Hallmark-Phoenix 3, LLC ( 2017 )


Menu:
  •                ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS
    Appeal of --                                 )
    )
    Hallmark-Phoenix 3, LLC                      )      
    ASBCA No. 61049
    )
    Under Contract No. W9124J-08-C-0026          )
    APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT:                      Bryant S. Banes, Esq.
    Sean D. Forbes, Esq.
    Neel, Hooper & Banes, P.C.
    Houston, TX
    APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT:                     Raymond M. Saunders, Esq.
    Army Chief Trial Attorney
    ChristinaLynn E. McCoy, Esq.
    Trial Attorney
    OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE PAGE
    Appellant seeks to recover $63,013.98 for increased wages and fringe benefit costs
    associated with the United States Department of Labor (USDOL) requirement that it pay
    its employees in accordance with wage determination (WD) 2005-2049, Revision 16
    (Rev. 16) during the eight-month and three-day extension period of its contract with the
    government. This amount is the difference in costs between WD 2005-2049, Revision 8
    (Rev. 8), which was the applicable wage determination at the time of contract award and
    Rev. 16, the wage determination applicable during this portion of contract performance,
    to which the government was obligated to adjust the contract, but did not. The parties
    have elected to proceed pursuant to Board Rule 12.2. 1 We sustain the appeal.
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    The Contract
    1. On 29 September 2008, the Mission and Installation Contracting Command
    at Fort Sam Houston, Texas (MICC-FSH) and Hallmark-Phoenix 3, LLC (appellant,
    HP3, or the contractor) entered into Contract No. W9124J-08-C-0026 for logistics
    services operations in support of the United States Army Garrison at the Presidio of
    Monterey in California (USAG POM) (R4, tab 1). 2 The period of performance
    1
    A decision under Rule 12.2 shall have no value as precedent, and in the absence of
    fraud, shall be final and conclusive and may not be appealed or set aside.
    2
    MICC-FSH and USAG POM are referred to collectively as the "government."
    included a 90-day, phase-in period (id. at 24 3), plus a nine-month base period and four
    12-month option years (id. at 1-5). The firm-fixed-price contract contained contract
    line item numbers (CLINs) at unit prices for supplies/services, logistics plans and
    operations, transportation, and maintenance; a separate CLIN for contractor manpower
    reporting was at no cost to the government (id. at 2-18). The contractor was to be paid
    a total of $1,713,346 for the base year (id. at 1).
    2. Among standard contract clauses is FAR 52.217-8, OPTION TO EXTEND
    SERVICES (Nov 1999), which provides:
    The Government may require continued
    performance of any services within the limits and at the
    rates specified in the contract. These rates may be adjusted
    only as a result of revisions to prevailing labor rates
    provided by the Secretary ofLabor. The option provision
    may be exercised more than once, but the total extension of
    performance hereunder shall not exceed 6 months. The
    Contracting Officer [CO] may exercise the option by
    written notice to the Contractor within 15 calendar days
    before the contract expires.
    (R4, tab 1 at 114) (Emphasis added)
    3. Among standard contract clauses incorporated by reference was
    FAR 52.233-1, DISPUTES (JUL 2002)-ALTERNA TE I (DEC 1991) (R4, tab 1 at 111 ).
    Also incorporated by reference is FAR 52 .222-41, SER VICE CONTRACT ACT OF 1965
    (Nov 2007). It provides, in pertinent part:
    (c) Compensation. ( 1) Each service employee
    employed in the performance of this contract by the
    Contractor or any subcontractor be paid not less than the
    minimum monetary wages and shall be furnished fringe
    benefits in accordance with the wages and fringe benefits
    determined by the Secretary ofLabor, or authorized
    representative, as specified in any wage determination
    attached to this contract.
    3
    Where applicable, we adopt pagination added by the parties to Rule 4 file
    documents.
