Joseph Sottolano ( 2016 )


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  •                 ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS
    Appeals of --                                  )
    )
    Joseph Sottolano                               )      ASBCA Nos. 59081, 60043
    )
    Under Contract No. ODIA-10-04-009              )
    APPEARANCE FOR THE APPELLANT:                         Michael H. Sussman, Esq.
    Sussman & Watkins
    Goshen, NY
    APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT:                       Raymond M. Saunders, Esq.
    Army Chief Trial Attorney
    Erica S. Beardsley, Esq.
    Trial Attorney
    OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MCILMAIL
    INTRODUCTION
    Appellant, Joseph Sottolano, appeals from the termination for cause of a
    baseball-coaching contract between him and the Army Athletic Association (the
    Fund), a non-appropriated fund instrumentality, and from the denial of his claim for
    breach damages allegedly arising from that termination. We deny the appeals.
    FINDINGS OF FACT
    Effective 1 July 2010, Mr. Sottolano and the Fund entered into Contract
    No. ODIA-10-04-009 (the contract, or the 2010 contract), for his services as "Head
    Baseball Coach, United States Military Academy [USMA]," from 1 July 2010 through
    30 June 2014 (R4, tab 1 at 1, 5, ~ 5.0l(a)). The contract's Disputes clause states that the
    contract is not subject to the Contract Disputes Act of 1978, and, at section 9.0l(e)(l) of
    the contract, provides that "[a] claim by the Contractor shall be made in writing and
    submitted ... to the Contracting Officer"; section 9.02 of the contract provides that "[t]he
    Contracting Officer's decision on claims may be appealed by submitting a written
    appeal to the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals" (R4, tab 1 at 11-12).
    Section 8.01 of the contract, USMA Mission is Primary, provides that:
    The parties agree that, although the Contract is
    sports-related, the primary purpose of the Fund is to
    support the mission of the USMA. The USMA Mission is
    ,
    "To educate, train, and inspire the Corps of Cadets so that
    each graduate is a commissioned leader of character
    committed to the values of Duty, Honor, Country;
    professional growth throughout a career as an officer in the
    United States Army; and a lifetime of selfless service to
    the nation." Accordingly, all the Fund's legal
    arrangements, including the Contract, are in support of that
    mission. Thus, the USMA Mission shall have priority in
    the various provisions of the contract.
    (R4, tab 1 at 11) Section 6.0l(a) of the contract, Termination By Fund/or Cause,
    provides that:
    The Fund shall have the right to terminate the Contract for
    cause prior to its normal expiration date, or prior to any
    extended termination date. The term "cause" shall include,
    in addition to its normally understood meaning in
    nonfederal employment contracts, any of the following
    examples:
    (5) Conduct of the Contractor seriously prejudicial to the
    best interests of the USMA, the Fund, or its athletic
    program or which violates USMA's or the Fund's
    m1ss10n ....
    (R4, tab 1 at 8-9)
    Section 6.0l(b) of the contract, Fund's Obligations Upon Termination/or
    Cause, provides that:
    In the event the Contract is terminated for cause in
    accordance with the provisions of Section 6.0l(a) hereof,
    all obligations of the Fund to make further payments
    and/or to provide any other consideration hereunder shall
    cease at the end of the month in which such termination
    occurs. In no case shall the Fund be liable to the
    Contractor for the loss of any collateral business
    opportunities or any other benefits.
    (R4, tab 1 at 9) In August 2010, the parties modified the contract to provide that:
    2
    A one[-]time payment of$5,000 will be paid to the
    contractor at the end of August 2010 in lieu of the
    previously contracted camp payment.
    (R4, tab 2)
    Mr. Sottolano's involvement with the USMA baseball team dates to 1992, when
    he began serving as an assistant coach (tr. 11280). Mr. Sottolano became interim head
    coach in 2000 (id.). Mr. Sottolano saw himself as a role model for USMA baseball
    players (tr. 11209), and, by 2013, the USMA athletic department viewed Mr. Sottolano
    as one of the best college baseball coaches in the United States (tr. 4/59-60). In
    May 2013, USMA athletic department representatives and Mr. Sottolano began
    discussions regarding an "extension" of his contract (tr. 4/59). The department's
    contracting office drafted Contract No. ODIA-13-07-026 (the 2013 contract), dated
    17 July 2013, for Mr. Sottolano's services as head baseball coach, to take effect on
    1August2013 and terminate on 30 June 2018 (ex. 5 at 1, 5, (Art. IV)). Section 10.02 of
    the 2013 contract, Requirement of Contracting Officer Signature and Approval, provides
    that:
    It is understood and agreed that the Contract shall
    not be effective until executed by a duly authorized
    Contracting Officer on the behalf of the Fund.
