ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS
Appeals of - )
)
Allard Nazarian Group, Inc. dba Granite ) ASBCA Nos. 62413, 62414
State Manufacturing )
)
Under Contract Nos. N65540-00-D-0005 )
N65540-00-D-0045 )
N65540-04-D-0020 )
APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: C. Peter Dungan, Esq.
Roger V. Abbott, Esq.
Miles & Stockbridge P.C.
Washington, D.C.
APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Samuel W. Morris, Esq.
DCMA Chief Trial Attorney
Debra E. Berg, Esq.
Ryan S. Johnstone, Esq.
Evan Georgopoulos, Esq.
Trial Attorneys
Defense Contract Management Agency
Hanscom AFB, MA
OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE STINSON ON
GOVERNMENT’S PARTIAL MOTION FOR RECONSIDERATION
The government requests partial reconsideration of our July 27, 2023, decision
granting partial summary judgment to appellant Allard Nazarian Group, Inc. (Allard), dba
Granite State Manufacturing. Allard Nazarian Grp., Inc. dba Granite State Mfg.,
ASBCA Nos. 62413, 62414, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408. Allard appealed two contracting
officer final decisions assessing a decrement against fixed hourly labor rate charges
incurred on a time and materials basis on various Indefinite Delivery, Indefinite Quantity
(IDIQ) contracts. We granted Allard’s motion, finding that appellant’s alleged failure to
submit auditable final indirect cost rate proposals on its time and material contracts did
not provide a proper basis for the government to then assess a decrement on Allard’s
costs for direct labor, which were determined by contractually mandated and agreed upon
hourly labor rates. Familiarity with that decision is presumed. For the reasons stated
below, the government’s motion for partial reconsideration is denied.
DISCUSSION
“Motions for reconsideration do not afford litigants the opportunity to take a
‘second bite at the apple’ or to advance arguments that properly should have been
presented in an earlier proceeding.” Dixon v. Shinseki, 741 F.3d 1367, 1378 (Fed. Cir.
2014). Reconsideration may be appropriate, however, “if we made mistakes in our
findings of fact or conclusions of law, or [failed] to consider an appropriate matter”
Supreme Foodservice GMBH, ASBCA No. 57884 et al., 20-1 BCA ¶ 37,716 at 183,090
(citation omitted). “[I]f we have made a genuine oversight that affects the outcome of the
appeal, we will remedy it.” Relyant, LLC, ASBCA No. 59809, 18-1 BCA ¶ 37,146
at 180,841.
I. The Government’s Contentions
The government alleges three errors in our decision:
i. The Board committed manifest legal error in
concluding that FAR 52.216-7, the Allowable Cost and
Payment clause within Allard’s contracts, and the
Government’s express remedies provided thereunder,
do not apply to all direct costs that the clause required
Allard to certify and claim as allowable costs. (See
Decision at *21-25)
ii. The Board erred in finding that the Government
applied “unilaterally-established final indirect cost
rates as a decrement” to Allard’s “direct labor hour
rates” due to Allard’s failure to submit a certified and
auditable Incurred Cost Proposal (“ICP”). (See
Decision at *27-30)
iii. The Board erred by construing and applying a contract
clause implementing regulation, FAR 16.307(a)(1),
which is not incorporated in any contract, to negate the
explicit terms of the Allowable Cost and Payment
clause, FAR 52.216-7, to which Allard had a
contractual obligation to comply, but which it
breached. (See Decision at *20)
(Gov’t mot. at 1-2).
2
II. Government Remedies Under FAR 52.216-7
The government’s first assignment of error is based upon the suggestion that we
“committed reversible error” by “concluding that ‘FAR 52.216-7(g) does not provide the
government the right to recoup prior overpaid amounts where no auditable support is
submitted” (gov’t mot. at 4 (internal citations omitted (citing Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408
at 186,625 (quoting the government’s opposition brief to appellant’s motion for partial
summary judgment (gov’t opp’n at 2)))). The government misstates our holding. 1
Regarding the government’s reliance upon Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR)
52.216-7(g), we stated that “[t]he government cites FAR 52.216-7(g) as absolute
authority for the contracting officer ‘applying these decrements to all billed costs’ (gov’t
opp’n at 2; see also id. at 12-13).” Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,625. As we
explained, the government had argued that FAR 52.216-7(g) permits “reductions to
payments due to the billing of unallowable costs or to recoup prior overpaid amounts
where no auditable support is submitted.” Id. (citing gov’t opp’n at 2).
