Singer-General Precision, Inc. v. The United States

427 F.2d 1187, 192 Ct. Cl. 435, 1970 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 138
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJune 12, 1970
Docket92-69
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 427 F.2d 1187 (Singer-General Precision, Inc. v. The United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Singer-General Precision, Inc. v. The United States, 427 F.2d 1187, 192 Ct. Cl. 435, 1970 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 138 (cc 1970).

Opinion

ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION AND DEFENDANT’S CROSS-MOTION FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

DAVIS, Judge.

By the Spring of 1963, the Navy had been trying since 1960 to formulate a development program for the EX-10 Torpedo Weapons System. In that period of some three years, plaintiff Singer-General Precision (Singer), through its predecessor, had prepared, at the Navy’s request, three proposals relating to this development program, including work statements for various studies, and for technical and managerial services. None *1188 of this work concerned actual production of any item of munitions; it all dealt with proposals and studies looking toward eventual procurement and production of the hardware. In each of these instances, Singer charged indirect proposal preparation costs to its general overhead expense account, allocating them, as part of the general overhead, to other Government contracts. This procedure accorded with the Armed Services Procurement Regulations (AS PR 15-2051 1 , no objections were raised by the Navy, and plaintiff reimbursed itself in the prescribed manner through awards on other agreements with defendant.

In mid-1963, the Government, seeking to “refine, expand and elaborate” upon these EX-10 proposals; presented Singer with a “work statement” consisting of 37 tasks and a separate, comprehensive “report” (so labelled in the work statement) summarizing the rest of the assignment (Task 38), and asked plaintiff to submit a cost estimate for the project. Singer replied that expenses would be about $327,000. This figure was not contested, but the Government informed the potential contractor that it had only $500,000 available for this project, half of which would go to another contractor and half to Singer, and it offered what it called a new, experimental “cost-no-free project definition phase” type contract. This was substantially identical, in subject matter and wording, to the work statement, except that in Task 38 (the final one), the word “report” was, in every instance, changed to “proposal”. 2 The contract also included a “cost ceiling” clause, establishing a $250,000 maximum price, and a “cost limitations” clause requiring 60 days’ notice to the Government if the contractor believed expenses would exceed 75% of the total cost. The latter provision also stated that when the cost ceiling was reached, the contractor could terminate without liability. 3 No explanation for the repeated change in Task 38 of the word “report” to “proposal” was given. Singer accepted the Government’s offer without indicating that it understood the contract to mean that indirect costs incurred in preparing the proposal would be reimbursed in the manner envisaged by ASPR 15-205.3, supra, through other *1189 Government contracts. Similarly, the Navy did not intimate that it considered the limitation of $250,000 to cover indirect costs chargeable to other contracts, as well as direct costs allocable to this agreement. The contract (No. NOw-63-0748-e), with a performance period of 95 days, became effective on June 28, 1963.

During the next few weeks, Singer, through its own budget meetings and inter-office memoranda, determined internally that Tasks 1-13 and 38, constituting what it called the “technical effort”, would incur around $250,000 in direct costs and Tasks 14-37, the “proposal preparation effort” would require $75,000 to $100,000 in indirect overhead expenses. It so informed the Government and proceeded to divide the work into two jobs for accounting purposes. Tasks 1-13 and 38 were reported under a job number indicating that they were “direct cost items” and Tasks 14-37 under another designation indicating them as “indirect overhead proposal expense item”. Separate records were maintained, and this separation was known to the Government’s two resident auditors.

After the contract was timely completed, Singer submitted its costs, noting $263,073.65 as direct expenses, and $156,-639.00 as indirect overhead charges, which it considered to be allocable to other contracts, as it had done with its prior work on this program since 1960. The contracting officer paid $250,000 under this contract and plaintiff did not ask for any more. 4 However, it treated the $156,639 of “indirect” costs as part of its general overhead and, as such, allocable to all Government contracts being performed by plaintiff during the accounting period within which these costs were incurred. There were six such contracts (other than No. NOw-63-0748-c). Some time later, the Defense Contract Audit Agency disallowed the allocations to these other contracts, holding that the Cost Ceiling clause in the EX-10 contract (No. NOw-63-0748-c) forbade the recovery of any excess over $250,000, even through overhead allocations to other contemporaneous contracts. On appeals under these six other contracts, the ASBCA affirmed. This suit was then brought to recover under the six other agreements to which the disallowances were directed. It is agreed, though, that the EX-10 contract controls the result and that we need not be concerned with the terms of the other documents. The issue under the EX-10 contract is one of law, 5 there are no relevant factual disputes, and we have before us cross-motions for summary judgment on the administrative record which was almost entirely stipulated.

Routinely, one looks first to the contractual language for dispositive or neardispositive guidance. It tells us (note 3, supra) that “the cost for the performance of this contract shall not exceed the sum of $250,000, and the Government shall not be obligated to pay to the Contractor any costs in excess of said sum of $250,000 incurred by the Contractor in the performance of this contract.” This clause, the defendant maintains, necessarily established a maximum fixed price for all work described by the contract, and the Navy was not to be charged, in any manner, for any excess. 6 Stressing the references to “this contract”, plaintiff argues that indirect costs pertaining to bid and proposal efforts may be recovered, through allocation to the general overhead account, under other government procurements, and *1190 that the $250,000 ceiling pertains only to reimbursement under the EX-10 contract itself.

In some agreements, the bare wording may be so clear, so detailed, and so explicit that it must carry the day, whatever else is offered to help in interpretation. But here, it seems to us, the unadorned language of the clause is not so demanding that, without more, it forces the defendant’s construction, regardless of the surrounding conditions and of the other factors. Especially in the light of the nature of this contract — to prepare a proposal for future procurement — it is possible to read the relatively few words of the provision as saying no more than that $250,000 is the most that will be paid under the EX-10 contract itself. In the proper circumstances, that would not distort the language beyond toleration.

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Bluebook (online)
427 F.2d 1187, 192 Ct. Cl. 435, 1970 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 138, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/singer-general-precision-inc-v-the-united-states-cc-1970.