C.B.C. Enterprises, Inc. (CBC) appeals from the September 18, 1991 decision of the United States Claims Court granting summary judgment to the United States.
C.B.C. Enters., Inc. v. United States,
I
In September, 1989, CBC contracted with the United States Navy to build certain improvements to a Marine Corps Air Station building at Cherry Point, North Carolina. The original contract price was $927,300 and CBC originally was to complete the improvements by July 11, 1990. During the course of construction the Navy modified the contract several times. On certain modifications which extended the work performance period, the parties agreed to calculate the additional home office overhead at 13.94 percent of direct costs, the rate at which home office overhead was fixed in the basic contract. The present appeal concerns the Navy’s unilateral modification numbered P00003. That modification called for work with direct costs of $10,846.00 and extended CBC’s work performance period by 24 days, during which time CBC’s work was not suspended, delayed or disrupted. All aspects of this modification were mutually agreeable except for the amount necessary to compensate CBC for home office overhead expenses. The Navy awarded CBC $1,512.00 for those expenses, that is 13.94 percent of the modification’s direct costs.
CBC contended that the Navy was required to award it home office overhead for the modification calculated at a daily rate derived from a formula known in the build
*671
ing arts as the Eichleay formula. The Eichleay formula was devised to calculate reimbursable home office overhead costs in the event of suspension of work on a contract, when the suspension decreases the stream of direct costs against which to assess a percentage rate for reimbursement. In the extreme, when direct costs are decreased to naught, employment of a fixed percentage rate absurdly denies recovery of any otherwise demonstrably reimbursable extended home office overhead costs. The Eichleay formula provides a method of constructively calculating daily extended home office overhead, using contract billings, total billings for the contract period, total overhead, days of contract performance, and days of delay.
See, e.g., Capital Elec. Co. v. United States,
CBC appealed the contracting officer’s decision to the Claims Court pursuant to 41 U.S.C. § 609(a) (1988). Both CBC and the government moved for summary judgment. The Claims Court read our decision in
Capital Electric
as a general rule that restricts use of the Eichleay formula to situations involving suspensions of work, when direct costs have been greatly reduced or eliminated.
C.B.C.,
II
CBC argues that this court, the Court of Claims and the Claims Court have consistently held that a contractor is entitled to use the Eichleay daily rate formula to recover extended home office overhead for delays, suspensions or extensions of contract performance caused by the government. Accordingly, CBC asserts that the Claims Court erred in confining use of the Eichleay formula to situations involving work suspension generally and exceptionally to contract extensions exhibiting “unusual circumstances.” In CBC’s view, using the Eichleay formula to calculate home office overhead for extended contract performance periods should be the rule, with only two exceptions: added work not extending the performance period and performance extensions involving added work equal to or greater than the original contract’s daily rate of direct costs. In those circumstances, use of the parties’ agreed percentage overhead rate would be appropriate because the direct cost stream has not been diminished. Amicus curiae Associated General Contractors of America urges us to adopt CBC’s arguments.
By contrast, the government contends that the Eichleay formula is never appropriately applied to mere extensions of contract performance occasioned by contract modifications adding work to be performed. From the government’s perspective, the general rule requires recovery of extended home office overhead under agreed percentage rates. The Eichleay formula, the government says, is an exception to that rule, and may only be applied where a contractor incurs extended overhead expenses as a result of government-caused delay, disruption or suspension of work.
*672 III
This case thus requires us to decide which of two methods should be used to reimburse a contractor for home office overhead costs incurred by reason of a contact extension to perform additional work. Those two methods are: (i) a fixed percentage mark-up of the direct costs incurred, in this case 13.94 percent; and (ii) a constructive daily rate derived using the Eichleay formula.
Contractors dealing with the government are entitled to recover in the contract price a portion of their home office overhead. 48 C.F.R. §§ 31.203-205 (1990). Home office overhead includes the cost of such items as weekly payrolls, Davis-Bacon reports, checks, W-2’s, 941’s and other required tax forms, cost records, review submittals from subcontractors, weekly and monthly progress reports to the government, salaries, dues and subscriptions, auto and travel, telephone and photocopying.
