Sauer, Inc.

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedSeptember 29, 2021
DocketASBCA No. 61847
StatusPublished

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Bluebook
Sauer, Inc., (asbca 2021).

Opinion

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS

Appeal of - ) ) Sauer, Inc. ) ASBCA No. 61847 ) Under Contract No. N40085-09-D-5026 )

APPEARANCE FOR THE APPELLANT: Jack Rephan, Esq. Pender & Coward, P.C. Virginia Beach, VA

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Craig D. Jensen, Esq. Navy Chief Trial Attorney Devin A. Wolak, Esq. Trial Attorney

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE EYESTER

Sauer, Inc. (Sauer or appellant) appeals a deemed denial of a certified claim concerning the construction of a multi-story barracks in Hampton Roads, Virginia, pursuant to a task order issued by the Naval Facilities Engineering Command (NAVFAC or government). Sauer submitted the claim on behalf of itself and its subcontractor for money and time delay. The parties have agreed to waive a hearing and have the appeal decided on the written record pursuant to Board Rule 11. Both parties have filed briefs in support of their respective positions. 1 We have jurisdiction pursuant to the Contract Disputes Act of 1978 (CDA), 41 U.S.C. §§ 7101-7109. For the reasons set forth below, the appeal is sustained in part and the remainder is denied.2

1 Appellant’s prayer for relief in its opening brief contained a request for attorney’s fees under the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA) (app. br. at 44). However, a request for attorney’s fees under EAJA is inappropriate during the briefing stage of the appeal, and would require a separate application pursuant to Addendum I of the Board’s rules after the disposition of the appeal has become final. 2 The parties jointly stipulated entitlement regarding two issues under this appeal. The

first issue, for work related to the Condenser Water Loop tie-in (Count IV), the parties agreed that appellant should be awarded $23,000 for this portion of its claim. The second issue, relating to Modification No. 004 (Mod. 004) for Electrical Equipment Change (Count V(b) extended overhead), was also resolved in favor of the appellant in the amount of $62,299.72. Thus, the parties requested that the Board’s final judgment include the previously agreed upon amounts. (Joint status rpt. 1/29/2021 at 1) Accordingly, this decision deals with the remaining issues under the above-captioned appeal. FINDINGS OF FACT (FOF)

Background

1. On December 3, 2008, NAVFAC awarded Contract No. N40085-09-D-5026 to Sauer. The contract was a Design Build/Design Bid Build Multiple Award Construction Contract (MACC) 3 for New Construction, Renovations, Alterations, and Repair Projects for Facilities in Hampton Roads, Virginia. (R4, tab 1 at 1294) 4

2. The MACC included the following clause:

5252.201-9300 CONTRACTING OFFICER AUTHORITY (JUN 1994)

In no event shall any understanding or agreement between the Contractor and any Government employee other than the Contracting Officer on any contract, modification, change order, letter or verbal direction to the Contractor be effective or binding upon the Government. All such actions must be formalized by a proper contractual document executed by an appointed Contracting Officer. The Contractor is hereby put on notice that in the event a Government employee other than the Contracting Officer directs a change in the work to be performed, it is the Contractor’s responsibility to make inquiry of the Contracting Officer before making the deviation. Payments will not be made without being authorized by an appointed Contracting Officer with the legal authority to bind the Government.

(R4, tab 1 at 1312) The MACC also incorporated by reference Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) 52.243-4, CHANGES (JUN 2007), and FAR 52.246-12, INSPECTION OF CONSTRUCTION (AUG 1996) (R4, tab 1 at 1303).

3. On October 31, 2013, NAVFAC issued fixed-price Task Order No. 0005 to Sauer in the amount of $27.406 million and with a completion date of December 16, 2015, for the design and build of a multi-story barracks for enlisted technical training students at the Naval Air Station Oceana, Virginia Beach, Virginia 5 (R4, tab 1.5 at 1193-95, tab 1.6 at 1211-12, tab 1.1 at 1072). NAVFAC issued the task order

3 Pursuant to an Order of the Board, the parties provided a copy of the MACC and included it as part of the government’s Rule 4 file. 4 We cite to the “Bates stamp” type of pagination affixed by the parties. 5 The award included other line items for planned modifications that are not relevant to

the decision here (R4, tab 1.5 at 1195-97, tab 1.6 at 1212-1214). 2 pursuant to Sauer’s MACC, which stated that the task order was subject to the MACC’s terms and conditions (R4, tab 1 at 1305).

4. The task order required Sauer to “provide all labor, supervision, engineering, materials, equipment, tools, parts, supplies and transportation to accomplish the work in accordance with” the solicitation (including the amendments); Sauer’s proposals submitted November 1, 2012 and August 13, 2013; and the final design (R4, tab 1.5 at 1194, tab 1.6 at 1211, tab 1.0 at 70).

5. The incorporated solicitation included four parts. As relevant here, part 3, the engineering system requirements (ESR), set forth the project’s specific requirements. Part 4, the performance technical specifications (PTS), provided “generalized technical requirements that apply to multiple facility types and include more requirements than are applicable to this project” (see generally R4, tab 1.0 at 500).

6. The task order required Sauer to establish and maintain a quality control (QC) program that used, among other things, a submittal review and approval process and “QC certifications and documents necessary to provide design, materials, equipment, workmanship, fabrication, construction and operations which comply with the requirements of” the task order (R4, tab 1.0 at 100). There were procedures for both design and construction submittals (R4, tab 1.0 at 45, 53).

7. Some submittals required government review and approval while others required either a QC certification and designer of record review and approval, or QC approval and copy sent to the designer of record (R4, tab 1.0 at 6; app. supp. R4, tab 4.2 at 4022). A QC certification for a submittal affirmed that the submittal complied with the task order requirements (R4, tab 1.0 at 47, 51, 56-57).

8. The task order required design documents created by Sauer to comply with the solicitation (R4, tab 1.0 at 55). In addition, Sauer was to provide all design submittals, including specifications, to the government for approval (R4, tab 1.0 at 55-56).

9. The task order set forth the procedures for design changes and variations. A design change was to be considered prior to government approval of the final design and a variation was to be considered after government approval of the final design (R4, tab 1.0 at 49). A design change was required to “meet the minimum requirements of the solicitation and the accepted proposal” and could be approved by the designer of record and brought to the attention of the government before being incorporated into the design documents. In contrast, the task order stated the following with respect to variations:

Variations from contract requirements including the solicitation, the accepted proposal, and the final design, require Government approval. Variations to the contract requirements must be approved by the Designer of Record 3 prior to resubmitting the design to the Government for approval of the variation.

(R4, tab 1.0 at 50) 6

10. Sauer’s designer of record for the award was VOA Associates Inc. (R4, tab 1.3 at 1131). VOA entered into a subcontract with Hankins & Anderson to serve as the mechanical, electrical and plumbing engineer for the project (app. supp. R4, tab 4.15, Forbes decl. ¶ 3).

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