Sungjee Construction Co., Ltd.

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedJuly 11, 2023
Docket62002, 62170
StatusPublished

This text of Sungjee Construction Co., Ltd. (Sungjee Construction Co., Ltd.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Sungjee Construction Co., Ltd., (asbca 2023).

Opinion

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS

Appeals of - ) ) Sungjee Construction Co., Ltd. ) ASBCA Nos. 62002, 62170 ) Under Contract No. W91QVN-14-D-0050 )

APPEARANCE FOR THE APPELLANT: Yong Eui Song, Esq. Central IP & Law Seoul, Korea

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Scott N. Flesch, Esq. Army Chief Trial Attorney CPT Dmitrius Ramon McGruder, JA 1LT Bryan R. Williamson, JA Trial Attorneys

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE EYESTER PURSUANT TO BOARD RULE 11

This appeal arises from a termination for default by the Department of the Army (Army or government), 411th Contracting Support Brigade (411 CSB), of a task order issued to Sungjee Construction Company, LTD (Sungjee or appellant) for the repair of an officer dormitory on Osan Air Base located in the Republic of Korea. The Army terminated the task order for default due to appellant’s failure to complete the project by the contract completion date (CCD). The Board has jurisdiction over the termination pursuant to the Contract Disputes Act, 41 U.S.C. § 7101. The parties elected to submit the appeal on the record pursuant to Board Rule 11. Because the government has established the validity of the default termination, and appellant has failed to demonstrate the default was excusable and entitlement to its claimed amounts, the appeals are denied.

FINDINGS OF FACT

1. On August 14, 2014, the 411 CSB awarded Sungjee indefinite-delivery, indefinite-quantity (IDIQ) Contract No. W91QVN-14-D-0050 to upgrade facilities for the United States Forces Korea (USFK) (R4, tab 1 at 1-3, 11). According to the contract, the contracting officer was “the only person authorized to modify the contract terms or take any action to enter into a change or contractual commitment on behalf of the Government” (id. at 12). In addition, as relevant here, the contract incorporated by reference Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) 52.249-10, DEFAULT (FIXED-PRICE CONSTRUCTION)(APR 1984), and FAR 52.242-14, SUSPENSION OF WORK

1 (APR 1984), and incorporated by full text Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation Supplement (DFARS) 252.201-7000, CONTRACTING OFFICER’S REPRESENTATIVE (DEC 1991) (id. at 23, 43). DFARS 252.201-7000, stated that the contracting officer’s representative (COR) was “not authorized” to make any commitments or changes affecting price, quality, quantity, delivery, or any other contract term or condition (id at 23). All orders issued pursuant to this IDIQ contract were subject to its terms and conditions (id. at 44).

2. Because work was to be performed in Korea, the contract also included Navy Marine Corps Acquisition Regulation Supplement 5152.204-4018, IDENTIFICATION OF CONTRACTOR’S EMPLOYEES. According to this clause, contractors requiring entry to a U.S. Government installation had to be processed through the contracting officer or representative and approved for entry pursuant to USFK Regulation 190-7, which outlines the process for issuance of passes for base access. (R4, tab 1 at 32) USFK Regulation 190-7 (dated Sept. 27, 2017) stated that the sponsoring organization representative, which here was from the requesting or using activity, signs the pass applications, while the COR coordinates pass requests and validates the status of the contract prior to the approving official’s consideration (R4, tab 36 at 24). Passes were valid for a maximum of one year (id. at 59). With respect to renewals of contractor passes, the requesting activity was to submit a memorandum for the renewal month with a list of names, the dates of the contract, and the contract with the extended contract period (id. at 31). The approving authority reviews this information, including the COR’s memorandum, when making his/her decision. Renewal requests were to be submitted at least 30 days prior to the current pass expiration date (id. at 31).

3. On June 30, 2016, the 411 CSB issued fixed-priced Task Order No. W91QVN-14-D-0050, call order No. 0026, to Sungjee in the amount of $3,860,659.26 U.S. dollars for the repair of Officer Dormitory B929 at Osan Air Base (R4, tab 2 at 1-2). The task order, awarded against the above-referenced IDIQ contract, explained that Sungjee was to comply with all the terms and conditions of the contract unless stated otherwise (R4, tab 2 at 4). In addition, the task order set forth the repair work requirements, which included architectural, civil, mechanical, and electrical work (id. at 4-9). Sungjee was to prosecute diligently and complete the repair work on the dormitory no later than 450 calendar days after the government issued the notice to proceed (id. at 13). The government issued the notice to proceed on July 20, 2016, but later executed Modification No. 01 to the order stating the CCD was October 31, 2017 (R4, tabs 3 and 5). 1

1 While the final completion date--450 days from the notice to proceed--was mid October 2017 (see gov’t br. at 3), the modification stated the CCD was October 31, 2017.

2 4. As relevant here, the task order included the following instructions regarding access to the base:

2. Access and general protection/security policy and procedures. This standard language is for contractor employees with an area of performance within Army controlled installation, facility, or area.

Contractor and all associated sub‐contractors[’] employees shall provide all information required for background checks to meet installation access requirements to be accomplished by installation Provost Marshal Office, Director of Emergency Services or Security Office. . . .

(R4, tab 2 at 15) (emphasis added) While pass requests needed to be reviewed and approved by government officials, we find the onus of providing employee information and starting the pass request process was on the contractor.

5. On August 12, 2016, Sungjee submitted its preliminary and initial project schedule (R4, tab 10). The government-approved schedule showed phase 1 removal work would begin around September 4, 2016, and the final inspection would occur prior to the CCD on October 10, 2017 (id. at 1, 10, 24).

6. On August 29, 2016, Sungjee emailed the government with a status report, including the status of base access passes (R4, tab 13 at 1, 3). According to the email, Sungjee submitted its first request for passes for the architectural team, and its requests for the civil, mechanical, and electrical teams were “[o]n processing” (id. at 3). Sungjee stated it would submit the rest of the pass requests by September 23, 2016 (id.). The record shows, therefore, that Sungjee was delinquent in requesting passes on time at the start of the project as work started in early September, and Sungjee did not request passes for most of its employees until late September.

First Request for an Extension

7. Two months before the CCD, in a letter dated August 31, 2017, Sungjee’s contract manager requested a 90-day extension. According to Sungjee, it experienced issues relating to the cold weather, and it performed additional work for the user’s convenience and potential problems in the future. Sungjee specifically stated it requested no additional money, just the additional time. (R4, tab 32 at 1-3) The government project engineer believed there should only be a 70-day extension because two of the additional items performed were required by the drawings and therefore were to be repaired/replaced by Sungjee (R4, tab 33 at 4-5). Further, the base housing

3 office expressed concerned that there was no warehouse to store the furniture and appliances being delivered to the buildings at the end of the original CCD (id. at 3).

8. On September 21, 2017, the government issued no-cost unilateral Modification No. 02 to the task order.

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