ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS
Appeals of -- )
)
Combat Support Associates ) ASBCA Nos. 58945, 58946
)
Under Contract No. DASA02-99-C-1234 )
APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: Karen L. Manos, Esq.
Owen E. Whitehurst, Esq.
Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP
Washington, DC
APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: E. Michael Chiaparas, Esq.
DCMA Chief Trial Attorney
Douglas R. Jacobson, Esq.
Trial Attorney
Defense Contract Management Agency
Bloomington, MN
OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MCILMAIL
ON APPELLANT'S MOTION TO DISMISS FOR LACK OF JURISDICTION
Appellant moves to dismiss these appeals from government claims for lack of
jurisdiction, contending that the government's claims are barred by the statute of
limitations. The Board denies the motion, without prejudice.
STATEMENT OF FACTS (SOF) FOR PURPOSES OF THE MOTION
1. On 13 July 1999, the Department of the Army (government) awarded
Contract No. DASA02-99-C-1234 to appellant, Combat Support Associates, for the
provision of support and security services in Kuwait (R4, tab 1 at 1; app. mot. at 1, ~ 1;
gov't opp'n br. at 1).
2. On 30 August 2007, appellant submitted to the government its fiscal year
(FY) 2006 incurred cost submission (ICS) (app. mot., ex. 1 at 2).
3. On 10 May 2007, the government requested that appellant submit three
additional items: (1) a formal letter confirming the submission of the ICS; (2) a compact
disc containing ''the same information"; and (3) a "Schedule T" (app. mot., ex. 2).
4. On 14 May 2007, appellant submitted to the government a formal letter
confirming its ICS submission (app. mot., ex. 3).
5. On 20 May 2007, appellant submitted to the government its "Schedule T,"
and a compact disc with a copy of that schedule (app. mot., ex. 4).
6. On 25 August 2007, appellant submitted to the government revised
Schedules A and B of its ICS (app. mot., ex. 5).
7. On 17 June 2013, the Defense Contract Audit Agency (DCAA) issued a
report on an audit of the ICS (app. mot., ex. 6).
8. On 23 August 2013, the administrative contracting officer (ACO), having
reviewed the DCAA audit report, issued two final decisions, one demanding that
appellant pay the government $332,167 in disallowed direct costs (app. mot., ex. 7), and
the other disallowing indirect costs and unilaterally determining appellant's indirect cost
rates for FY 2006 (app. mot., ex. 8).
9. The ACO's payment demand consists of two categories of disallowed direct
costs: (1) $308,889 in equipment costs, and (2) $23,278 in telephone and fax expenses
(app. mot., ex. 7 at 1-2). The ACO disallowed and demanded repayment of$164,008 of
the equipment costs because it determined that appellant had failed to provide
documentation that justified the purchase of Caterpillar equipment from Winner
International Trading Company (Winner), as opposed to from whom the ACO identified
as the sole authorized distributor of Caterpillar equipment in Kuwait in FY 2006,
Mohamed Adulrahman Al-Bahar (id. at 1). The amount disallowed was the difference
in price between the two suppliers (app. mot., ex. 6 at 33). The ACO disallowed and
demanded repayment of $144,881 of the equipment costs because it determined that
appellant had failed to provide documentation that justified "the selection of Volvo
Motor Road Grader rather than the lowest bidder supplier" (app. mot., ex. 7 at 1-2).
10. The ACO also disallowed and demanded repayment of $23,278 in telephone
and fax expenses "to adjust for personal use of [the] telephones and fax machines by
[appellant's] employees" (app. mot., ex. 7 at 2). The ACO explained that "[d]uring
DCAA audit, [appellant] acknowledged" that the $108,777 in telephone and fax
expenses that appellant had proposed "includes unallowable telephone/fax expenses
costs [sic] that were not voluntarily deleted" (id.). Such personal-use telephone and fax
expenses also comprise $13 3, 779 (of $625, 13 5 such expenses proposed) of the
$1,409,464 in indirect cost disallowances that form the basis of the CO's unilateral
determination of appellant's FY 2006 indirect cost rates (app. mot., ex. 8 at 1-3).
Including telephone and fax expenses, those indirect cost disallowances consist of seven
distinct categories (id. at 1).
11. On 2 October 2013, appellant timely filed an appeal docketed as ASBCA
No. 58945 (appealing the CO's final decision demanding payment of disallowed direct
costs), and filed an appeal docketed as ASBCA No. 58946 (appealing the CO's final
decision disallowing indirect costs and determining indirect cost rates).
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12. On 20 March 2014, DCAA Supervisory Auditor Kathryn Adamson declared
under penalty of perjury that:
I have reviewed the DCAA files related to [appellant's ICS]
and, to the best of my knowledge, the supporting data related
to those costs identified in the two (2) Government
contracting officer final decisions dated August 23, 2013 was
not provided to the auditors until after August 23, 2007.
(Gov't opp'n, ex. G-1)
DECISION
Appellant seeks the dismissal of these appeals for lack of jurisdiction, contending
that they are time barred pursuant to the Contract Disputes Act, 41 U.S.C. § 7103(a)(4).
That section requires a contract claim to be "submitted within 6 years after the accrual
of the claim." Id. The government opposes, making it the proponent of the Board's
jurisdiction, with the burden of proving that the Board possesses jurisdiction to entertain
the appeals. 1 Raytheon Missile Systems, ASBCA No. 58011, 13 BCA if 35,241 at
173,016. The government must establish, by a preponderance of the evidence, facts
sufficient to invoke the Board's jurisdiction. See Reynolds v. Army & Air Force
Exchange Service, 846 F.2d 746, 748 (Fed. Cir. 1988).
