14 Cl. Ct. 219 | Ct. Cl. | 1988
OPINION
In these consolidated cases, plaintiff has filed a motion for summary judgment requesting that the October 12, 1984 termination for default by the government of its construction agreement be converted to a termination for the government’s convenience. The plaintiff bases its motion on the following facts. The original completion date passed without government termination of the contract and plaintiff continued to perform work which the government had knowledge of and encouraged. The government did not establish a new completion date prior to the default termination. Defendant has crossed moved for partial summary judgment in its favor. The parties agree there are no material facts in issue. For the reasons set forth below in the body of this opinion, defendant’s motion is granted; plaintiff’s motion is denied.
Facts
On September 29, 1982, the U.S. Army Communications and Electronics Command, Ft. Monmouth, New Jersey, awarded Arctic Comer, Inc. (Arctic) a contract for the rehabilitation of the Barker Circle Barracks at Ft. Monmouth, New Jersey. The plaintiff is a surety company which issued performance and payment bonds to Arctic as principal.
Plaintiff filed with the Claims Court the complaint in No. 122-85C on February 28, 1985, requesting the termination be found improper and that it receive equitable adjustments for government-caused conditions. On March 11, 1985, plaintiff submitted a certified claim to the contracting officer for $867,788. The contracting officer has not issued a decision regarding the claim. The claim in No. 343-85C was filed on June 7, 1985, stating the same causes of action as in No. 122-85C, but requesting, in the alternative, either equitable adjustments or breach of contract damages. On August 15, 1985, defendant’s motion to consolidate the two cases was allowed. Subsequently, on October 11, 1985, plaintiff filed an amended complaint in No. 122-85C adding the cause of action which is the subject of the plaintiff’s motion and defendant’s cross-motion for summary judgment, i.e., that the defendant waived the contract completion date rendering the default termination for failure to complete on time improper. Thus, plaintiff claims the government’s action was in breach of contract entitling the plaintiff to damages.
Discussion
The plaintiff relies on DeVito v. United States, 188 Ct.Cl. 979, 413 F.2d 1147 (1969), which it claims sets forth the proposition that “[t]he Government is estopped from terminating a contract from default for failure to meet the completion date, if the Government encourages continued performance, but does not terminate within a reasonable time or does not set a new completion date.” The court in DeVito explained, at 990-91, 413 F.2d 1147, the rule regarding the waiver of the right to terminate:
Where the Government elects to permit a delinquent contractor to continue performance past a due date, it surrenders its alternative and inconsistent right under the Default clause to terminate, assuming the contractor has not abandoned*222 performance and a reasonable time expired for a termination notice to be given. * * * The necessary elements of an election by the nondefaulting party to waive default and delivery under a contract are (1) failure to terminate within a reasonable time after the default under circumstances indicating forbearance, and (2) reliance by the contractor on the failure to terminate and continued performance by him under the contract, with the Government’s knowledge and implied or express consent.
* * * The period for termination after default will naturally be greater where the contractor abandons performance or where his situation is such as to render performance impossible or unlikely, than where he continues performance in reliance on the lack of termination and proceeds to incur obligations in efforts to perform * * *.
The plaintiff claims the following facts support its position and mandate that, under the law, plaintiff is entitled to summary judgment that the government improperly terminated the Takeover Agreement: The contract completion date was July 20, 1984; the defendant did not terminate on July 20, 1984, but instead requested and allowed the plaintiff to continue performance; the government never set a new contract completion date; and, in reliance thereon, the plaintiff continued to perform until the contracting officer terminated the Agreement on October 12, 1984.
The defendant argues that neither the courts nor the boards of contract appeals have held that the DeVito rule “is as applicable to a construction contract, such as the one at issue here, as it is to supply contracts, such as the one at issue in De-Vito” Moreover, according to defendant, even if DeVito does apply, there was no waiver of the completion date herein because plaintiff had notice that the government was considering terminating the Agreement and that its continued performance was solely for the purpose of mitigating its liability.
