Doninger Metal Products, Corp. v. United States

50 Fed. Cl. 110, 2001 U.S. Claims LEXIS 149, 2001 WL 882793
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJuly 31, 2001
DocketNo. 97-137C
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 50 Fed. Cl. 110 (Doninger Metal Products, Corp. 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
Doninger Metal Products, Corp. v. United States, 50 Fed. Cl. 110, 2001 U.S. Claims LEXIS 149, 2001 WL 882793 (uscfc 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

HORN, Judge.

FINDINGS OF FACT

In 1992, the United States Postal Service (USPS) issued a solicitation for the production and delivery of three different types of Postal Service lockboxes. The' parties have defined lockboxes as “mail receptacles with locks commonly housed in post offices and available to Postal Service customers for a fee.” The units requested in the solicitation were lockboxes commonly referred to as 2901’s (12 boxes per unit), 2903’s (4 boxes per unit), and 2904’s (2 boxes per unit). As originally issued, the solicitation included a delivery schedule to Postal Service Material Distribution Centers in Sommerville, New Jersey, Norcross, Georgia, Topeka, Kansas, and Buena Park, California. The original delivery schedule required deliveries starting on September 24, 1992 and concluding on September 23,1994.

The solicitation required offerors to submit a firm fixed price offer based upon FOB origin and FOB destination delivery requirements. On August 26, 1992, the USPS awarded the contract for 2901’s, 2903’s, and 2904’s to Doninger Metal Products Corporation (Doninger) through contract number 059990-92-B-0804. Doninger was awarded the contract in the amount of $5,419,653.12.

Section H.2 of the contract between the parties, entitled “Changes,” states:

a. The contracting officer may, in writing, without notice to any sureties, order changes within the general scope of this contract in the following:

1. Drawings, designs, or specifications when supplies to be furnished will be specially manufactured for the Postal Service in accordance with them.

2. Statement of work or description of services.

3. Method of shipment or packing.

4. Place of delivery of supplies or performance of services.

5. Delivery or performance schedule.

6. Postal Service-furnished property or facilities.

c. If any such change affects the cost of performance or the delivery schedule, the contract will be modified to effect an equitable adjustment.

At the time of the award, Doninger was located in Freeport, New York. When the contract was awarded, the USPS included delivery requirements which were revised from the solicitation and incorporated into the contract. These revisions delayed the delivery schedule and restricted delivery to two locations: the Sommerville, New York and Topeka, Kansas Material Distribution Centers. The revised delivery schedule required deliveries of 2901’s from October 16, 1992 until August 19, 1994, 2903’s from April 2, 1993 until February 3, 1995, and 2904’s from October 16, 1992 until January 6, 1995, extending the date of the last delivery by 133 days.

A post-award conference was held on September 15, 1992 to discuss several matters, including the impact of the revised delivery schedule. The contract terms apparently were not changed as a result of this conference, and performance on the contract appears to have begun according to the revised delivery schedule. During the performance period, by letter dated January 25, 1993, Doninger submitted its first “claim for equitable adjustment,” requesting $477,573.09 for its anticipated total increase in costs due to [114]*114the changes impacting delivery of the 2901 and 2903 components. Subsequently, on May 27, 1993, Doninger submitted a second claim in the amount of $196,308.45 on behalf of Doninger’s subcontractor, Al’s Tools & Dies, for the 2904 components.1 On March 22, 1993, as an interim measure, pending receipt of a cost analysis conducted by the USPS, the parties agreed to execute bilateral modification 02 (Modification 02), which would temporarily adjust the price of the contract items so that the prices for 2901’s and 2903’s were increased by four dollars per unit, increasing the total contract price to $5,788,755.52. Between January and March 1993, Doninger moved its operations from Freeport, New York to Youngsville, North Carolina.

The Contracting Officer forwarded Don-inger’s first “claim for equitable adjustment” to the USPS Cost and Pricing Division (Cost and Pricing Division), requesting that a cost analysis be performed. The Cost and Pricing Division ordered the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) and the USPS Inspection Service to perform two separate audits. On November 17, 1993, after considering both audits and completing a cost analysis, the USPS issued Modification 05, which rescinded Modification 02 and decreased the total price of the contract to $5,511,233.00, allowing only $36,409.96 of the $477,573.09 requested by Doninger. On November 18, 1993 and January 11, 1994, Doninger requested clarification of Modification 05 and the reasons behind the denial of portions of its claim for equitable adjustment.

On January 19, 1994, the Contracting Officer responded with a letter detailing the rationale behind the decisions on each item of Doninger’s claim. In this letter, the Contracting Officer explained:

According to USPS review, much of your proposal was found to be unsupported due to a lack of any auditable source dat[a] (i.e., departmental job costs, production operations sheets, historical costs, etc.). Therefore, much of the costs although theoretically sound, could not be audited or substantiated. For example, the 1.43 hours initially estimated to assemble a 2901 series box could not be demonstrated from the original estimating sheets. The auditor/analyst who represented the USPS received subsequent detail showing these hours to really be 1.16 per unit. When you were asked how the 1.43 hours was developed, you indicated that it had always been the standard for the 2901, yet you could not explain how the “standard” was developed, nor could you provide any comparison to actual hours incurred from your prior production contracts. These types of records are apparently not maintained by your firm.

On February 18,1994 and February 24,1994, Doninger submitted additional information in support of its request for an equitable adjustment and reduced its claim from $477,573.09 to $205,834.49. The Cost and Pricing Division reviewed the additional information and the revised claim submitted by Doninger. On June 30, 1994, during the performance of the contract at issue, the USPS responded to Doninger’s February 18, 1994 letter and informed Doninger that because of Doninger’s failure to comply with the revised delivery schedule, it found that only $26,296.30 of Doninger’s claim could be justified, instead of the original $36,409.96 that had been approved pursuant to Modification 05. In the same letter, the USPS also notified Doninger that because the USPS had already paid $205,824.00 to Doninger in temporary price adjustments, Doninger owed the USPS $125,847.78, after crediting the amounts approved for both Doninger and its subcontractor. On August 1, 1994 and September 2, 1994, Modifications 07 and 08, respectively, effected administrative modifications not at issue in this case, and adjusted the contract price to $5,625,476.88.

On August 24, 1994, the parties met to discuss issues including the delays and the chemical finishing step of the manufacturing process. By letter dated September 20, 1994, the Contracting Officer represented that the USPS would not pursue the alleged overpayment to Doninger until Doninger had an opportunity to respond to the USPS’s [115]*115June 30, 1994 letter.

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Bluebook (online)
50 Fed. Cl. 110, 2001 U.S. Claims LEXIS 149, 2001 WL 882793, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/doninger-metal-products-corp-v-united-states-uscfc-2001.