Riley
&
Ephriam Construction Company, Inc. (“R & E”) аppeals the grant of summary judgment in favor of the United States (“government”) by the Court of Federal Claims.based on the determination'that R & E’s, claims were untimely filed under the Contract Disputes Act (“CDA”).
Riley & Ephriam Constr. Co. v. United States,
R & E entered into a contract with the governmеnt that could not be completed as originally agreed due to unforeseen conditions at the jobsite. R & E listed a Post Office box (“P.O.box”) in Stone Mountain, Georgia, as its contact address for matters relating to this contract. On March 8, 2000, after the parties could not agree to an adjustment of the contract, R & E applied for an equitable adjustment in the amount of $294,097. While the contracting officer was reviewing this request, R & E closed its corporate offices and ran the business from a home. R & E continued to maintain the Stone Mountain P.O. box.
The equitable adjustment wаs finally denied on November 27, 2001. On this date, the contracting officer mailed the final decision in the equitable adjustment claim via certified letter addressed to R & E’s P.O. box and faxed a copy of the final decision to the fax number on file for R & E’s attorney. R & E’s attorney claims to hаve never received this fax and the government is unable to produce a fax transmittal sheet. The certified letter arrived at the Post Office on November 30, 2001, at which time a postal employee placed a notice in R & E’s box that the letter cоuld be picked up at the counter. The Post Office placed a second notice in the P.O. box on December 19, 2001. R & E did not pick up the letter and on December 29, 2001, the Post Office returned the certified letter unsigned to the contracting officer. Upon receipt of the unclaimed certified letter and the unexecuted return receipt form, the government was on notice that no authorized person had received the certified mail.
In January of 2002, the contracting officer called the attornеy to notify him that the letter was returned and asked if the attorney would accept another copy of the final decision on behalf of R & E. On January 30, 2002, the contracting officer faxed the attorney a message that the letter had been resent to the firm’s аddress. Less than one year later, on January 24, 2003, R & E filed suit in the Court of Federal Claims for $306,039.33 in damages resulting from the additional work performed on the contract.
Before the Court of Federal Claims, the government moved for summary judgment based on the statute of limitations time bar in the CDA that requires suit to be filed within twelve months of the contractor’s actual receipt of the contracting officer’s final decision. 41 U.S.C. § 609(a)(3) (2000). The Court of Federal Claims found that R
&
E had received the final decision because both the fax sent on November 27, 2001, and the certified letter sent on the same date were deemed actually received by the contractor.
Riley & Ephriam,
II
This court reviews the grant of summary judgment
de novo. Insituform Techs., Inc. v. CAT Contracting, Inc.,
Ill
The burden is. on the government to prove the earlier date of receipt.
See, e.g., Pub. Serv. Cellular, Inc.,
ASBCA No. 52489,
а contractor may bring an action directly on the claim in the United States Court of Federal Claims .... [This] action ... shall be filed within twelve months from the date of the receipt by the contractor of the decision of the contracting officer concerning the claim, and shall proceed de novo in accordance with the rules of the appropriate court.
41 U.S.C. § 609(a)(1), (3) (2000). The CDA requires that “[t]he contracting officer shall issue his decisions in writing, and shall mail or otherwise furnish a copy of the decision to the contractor.” § 605(a). The implementing regulations further require that the decision is to be provided to the contractor via “certified mail, return receipt requested, or by any other method that provides evidence of receipt.” 48 C.F.R. § 33.211(b) (2004) (emphasis added).
The Federal Circuit has interpreted receipt by the сontractor to mean “actual physical receipt of that decision by the contractor [or his representative].”
Borough of Alpine v. United States,
In this case, the government has failed to produce the “evidence of receipt” by the contractor that is required by the CDA implementing regulations. The fax of November 27, 2001, and the letter received at the Stone Mountain Post Office on Nоvember 30, 2001, will be addressed in turn.
A
Although some courts have held that a fax confirmation sheet- produces a rebuttable presumption of receipt,
see Stevens Shipping & Terminal Co. v. M/V JAPAN RAINBOW II,
R & E’s attorney disputes receipt of the fax. The firm also contends that the fax number was changed when the firm relocated. Moreover, we cannot infer receipt from evidence of transmission. Proof of message exit from a transmitting machine cannot serve аs a proxy for proof of actual receipt of the- sent message by a remote receiving terminal. Simply put, the evidence offered by the government is not the type of “objective indicia of receipt” that the CDA requires to begin the limitations
We note the sound judgment reflected in the decisions of the Boards of Contract Appeal that have recognized the ease and simplicity with which the government can gain confidence that a fax transmission has been actually received by the contractor. All the government has to do is make a simple telephone call to the contractor or its authorized representative to affirm actual receipt of the fax. This simple step would give the government the assurance of actual receipt that the regulation requires it to have. Indeed, the regulation’s preferred method of transmission by certified mail return receipt has the built-in confirmation of receipt that a simple telephone call after a fax transmission would supply.
B
In the alternative, the Court of Federal Claims traced the start of the statute of limitations to the date the certified letter was received at the Stone Mountаin Post Office. The government contends that R & E received the certified letter on the date that it was processed at the postal facility and a notice- that the letter could be picked up at the counter was placed in, R & E’s P.O. box. The government asserts that “receipt occurred when the package verifiably arrived at the address R & E had chosen and was being held for their acceptance.” As with the fax transmission, we hold that the government has not shown objective indicia of receipt of the certified letter.
The contracting officer is obliged by 48 C.F.R. •§ 33.211(b) to send the final decision via “certified mail, return receipt requested, or by any other method that provides evidence of receipt.” The certified mail receipt, Post Office form 3811, the Domestic Return Receipt, specifically requires the receiving party to print its name, sign the form upon receipt, and note the date of delivery. In this case, the Post Office did not complete any portion of the certified mail.receipt nor was the letter ever released from the custody of postal employees. Instead, the Post Office returned the entire letter to the contracting officer marked as undeliverable, unaccepted and unsigned by R & E, on December 29, 2001.
Nonetheless, the Court of Federal Clаims found that “[p]laintiffs officers implicitly consented to allow Post Office em
The government attempts to analogize R & E’s box rental to that of a customer of a сommercial mail handler or private mailbox service that has the authority to accept mail for its customers. A private mail handler of this type was at issue in
Policy Analysis Co. v. United States,
In light of the above, the case law relied on by the government, Borough of Alpine and Policy Analysis, does not dictate finding the letter was received by the contractor when it was in possession of the Stone Mountain Post Office. The Post Office was not an “agent” for R & E, R & E never authorized the Post Office to sign for its mail, and further, the letter was not signed on the return receipt by a postal employee to indicate acceptance. The letter was simply returned undelivered to the contracting officer. Therefore, wе find that the government has not shown objective evidence of receipt by the contractor of the November 27, 2001, certified letter.
IV
Neither the fax communication nor the certified letter was received by the contractor as required under the CDA in оrder to begin the statute of limitations period. It is undisputed that R & E did receive the final decision of the contracting officer through its attorney on January 30, 2002, when the return of the undelivered certified letter put the government on notice that its first delivery attempt had lеgally failed and prompted the government to make a lawful delivery of the contracting officer’s final decision. Because suit was filed on January 24, 2003, the Court of Federal Claims erred when it granted summary judgment in favor of the government based on the erroneous finding that R & E’s claims were untimely filed. Accordingly, we reverse and remand for adjudication on the merits.
REVERSE AND REMAND.
