                ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS

Appeals of --                                )
                                             )
GSC Construction, Incorporated               )      ASBCA Nos. 59046, 59957
                                             )
Under Contract No. W9126G-11-D-0061          )

APPEARANCE FOR THE APPELLANT:                       James S. DelSordo, Esq.
                                                     Argus Legal, PLLC
                                                     Manassas, VA

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT:                     Michael B. Goodman, Esq.
                                                     Engineer Chief Trial Attorney
                                                    Jason R. Chester, Esq.
                                                    Ronald J. Goodeyon, Esq.
                                                    Stephanie J. Milburn, Esq.
                                                     Engineer Trial Attorneys
                                                     U.S. Army Engineer District, Tulsa

           MAJORITY OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE PAGE 1

       In this construction-contract case, GSC Construction, Inc. (GSC, appellant or the
contractor) seeks additional compensation from the government. It asserts that the
government ordered it to perform extra-contractual work for which it has not been paid,
and also seeks the release of liquidated damages and retainage withheld by the
government. Both entitlement and quantum are before the Board. 2 Familiarity is
presumed with the Board's denial of the government's motion for summary judgment in
GSC Construction, Inc., ASBCA No. 59046, 14-1BCA135,739. We grant the appeals
~p~.                                                                                    .
                                  FINDINGS OF FACT

The Contract, Relevant Request for Proposals (RFP) Amendments, and Task Order

       As described in 1 1.1 GENERAL DESCRIPTION OF WORK, the solicitation was
for "Base Multiple Award Task Order Contracts (MATOC) for Design and Construction
of Warehouses in the West of the Mississippi." The Department of the Army (Army or



1
  These appeals were heard by Judge Timothy P. Mcllmail.
2 See, e.g., tr. 1/61; see also the Board's Order of May 19, 2015 concurring with the
·       parties' joint status report of May 14, 2015 requesting that entitlement and
        quantum be heard in a single proceeding.
 government) intended to award more than one contract, with task orders for individual
 projects. (R4, tab 4(e) at 1740)

<          On September 15, 2011, the Army awarded Task Order 0001 (the task order) to
  GSC. This was done pursuant to Contract No. W9126G-11-D-0061 (the contract) (R4,
  tab 4(p) ), an indefinite delivery, indefinite quantity (ID/IQ) contract for work at
  Ft. Sill, Oklahoma. The task order amount was $11,9~1,460 (id. at 3377). The contract
- as awarded incorporated by reference "GSC' s proposal dated 29 August 2011,
  solicitation W9126G-1 l-R-0053, and all twelve (12) amendments." Contract line items
  (CLINS) that described particular work were each priced in a fixed, lump sum amount.
  (Id. at 3378) According to§ 01 10.00,, 2.0 SCOPE, the purpose of the contract was to
  "Construct a combined Central Issue Facility (CIF) for permanent party troops and
  soldiers in Advanced Individual Training (AIT)" (id., tab 4(e) at 1768).

       Contract § 00 72 00, , 1.3 PROPOSED BETTERMENTS (AUG [l 9]97) also made
 GSC's proposal part of the contract:

               (a) The minimum requirements of the contract are identified
               in the Request for Proposal. All betterments offered in the
               proposal become a requirement of the awarded contract.
               (b) "B.~tterme_nt" is defined as any component or system
               which exceeds the minimum requirements stated in the
               Request for Proposal. This includes all betterments identified
               in the proposal and/or all Government identified betterments.

· (R4, tab 4{a) at 32; see also§ 00 73 00 (ID/IQ) SPECIAL CONTRACT REQUIREMENTS,
  , 1.3, id. at 32)

        Paragraph 1.10 BASE ID/IQ CONTRACT specifically applied the "requirements of
 the Base ID/IQ Contract Division 00 PROCUREMENT AND CONTRACTING
 REQUIREMENTS sections and documents and Division OI GENERAL
 REQUIREMENTS sections ... except as otherwise specified in the task order documents"
 (R4, tab 4(p) at 3388).

        RFP Amendment 7, which was ~ffective March 28, 2011 (R4, tab H at 3150),
 required at, 2.b the following change to the Statement of Work (SOW): "In paragraph
 6.4.6.1, replace all 'Infrastructure Contractor' with 'D/B [Design/Build] Contractor"' (id.
 at3151).

        Contract§ 014504.00 10,, 3.8 COMPLETION INSPECTION provides in, 3.8.1 for
 preparation of a "punch list of items which do not conform to the approved drawings and
 specifications .... " After these deficiencies were corrected, the parties were to proceed to



                                               2
 a "Pre-Final Inspection ('ti 3.8.2) then a Final Acceptance Inspection ('ti 3.8.3)." (R4,
 tab 4(p) at 3556)

          Among standard contract clauses from the Federal Acquisition Regulation (FAR)
 is 52.211-10 COMMENCEMENT, PROSECUTION AND COMPLETION OF WORK (APR 1984).
 At 't[ (a), this clause requires the design and construction of the CIF to be completed no
 later than 519 days after receipt of notice to proceed. (R4, tab 4(p) at 3 3 83) That notice
 was issued November 17, 2011 (id., tab Q).

        Other :fAR clauses incorporated by reference were 52.236-21 SPECIFICATIONS
 AND DRAWINGS FOR CONSTRUCTION (FEB 1997) and 52.236-21 SPECIFICATIONS AND
 DRAWINGS FOR CONSTRUCTION ALT 1 (APR 1984) (R4, tab 4(a) at 9). See also
 § 00 72 00 SPECIAL CONTRACT REQUIREMENTS 't[ 1.2 DESIGN/BUILD CONTRACT - ORDER
 OF PRECEDENCE (AUG [19]97), which incorporates the "successful offeror's accepted
 proposal" as part of the contract (id. at 3.2).                             ·

        In accordance with 't[ (e) of FAR 52.232-5 PAYMENTS UNDER FIXED-PRICE
 CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS (SEP 2002), also incorporated by reference, the contracting
 officer (CO) was allowed to "retain a maximum of 10 percent of the amount of the
 payment [due the contractor] until satisfactory progress is achieved" (R4, tab 4 at 9).

