American Demolition & Nuclear Decommissioning, Inc. v. IBCS Group, Inc.

21 F. Supp. 3d 632, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 65786, 2014 WL 1906791
CourtDistrict Court, W.D. Virginia
DecidedMay 13, 2014
DocketCivil Action No. 3:11CV00078
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 21 F. Supp. 3d 632 (American Demolition & Nuclear Decommissioning, Inc. v. IBCS Group, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, W.D. Virginia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
American Demolition & Nuclear Decommissioning, Inc. v. IBCS Group, Inc., 21 F. Supp. 3d 632, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 65786, 2014 WL 1906791 (W.D. Va. 2014).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

GLEN E. CONRAD, Chief Judge.

In this diversity action, American Demolition and Nuclear Decommissioning, Inc. (“ADND”) asserts a claim for false advertising under Virginia law. The case is presently before the court on ADND’s motion for summary judgment. For the reasons that follow, the motion will be granted.

Background

ADND is a New York corporation that provides demolition, decommissioning, and environmental remediation services. In 2009, the company submitted a bid to perform demolition work at a nuclear facility in South Carolina known as the Savannah River Site (“SRS”). Because the nuclear facility is owned by the United States Department of Energy, ADND was required to furnish a performance and payment bond that complied with the requirements of the Federal Acquisition Regulations (“FAR”).

ADND had previously obtained bonds for construction projects from Edmund C. Scarborough, an individual surety, and his risk management company, The IBCS Group (“IBCS”). Upon learning of ADND’s plans to bid on the SRS project, IBCS’s Executive Vice President, Steven A. Golia, expressed an interest in providing the necessary bond.

During the parties’ discussions, William Schaab, the Vice President and Secretary of ADND, emphasized that ADND needed to procure a bond that would have a high chance of being approved by the federal government. Golia encouraged Schaab to review a brochure that IBCS had recently published and posted on its website, which might address Schaab’s concerns. The [634]*634brochure includes the following representations:

... To back the bond dollar for dollar, some individual sureties, such as Scarborough, utilize Irrevocable Trust Receipts (“ITR”), a financial instrument widely recognized in the financial world and used by the Government and private businesses for a variety of purposes, as their vehicle to pledge the assets to the particular bond.
Individual sureties are specifically recognized by the Federal Acquisition Regulation (“FAR”). Properly issued bonds are fully compliant with the FAR.... Individual surety bonds have been accepted by, among others, the Department of Justice, Federal Bureau of Prisons, the General Services Administration, Department of the Air Force, Department of Veterans Affairs and Naval Facilities Engineering Command,

(Brochure at 3.) The brochure also contains a Question and Answer section, which provides, in pertinent part, as follows:

Q. Is your company T-Listed?
A. This means approved by the federal Treasury department on their document “Circular 570.” For corporate sureties, this is an important part of their credentials — the ability to show they are capable of gaining the acceptance of the federal government. We are proud of the fact that our bonds have been repeatedly accepted by the federal government in multi-million dollar amounts. However, since Circular 570 only lists corporate sureties, the fact that we are accepted is not shown on this list. If the obligee requires a surety good enough to be approved by the federal government, we are!
Q. What asset backs the bonds?
A. The bonds may be backed by cash, cash equivalents or readily marketable assets such as commodities.
Q. What happens if a bond is rejected by an obligee?
A. We intend to pre-qualify all bonding requests to minimize the possibility of bond rejection. However, we will reverse a transaction if a bond is promptly rejected.

Id. at 17.

Between September 28, 2008 and March 3, 2009, Golia sent Schaab multiple emails containing a hyperlink to the brochure on the IBCS website. See, e.g., Pl.’s Ex. C-1 (“Our updated brochure is now online! Valuable info about Individual Sureties and details about us: Brochure ”). Schaab “read every page of the entire [b]rochure,” and “referred to it many times.” Schaab Decl. at ¶ 11. Based on the information contained in the brochure, Schaab believed that the individual surety bonds offered by the defendants “would have a high chance of being approved by the federal government because they would be backed by appropriate and FAR compliant assets.” Id. at ¶ 14. The brochure also “led [Schaab] to believe that bond premiums would be refunded and that IBCS would ‘reverse a transaction’ if one of its individual surety bonds was promptly rejected” by the project owner or contracting officer. Id. at ¶ 15.

ADND entered into a General Agreement of Indemnity with Scarborough on March 19, 2009. The General Agreement states that “[t]he full initial fee is fully earned upon execution of the bond and will not be refunded, waived or cancelled for any reason.” Agreement at § VI. The [635]*635General Agreement also states that it “constitutes the entire agreement between the parties,” and that “no other separate agreements or understandings, past, present or future, whether oral or written, change the terms of this agreement.” Id. at § XX.

Several months later, ADND paid the required bond premium in the amount of $138,005.00, and the defendants presented a performance and payment bond to ADND. The bond was issued through “Edmund Scarborough as Individual Surety.” Compl. ¶29. ADND submitted the bond to the contracting officer for the SRS project and executed a contract for the demolition work. The contracting officer subsequently rejected the bond on the ground that the asset pledged as security was unacceptable under the FAR:

... [A]s to the acceptability of coal as a guarantee for the bond, my interpretation of the FAR is that it is unacceptable. FAR section 28.203-2 states that the Government will only accept (1) cash, (2) readily marketable assets, or (3) irrevocable letters of credit from a federally insured financial institution from individual sureties to satisfy the underlying bond obligations. Unacceptable assets include but are not limited to speculative assets (e.g. mineral rights). Here, Edmund Scarborough is offering previously mined coal as an asset. The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit held in a bid protest case in 2009 that previously mined coal is a speculative asset and the surety in that case was Edmund Scarborough. Additionally, within the last three years, the U.S. Army conducted an investigation into the issuance of possibly fraudulent surety bonds to the United States government by a number of individuals and entities, including Scarborough.

Pl.’s Ex. C-3.

ADND promptly notified IBCS of the contracting officer’s decision. The contracting officer gave IBCS approximately five weeks to cure the defect. During that period, IBCS offered the contracting officer a replacement bond from another individual surety, which was allegedly secured by certain real property in Nevada. That bond was also rejected, however, after the contracting officer determined that the real property was actually owned by the United States government rather than the individual surety providing the bond.

On February 22, 2010, the contracting officer advised ADND that the contract for the demolition work would be terminated in three days unless ADND provided verification that it could obtain a bond from a corporate surety listed on the Department of the Treasury’s Circular 570.1

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Bluebook (online)
21 F. Supp. 3d 632, 2014 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 65786, 2014 WL 1906791, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/american-demolition-nuclear-decommissioning-inc-v-ibcs-group-inc-vawd-2014.