    (Ex. 5 at 15) Sections 6.0l(a)(5) and 8.01 of the 2013 contract, relating to termination
    by the Fund for violation of the USMA Mission, and reciting the USMA Mission,
    respectively, are identical to their counterparts in the 2010 contract (ex. 5 at 10, 13;
    R4, tab 1 at 9, 11). The 2013 contract bears neither the signature of Mr. Sottolano nor
    that of the contracting officer (ex. 5 at 16).
    On a Monday in May of 2013, at approximately 4:30 p.m., Mr. Sottolano, by
    his own admission, willingly received oral sex from a subordinate, the baseball
    program's primary administrative assistant, in his USMA office (tr. 1/218, 225-29,
    258, 272-73, 4/170-71 ). According to Mr. Sottolano, that day was his day off, and the
    encounter occurred just after the administrative assistant had ended her workday
    (tr. 11225, 258). He admits that he could have stopped the encounter, but did not
    (tr. 4/170-71 ). We assume without deciding that the encounter was consensual.
    On 2 August 2013, Mr. Sottolano and the administrative assistant had an
    argument in the athletic department's offices involving why she had not sent recruiting
    letters to potential USMA baseball players, as Mr. Sottolano had expected
    (tr. 11237-41). On 5 August 2013, the administrative assistant reported to USMA that
    she felt threatened by Mr. Sottolano (R4, tab 12 at 3). On the same day, the USMA
    Executive Athletic Director ordered Mr. Sottolano to refrain from contact with the
    3
    administrative assistant (R4, tab 7). On 12 August 2013, Mr. Sottolano was put on
    administrative leave (R4, tab 9).
    On 24 September 2013, subsequent to a series of investigations conducted by
    USMA and other government entities (R4, tabs 11, 12), the contracting officer
    terminated the contract for cause (R4, tab 13 at 1). The contracting officer (who did
    not investigate the matter herself but relied upon information arising from the
    investigation of others), found, among other things, that Mr. Sottolano had "conducted
    [him ]self in an inappropriate relationship with a female government employee
    assigned to assist [him] in the performance of [his] duties and responsibilities,"
    "engaged on several occasions in sexual activity with the female employee staff
    member," "demanded sexual activity from the female employee staff member during
    the official duty day in government facility offices," and "created a hostile workplace
    environment" (R4, tab 13 at 1; see tr. 3/20-27, 95-96). Among other contract
    provisions, the contracting officer cited section 6.0l(a)(5) (R4, tab 13 at 2). On
    16 December 2013, Mr. Sottolano filed an appeal docketed as 
    ASBCA No. 59081
    ,
    challenging the termination decision.
    On 5 May 2015, Mr. Sottolano presented to the contracting officer a certified
    claim in the amount of $2,844,902, for damages allegedly arising from the contract
    termination (R4, tab 43). 1 The claim consists of a list of damages categories and
    amounts, including $55,000 for "[s]ummer camp salary" (id.). The contracting officer
    denied the claim on 12 June 2015 (R4, tab 44). Mr. Sottolano timely appealed from
    the contracting officer's final decision on 16 June 2015. The Board docketed that
    appeal as 
    ASBCA No. 60043
    , consolidated that appeal with 
    ASBCA No. 59081
    , and
    held a five-day hearing in August 2015.
    DECISION
    
    ASBCA No. 59081
    : Termination of the contract for cause
    The Fund must prove that the termination for cause is justifiable. See ADT
    Construction Group, Inc., 
    ASBCA No. 55358
    , 13 BCA ~ 35,307 at 173,312, 173,315.
    If the Fund establishes a primafacie case of cause for termination, Mr. Sottolano must
    prove that the default was excusable, or that the termination decision was an abuse of
    discretion. See 
    id. at 173,312
    .
    1
    On 22 April 2015, the Board dismissed for lack of jurisdiction 
    ASBCA No. 59777
    ,
    an appeal from the deemed denial of a similar, 5 May 2014 request for
    monetary damages that Mr. Sottolano had submitted to the contracting officer.
