OK's Cascade Co. v. United States

97 Fed. Cl. 635, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 147, 2011 WL 681059
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedFebruary 25, 2011
DocketNo. 07-702C
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 97 Fed. Cl. 635 (OK's Cascade Co. 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
OK's Cascade Co. v. United States, 97 Fed. Cl. 635, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 147, 2011 WL 681059 (uscfc 2011).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

WHEELER, Judge.

Plaintiff, OK’s Cascade Company (“OK’s Cascade”) has presented a novel contract [638]*638claim involving mobile food services for firefighters in remote locations. The United States Department of Agriculture, Forest Service, National Interagency Fire Center (“Forest Service” or “the agency”) contracted with OK’s Cascade for these services on July 7, 2004. However, due to the filing of multiple bid protests, the Forest Service suspended performance of the contract on July 26, 2004, and later terminated the contract for the convenience of the Government on August 18, 2004. Instead of providing mobile food services under the terminated contract, OK’s Cascade performed in 2004 under higher-priced Emergency Equipment Rental Agreements (“EERAs”) issued by the Forest Service. OK’s Cascade claims that it is entitled to recover its costs from the termination for convenience even though it performed all of the services under a different contract vehicle.

OK’s Cascade submitted a termination for convenience settlement proposal to the Forest Service’s contracting officer on August 18, 2005. In this proposal, OK’s Cascade requested reimbursement of costs totaling $587,531, consisting of the following: (1) $174,724 to modernize mobile kitchen equipment and to comply with the Forest Service’s solicitation requirements; (2) $402,806 in under-absorbed overhead costs from having less work under the EERAs than under the terminated contract; and (3) $10,000 in estimated proposal preparation costs. After the contracting officer’s requests for additional support from OK’s Cascade went unanswered for more than nine months, the contracting officer issued a final decision denying the claim on September 27, 2006. OK’s Cascade received the final decision on October 3, 2006, and filed suit on September 28, 2007. The Court has jurisdiction under the Contract Disputes Act, 41 U.S.C. § 609(a) (2006).

Defendant opposes OK’s Cascade’s claim because even though the Forest Service terminated the contract for convenience, OK’s Cascade nevertheless performed all of the work it reasonably could have expected in 2004 through the higher-priced EERAs, and actually benefitted from the termination. Defendant also asserts that OK’s Cascade’s costs of modernizing kitchen equipment to be more competitive on an upcoming procurement are not reimbursable by the Government. Defendant further contends that all of OK’s Cascade’s damages calculations are defective, unreliable, and unsupported.

The Court conducted a trial in this matter during July 20-22, 2010 in Seattle, Washington. The Court also received the testimony of a former contracting officer, John Venag-lia, on August 4, 2010 in Washington, D.C. Thereafter, the parties filed post-trial briefs on November 15, 2010, and post-trial response briefs on December 16, 2010. The Court heard closing arguments on January 19,2011.

As explained more fully below, the Court concludes that OK’s Cascade is not entitled to any recovery. OK’s Cascade did not suffer any harm from the Forest Service’s termination for convenience because OK’s Cascade performed all of the anticipated work in 2004 under the higher-priced EERAs. OK’s Cascade received more money under the EERAs than it would have received under the terminated contract for the same work. Further, the costs of modernizing the kitchen equipment are not recoverable from the Government. OK’s Cascade incurred these costs to be more competitive for upcoming mobile food service work. These expenditures are a cost of doing business, and OK’s Cascade assumed the risk of the level of new work the modernized equipment would produce.

The claim for $402,806 in under-absorbed overhead costs is premised on the idea that OK’s Cascade performed EERAs for three kitchen unit locations, whereas it received an award for four kitchen unit locations under the terminated contract. However, the time period for the staffing of the fourth location in Albuquerque, New Mexico already had expired before the Forest Service awarded the contract to OK’s Cascade on July 7, 2004, and, in any event, OK’s Cascade actually provided services for Albuquerque under a precontract EERA. The factual premise for this claim thus is incorrect. Moreover, the evidence presented to support this portion of the claim was seriously flawed. Plaintiffs witness, John Reed, should have testified as an expert witness, but Plaintiffs counsel did [639]*639not comply with the Court’s rules for identifying expert witnesses during discovery. As a fact witness, Mr. Reed’s testimony and work product suffered from serious hearsay and other evidentiary shortcomings.

OK’s Cascade also cannot recover proposal preparation costs because they are not reasonable. OK’s Cascade increased this element of its claim to $50,396.71 at trial, but the underlying claim lacks factual and legal support, and should not have been submitted to the Forest Service in the first place. By not properly qualifying Mr. Reed as an expert witness, and due to substantive flaws in Mr. Reed’s analysis, the effort that generated the proposal preparation costs was inherently unreliable.

Factual Background1

The Forest Service is responsible for contracting to provide mobile food services to fire event locations. (Stip. ¶¶ 1-2.)2 These services include all phases of food preparation and related facilities such as tents and hand-washing stations. Id. ¶¶ 6-11. Prior to the 2004 solicitation at issue here, the Forest Service obtained services from OK’s Cascade through a 1999 solicitation and the exercise of options available under that contract (the “previous solicitation”). Id. ¶ 9.

A. The 2004. National Mobile Food Services Solicitation

On February 13, 2004, the Forest Service issued solicitation RFP 49-03-07 (the “2004 Solicitation”) as a partial small business set-aside, through which the agency intended to provide multiple awards for contracts that were referred to collectively as the National Mobile Food Services Contracts or “national contracts.” (Stip. ¶ 1.) The intent of the solicitation was “to obtain Mobile Food Services to provide tasty, well balanced hot and special meals, sack lunches, and hot and cold can meals, and supplemental items at various field locations some of which will be semi-remote.” (DX 3.18.)3 Section 1.1.2 of the solicitation specified that:

[t]he service provided shall include all phases of food preparation and food service normally associated with the trade. Such service shall include all materials, food, equipment, labor, and overhead. Such as, but not necessarily limited to: kitchen unit management, planning, and control; purchase, receipt, storage, issue, handling, processing, packaging and shipping, preparation, food servicing, and clean up....

Id.

In addition to food preparation, the mobile kitchen units were also required to provide comfortable eating facilities, including tents and hand-washing stations. Section 1.4.11 of the solicitation required that contractors provide “[w]aterproof tent(s) for the eating area(s) that are able to accommodate 175 persons comfortably_” (DX 3.22.) The hand-washing facilities required by the solicitation include a unit for the kitchen employees and a station for the firefighters.

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97 Fed. Cl. 635, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 147, 2011 WL 681059, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oks-cascade-co-v-united-states-uscfc-2011.