Dawson-Alamo1 JV, LLC ( 2019 )


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  •                ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS
    Appeal of --                                 )
    )
    Dawson-Alamo 1 JV, LLC                       )      ASBCA No. 60590
    )
    Under Contract No. FA3047-10-D-OOI2          )
    APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT:                      Johnathan M. Bailey, Esq.
    Kristin E. Zachman, Esq.
    Bailey and Bailey, P.C.
    San Antonio, TX
    APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT:                     Jeffrey P. Hildebrant, Esq.
    Air Force Deputy Chief Trial Attorney
    Erika L. Whalen Retta, Esq.
    Justin D. Haselden, Esq.
    Trial Attorneys
    OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE WILSON
    ON THE GOVERNMENT'S MOTION TO DISMISS COUNT TWO
    OF APPELLANT'S AMENDED COMPLAINT
    Dawson-Alamo I JV, LLC (DAI or appellant) has appealed the contracting
    officer's (CO's) deemed denial of its certified claim for work performed, allegedly
    outside the statement of work (SOW). The Air Force (AF or government) has moved
    to dismiss count two of appellant's amended complaint, in which appellant raised the
    allegation of mutual mistake for the first time.
    ST A TEMENT OF FACTS (SOF) FOR PURPOSES OF THE MOTION
    1. On July 12, 2010, the AF awarded Contract No. FA3047-10-D-OOI2 to DAI
    for miscellaneous construction projects on Lackland Air Force Base, San Antonio, Texas,
    and related installations. This was a fixed-price, indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity
    requirements contract. (R4, tab 3 at 2, 5-10)
    2. On September 22, 2011, DAI was awarded Delivery Order (D035) for
    repair of the interior rooms at Lackland Air Force Base Building 150, valued at
    $2,500.000 (R4, tab 10 at 1-2).
    3. The parties executed Modification No. 01, effective September 30, 2011,
    adding repairs and increasing the price of D035 by $500,000 to $3,000,000 (R4,
    tab 12 at 1-3). Bilateral Modification No. 03, effective March 25, 2013, incorporated a
    revised comprehensive SOW and estimate. This revised SOW added repairs to the
    understructure of Building 150 and increased the price ofD035 by $347,335.14 to
    $3,347,335.14. (R4, tab 15 at 1-4)
    4. Appellant submitted a letter, dated October 29, 2012, to the CO outlining
    costs related to "the extensive changes to this project that has [sic] been established by
    [the government] and DAI JV. All items and tasks are needed to give the end user a
    useable/workable facility." (Supp. R4, tab 53 at 1) The government, by memorandum
    dated January 11, 2013, stated "your request is being returned without action. [The
    Civilian Engineering Center] feels that your letter does not state the facts clearly."
    (App. supp. R4, tab 145)
    5. Appellant submitted a request for equitable adjustment (REA) to the AF,
    dated January 16, 2013, requesting payment of $465,521.98 for extra materials and
    work performed under the contract as well as a contract time extension of 210 days
    (R4, tab 21 at 1). Appellant's REA stated:
    As you review the E4-Clicksf*l cost estimate and compare
    to the original SOW, you will find that all of the additional
    work was not included in the original scope of work or
    awarded task order, but all was coordinated and performed
    per [the government]'s direction .... Per [two government
    offices], all items were deemed necessary .... Additional
    items include, but are not limited to, electrical
    infrastructure, bracing for the TV's [sic], emergency exit
    corridor, and communications infrastructure, all of which
    were not part of the original SOW and E4Clicks cost
    estimate. Unfortunately several needed items were
    overlooked in the mechanical portion of the project as
    well. The original SOW and MOD#l called for 10 RTU's
    when the true requirement was for 12 units in this area of
    the construction including all necessary components.
    (Id. at 1-2) Appellant then submitted a certified claim, dated August 8, 2013, to the
    CO requesting the same amount, arguing its performance of "additional work outside
    the scope of the awarded task order is a binding change under the Changes clause"
    (R4, tab 24 at 4). Appellant further noted:
    During the performance of the Project the Government
    directed DA 1 to perform additional work that was beyond
    the scope of the agreed E4click [sic] estimate presented by
    • E4Clicks appears to be a system for producing estimates of project costs.