    Joseph Sottolano, 
    ASBCA No. 59777
    , 15-1BCA~35,970 at 175,733. We
    reject any suggestion by Mr. Sottolano (app. br. at 1-2 & n.1, 4) that 
    ASBCA No. 59777
     somehow survived that dismissal.
    4
    Whether the termination was justifiable
    The Fund asserts several justifications for the termination of the 2010 contract, 2
    including that Mr. Sottolano created a hostile work environment (see gov't br. at
    54-61). In addition, the Fund asserts that Mr. Sottolano violated the USMA's mission
    by having oral sex with his administrative assistant in his office (see gov't br. at
    57-59). Although the Fund contends that the sexual activity between Mr. Sottolano
    and the administrative assistant was not consensual, it argues in the alternative that the
    termination was justified even if the activity was consensual (gov't br. at 60-61 ). As
    explained below, we agree with the latter assertion; therefore, we need not decide
    whether Mr. Sottolano created a hostile work environment, whether the administrative
    assistant consented to the May 2013 sexual activity, or whether (as the parties dispute)
    the administrative assistant's accounts of events are credible.
    The contract provides that "the USMA Mission shall have priority in the
    various provisions of the contract," and gives the Fund "the right to terminate the
    contract for cause," including for "[c]onduct of the Contractor... which violates
    USMA's ... mission" (R4, tab 1 at 89). The contract goes further, expressly reciting the
    USMA Mission as:
    To educate, train, and inspire the Corps of Cadets so that
    each graduate is a commissioned leader of character
    committed to the values of Duty, Honor, Country;
    professional growth throughout a career as an officer in the
    United States Army; and a lifetime of selfless service to
    the nation.
    (R4, tab 1at11) We find the contract's recitation of the USMA Mission unambiguous
    and self-explanatory, and hold that conduct that is inconsistent with that mission
    statement violates the USMA Mission.
    Consistent with the USMA Mission, Mr. Sottolano viewed himself as a role
    model for his baseball players. However, when he willingly received oral sex in a
    USMA office from a subordinate during what is, conventionally, a workday, he
    2   We reject any suggestion that the Fund and Mr. Sottolano entered into the 2013
    contract. That document expressly requires execution by a contracting officer
    to take effect, and no contracting officer ever signed the 2013 contract.
    Consequently, the 2013 contract did not replace or "extend" the 2010 contract.
    Even if it had, we cannot see how events would have transpired differently or
    changed the outcome of these appeals, particularly given that sections
    6.0l(a)(5) and 8.01 of both contracts are identical.
    5
    violated the USMA Mission, to which the contract gives priority, providing cause for
    his termination. Mr. Sottolano's conduct was inconsistent with the mission's goal of
    inspiring USMA cadets to be "leader[s] of character" committed to professional
    growth, and selfless service, and the values of duty and honor. 3 Rather, that conduct
    exemplifies self-indulgent lack of professionalism. It is inconceivable that one would
    hold that conduct up to a USMA baseball player as an example of how, in the future,
    he should conduct himself as an officer in the United States Army, in his workplace,
    with a subordinate. Given his candid and evidently remorseful admission to what
    happened, we expect that Mr. Sottolano himself would counsel the baseball players he
    coached not to conduct themselves as he did.
    Although he does not bear any burden of proof on the issue, we note that
    Mr. Sottolano is essentially silent regarding the Fund's contention that when he
    received oral sex in his USMA office from his administrative assistant at
    approximately 4:30 p.m. on a weekday, he violated USMA's mission. Mr. Sottolano
    contends that "[h]aving consensual sexual relations is NOT violative of the military's
    mission," and states that "having sexual contact [does not] directly conflict with the
    military's mission" (app. reply br. at 25). However, he does not directly address
    whether doing so where, when, and with whom he engaged in that behavior violates
    the USMA Mission. Because we find that Mr. Sottolano's conduct violated the
    USMA Mission, the termination of his contract was justifiable.
    Whether Mr. Sottolano 's default was excusable
    Mr. Sottolano offers no excuse for his behavior; rather, he admitted that he
    could have stopped the encounter, but did not. We find that Mr. Sottolano has not
    proved that his violation of the USMA's Mission was excusable.
