Sterling Millwrights, Inc. v. United States

38 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,316, 26 Cl. Ct. 49, 1992 U.S. Claims LEXIS 193, 1992 WL 88368
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedApril 29, 1992
DocketNo. 367-88C
StatusPublished
Cited by45 cases

This text of 38 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,316 (Sterling Millwrights, Inc. v. 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
Sterling Millwrights, Inc. v. United States, 38 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,316, 26 Cl. Ct. 49, 1992 U.S. Claims LEXIS 193, 1992 WL 88368 (cc 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

MOODY R. TIDWELL, III, Judge:

On July 15, 1983, the United States Department of the Army, acting through the Watervliet Arsenal, in Watervliet, New York, issued the first step in a two-step bidding process for the construction of a chrome-plating facility for the inner surfaces of 120-millimeter M256 cannon barrels mounted on the M1A1 tank. Only plaintiff, Sterling Millwrights, Inc. (Sterling), and a competitor survived the rigorous technical threshold of Step One, Request for Technical Proposals. The contract to be awarded following Step Two was a fixed-price contract let in accordance with the competitive sealed-bid procedures. Sterling was selected as the low responsive, responsible bidder and was awarded the contract on June 9, 1987, four years after initiation of the procurement. The project was doomed to failure from the start. On August 12, 1988, the Arsenal terminated the contract for default for failure to timely complete. The ease is before the court on issues of liability following seven weeks of trial. As the following discussion will demonstrate, the case is extremely complex, both factually and legally.

PLAINTIFF’S CLAIMS

The chrome-plating facility consists of approximately twenty steel tanks or vats that contain chrome in liquid form. As cannon barrels are dipped into the liquid chrome, electric current is run through the bore to electroplate the chrome to the inside of the barrel. The reason for plating the bore is to reduce friction to increase the velocity of the projectile and extend the life of the barrel.

[52]*52The contract was a firm fixed-price supply contract with a DX-C2 priority rating.1 The contract price was $8,310,000 and was to be completed by June 8, 1988, one year from the date of award. The contract completion date was highly ambitious and both sides agreed that the period for performance was greatly compressed.

There was disagreement as to whether the contract was a construction contract or supply contract. The document signed by Harold Caton, Sterling’s owner, was a supply contract, although performance of the contract, and virtually all of the substantive testimony surrounding it, clothed the project in the indicia of a construction contract. For example, the contract required Sterling to build a large facility that included such construction activities as performing demolition, pouring a concrete foundation, erecting structural steel, installing heating and ventilation systems, and installing extensive electrical and control systems. Both the reprocurement of the instant project and the Arsenal’s eight-millimeter chrome-plating facility built in the 1970’s were let under construction, and not supply, contracts. The Arsenal’s Engineering and Housing Directorate referred to the chrome-plating facility as a construction project. The C-2 classification assigned to the project under the Defense Priorities and Allocation System signified a construction project. The contract required the preparation and updating of a Program Evaluation and Review Technique (PERT) chart, and the project used Critical Path Method (CPM) analysis, both of which traditionally are intended for use on construction projects.2 In spite of the obvious nature of the construction activities involved, Mr. John Valloze, the Chief of the Arsenal’s Purchasing and Contracting Division, the senior contracting officer on the project, testified that the contract was a supply contract because Sterling was to provide “one chrome plating facility, complete.”3 It defied common sense to contract for the construction of the chrome-plating facility under a supply contract; nonetheless, the government did, and Mr. Caton signed the contract. It is basic contract law that prior or contemporaneous parol evidence will not be permitted to change the meaning of a writing which the parties intended to be the integrated expression of their agreement, unless the parties agree to modify the contract appropri[53]*53ately. The court declines to tinker with this well-settled principle.

Harold Caton is a civil engineer with approximately twenty years of industrial contracting experience. Mr. Caton employed Bruce Bromley as the principal subcontractor, and project leader, for the Arsenal contract. Mr. Bromley’s background is in the plating industry and he assisted in the successful completion of the eight-millimeter barrel chrome-plating facility for the Arsenal in 1976. The record indicated that both men were highly qualified professionals who had worked well together in the past. Although Mr. Bromley was a subcontractor, and not in privity of contract with the government, the record makes amply clear that the contract was administered as if it were a joint venture between Messrs. Caton and Bromley.

At a pre-award survey conducted on March 24, 1987, the government was told that Messrs. Caton and Bromley had pledged their homes and assets to Marine Midland Bank to secure a $500,000 line of credit to provide cash during the normal twenty to thirty-day period between Sterling’s billing of its incurred direct and overhead expenses and receipt of payment for those expenses from the Arsenal. As a small business the payment provisions of the contract permitted Sterling to bill the Arsenal for costs incurred, and required the Arsenal to pay 80 percent of the amount billed. Sterling was to pay its subcontractors 80 percent of their invoiced amounts until the end of the contract, at which time Sterling would receive its remaining 20 percent, and complete payments to its subcontractors. On May 21, 1987, the Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) issued a pre-award audit report stating that the contractor’s accounting system was adequate for accumulation and identification under a fixed-price contract. An August 26, 1987, post-award audit by DCAA concluded that Sterling’s financial condition was considered sufficient to finance the necessary liabilities and that Sterling’s line of credit was sufficient for it to perform the contract in one year.

The contract called for plaintiff to construct the 120-millimeter barrel chrome-plating facility in a pit that the firm of Sweet Associates, Inc. had constructed in a building at the Arsenal in 1980. The chrome-plating facility had been designed for the Arsenal by Walter Kidde Constructors, Inc. (WKC) in 1981, under a contract with the United States Army Corps of Engineers. Sterling was to pour and waterproof a concrete floor, erect a steel structure to house the vats of liquid chrome, and install sophisticated instrument control panels and complex electrical systems. In addition, the contract called for Sterling to remove the pit cover, waterproof the pit walls, and eventually reinstall a new cover over the pit in which it was to construct a new facility. Sterling, as the prime contractor, entered into a series of subcontracts to perform the work.

The DX-C2 status of the contract underscored the importance of completing the performance within the one-year contract period. Sterling’s as-planned progress schedule projected a completion date of May 23, 1988, seventeen days short of one year. A significant factor to meeting the compressed completion date was the requirement of the Arsenal to review all shop drawings within five working days. As set forth in the contract, the Offeror’s Statement of Compliance required Sterling to create a PERT Chart for the project shortly after award and provide the Arsenal with critical path updates monthly as construction progressed.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
38 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,316, 26 Cl. Ct. 49, 1992 U.S. Claims LEXIS 193, 1992 WL 88368, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sterling-millwrights-inc-v-united-states-cc-1992.