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Highland Al Hujaz Co., Ltd., ASBCA No. 58243 (2016)

Court: Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals Number: ASBCA No. 58243 Visitors: 27
Judges: Thrasher
Filed: Mar. 30, 2016
Latest Update: Mar. 02, 2020
Summary: (b) Progress payments. From, the outset, the contract identified the site electrical distribution system as a priority, life-support system and required appellant to provide temporary power to the soldiers', facilities on the CSB until they were connected to a permanent power source (Finding 13 ).
               ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS

Appeal of --                                  )
                                              )
Highland Al Hujaz Co., Ltd.                   )      ASBCA No. 58243
                                              )
Under Contract No. W917PM-09-C-0049           )

APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT:                       Herman M. Braude, Esq.
                                                     Edward D. Manchester, Esq.
                                                      Braude Law Group, P.C.
                                                      Washington, DC

APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT:                      Thomas H. Gourlay, Jr., Esq.
                                                      Engineer Chief Trial Attorney
                                                     Daniel B. McConnell, Esq.
                                                     James A. Wallace, Esq.
                                                      Engineer Trial Attorneys
                                                      U.S. Army Engineer District, Middle East
                                                      Winchester, VA

                OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE THRASHER

       This appeal arises out of a contract between the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers
(Corps or government) and Highland Al Hujaz Co., Ltd. (Highland or appellant) to
design and build an Afghan National Army (ANA) installation on Camp Hero in
Kandahar, Afghanistan. Highland appeals from the government's decision to
terminate the contract for default. Only the propriety of the Corps' default decision is
before us in this appeal. 1 We have jurisdiction to adjudicate this appeal pursuant to the
Contract Disputes Act, 41 U.S.C. §§ 7101-7109. Because the Corps has shown that it
properly terminated the contract for default and Highland has not shown that its
default was excusable, the appeal is denied.



1
    Post-hearing; the government asserted government claims for excess reprocurement
         costs, overpayments during performance, and liquidated damages under this
         contract. Appellant appealed all these claims and all have been set for hearing:
         reprocurement costs and overpayments, ASBCA Nos. 59746, 59818, 60134; and
         liquidated damages, ASBCA No. 60385. On 26 February 2016, the files in these
         associated appeals were consolidated with Highland Al Hujaz Co., Ltd., ASBCA
         No. 58243. However, this decision only addresses appellant's appeal of the
         government's termination of Contract No. W917PM-09-C-0049 for default.
                                 FINDINGS OF FACT

A. Background

       1. Solicitation and Contract Requirements

        1. In February 2009, the Corps issued a solicitation for a firm-fixed-price
contract for the design and construction of an ANA Corps Support Battalion (CSB)
installation to be located adjacent to the ANA Garrison at Camp Hero in Kandahar,
Afghanistan (R4, tab 3 at 1, 3, 60).

       2. While the project required the CSB to be master planned so that it could
ultimately accommodate 1,640 soldiers, the site initially would host about 700 soldiers
(R4, tab 3 at 3, 60-61). Accordingly, the solicitation stated that the soldiers' barracks,
the dining facility (DFAC), and several priority life-support systems were to be
completed by 1 September 2009. If they were not completed by that date, the
contractor would be responsible for providing temporary facilities or systems to
support 700 soldiers until the permanent facilities or systems were in place. (Id. at 67,
70, 74, 75) The site electrical distribution system, or power system, was one such
system. The solicitation stated in red lettering: "If the power system is not completed
by September 01, 2009 the contractor will be required to supply temporary power to
the compound" (id. at 67).

     3. The solicitation set forth in full text local clause 2.2, "ATTACKS FROM
HOSTILE ENTITIES," which stated in pertinent part:

              This contract is firm fixed-price. Costs incurred in the
              performance of project execution that arise from the
              attacks of hostile entities, such as costs arising from
              damage to or destruction of contractor equipment and
              facilities, and damage to or destruction of project prior to
              Government acceptance, are the sole responsibility of the
              contractor. The Government makes no guarantee to
              provide the contractor with security, and bears no
              obligation to reimburse the contractor for costs arising
              from the attacks of hostile entities. When appropriate, the
              Contracting Officer may provide the contractor with an
              equitable adjustment with respect to time - but not cost -
              in accordance with clause 52.249-10[.]

(R4, tab 3 at 175) The solicitation also set forth in full text an "AI Other Changes in
Contract Performance" clause which stated:



                                            2
              It is recognized by the parties entering into this contract
              that performance of the contemplated project will take
              place in Afghanistan. Afghanistan has been designated by
              the President of the United States as an area in which
              Armed Forces of the United States are and have been
              engaged in combat. As such, circumstances may cause the
              contemplated project to be [a]ffected during said
              performance. Examples of such circumstances include but
              are not limited to: Outbreak of hostilities in or near the
              project site; changes in contemplated project site
              (ownership of the project); U.S. Government and
              Afghanistan Government policy changes; site access
              denials; and other unforeseeable changes in the conditions
              of the project site that prevent the completion of the project
              as originally contemplated. Such circumstances may
              require the contract to be terminated, relocated, redesigned,
              etc[.], or a combination of factors. The aforementioned
              possibly [sic] remedy to unforeseen circumstances is meant
              to be illustrative and not all inclusive. In the event the
              Contractor is UNABLE to perform the project on the site
              set forth and described in the contract for any of the
              circumstances set forth above, the Contractor shall be
              entitled to an equitable adjustment to the [a]ffected terms
              and conditions of the contract. [Italics added]

(Id. at 54) Similarly, the solicitation recognizes that: "Construction delays due to full
or partial base closures due to incidents such as demonstrations, civil unrest and
outright attacks will be examined on an individual basis for consideration of time
extensions" (R4, tab 3, § 01060, special clauses, 1.22.3).