In response to the government’s argument, we stated:
FAR 52.216-7(g) provides the government the right to
conduct an audit prior to final payment and to reduce or
adjust any such payments determined by the contracting
officers to be unallowable costs. FAR 52.216-7(g) does not
provide the government the right to “recoup prior overpaid
amounts where no auditable support is submitted” (id.).
Here, the contracting officer's application of a decrement on
appellant’s direct labor rate costs was not based upon a
payment “found by the Contracting Officer not to constitute
allowable costs.” FAR 52.216-7(g). Rather, the government
applied a decrement to appellant’s direct labor rate costs
based upon appellant’s alleged failure to submit auditable
indirect cost rate proposals. FAR 52.216-7(g) does not
provide a proper justification, or regulatory authority, for the
government’s actions taken here.
Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,625.
1
We note that our decision was not based solely upon alleged audit rights granted the
government pursuant to FAR 52.216-7. Rather, we found that the plain language
of FAR 16.307(a)(1) - the same FAR clause that required us to read FAR 52.216-7
into all four contracts - also “limits the application of FAR 52.216-7 to ‘the
portion of the contract that provides for reimbursement of materials.’” Allard, 23-
1 BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,624 (citing FAR 16.307(a)(1)). We discuss the import and
application of this FAR provision in section V below.
3
FAR 52.216-7(g) could not be more clear, stating, beneath the heading “Audit,”
that “[a]t any time or times before final payment, the Contracting Officer may have the
Contractor’s invoices or vouchers and statements of cost audited,” and that “[a]ny
payment may be (1) [r]educed by amounts found by the Contracting Officer not to
constitute allowable costs; or (2) [a]djusted for prior overpayments or underpayments.”
FAR 52.216-7(g). In its opposition to Allard’s motion for partial summary judgment, the
government did not allege that its application of the decrement reducing Allard’s costs,
including its direct, fixed labor costs, was based upon a determination by the contracting
officer that such costs were not allowable or a finding of overpayment. Allard, 23-1
BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,626. 2 Instead, the government alleged that it “could not validate,
through audit, the number of hours and categories of labor claimed and paid over the
course of a contractor’s fiscal year” – the premise for the government’s argument being
that “labor costs under a T&M contract are based on fixed labor rates multiplied by a
variable–i.e. actual time incurred” (gov’t opp’n to app. mpsj at 9; see Allard, 23-1 BCA
¶ 38,408 at 186,627). We pointed out that the government cited no specific language in
FAR 52.216-7(g) that gave it the right – in its words – to “recoup prior overpaid amounts
where no auditable support is submitted” (Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,625).
Although the government may have a right of recoupment based upon other regulatory
provisions, FAR 52.216-7(g) does not provide the government that authority in the
context of these appeals.
In its motion for partial reconsideration, the government asserts, without support,
that the contracting officer’s authority “to ‘reduce’ or ‘adjust’” costs “is not predicated
upon an audit,” noting that FAR 52.216-7(g) states “the Contracting Officer may have the
Contractor’s invoices or vouchers and statements of cost audited” (gov’t mot. at 7)
(emphasis in original). In essence, the government argues that regardless of whether it
conducts an audit, FAR 52.216-7(g) grants the contracting officer the unfettered right to
reduce or adjust costs paid the contractor. In its reply brief, the government doubles
2
In its motion for partial reconsideration, the government argues for the first time that
appellant’s alleged “failure to comply with FAR 52.216-7, by not submitting an
auditable ICP, rendered its costs - both indirect and direct labor - unallowable”
(gov’t mot. at 7 (citing FAR 31.201-2(4) (which we assume is a reference to
FAR 31.201-2, Determining allowability, although 31.201-2(4) is apparently an
incomplete cite)). The government’s having failed to raise this argument in its
opposition to appellant’s motion for partial summary judgment, we need not
consider its argument now. Assist Consultants Inc., ASBCA Nos. 61525, 62090,
21-1 BCA ¶ 37,946 at 184,298-99. On the merits, however, we note that, other
than its reference to FAR 31.201-2, the government cites no legal authority for its
argument that all of appellant’s costs are rendered unallowable because appellant
allegedly failed to submit auditable ICPs. FAR 31.201-2 certainly does not
expressly support such a sweeping argument, nor does it do so by implication.
