Court Opinion

ID: 932064
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2013-06-26 16:00:11.989262+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T12:36:50.284410
License: Public Domain

In the United States Court of Federal Claims
                                    No. 07-165 C
                                (Filed June 25, 2013)

 HERNANDEZ, KROONE AND                    )
 ASSOCIATES, INC.,                        )
                   Plaintiff,             )
                                          )
                     v.                   )
                                          )
 THE UNITED STATES,                       )
                 Defendant.               )

                                      ORDER

        By its RCFC 59 motion, filed April 24, 2013, (ECF No. 202) defendant seeks
reconsideration of $9,366.00 awarded to plaintiff in the corrected judgment, entered
April 5, 2013 (ECF No. 200). This sum represents, in part, the $7,985 invoice Palm
Springs Paving submitted to Hernandez, Kroone and Associates, Inc. (HKA) for the
extra work it performed to correct a parking lot appearance problem caused by the
aggregate the Corps of Engineers (COE) had required be used in paving the lot.
Hernandez, Kroone & Assocs., Inc. v. United States, 110 Fed. Cl. 496, 517-18, 521-
22 (2013). HKA added its 15% mark-up to the $7,985 Palm Springs invoice plus 2%
for its bond to bring the total amount to $9,366.00. Id.

      Defendant seeks reconsideration of the $9,366 awarded because HKA has not,
to date, paid Palm Springs for this work and defendant asserts HKA does not
currently owe Palm Springs for the work it performed.

       Defendant is correct only with respect to the fact that HKA has not, to date,
paid the Palm Springs invoices that it continues to receive. Id. at 518. However, as
the transcript citations which HKA submits in its response (ECF No. 209) to
defendant’s RCFC 59 motion demonstrate, HKA recognizes that it has incurred a
contractual liability to pay Palm Springs for the extra work performed and that it will
pay Palm Springs when it recovers the amount in this litigation. It is established that
this form of “conditional liability” suffices, when actions of the government cause
harm to a subcontractor, to sanction a suit by a prime contractor against the United
States to recover such costs incurred by a subcontractor. W.G. Yates & Sons Constr.
Co. v. Caldera, 192 F.3d 987, 991 (Fed. Cir. 1999). There is no logical reason why
the same principle would not be applicable to a suit for an equitable adjustment. It
is clear that the cost in a specific amount has been incurred and HKA has agreed to
pay Palm Springs when the sum is recovered from the United States. This is unlike
the circumstance in SAB Constr., Inc. v. United States, 66 Fed. Cl. 77 (2005) – cited
by defendant, where only a potential liability was involved. Here a specific additional
cost has been established. Delhur Indus., Inc. v. United States, 95 Fed. Cl. 446, 454
(2010).

        Defendant asserts, however, that HKA does not currently owe Palm Springs for
the additional work caused by the aggregate specified by the COE because of a
release executed by Palm Springs or because the California statute of limitations
provides HKA with a defense to any current suit by Palm Springs on the specific
contractual liability. It was determined that no release covers the specific contractual
liability involved. Hernandez, Kroone, & Assocs., 110 Fed. Cl. at 522. Defendant’s
Rule 59 motion provides no basis supporting reconsideration of this determination.
As for the California statute of limitations, the opinion in question notes that HKA’s
acknowledgment of the liability, under Cal. Civ. Proc. Code § 360, can serve to
revive an enforcement action if this possibility were required in order for HKA to
recover the sum from the United States in this litigation. Id. Defendant questions the
application of § 360 in that the provision requires that the acknowledgment “[i]s
contained in some writing.” In this matter HKA’s acknowledgment comprised
testimony taken under oath and recorded in a written transcript with the reporter
certifying in writing that the “record is a correct transcript of the proceeding.” RCFC
80.1(e). This would appear clearly to satisfy the § 360 requirements if such
satisfaction were required to recover the amount in this litigation. See Dearborn v.
Grand Lodge of A.O.U.W., 138 Cal. 658, 72 P. 154 (1903).

       In a “Reply” (ECF No. 210), filed June 25, 2013, defendant objects to
consideration of HKA’s (Richard Hernandez) declaration, included with plaintiff’s
Opposition (ECF No. 209) to defendant’s Motion for Reconsideration (ECF No. 202).
Defendant questions the absence of a motion for leave to submit the document at this
stage in the proceedings. Technically, the filing of a reply in this circumstance also
requires a motion for leave as the Order (ECF No. 203) pursuant to RCFC 59(f)

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requesting the filing of a response to defendant’s motion for reconsideration did not
also request the filing of a reply.

      As it is considered that the record, without further supplementation, supports
recovery of the amounts awarded to HKA and plaintiff has established no viable basis
for reconsideration, it is ORDERED that leave is GRANTED for the filing of
defendant’s Reply (ECF No. 210) and defendant’s Rule 59 Motion is DENIED.1/

                                                        s/ James F. Merow
                                                        James F. Merow
                                                        Senior Judge

       1/
         As HKA’s (Richard Hernandez) declaration, in writing, makes it clear that HKA will pay
Palm Springs the amount in question, in the interest of justice, if it were determined that the existing
record does not satisfy the provisions of § 360 and that such satisfaction were required for HKA’s
recovery in this matter, then in this circumstance, the declaration is received in evidence.

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