        4. On 26 February 2009, the Corps amended its solicitation, extending the move-in
date for the barracks and priority life-support systems from 1 September 2009 to 1 January
2010 (R4, tab 4 at 1). Additionally, several "Questions and Answers" were incorporated
into the solicitation by the 26 February 2009 amendment (id. at 6-9). One of the questions
was whether a contract line item number (CLIN) would be added for CSB temporary
facilities in the event the contractor was unable to have the barracks and or the priority
life-support systems completed by the move-in date. The Corps' response was:

              NO. The contractor should bid appropriately according to
              the contractor's ability to complete the permanent facilities
              and utilities within the required schedule. If the contractor
              believes he will not have the life support facilities



                                             3
                completed by the Soldier move-in date, then he should
                include the temporary facilities cost into his bid proposal.

(Id. at 7) Additionally, the Corps confirmed that the number of soldiers to be
supported initially would be 700 and that the battalion of ANA soldiers was expected
to actually move in and occupy the barracks by the revised move-in date, 1 January
2010 (id. at 7).

        5. On 27 March 2009, the government amended the solicitation to incorporate
additional "Questions and Answers" (R4, tab 8 at 1, 5-19). Referring to the
solicitation's Attacks from Hostile Entities clause (see findiµg 3), and noting the "rise
of terrorist incidents and the deterioriation [sic] of security conditions throughout
Afghanistan," one prospective offeror "respectfully requested" that the Attacks from
Hostile Entities clause be replaced by a "War Risk" clause that shifted the risk of loss
of equipment and materials resulting from such attacks to the government (id. at 9).
The Corps declined to make such a change, insisting instead that:

                THE CONTRACTOR MUST BID UPON THIS
                PROJECT KNOWING ALL RISKS ASSOCIATED
                WITH CONSTRUCTION IN AFGHANISTAN. SUCH
                RISKS FAR EXCEED HOSTILITIES. NO SPECIAL
                CLAUSE IS TO BE ADDED; THE CONTRACTOR IS
                RESPONSIBLE FOR ALL ACTIONS, INCLUDING
                DELAYS FROM HOSTILITIES, ETC[.] AND SHOULD
                REFLECT THIS RISK IN HIS BID. THE PURPOSE OF
                THE DESIGN-BUILD CONTRACT IS TO REFLECT
                SUCH RISKS UPON THE CONTRACTOR AND NOT
                THE GOVT[.]

(Id. at 9-10)

      6. Another question which was raised was about the CLIN under which a
prospective offeror should price temporary facilities and service, to which the Corps
responded that "[t]he contractor shall bid accordingly under each facility CLIN.
Contractor should take into account the ability or inability of the contractor to
complete the priority facility by the stated move-in date." (Id. at 16, question 73)

       7. Highland submitted a proposal by the proposal deadline of 13 April 2009
and on 3 June 2009, the Corps awarded Contract No. W917PM-09-C-0049 (the
contract) to Highland (R4, tab 11 at 1). At the time of award, the total value of the
contract was $26,749,757.62 (id. at 2). The project was to be entirely completed
within 420 days of receiving notice to proceed (id. at 1, 70). However, priority tasks,
including the site electrical distribution system, the barracks, the DF AC, and the


                                              4
toilet/shower/ablution/laundry facility, needed to be completed by no later than
300 days after receiving notice to proceed (id. at 70). Appellant required notice to
proceed on 28 July 2009 (R4, tab 37), thereby requiring completion of the priority
tasks by 24 May 2010, and the entire project by 21 September 2010. 2

       8. The contract incorporated by reference several standard fixed-price
construction clauses relevant to the parties' dispute, including FAR 52.232-5,
PAYMENTS UND~R FIXED-PRICE CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS (SEP 2002);
FAR 52.233-1, DISPUTES (JUL 2002); FAR 52.236-7, PERMITS AND RESPONSIBILITIES
(Nov 1991); FAR 52.236-11, USE AND POSSESSION PRIOR TO COMPLETION (APR
1984); FAR 52.236-15, SCHEDULES FOR CONSTRUCTION CONTRACTS (APR 1984);
FAR 52.243-4, CHANGES (JUN 2007); and FAR 52.249-10, DEFAULT (FIXED-PRICE
CONSTRUCTION) (APR 1984) (R4, tab 11 at 29-30).

        9. The Payments clause, FAR 52.232-5, states in pertinent part:

                 (a) Payment ofprice, The Government shall pay the
               Contractor the contract price as provided in this contract.

                  (b) Progress payments. The Government shall make
               progress payments monthly as the work proceeds, or at
               more frequent intervals as determined by the Contracting
               Officer, on estimates of work accomplished which meets
               the standards of quality established under the contract, as
               approved by the Contracting Officer.

                 (1) The Contractor's request for progress payments shall
               include the following substantiation:

                  (i) An itemization of the amounts requested, related to
               the various elements of work required by the contract
               covered by the payment requested.

                 (ii) A listing of the amount included for work
               performed by each subcontractor under the contract.

                 (iii) A listing of the total amount of each subcontract
               under the contract.



2   These dates were subsequently extended by mutual agreements for reasons not
        relevant to this decision.

                                             5
  (iv) A listing of the amounts previously paid to each
such subcontractor under the contract.

  (v) Additional supporting data in a form and detail
required by the Contracting Officer.



   (c) Contractor certification. Along with each request for
progress payments, the Contractor shall furnish the
following certification, or payment shall not be made ....

