United States v. Wunderlich

United States v. Wunderlich

Argued November 6, 1951
Decided November 26, 1951
Full case name United States v. Wunderlich
Citations

342 U.S. 98 (more)

72 S. Ct. 154; 96 L. Ed. 113
Prior history 117 Ct. Cl. 92 (reversed)
Court membership
Case opinions
Majority Minton, joined by Vinson, Black, Frankfurter, Burton, Clark
Dissent Douglas, joined by Reed
Dissent Jackson

United States v. Wunderlich, 342 U.S. 98 (1951) was a case decided before the United States Supreme Court.

Dispute

A dispute arose during the course of respondents' performance of a contract to build a dam for petitioner United States. The contract contained a dispute resolution provision, called a "finality clause" or an "Article 15" provision, which relegated disputes to the contracting officer with any final appeal to be rendered by the department head, whose decision was final and conclusive on the matter.

Court of claims

The court of claims set aside the factual determination made by the Secretary of Interior, holding it to be arbitrary, capricious, and grossly erroneous, even if a provision of the contract made his decision final and conclusive upon the parties thereto.

Opinion of the Court

In an opinion authored by Justice Minton, the Court reversed 6-3, holding:

  • 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 its opinions, the court has consistently upheld the finality of a federal department head's decision unless it was founded on fraud, alleged and proved. So fraud is in essence the exception. By fraud the court means conscious wrongdoing, an intention to cheat or be dishonest.

Dissents

Justice Douglas, with the concurrence of Justice Reed, dissented, arguing that the Court of Claims should be allowed to reverse an official where his conduct is plainly out of bounds, whether he is fraudulent, perverse, captious, incompetent, or just palpably wrong.

Justice Jackson, dissented on the ground that the administrative decision was impeachable not only for fraud, but also for a gross mistake necessarily implying bad faith.

See also

References

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