Silverbow Construction v. Alaska Department of Administration, DGS

CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 27, 2016
DocketS15850
StatusUnpublished

This text of Silverbow Construction v. Alaska Department of Administration, DGS (Silverbow Construction v. Alaska Department of Administration, DGS) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Silverbow Construction v. Alaska Department of Administration, DGS, (Ala. 2016).

Opinion

NOTICE Memorandum decisions of this court do not create legal precedent. A party wishing to cite such a decision in a brief or at oral argument should review Alaska Appellate Rule 214(d).

THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF ALASKA

SILVER BOW CONSTRUCTION, ) ) Supreme Court No. S-15850 Appellant, ) ) Superior Court No. 1JU-13-00792 CI v. ) ) MEMORANDUM OPINION STATE OF ALASKA, ) AND JUDGMENT* DEPARTMENT OF ) ADMINISTRATION, DIVISION ) No. 1581 – April 27, 2016 OF GENERAL SERVICES, ) ) Appellee. ) )

Appeal from the Superior Court of the State of Alaska, First Judicial District, Juneau, Louis J. Menendez, Judge.

Appearances: Jack B. McGee, Law Office of Jack B. McGee, Juneau, for Appellant. Sean Lynch, Assistant Attorney General, and Craig W. Richards, Attorney General, Juneau, for Appellee.

Before: Stowers, Chief Justice, Fabe, Winfree, Maassen, and Bolger, Justices.

The State of Alaska, Department of Administration, Division of General Services contracted with Silver Bow Construction to install an air distribution system in the Court Plaza Building in Juneau. During the period of performance, the parties discovered that the contract contained contradictory terms regarding the scope of the

* Entered under Alaska Appellate Rule 214. project. Specifically, the State believed that Silver Bow was required under the contract to perform a process referred to as “air balancing”; Silver Bow disagreed and demanded additional compensation to conduct air balancing. Silver Bow filed a claim with the state procurement officer on the contract under AS 36.30.620.1 The procurement officer determined that Silver Bow was required to conduct air balancing under the contract. On appeal, the Department of Transportation and Public Facilities reached the same conclusion. The agency found that the provisions of the contract relating to air balancing were in “direct conflict” but that the conflict could be resolved through the application of the contract’s order of precedence provision. It concluded that the “unambiguous” terms in the order of precedence provision required Silver Bow to perform air balancing. Finally, it rejected Silver Bow’s contention that the existence of a contradiction estopped the State from enforcing one of the contradictory provisions. Silver Bow appealed the administrative decision to the superior court. The superior court affirmed the Department’s decision, similarly reasoning that the contract’s order of precedence resolved the contradiction and rejecting Silver Bow’s arguments related to estoppel. Silver Bow now appeals to this court. We AFFIRM the superior court’s decision upholding the agency’s decision and adopt both of these decisions, attaching them as appendices.

1 AS 36.30.620 governs claims concerning state procurement contracts. When a dispute arises on such a contract, the statute requires that the contractor file a claim with the procurement officer. AS 36.30.620(a). If the claim “cannot be resolved by agreement, the procurement officer shall, after receiving a written request by the contractor for a decision, issue a written decision.” AS 36.30.620(b). AS 36.30.625 then provides for appeal to the “commissioner of administration” or the “commissioner of transportation and public facilities,” depending on the type of contract.

-2- 1581 BEFORE THE STATE OF ALASKA OFFICE OF ADMINISTRATIVE HEARINGS ON REFERRAL BY THE COMMISSIONER OF ADMINISTRATION[*] 1

SILVER BOW CONSTRUCTION ) ) v. ) ) DIVISION OF GENERAL SERVICES ) OAH No. 12-0025-CON _________________________________ ) Contract No. 2010-0222-9525

REVISED DECISION2

I. Introduction Silver Bow Construction, Inc., [Silver Bow] was awarded a contract by the Division of General Services [Division] for the replacement of a rooftop air handler and associated canopy. After the air handler was installed, the Division asserted that Silver Bow was also required to provide air balancing services on each of the eight floors of the building served by the air handler. The contract’s technical specifications state that air balancing is not included in the contract, but another provision of the contract is to the contrary.

* This decision has been edited to remove internal record citations. 1 This matter was appealed to the Department of Administration, pursuant to the instruction provided on the contracting officer’s letter denying the contract claim. The commissioner referred the matter to the Office of Administrative Hearings. The Commissioner of Transportation and Public Facilities subsequently delegated responsibility for the matter to the Commissioner of Administration, retaining authority to issue the final decision. 2 This case was remanded to the administrative law judge for preparation of a revised decision consistent with a proposal for action filed by the Division of General Services. This revised decision constitutes the final decision in the case. Appendix A - 1 of 13 1581 Silver Bow filed a contract claim asserting that the air balancing work was not within the scope of the original contract, and that it should be provided additional compensation for that work. The contracting officer denied the claim. Silver Bow appeals. The matter was submitted for decision on the written record. The Division argues that under the contract’s terms, the technical specification does not control; Silver Bow argues it does. Under the contract’s order of precedence term, the technical specification does not control. Silver Bow’s claim is therefore denied. II. Facts On July 6, 2010, the Division of General Services issued Invitation To Bid No. 2010-022-9525 (ITB), requesting bids to remove and replace a roof-mounted air handler at the Court Plaza Building in Juneau, with related electrical, mechanical, sprinkler and roof membrane installation and repair. The ITB’s project description in two different locations stated, “After the new air handler unit is installed, the contractor shall conduct air balancing of the air flows on each of the eight floors within the building.” The ITB Table of Contents, sub headed “Division 0 - Bidding and Contract Requirements,”3 lists various sections, each (other than drawings) identified by a five-digit number, with a title, the form number (if applicable), and the number of pages. The listed sections contain procurement-related documents4 and contract documents,

3 According to the Division, Division 0 was part of the 1995 MasterFormat indexing system. However, according to Silver Bow, Division 0 did not come into existence until the 2004 revision to the MasterFormat system, in which the number of divisions was increased to 50. 4 The procurement-related documents are Sections 00020-00670, consisting of various forms (25D 3-4, 1-9, 1 OA, 12-14, 16). These forms appear to be the standard “Contract Forms for Construction Bids”, as issued by the Department of Transportation (continued...)

Appendix A - 2 of 13 1581 including General Conditions, Supplementary Conditions, certain labor-related provisions, a summary and extensive technical specifications, and drawings, with an appendix showing the various variable air volume (VAV) box locations and air flow (CFM) requirements. Section 01100 (Summary of Work) precedes the technical specifications and provides that the Work (services and labor “as required by the Contract Documents”) includes removal and replacement of a roof-mounted air handler at the Court Plaza Building in Juneau, with related electrical, mechanical, sprinkler and roof membrane installation and repair and “other work as required for an operational air handler and warranted roof” and does not mention air balancing on all eight floors.

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