  I hereby certify, to the best of my knowledge and belief,
that-

   (I) The amounts requested are only for performance in
accordance with the specifications, terms, and conditions
of the contract;

  (2) All payments due to subcontractors and
suppliers from previous payments received under the
contract have been made, and timely payments will be
made from the proceeds of the payment covered by this
certification, in accordance with subcontract agreements
and the requirements of chapter 39 of Title 31, United
States Code; [Bold added]

  (3) This request for progress payments does not include
any amounts which the prime contractor intends to
withhold or retain from a subcontractor or supplier in
accordance with the terms and conditions of the
subcontract; ...



   (e) Retainage. If the Contracting Officer finds that
satisfactory progress was achieved during any period for
which a progress payment is to be made, the Contracting
Officer shall authorize payment to be made in full.
However, if satisfactory progress has not been made, the
Contracting Officer may retain a maximum of I 0 percent
of the amount of the payment until satisfactory progress is
achieved.


                             6
       10. The Schedules for Construction Contracts clause, FAR 52.236-15, states in
pertinent part:

                (a) The Contractor shall, within five days after the work
             commences on the contract or another period of time
             determined by the Contracting Officer, prepare and submit
             to the Contracting Officer for approval...a practicable
             schedule showing the order in which the Contractor
             proposes to perform the work, and the dates on which the
             Contractor contemplates starting and completing the
             several salient features of the work (including acquiring
             materials, plant, and equipment). The schedule shall be in
             the form of a progress chart of suitable scale to indicate
             appropriately the percentage of work scheduled for
             completion by any given date during the period. If the
             Contractor fails to submit a schedule within the time
             prescribed, the Contracting Officer may withhold approval
             ofprogress payments until the Contractor submits the
             required schedule. [Emphasis added]

      11. The Default clause, FAR 52.249-10, states in pertinent part:

                (a) If the Contractor refuses or fails to prosecute the
             work or any separable part, with the diligence that will
             insure its completion within the time specified in this
             contract including any extension, or fails to complete the
             work within this time, the Government may, by written
             notice to the Contractor, terminate the right to proceed
             with the work (or the separable part of the work) that has
             been delayed ....

                (b) The Contractor's right to proceed shall not be
             terminated nor the Contractor charged with damages under
             this clause, if-

               ( 1) The delay in completing the work arises from
             unforeseeable causes beyond the control and without the
             fault or negligence of the contractor. Examples of such
             causes include-

                    (i) Acts of God or of the public enemy,



                                          7
                     (ii) Acts of the Government in either its sovereign or contractual
              capacity,
                     (iii) Acts of another Contractor in the performance of a contract
              with the Government,
                     (iv) Fires,
                     (v) Floods,
                     (vi) Epidemics,
                     (vii) Quarantine restrictions,
                     (viii) Strikes,
                     (ix) Freight embargoes,
                     (x) Unusually severe weather, or
                     (xi) Delays of subcontractors or suppliers at any tier arising from
              unforeseeable causes beyond the control and without the fault or
              negligence of both the Contractor and the subcontractors or suppliers ....



                 ( d) The rights and remedies of the Government in this
              clause are in addition to any other rights and remedies
              provided by law or under this contract.

        12. The contract included in full text "SPECIAL" clause 1.22, Time Extensions,
which prescribed the procedure to be used for determining time extensions due to
unusually severe weather for purposes of the Default clause. The Time Extensions
clause stated that the contracting Officer (CO) should determine entitlement to time
extensions for unusually severe weather based on the occurrence of "actual unusually
severe weather days." These were defined as "days actually impacted by unusually
severe weather," with weather severe enough to "prevent work for fifty percent (50%)
or more of the Contractor's workday and delay work critical to the timely completion
of the project." (R4, tab 11 at 155-56)

        13. The contract stated that if the soldiers' barracks, the dining facility (DF AC),
and the priority life-support systems were not completed by 1 January 2010, appellant
would be responsible for providing temporary facilities or systems to support 700 soldiers
until the permanent facilities or systems were in place (R4, tab 11 at 54, 58, 61, 63 ).
Regarding the site electrical distribution system, or power system, the contract stated:
"Power system must be operational by January 01, 2010. If the power system is not
completed by this date, the contractor will be required to supply temporary power to the
compound" (id. at 54).

       14. Per the contract, Highland was required to take partial designs provided by
the government and complete the design work so as to meet all requirements and
applicable criteria and codes (R4, tab 11 at 47-48). The Corps also furnished Highland


                                            8
with minimum design standards and product requirements, including for acceptable
equipment and materials (id. at 71-143 ). Highland was encouraged to propose
alternate designs or products that were more commonly used in the region, provided
that such alternate designs or products would be equally or more cost effective or
allow for more timely completion and would furnish the same system safety,
durability, ease of maintenance, and environmental capability as the government's
minimum requirements. In proposing such an alternate design or product, appellant
was required to submit such information as would allow the CO to make a comparison
of the proposed alternate design or product to the Corps' minimum requirements.
Once a design or product was approved, any variations would require prior approval
by the CO. (Id. at 71, ii 1.2)

        15. The contract required Highland to design and construct all electrical
systems for the CSB, including providing all necessary labor, equipment, and material
to install a fully-functional system that would interface with Camp Hero's existing
electrical system. All major components of electrical equipment were required to bear,
securely attached to the equipment, a non-corrosive and non-heat-sensitive plate
identifying the manufacturer's name and address; the type or style of the equipment
and its voltage and current rating; and the item's catalog number. All such equipment
was to be in "new condition, undamaged and unused," and prior to installation such
equipment was to be "protected from the weather, humidity and temperature variation,
dirt and dust, and any other contaminants." (R4, tab 11 at 131, ii 9 .3 .1) For long
lead-time power system components, including transformers, appellant was required to
schedule its submittals to allow for "approvals, procurement, delivery and installation
to establish permanent power as soon as possible" (id. at 132, ii 9.4.1.1). The contract
established the following minimum requirement for transformers, in relevant part:

              Primary side load-break disconnecting means shall be
              provided with all transformers. All transformers shall
              match existing. Transformer substations shall be dead
              front, loop-feed, pad-mounted, compartmental, self-cooled
              type. Transformers shall come complete from
              manufacturer; use of third party transformer housings or
              add-on transformer housings shall not be permitted.
              Transformers shall have no exposed live components.