    2
    the Government and accepted by DAI as the scope of the
    work for the project at the beginning of the project...the
    Government directed work amounted to $462,521.98.
    (Id.) DA I attached its REA to its claim (R4, tab 24 at 65-80).
    6. By email dated May 17, 2016, appellant appealed the deemed denial of its
    claim to the Board.
    7. Appellant asserted in its June 28, 2016 complaint that the government
    directed it to perform work beyond the scope of the SOW. causing it to incur the extra
    mat~rials and work expenses, and argues that such changes were pursuant to the
    Changes clause (com pl. , 13 ). However, appellant later amended its complaint to
    include count two, alleging in the alternative mutual mistake (amended compl., 16).
    This legal argument was developed further in appellant's pre-hearing brief, in which
    appellant requested reformation of D03 5 on the basis of mutual mistake, though no
    longer in the alternative (app. pre-hearing br. at 53-59).
    DECISION
    The AF moves to dismiss appellant's mutual mistake allegation, asserting it is a
    new claim not submitted to the CO, and thus not within the Board's jurisdiction. In its
    motion, the AF argues mutual mistake requires proof of different elements and
    requests different relief than the constructive change theory, and that both of these
    issues indicate the mutual mistake count is a separate claim. As this separate claim
    was not submitted to the CO for a final decision, the AF posits that the Board lacks
    jurisdiction over it, and it must be dismissed.
    In its response, appellant argues that the operative facts of its original claim
    provided for mutual mistake and the addition of this new legal theory does not alter the
    nature of the claim. Thus, it is not a new claim and the Board retains jurisdiction.
    The Contract Disputes Act requires all claims by a contractor be submitted to
    the CO for decision. 41 U.S.C. § 7103(a)(l ). "We lack jurisdiction over claims raised
    for the first time on appeal, in a complaint or otherwise." Optimum Servs., Inc.,
    ASBCA No. 57575, 13 BCA, 35,412 at 173,726 (citing Versar, Inc., ASBCA
    No. 56857, 10-1 BCA, 34,437 at 169,957). However, the Board possesses
    jurisdiction to entertain claims that arise from the same operative facts as those
    presented to the CO, seek essentially the same relief, and merely assert differing legal
    theories for that recovery. ABC Data Entry Sys., Inc., ASBCA No. 59865, 16-1 BCA
    , 36,557 at 178,048 (citing King Aerospace, Inc., ASBCA No. 57057, 16-1 BCA
    , 36,451 at 177,651). "Matching the elements of [the original legal theory] against the
    elements of the new legal theories [appellant] posed does not resolve the question
    3
    whether the claim before us in the amended complaint is the same one presented to the
    CO.'" Public Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 56022, 11-2 BCA, 34,788 at 171,228
    (citing URN Indus., Inc. v. United States, 
    962 F.2d 1013
    , 1024 (Fed. Cir. 1992)). "The
    introduction of additional facts which do not alter the nature of the original claim ... or
    the assertion of a new legal theory of recovery, when based upon the same operative
    facts as included in the original claim, do not constitute new claims." Trepte Constr.
    Co., ASBCA No. 38555, 90-1 BCA, 22,595 at 113,385-86. "In determining a claim's
    scope, we are not limited to the claim document but can examine the totality of the
    circumstances. No particular wording is necessary to express it, but the CO must have
    'adequate notice' of the basis and amount of the claim." Sauer, Inc., ASBCA
    No. 60366, 16-1 BCA, 36,565 at 178.101.
    In Todd Pacific Shipyards Corp., ASBCA No. 55126, 06-2 BCA, 33,421, the
    contractor (Todd) had signed a contract for, inter alia, servicing various Navy ships in
    dry dock, including the U.S.S. Sacramento. Though Todd incurred expenses to
    maintain a dry dock large enough to service the Sacramento, the Navy decided to
    decommission the ship early and transfer two vessels which would likely have been
    serviced at Todd's dry dock to another fleet. In seeking to recover the incurred costs
    for certification and upkeep, Todd advanced several legal theories, ranging from
    constructive change to an effective partial termination for convenience and equitable
    reimbursement under FAR Part 50. In its claim, Todd alleged the Navy had engaged
    in actions. which altered the amount of work Todd could receive under the contract by
    moving some of the vessels to be serviced to a different fleet. Todd then advanced
    two new legal theories for the first time in its complaint: provisions for an equitable
    adjustment allowed in the Cost Accounting Standards, and the Navy's delay in or
    elimination of the contract's work requirements. 