          FAR clauses incorporated by full text included 52.211-12 LIQUIDATED DAMAGES-
 CONSTRUCTION (SEP 2000) (R4, tab 4(a) at 12). This provision.is reiterated at§ 00 73 10,
 'ti 1.3, which allowed the government to assess against GSC "$1280 for each calendar day
 of delay until the work is completed or accepted ... " (R4, tab 4(p) at 3384).

       The contract also included FAR 52.211-10 (R4, tab 4(a) at 12). Relevant here is
 added note (3), which states:

               (3) 0 & M Manuals. 0 & M Manuals shall be developed
               and submitted in accordance with Contract Section O1 78
               02.00.10 Closeout Submittals, at least 60 calendar days prior
               to the scheduled contract completion date. Upon approval of
               fully developed O & M Manuals, the Contractor shall have
               earned the withholding amount shown for "Operation and
               Maintenance Manuals" in Contract Section 01 78 02.00
               Closeout Submittals.

 (Id., tab 4(p) at 3383-84)

         In§ 00 73 10, TASK ORDER SUPPLEMENTAL CONTRACT REQUIREMENTS, 't[ 1.4
  contains Defense Federal Acquisition Regulation (DFARS) clause, 252.236-7001
. CONTRACT DRAWINGS, MAPS, AND SPECIFICATIONS (AUG 2000). Of particular interest


                                               3
are 1 1.4(c )( 1), which states that "Large-scale drawings shall govern small-scale
drawings" and 11.4(d), which provides:

               Omissions from the drawings or specifications or the
               misdescription of details of work which are manifestly
               necessary to carry out the intent o.f the drawings and
               specifications, or that are customarily performed, shall not
               relieve the Contractor from performing such omitted or
               misdescribed details of the work. The Contractor shall
               perform such details as if fully and correctly set forth and
             \__,described in the drawings and specifications.

(R4, tab 4(p) at 3384-85)

        SOW 16.3.1.4 states that the infrastructure drawings were being provided to the
D/B contractor as a reference "for information only" (R4, tab 4( e) at 1817). SOW 1 6.3 .1.5
reiterates that "infrastructure drawings are provided as 'for information only' reference"
(id., tab 4(p) at 34 72).

       sow 16.3 .2 SITE STRUCTURES AND AMENITIES calls for the contractor to:
"Provide one dumpster pad and enclosure per facility" (R4, tab 4(e) at 1818).

     In relevant part, RFP Amendment 4, § 0110 00,_SOW 16.4.6 BASE UTILITY
INFORMATION apprises the contractor of the following:

              6.4.6.1 Utilities: The Installation's DPW supervises
              infrastructure and utilities. Most utilities are privatized ....
              Existing utility services such as potable water [and] sanitary
              sewer... are not located near the site. Closest locations for
              tie-ins are shown on drawings in Appendix J. Coordinate and
              plan utilities with the A/E Integrator through the Contracting
              Officer. The site plan contained in Appendix J provides
              utility main routing and. general orientation for points of ·
              connection for each facility. Prior to final design, verify the
              locations and sizes of utility services with the A/E Integrator.

(R4, tab 4(e) at 1819)

        The SOW furnished in RFP Amendment 4 provides specifications for water mains
in 1 6.4.6.1( C):

              Water mains are shown on the drawings at Appendix J. .. . The
              Infrastructure Contractor will provide the potable water


                                             4
             service between the main line to the 5-foot line of the
             building. Provide potable water service from the 5-foot line
             to the facility and within the building.... The Government will
             provide primary or main water pipe distribution, including .
             the water meter and vault. Design and construct water
             service lines from the 5-foot line to the building to meet the
             utility provider's installation details and specification. The
             Government will provide the Post Indicator Valve (PIV) and
             any bollards required for protection and route the fire water
             line (separate from the domestic supply) to 5 feet from the
             building ....

(R4, tab 4(e) at 1819; see also id., tab4(p) at 3474) (emphasis added)

       SOW i16.4.6.l(d) provides:

             The Infrastructure Contractor will design and construct the
             sanitary sewer service line between the sanitary sewer main to
             5 feet from the building including cleanout or manhole.
             Sanitary sewer mains are shown on the drawings in
             Appendix J. Coordinate points of connection through the CO
             with the service provider [American Water Enterprises]
             (AWE).

(R4, tab 4(p)_at 3474)

       RFP Amendment 4 introduced Appendix EE, "Infrastructure Drawings," which
includes a drawing entitled "OVERALL PROJECT CONSTRUCTION ACCESS" (R4,
tab 4(p) at 4090, 4093). "GENERAL PROJECT SCOPE NOTES," note 4 "WATER
SUPPLY AND DISTRIBUTION" states in relevant part:

             MULTIPLE EXISTING WATER LINES WILL NEED TO
             BE REROUTED AS PART OF THIS PROJECT. THERE IS
             AN EXISTING 12" TRANSITE AND 24" CAST IRON
             WATER LINE RUNNING THRU THE FOOTPRINT OF
             THE NEW FACILITY. THE 12"LINE WILL BE
             REMOVED AND REROUTED AROUND THE SOUTH
             SIDE OF THE FACILITY. AN 8" LOOP WILL BE
             CONNECTED TO THIS LINE TO SERVE THE
             FACILITY WATER DEMANDS. THE EXISTING
             24" CAST IRON WATER LINE.IS ABANDONED .... THE.
             PORTION OF THIS LINE UNDER THE FOOTPRINT OF
             THE NEW FACILITY WILL BE REMOVED.'. AN


                                            5
              EXISTING 24" WATER LINE UNDER THE NEW POV
              PARKING LOTS WILL NEED TO [BE] REMOVED.

(Id. at 4093) (capitals in original, bold added as emphasis)

       Appendix EE includes a drawing entitled "UTILITY PLAN." Note 2 of that
drawing states that the "CONTRACTOR WILL PROVIDE ANY SANITARY SEWER
ELEMENT REQUIRED OUTSIDE 5' OF THE BUILDING INCLUDING A
CLEANOUT OR MANHOLE AND CAP FOR FUTURE CONNECTION." (R4,
tab 4(p) at 4102)

       The drawings in Appendix EE provided direction supplementing the water main
specifications:

              4. WATER.SUPPLY AND DISTRIBUTION. AS PART OF
              THE PROJECT, THE EXISTING FIRE HYDRANTS IN
              THE AREA ARE TO BE TESTED AND THE DATA
              PROVIDED TO [AWE] TO CHECK AGAINST THEIR
              MODEL. AFTER DISCUSSION WITH A WE IT HAS.
              BEEN DETERMINED THERE ARE NO CONNECTION
              POINTS OR FIRE HYDRANTS ON THE 12" WATER
              LINE AVAILABLE FOR FLOW TESTING .... THERE IS
              AN EXISTING 12" TRANSITE AND 24" CAST IRON
              WATER LINE RUNNING THRU THE FOOTPRINT OF
              THE NEW FACILITY. THE 12" LINE WILL BE
              REMOVED AND REROUTED AROUND THE SOUTH
              SIDE OF THE FACILITY. AN 8" LOOP WILL BE
              CONNECTED TO THIS LINE TO SERVE THE FACILITY
              WATER DEMANDS. THE EXISTING 24" CAST IRON
              WATERLINE IS ABANDONED.