In Administration of Government Contracts, by Cibinic and Nash (1981), the authors state at page 436 that “[w]aiver has been a more significant issue in supply contracts than in construction contracts. The supply contractor who continues performance while in default incurs costs which will not be recovered if the Government later successfully terminates for default. * * * However, in construction contracts the contractor will be reimbursed for acceptable work performed at the site even if the contract is terminated. For this reason, continued performance alone will not ordinarily support a claim of waiver * * *.”
With respect to the issue of waiver of the contract completion date, in Brent L. Sellick, ASBCA 21869, 78-2 BCA ¶ 13,510 (1978), the board stated at 66, 194-95:
The essence of the waiver of the delivery date doctrine as explained in DeVito * * * is that through Government actions or inactions, and contractor reliance thereon, the Government is estopped from enforcing a specified contractual delivery date. However, as explained by this Board in recent cases, this estoppel rationale is not normally applicable where the contract contains the usual provisions applicable to construction contracts entitling the contractor to payment for work performed subsequent to the specified completion date but also entitling the Government to recover liquidated damages for late completion. With such provisions in the contract, detrimental reliance on the contractor’s part cannot be found merely from a period of Government forbearance coupled with continued contractor performance in reliance thereon. Olson Plumbing & Heating Co., ASBCA Nos. 17965, 18411, 75-1 BCA ¶ 11,203; * * * Joseph Morton Company, Inc., ASBCA No. 19793, 78-1 BCA ¶ 13,173. Moreover, with these provisions in the contract Government encouragement to expedite completion during a forbearance period should not be interpreted as a disestablishment of the contractually-prescribed completion date absent further manifestation by the Gov-*223 emment that it no longer considered that. date to be enforceable. Such a disestablishment was indeed found in Corway, Inc., ASBCA No. 20683, 77-1 BCA ¶ 12,357, where the Government neither mentioned nor assessed liquidated damages and otherwise manifested lack of concern with the contractor’s late completion. Under those circumstances, the DeVito doctrine was invoked with recognition that the case was unusual.
(Emphasis added.)
In Olson Plumbing & Heating Co. v. United States, 221 Ct.Cl. 197, 602 F.2d 950 (1979), involving a construction contract, the court considered the waiver issue on its merits, finding that the contractor did not meet the burden of establishing Government waiver and contractor reliance. The court in Olson Plumbing & Heating Co. stated, at 204, that the question of whether a default termination is proper depends upon the facts and circumstances of each case, citing DeVito, 188 Ct.Cl. at 991, 413 F.2d 1147. In Olson Plumbing & Heating Co., the court found the contractor had abandoned performance and thus the government could not be found to have waived the due date or to have elected continued performance by the contractor. In addition, the court found that, where the right to terminate a contract has been expressly preserved or when liquidated damages have been imposed by the nonbreaching party, the other party has a heavier burden of proving that the right to terminate for failure to deliver on time has been waived. In Overhead Electric Co., ASBCA No. 25656, 85-2 BCA ¶ 18,026, the board recognized that it takes unusual circumstances for the DeVito rule to be applied in construction contract cases. Yet, the board found the government’s default termination based on a contractor’s failure to meet the construction contract completion date improper. The government had taken no action to terminate the contractor’s right to proceed after the completion date passed and.never stated its intent to assess liquidated damages. In addition, the government had withheld progress payments for work the contractor had completed. Under these circumstances, by permitting the completion date to expire without action, and by not establishing a new completion date, the government waived the completion date and could not terminate for default based on the contractor’s failure to meet the waived completion date. However, in Mitchell Engineering & Constr. Co., 78-1 BCA ¶ 13,112, the board held the government properly terminated a contract for the construction of a steel building for default, despite its failure to set a new completion date after the original one passed. The board found the contractor failed to do the work even though it had more than a reasonable time between the original completion date and the time of termination within which to perform the contract. The board stated “the government is not precluded from terminating for default if the contractor fails to make reasonable progress during the forbearance period. * * * Failure to perform within that time has the same effect as if the time had been originally stated in the contract.” Furthermore, in Kenneth L. Yates, Inc., ASBCA No. 31225, 86-2 BCA ¶ 18,908, the board held the government had no obligation to establish a new completion date for a construction contract after the contractor abandoned the work site, completing only 30 percent of the contract work. The board found that Overhead Electric Co. did not support the contractor’s position that the government waived the contract completion date by failing to establish a new completion date. That is, in Overhead Electric Co., the contractor was willing and able to complete the work as it had all the necessary material and labor available and the government never mentioned liquidated damages. In Yates, the government notified the contractor that liquidated damages were being assessed and thus the contractor was on notice the contract completion date was not being waived. The board in Yates said Overhead represents a rare exception to the general inapplicability of the waiver concept to construction contracts.