    Id. at 165,684-86.
    Despite the range
    of elements and proof the theories would require, we allowed Todd to proceed under
    the new legal theories as "appellant essentially alleged the operative facts necessary to
    those theories in its ... claim" as well as supporting documents to which the claim
    ·referred. 
    Id. at 165,688.
    We must look at the elements required to prove mutual mistake in order to
    determine whether the theory springs from the same operative facts alleged in
    appellant's claim. To prove mutual mistake, appellant must show:
    1) the parties to the contract were mistaken in their belief
    regarding a fact;
    2) that mistaken belief constituted a basic assumption
    underlying the contract;
    3) the mistake had a material effect on the bargain; and
    4
    4) the contract did not put the risk of the mistake on the
    party seeking reformation.
    SKE Base Servs. GmbH, ASBCA No. 60101, 18-1 BCA ,r 37,159 at 180,901 (citing
    National Australia Bank v. United States, 
    452 F.3d 1321
    , 1329 (Fed. Cir. 2006)).
    Rather than prove these elements, at this stage, appellant's claim must merely allege
    facts that could plausibly support each ele"ment. Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556. U.S. 662, 678
    (2009) (quoting Bell Atlantic Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    , 570 (2007)). Next, we
    inspect the operative facts alleged to see if they plausibly support each element of
    mutual mistake.
    Similar to Todd Pacific Shipyards, we find that it does. The claim and prior
    documents to which it referred alleged the government had directed appellant to
    perform additional work beyond the government's SOW, which detailed what work
    needed to be done to Building 150 at the time of award to achieve the government's
    desired ends (SOF ,i 5). This is sufficient to allege, though not prove, that the parties
    had a different understanding of the work required to complete D035 and thus were
    both mistaken. As performance of the SOW was the entire point of D035, the scope
    of the SOW qualifies as a basic assumption underlying the contract (SOF ,i 2). The
    alleged mistake had a material effect on the bargain as it involved appellant allegedly
    incurring significant costs it had not accounted for (SOF ,i 5). Finally, appellant
    alleges the risk was not on it as to the cost of additional work, as evidenced by the
    filing of their REA and certified claim (id.). The government was certainly on notice
    that appellant believed it did not bear any risk of loss for the amount asserted. The
    government cannot reasonably claim to have lacked notice of the matters alleged and
    they do not differ materially from the essential nature of and operative facts in
    appellant's claim to the CO.
    Appellant's claim of mutual mistake also requests essentially the same relief as
    that for constructive change. As the work at issue is already completed, should
    appellant prevail on its theory of mutual mistake. reformation of 003 5 would afford
    appellant practically the same relief as its original claim. Neither theory would create
    any new obligations for either party at this point beyond the entitlement to the payment
    appellant sought in its original claim. See Envtl. Chem. Corp., ASBCA No. 58871,
    15-1 BCA ,i 36,110 at 176,288. We hold count two is not a new claim.
    5
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated above, the government's motion to dismiss is denied.
    Dated: May 30, 2019
    OWEN C. WILSON
    Administrative Judge
    Vice Chairman
    Armed Services Board
    of Contract Appeals
    I concur
    inistrative Judge                           Administrative Judge
    Chairman                                        Armed Services Board
    Armed Services Board                            of Contract Appeals
    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. 60590, Appeal of
    Dawson-Alamo I JV, LLC, rendered in conformance with the Board's Charter.
    Dated:
    PAULLA K. GATES-LEWIS
    Recorder, Armed Services
    Board of Contract Appeals
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: ASBCA No. 60590

Judges: Wilson

Filed Date: 5/30/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 6/10/2019