, for proper cause
extend, such time, and, if the parties cannot agree upon the
adjustment, the dispute shall be determined as provided in Article
15 hereof. But nothing provided in this article shall excuse the
contractor from proceeding with the prosecution of the work so
changed."
Article 15 provides:
"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 or his duly authorized representative, subject
to written appeal by the contractor within thirty days to the head
of the department concerned, whose decision shall be final and
conclusive upon the parties thereto as to such questions of fact.
In the meantime, the contractor shall diligently proceed with the
work as directed."
The respondent did not appeal from the order of the contracting
officer to the head of the department concerned. After completion
of the work, the acceptance of the Government's final payment was
under protest. Thereafter, respondent brought this action for its
additional costs over the price of 14.43� paid it for the extra
work, and was awarded a recovery by the court below.
The Government's defense was that, under the terms of the
contract, the contracting officer's decision as to what
Page 317 U. S. 59
was an equitable adjustment involved only a question of fact,
and that, if the respondent was dissatisfied with the officer's
judgment, the contract limited further recourse to an appeal to the
department head. The court below overruled the contention by a vote
of 3 to 2, one of the judges in the majority writing a separate
opinion.
* Two of the judges
were of opinion that the contracting officer paid no attention to
Art. 3 of the contract, made no adjustment, and, without
considering the possibility of extra costs involved in the extra
work, simply ruled that the contract price applied to it.
We cannot accept this view, for several reasons. In the first
place, there are no findings to support it. The findings show that
the officer gave the matter consideration, reached a decision about
it, and issued the order which gave respondent a credit to which it
might not have been entitled under the contract, and fixed the rate
of 14.43� per cubic yard for the extra yardage required by the
change in the specifications. There are no findings that the
contracting officer failed to ascertain the probable cost of the
new work, or that he did not honestly decide that the contract
price would be a fair allowance for the extra work. If the conflict
between the opinion and the findings were sufficient to require a
remand for clarification, this is obviated in the present instance
by certification of the evidence which supports the following
conclusions. Between October 7th, the date of the stop order, and
October 18th, the date of the change order, the respondent's
officials were in touch with the area engineer and the contracting
officer, represented that there was not sufficient earth in the
borrow pit opposite the sector in question, but that the earth
would have to be brought from other points, and that the contract
price of 14.43� would be insufficient to compensate for the
additional expense involved. The Government's representatives
disagreed
Page 317 U. S. 60
with the contentions. Prior to October 18th, however, after
talking with the contracting officer, respondent's officials
signified that they would proceed with the work as ordered, keep a
careful record of the work done and its cost, and would later
insist on payment of any cost greater than that specified by the
change order.
All three judges who were in the majority below agreed, as an
alternative ground of decision, that, if what the contracting
officer did constituted his notion of an equitable adjustment, he
was wrong, and the respondent was right in its claim that the
adjustment made was unfair and inequitable. To the Government's
insistence that the question was one of fact, and therefore to be
settled finally by appeal to the department head in accordance with
Art. 15 of the contract, the court below replied that this court,
in
Case v. Los Angeles Lumber Co., 308 U.
S. 106, and
Securities Commission v. United States
Realty & Improvement Co., 310 U.
S. 434, held that what constitutes an equitable
adjustment is not a question of fact, but a question of law. In
this view, they held that Art. 15 was inapplicable; that the
contracting officer, having erred in his construction of the
contract, had thereby breached its terms, and the respondents were
entitled to sue for the amount of damage incurred by that
breach.
The decisions cited are not authority for the principle that
what is fair and equitable is always a question of law. Quite the
contrary. In § 77B of the Bankruptcy Act, it was provided that the
court should confirm a plan of reorganization if satisfied "it is
fair and equitable" and does not discriminate unfairly in favor of
any class of creditors or stockholders. We held that, in this
connection, the phrase "fair and equitable" had become a term of
art, that Congress used it in the sense in which it had been used
by the courts in reorganization cases, and that whether a plan met
the test of fairness and equity long established by judicial
decision was not a question to be answered by
Page 317 U. S. 61
the creditors and stockholders, but by the court as a matter of
law.
An "equitable adjustment" of the respondent's additional payment
for extra work involved merely the ascertainment of the cost of
digging, moving, and placing earth, and the addition to that cost
of a reasonable and customary allowance for profit. These were
inquiries of fact. If the contracting officer erroneously answered
them, Article 15 of the contract provided the only avenue for
relief.
The judgment is
Reversed.
* 95 Ct.Cls. 314.