(Id. at 134, ii 9 .4.5) (Emphasis added)

       16. The contract required Highland, after coordinating with the CO, to connect
the CSB's power distribution system to Camp Hero's existing, active electrical system.
To do this, Highland was to install underground "raceways," or conduits, no less than
four inches in diameter, consisting either of thin-wall PVC that would be encased in
concrete or, in the case of street lighting circuits, hard-wall ("Schedule 40") PVC that


                                           9
would be directly buried without concrete encasement except when passing under
paved areas or road crossings. (R4, tab 11 at 134, ~~ 9.4.3, 9.4.4)

       17. Between 17 August 2009 and 30 March 2011, the parties engaged in
negotiations to expand the utility systems requirements of the contract to accommodate
4,300 soldiers instead of the contract's original 1,640. At one point the parties discussed
a change to the contract's original requirements regarding the Camp Hero power plant: a
requirement for Highland to build an entirely new power plant (R4, tabs 13, 19, 237, 302,
416). These negotiations ultimately proved unsuccessful and concluded on 30 March
2011 with Change Order No. A00004. Change Order No. A00004 reestablished the
contract's original requirements regarding the site electrical distribution system,
generator fuel storage/distribution, and expansion work to be done on the Camp Hero
power plant. (R4, tab 19 at 1-2)

       2. Arrival ofANA Corps Support Battalion Personnel

        18. The ANA soldiers arrived at the CSB site and occupied their quarters and
barracks on 3 February 2011 (R4, tab 185, vol. 1, Rpt. 552). Following the ANA
battalion's arrival, Highland leased generators and purchased fuel to provide
temporary power to the ANA soldiers' quarters and barracks and their
toilet/shower/ablution facilities (R4, tab 185, vol. 2, Rpt. 652).

         19. Effective on 13 January 2011, the Corps issued Change Order No. A00003
for temporary power to eleven buildings on the CSB site: the three buildings
comprising the Bachelor Officer Quarters, the six buildings of the Enlisted Barracks,
the Toilet and Shower building, and the DFAC (R4, tab 18 at 1-2). Due to the "urgent
nature" of the requirement to provide temporary power for the ANA soldiers' quarters
and barracks and their toilet/shower/ablution facilities, Change Order No. A00003 was
issued as an undefinitized contract action with a not-to-exceed amount of
$1,748,740.00 (id. at 2). Of that amount, $575,080.59 would be used to lease
generators and pay for their maintenance for three months under a newly-added CLIN,
while the balance would be used to pay for generator fuel under a separate CLIN (id.
at 4). The fuel CLIN was a "Materials" type CLIN, meaning that the Corps would pay
for fuel on an at-cost basis without profit or overhead (id. at 2, 3, 5), in accordance
with FAR 52.232-7, PAYMENTS UNDER TIME-AND-MATERIALS AND LABOR-HOUR
CONTRACTS (FEB 2007), which Change Order No. A00003 also added to the contract
(id. at 6). The Corps anticipated that Change Order No. A00003 would be definitized
within three months (id. at 2), and expected that the definitized contract action would
consist of a single negotiated, firm-fixed-price CLIN for generator leasing and
maintenance as well as fuel (id. at 7).




                                           10
        3. Subcontractor Issues

       20. On 1 February 2011, one of Highland's principal subcontractors informed
the Corps that Highland owed it a "large amount of money" (R4, tab 185, vol. 1,
Rpt. 550). The Corps issued Highland a show cause notice, Serial Letter No. C-0049,
on 20 April 2011. The Corps identified several "critical items that have yet to be
addressed appropriately and continue to hinder current progress," including "[t]he
payment of subcontractors, along with a list provided to [the Corps] of all
subcontractors and outstanding balances owed to them by [Highland]." (R4, tab 61
at 1) The show cause notice further stated, in relevant part:

              [W]e have noticed that your employee[ s] and
              subcontractors are not on the job site on a regular basis.
              We have been advised that this is due to your failure to pay
              them. We have requested that you pay your
              subcontractor[ s] and employees, so that construction could
              continue. Your subcontractors and your employees still
              have not received payments to them for work already
              completed for which the Government has made progress
              payment to your organization. As a result, they have not
              returned to work and any progress is insignificant.

(Id. at 2)

       21. On 4 May 2011, the Corps again heard reports that Highland had not paid
one of its principal subcontractors. The subcontractor reported that its employees had
not been paid for three months and, as a result, many had quit. The subcontractor also
reported that there were insufficient funds to pay for materials, food for the workers, or
manpower. (R4, tab 185, vol. 2, Rpt. 642)

        22. On 14 May 2011, the owner of the generators that were providing
temporary power to the CSB reported to the Corps that Highland had not been paying
him and he was considering removing the generators, but that the ANA colonel had
threatened to lock down the CSB site if he tried (R4, tab 185, vol. 2, Rpt. 652). The
next day, a meeting was held between the Corps, Highland, and three of Highland's
principal subcontractors to discuss nonpayment issues (id. at 653). Then, on 29 May
2011, a violent protest involving employees of several of Highland's subcontractors
and even Highland's own security personnel erupted in Highland's man camp (id. at
667; tr. 3/322-27). Two days later, appellant's project manager, Mr. Douglas Seaman,
was arrested and briefly detained by the ANA battalion commander (id. at 669). Upon
his release, Mr. Seaman promptly departed the country (tr. 3/304).