4
down on its argument, reading much more into FAR 52.216-7(g) than that clause
provides (gov’t reply at 3). According to the government,
the plain language of FAR 52.216-7(g) . . . provides the
Government with authority to reduce or decrement prior costs
claimed and paid by amounts or methods determined by the
ACO based on the best information available to her, and also
gives the Government the separate authority to undertake an
audit of vouchers or statements of cost at “any time” before
final payment.
(Id.)
However, the “plain language” of FAR 52.216-7(g) does not support the
government’s argument. Notwithstanding the government’s contrary assertion,
FAR 52.216-7(g) does not “provide[] the Government with authority to reduce or
decrement prior costs claimed and paid by amounts or methods determined by the ACO
based on the best information available to her” (id.). Rather, FAR 52.216-7(g) grants the
government the right to audit progress payments prior to final payment and reduce or
adjust any amounts found to be not allowable or an overpayment. Specifically,
FAR 52.216-7(g) states that the contracting officer may conduct an audit of “invoices or
vouchers and statements of cost” (which, as set forth in FAR 52.216-7(a)(1), are
documents submitted by the contractor “as work progresses”), and, with regard to any
such progress payments made based upon those documents, may reduce amounts found
“not to constitute allowable costs” or adjust for “prior overpayments.” FAR 52.216-
7(a)(1), (g). The government’s right to reduce or adjust progress payments is tied to the
government’s right to audit the documents submitted by the contractor in support of its
progress payments. The government’s interpretation of FAR 52.216-7(g) unreasonably
reads out of that FAR clause the concept of conducting an audit – which is the right
expressly granted to the government by FAR 52.216-7(g). 3
The government suggests that “a contractor effectively could avoid a decrement to
its costs, direct and indirect, by simply refusing to submit a certified statement of costs, as
was the case here, and thereby deprive the Government of its contractual right to audit or
validate the existence, accuracy, and allowability of costs, including direct costs” (gov’t
reply at 4). However, contrary to the government’s assertion, that is not the situation
3
The government asserts that FAR 52.216-7(d)(5) and (d)(6) authorize the contracting
officer “to recover indirect and direct costs paid in applicable years due to Allard’s
failure to submit an auditable ICP and its failure to provide supporting
documentation for its claimed costs” (gov’t mot. at 7). However, FAR 52.216-
7(d), as its title “Final indirect cost rates” suggests, addresses the procedures by
which the parties finalize indirect cost rates.
5
presented here. While FAR 52.216-7(g) provides the government the right to “have the
Contractor’s invoices or vouchers and statements of cost audited,” such invoices,
vouchers, and statements of costs are documents submitted by the contractor initially to
receive payment “as work progresses.” FAR 52.216-7(a)(1), (g). In response to
appellant’s motion for partial summary judgment, the government neither alleged, nor
presented factual evidence, supporting a finding that Allard failed to submit with its
requests for payment “as work progresses,” the requisite invoices, vouchers, or statement
of costs.
The government also suggests that “[t]he Decision construes the Allowable Cost
and Payment clause to allow a contractor to claim indirect cost rates, without including in
the ICP [incurred cost proposal] the costs underlying the contractor’s allocation base”
(gov’t mot. at 6). The government’s argument ignores the fact that our decision expressly
made “no determination about the propriety of the government’s decrement as applied to
appellant’s indirect costs, as that issue [was] not before the Board for consideration as
part of appellant’s motion for partial summary judgment.” Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408
at 186,627. According to the government, “the Board’s construction of the Allowable
Cost and Payment clause would entitle a contractor who uses a ‘total cost input’ base to
exclude labor hour costs, reducing the base and hence increasing the rate, even though a
total cost input base requires inclusion of labor hour dollars as part of the ‘total cost’”
(gov’t mot. at 6). We disagree. Our decision did not hold that a contractor who utilizes a
“total cost input” base may exclude labor hour costs. Rather, our decision addresses the
government’s improper application of a decrement to Allard’s fixed, direct labor, based
upon Allard’s alleged failure to submit final indirect cost rate proposals, with the
government relying upon FAR 52.216-7(g) as support for its actions.
