IMS Engineers-Architects, P.C. v. United States

92 Fed. Cl. 52, 2010 U.S. Claims LEXIS 64, 2010 WL 1076054
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedMarch 18, 2010
DocketNo. 07-291C
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 92 Fed. Cl. 52 (IMS Engineers-Architects, P.C. 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
IMS Engineers-Architects, P.C. v. United States, 92 Fed. Cl. 52, 2010 U.S. Claims LEXIS 64, 2010 WL 1076054 (uscfc 2010).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER

MILLER, Judge.

This case is before the court after trial, during which the court granted defendant’s motion for partial findings under RCFC 52(c) with respect to a claim for financing costs as an element of damages. In order to assert a claim against the Government for breach of the implied duty of good faith and fair dealing, plaintiff sought to set aside a release of all of its claims executed in 1996. The court previously denied summary judgment for plaintiff on liability, noting the existence of genuine issues of disputed facts concerning the circumstances attending the execution of the release. See IMS Engr’s-Architects, P.C. v. United States, 87 Fed.Cl. 541, 553 (2009) (granting summary judgment for defendant with respect to two other contracts and denying plaintiffs motion on liability). The facts bearing on the release had to be resolved in plaintiffs favor before plaintiff was entitled to an adjudication of its claim for breach. Trial determined that plaintiff could not carry its burden of proof to overcome the full release of the claim that it sought to advance in this action.1

FACTS

IMS Engineers-Architeets, P.C. (“plaintiff’ or “IMS”), is a consulting engineering firm based in New York State with experience as a government contractor. Plaintiffs president is Iqbal Singh, a professional engineer licensed in New York, New Jersey, and Pennsylvania. Mr. Singh founded his eompa-ny in 1982 to do advanced work in environmental engineering. See Transcript of Proceedings, IMS Engr’s-Architects, P.C. v. United States, No. 07-291C, at 53 (Fed.Cl. Dec. 14-17, 2009) (“Tr.”). Mr. Singh, a native of India and a Sikh, holds a Masters of Science degree in environmental engineering. He is a proud gentleman with many accomplishments in which to take pride, including his own educational and professional achievements, as well as those of his wife and two children. The court was impressed with Mr. Singh’s enthusiasm for his scientific discipline and for plaintiffs capabilities. Mr. Singh viewed as recognition of plaintiffs relative standing among its peers the 1992-1997 listing by the Division of Hazardous Waste Remediation, New York State Department of Environmental Conservation, that ranked plaintiff fifth out of twenty-five consulting engineering firms qualified to bid on state contracts for engineering and technical services in connection with inactive hazardous waste sites. Notwithstanding the court’s positive impression of Mr. Singh as a person, he was a poor witness for plaintiff — vague, impressionistic, inconsistent, and given to exaggeration. This opinion scrutinizes the facts attending whether plaintiff made a full release of its claims. It cannot be gainsaid, however, that plaintiff, through Mr. Singh, failed to prove that it suffered damages as a result of the alleged breach.

On December 24, 1991, the Huntsville (Alabama) Division of the Army Corps of Engineers (the “Corps”) awarded plaintiff, as subcontractor to the U.S. Small Business Administration (the “SBA”), Contract No. DACA87-92-C-0004 (“Contract 0004”) to conduct facility contamination investigations and remedial designs at the Watervliet Arsenal (“Watervliet”) in New York. Through its president, Mr. Singh, plaintiff had been accepted in the SB A 8(a) program since 1986 or 1987,2 and plaintiff received Contract 0004 as a result of this program.

[57]*57Contract 0004 was a fixed-price contract for $859,663.00. Mr. Singh early on had proposed an expanded scope of work that was implemented by subsequent modification on June 30, 1992, increasing the contract value to $1,383,916.00. By further modifications the final value of the contract was set at $1,406,320.00. The contract completion date was June 20, 1996. A key deliverable under Contract 0004 was plaintiffs draft final work plan, which plaintiff submitted by July 9, 1992, recommending more tasks than originally were contracted. See PX 43. The work covered two areas known as Building 25 and Siberia, a storage area. The Corps never approved plaintiffs work plan, and subsequent correspondence dated March 30, 1993, and June 3,1994, from New York State and the Huntsville Division, respectively, commented on the work plan’s deficiencies. See id. (noting that a June 3,1994 letter from the Huntsville Division was “the last correspondence on contract tasks completed by IMS”).

Although its work plan was not approved, plaintiff proceeded to work at Watervliet. See Tr. at 378-79, 381 (Singh) (discussing plaintiffs submittal of a work plan and its work at Watervliet). Because the Corps had not approved plaintiffs work plan, Mr. Singh acknowledged that plaintiff could not bill the Corps for that work. See id. Although Mr. Singh understood that plaintiff “had to wait for [the Corps’s] approval before [it] could continue with the work,” Tr. at 379 (Singh), he considered that plaintiffs continued work was necessary in order to maintain a state of readiness and took the position that it was performed pursuant to the Corps’s implicit approval, see Tr. at 380, 382-83, 385-86 (Singh). Nonetheless, Mr. Singh appreciated the corollary to plaintiffs continued work: that plaintiff was proceeding at its own risk. See Tr. at 381-82, 386 (Singh).

The Corps did not administer Contract 0004 within the spirit of the 8(a) program, particularly following a September 1994 reassignment of the contract’s administration from the Huntsville Division to the Corps’s Baltimore District. Plaintiffs subsequent interaction with the Corps and the SBA involved the following witnesses: COL Randall R. Inouye, who from 1994 to 1997 was the Commander of the Baltimore District; LTC Ralph H. Graves, the Deputy District Engineer for the Baltimore District from 1992 through June 1995; Contracting Officer Mary C. (“Cathey”) Robertson of the Baltimore District, who was contracting officer when Contract 0004 was transferred to the Baltimore District during fall 1994; William Charles Ryals, Chief of the Corps Architect-Engineers (“AE”) Contracting Branch from 1990 to 2001, who took over Contract 0004 from Ms. Robertson and became Terminating Contracting Officer during late January 1996; Christina E. Corréale, Chief of the Baltimore District’s Hazardous, Toxic, and Radioactive Waste Design Center from late 1991 through March 1998; Patricia A. Huber, the Corps Deputy for Small Business from 1991 through 1997; James O. Branch, a contracting officer and business development specialist from 1991 through 1997 with the SBA’s Region II out of Buffalo, New York; and James R. Sherman, an Environmental Protection Specialist who worked for Water-vliet from 1992 to 1997.

In conjunction with the reassignment of Contract 0004 to the Baltimore District, the Corps arranged a concomitant absorption of [58]*58the work by a large government contractor, Malcolm Pirnie Inc. (“MP”), that had been performing facility investigations to locate contamination at Watervliet. As of August 8, 1994, the Army’s director of Public Works at Watervliet had requested that the Huntsville Division terminate plaintiffs contract. PX 46, at 106. On August 10, 1994, Mr. Singh met with LTC Graves to discuss plaintiffs qualifications and to communicate plaintiffs interest in continued work on Contract 0004. In an August 11, 1994 letter to John Paris, Watervliet’s Chief Environmental Engineer, Mr. Singh highlighted plaintiffs credentials, but when Mr. Sherman, on August 29, 1994, forwarded Mr.

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92 Fed. Cl. 52, 2010 U.S. Claims LEXIS 64, 2010 WL 1076054, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ims-engineers-architects-pc-v-united-states-uscfc-2010.