Watts Constructors, LLC ( 2015 )


Menu:
  •                ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS
    Appeal of --                                 )
    )
    Watts Constructors, LLC                      )      
    ASBCA No. 59602
    )
    Under Contract No. N62473-10-D-5418          )
    APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT:                      Peter N. Ralston, Esq.
    Alix K. Schroeder, Esq.
    Oles Morrison Rinker & Baker, LLP
    Seattle, WA
    APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT:                     Ronald J. Borro, Esq.
    Navy Chief Trial Attorney
    Tracey R. Rockenbach, Esq.
    Trial Attorney
    OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE THRASHER
    PURSUANT TO BOARD RULE 12.2
    This appeal involves a contract awarded to Watts Constructors, LLC (Watts) by
    the Naval Facilities Engineering Command Southwest (government) to perform a
    utility upgrade for Camp Pendleton Marine Corps Base, California. Watts seeks an
    equitable adjustment for additional direct costs of $41, 148 it incurred while removing
    a differing site condition, as well as, interest it contends was the result of the
    government's delay in issuing a modification allowing Watts to proceed with the
    work. The facts are largely undisputed but the parties differ as to how Watts incurred
    costs should be allocated; whether the costs are direct costs or indirect overhead costs
    under Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) Part 31 cost principles (cost principles).
    Watts elected to proceed under the Board's Expedited Procedure (Rule 12.2) 1 and the
    parties elected to decide the appeal on the record pursuant to Board Rule 11. 2 Only
    1
    The Contract Disputes Act, implemented by Board Rule 12.2, provides that this
    decision 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
    The record consist of: the government's Rule 4 file (tabs 1-30); appellant's
    Supplemental Rule 4 file (tabs 1-8); the Declaration of Mr. Jeffrey M. Pruett
    (attachment to appellant's post-hearing brief); the government's Exhibit A,
    an email exchange between 22 August 2012 and 25 September 2012, Exhibit B,
    an unsigned modification and Exhibit C, the Declaration of Joseph U. Hill
    (attachments to the government's post-hearing brief); and Second Declaration
    of Mr. Jeffrey M. Pruett (attachment to appellant's reply brief).
    entitlement is at issue. The Board has jurisdiction over the dispute pursuant to the
    Contract Disputes Act (CDA) of 1978, 
    41 U.S.C. §§ 7101-7109
    . We deny the appeal.
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    1. On 16 August 2012, the government awarded Watts a firm-fixed price task
    order 0003 (contract) under Contract No. N62473-10-D-5418 (basic contract). This
    appeal primarily involves one requirement under the contract, to Relocate Sewer Lift
    Station 310406 (Sewer Lift Relocation). (R4, tab 3 at 1, 18)3
    2. Pertinent to this appeal, the contract incorporated all clauses in the basic
    contract (R4, tab 3 at 101) which in tum incorporated the FAR cost principles through
    inclusion of DFARS 252.243-7001, PRICING OF CONTRACT MODIFICATIONS
    (DEC 1991) (R4, tab 30 at gov't supp. ex. 032). 4 Shortly after award the government
    informed Watts that it must consistently use a single distribution base for computing
    field office overhead, 5 using either a per diem rate or percentage mark-up to compute
    field office overhead on all changes (R4, tab 9). In response, Watts elected to recover
    overhead rates on a percentage basis, rather than a per diem basis for this contract (R4,
    tab 28 at 1031 ). The final cost objective for these costs was the contract as a whole
    (R4, tab 26 at 1021 ).
    3. Watts encountered a differing site condition that interfered with the
    installation of the Sewer Lift Relocation (app. supp. R4, tab 7). Watts promptly
    notified the government and, on 10 July 2013, the government acknowledged a
    differing site condition existed and notified Watts any work it completed before a
    processed modification was issued would be at its own risk (app. supp. R4, tab 5 at 2).
    The work stoppage directly interfered with the installation of a manhole, excavation
    and completion of the Sewer Lift Relocation work (R4, tab 20 at 978).
    4. On 22 July 2013 Watts submitted its initial cost proposal and a revised
    proposal on 31 July 2013 for the differing site condition. Both cost proposals
    contained a percentage markup for field office overhead, as was the case on a previous
    3
    All Rule 4 page numbers are to the Bates-stamped numbers.
    4
    DF ARS 252.243-7001, PRICING OF CONTRACT MODIFICATIONS (DEC 1991) states,
    "When costs are a factor in any price adjustment under this contract, the
    contract cost principles and procedures in FAR Part 31 and DF ARS Part 231, in
    effect on the date of this contract, apply."
    5
    The term "field office overhead" is often used interchangeably with the term "job site
    overhead." For consistency, we refer to the claimed costs at issue as field office
    overhead.
    2
    modification. 6 (R4, tabs 16-18) Mr. Jeffrey M. Pruett testified by affidavit that the