                                            11
         4. The Parties' Global Settlement: Modification Nos. POOOJO-POOOJ4

       23. On 19 September 2011, the parties executed bilateral contract Modification
No. POOOlO, the first in a series of five modifications implementing the parties'
"Global Claims Settlement for CSB" (R4, tabs 25-28, 30). Modification No. POOO 10
resolved any outstanding requests for equitable adjustment relating to work on the
CSB (R4, tab 25 at 2). It also significantly redefined the scope of the CSB utility
requirements, particularly the requirements regarding the site electrical distribution
system and the existing Camp Hero power plant, thereby "establish[ing] an
unequivocal starting point for any future changes if required." Respecting the
contract's permanent power requirements, Modification No. POOOlO stated:

               b. Permanent Power: Provide an electrical ductbank of 6"
               PVC conduits in accordance with the Electrical
               Distribution/Duct Bank modification (Mod. No. POOO 11 ) ....

               c. [Camp] Hero Power Plant: With the exception of the
               15kV, 250A CSB feed breaker at the power distribution
               switchgear, delete all other work within the Camp Hero
               Powerplant. This includes any plant expansion to include
               the design, purchase and installation of new generators and
               associated equipment.

(Id. at 2-3) Highland was directed to submit to the CO by 3 October 2011 "a proof of
purchase and/or similar documents ... of all DFAC equipment, long-lead items, and
other materials/equipment as contractually required to complete this project" (R4,
tab 25 at 2, tab 336).

      24. The Electrical Distribution/Ductbank modification, Modification
No. POOO 11 stated in pertinent part:

               A. (SJCOPE OF WORK

               Provide an electrical ductbank of 6" PVC conduits ....
               Install a new 250A breaker in the MVl31 load distribution
               switchgear at the existing [Camp] Hero Powerplant.
               Provide electrical cabling (120 mm - 2 minimum) from the
               [Camp] Hero Powerplant MV switchgear to the CSB
               distribution switchgear. Delete all other work within the
               [Camp] Hero Powerplant to include the design, purchase


3   "MV" means "medium voltage" (R4, tab 903 at 281, 289).

                                            12
                and installation of new generators and all required
                equipment to support the expansion of the power capacity.

(R4, tab 26 at 1-2) Highland was directed to submit for the CO's approval a redesign
incorporating the revised duct bank requirements. In order to effectuate Modification
No. POOO 11, the parties agreed to extend the performance period by a total of
421 days, from 4 January 2011 to 1March2012. (Id. at 2)

        25. Bilateral Contract Modification Nos. P00012 and P00014 had the same
effective date, 30 September 2011, and both appear to have been intended to
accomplish the same thing: definitize Change Order No. A00003, Temporary Power
(see finding 18; R4, tab 27 at 1-2, tab 30 at 1-2). 4 We find that, between them,
Modification Nos. P00012 and P00014 definitized Change Order No. A00003 by
adding firm-fixed-price CLIN 0016 with a value of $204,626.41 (R4, tab 27 at 2-3,
tab 30 at 2-3).

       26. On 12 October 2011, the parties held a "Red Zone" meeting to discuss the
path forward with respect to the remaining buildings under construction. The parties
agreed that, due to the high costs of providing temporary power to the CSB, the Corps
would not accept any more buildings beyond those it had already accepted, namely the
ANA quarters and barracks and the showers/toilet/ablution facilities, until appellant
had finished connecting the CSB to the Camp Hero power plant as required by
Modification No. POOOl 1. (R4, tab 185, vol. 2, Rpt. 803)

        27. The last of the global settlement modifications, with an effective date of
8 November 2011, was bilateral Modification No. P00013 (R4, tab 28 at 1).
Modification No. P00013 established the parties' approach to providing temporary
power "until permanent power can be supplied to the CSB via a [Highland-]installed
ductbank to the Camp Hero power plant (contract modification [POOOl l])." The
parties agreed that the Corps would pay the costs of leasing and maintaining the
generators and keeping them fueled, but only until the parties' revised contract
completion date, 1 March 2012:

               The effective date [of the requirement to provide
               temporary power] is the date both parties sign the
               modification to the contract and the end date of temporary
               power is 1March2012. The maximum duration of this

4   The record is silent as to why Modification No. P00014 had the same effective date
         and purpose as Modification No. P00012, although some handwritten notes
         appearing on the copy of Modification No. P00012 in the record indicate that
         No. P00014 was simply correcting some errors made in the earlier modification
         (R4, tab 27 at 2, tab 30 at 2).

                                           13
               requirement is until 1 March 2012, at which time
               [Highland] is required to have permanent power in place,
               and the government will no longer be responsible for
               temporary power. Should temporary power still be
               required after this date, the contractor shall continue to
               provide all necessary power at their own cost until the
               permanent power system is functioning.