In this case, the plaintiff argues the facts and circumstances require the appli
In reply, defendant states that plaintiff received progress payments prior to the default termination and that plaintiff has not explained what specific unreimbursed expenses it incurred between the original completion date and the default termination. Also, defendant urges that, as the surety for the original defaulted contractor, plaintiffs performance under the contract was one way to mitigate its liability to the government. That is, plaintiff’s continued performance could only help, not hinder, its position as the performance bond surety because that much less remained to be done in completion of the contract after the default termination. Thus, to the extent plaintiff remained responsible for completion of the contract work, the more it completed the better. Moreover, plaintiff could still be assessed reprocurement costs.
Plaintiff responds that, as the surety, it was forced to complete the contract when Arctic defaulted, but there was insufficient money left under the contract to complete performance as required by the Takeover Agreement. Therefore, plaintiff’s continued performance, after the completion date passed and the government did not terminate the contract, resulted in plaintiff incurring costs which would not be reimbursed.
In summary, plaintiffs claims seem to all relate to the premise that a defaulted construction contractor is as prejudiced as a defaulted supply contractor who continues performance past the completion date and, thus, the waiver rule should equally apply. Defendant, in essence, argues construction contractors, and the plaintiff in particular, are not harmed, as supply contractors would be, by continued performance and, therefore, the waiver rule should only apply under exceptional circumstances.
In DeVito, the government was held to have waived its right to terminate for default. In that case, the court set forth the proposition that the facts and circumstances of each case determine what is a reasonable time for the government to terminate a contract after default. There is no question that the DeVito rule has been considered to determine its applicability to construction contract cases as well as to supply contract cases, by the Claims Court (see Boston Shipyard Corp. v. United States, 10 Cl.Ct. 151 (1986)), the Court of Claims (see Olson Plumbing & Heating Co. v. United States, 221 Ct.Cl. 197, 602 F.2d 950 (1979)), and the boards of contract appeals (see, e.g., Corway, Inc., 77-1 BCA ¶ 12,357 (1977)). Thus, the plaintiff is correct that the DeVito rule has been applied in the construction contract context. However, the defendant is also correct in that the waiver rule has only been applied when exceptional or rare circumstances are presented in a construction contract case.
The actions taken by the government after the completion date passed in Olson Plumbing & Heating Co. v. United States, 221 Ct.Cl. 197, 602 F.2d 950, are more similar to those taken in this case. That is, in Olson the government, instead of terminating the contractor for default for failure to deliver on the proper date, sent two letters indicating it was not waiving any rights under the contract and that liquidated damages would be assessed against the contractor until the project was completed. As mentioned previously, the court said, at 204, “[wjhere the right to terminate has been expressly reserved or when liquidated damages have been imposed by the non-breaching party, the other party has a heavier burden of proving that the right to terminate for failure to deliver on time has been waived.” In this case, the right to terminate was expressly reserved by the government in communications with plaintiff.
