ON PETITION FOR REHEARING
General Injectables & Vaccines, Inc. (“GIV”) has filed a petition for rehearing in which it contends that the panel’s interpretation of the “excusable delays” provision at issue in this case, FAR 52.212-4(0, conflicts with several Court of Claims decisions,
Poloron Products v. United States,
FAR 52.212-4(f) reads as follows:
The Contractor shall be liable for default unless nonperformance is caused by an occurrence beyond the reasonable control of the Contractor аnd without its fault or negligence such as, acts of God or the public enemy, acts of the Government in either its sovereign or contractual capacity, fires, floods, epidemics, quarantine restrictions, strikes, unusually severe weather, and delays of common carriers.
The panel opinion interpreted that provision consistently with the general rule that an unexcused default by a subcontractor does not excuse nonperformance by the prime contractor.
See Johnson Mgmt. Group CFC, Inc. v. Martinez,
GIV argues that Poloron Products, Climatic Rainwear, and H.B. Nelson stand for the proposition that if the contractual delay provision does not sеparately state that the contractor is liable for the unexcused actions of its subcontractor, then subcontractor delays are excusable as long as the contractor acted reasonably in selecting the subcontractor. In fact, those cases do not state that rule expressly, nor can the cases fairly be read as adopting such a rule implicitly.
The delay provisions in all three of the cited cases specified that the contractor wоuld not be liable for delays due to “unforeseeable causes” beyond its control. The court in each of those cases focused on the foreseeability of the problem that resulted in the delay, not on whether the problem was fоreseeable to the contractor as opposed to the subcontractor. In fact, in
Climatic Rainwear,
the court observed that the problem was “clearly unforeseeable on the part of everyone associated with the contract,” including the subcontractor.
In a subsequent decision, the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals noted that the
H.B. Nelson
case focused on the issue of foreseeability and did not establish any broad principle limiting the normal rule that a contractor is liable for the unexcused defaults of its subcontractors.
See In re Hogan Mech., Inc.,
ASBCA No. 21612, 78-1 B.C.A. (CCH) ¶ 13,164, at 64,334,
The
H.B. Nelson
case is distinguishable on another ground as well: it dealt with a failure of proper and timely delivery by a common carrier. A common carrier stands in a very different position from a supplier of the goods that the contractor has agreed to provide to the government. The Veterans Administration Board of Contract Appeals in
In re Malan Construction Corp.,
VABCA No. 262,
It is worth noting the implications of GIV’s argument if it were to be adopted. GIV’s contention that failure on the part of a subcontractor/supplier results in an excusable delay for the contractor would place a contractor who procures contract goods through subcontract in a better position with respect to the risk of nonperformance than a contractor who manufactures the contract goods itself. Thus, if the government had contracted directly with Chiron for the production of the vaccine, and the same problem had developed in Chiron’s production facilities, Chiron would have had to show that the рroblem fell within the “excuse” clause in order to avoid default. See 14 James P. Nehf, Cor *1378 bin on Contracts § 74.16, at 104 (2001) (burden of proving impossibility rests on party asserting it). By virtue of the subcontract arrangement, however, GIV contends that it can avoid liability for breach even if it cannot show that Chiron’s failure to produce the vaccine is excusable. To allow that form of risk reallocation through subcontracting would be difficult to justify as a matter of procurement policy.
GIV’s implicit response to such policy objections is that thе government could cure the problem by specifically including a reference to subcontractors in its “excusable delays” clause and that not having inserted such a reference in FAR 52.212-4(f), the government must live with the consequences. We do not agree with GIV, however, that contractors should be liable for unexcused nonperformance by their subcontractors only if the contract contains a specific clause covering such a contingency. Instead, we interpret thе default rule, absent contractual language to the contrary, to be that contractors are bound by the unexcused nonperformance of their subcontractors. Moreover, we are not persuaded that the “excusable dеlays” provision in FAR 52.212-4(f) was intended to depart from that rule, and we are not persuaded that the older Court of Claims cases on which GIV relies require us to interpret the “excusable delays” clause in a manner that would put it at odds with that rule.
GIV acknowledges that the normal rule under the FAR is that the contractor is responsible for the unexcused defaults of its subcontractors or suppliers.
See
John Cibinic, Jr., Ralph C. Nash, Jr., & James F. Nagle,
Administration of Government Contracts
555 (4th ed. 2006) (“Under the clauses currently in use ... before the contractor can be excused, it must be shown that the cause of delay was beyond the control and without the fault or negligence of the contractor and all intervening contractors including the delayed subcontractor.”). GIV argues, however, that the “excusable delays” clause at issue in this сase, FAR 52.212-1(f), must be interpreted to include subcontractor nonperformance among the causes of excusable delay because other FAR provisions dealing with default and excusable delay contain express language exсluding unexcused subcontractor defaults.
See
FAR 52.249-8(e)-(d), 52.249-9(c)-(d), 52.249-10(b)(1), 52.249-14. The inference that GIV wishes us to draw from the fact that other FAR clauses use different language is weakened by the fact that FAR 52.212-4© was added to the FAR in 1995, long after the other cited clauses. Moreover, whatever force that inference may have is outweighed by the fact that the Federal Acquisition Circular issued at the time FAR 52.212-4 was promulgated stated that the new regulation “contains the terms and conditions believed to be consistent with customary сommercial practice.” 60 Fed.Reg. 48,206, 48,207 (1995). In that respect, the regulations complied with the directive in section 8002(b)(1)(B) of the Federal Acquisition Streamlining Act, Pub.L. No. 103-355, 108 Stat. 3243, 3386 (1994), codified at 41 U.S.C. § 264 note, which provided that the new FAR regulations governing the acquisition of commercial items should include contract clauses “that are determined to be consistent with standard commercial practice.” As applied to the issue of “excusable delays,” we interpret those statements as indicating аn intention to adopt the normal rule that “[t]he contractor alone is responsible for the deficiencies of its suppliers and its subcontractors absent a showing of impossibility.”
Olson Plumbing & Heating,
Nearly a century ago, the Supreme Court provided an admirably succinct explanation of the rationale for the rule we have applied here, in an opinion dealing with a contract to supply goods to the government. In that case,
Carnegie Steel Co. v. United States,
It would seem that the very essence of the promise of a contract to deliver articles is to procure or make them.... [The contract] would have no sense or incentive, no assurance of fulfillment, otherwise; and a delay resulting from the absence of such ability is not of the same kind enumerated in the сontract— is not a cause extraneous to it and independent of the engagements and exertions of the parties.
The other arguments GIV presents in its petition for rehearing have already been addressed in the original panel opinion.
The petition for rehearing is denied.
Notes
. In a 1950 decision, the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals refused to grant the government's request for liquidаted damages under a pre-FAR "Delays-Liquidated Damages” clause when a subcontractor’s nonperformance caused the contractor's performance to be delayed.
John Andresen & Co.,
ASBCA No. 633 (Dec. 13, 1950). The language of standard government contract clauses was subsequently changed to overcome the
Andresen
case, and GIV has not relied on
Andresen
or any of the other contemporaneous ASBCA decisions. In any event, the ASBCA has since characterized
An-dresen
as an example of the “exceptional circumstances which have at times led the Board to relieve an appellant contractor of ... responsibility [for its supplier’s unexcused defaults].”
L & P Food Serv. Equip. Co.,
ASBCA No. 11007, 66-1 B.C.A. (CCH) ¶ 5659, at 26,405,
