Fireman's Fund Insurance v. United States

92 Fed. Cl. 598, 2010 U.S. Claims LEXIS 269, 2010 WL 2197532
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedMay 26, 2010
DocketNos. 04-1692C, 08-782C, 08-783C, 08-784C
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 92 Fed. Cl. 598 (Fireman's Fund Insurance 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
Fireman's Fund Insurance v. United States, 92 Fed. Cl. 598, 2010 U.S. Claims LEXIS 269, 2010 WL 2197532 (uscfc 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

MILLER, Judge.

This case is before the court after multiple orders, opinions, and trial. Plaintiffs are sureties that completed performance of a contract upon the bankruptcy of J.A. Jones Construction Company (“J.A Jones”), a joint venturer with Guy F. Atkinson Construction Company (“Atkinson” and, together with J.A. Jones, the “Joint Venture”), in the construction of the Montgomery Point Lock and Dam Project (“Montgomery Point” or the “Project”) on the White River in eastern Arkansas. Plaintiffs allege that the U.S. Corps of Engineers (the “Corps”) is liable due to the subject contract’s flawed design specifications for concrete and a labor shortage impacting work on Montgomery Point, i.e., causing the Joint Venture to pay higher wages for skilled craftsmen by commandeering the relevant labor market through the Corps’s settlement of a dispute with another contractor for the Corps on a contemporaneous construction project in Pine Bluff, Arkansas. Consolidated with the instant matter are four additional claims (the “Board claims”) — including three claims formerly before the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals (the “ASBCA”) and a related subcontractor claim — stemming from the Corps’s allegedly deficient design specifications and Project mismanagement. Defendant counterclaims that an unauthorized waiver by the Corps shortened the period of contract performance and entitles the Government to a reduction in the contract price.

BACKGROUND AND FACTS1

1. Project description

The belabored execution of Montgomery Point belies the Project’s successful completion and reflects its complexity — it is a structure with, as defense counsel suggests, “many nooks and crannies.” Transcript of Proceedings, Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co., et al. v. United States, Nos. 04-1692C, 08-782C, - 783C & -784C, at 68 (Fed.Cl. Nov. 2-20, 2009) (“Tr.”). Montgomery Point ensures the navigability of the White River in Arkansas notwithstanding low water levels. When the White River’s water level is not low and its navigability is unaffected, traffic proceeds through Montgomery Point’s 300-foot-wide navigable pass over submerged, hinged, and hydraulically operated steel crest gates. The [603]*603submerged crest gates extend across the river’s width, perpendicularly stemming from one wall of Montgomery Point’s navigation lock. The lock’s two walls form a 110-foot-wide and 600-fooL-long lock chamber sitting parallel to the shoreline. Standing on the wall opposite the crest gates is the concrete control tower, from which extends a 200-foot-wide concrete spillway that allows overflow when water levels are excessively high. An abutment connects the spillway to the shoreline.

The control tower houses Montgomery Point’s various mechanical, electrical, and hydraulic controls. From the control tower, an operator monitors river conditions and regulates river traffic passing Montgomery Point. When a low water level disrupts the navigability of the White River, the operator raises the submerged crest gates to create a temporary dam, thereby blocking the navigable pass and elevating the water level upstream of Montgomery Point. A concrete 524-foot floating guide wall extending from the lock receives river traffic queuing upstream and guides it to the lock chamber (the “upstream floating guidewall”). To facilitate passing traffic, four hydraulically operated tainter valves adjust the water level in the lock chamber, while steel miter gates, functioning as the doors to the lock chamber, open and close. On the downstream end of the lock, a twin floating guide wall directs departing traffic (the “downstream floating guidewall”). Montgomery Point similarly allows traffic to progress in the opposite direction through the lock chamber. Additionally, a Crest Gate Dewatering System (the “CGDS”) permits the maintenance of the hydraulic crest gates by dewatering Montgomery Point.

2. Background and submission of proposals

On April 7, 1997, the Corps solicited proposals for the construction of Montgomery Point. The court heard testimony from three of the individuals responsible for preparing the Joint Venture’s bid: Norman D. Wagner, the chief estimator for J.A. Jones’s Heavy Civil Group; Douglas G. Sickle, a J.A. Jones employee and the Joint Venture’s Project Manager; and Calvin Gregory (“Greg”) Herrick, a J.A Jones employee and the Joint Venture’s Senior Project Engineer and Project Controls Engineer. See Tr. at 1388 (Wagner); see also Tr. at 179-80 (Herrick) (listing, as involved in Joint Venture’s bid preparation, “Dennis Olson, Doug Sickle, Norm Wagner, Rick Scharff, Joe Smith, myself, and representatives from Atkinson”). Mr. Herrick proved to be plaintiffs’ most generally knowledgeable witness about Montgomery Point’s history and development insofar as he participated in or observed the events that he described.

J.A. Jones hired Mr. Wagner as the chief estimator of its Heavy Civil Group in 1991. Before he left J.A. Jones in 2002, Mr. Wagner had assisted or prepared bids for a variety of projects, including Gray’s Landing Dam, Florida’s Gareon Bridge, Arizona’s Bartlett Dam, Olmsted Lock and Dam, Braddock Lock and Dam, Oliver Lock and Dam, the Arkansas Hydro hydroelectric plant (“Ark Hydro”), and Montgomery Point. Following his departure from J.A. Jones, Mr. Wagner remained a chief estimator for subsequent employers and since has been responsible for bidding projects, including one for the Marmet Lock and Dam. The court found Mr. Wagner to display an impressive recollection and command of the bid process undertaken by the Joint Venture.

Mr. Wagner described the process for bidding on Montgomery Point, as follows:

The first thing we did was get the documents. We had to order them from the [Cjorps. Get the documents, distribute them to the people in our bid team.
Make bid assignments to the individuals. Prepare the joint venture documents, which would have included quantity reconciliation forms, plug pricing for materials, subcontracts, first pass at labor rates.
I believe we each [J.A Jones and Atkinson] did our own equipment rates on that job. Then set up schedules of reviews. That sort of thing. What times things were needed. Set up joint venture meetings. All with consideration of what management time was and that.

Tr. at 1389. “Plug pricing” was necessary because the subcontractors’ actual pricing information often was not available when they [604]*604bid; therefore, the Joint Venture used pricing records obtained from previous projects or from subcontractor estimates and later conformed a given submission with the actual quotes. Quantity and cost reconciliations allowed J.A. Jones and Atkinson to coordinate their respective estimates for Montgomery Point’s requirements. Immediately prior to submitting its proposal, the Joint Venture substantiated the amount of its bid with actual pricing data from its subcontractors, which yielded a “conformed” bid. See Tr. at 1393-94 (Wagner) (“We use the term conformed saying that [the bid] was de-plugged to actual material and subcontractor pricing. Any final adjustment at bid time.”).

Mr. Wagner explained how the Joint Venture conformed its bid estimate. See Tr. at 1393; see also JX 2061 (Joint Venture’s conformed bid estimate). The estimate matched the bid items proposed by the Corps’s bid sheets.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
92 Fed. Cl. 598, 2010 U.S. Claims LEXIS 269, 2010 WL 2197532, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/firemans-fund-insurance-v-united-states-uscfc-2010.