III. Government Remedies Under FAR 52.232-7
FAR 52.232-7(a), which was incorporated in all four contracts at issue here (see
Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,621), sets forth the manner in which labor costs under
time and material contracts are determined and paid. Our decision explained that
FAR 52.232-7 “concerns payments under time and material and labor-hour contracts”
and provided the government the right to address concerns it had regarding its payments
for Allard’s direct labor. Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,627. 4 The government’s
motion for partial reconsideration, however, misconstrues our decision, suggesting that
4
The government cited no record evidence to support a finding that the government
could not audit Allard’s direct, fixed labor costs or that records relating to those
costs did not exist. Rather, the government argued that Allard’s failure to submit
an auditable final indirect cost rate proposal was justification alone for imposing a
decrement upon all of Allard’s costs, including its direct cost. Moreover, the
government made no attempt to establish that an audit of Allard’s direct costs
pursuant to FAR 52.232-7 was impossible.
6
that we read into FAR 52.232-7(f) “a requirement” that the Government “verify claimed
direct labor by reviewing interim vouchers at the time each voucher is submitted” (gov’t
reply at 5-6) and that FAR 52.232-7(f) only allows the government “validation and
adjustment of direct costs at a prescribed time – the time of voucher presentment” (id.
at 6). Our decision was not so limited. Indeed, we expressly recognized that FAR
52.232-7
grants the contracting officer the right to request at any time
before final payment an ‘audit of the invoices or vouchers and
substantiating material,’ and provides that ‘[e]ach payment
previously made shall be subject to reduction to the extent of
amounts, on preceding invoices or vouchers, that are found by
the Contracting Officer not to have been properly payable and
shall also be subject to reduction for overpayments or to
increase for underpayments.’
Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,627 (quoting FAR 52.232-7(e) (DEC 2002)).
The government suggests that because both FAR 52.216-7 and FAR 52.232-7
grant it audit rights prior to final payment, and the fact “that the Government justified its
actions by citing to FAR 52.216-7(g) rather than FAR 52.232-7(f) should not be
dispositive as the Decision indicates” (gov’t reply at 5). Regardless of the competing
audit rights set forth in these two clauses, the government here applied a decrement to
Allard’s fixed, direct labor, based upon Allard’s alleged failure to submit final indirect
cost rate proposals, citing FAR 52.216-7(g) as support for its actions. As we held in our
original decision, and as we have reiterated here, that regulation simply does not provide
the government proper authority for its actions. In its reply brief, the government also
argues that our decision somehow deemed FAR 52.232-7 “the Government’s sole remedy
for validating and adjusting a contractor’s direct costs” (id.). The government’s argument
overstates our holding. Indeed, nowhere in our decision did we find that FAR 52.232-7
was the government’s “sole remedy.”
IV. Government’s Assessment of a Decrement to Allard’s Direct Labor
The government argues that the Board erred in finding that the government
applied its unilaterally established final indirect cost rates as a decrement to Allard’s
direct labor hour rates (gov’t mot. at 2) because the government’s claim “nowhere stated
or represented that the decrement was an ‘indirect cost rate decrement’” (id. at 8). As
support, the government alleges that Allard breached its contract by failing to submit an
auditable incurred cost proposal, that “[t]he government could not possibly verify the
existence or validity of any of Allard’s costs, direct or indirect,” and “[t]o mitigate the
risk – indeed, high probability – of overpayment, the Government applied a reduction or
7
decrement of either 20 percent or 16.4 percent to ‘all costs billed and paid’ to Allard” (id.
(citing gov. opp. at 10 (emphasis in original))).