(R4, tab 4(e) at 2438)

       Keyed notes 1 and 4 to Drawing Cl20 [Dwg. Cl20] in Appendix EE provide:

              KEYED NOTE 1: "CONTRACTOR WILL PROVIDE
              DOMESTIC WATER LINE AND WATER METER SET IN
              A VAULT OUTSIDE THE FACILITY. CONTRACTOR
              WILL TAKE DOMESTIC WATERLINE AND ROUTE
              WITHIN THE BUILDING THROUGH A BACKFLOW
              PREVENTOR [SIC] (GENERALLY LOCATED IN
              MECHANICAL ROOM)." .



                                             6
              KEYED NOTE 4: "CONTRACTOR WILL PROVIDE THE
              PIV AND ROUTE FIRE WATERLINE (SEPARATE FROM
              THE DOMESTIC SUPPLY). CONTRACTOR WILL TAKE
              FIRE WATER LINE AND ROUTE WITHIN THE
              BUILDING AND REQUIRED ELEMENTS TO PROVIDE
              THE FIRE PROTECTION SYSTEM."

(R4, tab 4(e) at 2447)

       sow,i 6.4.6.1, ,i (d) states:
              (d) Sanitary Sewer- With regard to the sanitary sewer,
              Amendment 4 provides: Sanitary Sewer: The Infrastructure
                                                 J

              Contractor will design and construct the sanitary sewer
              service line between the sanitary sewer main to 5 feet from
              the building, including cleanout or manhole. Sanitary sewer
              mains are shown on the drawings' in Appendix [EE].
              Coordinate points of connection through CO with the service
              provider (A WE).

(R4, tab' 4( e) at 1819) ( emphasis added)

   _ The Overall Project Construction Access drawing at note 5, "SANITARY
SEWER," states:

              THE NEW MAINS WILL BE 8" WITH THE NEW
              SERVICE LINES 6". THE NEW MAINS AND SERVICE
              LINES WILL HAVE PRE-CAST MANHOLES
              INSTALLED TO ALLOW FOR THE CONNECTION OF
              THE NEW FACILITY.

(R4, tab 4(p) at 4093)

      The Utility Plan drawing, at note 4, states that the "CONTRACTOR WILL
PROVIDE THE PIV AND ROUTE FIRE WATERLINE (SEPARATE FROM THE
DOMESTIC SUPPLY). CONTRACTOR WILL TAKE FIRE WATER LINE AND
ROUTE WITHIN THE BUILDING." It required GSC to provide for the fire protection
system. (R4, tab 4(p) at 4102)

GSC's April 7, 2011 Proposal

      Mr. Brannon Cundey of GSC helped estimate the job for appellant and served as a
scheduler and project manager for the contract (tr. 2/13-14). He testified that GSC


                                             7
interpreted contract provisions for the sanitary sewer service line (id. at 2/24; R4, tab 4( e)
at 1819) as changed by Amendment 7 (R4, tab 4h), as well as the information on Dwg.
CI20, keyed note 2 (R4, tab 4(c) at 2447). GSC understood this to require the contractor
to build sewer lines out to the manholes identified on Dwg. CI20, where the sewer main
would be provided by the government (tr. 2/79-80).

       GSC 's proposal of April 7, 2011 contained the following relevant information
pertaining to the sanitary sewer:

              A new 6 inch sanitary sewer will exit the proposed building
              along the north side.and extend approximately 60 ft to the·
              north into a new manhole and then tum east and travel to the
              next manhole approximately I40lf [lineal feet] at
              approximately 2.0% slope. Another 6 inch sanitary line,
              approximately 80 lfwill exit the building along the east side
              of the building and travel to the same manhole that the
              northern lines ties into. At this manhole the sanitary line size
              will be increased to an 8 inch line and the [sic] travel to the
              existing sanitary manhole, approximately 240lf at 1.0%, the
              existing manhole is located [at] the northeast of the site that
              serves the existing building ....

(R4, tab 4G) at 3321)

        Appellant's proposal also contained the following regarding the fire protection
loop:

              A new 12 inch PVC water line waterline [sic] will be,installed
              and routed approximately 680lf as shown on the utility
              plans.... An 8 inch PVC fire loop will then circumvent the
              building approximately 1500 lfto complete the required fire
              protection loop.... There are three new fire hydrants.... These ·
              will have approximately I20lf of 6 inch PVC and ductile iron
              pipe to complete the tie in.

(R4, tab 4G) at 3321)

       Although the RFP and contract called for an 8-inch pipe to be used for the fire
protection loop (see R4, tab 4(p) at 4090, 4093) and GSC proposed to install the fire loop
using this size (id., tab 4G) at 3321), GSC later "upsized" it to a IO-inch pipe (tr. 1/49-51).
Appellant offered no proof that it was required by the government to change this 8-inch
pipe to a IO-inch one. Counsel for GSC said that the change in pipe size was not part of



                                               8
    the claim (tr. 2/16; see also R.4, tab 3 at 0002 discussing the 8-inch line as part of the
    claim). 3

    The Truck Turnaround and Beneficial Occupancy of the CIF

           Section 2.0 SCOPE stated that "Design requirements and assumptions include but
    are not limited to the following .... " At 1 (g), this provision called for the contractor to
    "[a]ssume that supply trucks are tractor-trailers hauling 53 feet long shipping containers."
    (R4, tab 4(p) at 3422)

            At the hearing, GSC furnished a photograph showing a tractor-trailer parked at the
    loading dock. GSC's "on-site superintendent project manager of the construction
    activities" testified that he took the photograph sometime between the first and third
    weeks of October, 2013. (App. ex. 18; tr. 2/76, 91-94)

           GSC asserts that the government required it to perform additional work on a
   number of items, including increasing the size of the loading dock area (see app. exs. 19,
   29-31; tr. 3/11-14 ). The contractor says that it had to relocate the dumpster pad_ after
   finalizing the.construction design and drawings because the government insisted that the
_, contract required a turnaround area in the loading dock large enough to accommodate a
   53-foot long truck (app. br.at6121 citing R4, tabs 27- 28).

