02-1462
CHARLES G. WILLIAMS CONSTRUCTION,
INC.,
Appellant,
v.
Thomas E. White, SECRETARY OF THE
ARMY,
Appellee.
Judith
Ward Mattox, of Colorado Springs, Colorado, argued for appellant.
Carolyn
J. Craig, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division,
Department of Justice, of Washington, DC, argued for appellee. With her on the brief were Robert D.
McCallum, Jr., Assistant Attorney General; David M. Cohen, Director;
and Donald E. Kinner, Assistant Director. Of counsel on the brief was Major John B. Alumbaugh,
Department of the Army, United States Army Legal Services Agency, of Arlington,
Virginia.
Appealed from: Armed
Services Board of Contract Appeals
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
02-1462
CHARLES G. WILLIAMS CONSTRUCTION,
INC.,
Appellant,
v.
Thomas E. White, SECRETARY OF THE
ARMY,
Appellee.
______________________________
DECIDED: May 5, 2003
______________________________
Before MICHEL, Circuit Judge, FRIEDMAN, Senior
Circuit Judge, and LINN, Circuit Judge.
FRIEDMAN, Senior Circuit Judge.
The question in this case, here for
a second time, is whether the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals
(ÒBoardÓ) correctly held that a government contractor had failed to prove an
essential element of its claim for so-called Eichleay damages covering
its unabsorbed home office overhead costs during a period of government-caused
delay in contract performance. In
the prior appeal, we vacated the BoardÕs earlier decision denying Eichleay
damages because the Board had not adequately addressed the issue, and remanded
for further Board proceedings. On
the remand, the Board again denied the Eichleay claim. We affirm.
I
The facts are fully set forth in our
prior opinion, Williams Construction, Inc. v. White, 271 F.3d 1055,
1055-57 (Fed. Cir. 2001). They
will be here repeated only to the extent necessary for our decision.
The appellant (Williams) was awarded
a fixed-price contract to improve and repair a government building. The work was to be done in two phases,
covering the south and north portions of the building, and there was a
specified completion date.
ÒWilliams Ôreasonably understood, and the Government ultimately agreed,
that the contract required the Government to vacate each phase while that phase
was under construction.ÕÓ Id.
at 1057.
There were substantial delays in
performance of the contract, for which the Board held that both the government
and Williams were responsible.
There were Òdefects in the governmentÕs specifications and deficiencies
in WilliamsÕ own performance and that of its subcontractors. The government failed to vacate the
southern portion of the building as required, which caused substantial delays
in WilliamsÕ performance. The
government issued a large number of change orders, many of which provided for
additional payment.Ó Id.
The
government ultimately terminated for convenience WilliamsÕ work on phase two
and Williams completed phase one ninety-three days after its extended
completion date. Id. In the ensuing dispute on WilliamsÕ
various claims, the Board allowed some of them, but denied WilliamsÕ Eichleay
claim. The Board devoted only a
single finding (No. 24) to that claim, which stated in pertinent part:
The DCAA [Defense Contract Audit Agency] auditor found that the overhead for the entire period of extended contract performance was Òfully absorbed by the basic contract, contract modifications, and other projects.Ó He further found that CGW used both variable and fixed overhead expenses in computing the average daily overhead rate. On this evidence, CGWÕs Eichleay claim is not proven.
Id. (quoting GovÕt supp. R4, Book 11, tab 2 at 003795-96; tr. 2/270-73). The Board did not even mention the Eichleay claim in its two-page discussion captioned ÒDECISION,Ó which followed its 31 findings. Id.
We
vacated the BoardÕs decision rejecting WilliamsÕ Eichleay claim as not
proven, and remanded to the Board for further proceedings in light of and
consistent with our opinion. Id.
at 1060. We stated:
The BoardÕs function in this case was itself to determine whether Williams had established its case for Eichleay damages, not to determine whether the auditorÕs ÒfindingÓ that Williams had not done so was supported by the record. The Board was entitled to give the auditorÕs evidence and testimony, like that of any other evidence, whatever weight it concluded it should have. Under the Contracts Disputes Act, however, it is the function and responsibility of the Board, and not of the auditor, to decide the question of entitlement.
Id. at 1059.