Buchart Horn, Inc. v. Department of Transportation

1 A.3d 960, 2010 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 347, 2010 WL 2733508
CourtCommonwealth Court of Pennsylvania
DecidedJuly 13, 2010
Docket2001 C.D. 2009
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 1 A.3d 960 (Buchart Horn, Inc. v. Department of Transportation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Commonwealth Court of Pennsylvania primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Buchart Horn, Inc. v. Department of Transportation, 1 A.3d 960, 2010 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 347, 2010 WL 2733508 (Pa. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

OPINION BY

Judge PELLEGRINI.

Buchart Horn, Inc. (Contractor) appeals from an order of the Board of Claims (Board) granting the Pennsylvania Department of Transportation’s (PennDOT) preliminary objections for failure to exhaust administrative remedies and comply with Section 1712.1 of the Procurement Code 1 and dismissing Contractor’s claim with prejudice.

Contractor is a consulting engineering firm that entered into a series of contracts *962 for materials inspection services for Penn-DOT whereby Contractor supplemented PennDOT’s inspection staff by providing qualified individuals to inspect materials delivered for PennDOT projects. The two contracts relevant to this ease were a 2000 contract that provided that Contractor would provide inspection services for five years worth a maximum amount of $7,120,857.60 and a 2005 contract that provided that Contractor would provide services for three years worth a maximum amount of $2,195,135.89.

In January 2007, PennDOT’s Comptrollers Office notified Contractor that Penn-DOT had requested it to perform an audit on the 2000 and 2005 contracts to determine if Contractor’s inspection personnel invoiced on the contracts had the requisite experience and credentials to justify the price at which they were billed. PennDOT presented the results of the audit to Contractor at a May 31, 2007 meeting. According to PennDOT, the audit revealed that while many of the inspectors were qualified to perform the inspections, they did not have the wage classifications set forth in the contracts. As a result, Penn-DOT demanded reimbursement of $277,304 for the alleged invoice overcharges.

Contractor sent a letter to PennDOT on July 20, 2007, taking exceptions to the audit findings. Several meetings and letters on the subject then ensued, including an October 9, 2007 formal written demand for reimbursement by PennDOT that threatened debarment and a December 12, 2007 letter by Contractor contesting that it was required to reimburse anything. On June 11, 2008, PennDOT sent Contractor a letter demanding the full refund payment within 15 days and again threatening to begin debarment proceedings if Contractor did not comply. 2 On June 23, 2008, Contractor paid PennDOT $277,304 under protest, reserving its right to make a claim against PennDOT with the Board. Contractor subsequently did file a claim with the Board on December 19, 2008, seeking reimbursement of the full amount it paid to PennDOT under protest.

PennDOT then filed preliminary objections arguing that the Board of Claims lacked subject matter jurisdiction over Contractor’s claim because it failed to exhaust its administrative remedies by bringing its claim directly to the Board without first bringing it to a PennDOT contracting officer as required by Section 1712.1(b) of the Procurement Code. 3 PennDOT also argued that even if any of the interactions between it and Contractor could be viewed as a claim and the June 11, 2008 letter as a final determination, Contractor missed the 15-day deadline to file a claim with the Board, 4 and its claim should be dismissed for that reason.

Contractor responded that “[wjhile there may be technical merit” to the posi *963 tion that it did not exhaust its administrative remedies, “the liberal interpretation requirement of the law” would allow this defect to pass because it had already had numerous discussions with PennDOT regarding the claim, and PennDOT was firm in its insistence that Contractor owed it the full amount. (Reproduced Record at 52a.) To do anything more before filing its claim with the Board would have been pointless and, consequently, it did not need to pursue its administrative remedies. Because it fulfilled the “spirit” of exhausting its administrative remedies, Contractor argued that no matter what date the claim was denied, a claim could never be out-of-time as Section 1712.1(e) states that “the contractor may file a statement of claim with the board.” (Emphasis added.) The 15-day statutory appeal period is permissive, and it could file an appeal with the Board at any time whatsoever without worry about the purported time limitation.

The Board first addressed the issue of whether failure to exhaust administrative remedies or failure to file a timely appeal would deprive it of subject matter jurisdiction. It concluded that such procedural defects would not divest it of subject matter jurisdiction but would divest it of personal jurisdiction. Because a lack of subject matter jurisdiction can never be waived but a lack of personal jurisdiction can be waived, the Board allowed Contractor to file an amended claim to determine if PennDOT, through its actions, voluntarily submitted itself to the personal jurisdiction of the Board. It then issued a separate opinion and order addressing that issue. 5 Next, the Board held that the 15-day period in which to file a claim with the Board following an adverse determination by an agency was mandatory, operating as a bar to filing an appeal beyond the 15-day period.

The Board then considered two scenarios concerning when Contractor’s claim accrued and whether or not Contractor had properly exhausted its administrative remedies. Under the first scenario, the Board considered the October 9, 2007 letter by PennDOT to be the point in time at which Contractor’s claim accrued. Contractor had six months to file a claim with Penn-DOT’s contracting officer to contest this determination, which it did with its December 12, 2007 letter contesting the reimbursement. The Board then considered PennDOT’s June 11, 2008 letter to be a final determination of the December 12, 2007 claim, which would give Contractor 15 days (until June 26, 2008) to file a claim with the Board. Under this scenario, Contractor fulfilled its requirement to exhaust administrative remedies, but its claim would be barred because it did not timely file its appeal to the Board, thereby depriving the Board of jurisdiction.

Under the Board’s second scenario, none of the communications between Contractor and PennDOT consisted of the accrual of a claim until Contractor’s June 23, 2008 payment of $277,304 to PennDOT. At that time, the claim accrued and Contractor had six months to file a claim with the PennDOT contracting officer. Because Contractor’s next action was to file its claim with the Board, it did not exhaust its administrative remedies, depriving the Board of jurisdiction to hear the claim. Because the Board lacked jurisdiction to *964 hear the claim under either scenario, it granted PennDOT’s preliminary objections and dismissed the claim. This appeal followed. 6

On appeal, 7 Contractor admits that it failed to exhaust its administrative remedies under Section 1712.1(b) but fulfilled the spirit, if not the express technical requirements through the numerous letters and meetings between the parties. These actions put PennDOT on notice of the claim and gave it an opportunity to accept or reject the claim.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
1 A.3d 960, 2010 Pa. Commw. LEXIS 347, 2010 WL 2733508, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/buchart-horn-inc-v-department-of-transportation-pacommwct-2010.