Technology Systems, Inc.

CourtArmed Services Board of Contract Appeals
DecidedJanuary 12, 2017
DocketASBCA No. 59577
StatusPublished

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Technology Systems, Inc., (asbca 2017).

Opinion

ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS

Appeal of -- ) ) Technology Systems, Inc. ) ASBCA No. 59577 ) Under Contract Nos. N00039-07-C-0006 ) N00014-07-C-0236 ) N00014-07-C-0340 ) N41756-05-C-4775 )

APPEARANCE FOR THE APPELLANT: Mr. Charles J. Benton President/Owner

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: E. Michael Chiaparas, Esq. DCMA Chief Trial Attorney Debra E. Berg, Esq. Trial Attorney Defense Contract Management Agency Boston, MA

OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE PROUTY

This appeal, brought by Technology Systems, Inc. (TSI), challenges the final decision of the Defense Contract Management Agency (DCMA) administrative contracting officer (ACO) to follow the recommendation of the Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) and disallow certain expenses used to calculate its indirect cost rates for fiscal year (FY) 2007 as well as some direct costs. In addition to certain cost-specific arguments, TSI argues, in general, that the disallowed expenses had not been questioned by prior DCAA audits and that it relied upon this to its detriment because it did not preserve what DCAA would have considered to be necessary evidence for the FY 2007 costs in question. The amount in dispute is the $159,303 that the government seeks to recoup from TSI after finding the already-paid costs to be unsupported.

Judge Clarke heard this appeal and, for reasons detailed in his dissenting opinion and discussed further below, is of the view that TSI is entitled to significant relief through an application of the retroactive disallowance doctrine and as a result of the government's past course of conduct, and that it is due some other relief for different reasons. Though not unsympathetic to TSI, we respectfully disagree with our colleague and deny portions of the appeal that he would sustain (although also granting it in part): the DCMA- challenged costs were largely not allowable and, without more, an auditor's failure to challenge a cost in one audit does not require application of the principle of retroactive disallowance nor does it constitute a course of conduct precluding the government from disallowing the costs in subsequent audits.

FINDINGS OF FACT

TSI is a small technology business that, while operational, 1 conducted research and development of software systems relating to new ways. for ship navigation (tr. 2/227). TSI employed approximately 20 people (tr. 21193), including three executives: Mr. Charles Benton, chief technology officer, president and sole owner (tr. 2/229-30); Mr. Maxwell Fletcher, chief financial officer (CFO) (tr. 2/117); and Mr. Thomas Zysk, chief operating officer (COO) (tr. 2173, 76, 102). Mr. Benton started TSI in 1985 and it began contracting with the government in 1987 (tr. 2/230).

During the time relevant to this appeal, TSI had four cost-plus-fixed-fee (CPFF) contracts for research and development with the Navy: Contract Nos. N00039-07-C-0006 (0006), N00014-07-C-0236 (0236), N00014-07-C-0340 (0340), and N41756-05-C-4775 (4775)2 (R4, tabs 1-3, 16 at 268, tab 17 at 269). These contracts contained standard clauses from the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR) that governed the payment of their costs by the government. 3 In a typical CPFF contract, subject to the standard FAR clauses included here, the government compensates a contractor for two types of costs: direct and indirect. FAR 52.216-7(b ). Direct costs, as suggested by the name, are those costs directly incurred for performing task orders on a contract. See FAR 2.101, Definitions, Direct Costs. Indirect costs are overhead costs that the company incurs during the time of contract performance that cannot be allocated to a single "cost objective." FAR 31.203(b). They are allocated to the contract on a pro rata basis, based upon the direct costs incurred during the base time period, typically the contractor's fiscal year. 4 FAR 31.203(b)-(g); see also

1 TSI ceased operations in August 2014, but continued to exist "on paper" to permit this litigation (tr. 2/230). 2 Contract 4775 was identified as a classified contract and a copy is not in the record (R4, tab 53 at 910). 3 Contracts 0006, 0236 and 0340 contained the following standard clauses: FAR 52.215-2, AUDIT AND RECORDS-NEGOTIATION (JUN 1999); FAR 52.216-7, ALLOWABLE COST AND PAYMENT (DEC 2002); FAR 52.233-1, DISPUTES (JUL 2002); FAR 52.242-1, NOTICE OF INTENT TO DISALLOW COSTS (APR 1984); FAR 52.242-3, PENALTIES FOR UNALLOWABLE COSTS (MA y 2001 ); and FAR 52.244-2, SUBCONTRACTS (AUG 1988), (contract 0006) or 1998 (contracts 0236, 0340) (R4, tabs 1-3). We infer that contract 4775 also had these required clauses. 4 Indirect costs are billed at a percentage rate which is based on the notion of dividing the pool of such costs for a year by the company's direct expenses for the year. To provide a rudimentary example, if a company incurred $50,000 in allowable overhead costs for a year and $100,000 in direct costs for the same year, its indirect cost rate would be 50%, which would lead to the invoicing of $500 of

2 KAREN L. MANOS, GOVERNMENT CONTRACT COSTS & PRICING, § 7:A:2 (2003). Whether a cost claimed by the contractor is compensated by the government is dependent upon both whether the costs claimed are allowable under the contract (which is controlled by the FAR) and whether they are satisfactorily proved to have been incurred as shown in the records maintained by the contractor. FAR 52.216-7(b )(1 )(ii)(F).

In any event, a contractor with a CPFF contract generally regularly invoices the government for its direct and indirect costs throughout contract performance and is paid by the CO if he or she is provisionally satisfied that the costs are allowable and have been incurred (tr. 2/21-22). FAR 52.216-7(a)(l). Indirect costs are billed and initially paid at estimated rates. FAR 52.216-7(e). Often these estimated rates are submitted to DCAA prior to billing for review and provisional approval, but this does not always happen (tr. 1/28-31).

Within six months of the end of the contractor's fiscal year, it is required to submit to the C0 5 and the CO's auditor (here, the DCAA) a "final indirect cost rate proposal" (ICP), which is based on the actual indirect costs incurred by the contractor during the time period of that fiscal year. FAR 52.216-7(d)(2)(i)-(iii). DCAA auditors typically select those portions of the ICP that appear most ripe for review and concentrate their review upon them because it would be impractical to closely audit the entirety of the IPC (tr. 1/21-22, 24). Upon completion of its review, the DCAA shares its audit results and recommendations with the CO, who is required to make an independent determination of whether to accept them (tr. 1/253). If costs are questioned, the CO ha~ authority to negotiate with the contractor regarding which costs would be approved. FAR 52.216-7(d)(3). After the indirect cost rates are agreed to between the contractor and the government (or, absent agreement, the government imposes its own rates upon the contract), the contractor is required to update the prior billing to reflect the final indirect cost rates. FAR 52.216-7(d)(2)(v).

DCAAIDCMA Audit History Prior to FY 2007

Ms. Winefield, a DCAA supervisory auditor, testified that DCAA conducted full audits of TS I's ICPs for FYs 1998 - 2003 and for FY 2006 (tr. 1/28). The FY 2001 audit questioned several costs but it primarily questioned $70,072 in the Professional Fees Cost Element claimed in overhead and in G&A 6 for Messrs. Kemper, Ring and Wilson (ex. G-1 at 4-5, 9-11 ). These costs were questioned because, among other

indirect costs for every $1,000 in direct costs charged to the government. Further complicating matters, contractors often (and appropriately) establish separate pools to associate particular overhead costs with different categories of direct costs such as labor and materials.

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