    2
    (d) Obligation to Furnish Fringe Benefits. The
    Contractor or subcontractor may discharge the obligation
    to furnish fringe benefits specified in the attachment or
    determined under subparagraph (c)(2) of this clause by
    furnishing equivalent combinations of bona fide fringe
    benefits, or by making equivalent or differential cash
    payments, only in accordance with Subpart D of 29 CFR
    Part 4.
    (Id.) (Emphasis added)
    4. The contract also included USDOL Wage Determination No. 2005-2049,
    Revision 8 (Rev. 8) dated 24 June 2008 (R4, tab 1 at 123). This was a later WD than
    that contained in the solicitation upon which HP3 bid the contract (tr. 2/160). Under
    Rev. 8, the monthly contract price as awarded was $167,962 (tr. 1/114-15; app. supp.
    R4, tab 11). Although the contractor provided timely notice of several changed WDs
    during the course of performance, the government incorporated only Rev. 16 into the
    contract by unilateral Modification No. P00038 dated 16 November 2013. The
    government never changed the contract price to reflect the increased wages and
    associated costs imposed on the contractor. (Tr. 11114-21, 2/160; R4, tabs 1, 38)
    5. Also incorporated by reference is FAR 52.222-43, FAIR LABOR STANDARDS
    ACT AND SERVICE CONTRACT ACT - PRICE ADJUSTMENT (MULTIPLE YEAR AND
    OPTION CONTRACTS) (Nov 2006), which provided in pertinent part:
    (d) The contract price or contract unit price labor
    rates will be adjusted to reflect the Contractor's actual
    increase or decrease in applicable wages and fringe
    benefits to the extent that the increase is made to comply
    with or the decrease is voluntarily made by the Contractor
    as a result of
    ( 1) The Department of Labor wage determination
    applicable on the anniversary date of the multiple year
    contract, or at the beginning of the renewal option
    period ....
    (2) An increased or decreased wage determination
    otherwise applied to the contract by operation of law; ...
    3
    (e) Any adjustment will be limited to increases or
    decreases in wages and fringe benefits as described in
    paragraph (d) of this clause, and the accompanying
    increases or decreases in social security and unemployment
    taxes and workers' compensation insurance, but shall not
    otherwise include any amount for general and
    administrative costs, overhead, or profit.
    (f) The Contractor shall notify the [CO] of any
    increase claimed under this clause within 30 days after
    receiving a new wage determination unless this
    notification period is extended in writing by the [CO]. The
    Contractor shall promptly notify the [CO] of any decrease
    under this clause .... The notice shall contain a statement
    of the amount claimed and any relevant supporting data
    including payroll records, that the [CO] may reasonably
    require. Upon agreement of the parties, the contract price
    or contract unit price labor rates shall be modified in
    writing. The Contractor shall continue performance
    pending agreement on or determination of any such
    adjustment and its effective date.
    (g) The [CO] or an authorized representative shall
    have access to and the right to examine any directly
    pertinent books, documents, papers and records of the
    Contractor until the expiration of 3 years after final
    payment under the contract.
    (R4, tab 1 at 111)
    6. HP3 and Data Monitor Systems, Inc., (DMS) entered into a subcontract that
    was effective 29 October 2008 for the purpose of performing the instant contract (app.
    supp. R4, tab 12 at 734-35). Paragraph 24 of the subcontract, "INVOICING AND
    PAYMENT" required appellant to pay DMS's invoices "within fifteen (15) calendar
    days of receipt or within fifteen (15) business days after receipt of the Government's
    payment covering the amounts submitted by HP3, which ever is later." Paragraph 28
    "DISPUTES" described the process to be followed by the parties in the event of a
    dispute and the manner in which HP3 would sponsor a pass-through claim to the
    government on behalf ofDMS (id. at 740-42).