           According to a photograph taken by the contractor that is date-stamped
    "10/2/2013" (app. ex. 27), the government had installed office furniture including cubicle
    setups by that date. This was in the administrative area of the CIF. (Tr. 2/43-45)

           The CO's representative (CbR) notified GSC on November 21, 2013 that the
    previously-installed truck turnaround was found to be deficient during the delivery of
    government-furnished storage rack systems to the warehouse. According to the
    government, "A tractor-trailer hauling a 53 ft long shipping container is unable to enter
    the space and maneuver to the loading dock within the confines of the aprons and
    driveways provided." Appellant was told that a design defect resulting from a previously
    approved deviation for a dumpster pad "did not become obvious until it was seen that the
    space provided did not meet the required performance criteria." The COR called for
    immediate corrective action and said that payment would not be approved until "this
    deficient work" was corrected. (R4, tab 38)

,          GSC took exception to the government's rejection of the turnaround. It reminded
    the government that the design, which included the dumpster pad location, was


    3
        As counsel for appellant confirmed for the Board, ASBCA No. 59046 concerned "the
             sanitary sewer line, the 12-inch water line, the 24-inch water line, [and] the
             10-inch fire loop ... " (tr. 2/5, 9-10).

                                                   9
previously approved. (R4, tab 40) The COR informed the contractor that having the
tractor-trailer back up from Randolph Road to the loading dock "does not meet the design
requirement" (id., tab 42). On January 16, 2014, the CO issued a "Show Cause Notice"
to GSC over this issue, and warned of possible termination of the contract for default if
not corrected (id., tab 50).

        The government advised on January 30, 2014 that GSC's design accommodated a
truck turning radius of only 42.5 feet, and not 53 feet as required (R4, tab 55). The
contractor replied on February 5, 2014, and disagreed with the CO's position. It
reminded the government that work to date had been done with the government's
approval, and denied that the contract required a design that allowed a truck to make a
single point tum to access the loading dock (id., tab 58). The government's letter of
February 19, 2014 said that it had never required a single-point tum, and restated that
prior acceptance of work was not conclusive where deficiencies were later discovered
(id., tab 62).

       Mr. McKnight testified that the government had installed large racks in the
warehouse and stocked that area before it raised alleged deficiencies in the truck
turnaround. He said he looked at the daily reports for either December 27 or 28, 2013,
and confirmed that the building was then being used. (Tr. 1/67-69) ·

Final Completion and Punch List Items

       A November 6, 2013 memorandum from the Boatwright Company, PA
(Boatwright), which served as GSC's "commissioning agent" (tr. 2/66-67, 69-70),
assessed "system components [that] should be completed as soon as possible." Items to
be remedied included ductwork in the safe areas, boiler # 1 (although boilers #2 and #3
were operational and might suffice), the mini-split system that cooled the server room,
and balancing of the secondary heating hot water pumps ( although the differential
pressure was being controlled by other means). Boatwright observed that only a partial
review could be done for the ''local HVAC DDC system." Despite these shortcomings, it
was Boatwright's "professional opinion that this facility can be used for its intended
purpose." (App. ex. 19)

        The government repeatedly reminded the cmitractor that certain contract
requirements, including punch list items, remained incomplete, but the contractor took
exception to this (see, e.g., R4, tabs 59-61 ). GSC told the government that Boatwright
previously had opined that none of the missing items should hold up building acceptance
(id., tab 60).




                                           10
The Claims and the Contracting Officer's Decisions

        On March 15, 2012, GSC submitted,Request for Information 0014 (RFI-0014),
asking for guidance: "Amendment 4· introduced new requirements to the RFP regarding
the site utilities in specification section 01 10 00 para 6.4.6. Should GSC disregard the
RFP specifications regarding the utilities and proceed with the verbage [sic] of GSC' s ·
narrative regarding Site Utilities?" (R4, tab 5)

       On March 26, 2012, the Administrative Contracting Officer (ACO) directed GSC
"to design and install all items referenced in the RFP dealing with the 'infrastructure
contractor.'" He continued that, in accordance with GSC's "proposal and the awarded
contract, with all amendments, I consider the design and construction of all items
associated with the infrastructure contractor as belonging [t]o the D/B Contractor." .(R4,
tab 6)

       GSC disagreed with this in its March 27, 2012 request for a CO's decision:

              The correspondence received [from the ACO] on 3-26-12
              states GSC is to proceed with designing and installing all of
              the utilities for the project. The contract documents issued by
              the government during the RFP process regarding
              responsibility for the infrastructure of this project state in fact
              almost the exact opposite. Amendment 4 para 5.2.5
              "Utilities" references para. 6.4.6 "Base Utility Information"
              and this describes all of the contractor's responsibility clearly.

(R4, tab 7 at 1)

       GSC' s request continued:

              GSC feels that the specifications clearly state the utility
              requirements for the infrastructure of the project and_GSC is
              asking for a Contracting Officer['s] Final Decision [COFD]
              on GSC's positions as stated above. GSC has found no
              information in any other amendment altering the "Base
              Utility Requirements." GSC believes that it does not have
              any responsibility beyond the requirements of specification
              section 01 10 00 para. 6.4.6.1. GSC estimates the additional
              work as directed by your office for the water mains, sanitary
              sewer, electrical distribution primary, and additional




                                              11
              communications is $502,907.50 and will also require a 90 day
              contract extension.

