Magnus Pacific Corporation v. United States

133 Fed. Cl. 640, 2017 WL 3765524
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedAugust 31, 2017
Docket13-859 C
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 133 Fed. Cl. 640 (Magnus Pacific Corporation 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
Magnus Pacific Corporation v. United States, 133 Fed. Cl. 640, 2017 WL 3765524 (uscfc 2017).

Opinion

OPINION

Bush, Senior Judge.

This post-trial opinion resolves all of the claims and requests for relief presented in this suit by Magnus Pacific Corporation (Magnus or Magnus Pacific) which spring from the restoration of a levee in Texas for the United States Section of the International Boundary and Water Commission (IBWC). 1 The IBWC is a federal agency collaborating with its Mexican counterpart in the implementation of border and water treaties between the two countries. The contract between Magnus and the IBWC was awarded in December 2010; the disputes in this case focus on levee restoration work on the Rio Grande performed by Magnus from April 2011 through May 2012.

On the same topic as one of plaintiffs claims related to the levee, the government has asserted a counterclaim seeking to justify funds owed Magnus under the contract but retained by the IBWC, The amount in controversy for all of plaintiffs claims is almost four million dollars, plus interest; the contract’s fixed price, subsequent to modifications agreed to by the parties, was approximately twelve million dollars. As discussed in detail below, plaintiff prevails on its claims to a great extent.

BACKGROUND 2

I. The Contract Claims

This is a suit brought under the Contract Disputes Act of 1978, 41 U.S.C, §§ 7101-7109 (2012) (CDA). Am. Compl. ¶¶ 15, 20; Def.’s Br. at 58; Pl.’s Reply at 29-30. The parties agree that in 2010, pursuant to a sealed bid, fixed price procurement, plaintiff and the IBWC entered into a “lump-sum” contract whereby Magnus would perform restoration work on a levee near Presidio, Texas. The largest claim in this suit is plaintiffs “embankment fill” claim, which asserts that Mag-nus was obliged to import and place on the levee greater amounts of fill than a reasonable bidder responding to the solicitation *646 would have expected. 3 Plaintiffs second-largest claim, the “riprap claim,” is that the contract, as amended, required that Magnus place imported1 riprap armoring on various sections of the levee, but the IBWC also obliged Magnus to do additional, out-of-scope riprap work. 4 Plaintiffs third and smallest claim is an appeal of the contracting officer’s final decision vlhich sought to justify the retainage of contract payments by the IBWC in the amount of $466,092, a retainage of contract funds related to a disputed credit owed the government for a mid-project change to the levee design. This final dispute, which may best be described as the “slope change credit claim,” is the subject of both plaintiffs claim and the government’s counterclaim. 5 The court provides a very brief, general description of each dispute below, but reserves a more detailed narrative of pertinent facts for the specific analysis section of this opinion devoted to each of plaintiffs claims.

A. Embankment Fill

Magnus’s embankment fill claim, adjusted during trial because certain computation errors were conceded by plaintiff, is for an equitable adjustment of the contract price in the amount of $2,851,788. Of this sum, the embankment fill “overruns” are divided into two main categories: (1) fill required at the construction locations where deep “slurry walls,” i.e., barriers to groundwater movement buried in trenches sixty feet deep, were installed at the side of the levee, and (2) fill required, more along most of the levee because Magnus was obliged to excavate existing levee material to a lower depth than expected. Of these two embankment fill claim components, the generalized deeper excavation of existing levee materials portion of the claim greatly exceeds the portion of the claim related to the excess fill required at the slurry wall construction locations. See Joint Exhibit (JX) 2, at 1-2.

B. Riprap

Magnus’s riprap claim, adjusted during trial because certain computation errors were conceded by plaintiff, is for an equitable adjustment of the contract price in the amount of $597,075. In support of this claim, Magnus contends that three separate and distinct amounts of riprap were placed on the levee. First, the contract at the time of award called for a certain amount of new riprap to be placed on the levee, approximately 17,500 cubic yards (CY). JX 24, at 1. Second, when the levee project was extensively modified by bilateral modifications triggered by what the parties refer to as the “matrix” document, 6 an additional amount of new riprap, approximately 9750 CY, was ordered to be placed on the levee. Id. Neither of these riprap amounts in the contract included, however, the replacement of certain existing, unsatisfactory riprap which could not be re-used on the levee. It is this final category of riprap work, 8101 CY of new riprap to replace existing riprap, that is the basis of Magnus’s riprap claim. Id.

*647 C. Slope Change Credit Dispute

Well after the matrix and related contract modifications provided the parties with a revised statement of work for the project, another major change to the contract occurred in late February 2012. JX 104. For a significant portion of the length of the levee, the footprint of the proposed restored levee exceeded, on the landside of the levee, the space provided by pertinent property boundaries. The parties were obliged to reduce the levee’s footprint by making the landside slope of the levee in those areas steeper and more narrow. Although the volume of the levee would thus be reduced, the credit owed the government due to this contract change was not resolved amicably.

For the slope change credit, the IBWC retained $466,092 in contract payments owed Magnus under the contract. Magnus argues that the slope change credit should be $35,036, whereas the government’s position, modified during trial, is that the IBWC is entitled to a slope change credit of $383,893. In its amended complaint, Magnus seeks a disbursement of the retained funds in the amount of $431,056 (subtracting a $35,036 slope change credit from $466,092 retained by the IBWC). In its counterclaim, the government seeks a ruling which endorses a slope change credit of $383,893, so that the IBWC would only refund to Magnus a modest amount ($82,199, subtracting a $383,893 slope change credit from $466,092) of the retainage.

II. Overview of the Levee Restoration Project

A. The IBWC Managers of the Project Lacked Specialized Levee Expertise

It became clear at trial that levee restoration projects are somewhat specialized projects that benefit from specialized experience. The IBWC employees assigned to the project at issue in this case, referred to as the Lower Presidio Levee, were not well-versed in the technical requirements of levee restoration. The contracting officer, Mr. Frank Delgado, testified that he had no technical expertise in levee restoration or construction. Delgado Tr.

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Bluebook (online)
133 Fed. Cl. 640, 2017 WL 3765524, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/magnus-pacific-corporation-v-united-states-uscfc-2017.