Sheffield Barbers, LLC

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedApril 4, 2025
Docket62367
StatusPublished

This text of Sheffield Barbers, LLC (Sheffield Barbers, LLC) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sheffield Barbers, LLC, (asbca 2025).

Opinion

DOCUMENT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE. The decision issued on the date below is subject to an ASBCA Protective Order. This version has been approved for public release.

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS Appeal of - ) ) Sheffield Barbers, LLC ) ASBCA No. 62367 ) Under Contract No. BRG 15-002 )

APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: H. Todd Whay, Esq. Ian A. Cronogue, Esq. Baker, Cronogue, Tolle & Werfel, LLP McLean, VA

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Dana J. Chase, Esq. Army Chief Trial Attorney MAJ Joshua B. Fix, JA CPT Camille J. Grathwohl, JA Trial Attorneys

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE HERZFELD

The Army & Air Force Exchange Service (AAFES) asserts that Sheffield Barbers, LLC (Sheffield), needed to take a haircut in the fees it could charge to perform fade haircuts at Fort Bragg in North Carolina. AAFES has moved for summary judgment, asserting that the contract defined fade haircuts as regular haircuts, not the more expensive style haircuts. We deny AAFES’s summary judgment motion as to Sheffield’s breach and constructive change allegations because the agency waived its preferred interpretation by failing to enforce this contract provision over an extended period. We grant AAFES’s summary judgment motion as to Sheffield’s allegations of unreasonable estimates.

STATEMENT OF FACTS (SOF) FOR PURPOSES OF THE MOTION

On January 21, 2015, AAFES solicited offers to operate barber shops at Fort Bragg in North Carolina (R4, tab 8). On February 10, 2015, AAFES awarded Sheffield a concessionaire contract (the Contract) (R4, tab 1). In exchange for access to Fort Bragg and its haircut customers, Sheffield paid a fee to AAFES for each haircut performed at the Fort Bragg barber shops (R4, tab 1 at 56). The Contract indicated that “[o]nly contracting officers may waive or change contract terms” (R4, tab 1 at 14). DOCUMENT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE. The decision issued on the date below is subject to an ASBCA Protective Order. This version has been approved for public release.

The Contract recognized two types of haircuts: (1) a “Haircut, Regular” with a price of $8.55; and (2) a “Style Cut” at a price of $10.75 (R4, tab 1 at 48). The Contract defined these two haircuts:

Haircut, Regular – A tapered or blocked haircut done with clippers or scissors or a combination of both. Generally done dry. Length of hair doesn’t require specialized shaping, layering, or contouring beyond normal blending and tapering. Includes standard military haircuts as outlined in AR 670-1 and AFI 36-2903.

Style Cut – A layered haircut done with shears and/or razor. Hair generally longer than normal and an individual effect is created by shaping, layering and contouring of the hair. Often done with wetting the hair and the final result achieved by blow-drying to customer-selected appearance. Shampooing and conditioning enhance results, but are not included in the price and are provided at customer’s option. A style cut is a change in hairstyle, including converting a regular haircut to a flat top or a flat top to a regular haircut.

(R4, tab 1 at 48 (emphasis in original)).

The definition of regular haircuts in the Contract referenced Air Force Instruction 36-2903, which provides hair grooming standards (app. opp’n, ex. 8 at 19-20). The Air Force Instruction directs male service members’ hair to have a “[t]apered appearance on both sides and the back of the head, both with and without headgear” (id. at 19). A “tapered appearance” will conform “to the shape of the head, curving inward to the natural termination point without eccentric directional flow, twists or spiking” (id.). “A block-cut is permitted with tapered appearance . . . . Cleanly shaven heads, military high- and-tight or flat-top cuts are authorized” (id. at 19-20).

The definition of regular haircuts in the Contract also referenced Army Regulation 670-1, which also includes hair grooming standards. 1 Similar to the Air Force standard, “The hair must present a tapered appearance” that “conforms to the shape of the head . . ., curving inward to the natural termination point at the base of the neck” (Army Regulation 670-1 at 6). “Hair that is completely shaved or trimmed closely to the scalp is authorized” (id.).

