Reiter Consulting Services, Inc. v. Hildenbrand

CourtDistrict Court, District of Columbia
DecidedSeptember 30, 2025
DocketCivil Action No. 2023-2805
StatusPublished

This text of Reiter Consulting Services, Inc. v. Hildenbrand (Reiter Consulting Services, Inc. v. Hildenbrand) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, District of Columbia primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Reiter Consulting Services, Inc. v. Hildenbrand, (D.D.C. 2025).

Opinion

UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

REITER CONSULTING SERVICES, INC.,

Plaintiff, Vv. Case No. 1:23-cv-2805-RCL

SANDRA HILDENBRAND, in her capacity as personal representative of the Estate of Jack Dallas Hildenbrand, and POTOMAC SOLUTIONS LLC,

Defendants.

MEMORANDUM OPINION

Before the Court are two motions: Plaintiff Reiter Consulting Services’ Motion for Leave to Amend and Defendant Sandra Hildenbrand’s Motion for Summary Judgment, brought in her putative capacity as personal representative of her deceased husband, Jack Dallas Hildenbrand. Ultimately, the disposition of both motions turns on the lack of diligence of the plaintiff. Namely, the plaintiffs motion for leave to amend and the plaintiff's opposition to summary judgment were filed well past clearly set deadlines, the plaintiff has made no serious effort to justify those delays, and their arguments would be unavailing on their merits. Because of these missteps, the plaintiff s motion for leave to amend will be DENIED and Sandra Hildenbrand’s motion for summary judgment will be GRANTED.

I. BACKGROUND a. Key Facts Plaintiff Reiter Consulting Services (“RCS”) is a Maryland-based federal government

subcontractor that provides information technology services. Compl. 48, 15. RCS performed first-tier subcontracting services to the U.S. Postal Inspection Service through ECS Federal, a prime contractor. Jd. § 7-8, 15. RCS’s subcontract with ECS F ederal was a “time and materials- type subcontract,” meaning that Reiter was compensated by the hour and cost of materials. Id. q 9.

Defendant Sandra Hildenbrand (“Ms. Hildenbrand”) is the widow of Jack Dallas Hildenbrand (“Mr. Hildenbrand”) and the personal representative of his estate. Id. 43. Mr. Hildenbrand and RCS President Bruce Reiter became friends around 1999. Id. 410. From March 2008 through September 2009, they were partners in a government IT-services contractor business. Id. 411.

In October 2014, RCS retained Mr. Hildenbrand and his company, Defendant Potomac Solutions, as second-tier subcontractors to provide services to the Postal Inspection Services under the aegis of the ECS Federal prime contract. Jd. 913. Mr. Hildenbrand’s role in supporting the prime contract was providing senior systems engineering and solution architecture services. Id. ] 15. RCS agreed to pay Mr. Hildenbrand and Potomac Solutions $98 per hour of work. Jd. q 18.

Between 2014 and 2016, Mr. Hildenbrand’s timesheets represented that he worked approximately twelve hours a month, including approximately three hours on weekends. Id. q 21. In 2016, the scope of the work required under the contract increased due to government need, and Mr. Hildenbrand accordingly began reporting that he was working forty hours per week under the contract. Jd. §]22-23. During calendar year 2020, for example, Mr. Hildenbrand submitted timesheets representing that he was working full-time, meaning forty hours per week, for RCS and ECS Federal. Id. § 25.

At the same time, however, Mr. Hildenbrand was also working for a separate prime contractor, Perspecta Enterprise Solutions (“Perspecta”) on its contract with the Postal Inspection

Service. Id. | 26. Mr. Hildenbrand worked approximately 37.5 hours per week for Perspecta. Id. RCS does not allege that it was unaware of this work, but they allege that they believed Mr. Hildenbrand was working on its second-tier contract “mostly in the evenings, at night, and on weekends” and often worked odd hours on the RCS contract because he was “on call.” Id. 9] 27. In December 2020, RCS “was informed,” though the Complaint does not identify by whom, that Mr. Hildenbrand “could no longer work on two contracts at once,” and RCS consequently removed Mr. Hildenbrand “from working on the ECS Federal contract.” Jd. 428. In early 2021, the Inspector General of the Postal Service began investigating Mr. Hildenbrand’s work on the two contracts. Id. | 29.