In deciding the motion, the Board has presumed undisputed facts to be true;
disputed jurisdictional facts have been subjected to our fact-finding based upon a review
of the record. Raytheon Missile Systems, 13 BCA if 35,241at173,016. A claim accrues
under the CDA when "all events, that fix the alleged liability ... and permit assertion of
the claim, were known or should have been known." Id. at 173,017 (citing
FAR 33.201). Given the CDA's six-year limitation, to be timely, the government's
23 August 2013 claims must have accrued on or after 23 August 2007.
The government has met its burden, at least upon the record currently before the
Board. Appellant contends that the government's claims accrued no later than 20 May
1
At page 2 of its brief, the government cites Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. v. United
States, 105 Fed. Cl. 657 (2012) (the government's citation mistakenly reports
that the court issued its opinion in 2013), an opinion that is not binding precedent
for the Board. MA. Mortenson Co., ASBCA No. 53346, 05-2 BCA if33,014 at
163,616 n.3. In addition, the government follows that citation with a quotation
(at page 3 of its brief) that does not appear in the opinion that begins at 105 Fed.
Cl. 657, but in Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. v. United States, 110 Fed. Cl. 210, 220
(2013). The government provides "Sikorsky at 11" as the citation for the
quotation.
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2007 (app. mot. at 4), when (except for revisions to Schedules A and B) appellant
completed the submission of its ICS (SOF ifif 5-6). The government contends that it "had
no knowledge, and had no reason to know, whether the costs were allowable until
[appellant] provided the detailed information (adequate supporting data) showing the
costs were allowable" (gov't opp'n br. at 7). In support of that contention, the
government relies upon the declaration of DCAA Supervisory Auditor Adamson, who
states that "the supporting data related to those costs identified in the two
(2) Government contracting officer final decisions dated August 23, 2013 was not
provided to the auditors until after August 23, 2007" (SOF if 12). Appellant does not
counter by demonstrating that, even without any supporting data, the government had, on
20 May 2007, the information it needed to know that it had the claims set forth in the
ACO's 23 August 2013 final decisions (that is, a demand for payment of disallowed
direct costs, and the unilateral determination of indirect cost rates based upon the
disallowance of indirect costs), or that the government had additional information before
23 August 2007 from which it knew or should have known of its claims.
For example, appellant does not demonstrate that the ICS informed the
government that appellant had purchased Caterpillar equipment from Winner instead of
Mohamed Adulrahman Al-Bahar; the reason that the ACO demanded the repayment of
$164,008 in billed equipment costs (SOF if 9). Nor does appellant demonstrate that the
ICS informed the government that appellant had selected Volvo Motor Road Grader
rather than "the lowest bidder supplier," the reason that the government demanded the
repayment of $144,881 in billed equipment costs (id.). Indeed, the ICS does not appear
to indicate that appellant purchased Caterpillar equipment from Winner, or that it had
selected Volvo Road Grader (app. mot., exs. 1, 4). In addition, although the ICS
proposes $625,135 in telephone and fax expenses (app. mot., ex. 1), it does not appear
also to indicate that some of those expenses were the result of personal use by
appellant's employees. Finally, appellant does not counter Ms. Adamson's declaration
by demonstrating that any of the disallowances that form the bases for the government's
claims was otherwise determinable prior to 23 August 2007 (perhaps, for example, by
reference to the Federal Acquisition Regulation), even without any of the "supporting
data" to which Ms. Adamson refers.
Appellant replies that a contractor is not required to submit supporting data with
an ICS. That misses the point. The issue raised by appellant's motion is when the
government knew or should have known of its claims; not whether the ICS satisfied the
requirements for an JCS. Upon the record currently before the Board, the government
has established that it knew or had reason to know of its claims only after 23 August
2007, upon appellant's submission of the "supporting data" from which the government
learned, or had reason to learn, of its claims. Because it brought those claims on
23 August 2013, within six years of 23 August 2007, those claims are not time barred,
and the Board possesses jurisdiction to entertain them.
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For these reasons, appellant's motion to dismiss these appeals is denied, without
prejudice. This decision is interlocutory. See Checker Moving, ASBCA No. 32654,
87-1BCAif19,357 at 97,904. Therefore, it is subject to modification. E.I. du Pont de
Nemours & Co. v. United States Camo Corp., 19 F.R.D. 495, 498 (W.D. Mo. 1956).
Indeed, the Board has a special obligation to satisfy itself of its own jurisdiction, see
Weeks Marine, Inc. v. United States, 575 F.3d 1352, 1359 (Fed. Cir. 2009), and will be
mindful of that obligation as the record develops further regarding the several
components of the government's claims. Accordingly, the jurisdictional evidentiary
hearing currently scheduled for 18-19 November 2014 is canceled, to be rescheduled to
coincide with any hearing upon the merits of these appeals.
Dated: 22 October 2014
1IM0THYPCiiL
Administrative Judge
Armed Services Board
of Contract Appeals
I concur I concur
~~~
~ N. STEMPLER
Administrative Judge
RICHARD SHACKLEFORD
Administrative Judge
Acting Chairman Vice Chairman
Armed Services Board Armed Services Board
of Contract Appeals of Contract Appeals
I certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the Opinion and Decision of the
Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals in ASBCA Nos. 58945, 58946, Appeals of
Combat Support Associates, rendered in conformance with the Board's Charter.
Dated:
JEFFREY D. GARDIN
Recorder, Armed Services
Board of Contract Appeals
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