Strategic Technology Institute, Inc.

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedJanuary 5, 2022
DocketASBCA No. 61911
StatusPublished

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Strategic Technology Institute, Inc., (asbca 2022).

Opinion

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS

Appeal of -- ) ) Strategic Technology Institute, Inc. ) ASBCA No. 61911 ) Under Contract No. N00178-05-D-4580 )

APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: James Y. Boland, Esq. Caleb E. McCallum, Esq. Venable, LLP Tysons Corner, VA

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Arthur M. Taylor, Esq. Chief Trial Attorney Kara M. Klaas, Esq. Trial Attorney Defense Contract Management Agency Chantilly, VA

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE D’ALESSANDRIS

In April 2008, the Department of the Navy (Navy) awarded a contract to appellant, Strategic Technology Institute, Inc. (STi), for engineering support and other services. The contract was STi’s first cost-type contract, and the contract was administered by the Defense Contract Management Agency (DCMA or government). Pursuant to the contract, STi was required to submit an Incurred Cost Proposal (ICP) within six months of the end of its fiscal year, which was the calendar year. STi retained accountants to timely prepare its ICPs for the 2008 and 2009 fiscal years, in 2009 and 2010, respectively.

This appeals turns on the following factual dispute. STi contends that it timely submitted the ICPs to the contracting officer. However, STi has not presented documentary evidence or testimony from a witness with personal knowledge to demonstrate that it submitted the documents. Conversely, the government maintains logs of incoming mail (both email and hard-copy mail) and finds no record of submission to the Navy or DCMA.

Following submission of an ICP, the normal procedure is for the Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) to audit the ICP, and for the contracting officer to set final incurred cost rates. At the time of these events, DCAA monitored ICP submissions based on the date of the last submission, and would send reminders to contactors if the government had not received a new ICP within a year of the most recent submission. However, because this was STi’s first cost-type contract, there was no prior submission to trigger this reminder.

The situation remained unchanged until July 2014, with STi apparently of the belief that its 2008 and 2009 ICPs were awaiting audit, and the government apparently unaware that it had not received the 2008 and 2009 ICPs. During that month, DCAA was auditing STi’s 2010 ICP, which would have been submitted in June 2011 -- three years earlier. The auditor found reference to 2008 and 2009 costs, and requested from STi copies of its 2009 and earlier ICPs. STi promptly provided the 2008 and 2009 submissions to DCAA. At this point in July 2014, the 2008 ICP had been prepared five years earlier. In August 2014, DCAA internally considered the statute of limitations and concluded that, since it had no record of the ICP having been submitted previously, there was no statute of limitations problem, meaning that they concluded that they had six years from the prior month’s submission to bring any claim, rather than a period of less than 11 months, that would apply if DCAA had received the document back in July 2009. DCAA issued its audit report regarding the 2008 and 2009 ICPs in June 2015, just shy of six years from the original due date of the 2008 ICP, and just over a year prior to the expiration of the six year claim deadline for the 2009 ICP. The DCMA contracting officer eventually issued a final decision asserting a government claim in excess of $1.1 million in November 2018, over three years after the audit report was released and over nine years after the 2008 ICP was prepared, but less than four-and-a-half years after DCAA requested the ICPs from STI in July 2014.

On appeal to the Board, STi argues that the government’s claim is barred by the six-year statute of limitations. STi contends that it timely submitted the ICPs in July 2009 and July 2010, more than six years before DCMA issued its final decision. Alternatively, STi contends that, even if the Board finds that the ICPs were not submitted until 2014, the government’s claim accrued in July 2009 and July 2010, because the government should have known that STi’s ICPs were due on those dates. STi has not presented any evidence on the merits of the government’s claim and states that it is unable to defend against the government’s cost claims due to the passage of time. We hold that the contract required STi to submit its ICPs, and that STi has not established, by a preponderance of the evidence, that it submitted its ICP prior to July 2014. Additionally, we hold that the government did not know and had no reason to know of its claims against STi until it received the 2008 and 2009 ICPs in July 2014. Accordingly, we sustain the government’s claim, reject STi’s statute of limitation defense and deny the appeals.

2 FINDINGS OF FACT

I. The Contract

On April 1, 2008, the Navy awarded STi Contract No. N00178-05-D-4580, delivery order no. FG01, a cost-reimbursable contract with a performance period of one year, and four one-year option periods (R4, tab 1 at G-57, 68). The contract required STi to provide engineering, logistics and planning, training, and program management support services for Navy mission systems and aircraft to support mission readiness, including “engineering analysis and assessments; system safety services; logistics support; strategic planning and coordination; training; and program management” (id. at G-62). The contract was administered by DCMA (id. at G-57). The contract incorporated Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) 52.215-2, “AUDIT AND RECORDS – NEGOTIATION (JUN 1999),” which required STi to maintain and make available for government examination “records and other evidence sufficient to reflect properly all costs claimed to have been incurred or anticipated to be incurred directly or indirectly in performance of this contract” (Id. at G- 43; FAR 52.215-2(b)). The contract also incorporated FAR 52.242-4, “Certification of Final Indirect Costs,” which required STi certify its “proposal to establish or modify final indirect cost rates” (R4, tab 1 at G-44; FAR 52.242-4(a)(1)). The contract additionally incorporated FAR 52.242-3, “PENALTIES FOR UNALLOWABLE COSTS (MAY 2001)” and FAR 52.216-7, the “ALLOWABLE COST AND PAYMENT (DEC 2002)” that required STi to submit an ICP within six months of the end of its fiscal year (R4, tab 1 at G-43-44; FAR 52.216-7(d)(2)(i) (“The Contractor shall submit an adequate final indirect cost rate proposal to the Contracting Officer (or cognizant Federal agency official) and auditor within the 6-month period following the expiration of each of its fiscal years.”)).

II. STI’s 2008 and 2009 Incurred Cost Proposals

During July 2009 and July 2010, STi did not have in place a system to document the dates upon which it sent records outside of STi, including when it submitted its ICPs to the Government (gov’t supp. R4, tab G-13 at G-430-31, 435). In June and July 2009 and 2010, STi’s Director of Operations, Mr. Navaneeth Muthu, was responsible for submitting STi’s final indirect cost rate proposals for Fiscal Years 2008 and 2009, respectively (app. supp. R4, tab A-29 at A-1031; tab A-31 at A-1101). STi retained an outside accountant, Mr. Madison Lawrence, Jr., a former senior DCAA auditor, of Madlaw Consulting, Inc., to prepare and finalize STi’s Fiscal Year 2008 and 2009 final indirect cost rate proposals (app. supp. R4, tab A-30 at A-1096; tab A-31 at A-1101). Mr. Lawrence prepared STi’s final indirect cost rate proposal for Fiscal Year 2008 in June and July 2009 and provided the proposal to STi (app. supp. R4, tab A-31 at A-1101; tab A-1 at A-1). Mr. Lawrence prepared STi’s final indirect cost rate proposal for Fiscal Year 2009 in April to July 2010 and provided the proposal to STi (app. supp. R4, tabA-31 at A-1101; tab A-2 at A-3-5). In

3 2009 and 2010, STi also utilized the services of its accountant, Mr.

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