Cray Research, Inc. v. United States

42 Cont. Cas. Fed. 77,349, 41 Fed. Cl. 427, 1998 U.S. Claims LEXIS 170
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJuly 23, 1998
DocketNo. 95-564C
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 42 Cont. Cas. Fed. 77,349 (Cray Research, Inc. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cray Research, Inc. v. United States, 42 Cont. Cas. Fed. 77,349, 41 Fed. Cl. 427, 1998 U.S. Claims LEXIS 170 (uscfc 1998).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

WEINSTEIN, Judge.

This case is before the court on cross-motions for summary judgment. Plaintiff demands damages for defendant’s failure to make the last payment under a contract modification (“Mod 9”) providing for the acquisition of a Cray Y-MP 8/432 computer system (the “Y-MP system”).

Plaintiff claims that Mod 9 converted the underlying base agreement, for the lease or lease-to-ownership plan (LTOP) of Cray’s XMP computer system, into an installment purchase of the Y-MP system. Plaintiff claims that defendant breached the Y-MP purchase agreement (or terminated it for its own convenience)1 by failing to make the final, fiscal year 1995 (FY95) payment. Defendant maintains that Mod 9 merely changed the lease deliverables and that the government properly exercised its contractual right not to renew the lease, on grounds of the government’s “best interest” or the unavailability of funds, before the final FY95 payment.

Because Mod 9 is latently ambiguous when considered together with the contract as a whole and there are genuine issues of material fact requiring a fact finder’s determination (e.g., the (objective) intent of the parties at the time of the execution of this modification; industry practice; the course of dealing of the parties; and, if the ambiguity is found to be latent, whether plaintiff relied on its reading of the contract), the court denies both cross motions.

Facts

The material facts set out below are not in dispute.

On or about June 29, 1987, the Central Intelligence Agency (CIA or government) awarded a LTOP contract for the acquisition of an X-MP computer system, including peripheral equipment, training, total system maintenance, and related technical assistance, under contract No. 87-W328700-000, to Cray Research, Inc. (Cray). The system [430]*430was delivered and accepted in December, 1987. The initial term of the X-MP contract ended September 30, 1988. It was anticipated that the government would use the system during its useful life of 72 months from the date of award, i.e., through FY93 (ending September 30, 1993). See Contract Clause F-4.5.2

The LTOP provided for an annual payment plan (Annual PP) with five annual renewal options, as well as options to acquire or lease additional equipment. The renewal options were to be evidenced by a modification to the contract. See Contract Clause H-10(b). In the event of non-renewal, the contractor was to keep the money paid to date and the machines were to be returned to the contractor “in the original condition as delivered, less ordinary wear and tear.” Contract Clause H-10(c). Risk of loss was placed on the contractor. See Contract Clause H-10(d). Upon final payment, the government was considered to have purchased all the machines listed in the contract and “thereafter [to] have all the rights of ownership ... including title.” Contract Clause H-10(a). Clause H-11, too, reflects that title was to remain with the contractor until final payment under the LTOP/Annual PP.

The statement of work for the base agreement provided for the procurement of a “system” including the main computer, a Model X-MP/24 Central Processor Unit, along with other enumerated items, but did not refer to a successor or replacement system. The deliverables included 14 items, including the XMP, but no replacement system. The contractor was required merely to propose “additional items necessary for the [X-MP] system to process ... applications.” Contract Clause C-2.2.1 (“Field Upgrades”) also did not refer to any successor or replacement system.

The performance period for the base (XMP) system was to begin on the installation date (the date when the contractor certified that it was ready) and system acceptance occurred when the system had met the standard of performance for 30 days. See Contract Clause C-5. Acceptance was conditioned “upon successful completion of the Inspection and Acceptance Tests.” Contract Clause E-5. The system delivery and installation schedule specified the items covered and did not include a replacement system. See Contract Clause F.

The government had the option to purchase additional equipment, but the prices were to be determined by the contractor’s proposal. See Contract Clause F-4.5.3. Again, no mention was made of replacing the entire system. Clause H-10, captioned “Lease to Ownership Annual Payment Plan,” stated that the base lease or LTOP “is an agreement for acquisition of the listed machines.” (Emphasis added). No replacement machine was listed. Clause H-10 also provided that “all the rights of ownership ... including title” would pass “upon final payment,” and that during the term of the agreement the government could not “in any way encumber the machines.”

The contractor was not obligated to provide substitute equipment, but retained the right to do so under Clause H-10(g), in the event the identified equipment was no longer available from the contractor. Part II of the contract incorporated by reference certain FAR clauses applicable to “Fixed Price Supply” contracts. As the government was aware, see Pl.’s Exh. 2 at 2.9.3 (discussing buyout of X-MP and Citicorp as assignee under contract), and as authorized by clause H-5 (“Assignment of Claims”), plaintiff “... assigned] its rights ... [to all unpaid amounts payable under the contract] to a financing institution.”

The contract was modified nineteen times. Modifications 1 through 8 added equipment costing a total of $5,720,672. Subsequently, the CIA requested a proposal (purportedly pursuant to Clause F-4.5.3 of the contract (“Option for Additional Equipment”), which allowed the government to “purchase additional equipment as required”) to provide a new computer system. Mod 9 purported to be entered into pursuant to clause F-4.5.3, [431]*431although this clause gave the government an option to purchase only “additional equipment,” not a new system.

In 1989, at the government’s request, plaintiff proposed to provide a Cray Y-MP system, at a total cost increase of $14,041,306 (from $18,077,798 under the base agreement to $32,119,104). This proposal, which culminated in Mod 9, offered an “alternate payment plan” (Alternate PP) of five annual payments, from November, 1990 (FY91) through November, 1994 (FY95).

Mod 9 provided (in pertinent part):

This modification provides for the purchase of a Y-MP8/432 Computer System and related peripherals under an Alternate Payment Plan (Alternate] PP) whereby the Government is granted “encumbered” title after installation and acceptance of the equipment, with “clear” title passing after completion of the last [Alternate] PP payment. Any reference to a lease arrangement of any kind under this modification is invalid....
Except as provided herein, all terms and conditions of the referenced contract, as heretofore changed, remain unchanged and in full force and effect.

Under Mod 9, the government agreed to pay the remaining lease payments for the XMP directly to Citicorp, the assignee of Cray’s income stream for the X-MP. Clause A-l, the “Type of Contract and Consideration” clause, was modified to increase the total price for performance by $14,041,306, from $18,077,798 to $32,809,128. After a “buy-out credit” of $232,178 for the government’s purchase of the X-MP, the difference to be financed by Citicorp and paid in annual installments by the government was $13,809,-128.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
42 Cont. Cas. Fed. 77,349, 41 Fed. Cl. 427, 1998 U.S. Claims LEXIS 170, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cray-research-inc-v-united-states-uscfc-1998.