(Id. at 2) (Emphasis added) Witnesses for the government and for Highland both
testified to their mutual understanding that Modification No. P00013's requirement to
provide temporary power would be satisfied when the duct bank system was connected
to the existing power plant, regardless of whether the power plant was then capable of
generating enough power to supply the entire CSB (tr. 1/84-85, 4/294-95, see also R4,
tab 380).                              ·

       28. Highland submitted the redesign required by Modification No. POOOl l on
3 December 2011 5 (R4, tab 903, vol. I at 277). Highland's design submission included
drawings showing duct banks that consisted of 6-inch Schedule 40 PVC encased in
concrete in accordance with the requirements described in Modification No. POOO 11,
(R4, tab 903, vol. I at 285), as well as an electrical distribution system that included ten
transformers with circuit-switching mechanisms that would allow power to be shut off to
any particular transformer while still allowing power to flow "downstream" to the rest of
the system (R4, tab 903, vol. I at 281). Such a circuit-switching mechanism is known as
a "load-break" mechanism (tr. 1/280, 2/17). Also attached to Highland's submission was
a "100% Resubmittal" design document, dated 3 October 2011, which included a section
describing "THREE-PHASE PAD-MOUNTED TRANSFORMERS" (R4, tab 903, vol. II
at 888, vol. III at 1399-1406). In it Highland reiterated the contract's requirement for
"Dead-Front," "Load-break switch" transformers, as follows in pertinent part:

               2.2.1.1    High Voltage, Dead-Front

                   High-voltage compartment shall contain the incoming
                   line, insulated high-voltage load-break connectors,
                   bushing well inserts, feed-thru inserts, six high-voltage
                   bushing wells configured for loop feed application,
                   load-break switch handle(s), access to tap changer
                   handle, connector parking stands with insulated stands
                   with insulated standoff bushings and ground pad.

5   Although the cover page to appellant's 3 December 2011 design submission indicates
    ·    that it was submitted as required by Modification No. POOO 10 (R4, tab 903,
         vol. I at 277), Modification No. POOO 11 required the redesign submittal
         (finding 24).

                                             14
               c. Load-break switch

                  Loop feed sectionalizer switches: Provide three,
                  two-position, oil-immersed type switches to permit
                  closed transition loop feed and sectionalizing.

(Id., vol. III at 1399) (Emphasis added) The Corps approved Highland's 3 December
2011 submission on 10 December 2011 (R4, tab 864 at 2).

       29. The record is silent as to whether Highland furnished to the CO any proof
of having purchased the transformers as required by Modification No. POOOlO.
Nonetheless, the record does include Highland's invoice for the ten transformers,
dated 1 May 2011, which shows that Highland ordered ten "Front Dead End, Pad
Mounted," "Load Break Switch" transformers (R4, tab 546).

       5. Post Global Settlement Events

       a. November Flooding

        30. On 10 November 2011 it rained at the CSB for nearly two hours, resulting
in significant flooding at the site (R4, tab 185, vol. 2, Rpt. 833; tr. 1/137-138). It is not
apparent from the record, however, which portions of the work were affected or for
how long. Highland's witness, Mr. Reardon, testified the duct bank system was
impacted because the soil was too wet to dig trenches (tr. 4/254). However, there was
no testimony about the length of such delay. Additionally, there is no evidence in the
record confirming the exact length of delay or impact, if any, on the overall installation
of the duct bank system. For instance, the record includes numerous undated
photographs of the flooded worksite around some of the buildings in the northwestern
area of the CSB (app. supp. R4, tab 21 at 1-12). However, the "Chronology of
Significant Events" for October-November 2011 in Highland's Camp Hero Duct Bank
Progress Report for November 2011 does not even mention the 10 November 2011
rainstorm; indeed, according to the Duct Bank Progress Report Highland did not even
have a permit to dig inside Camp Hero until 17 November 2011, and digging
manholes and trenches for the duct bank system did not actually begin until
19 November 2011 (app. supp. R4, tab 5 at 4-5). The Duct Bank Progress Report
includes several photographs, dated 17 November 2011, of trenches and manholes dug
on the CSB site, none of which appear to be muddy or to have any water in them (id.
at 13-20). Photographs of digging-work taking place inside Camp Hero on
19 November 2011 show the earth-moving machine stirring up clouds of dust (id. at
23-46). Highland's "Subsidiary Report for Duct Bank Work," dated 18 November


                                             15
2011, makes no mention of flooding or damp conditions but rather reports that, with
respect to beginning excavation work for the duct bank system, there are "[ n]o
problems[;] ok to continue work" (app. supp. R4, tab 6). Both the government's daily
Quality Assurance Reports (QARs) and the contractor's daily Quality Control Reports
(QCRs) agree that there was work stoppage on 10 November 2011 due to a rain storm.
However, although there is mention of damage to buildings, etc., there is no specific
mention of delay to proceeding with the duct bank system resulting from the rain.
(R4, tabs 184-85)

       b. Pakistani Border Closure/Hijacked Transformers

        31. The Pakistan border with Afghanistan was closed from November 2011
through July 2012. Highland had ordered the ten transformers required for the site
electrical distribution system sometime prior to the border closure. By letter dated
4 December 2011, Highland informed the Corps that three of the ten transformers ordered
had been hijacked and stolen in Pakistan and that delivery of the remaining seven
transformers would be delayed by the closing of the border (app. supp. R4, tab 9). Despite
the border closure, supplies could still enter Afghanistan by air and by other land routes
(app. supp. R4, tab 12; tr. 2/15). In fact, despite the Pakistan border closure, seven of the
transformers were delivered to the CSB on 4 February 2012. However, when the Corps
inspected the transformers upon their arrival, three of them were found to be dead-break
transformers, rather than the load-break transformers required by the contract.
(R4, tab 185 vol. 2, Rpt. 918) Moreover, the transformers were not in the new, protected
condition specified in the contract, but faded by the sun; some were rusty, some were
leaking oil (tr. 2/17). The Corps issued Highland a deficiency notice, dated 11 March
2012, for the nonconforming transformers and MV cable disconnects (R4, tab 383). By
letters dated 25 March 2012 and 31March2012, Highland requested a variance to the
approved load-break design in order to use the three dead-break transformers (R4,
tabs 385, 389). The Corps denied Highland's variance request by letter dated 3 April
2012 (R4, tab 390).