    percentage method was used under the assumption that the final modification,
    Modification No. 4 (Mod 4) would be completed before the original contract
    completion date and, therefore, the costs would be shared with other contract work
    (Declaration of Mr. Jeffrey M. Pruett (Pruett decl.) ~ 6). The parties conducted
    negotiations on 13 August 2013 culminating in an agreement on the costs to be
    reflected in Mod 4 (R4, tab 19 at 975). While waiting for the Mod 4 to be issued,
    Watts completed as much of the work as it could on the Sewer Lift Relocation and
    other contract items; once Watts had completed all possible work on the Sewer Lift
    Relocation, Watts moved its equipment and personnel to work on other contract items
    (Pruett decl. ~ 11 ).
    5. Watts completed all other contract work before Mod 4 was issued and on
    18 September 2013 requested that Mod 4 include language providing for payment
    of "associated costs" related to time delay in executing the modification (R4, tab 22
    987-89). That same day, the government responded stating, "Because you charge
    [field office overhead] as a percentage rate, we don't agree that you are entitled to
    additional costs for the delay associated with this mod. However, you are more than
    welcome to submit a proposal for delay costs." (R4, tab 22 at 987)
    6. On 20 September 2013, Watts submitted a revised proposal for Mod 4 that
    eliminated any percentage charge for field office overhead costs but requested a total
    cost of$57,782 that included $42,004 for the direct site costs (R4, tab 21at984).
    7. On 23 September 2013, in an attempt to avoid further delay, the government
    responded to Watts suggesting that the parties execute Mod 4 as negotiated, i.e.,
    including the percentage field office overhead, proposing to resolve the "time and
    associated costs related to this change" at a later date by the inclusion of language in
    the mod preserving Watts' claim (R4, tab 22 at 986). Watts executed bilateral Mod 4
    on 23 September 2013 reimbursing Watts in the amount of $20,991.00. Mod 4 did not
    provide any time extension but stated, "If there is time and associated costs related to
    this change, it will be negotiated later upon Government review of the Contractor's
    Time Impact analysis dated September 19, 2013." (R4, tab 23) Mod 4 also included
    10% mark-up for field overhead costs on the change (R4, tab 22 at 986, tab 25
    at 1018).
    8. On 15 October 2013, Watts submitted its proposal for additional delay
    requesting $41,148 and 39 working days (56 calendar days) (R4, tab 24 at 998). The
    costs claimed for field office overhead were for a quality control manager, a
    supervisor, an office trailer, and site fencing among other costs that Watts was
    6
    Modification No. 3 deleted work and included an amount for field office overhead
    that employed a percentage mark-up (R4, tab 28 at 1031 ).
    3
    required to provide on site (Second Declaration of Mr. Jeffrey M. Pruett (2nd Pruett
    decl.) ~ 3). On 22 January 2014, the government denied Watts' cost proposal because
    Watts should have recovered these costs through the percentage mark-up for field
    office overhead as it elected and applied on previous modification (R4, tab 25
    at 10118). Mr. Pruett testified that, "If Watts had been aware the Government would
    merely deny Watts' costs outright, Watts would have waited for the additional funding
    and/or renegotiated Modification 4 rather than agreed to the reservation" (2nd Pruett
    decl. ~ 6).
    9. On 30 January 2014, Watts requested a contracting officer's final decision
    (COFD) (R4, tab 26 at 1020). The government responded with a COFD on 8 July
    2014 granting the additional time claimed but denied the claim for direct costs
    asserting Watts was impermissibly changing its accounting practices on the same
    contract because Watts was only entitled to recover for these site costs as indirect field
    office overhead costs and on a percentage basis (R4, tab 28 at 1034).
    10. On 25 September 2014, Watts appealed the COFD to the Board and elected
    the Board's Expedited Procedure (Rule 12.2) and submitted for decision on the record
    pursuant to Board Rule 11 on 3 November 2014.
    DECISION
    The facts are largely undisputed; appellant incurred additional field office
    overhead costs as a result of the government's delay in processing Mod 4 and the
    government concedes appellant is entitled to reimbursement for these costs. The
    dispute is whether these costs should be reimbursed on a percentage basis or direct
    basis. Appellant contends it is entitled to reimbursement for the actual costs of the
    claimed costs because they are in fact direct costs under the cost principles based upon
    the fact they were incurred differently (app. br. at 4-5) and, were not incurred for the
    same purpose and in a like manner as field office overhead costs (app. br. at 5-6). In
    addition, appellant contends it would be inequitable not to reimburse these costs
    directly because of the way they were incurred (app. br. at 6). The government
    responds that appellant should not recover these costs because the claimed costs are
