Lumbermens Mutual Casualty v. United States

70 Fed. Cl. 94, 2006 U.S. Claims LEXIS 58, 2006 WL 554343
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedMarch 3, 2006
DocketNo. 04-1255C
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 70 Fed. Cl. 94 (Lumbermens Mutual Casualty 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
Lumbermens Mutual Casualty v. United States, 70 Fed. Cl. 94, 2006 U.S. Claims LEXIS 58, 2006 WL 554343 (uscfc 2006).

Opinion

ORDER AND OPINION

HODGES, Judge.

Plaintiff Lumbermens is a surety that overtook a contract with the Navy after the original contractor defaulted. Lumbermens is seeking damages in this court from allegedly improper payments made by the Navy to the original contractor. Lumbermens claims the Navy’s actions resulted in higher costs to complete the job. Plaintiff filed motions to compel written discovery and for sanctions for violating the notice requirement for third-party subpoenas pursuant to Rule 45. The parties attempted to settle the discovery disputes short of additional proceedings, but counsel could not reach resolution. We heard oral arguments on February 22.

We grant in part plaintiffs motion for sanctions for the reasons discussed below. Plaintiffs motion to compel is denied.

DISCUSSION

The Navy contracted with Landmark Construction Company in April 2000 for repair and renovation of 160 military family housing units.1 The contract stipulated that the Government was to make periodic progress payments that corresponded with the work completed. Section 01200 of the contract set forth the requirements for Landmark’s requests for payment. The requests were to contain: (1) invoices submitted on NAVFAC Form 7300/41; (2) a contract performance statement showing the percentage of work completed; (3) an updated network analysis; (4) the contractor’s final release form; and (5) the quality control manager’s invoice certification. Payment requests that did not have the required documents were to be returned to the contractor for correction.

Plaintiff alleges that the Navy did not hold Landmark to these requirements, and as a result, the Navy made payments to the contractor significantly in excess of progress on the project. The Navy made progress payments based solely on the passage of time, according to plaintiff. Landmark informed the Navy in July 2001 that it could not complete the project, and the Navy terminated for default soon thereafter. The Navy had paid nearly forty percent of the contract price at termination. Landmark had completed twenty-two of the 181 housing units, or ten to fifteen percent of the work. The parties entered into a Takeover Agreement with a completion contractor in November 2001.

Lumbermens filed a Complaint in this court in 2004, seeking damages for impairment of suretyship or equitable subrogation, and for breach of the Takeover Agreement because its costs were greater once it took over the contract. Lumbermens alleges that the Government impaired its suretyship rights by: (1) paying Landmark according to Network Analysis Schedules that did not comply with contract specifications; (2) making improper payments to Landmark for materials, services, and personnel; and (3) failing to withhold progress payments. We dismissed ten of twenty-three Counts in Lumbermens’ Complaint on August 17, 2005. Lumbermens Mut. Cas. Co. v. United States, 67 Fed.Cl. 253 (2005).2 Plaintiff was precluded from relief under the theory of equitable subrogation because Lumbermens did [96]*96not provide the requisite notice to the Government that the contractor could not complete the contract, and that payment should be made to the surety instead. Id. at 254-55.

Motion to Compel Discovery

The parties exchanged project-related documents pursuant to Rule 26(a) in Spring 2004. The documents produced to plaintiff included copies of thirteen invoices submitted by Landmark to the Navy for payment during contract performance. Many of the payment requests were incomplete, according to Lumbermens, including updated Network Analysis Schedules, progress payment certifications, and the “Required Sorts” and “Look-Ahead Reports.” Updated Network Analysis Schedules divided the project into discrete activities and assigned values to each. This allowed the Navy to determine the amount of the progress payment earned by the Contractor for each activity. Plaintiff claims it needs updated schedules to ascertain the amount Landmark had billed for each item or activity, and when and how much the Government actually paid. Apparently, six of the thirteen invoices are missing the updated schedules.

FAR 52.232-5, mandating the use of progress payment certifications, was incorporated by reference into Landmark’s contract with the Navy. Only three of the thirteen invoices contained the certifications.

Plaintiff issued its first request for documents to the Government on September 8, 2005. Defendant answered each of Lumber-mens’ requests by stating, “[ajll responsive documents have previously been produced. The original documents remain available for inspection and copying.” Def.’s Mot. to Compel Disc, at 6. Lumbermens’ counsel eon-tacted government counsel on November 4, 2005, and asked that she obtain the missing documents from the Defense Finance and Accounting Services. She agreed, but the Government did not respond further. Lum-bermens reissued its request two weeks later. Government counsel then stated in an e-mail that “[i]t is not clear that DFAS has any information that has not already been provided, that is, the invoices/public vouchers.” Id. at 7.3

Government counsel informed plaintiff on November 22 that she had contacted the DFAS office in Norfolk, VA and asked that the documents be recovered from the Federal Records Center. On December 7, defendant stated, “DFAS has not been able to locate any documents. The paperwork that is filled out when documents are sent to the Federal Records Center for storage cannot be found. Without the paperwork containing the identifying information the records cannot be retrieved from the Federal Records Center.” Id. at 8.

Lumbermens argues the materials relate to essential elements of its case. Moreover, Rule 34(a) of this court obligates defendant to produce documents “in the possession or control of the party upon whom the request is served.” DFAS is a government agency; therefore, the documents at DFAS are within the custody and control of defendant.

The Government does not dispute that the documents processed by DFAS are within its control. Government counsel argues, however, that defendant has taken all reasonable steps to locate the documents and has repeatedly sought to recover the records from the agency but DFAS does not have the box accession number, so the files cannot be located within the Federal Records Center.4

[97]*97Lumbermens nevertheless remains dissatisfied with the Government’s discovery responses'. It now seeks an order compelling the Government to produce the documents from DFAS, and awarding plaintiff the costs of filing this motion. We attempted to resolve the dispute informally, raising questions to counsel regarding the documents plaintiff has asked the Government to produce. See Order, No. 04-1255C (Jan. 24, 2006). The court conducted a hearing pursuant to the Order on February 22.

Plaintiff contended at the hearing that the court need answer only two questions: are the documents relevant, and have they been produced. The documents are relevant because they are the invoices the Government relied upon in making payments to the contractor. Those payments lie at the heart of this dispute. Some of the payments were made in error, and plaintiff believes that defendant has not made sufficient effort to produce the documents. Thus, this court should compel production of the documents.

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70 Fed. Cl. 94, 2006 U.S. Claims LEXIS 58, 2006 WL 554343, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lumbermens-mutual-casualty-v-united-states-uscfc-2006.