    4
    The Parties' Settlement Agreement from HP3 's Appeal to the United States
    Court ofFederal Claims
    7. In December 2012, the parties entered into a settlement agreement to resolve
    HP3's appeal in the amount of $1,285,475.99 before the United States Court of
    Federal Claims. Although the matter was originally heard on a deemed denial basis,
    the CO issued a final decision (COFD) that granted the portion ofHP3's claim relating
    to parts reimbursement. The COFD denied the contractor's demand to recover for
    excess workload and additional costs associated with revised wage rate
    determinations. Under the settlement of the remaining issues, the government paid
    HP3 a total of$733,138.53. (App. supp. R4, tab 12 at 8-12)
    8. Paragraph 8 of the settlement agreement provides in relevant part:
    For Option Year 04, which is ongoing, HP3 releases,
    waives, and abandons any claims for excess workload and
    for wage determination, including but not limited to any
    claims for costs, interest, expenses, attorney fees, and
    damages of any sort with respect to such claims for excess
    workload and wage determination. Furthermore, HP3 does
    not hereby release, abandon, or otherwise waive any other
    claims that may arise out of its performance of the contract
    during Option Year 04, with the exception of any claims
    for excess workload and wage determination, as herein
    described.
    (R4, tab 12 at 9-10)
    9. Paragraph 12 defines the scope of the settlement agreement:
    This agreement is for the purpose ofsettling this case, and
    for no other. Accordingly, this agreement shall not bind
    the parties, nor shall it be cited or otherwise referred to, in
    any proceedings, whether judicial or administrative in
    nature, in which the parties or counsel for the parties have
    or may acquire an interest, except as is necessary to effect
    the terms of this agreement.
    (R4, tab 12 at 10-11) (Emphasis added)
    5
    The Contract Extension Period
    10. On 25 October 2013, following Option Year 4 (OY4), the government
    unilaterally extended the contract in accordance with FAR 52.217-8 from 29 October
    2013 through 28 December 2013 (R4, tab 37). The government added and incrementally
    funded new 5000-series CLINs (R4, tabs 37, 40-41, 43).
    11. Subcontractor DMS on 19 November 2013 advised HP3 that its cost of the
    "Extension Increase" using Rev. 16 was $178.33 per month" (app. supp. R4, tab 12 at
    101-05).
    12. The CO on 16 November 2013 incorporated Rev. 16, dated 19 June 2013
    into the contract extension. Rev. 16 called for a $ .10 health and welfare adjustment,
    and no increase or decrease in prevailing wage rates, over WD 2005-2049, Revision
    15 (Rev. 15). (R4, tab 38) There was no evidence that the government incorporated
    wage determination revisions 9 through 15 into the contract or that it accordingly
    adjusted the contract price as called for by FAR 52.222-43(d) (R4, tab 1, passim; see
    also R4, tab 49 at 13-14 ).
    13. Bilateral contract Modification No. P00035 dated 28 April 2014 extended
    the performance period through 28 August 2014, and adjusted the price by $671,848
    for this four-month extension period (R4, tab 44 ). The modification acknowledged
    that Rev. 16 remained in effect and that the "[i]ncorporation of Wage Adjustment in
    accordance with the wage determination is forthcoming" (id. at 2).
    The Contractor's Requests for Compensation and the Government's Response
    14. Appellant on 22 September 2014 wrote the CO seeking a "cost increase for
    the subject contract" that was certified as required by the Contract Disputes Act of
    1978 (CDA), 
    41 U.S.C. § 7103
    (b)(l). In relevant part, HP3 said that this claim
    "includes our previous WD requests which have not yet been incorporated into the
    contract but were paid for OY1-0Y4 (not the extension) in the certified contract claim
    settlement dated 13 Dec 2012." As excerpted in relevant part, HP3 summarized its
    additional costs associated with Rev. 16:
    New           Original       Increase       #Months       #days     Total
    Monthly       Monthly                                               Adjustment
    Price         Amount                                                per CLIN
    8           3
    5001          $6,442.19    $6,430.00       $12.19            $97.52     $0.40       $97.92
    5002         $73,101.33   $70,859.00    $2,242.33        $17,938.64    $73.72   $18,012.36
    5003         $63,623.54   $58,610.00    $5,013.54        $40,108.32   $164.83   $40,273.15
    5004         $32,574.89   $32,063.00      $511.89         $4,095.12    $16.83    $4,111.95
    Total Request for Equitable
    Adjustment                               $62,495.38
    6
    (R4, tab 49 at 1, 6) This amount was increased to $63,013.98 by appellant's 25 July
    2016 correspondence (R4, tab 118).