The Board’s error, according to the government, was in labeling the decrement a
“unilaterally-established final indirect cost rate[]” (gov’t mot. at 3) (emphasis omitted). 5
There is no dispute, however, that the government applied its decrement to reduce all of
Allard’s costs, including direct labor, based upon a decrement established by the
government and imposed as a means to decrease amounts paid a contractor who failed to
submit an indirect cost rate proposal. Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,621, 623, 625.
Regardless of the label the government places upon it - “a total contract cost decrement”
or a “decrement[] based on DCAA’s agency wide analysis of recent incurred cost audit
experience” (gov’t opp’n to app. mpsj at 6, 10) - by applying that decrement to Allard’s
direct labor, the effect is the same, i.e., the government unilaterally applied a rate meant
to rectify the problem of possible overpayments based upon “overdue indirect rate
proposals” (see R4, tab 11 at G-000154). 6 Simply stated, according to the government,
Allard’s indirect rates could not be verified so the government applied an agency-wide
decrement to all of Allard’s contracts – including direct labor portions of those contracts.
The government seems to suggest that the fact the decrement is applied to all
contract costs somehow justifies its actions (gov’t mot. at 8). It does not. The
government offers no proper statutory or regulatory support for its actions (other than
FAR 52.216-7(g), which we already have discussed) for applying a decrement to Allard’s
invoiced, direct labor. The government likewise asserts that its “claim has nothing to do
with any decrement, adjustment, challenge, or even questioned fixed labor cost rates in
5
To the extent our previous decision utilizes this terminology, we clarify here, for
purposes of our earlier decision, that the government, based upon appellant’s
alleged failure to submit an indirect cost rate proposal, applied a unilaterally
established decrement to Allard’s contracts, including Allard’s invoiced, direct
labor, and not a “‘unilaterally-established final indirect cost rate[] as a decrement’
to Allard’s ‘direct labor hour rates’” (gov’t mot. at 2). However, this clarification
does not change the outcome of our decision in which we granted Allard’s motion
for partial summary judgment or require us to grant the government’s motion for
partial reconsideration.
6
The record contains a DCAA memorandum setting forth “Updated Audit Guidance on
the Treatment of Overdue Indirect Rate Proposals” which provides “Support to
Unilaterally Establish Contract Costs” and presumably is the document the
contracting officer relied upon to impose its decrements here (R4, tab 11 at G-
000154; see also gov’t opp’n to app. mpsj at 2 (“having received DCAA’s
guidance,” the contracting officer “imposed a decrement of 20 percent for FY
2009 and 16 percent for FYs 2010-2014 on all billed amounts”)). That document,
however, cites no legal authority for “applying a unilateral contract cost
decrement” (R4, tab 11 at G-000154).
8
Allard’s contracts” (id. at 8-9). Therein lies the problem. The government applied its
decrement (which is its label) to all of Allard’s contracts - contracts which included a
substantial portion of direct labor - utilizing as justification what amounts to pure
speculation, i.e., a “high probability” of overpayment (id. at 8). 7 The government did so
without providing any “challenge” or basis upon which to have “questioned [Allard’s]
fixed labor cost rates” (id. at 9) other than Allard’s alleged failure to submit auditable
incurred cost proposals.
Although the government alleged in its opposition to Allard’s motion that Allard
failed to submit “adequate” or “auditable” ICPs (gov’t opp. to app. mpsj at 1, 5, 9), the
government did not allege that Allard’s actions were a breach of contract (gov’t mot.
at 8-9). The government’s motion for reconsideration, however, alleges a breach of
contract, stating, for example, that appellant “did not submit its required statement of
allowable costs, indirect and direct, for fiscal years (“FYs”) 2009 - 2014, nor did it
provide the required substantiation for any of its costs billed to the Government for those
years,” and that appellant’s “omissions and inactions breached its contractual
obligations” (gov’t mot. at 6). The government’s allegation of breach is a new argument
that the government submitted for the first time in its motion for reconsideration. As
such, it is of no relevance here. CDM Constructors Inc., ASBCA No. 62026 et al., 21-1
BCA ¶ 37,833 at 183,723 (arguments not raised in initial briefing are not appropriate
bases for reconsideration). The government’s argument also is belied by a statement in
its opposition to Allard’s motion, in which the government recognized that, pre-dispute,
Granite State Manufacturing “submitted ICPs, albeit inadequate ones” (gov’t opp’n to
app. mpsj at 9 n.3). The adequacy of those submissions is not a proper issue to raise for
the first time in a motion for reconsideration.