       6. Progress Payments: Retainage and Withholding

        32. By letter dated 19 March 2011, the Corps directed Highland to submit a
revised schedule for the site electrical distribution system by 21 March 2011 (R4,
tab 307 at 2). By subsequent letter dated 24 March 2011, the Corps informed
Highland that it was past due in submitting a revised schedule and reminded Highland
that its failure to provide a revised schedule for review and approval by the CO might
delay future progress payments (R4, tab 60). From the latter part of November 2011
through February 2012, every progress payment was subjected to ten percent retainage




                                           16
due to failure to make progress, lack of performance, failure to submit sufficient
resources, or failure to submit an acceptable schedule. 6

       33. The generators providing temporary power to the CSB ran out of fuel on
26 November 2011. In the Corps' report of the incident, the Corps noted that the
sporadic availability of water and electricity for its facilities, both dependent upon the
temporary power, was causing disciplinary problems among the ANA soldiers at the
CSB. (R4, tab 185 vol. 2, Rpt. 848) Mr. Mark Stephenson, who was the resident
engineer and a CO's representative on the project from December 2011 until
December 2013, testified that without power to those facilities, "it would have been,
pretty much, a riot" (tr. 3/201).

       34. By letter dated 7 December 2011, the Corps advised Highland that an
unsigned, proposed revised schedule that had been delivered to the Corps at the
preceding weekly progress meeting was not up-to-date or complete and therefore it
was rejected. The Corps advised Highland that "[l]ack of an approved schedule or
scheduling personnel shall result in an inability of the [CO] to evaluate Contractor
progress for the purposes of payment." (R4, tab 358) Highland submitted another
proposed schedule revision, which was also rejected. By letter dated 13 December
2011, the Corps explained that Highland's proposed revision was "very optimistic
based on placement to date and anticipated resources for the remaining duration" and
"not up to date or complete." The Corps again reminded Highland that lack of an
approved schedule might adversely affect the ability of the CO to approve progress
payment requests. (R4, tab 360)

      35. The generators providing temporary power to the CSB ran out of fuel again
on 17 December 2011 (R4, tab 185 vol. 2, Rpt. 869). In a letter dated 25 December
2011, Highland cited maintenance problems, fuel delays, and cash flow issues as

6   Progress Payment No. 37, covering 28-30 November 2011, due to "poor performance"
        (R4, tab 141 at l); Progress Payment No. 38, covering 1-15 December 2011, due
        to "lack of performance" (R4, tab 142 at l); Progress Payment No. 39, covering
        16-30 December 2011, due to "lack of progress" (R4, tab 143 at l); Progress
        Payment No. 40, covering 31 December 2011 through 1 January 2012, due to
        "lack of progress" (R4, tab 144 at 1); Progress Payment No. 41, covering
        2-31 January 2012, due to appellant's failure to submit an acceptable completion
        schedule, "lack of progress," and "failure to commit sufficient resources (R4,
        tab 145 at 1, tab 374); Progress Payment No. 42, covering 1-15 February 2012,
        due to "lack of progress" (R4, tab 146 at l); and Progress Payment No. 43,
        covering 16-29 February 2012, due to appellant's failure to submit an acceptable
        completion schedule, "lack of progress," and "failure to commit sufficient
        resources" (R4, tab 147 at 1, tab 3 81 ).



                                            17
causes for the temporary power supply disruptions. The Corps responded by letter
dated 28 December 2011 reminding Highland that such matters were Highland's
responsibility, not the Corps'. (R4, tab 368)

       36. The Corps' QARs for 22 January 2012 noted that Highland's latest
progress payment request asked for 50-80% of payment on items the work on which
had either not yet begun or had just started. The Corps' QAR for 2 February 2012
noted that Highland had renamed several of the pay activities in its latest progress
payment request and included some pay activities the requirements for which were not
part of the contract (e.g., hescoes; wash rack fence). The Corps' QARs for 2-4 March
2012 reported that "workers for AZAD[,] a subcontractor for [Highland,] have not
been paid in over three months." (R4, tab 185 vol. 2, Rpts. 905, 916, 944-47 at 2)

        37. Highland's Prompt Payment Certification and Supporting Data for
Contractor Payment Invoice (Progress Payment Request) No. 44, dated 15 March
2012, sought $238,690.88 (R4, tab 182 at 1, 31). Highland represented that the
following subcontractor payment amounts, totaling $569,350, were listed in Progress
Payment Request No. 44: Akbar Mirzad Group, $20,000; AZAMEL, $25,000; Baktiar
Company, $20,000; Ehsan Company, $20,000; HKCC Company, $35,000;
JanosFarkas Eng. Supt., $7,000; Kar Neeroo Electrical Co. Ltd. 7 , $50,000; Leading
Co., $44,350; Malik Express LLC, $25,000; Mumtaz Iqbal Logistic & Supply Co.
LTD, $20,000; Omran Consulting, Construction & Engineering, $21,000; Platenuim
Co. (PECC), $25,000; SIGC, $247,000; and ZABUL, $10,000. Highland further
certified that, as of 15 March 2012, it had never retained any subcontractor earnings.
(Id. at 1-3) Highland did not invoice for the costs of fuel or maintenance for the
temporary power generators (id. at 4). The Corps received appellant's Progress
Payment Request No. 44 on 25 March 2012 (R4, tab 148 at 1).