1 https://armypubs.army.mil/epubs/DR_pubs/DR_a/ARN30302-AR_670-1-000-WEB- 1.pdf. 2 DOCUMENT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE. The decision issued on the date below is subject to an ASBCA Protective Order. This version has been approved for public release.

Generally, a “fade cut is a form of tapering the hair down to the skin without blocking it at the back or around the side at the point of termination” (gov’t mot. at ex. G- 6, Contracting Officer Bessie Townsend declaration). 2

One provision of the Contract provided sales figures (incorporating it from the solicitation), which were “based upon sales reported to the Exchange by the prior contractor for the past 12 months” (R4, tab 1 at 10-11; tab 8 at 155-56). Although these figures consisted of gross sales and did not distinguish between “regular” and “style” haircuts, much less “fades” (see id.), the prior contractor treated all skintight haircuts, including fade haircuts, as style cuts – not regular haircuts (app. opp’n, ex. 1 – Clayborn Tillison dep. tr. at 16-17; ex. 2 – Kevin Owens decl. ¶ 6; ex. 3 – Dominique Wilson decl. ¶ 5; ex. 4 – Belinda Merritt decl. ¶ 6). The barbers also treated some tapered cuts as regular haircuts but all skintight cuts, including fade cuts with more tapering, as style cuts (app. opp’n, ex. 1 – Tillison dep. tr. at 16-17; ex. 6 – Christina Deardeuff dep. tr. at 92- 93, 96).

The barbers working on the prior contract estimated that they billed between 70 percent to 90 percent of haircuts as style cuts based on that interpretation (app. opp’n, ex. 1 – Tillison dep. tr. at 109-10 (90%); ex. 2 – Owens decl. ¶ 9 (70%); ex. 3 – Wilson decl. ¶ 8 (80%); ex. 4 – Merritt decl. ¶ 7 (“vast majority”)). An AAFES service business manager who compiled the sales figures used in the solicitation (and later incorporated into the contract) attended a meeting with the prior contractor’s barbers, in which the barbers explained that they were treating skintight cuts, including fade cuts, as style cuts. (App. opp’n, ex. 5 – Gov’t Interrog. Resp. at 7; ex. 2 – Owens decl. ¶¶ 10-12; ex. 4 – Merritt decl. ¶¶ 9-11; ex. 1 – Tillison dep. tr. at 67-68). At that meeting, an AAFES representative told the barbers to continue charging fades as style cuts (app. opp’n, ex. 2 – Owens decl. ¶¶ 10-12; ex. 4 – Merritt decl. ¶¶ 9-11; ex. 1, Tillison dep. tr. at 67-68). Nevertheless, the Contract (and solicitation) included a disclaimer warning that AAFES “makes no guarantee, either express or implied, that a contractor can achieve the amount

2 Unlike the Army and Air Force regulations referenced in the Contract, the Marine Corps’ regulation references a fade haircut but without defining it: “The hair may be clipped at the edges of the side and back and will be evenly graduated all the way around the head (blended or faded and not edged as an outline) from zero length (skin) at the hairline to at least the top orifice of the ear circling around the back of the head, where it may then extend to the maximum hair length.” Marine Corps Uniform Regulations, May 1, 2018, 1020.34H, PCN 10200150000, ¶ 1004- 7a(1)(a), https://www.marines.mil/portals/1/Publications/MCO%201020.34H%20v2.pdf?ve r=2018-06-26-094038-137 (visited on May 15, 2024). The Marine Corps regulation appears to require more of a skintight cut than the Army and Air Force regulations. 3 DOCUMENT FOR PUBLIC RELEASE. The decision issued on the date below is subject to an ASBCA Protective Order. This version has been approved for public release.

of sales for barber services obtained by the previous contractor as listed in this solicitation” (R4, tab 1 at 11; tab 8 at 156).

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