Richard J. Danzig, Secretary of the Navy v. Aec Corporation

224 F.3d 1333, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 23731, 2000 WL 1370342
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedSeptember 25, 2000
Docket99-1343
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 224 F.3d 1333 (Richard J. Danzig, Secretary of the Navy v. Aec Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Richard J. Danzig, Secretary of the Navy v. Aec Corporation, 224 F.3d 1333, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 23731, 2000 WL 1370342 (Fed. Cir. 2000).

Opinion

BRYSON, Circuit Judge.

The dispute in this case arose when the government terminated its contract with AEC Corporation for default. The Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals ruled that the default termination was improper, and the government has appealed from that ruling. We reverse and remand for further proceedings.

I

In May 1989, the Navy awarded AEC a contract to complete the construction of a Naval and Marine Corps Reserve Training Center in Miami, Florida. The contract called for AEC to finish the work by October 14, 1990. By late 1990, it was apparent that AEC was behind schedule. AEC was having financial difficulties with its surety, and those problems were delaying the progress of the work. A cure notice issued by the Navy in December 1990 led to a meeting between the Navy and AEC on January 23, 1991. At that meeting, AEC provided a schedule with a projected completion date of April 16, 1991. The Navy agreed not to terminate the contract for default if AEC continued to make progress according to that schedule. AEC subsequently submitted a revised schedule with April 26,1991, as the completion date. The Navy accepted that revised schedule, although for reasons that are unclear from the record, the parties subsequently used the following day, April 27, 1991, as the projected completion date for the project.

In late February 1991, AEC’s surety froze the project’s bank account, and the number of workers doing productive work on the project began to decline. At a meeting on March 5, 1991, the Navy asked why the project was progressing so slowly. AEC advised the Navy that it was unable to make progress on the project because the surety would not release funds from the project’s bank account. The Navy re *1335 sponded by stating that AEC was close to being terminated for default.

On March 20, 1991, the Navy sent AEC a letter containing a cure notice. In the letter, the Navy stated that its agreement at the January 23 meeting not to pursue termination for default was contingent upon AEC’s diligently pursuing completion of the contract by April 27, 1991. Since the January 23 meeting, the Navy charged, “work in place continues to progress at a dangerously low pace.” Based on the decreasing number of man-hours being devoted to the job, the Navy expressed concern that AEC would not be able to complete the project by April 27. The Navy therefore stated that it considered AEC’s “failure to diligently pursue completion a condition that is endangering performance of the contract” and advised that unless that condition was cured within 10 days, the Navy would consider terminating the contract for default.

AEC responded to the cure notice with a letter dated April 3, 1991. In the letter AEC explained that while it had previously appeared possible to complete the project by April 27, 1991, “numerous factors have prevented [the project’s] scheduled progress.” First, AEC claimed that “the many changes and delays caused by the Government have made an April completion impossible.” Second, AEC complained that since January 1991 the surety had interfered with AEC and hampered its progress on the job by blocking the release of funds sufficient to enable AEC to pay its subcontractors and meet other project expenses. The “financial strangulation” by the surety, AEC stated,

has progressed to the point of not only preventing AEC from meeting its April 27, 1991 completion date, it has made it impossible for AEC to predict an ultimate completion date at this time. As a matter of fact, unless [the surety and its affiliate] restrain [sic] from their present conduct and release the funds currently in [the project’s] bank account, it is doubtful that AEC will ever be.able to complete the project.

The Navy responded by letter the next day, stating that it could not evaluate AEC’s response because AEC’s contentions that burdensome changes and government-caused delays had made an April 27 completion impossible were vague and unsubstantiated. The Navy directed AEC to provide a detailed response to substantiate its allegations. The Navy added that the March 20 cure notice required AEC to cure the dangerously slow work pace within 10 days, and it “strongly encouragefd]” AEC to address the cure issue.

On April 5, AEC answered by stating that it “cannot cure the deficiency stated in your Cure Notice due to the restrictions that [the surety and its affiliate] have imposed on the disbursement of funds from the joint escrow account. Consequently we cannot give you any assurance as to when the project will be completed.” AEC added that “[t]he financial strain of this action has been aggravated by costs incurred as a result of delays and additional work caused by the government.” In response to the Navy’s request for substantiation of the allegations regarding government-caused delays and changes, AEC responded that “due to time constraints, we refer you to correspondence which we sent you in .preparation for our meeting of January 23, 1991.” In a second letter dated the same day, AEC advised the Navy that it had reduced its work force at the job site to two supervisory employees because of the financial restrictions imposed by the surety.

The Navy called a meeting at the site on April 9, 1991, at which it gave AEC an unsigned letter directing AEC to “show cause” why the contract should not be terminated for default. The letter directed AEC to respond within ten days. AEC received a signed copy of the letter on April 11. During the following 10 days, AEC did not respond to the Navy’s “show cause” letter, and throughout that period AEC had only a handful of workers on the job site.

*1336 On April 22, 1991, the Navy terminated the contract for default. The termination notice stated that the contract was being terminated “due to failure to make progress in the work and for default in performance.” AEC responded by letter the same day, expressing surprise that the Navy had terminated the contract without waiting for AEC’s response to the show cause letter.

AEC appealed the termination. After the contracting officer denied the appeal, AEC appealed to the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals, which held the termination invalid. The Board concluded that modifications and delays to AEC’s contract performance attributable to the government entitled AEC to an extension of time, which changed the contract completion date to May 16, 1991. The Board further ruled that the Navy had presented “no evidence that AEC could not complete contract performance by the extended contract completion date [May 16, 1991] produced by an appropriate analysis of the time extensions to which AEC is entitled.” Accordingly, the Board concluded that “the Navy’s default termination for failure to make progress was improper.” The Board also rejected the Navy’s argument that AEC had breached the contract by anticipatory repudiation. Because AEC had not “expressed, an unequivocal unwillingness or inability to perform,” the Board concluded that it had not repudiated the contract and that the default termination could not be sustained on that ground. Finally, the Board rejected the Navy’s argument that the default termination was justified because AEC failed to give the Navy assurances that it could complete the contract on a timely basis.

The government sought reconsideration. In its reconsideration motion, the government argued, inter alia,

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Bluebook (online)
224 F.3d 1333, 2000 U.S. App. LEXIS 23731, 2000 WL 1370342, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/richard-j-danzig-secretary-of-the-navy-v-aec-corporation-cafc-2000.