V. FAR 16.307(a)(1) is Applicable and Instructive to These Appeals
Our decision held that “FAR 16.307(a)(1) dictates that FAR 52.216-7 applies
‘only to the portion of the contract that provides for reimbursement of materials (as
defined in the clause at 52.232-7) at actual cost.’” Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408
at 186,624-25). The government challenges our holding, arguing that we improperly
determined that the plain language of FAR 16.307 limited application of FAR 52.216-7
to the material portion of time and material contracts (gov’t mot. at 9). In support of its
argument, the government suggests that we “construed and applied FAR 16.307(a)(1), a
provision which is not in any Allard contract, to nullify the plain and unambiguous
7
Regarding the government’s speculative argument that there was a “high probability –
of overpayment” (gov’t mot. at 10), we note that the government did not argue in
its opposition to Allard’s motion for partial summary judgment that there was a
“high probability of overpayment” nor did the government offer any record
evidence in support of such an assertion.
9
language of contract clause FAR 52.216-7” which is “a provision contractually binding
on both parties” (id. at 9-10).
The irony of the government’s current position - that our decision improperly
relied upon FAR 16.307(a)(1) as a basis for interpreting the reach of FAR 52.216-7 (id.) -
is that FAR 16.307(a)(1) provided the basis upon which we determined that the
contracting officer was required to “insert the clause at 52.216-7, Allowable Cost and
Payment, in solicitations and contracts when a cost-reimbursement contract or a time-
and-materials contract (other than a contract for a commercial product or commercial
service) is contemplated.” Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,624. Far from nullifying
portions of FAR 52.216-7, FAR 16.307(a)(1) provided the basis upon which we
determined, pursuant to the Christian doctrine, that FAR 52.216-7 was a mandatory time
and materials contract clause as specified in FAR 16.307(a) and “is considered inserted
into the contract by operation of law.” Id.
The government asserts that “[i]n the instant situation, all the contracts at issue
include FAR 52.216-7, Allowable Cost and Payment (DEC 2002), which placed an
affirmative duty on Allard to provide an ICP adequate for audit within six months
following the expiration of each of its fiscal years” (gov’t mot. at 5). The government’s
argument is factually incorrect. As we previously held, only Contract No. N65540-09-D-
0009, entered between Allard and the government, included FAR 52.216-7. Allard, 23-1
BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,624. The three previous contracts between the government and
Scandia did not. Id. 8
FAR 16.307(a)(1) requires a contracting officer to incorporate FAR 52.216-7 into
time and material contracts - but in the manner specified in FAR 16.307(a)(1). 9 As noted
by appellant in its opposition brief, “to the extent that FAR 52.216-7(g) authorizes the
Agency to apply a decrement to the Contracts, that authority extends only to the material
cost portion” (app. opp’n at 11). The government argues that our application of
FAR 16.307, a non-contract provision, improperly “negates the explicit terms of”
8
The government’s current position is equally confounding given that in its opposition to
the Allard’s motion for partial summary judgment the government expressly relied
“upon FAR 16.307 as part of its argument that FAR 52.216-7 applies to both the
time and labor portions of time and materials contracts.” Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶
38,408 at 186,624 n.5 (citing gov't opp'n at 9). Indeed, in its opposition brief, the
government stated, “FAR 16.307(a)(1) provides that FAR 52.232-7 and
FAR 52.216-7 be included in T&M contracts” (gov’t opp’n to app. mpsj at 3).
9
Indeed, FAR 52.216-7 begins as follows, stating “[a]s prescribed in [FAR] 16.307(a),
insert the following clause.” FAR 52.216-7. One prescription set forth in
FAR 16.307(a) is that FAR 52.216-7 applies “only to the portion of the contract
that provides for reimbursement of materials (as defined in the clause at 52.232-7)
at actual cost.” FAR 16.307(a)(1).
