A4 Construction Company, Inc.

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedApril 29, 2024
Docket63252, 63456, 63626
StatusPublished

This text of A4 Construction Company, Inc. (A4 Construction Company, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A4 Construction Company, Inc., (asbca 2024).

Opinion

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS Appeals of - ) ) A4 Construction Company, Inc. ) ASBCA Nos. 63252, 63456, 63626 ) Under Contract No. W9128F-19-C-0016 )

APPEARANCE FOR THE APPELLANT: Denver C. Snuffer, Jr., Esq. Nelson, Snuffer Dalhe & Poulsen PC Sandy, UT

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Michael P. Goodman, Esq. Engineer Chief Trial Attorney Jacob W. Harberg, Esq. Thomas J. Tracy, Esq. Engineer Trial Attorneys U.S. Army Engineer District, Omaha

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE TAYLOR ON THE GOVERNMENT’S MOTION TO DISMISS

The United States Army Corps of Engineers (USACE or the government) moves to dismiss ASBCA No. 63456 for failure to state a claim alleging A4 Construction Company, Inc. (A4 or appellant) failed to submit a sum certain amount for its claim. 1 In the alternative, the government moves to strike paragraphs 8(A), 8(H) and 8(M) from appellant’s complaint for failing to provide a sum certain amount for those separate and distinct claims (gov’t mot. at 18). We partially grant the government’s motion and strike complaint paragraphs 8(A), 8(H) and 8(M) for failure to state a claim since those separate and distinct claims are based upon materially different, unrelated operative facts, for which A4 did not state a separate sum certain.

STATEMENT OF FACTS (SOF) FOR PURPOSES OF THE MOTION

Contract Award and Termination

1. On April 19, 2019, USACE awarded Contract No. W9128F-19-C-0016 (the contract) to A4 for the design and construction of a special operations mountaineering facility at Fort Carson, Colorado (R4, tab 4). The contract

1 USACE does not seek to dismiss ASBCA Nos. 63252 or 63626. ASBCA No. 63252 is A4’s appeal of the termination for default while ASBCA No. 63626 involves an A4 equitable adjustment claim on a different related contract. incorporated by reference the FAR disputes clause which defined a “claim” as “a written demand or written assertion by one of the contracting parties seeking, as a matter of right, the payment of money in a sum certain.” FAR 52.233-1, DISPUTES (MAY 2014) (R4, tab 4 at 38). 2

2. USACE terminated the contract for default on January 14, 2022, due to appellant’s alleged failure to complete the project by its modified contract completion date (R4, tab 3). Appellant appealed the contract termination to the Board. The Board docketed that appeal as ASBCA No. 63252.

A4’s Certified Claim and Complaint

3. On June 22, 2022, appellant submitted an equitable adjustment claim on the contract to the USACE contracting officer (the claim) (R4, tab 56 at 757-66). The claim included numerous exhibits (id. at 767-1168). The claim contained several requests for money and delay arising from different events as described below (id. at 757-66).

COVID Related Price Increases and Material Delays

4. Throughout its claim and complaint, A4 requests increased price and time adjustments and increased subcontractor prices resulting from COVID-19 related impacts (id. at 757-59, 760-61, 763; compl. ¶¶ 8(A), 8(C), 8(D), 8(E), 8(F), 8(J)). A4’s claim first asserts a general claim for price and time adjustments resulting from the COVID impacts (R4, tab 56 at 757-58). In its complaint, A4 states, “[A]mong other things, the project was delayed and impacted by: COVID-19-related impacts for which insufficient time was permitted, in violation of the OMB instructions” (compl. ¶ 8(A)). Neither the claim nor complaint, however, specify the monetary impact or number of delay days A4 attributes to these general COVID impacts.

5. The claim then discusses several specific subcontractor COVID related impacts. A4’s claim first requests an additional payment of $39,820 due to COVID price increases its subcontractor Arapahoe Fire Protection allegedly incurred over its bid price for fire protection equipment (id. at 760; compl. ¶ 8(C)). A4 included this payment request as a line item in its itemized claim certification (R4, tab 56 at 766).

6. A4 next requests an additional payment of $67,796.88 due to its subcontractor’s, Foster Electronic Corporation’s (Foster’s), allegedly increased costs over its bid price for the procurement and installation of an electronic security system and $504,771 for Foster’s allegedly increased costs for the procurement and

2 The government’s Rule 4 file is Bates numbered with a six-digit number proceeded by “R.4 USACE.” Here, we delete the prefix and the leading zeroes. 2 installation of audio-visual equipment (id. at 761; compl. ¶¶ 8(D), 8(E)). A4 asserts Foster incurred these increased costs due to the government’s delay in issuing Options 0006 and 0007 and the resulting COVID price increases (R4, tab 56 at 761).

7. USACE notified A4 by letter dated March 4, 2020, of its intent to exercise the options in CLINs 0004, 0006 and 0007 and requested A4 hold its proposal pricing through March 31, 2021 (id. at 1071). A4 agreed to hold its proposal pricing (id.). USACE exercised these options by bilateral Contract Mod No. P00002 on March 30, 2021 (R4, tab 58 at 2531-33). In both its claim and complaint, A4 alleges it was unable to get its subcontractors to perform the option CLINs 0006 and 0007 work at the proposed prices due to the intervening COVID disruptions (R4, tab 56 at 761; compl. ¶ 8(F)). 3 A4 included line items for “Option 0006” and “Option 0007” in its itemized claim certification (R4, tab 56 at 766).

8. Finally, A4 contends COVID caused delays in getting roofing materials before an unexpected snowstorm (id. at 763; compl. ¶ 8(J)). In its claim, A4 alleges the snowstorm caused abnormally muddy grounds resulting in 14-days of delay (R4, tab 56 at 763). It is unclear whether A4 included these 14 days in its 377 days of delay line item in its itemized claim certification (id. at 766).

RME Subcontract “Extra Work” and Differing Site Conditions

9. A4’s claim next alleges the government required its subcontractor “RME” to perform “extra work” under the contract between July 2020 and December 2020 (id. at 759-60). A4 does not spell out the acronym RME but it appears to be a reference to RME Ltd., LLC which was doing business as Rocky Mountain Excavating and Elite Surface Infrastructure (id. at 913, 1047). The claim’s referenced supporting exhibits show A4 approved certain change orders for various supplies and services (id. at 776-94). In her final decision, the contracting officer determined A4’s change orders totaled $332,721 with the exclusion of one change order that indicated the price was to “be determined” (R4, tab 58 at 1175).

10. A4’s claim further indicates it consolidated the RME “extra work” claim from three prior requests for equitable adjustments (REAs) (R4, tab 56 at 759). First, on December 9, 2020, A4 submitted an REA for “Unforeseen Earthwork & Import”, “Soil Stabilization requirements” and “Additional Days with General Conditions” (id. at 796-98). This REA appears to be a claim for a differing site condition that required stabilizing “soft soils” at the site (id.). The REA requested compensation in the amount of $348,344 including “22 additional days with general conditions for the

3 A4 indicated its subcontractors on Option 0004 agreed to hold their proposed prices (R4, tab 56 at 761). 3 extra time required to complete this work” (id. at 798). By letter dated April 28, 2021, the USACE contracting officer denied the REA (id. at 1010-12).

11. On December 17, 2020, A4 submitted a second “extra work” REA for “the unforeseen additional drilled pier footages, concrete, spoils haul-off and additional days with general conditions” (id. at 836-41). This REA appears to involve a differing site condition claim regarding the required drilled pier footage depths (id.).

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