    15. The CO on 27 October 2014 informed HP3 that the government was
    processing its claim. "However, per legal review, we have been advised that, in
    accordance with the contract claim settlement agreement dated 13 December 2012,
    paragraph 8, you are not entitled to any claims for excess workload and wage
    determination for OY4 and extension." The government said it would consult with
    "the contract trial attorney for further clarification of the settlement" and would keep
    the contractor informed. (R4, tab 50)
    16. Thus began a period of about a year and a half in which the parties exchanged
    correspondence regarding HP3 's request (see, e.g., R4, tabs 58-60). A pattern emerged,
    in which HP3 provided information requested by various government personnel
    evaluating the request, a period of delay would ensue, the contractor would inquire
    regarding the status of its demand, and the government would either offer assurances that
    the matter would be addressed or asked for information that HP3 contended it had already
    provided (see, e.g., R4, tabs 60, 62, 66, 68-69, 72, 74, 76, 79, 83, 86-87, 89, 93). On
    12 August 2015, appellant wrote the CO concerning the government's lack of response.
    It reminded her that the government's letter of 27 October 2014 "allege[d] that HP3's
    claim is barred by waiver in the settlement agreement and [that she] assumed the
    responsibility of conferring with [counsel] on this matter." HP3 advised that as it had not
    heard from the CO or its counsel, it would "consider this a deemed denial and move to
    litigation if this matter is not resolved by August 31, 2015." HP3 denied that paragraph 8
    of the settlement "bar[red] this claim [and there] was certainly no waiver that covered any
    extension beyond OY4." (R4, tab 60)
    17. Following further exchanges between the parties, the government on
    12 May 2016 asked HP3 to provide one month of payroll data (R4, tab 99). The
    contractor responded with this information on 13 May 2016, and noted that it had
    provided this on 23 November 2015 (R4, tab 100). Appellant asked again for updates
    on 8 and 21 June 2016, and was told that the matter was pending and that the
    government would ask for more information (R4, tabs 103-05). HP3 expressed
    disappointment with the additional delay on 22 June 2016, and the government said
    that it anticipated a decision by 29 July 2016 (R4, tabs 105-06). Further
    correspondence ensued regarding the status of funding and how the matter would be
    processed (R4, tabs 107-08).
    18. HP3 on 25 July 2016 submitted a second certified request for a cost increase
    for the eight-month, three-day period of 29 October 2013 - 2 July 2014. Attached was a
    "Claim Summary Sheet"; the "HP Claim"; and its subcontractor "DMS Claim." The
    contractor sought an "Extension Increase" of "$178.33 per month" and a total of
    $63,013.98. (R4, tab 117) Again, the governIJlent continued to ask for additional
    7
    information and the contractor responded (R4, tabs 118-21 ). On 30 August,
    26 September, and 7 December 2016, HP3 again asked for a timeline from the
    government (R4, tabs 122-24). The CO replied on 7 December 2016 that "[t]he Wage
    Adjustment ha[ s] not been denied" and that she would work on providing HP3 with a
    "projected dead line [sic] with a decision and way forward" (R4, tab 125). Appellant on
    3 January 2017 again asked the CO for a "time line for the Government's resolution of
    this claim" (app. supp. R4, tab 10). HP3 on 6 February 2017 appealed to the Board on
    the basis of a "deemed denial" by the CO.