    Whether the contracting officer abused her discretion
    Mr. Sottolano contends that in terminating the contract for cause, the
    contracting officer acted in bad faith and abused her discretion (app. 2nct reply br. at
    27-33). The burden of proof to show abuse of discretion is very high. Empire Energy
    Management Systems, Inc., 
    ASBCA No. 46741
    , 03-1BCA~32,079 at 158,553. To
    determine whether a termination was an abuse of discretion, the Board considers
    1) whether the government official acted with subjective bad faith; 2) whether the
    official had a reasonable, contract-related basis supporting the decision under review;
    3) the amount of discretion vested in the official whose action is being reviewed; and
    3
    We so conclude even assuming, as Mr. Sottolano contends, that the Monday the
    incident occurred was his day off, and that the administrative assistant's
    workday had just ended. We find drawing such fine distinctions inconsistent
    with the sweeping language of the USMA Mission.
    6
    4) whether a proven violation of relevant statutes or regulations can render a decision
    arbitrary and capricious. 
    Id.
     Government agents are presumed to discharge their
    duties in good faith, and a party alleging "bad faith" or "bad intent" can overcome this
    presumption only by clear and convincing evidence. SIA Construction, Inc., 
    ASBCA No. 57693
    , 14-1 BCA ~ 35,762 at 174,986. To overcome this presumption, a
    contractor must show with convincing clarity a high probability that the government
    official acted from personal animus with specific intent to injure the contractor. See
    Empire Energy, 03-1BCA~32,079 at 158,553.
    Mr. Sottolano fails to demonstrate that the contracting officer abused her discretion.
    First, Mr. Sottolano fails to overcome the presumption that the contracting officer acted in
    good faith; he neither asserts nor points to any evidence that the contracting officer
    terminated Mr. Sottolano's contract out of personal animus toward him.
    Second, the contracting officer had a reasonable, contract-related basis
    supporting her decision. Among the contracting officer's reasons for terminating the
    contract was her finding that Mr. Sottolano engaged in sexual activity with an
    employee staff member, although the contracting officer found that he had done so on
    several occasions. Similarly, we have found that the single encounter to which
    Mr. Sottolano admitted violated the USMA Mission, providing cause to terminate the
    contract. Third, the contract does not expressly limit the contracting officer's
    discretion to terminate the contract for cause. Finally, Mr. Sottolano does not assert
    that the termination decision violated any statute or regulation.
    In essence, Mr. Sottolano contends that the contracting officer abused her
    discretion because, in his view, she was ill- or under-informed, relied on erroneous or
    otherwise flawed information from others rather than conducting her own
    investigation, did not weigh the evidence correctly, decided to terminate the contract
    prematurely (and weeks before she issued her decision), offered testimony during the
    hearing that conflicted with her deposition testimony and the testimony of others, and
    did not explain her decision well (app. 2nd reply br. at 27-33, 37). We disagree that
    any of those issues, alone or in combination, demonstrates an abuse of her discretion.
    A contracting officer's assessment need not be correct or based upon perfect
    information in order to constitute a valid exercise of discretion. See ADT
    Construction, 13 BCA ~ 35,307 at 173,314-15. Nor does the contracting officer have
    to have conducted her own investigation; all that is required is that she put her mind to
    the problem and render her own decision, even if in doing so she relies upon
    information from others. See Pacific Architects & Engineers, Inc. v. United States,
    
    491 F.2d 734
    , 744 (Ct. Cl. 1974); Space Age Engineering, Inc., 
    ASBCA No. 25761
     et
    al., 86-1BCA~18,611at93,451-52. Here, the contracting officer learned from others
    that Mr. Sottolano had engaged in sexual activity with an employee staff member in
    his USMA office during what the contracting officer understood was a workday. Her
    information was essentially correct (Mr. Sottolano admitted to that basic story), even if
    7
    she had some of the details wrong, came to incorrect legal conclusions, provided
    testimony that conflicted with her previous accounts and the accounts of others,
    arrived at a decision before she had all the information, and could have explained her
    decision better. Notably, Mr. Sottolano does not even suggest that the contracting
    officer failed to put her mind to the problem or make her own decision; 4 essentially, he
    complains about how she made that decision and later defended it. We have found
    that when Mr. Sottolano received oral sex in his USMA office from his administrative
    assistant at approximately 4:30 p.m. on a weekday, he violated USMA's mission,
    justifying the termination of his contract. Nothing that Mr. Sottolano points to
    regarding how the contracting officer arrived at essentially the same conclusion, or
    how she explained it, demonstrates that she abused her discretion.