Mr. Hildenbrand died on October 4, 2021, before the USPS investigation concluded. Id. 430. The investigation ultimately revealed that Mr. Hildenbrand had regularly overstated the number of hours he worked to RCS, ECF Federal, and USPS. Jd. 931. He had falsely billed USPS for an average of approximately 16 hours of work per day for June 2016 through December 2020. Id. 32. RCS learned of the investigation’s findings from ECS Federal in December 2022. Id. 439. USPS had required ECS Federal to reimburse the government for $913,145 in overbilling, and pursuant to RCS’s subcontract, RCS reimbursed ECS Federal for the same. Id. Ff 40-41. On January 31, 2023, RCS presented a formal written demand for payment to Ms. Hildenbrand, the personal representative of Mr. Hildenbrand’s estate. Id. { 43.

b. Procedural History

After the written demand failed to secure payment, see id. 45, RCS brought this case in September 2023. The Complaint names Sandra Hildenbrand, as personal representative of the estate of Jack Dallas Hildenbrand, and Potomac Solutions, LLC, as defendants, and alleges three counts seeking recovery: fraud (Count I), contribution (Count IJ), and indemnification (Count III).

Id. 9§ 46-73. Ms. Hildenbrand, but not Potomac Solutions, filed an answer. See Answer, ECF No. 13. The parties then agreed upon a schedule, which the Court ordered, as follows: initial disclosures would be due February 1, 2024; any amendment or joinder would be due March 1, 2024; fact discovery would close November 1, 2024; and dispositive motions would be due December 2, 2024. See Scheduling Order at 1, ECF No. 19.

Because Potomac Solutions, LLC had not appeared or answered within the allotted time, RCS requested that the Clerk of Court enter Potomac Solutions’ default. See ECF Nos. 15. After the Clerk did so, on February 12, 2024, RCS moved for default judgment. See ECF No. 24. Ms. Hildenbrand then filed a response, explaining that the Court should defer entry of default judgment because (1) RCS’s evidence indicated that Potomac Solutions, LLC was incorporated in October 29, 2021, and therefore came into existence only after the events alleged against the company had occurred; (2) Potomac Solutions, LLC’s liability, if any, would be coextensive with Mr. Hildenbrand’s liability, so such liability should be determined on the merits of RCS’s claims against the estate; and (3) RCS had failed to produce (i) its contract with Potomac Solutions, (i1) verification of the claimed damages, or (iii) evidence of the fraudulent timesheets. ECF No. 28 at 4-6. Because the Court harbored “reservations about whether Potomac Solutions, LLC is the correct defendant,” among other concerns, it denied the motion for default judgment without prejudice on April 2, 2024. See Order of April 2, 2024, at 1, ECF No. 35.

The Court heard little from the parties during the period scheduled for fact discovery. Instead, on the day fact discovery was scheduled to close, the plaintiff moved to extend discovery for an additional ninety days. See ECF No. 37. Then, on November 8, 2024, more than eight months after the deadline for amendments, the plaintiff requested leave to file an amended

complaint, seeking to join as defendants an additional corporate entity—Potomac Solutions, Inc.— and Ms. Hildenbrand in her individual capacity. See ECF No. 38. On November 12, 2024, Ms. Hildenbrand moved for summary judgment on the ground that she lacked capacity to be sued as the personal representative of her husband’s estate because RCS had failed to provide evidence that she was, in fact, the personal representative of the estate. See ECF No. 41. Il. LEGAL STANDARDS a. Leave to Amend

The parties quarrel over the proper standard of review when a plaintiff seeks to amend their complaint after the scheduled deadline for amendments has passed, a subject on which this Court has opined previously. See Lurie v. Mid-Atl.

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Reiter Consulting Services, Inc. v. Hildenbrand, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/reiter-consulting-services-inc-v-hildenbrand-dcd-2025.