(R4, tab 7 at 2)

       Although the parties met on May 17, 2012, the CO did not respond to GSC's
request. On June 13, 2012, the contractor reiterated its concerns and again requested a
COFD regarding these issues. (R4, tab 8)                                      ,

       The CO on August 22, 2012 issued a "Letter of Direction," also referenced as "SL
#0007," in response to GSC's request of March 27, 2012. The CO said that a COFD was ·
"only rendered for Certified Claims," 4 but agreed to issue a "Contracting Officer's
Decision pursuant to your request." Although the CO directed GSC to perform in a
certain manner, the document was not styled as a COFD nor did it recite the contractor's
appeal rights. (R4, tab 9) 5

       The CO interpreted SOW ,r 6.4.6.l(c) to mean that "the Government [would]
provide primary or main water pipe distribution, including water meter and vault." It
would also "provide the Post Indicator Valve (PIV) and any bollards required for
protection and route the fire water line (separate from the domestic supply) to 5 feet from
the building." As the "Infrastructure/D/B Contractor," GSC was required to coordinate
points of contact with "service provider" (AWE). Appellant also had to provide potable
water service "between the main line to the 5-foot line ofthe building" as well as "from
the 5-foot line to the facility and within the building, through a backflow preventer."
GSC was told that it was responsible for the design and construction of all building and
site work depicted in Appendices EE and FF. (R4, tab 9 at 7-8)

       The CO stated that "The Government will provide primary or main water pipe
distribution, including the~meter and vault," but noted that there was "a difference
between the drawings and specifications in reference to the meter and vault (Refer to
Keyed Note 1 in [Dwg.] Cl20)." The CO resolved this discrepancy by telling GSC that
"In accordance with the contract, specifically FAR Clause 52.326.21, the specifications
shall govern." Therefore, "GSC is to design and construct water service lines from the



4 The Contract Disputes Act of 1978 at 41 U.S.C. _§ 7103(a)(3) requires a contracting
       officer to issue a written decision on each claim by a contractor against the Federal
       Government. In accordance with 41 U.S.C. § 7103(b)(l), the contractor must
       properly certify claims of more than $100,000.
5
  Although the CO did not separately number the paragraphs in this correspondence,
       GSC's March 14, 2013 "Request for Contracting Officer Final Decision" (R4,
       tab 2) refers to specific numbered paragraphs. We correlate the references in the
       two documents by topic.

                                             12
5-foot line to the building to meet [AWE's] installation details and specifications." (R4,
tab 9 at 7)

        The CO noted that there were two different types of connections between the CIF
and the potable water supply: one was for the "domestic water supply" and the other was
a "fire water line." The government again distinguished Dwg. C120 from the
specifications, and cited FAR 52.236.21 SPECIFICATIONS AND DRAWINGS FOR
CONSTRUCTION for the proposition that "the specifications shall govern.... GSC will take
fire water line and route within the building and required elements to provide the fire
protection system." (R4, tab 9 at 7)                   ,

       As with the government's interpretation of SOW~ 6.4.6.l(c), the CO's letter of
August 22, 2012 relied upon FAR 52.236.21 in interpreting~ 6.4.6.l(d) SANITARY
SEWER to require GSC to "design and construct the sanitary sewer service line between
the sanitary.sewer main to 5 feet from the building, including clean6ut or manhole" (R4,
tab 9 at 7-8).

        Contract Modification No. A00002 was effective on February 19, 2013. It
increased the contract amount by $47,951, and called for appellant to "provide and install
approximately 150 LF of 8 [inch] Fire Protection water line, extending from the water
line to a point 5 ft from the building." The contract completion date remained
unchanged. (R4, tab 4(s))

        GSC's certified claim dated March 14, 2013 sought $826,355 for work related to
"Natural Gas, Water Mains, Sanitary Sewer, Electrical, and Communications" as required
by the government's letter of August 22, 2012. (R4, tab"2 at 1, 6) GSC agreed that
Amendment No. 7 added certain responsibilities for the "'Infrastructure Contractor' to
[the] 'Design Build Contractor'" in SOW§ 6.4.6.1 and that it was required under
~ 6.4.6.1 (c) to "provide the portable [sic] water service between the main line to the
5-foot line of the building, but claimed that the government "owed [it] for the design of
the line from the water main installed by the base to the 5' line of the building." The
contractor noted that the government in the August 22, 2012 letter of direction had said
that "the government will provide primary or main water pipe distribution,
including the meter and vault." Appellant continued that it "has not receive[d] a
change order for moving the 24" primary or main water line and is requesting monies for
this activity in this decision." Additionally, GSC sought a COFD "for the design and
construction costs for installing the sanitary sewer main from the housing development to
the project." (R4, tab 2 at 4-5) (emphasis in original)

       GSC amended its claim on June 18, 2013, and provided information as requested
by the CO. The contractor sought an extension of 112 days, and asked for "extended
overhead in the amount of $162,309.28" that it associated with government-caused delay.
(R4, tab 3 at 1-2)


                                            13
         As part of its claim for allegedly additional water utilities work, GSC passed
.through the claims of its subcontractor Evans & Associates, which GSC hired to do the
 tasks described in app. ex. I (tr. 1/54). In relevant part, the exhibit seeks compensation in
 the amount of $191, 282 for "the installation of the site fire water line that includes
 piping and valves to fire hydrants and 5' out of the building, any remaining requirements
 for the site domestic water lines, installation [of] C905 24" pipe and removal of the 24"
 water main that is being relocated" (app. ex. I). GSC supported amounts sought for the
 water utilities work with its change order to Evans for this effort (app. ex. 4); a
 spreadsheet showing various co·sts (app. ex. 5); and an email exchange (app. ex. 6).
 (Tr. 1/43-44, 55-58, 2/30-34)

        The COFD of August 22, 2013 granted appellant's claim in part. The CO found
merit in the amount of$442,l 19.63 for "design an_d installation costs for the electrical
distribution line and the site communication line." Relevant to these appeals, the CO
denied appellant's claim for $546,544.65 for "[t]he remaining site utilities, (12" water
line, relocate 24'' water line, 10" fire loop, sanitary sewer line, and site lighting)." (R4,
tab I at I, 13) Appellant received the COFD on August 30, 2013, and timely appealed.