    Mr. Sottolano also contends that the contracting officer did not terminate the
    contract on the basis of consensual sexual activity (app. br. at 116; app. reply br. at
    27). While the contracting officer found that Mr. Sottolano "demanded sexual
    activity," she also found that he "engaged .. .in sexual activity," a formulation that is
    not, on its face, dependent upon coercion. In any event, a party can justify a
    termination if there existed at the time an adequate cause, even if then unknown.
    Joseph Morton Co. v. United States, 
    757 F.2d 1273
    , 1277 (Fed. Cir. 1985). Here,
    regardless of whether the contracting officer terminated the contract based upon
    consensual sexual activity, the Fund has expressly contended that Mr. Sottolano's
    behavior justified the termination of his contract even ifthe sexual activity was
    consensual (see gov't br. at 61 ), an argument that is also not dependent upon a
    demonstration of coercion. Here, in deciding that Mr. Sottolano's conduct justifies the
    termination of his contract, we have assumed, without deciding, that the sexual activity
    at issue was consensual.
    Because Mr. Sottolano violated USMA's mission and has not proved that his
    default was excusable, or that the termination of his contract was an abuse of
    discretion, the termination of his contract for cause was justified. Consequently, we
    deny 
    ASBCA No. 59081
    .
    Damages
    Because the termination of the contract for cause was justified, any recovery by
    Mr. Sottolano is governed by section 6.0l(b) of the 2010 contract. That section provides
    that the Fund's payment obligations ended at the end of the month in which the
    4   In his recitation of the contracting officer's testimony, Mr. Sottolano puts the term
    "her decision" in quotation marks (app. br. at 67), but never expressly contends
    that the contracting officer did not exercise her independent judgment in
    terminating the contract.
    8
    termination occurred. The termination occurred on 24 September 2013; consequently,
    the Fund's payment obligations to Mr. Sottolano ended on 30 September 2013.
    Mr. Sottolano does not contend that the Fund owes him money under section 6.0l(b);
    rather, he contends that the Fund owes him breach damages, consisting of what he
    would have earned under the 2010 contract had it not been terminated, and what he
    would have earned under the 2013 contract had that document been "fully executed"
    (app. br. at 126-27). However, having found unexcused cause for the termination of the
    2010 contract, and that the termination was not an abuse of discretion, we find that the
    termination of the contract was not a breach. 5 Consequently, Mr. Sottolano is not
    entitled to breach damages, and 
    ASBCA No. 60043
     is denied. 6
    CONCLUSION
    For these reasons, the appeals are denied.
    Dated: 24 March 2016
    Administrative udge
    Armed Services Board
    of Contract Appeals
    (Signatures continued)
    5
    The parties dispute whether, under the particular terms of the contract, the recovery
    for a termination for cause that is found to be without "good cause" is breach
    damages or liquidated damages (gov't br. at 65; app. br. at 125). Because we
    find the termination for cause justified, we need not resolve that dispute.
    6
    We do not consider whether Mr. Sottolano and USMA entered into a written, oral,
    or implied-in-fact contract separate from the 2013 contract for him to run a
    summer baseball camp in July 2013, or to extend his 2010 contract, as his
    post-hearing briefing at least to some extent suggests (app. br. at 121, 127-28;
    app. reply br. at 35; app. 2nd reply br. at 22-25). No such claims have been
    presented to the contracting officer, as required by section 9.0l(e)(l) of the
    2010 contract; consequently, we do not possess jurisdiction to entertain them.
    In addition, although Mr. Sottolano points to testimony of the contracting
    officer in support of a suggestion that the summer camp was the subject of a
    signed modification to the 2010 contract (app. 2nd reply br. at 22-23), we find in
    the record only an August 2010, signed modification providing for payment of
    $5,000 for a camp ostensibly held in 2010, not any modification relating to a
    2013 camp.
    9
    I concur                                       I concur
    ~~-
    /MAR]&S~LER
    M---
    RICHARD SHACKLEFORD
    Administrative Judge                          Administrative Judge
    Acting Chairman                               Vice 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 Nos. 59081, 60043, Appeals of
    Joseph Sottolano, rendered in conformance with the Board's Charter.
    Dated:
    JEFFREY D. GARDIN
    Recorder, Armed Services
    Board of Contract Appeals
    10
    

Document Info

Docket Number: ASBCA No. 59081, 60043

Judges: McIlmail

Filed Date: 3/24/2016

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 5/9/2016