    indirect costs (gov't br. at 6-7) and, given appellant's election to charge these costs on
    a percentage basis, allowing appellant to recover these costs on a direct basis would be
    contrary to the FAR cost principles and our decisions in MA. Mortenson Co., 
    ASBCA No. 40750
     et al., 98-1 BCA ~ 29,658 at 146,945-46 (Senior Deciding Group), ajf'g
    on recon., 97-1BCA~28,623, and Caddell Construction Co., 
    ASBCA No. 53144
    ,
    02-1BCA~31,850 (gov't br. at 8-11).
    4
    Treatment of Job Site Overhead Expense Under the FAR Cost Principles
    FAR 2.101 defines a direct cost as "any cost that is identified specifically with a
    particular final cost objective .... Costs identified specifically with a contract are direct
    costs of that contract. All costs identified specifically with other final cost objectives
    of the contractor are direct costs of those cost objectives." And an indirect cost as
    "any cost not directly identified with a single, final cost objective, but identified with
    two or more final cost objectives or with at least one intermediate cost objective." The
    final cost objective on this project was the contract (finding 2). Consequently, any
    field office overhead costs incurred on this contract, on any job site, are in reality
    direct costs. However, the cost principles at FAR 31.105(d)(3) specifically address
    these types of costs allowing the contractor to treat them as either direct or indirect
    costs. As one commentator has succinctly explained,
    Job site overhead costs, which are also sometimes referred
    to as field office overhead costs, are not really "overhead"
    costs at all (unless the contractor happens to be performing
    two or more contracts at the same job site). They are direct
    costs of performing a construction ... contract at that site.
    However, FAR 31.105( d)(3) permits the contractor to
    charge job site overhead costs either directly or indirectly,
    provided it follows a consistent practice:
    Costs incurred at the job site incident to performing
    the work, such as the cost of superintendence,
    timekeeping and clerical work, engineering, utility
    costs, supplies, material handling, restoration and
    cleanup, etc., are allowable as direct or indirect
    costs, provided the accounting practice used is in
    accordance with the contractor's established and
    consistently followed cost accounting practices for
    all work.
    Karen L. Manos, Government Contract Costs & Pricing, vol. 2, § 87:D:3 at 316
    (2d ed. 2004). Therefore, contractors may charge job site overhead costs either
    directly (per diem) or indirectly (percentage), as long as they are charged consistently.
    MA. Mortenson Co., 98-1BCA~29,658 at 146,945-46.
    Here appellant elected to use the indirect method (percentage) of charging these
    types of costs (finding 2). Appellant's initial proposal for Mod 4 included a
    percentage indirect overhead rate for field office overhead, as it had done on a
    previous modification (finding 4). Appellant's proposal for additional costs after
    Mod 4 was delayed eliminated the percentage mark-up for field office overhead and
    5
    instead proposed direct costs (finding 6). Therefore, we conclude appellant's claim in
    this appeal is inconsistent with FAR 3 l .105(d)(3).
    Appellant's Entitlement to Recover under the Equitable Principles of the Changes
    Clause
    Appellant contends it would be inequitable not to reimburse it for all of the
    extra field office overhead costs incurred because the contract performance period was
    extended as a result of the government's delay in processing Mod 4 (app. br. at 6). We
    addressed this issue in Mortenson in dicta where we stated:
    We see no convincing rationale for routinely
    using different job site overhead distribution bases on
    changes that extend or shorten contract performance, say,
    by one day (or one week, or one month), and changes that
    do not.... Even when a contractor proves it has failed to
    recover its entire overhead, that is insufficient justification
    for permitting an accounting change from one distribution
    base to another ....
    Mortenson, 98-1BCAi!29,658 at 146,948 n.7. Consequently, we conclude the fact
    that the contract performance period was extended and that the use of the percentage
    mark-up might not fully compensate appellant for all field office overhead costs
    incurred does not, per se, entitle appellant to change its distribution base.
    Additionally, appellant has not presented any evidence of special circumstances that
    might justify allowing appellant to employ a different distribution base. Id.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated, the appeal is denied.
    Dated: 26 January 2015
    dministrative Judge
    Armed Services Board
    of Contract Appeals
    6
    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. 59602
    , Appeal of Watts
    Constructors, LLC, rendered in conformance with the Board's Charter.
    Dated:
    JEFFREY D. GARDIN
    Recorder, Armed Services
    Board of Contract Appeals
    7
    

Document Info

Docket Number: ASBCA No. 59602

Judges: Thrasher

Filed Date: 1/26/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/11/2015