Capital Elec.,
The Eichleay method of calculating extended home office overhead has a long history. As we shall see, contractors have been permitted to use this method to calculate extended home office overhead in situations where disruption, delay or outright suspension have cast a cloud of uncertainty over the length of the performance period of the contract.
Judicial approval for using a daily overhead rate to calculate extended home office overhead during periods of government-caused delay first appeared some time ago in
Herbert M. Baruch Corp. v. United States,
The following year, the Court of Claims discussed the issue of proportional overhead recovery at length in
Fred R. Comb Co. v. United States,
In 1960, the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals devised a similar daily rate formula to estimate extended home office overhead.
Eichleay Corp.,
60-2 B.C.A. (CCH) ¶ 2688,
overhead costs, including the main office expenses involved in this case, cannot ordinarily be charged to a particular contract. They represent the cost of general facilities and administration necessary to the performance of all contracts. It is therefore necessary to allocate them to specific contracts on some fair basis of proration.
Id. at 13,574. On reconsideration, the Board clarified the type of suspension at issue in Eichleay Corp.:
Performance of the contracts was at no time completely suspended and the delays were not continuous. One item of work would be suspended, then another and so on through an extended series of suspensions. The partial suspensions were lifted at innumerable, varying intervals over a prolonged period of time with the issuance of the numerous modifications providing for changes in the contracts.
Eichleay Corp., 61-1 B.C.A. (CCH) ¶ 2894, at 15,117 (ASBCA 1961).
Following the
Eichleay Corp.
decision, the Court of Claims approved award of overhead costs prorated on a daily basis in cases where the government caused disruption, suspension or delay during performance of the contract.
See, e.g., Luria Bros. & Co. v. United States,
Then in 1984, this court refused to accede to the government’s request to jettison use of the Eichleay formula to calculate such delay damages.
Capital Elec. Co.,
This same element of uncertainty, engendered by the fact of disruption, suspension or delay of contract performance, has been present whenever the courts or the Boards of Contract Appeals have permitted extended home office overhead to be calculated under the Eichleay formula.
See, e.g., Weaver-Bailey Contractors, Inc. v. United States,
IV
CBC and amicus curiae argue that use of Eichleay should be permitted in any instance in which a contract modification results in an erosion of direct costs because a percentage mark-up of the decreased additional direct costs will not allocate a fair proportion of home office overhead to the contract. This desire to extend availability of the Eichleay formula to pure contract extensions would likely transform use of the formula from an exception to a rule, making the formula applicable to nearly every contract. CBC maintains that extended home office overhead expenses would not be calculated using the Eichleay formula for the majority of pure contract extensions. CBC, however, can only articulate two occasions when use of the Eichleay formula would be inappropriate, i.e., would not reduce the stream of direct costs: contract modifications that add direct costs but do not extend the time for performance, and contract modifications that, over an extended period of time, add direct costs equal to or greater than the amount of direct costs per day under the original contract. Moreover, CBC offers only attorney argument, not empirical data, to support its contention that the Eichleay formula will thus be inapplicable for the majority of contract extensions. We are *675 not persuaded. It appears more likely that the greater part of all contract modifications would qualify for the Eichleay rule under CBC’s contention.
In our view, CBC seeks a drastic shift in the circumstances under which the Eichleay formula has been available. Such an extension of the formula’s use is no less drastic than the government’s urging in the
Capital Electric
litigation that Eichleay be abandoned altogether. As we noted in
Capital Electric,
we believe that Congress, not the courts, should make that decision.
Capital Elec.,
We decline the invitation to stand availability of the Eichleay formula on its head. The
raison d’etre
of Eichleay requires at least some element of uncertainty arising from suspension, disruption or delay of contract performance. Such delays are sudden, sporadic and of uncertain duration. As a result, it is impractical for the contractor to take on other work during these delays.
See George Hyman Constr. Co. v. Washington Metro. Area Transit Auth.,
For these reasons the judgment of the Claims Court is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
The Eichleay Formula
(as approved by the Federal Circuit)
First, calculate:
contract billings total overhead _ X [incurred during the] contract total billings for period contract period overhead allocable to the contract
Second, calculate:
allocable contract overhead [actual] days of [contract] performance daily contract overhead
Third, calculate:
daily contract overhead x [number of] days [of] delay amount recoverable
Capital Elec.,