        On February II, 2015, GSC filed another claim for $468,808.43 for additional
work and delay attributed to both the government and bad weather. It broke down the
amount as follows: truck turnaround area ($92,641.47); withheld payments
($373,166.96) (this includes liquidated damages and "improperly withheld funds"); and
claim preparation costs ($3,000). GSC argued that the government's failure to approve
its requests for time extensions constructively accelerated the contract. (R4, tab 28)

       The COFD of April 8, 2015 deemed GSC's February 11, 2015 claim without merit
and denied it. The government said that the deficiency in the truck turnaround area was
discovered during a government Quality Assurance inspection ofNovember 18, 2013,
"when a tractor trailer hauling a 53-foot container was unable to enter the space and
maneuver to the loading dock within the confines of the aprons and driveways provided."
The CO said that GSC' s design did not meet RFP requiremerits, denied that a "single
point tum" was required, and contended that the .government's prior approval of design
changes to relocate a dumpster did not excuse errors later discovered. (R4, tab 27 at I, 7)

       The COFD acknowledged that "The Government is currently withholding or
retaining $373,166.96 on the contract." The CO said that the contract was to have been
completed by June 27, 2013, but that "the contractor did not receive actual contract
completion and BOD until February 28, 2014, which is 246 days late." The CO denied
GSC's request for an extension and said_ the government was not responsible for these
delays. He denied that BOD occurred on October 9, 2013 "when Army personnel started
storing equipment and furniture in the building," because "the contract requirements were
not substantially completed." The CO acknowledged that the government continued to


                                              14
hold $314,880 as liquidated damages, leaving "$58,286.96 remaining on the contract."
He said the latter amount would be retained until successful completion of requirements
such as furnishing As-Built drawings and O&M manuals. (R4, tab 27 at 7-8)

                                        DECISION

ASBCA No. 59046

        According to appellant, it is entitled to an equitable adjustment for having to do
additional work beyond contract requirements (app. br. at 1). GSC says that this involved
"additional work involved [with] the installation of three types of pipes beyond the
location of the manholes on [Dwg.] C120" (id. at 3 ~ 8). That work included "a 10" fire
protection loop"; a "12" sanitary sewer line ... from the keyed note 2 manhole extending
to the right to 'Currie Road"'; and "the 24" water line seen in section D6 of [Dwg.] C120
(upper left comer of the drawing)" (id. at 3-4 ~ 8). GSC seeks a total of $191,282.00 for
this "Water Utilities Work." Appellant claims $92,641.47 for additional work at the
"Tum around area," which required the relocation of a dumpster pad it had already
installed with the government's approval. (Id. at 9 ~ 32) GSC asserts that "While
nothing in the contract required such an accommodation relating to 53' long trucks, the
loading area as constructed actually accommodates trucks of that length" (id. at 7 ~ 24).

        As verified at hearing, of the $191,282.00 sought for "water utilities work," the
24" water line is "about a $97,000 claim" whereas the sanitary sewer claim is "about
$80,000" not including unspecified "markups" (tr. 3/40-41). Lacking more precise
information, we calculate that GSC seeks $14,282 for the fire protection loop portion of
the claim.

        A common thread running through these disputed items is the parties' respective
interpretations of amendments 4 and 7 to the RFP. Amendment 4 in relevant part
referenced sow~ 6.4.6 BASE UTILITY INFORMATION, particularly~ 6.4.6.1 UTILITIES
regarding domestic water service, and referenced, among other things, information in
Appendix J. Amendment 7 changed~ 6.4.6.1 to replace all references to the
"Infrastructure Contractor" with "D/B" (design/build") contractor. (See, e.g., gov't br.
at 2-5, 17-18) This led to the controversy over who was responsible for doing what, and
resulted in the government's partially settling the claim; we analyze the remaining issues.

       GSC's Legal Arguments for Entitlement and Quan.tum

         According to GSC, "the Government's repeated modifications of the. RFP led to
an internally inconsistent and contradictory specification" (app. br. at 11). It maintains
that it is entitl~d to an equitable adjustment under the contract's Changes clause,
FAR 52.243-1 because the government constructively changed the contract.



                                             15
 (Id. at 11-13) A "constructive change" occurs "'when a contractor performs work
 beyond the contract requirements, without a formal change order under the [contract's] .
 Changes clause; due either to an informal order from, or through the fault of, the
 government."' Lebolo-Watts Constructors, ASBCA Nos. 59738, 59909, 2018
 WL 6577624 (November 16, 2018, slip op. at 28) citing MA. Mortenson Co., ASBCA
 No. 53229, 05-1 BCA ,r 32,837 at 162,469-70 and Ets-Hokin Corp. v. United States, 420
 F. 2d 7.16, 720 (Ct. Cl. 1970). "The theory of constructive change is to compensate a
 contractor for work that might properly have been directed through the contract's changes
 clause, but which was not. See Zafer Taahhut lnsaat ve Ticaret A.S. v. United States, 833
 F. 3d 1356, 1361 (Fed. Cir. 2016)." Charles F. Day, ASBCA No. 60211, 19-1 BCA
 ,r 37,215 at 181,175. To recover, the contractor must prove not only that it was made by
 the government to perform in excess of the contract but also that it suffered "increased
 costs compared to what was otherwise required by the contract.. .. " Charles F. Day, 19-1
 BCA ,r 37,215 at 181,175 (citing Norcoast Constructors, Inc., ASBCA No. 12751, 72-2
 BCA ,r 9699 at 45,285). _In the instant appeal, the contract specifically incorporated
 GSC's proposal by reference, and obligated the contractor to provide betterments it
 offered in response to the RFP.

        As these appeals involve both entitlement and quantum, GSC asserts that "[i]t is
/well-settled that the measure for an equitable price adjustment is the difference between
 the reasonable cost of performing the contract as awarded absent the change and the
 reasonable cost of performing.with the change. (See Keco Indus., Inc. v. United States,
 364 F. 2d 838, 850 (Ct. Cl. 1966) cert. denied 386 U.S. 958 (1967); Nager Elec. Co. v.
 United States, 442 F.2d 936, 946 (Ct. Cl. 1971))." (App. hr. at.13)

        Discussion

        Even where the contractor demonstrates that the government constructively changed
 the contract and that it is entitled to additional costs, it is incumbent upon it as proponent to
 prove the amount it is owed. The "burden of proof is upon the party asserting a right."
 Parsons Evergreene, ASBCA No. 58634, 19-1 BCA ,r 37,251 at 181,312 citing Black
 Tiger Company, ASBCA No. 59819, 18-1 BCA 'if 37,046 at 180,336.

