Sippial Electric & Construction Company, Inc. v. Sheila Widnall, Secretary of the Air Force

69 F.3d 555, 40 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,866, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 36001, 1995 WL 646344
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedNovember 2, 1995
Docket93-1276
StatusUnpublished

This text of 69 F.3d 555 (Sippial Electric & Construction Company, Inc. v. Sheila Widnall, Secretary of the Air Force) 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
Sippial Electric & Construction Company, Inc. v. Sheila Widnall, Secretary of the Air Force, 69 F.3d 555, 40 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,866, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 36001, 1995 WL 646344 (Fed. Cir. 1995).

Opinion

69 F.3d 555

40 Cont.Cas.Fed. (CCH) P 76,866

NOTICE: Federal Circuit Local Rule 47.6(b) states that opinions and orders which are designated as not citable as precedent shall not be employed or cited as precedent. This does not preclude assertion of issues of claim preclusion, issue preclusion, judicial estoppel, law of the case or the like based on a decision of the Court rendered in a nonprecedential opinion or order.
SIPPIAL ELECTRIC & CONSTRUCTION COMPANY, INC., Appellant,
v.
Sheila WIDNALL, Secretary of the Air Force, Appellee.

No. 93-1276.

United States Court of Appeals, Federal Circuit.

Nov. 2, 1995.

Before RICH, NEWMAN, and LOURIE, Circuit Judges.

PAULINE NEWMAN, Circuit Judge.

For these two contracts subject of this appeal from the decision of the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals,1 the Board's decision is reversed in part, vacated in part, and remanded.

The 0080 Contract

Sippial Electric and Construction Company is a small minority-owned business in Montgomery, Alabama. It entered into a fixed-price contract for construction work at Gunter Air Force Base, in the amount of $68,310. The notice to proceed was given on October 4, 1989. On October 18, 1989 the government ordered that all work be suspended because of defective government specifications. The suspension was lifted on October 10, 1990, with a contract modification extending the completion date by the length of the suspension. The project was timely completed.

Sippial Electric requested delay damages calculated in accordance with the Eichleay formula. The Chief of the Contract Management Section instructed the contracting officer that Sippial Electric "should be compensated for this Government delay." Sippial Electric's calculation of delay damages was $22,773.03. The claim was audited by the Defense Contract Audit Agency, who determined Sippial had incurred costs of $16,629 but questioned $6,144 of the amount sought. The contracting officer, without further inquiry of Sippial Electric, issued a final decision based on the audit report:

Final decision.

....

As such I find that you are only entitled to an equitable adjustment in the amount of $16,629. Your claim for an equitable adjustment for G & A/Overhead is the amount of $22,773.03 is denied.

The owner of Sippial Electric filed a pro se appeal to the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals.

The 0076 Contract

The issue on appeal with respect to the 0076 contract is the same as that of the 0080 contract, in that all work was suspended at government order, except that in the 0076 contract the delay was stated to be to the end of the school year. The contracting officer, again after audit conducted by the Defense Contract Audit Agency, found entitlement to only the amount approved in the audit:

Final decision

As such I find that you are only entitled to an equitable adjustment in the amount of $22,576. Your claim for an equitable adjustment for G & A/Overhead in the amount of $32,989.32 is denied.

The owner of Sippial Electric again filed a pro se appeal to the ASBCA, seeking the disallowed amount. The appellant stated to the Board that there had been no interaction with the contracting officer or discussion of the items disallowed by the auditor, and complained that the agency had not negotiated these amounts before the contracting officer issued his final decision.

The Board consolidated the appeals. There was no hearing, for the parties had elected to proceed on the written record. At the end of the time set for supplementing the record the government submitted an unsworn and undated "affidavit"2 of the contracting officer in which he stated that his Final Decision in both contracts, quoted above, was an "offer of settlement." The "affidavit" also stated that several of Sippial's employees who had been working on the delayed contracts had been re-assigned to other government contracts during the period of delay, and the contracting officer concluded that Sippial had not established entitlement.

The Board denied all recovery for delay, in both contracts. The Board held that "Appellant must establish with reasonable certainty that it was damaged as a result of disruption or delay. Appellant must show that home office overhead costs were not properly absorbed, and that during the delay labor forces could not be shifted to other work." The Board thus declined to apply the Eichleay formula in accordance with the audit that had been conducted by the Defense Contract Audit Agency. The Board held that Sippial Electric had not proved actual damages for either contract.

We conclude that the Board erred in not giving weight to the DCAA audit, the circumstances of the delays, and the Eichleay methodology of estimating unabsorbed overhead based on the ratio of delayed to ongoing work. When these factors are given ordinary weight they comprise a prima facie case of entitlement with respect to the amount approved in the DCAA audit. The burden of coming forward with evidence to defeat recovery of the audited amounts shifted to the government. That burden was not met.

ANALYSIS

A contractor who can directly prove actual and specific damages resulting from government delay has no need to invoke the Eichleay formula. See Wickham Contracting Co. v. Fischer, 12 F.3d 1574, 1578 (Fed.Cir.1994) ("Were it possible to trace a cost to a particular contract, it would be a direct cost of the contract.") The Eichleay formula was developed because of the difficulty of allocating each overhead expense to each of the contractor's activities. The formula permits the contractor to apportion its overhead expenses in the same proportion as a specific contract represents in its total business.3 When a contract is delayed by the government and the contractor is required to stand by, ready to perform when ordered, that portion of its continuing overhead expense which would have been met by payments on the delayed contract is recoverable as damages. The Eichleay formula is a convenient and accepted method of estimating those damages, for it avoids the need to prove the specific details of the overhead expenses allocable to a specific contract.

In implementation of recovery of delay damages, the burden is upon the contractor to establish a prima facie case of entitlement. The burden then shifts to the government to show that the contractor was not harmed by the delay. In Mech-Con Corp. v. West, 61 F.3d 883 (Fed.Cir.1995) we reiterated that

when a contractor can show that the government required a contractor to remain on "standby" and the government-imposed delay was "uncertain," the contractor has established a prima facie case of entitlement to Eichleay formula damages.

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69 F.3d 555, 40 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,866, 1995 U.S. App. LEXIS 36001, 1995 WL 646344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sippial-electric-construction-company-inc-v-sheila-cafc-1995.