    The Parties' Stipulations Regarding Appellant's Financial Records
    19. Ms. Pamela Barber was the former vice president for finance and accounting
    for HP3. The parties stipulated that Ms. Barber "used contemporaneous time records to
    input labor hours and other data related to the WD adjustment and to HP3's accounting
    system; that these records were signed ... by the employee and on-site manager, and she
    relied on these contemporaneous records for what was placed in the accounting system of
    HP3." Ms. Barber "can also confirm that the ... labor payments and health-and-welfare
    payments to the [employee stock option plan] and health insurance reflected in HP3's
    accounting system were actually made." She would have testified that "the time sheets
    [were] in a file cabinet and [she] left them there when she left [HP3] in 2014. That office
    has since been closed, and that's why it's so hard to find them." Further, "despite a
    diligent search, Mr. Freeman [president of HP3] is not able to find the underlying time
    sheets, although there remains a dispute about whether those duplicate records need to be
    maintained." Finally, the parties stipulated that Mr. Sook of DMS "will say that he has
    not been paid for the last two months of the extension period, two months and three days
    of the extension period .... [and] that there is nothing owed to him prior to that" but that he
    "paid all his employees in accordance with the wage determinations and that he adjusted
    the wages for the extension period in accordance with Rev. 16." (Tr. 1/100-03) We
    accept appellant's explanation that it was unable to locate original payrolls records and
    that they were lost during a move; HP3 's assertion that the accounting records on which
    it relies reflect contemporaneous labor and fringe benefit costs, and that it made the
    necessary corrections for minor posting errors; and that DMS paid its employees in
    accordance with Rev. 16 for the extension period but has not been paid by HP3.
    DECISION
    Entitlement
    The contractor's entitlement hinges upon two obligations that are clearly stated
    in the contract. The first is the contractor's duty under FAR 52.222-41, SERVICE
    CONTRACT ACT OF 1965 (Nov 2007), to compensate its workers, and provide fringe
    benefits, in accordance with the minimums stated in the then-applicable USDOL wage
    determination, here Rev. 16. We find that, during the extension period, HP3 and DMS
    8
    paid their employees and furnished fringe benefits using Rev. 16 in compliance with
    FAR 52.222-41. (Findings 3-4, 6, 19)
    The second obligation is that of the government to adjust the contract price as
    required by FAR 52.222-43, FAIR LABOR STANDARDS ACT AND SERVICE CONTRACT
    ACT- PRICE ADJUSTMENT (MULTIPLE YEAR AND OPTION CONTRACTS) (Nov 2006).
    Paragraph ( d) of this provision states that the "contract price or contract unit price
    labor rates will be adjusted to reflect the Contractor's actual increase or decrease in
    applicable wages and fringe benefits to the extent that" the change is made as a result
    of the USDOL applicable wage determination. Paragraph (f) requires the contractor to
    timely notify the government of such a change, which HP3 did. (Findings 4-5)
    The record shows that although HP3 complied with paragraph (f), the CO never
    amended the parties' original contract, which incorporated Rev. 8, to reflect successive
    WD revisions. The government does not explain this lapse, as it was obligated to
    make this change but did not do so. By the time of the extension period at issue,
    USDOL required compliance with Rev. 16, which was more costly to the contractor
    than Rev. 8. (Findings 4, 5, 12-13) We find that the government failed to fulfill this
    obligation, and that appellant is entitled to recover the price increase occasioned by
    Rev. 16 over Rev. 8. The change in the applicable wage determination, and the
    appropriate change in contract price, were to be "applied to the contract as a matter of
    law" (FAR 52.222-43(d)); this is specifically authorized for contract extensions by
    FAR 52.217-8.
    Affirmative Defenses Asserted by the Government
    The government's opposition to HP3's entitlement to increased costs rests upon
    two late-raised affirmative defenses, to which appellant objected. These are that
    "HP3'S DECEMBER 2012 SETTLEMENT RELEASE PRECLUDES
    ADJUSTMENTS TO WAGE RATES UNDER WD 2005-2049, REV. 16," and that
    "HP3'S [SIC] IS BARRED UNDER ACCORD AND SATISFACTION TO ANY
    ADJUSTMENT FOR THE FINAL TWO MONTHS AND THREE DAY
    EXTENSION" (gov't br. at 21-24). The Board provisionally allowed testimony at
    hearing but cautioned the government that it must justify its untimely assertions. The
    government responded that these defenses should be allowed, as "HP3 was on notice of
    the [government's] available defenses, and was not prejudiced" (gov't reply br. at 5).