         GSC asserts that "because the quantum of Appellant's damages·is supported by
 contemporaneous cost data in the record and the Government has presented no basis to
 dispute Appellant's claimed costs, the Board should enter judgment on quantum on
 GSC's favor" (app. hr. at 1). It describes the loss it suffered in this appeal as follows, and
 relies upon the evidence as cited:




                                               16
       Cost Category                       Amount
       Water Utilities Work                $191,282.00 App. Exs. 1, 4-6

(Id. at 9, repeated at 13)

       1. Potable (Domestic) Water Line
                             -
        Appellant says the government owes it for the relocation of a main waterline that
ran under a parking lot (app. br. at 3-4, 8; tr. 2/8). The issue is whether the contract
required appellant to relocate that main (see tr. 2/8). Appellant relies upon specification
§ 6.4.6.1.(c) (see tr. 3/41), which says: "[P]rovide the potable water service between the
main line to the 5-foot line of the building. Provide potable water. service from the 5-foot
line to the facility.... The Government will provide primary or main water pipe
distribution .... " (R4, tab 4(e) at 1819) That specification does not say that appellant
would relocate the water main; ind~ed, to the extent it addresses a water main at all, it
points to the governrhent as the responsible party: ''The Government will provide
primary or main water pipe distribution" (id.). The government does not address that
specification, but points (gov't resp. at 2; gov't br. at-3) to a drawing note tha{references
a waterline, which the note states "WILL NEED TO BE REROUTED" (R4, tab 4(p)
at 4093 n.4 ). The note does not say that the contractor would be responsible for that
work.

       We find that the government constructively change4 the contract, thereby entitling
appellant to recover $97,000 for relocation of the water main.

       2. Fire Protection Loop

         GSC asserts the government owes it for the installation of a "fire protection loop,"
which is a waterline dedicated to the warehouse's fire protection system (app. br. at 3-4
, 8; tr. 2/8-10). The issue is whether the contract required appellant to install that loop.
Again, GSC relies upon specification§ 6.4.6.1.(c) (see also tr. 3/42), which provides that
"[t]he Government will ... route the fire water line (separate from the domestic supply) to
5 feet from the building." (R4, tab 4(e) at 1819) And again, the government does not
address that specification, but points (gov't resp. at 2; gov't br. at 4, , c) to a drawing
note that states that "CONTRACTOR... WILL ROUTE FIRE WATERLINE" and
"CONTRACTOR WILL TAKE FIRE WATER LINE AND ROUTE WITHIN THE
BUILDING" (R4, tab 4(p) at 4102 n.4).

        The contract instructs the contractor to "route the fire water line" as indicated
(underlining
           r
              added). This directs GSC on the placement of this pipe as part of the
installation. Reading this provision to require the government to install the fire protection
loop but then have GSC route it "to 5 feet from the building" is not reasonable, and
would create a patent ambiguity that required appellant to inquire before submitting its


                                             17
·proposal, and there is no proof that it did so. See, e.g., KiewitPhelps, ASBCA No. 61197,
 2019 WL 2052448, slip. op. at 25. GSC's proposal, which was incorporated by reference·
 into the contract, also provides in relevant part: "An 8 inch PVC fire loop will then
 circumvent the building approximately 1500 If to complete the required fire protection
 loop" (R4, tab J at 3321). Because both the contract and its proposal obligate GSC to
 furnish the fire protection loop, we deny this portion of the claim. Further, as there was
 no proof th~t the government ordered GSC to "upsize" the pipe, GSC cannot recover for
 that change.

       3. Sanitary Sewer Main

        According to GSC, the government improperly required appellant to install a
"sanitary sewer main" (tr. 2/5-6). GSC says that specification 16.4.6.1.(d) sets forth its
contractual obligations regarding sewer installation. It maintains that it was only required
to "design and construct the sanitary sewer service line between the sanitary sewer main
to 5 feet from the building, including cleanout or manhole." GSC says that "The record
clearly shows that all of the utility work claimed by GSC is outside of the line of the
manholes [that were] 30-40 feet from the CIF." (App. br. at 11) (emphasis in original)

        The government disagrees, and regards construction of the sanitary sewer main as
part of GSC's obligation as both "infrastructure" and "Design/build" contractor (gov't br.
at 17-18). It relies upon contract Dwg. C120, which depicts the sewer main (labeled "6"
SS"), but that drawing does not address who was to install it (gov't resp. br. at 10-11; R4,
tab 4( e) at 244 7).

        The Board addressed the government's argument that GSC is responsible for
providing a sanitary sewer main in GSC Construction, Inc., ASBCA No. 59046, 14-1
BCA 135,739 at 174,919, in which we denied the government's motion for summary
judgment. There, we interpreted contract specification 1 6.4.6.1.( d) to require appellant
only to "design and construct the sanitary sewer service line between the sanitary sewer
main to 5 feet from the building" (R4, tab 4(p) at 3474) (emphasis added). We did not
agree that this provision oblige~ GSC to install a sewer main. In this decision on the
merits, we agree with that analysis and hold that appellant is entitled to recover $80,000
for the installation of the sewer main.

ASBCA No. 59957

    GSC's claim of February 11, 2015 sought to recover for changes to the completed truck
turnaround, the return of liquidated damages and retainage withheld by the government,
and claim preparation costs. The contractor maintains that the government "wrongfully
with[held] over $350,000 in payments" as liquidated damages and retainage, even though
the government-ordered "additional work [that] increased GSC's time and cost of
performance by 99 ~ays and $92,641.47." The contractor further argues that "Beneficial


                                             18
  occupancy of the CIF occurred on October 9, 2013 when [government] personnel started
. storing equipment and furniture in the building." (App. hr. at 8 'if'if 29-30) GSC seeks
  $373,166.96 for "Withheld payments [liquidated damages]" and retainage and asks for
  $3,000.00 for "claim preparation costs." Appellant says that "These costs were the subject
  of claims submitted to the contracting officer by letters, dated June 11, 2013." (Id. at 9
  citing R4, tabs 2, 28)