Given all these circumstances, this case does not present that exceptional situation pursuant to which the DeVito waiver rule will be applied in a construction contract case. In sum, the government did not waive its right to terminate the plaintiff for default by its failure to do so between July and October 1984. Therefore, contrary to plaintiffs argument, it is unnecessary to consider the requirement of International Telephone & Telegraph Corp. v. United States, 206 Ct.Cl. 37, 509 F.2d 541 (1975), that, once there has been a waiver in a breach situation, for time to again become of the essence and for the government to regain the right to terminate a contractor for default, a new date must be established. This is so because there had been no waiver by the government in this case and time remained of the essence. Thus, no new date needed to be established in order for the government to terminate for default in October based on plaintiff’s failure to meet the July completion date or to make substantial progress thereafter up until the time when the contracting officer terminated the Takeover Agreement. See, e.g., Mitchell Engineering & Constr. Co., 78-1 BCA ¶ 13,112 (1978), aff'd mem., 225 Ct.Cl. 653, 650 F.2d 290 (1980).
Therefore, it is ORDERED:
(1) Plaintiffs motion for summary judgment is denied, defendant’s motion for partial summary judgment as to Count 6 is granted; and
(2) On or before March 14, 1988, counsel shall file a “Status Reports)” with the clerk indicating the procedure(s) proposed to obtain the resolution of the remaining issues in this litigation.
. See Morrison Assurance Co. v. United States, 3 Cl.Ct. 626, 632-33 (1983), for discussion regarding the distinction between a performance and payment bond obligation. A performance bond obligates the surety to assume primary responsibility for completion of the contract if the original contractor is unable to complete it. Under applicable regulations, the surety may complete the project itself or, alternatively, allow the government to find a new contractor and pay the government the costs of completion. Thus, the performance bond protects the government by making sure that it is not left with a partially completed project because the original contractor is unable to complete the work. A payment bond, however, protects the subcontractors, laborers, and the materialmen. If the primary contractor fails to pay any of them, the surety is obligated to do so.
. The work under the Takeover Agreement was performed by an entity called “Barker Circle Trust" Based on the record, the "Barker Circle Trust” and plaintiff are one and the same.
. In the July 27, 1984 reply by the contracting officer to plaintiffs response to the government's cure letter, plaintiff was given 10 days to explain its failure to make adequate progress and to not having completed the work by July 20, 1984. Plaintiff was notified that the government was considering termination but might forbear this result if, within ten days of receipt of the notice, plaintiff made the required demonstration. This letter concludes, as does one of September 7, 1984: "Any assistance rendered to you on this contract or acceptance by the Government of delinquent goods or services hereunder will be solely for the purpose of mitigating damages, and is not to be construed as an intention on the part of the Government to condone any delinquency, or as a waiver of any rights the Government may have under subject contract.”
. As stated in the Takeover Agreement, the government’s position was that the principal contractor, Arctic, failed to prosecute the work required by the contract with the necessary diligence so that it was impossible to complete by the required date of March 1, 1984. Thus, liquidated damages were assessed as of March 2, 1984.
. See, e.g., Pelliccia v. United States, 208 Ct.Cl. 278, 293, 525 F.2d 1035, in which the court considered a clause in the government’s "show cause’’ letter, which is virtually identical to the one mentioned in n. 3 regarding the intentions of the government to not condone the contractor’s delinquency or to waive any right under the contract, in reaching its decision.
. Affidavit of Andrew A. Dellomo, contracting officer. Plaintiff’s invoice covering the period of May 23, 1984 to August 13, 1984 was paid by the government on October 5, 1984.
. See Joseph Morton Co., 78-1 BCA ¶ 13,173, at 64,411 (1978), wherein the board found that, when a contractor receives payment (progress payments) for continued performance after the completion date on a construction contract has passed, he or she is not harmed by government failure to enforce the contract schedule. Thus, government forbearance for a reasonable time under the contract was not inconsistent with a subsequent termination for default or assessment of liquidated damages.