10
FAR 52.216-7 (gov’t reply at 2). 10 However, it was the explicit terms of FAR 16.307(a)
that provided the basis upon which we held that FAR 52.216-7 applies to all of Allard’s
contracts, and it was the explicit terms of FAR 16.307(a), which also “limit[ed]
application of FAR 52.216-7 to ‘the portion of the contract that provides for
reimbursement of materials.’” Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶ 38,408 at 186,625 (citing
FAR 16.307(a)(1)).
The government suggests that reliance upon FAR 16.307 was improper because
there was no ambiguity in the contract(s) and, only in the case of an ambiguity, may the
Board look to provisions not included in the contract (gov’t mot. at 10). According to the
government, the Board “implicitly presumed that the contracts themselves are
ambiguous” (id. at 11). We disagree. Here the contract terms required interpretation, not
because of any ambiguity, but because the parties disagreed as to the contract
requirements. The government’s argument misunderstands the import of the provisions
found in FAR Part 16. Reliance upon such promulgating provisions is not appropriate
only when the contract contains an ambiguity that requires resolution, rather, as we stated
in our decision, “FAR 16.000 ‘describes types of contracts that may be used in
acquisitions,’ and ‘prescribes policies and procedures and provides guidance for selecting
a contract type appropriate to the circumstances of the acquisition’” Allard, 23-1 BCA ¶
38,408 at 186,624. FAR 16.000 goes to the heart of determining the specific FAR
clauses that a contracting officer is required to include in a contract.
The government cites K-Con, Inc. v. Secretary of the Army, 908 F.3d 719 (Fed.
Cir. 2018), as support for its argument that the Board committed “clear error” by
considering the import of FAR 16.307 and its application to FAR 52.216-7 without a
finding that the contracts at issue here were ambiguous (gov’t reply at 11). 11 According
to the government, in K-Con “the Federal Circuit looked outside the language of the
contracts to determine if the bonding requirements should apply only after first
determining that the terms of the contracts were ambiguous” (gov’t mot. at 11) (emphasis
in original). The ambiguity presented in K-Con was whether the contracts at issue were
for construction or commercial items. The Federal Circuit found that the contracts were
properly considered construction contracts. The Federal Circuit then considered, given
its determination that the contracts were construction, what bonding requirements should
10
We disagree with the government’s characterization that FAR 16.307(a)(1) negates or
nullifies explicit or express terms in FAR 52.216-7 (gov’t mot. at 9-10; gov’t reply
at 2). FAR 16.307(a)(1) does not “negate” or, “nullify” portions of FAR 52.216-7.
Rather, in addition to requiring that the contracting officer insert the clause in
certain contracts, FAR 16.307(a)(1) likewise specifies the contract costs to which
FAR 52.216-7 applies.
11
In its opposition to the government’s motion for reconsideration, appellant cited K-Con
in support of its argument that the Board here properly relied upon FAR 16.307
(app. opp. at 10).
11
apply to those construction contracts. The court applied the Christian doctrine to
incorporate into the contracts the bonding requirements as a matter of law. Although the
Federal Circuit found the contracts ambiguous, the court did not hold that application of
the Christian doctrine must first be predicated upon a finding that the contract is
ambiguous. Rather, the Federal Circuit held that “under the Christian doctrine, the
standard payment and performance bond requirements in construction contracts were
incorporated into K-Con's contracts by operation of law.” K-Con, 908 F.3d at 728.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated above, the government’s motion for reconsideration is
denied.
Dated: January 31, 2024
DAVID B. STINSON
Administrative Judge
Armed Services Board
of Contract Appeals
I concur I concur
OWEN C. WILSON MICHAEL N. O’CONNELL
Administrative Judge Administrative Judge
Acting Chairman Acting Vice Chairman
Armed Services Board Armed Services Board
of Contract Appeals of Contract Appeals
12
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. 62413, 62414, Appeals of
Allard Nazarian Group, Inc. dba Granite State Manufacturing, rendered in conformance
with the Board’s Charter.
Dated: January 31, 2024
PAULLA K. GATES-LEWIS
Recorder, Armed Services
Board of Contract Appeals
13