      1. Truck Turnaround

     The government ordered appellant to redesign and reconstruct the truck turnaround
area because,'the government says, "In November 2013, a tractor-trailer hauling a 53 foot
shipping container was unable to maneuver the provided space and back up to the loading
dock in order to unload the equipment for the piled rack storage system" (gov't br. at 11
'if 33). It is not necessary to ascertain what the contract required regarding the turnaround,
because the government points to no evidence that is first hand or of sufficient weight to
show that a tractor-trailer hauling a 53-foot shipping container had trouble using the
loading dock. Rather, the government cites the testimony of its contract manager (gov't
br. at 11 'if 33; tr. 2/245, 255, 3/46-47), but he said that he heard it from another
government employee (tr. 2/255, 269-71, see also tr. 3/46). Because. the government fails
to credibly demonstrate that the truck turnaround area did not meet specifications, GSC is
entitled to the cost of the redesign and reconstruction of that area. See Ensign-Bicliford
Aerospace & Defense Co., ASBCA No. 57929, 16-1 BCA 'if 36,533 at 177,969 (the
contractor is entitled to an equitable adjustment if the government fails to meet its burden
of proving that the rejected work did not comply with the contract).

    GSC claims $92,641.47 for this item, and cites certain documentary evidence that the
government does not address (app. hr. at 13 citing app. ex. 3). That evidence is sufficient
to establish that appellant spent $92,641.47 on the redesign and reconstruction of the
turnaround area. We find appellant is entitled to this amount, plus applicable interest, for
this extra work.

      2. Liquidated Damages

   Appellant challenges the government's withholding of $314,880 6 in liquidated
damages (app. hr. at 9, 13). The contract completion date was June 27, 2013, and the
contract says that liquidated damages would be $1,280 for each day oflate completion. In
challenging the government's assessment of liquidated damages (app. reply br. at 13-15;
app. sur-reply hr. at 11-16), appellant asserts that the government delayed completion by
112 (or 114) days related to water utility work and 99 days related to the truck turnaround


6
    Although appellant's brief states that it seeks $373,166.96 in "Withheld Payments
         [liquidated damages]" (app. br. at 9, 13), this amount includes $55,600 in separate
         retainage for allegedly incomplete or defective work.

                                              19
area and overzealous inspection of a fire control system (app. sur-reply hr. at 4-5, 12-13).
However, appellant does not prove th~se delay periods, and furnishes no analysis that
addresses whether any of those delays were concurrent. See George Bernadot Co.,
ASBCA No. 42943, 94-3 BCA ,r 27,242 at 135,741-42; compare HG. Reynolds Co.,
ASBCA,. No. 42351 et al., 93-2 BCA ,r 25,797 at 128,378.

        Nevertheless, the government took beneficial occupancy ·of the warehouse on
October 2, 2013, when it started using it, and cannot assess liquidated damages after that
date. See Strand Hunt Construction, Inc., ASBCA No. 55905, 13 BCA ,r 35,287
at 173,188 (In assessing "beneficial occupancy" (also referred to as "substantial
completion"), which "occurs on the date the work is completed satisfactorily to the extent
that the facilities in question may be occupied or used by the Government for the purpose
for which intendedt we consider '"( 1} the quantity of work remaining to be done, and (2)
the extent to which the project was capable of servicing adequately its intended purpose"'
(further citation omitted)).

    October 2, 2013 was only 98 days after June 27, 2013, GSC's contract completion
date, which, at $1,280 per day, allows an assessment of liquidated damages of $125,440.
The difference between the $314,880 withheld by the government and $125,440.00 is
$189,440. GSC is, therefore, entitled to this last amount in withheld liquidated damages
plus applicable interest.

   3. Retainage and Other Withheld Funds

       The government concedes that appellant is entitled to $3,136.96 in retained funds
(gov't hr. at 26-27). Appellant seeks the return of another $55,600 in retained funds (app.
reply hr. at 12), which the government is withholding until issues with certain
deliverables "have been satisfactorily resolved" (R4, tab 27 at 8). However, the
government has not met its burden to demonstrate that the items for which funds have
been retained are defective. See Ensign-Bickford, 16-1 BCA ,r 36,533 at 177,969
(assigning burden). The government relies upon the COFD and its cross-examination of
a witness identified with appellant (gov't hr. at 26-27,r 59), but none of that evidence
demonstrates that any of the items was or is defective. Appellant is entitled to
$58,736.96 in retained funds.

   4. Claim Preparation Costs

   Appellant requests $3,000 in claim preparation costs (app. hr. at 13), but presents no
persuasive evidence in support of that very sparse claim. This portion of the appeal is
denied.




                                             20
                                      CONCLUSION

       ASBCA No. 59046 is sustained in the amount of $177,000, plus interest pursuant
to 41 U.S.C. § 7109, from March 18, 2013 (the date that the contracting officer received
appellant's certified claim (R4, tab 2 at 1)), to the date of payment.

       ASBCA No. 59957 is sustained in the amount of $340,818.43, which includes
$92,641.47 (truck turnaround)+ $189,440 (return ofliquidated damages)+ $3,136.96
(retainage conceded by the government)+ $55,600 (government-withheld funds for
allegedly deficient work). GSC is. also entitled to interest on the total amount owed
pursuant to 41 U.S.C. § 7109, from February 11, 2015 (the date that the contracting
officer received appellant's certified claim (R4, tab 27 at 1)), to the date of payment.
The appeals are otherwise denied. The parties' other positions are unnecessary to
address; given these results.

       Dated: July 11, 2019




                                                   Administrative Judge
                                                   Armed Services Board
                                                   of Contract Appeals


 I concur                                          I concur




                                                   Vice Chairman
                                                   Administrative Judge
 Armed Services Board                              Armed Services Board
 of Contract Appeals                               of Contract Appeals



(Signatures continued)




                                            21
 I concur                                      I concur in part-no separate opinion




 Administrative Judge
                                              ~Administrative Judge
 Armed Services Board                          Armed Services Board
 of Contract Appeals                           of Contract Appeals


     I certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the Opinion and Decision of the
Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals in ASBCA Nos. 59046, 59957, Appeals of
GSC Construction, Incorporated, rendered in conformance with the Board's Charter.

      Dated:



                                               PAULLA K. GATES-LEWIS
                                               Recorder, Armed Services
                                               Board of Contract Appeals




                                         22