    We sustain appellant's objections. FED. R. CIV. P. 8(c)(l) requires a party
    responding to a pleading to "affirmatively state any available or affirmative defenses,"
    which include accord and satisfaction and release. 4 This rule requires timely notice to
    4
    The FED. R. CIV. P. are not directly applicable to the Board, but we consider these for
    guidance when the Board's Rules do not directly speak to the issues. We
    9
    the opposing party, and the government offered no excuse for failing to do so. Even if
    the Board allowed the government to pursue these defenses, these would fail for want
    of proof. We find that the December 2012 settlement agreement did not bar the instant
    appeal for wage-related increased costs for the extension period nor did it modify the
    terms of the contract (R4, tab 12 at 8-10).
    The government produced no evidence that appellant intended to release its
    right to recoup the cost of increased wage requirements for the extended period. See,
    e.g., Optex Systems, Inc., 
    ASBCA No. 58220
    , 14-1 BCA if 35,801 at 175,097. Nor did
    the government prove there was accord and satisfaction simply "because [HP3] is a
    signatory to bilateral Modification P00035" which applied Rev. 16, which had "only a
    $.10 [health and welfare] adjustment, and not prevailing wage increases." In
    particular, the government has not proven the essential element that there was a
    meeting of the minds that this modification was intended as accord and satisfaction for
    costs incurred during the contested extension period. See, e.g., Bell BC! Co. v. United
    States, 
    570 F.3d 1337
    , 1341 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (quoting O'Connor v. United States, 
    308 F.3d 1233
    , 1240 (Fed. Cir. 2002)). Notably, the government adduced no testimony
    from the CO or any competent government representative to support this contention.
    Quantum
    Appellant seeks to recover $63,013.98. We reject the government's contention
    that HP3 is entitled, at most, to the increased cost of complying with Rev. 16 over
    Rev. 15, which was used during OY4 as a result of the settlement agreement (see, e.g.,
    gov't br. at 21-22; gov't reply br. at 2). The government overlooks the fact that the
    contract price was never adjusted to incorporate the increased costs of compliance with
    Rev. 15. We hold that the starting point to calculate the cost impact of Rev. 16 was
    Rev. 8, which was the only prior wage rate specified in the contract.
    The government also criticizes appellant for failing to produce original payroll
    records to substantiate its claim, which it asserts were lost during a move (finding 20).
    While these would be the best proof of the contract's increased expenses, we deem the
    records produced in support of its claim to be adequate. We accept HP3 's assertion,
    which the government did not successfully rebut, that it corrected the relatively minor
    errors it made with respect to incorrectly paid workers and in its accounting entries and
    that the currently-requested amount is correct (app. reply hr. at 5). We reject the
    government's contention that HP3 is not entitled to the amounts due to its
    subcontractor DMS. Appellant successfully demonstrated that its agreement with
    DMS provided for HP3 to pay the subcontractor after it received payment from the
    government. (Findings 6, 19)
    regard FED. R. CIV. P. 8(c)(1) as appropriate here as a matter of fundamental
    fairness, particularly in this expedited Rule 12.2 appeal.
    10
    CONCLUSION
    We sustain appellant's appeal, and hold that the contractor is entitled to recover
    the $63,013.98 it seeks plus interest pursuant to the CDA, 
    41 U.S.C. § 7109
    , from the
    date of its 22 September 2014 claim.
    Dated: 23 June 2017
    ``
    PAGE~
    REBA
    Administrative Judge
    Armed Services Board
    of Contract Appeals
    I certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the Opinion and Decision of the
    Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals in 
    ASBCA No. 61049
    , Appeal of
    Hallmark-Phoenix 3, LLC, rendered in conformance with the Board's Charter.
    Dated:
    JEFFREY D. GARDIN
    Recorder, Armed Services
    Board of Contract Appeals
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: ASBCA No. 61049

Judges: Page

Filed Date: 6/23/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 7/5/2017