        38. The Corps did not retain any of Progress Payment No. 44. Instead, the
Corps withheld Progress Payment No. 44 in its entirety "because of a lack of progress
on site and failure to pay sub-contractors." (R4, tab 148 at 1) The Corps further
explained its rationale for withholding all of Progress Payment No. 44 in Serial Letter
No. C-0111, dated 25 March 2012. The Corps cited, as the basis for withholding,
Highland's failure to submit an acceptable schedule; Highland's lack of progress and
failure to commit sufficient resources; and appellant's failure to pay its subcontractors
and to provide the Corps with evidence of payment. As authority for its decision to
withhold the entire progress payment, the Corps referred to FAR 52.232-5(e) and
"paragraph (2) of the Prompt Payment Certificate." (R4, tab 75)


7
    Kar Neeroo Electrical Engineering (Kar Neeroo) was the subcontractor responsible for
         digging the trenches, installing the conduits, and pulling the cable for the site
         electrical distribution system (R4, tab 185, vol. 2 Rpt. 978; app. supp. R4, tab 5).

                                              18
         39. The Corps issued Highland a cure notice, dated 28 March 2012, for failing
to complete several facilities by the 1March2012 construction-completion date. The
first item identified by the Corps in its list of incomplete facilities was the power
distribution system. (R4, tab 77 at 1) The Corps notified Highland that it considered
Highland's failure to complete the facilities to be a condition endangering the timely
completion of the contract and directed Highland to submit a revised construction
schedule "that is reasonable and agreeable to the Government" within 10 days of
appellant's receipt of the cure notice (id. at 2).

       40. By letter dated 28 March 2012, Highland responded to the Corps' Serial Letter
No. C-0111 objecting to the Corps' decision to withhold all of Progress Payment No. 44 on
the basis of FAR 52.232-5(e), which Highland argued only allows retainage of up to 10%
of a progress payment, and "point[ed] out that [the Corps'] withholding of payment could
add additional delays to the project...[ and] that there will undoubtedly be more complaints
as withholding [the] payment will directly impact the subcontractors that are expecting
payment from [the] proceeds" (R4, tab 76).

       41. ·At some point in early April 2012, Highland provided the CO with
"Confirmation[ s] of Cash Receipt" signed by the representatives of several of its
subcontractors and by Highland's Construction Manager, Mr. John Reardon, all of which
were dated 1 April 2012 (R4, tab 78). The subcontractors whose representatives signed
"Confirmation[s] of Cash Receipt" were the Azad Company, whose representative
Mr. Nestor A. Bersula confirmed receipt of $75,000 for "labor against contract" (id. at l);
Zabul Pashton, whose representative Mr. Bashir Ahmad confirmed receipt of $77 ,000 for
"DEF AC contract work" (id. at 2); and "EKCC," or Ehsahullah Karimi Construction
Company, whose representative Mr. Jay-ar G. Maglalang confirmed receipt of $50,000 for
"Agreement between HLH/COE/EKCC" (id. at 3). Attached to EKCC's "Confirmation of
Cash Receipt" were two spreadsheets purporting to be its employee-payroll for CSB work
for January and February 2012 (id. at 4-7). Of these subcontractors, only Zabul Pashton,
presumably listed as "ZABUL," was identified in Highland's Progress Payment Request
No. 44 as being included in the payment estimate, and that was only $10,000; EKCC did
not even appear among the subcontractors listed (R4, tab 182 at 1, 31 ).

      42. On 4 April 2012, a meeting was held between the Corps, Highland, and
Highland's electrical duct-bank system subcontractor, Kar Neeroo, regarding
non-payment issues. The subcontractor reported that it was owed approximately
$680,000. (R4, tab 185 vol. 2, Rpt. 978)

        43. Highland responded to the Corps' 28 March 2012 cure notice by letter, dated
7 April 2012, with a proposed revised schedule attached. Highland informed the Corps,
however, that unspecified "delays and interruptions with progress payments could adversely
affect the submitted time schedules." Highland also advised the Corps that it intended to
"submit a comprehensive report within the next seven to ten days, detailing all pertinent


                                          19
issues relating to the project with particular emphasis [on] subcontractor payments and
progress on Permanent Power to the site." (R4, tab 80) Highland's proposed revised
schedule stated that procurement of the transformers should have been completed by
9 April 2011 (R4, tab 79 at 4); that excavation of trenches for the duct bank system, laying
of conduits, construction of manholes/handholes, and backfilling and compaction had
already been completed on 6 April 2012; that installation of "transformers 7" and
"transformers 3" would be done by 21 May 2012; that execution of the work specified in
Modification No. P00010 8 would begin on 22 May 2012 and be completed by 10 June
2012; that the MV load distribution switchgear work added by Modification No. POOOl l
had already been completed on 1April2012 (id. at 32); that cable pulling to the CSB would
be complete on 16 May 2012 (id. at 33); and that all of the electrical distribution system
work would be completed by 22 June 2012 (id. at 9). Although Highland's proposed
revised schedule did not contemplate the energization of the site electrical distribution
system until 3 July 2012, it inexplicably provided that temporary power would cease on
21 May 2012 and that provision of diesel fuel for the generators would end on 2 9 April
2012 (id. at 33). Highland's proposed revised schedule did not identify anything as being
on the critical path, nor did it identify any delay to any part of the work - whether occurring
before, during, or since November 2011 - or give any indication whatsoever as to the
duration of such a delay or its effect upon the schedule (id.).

        44. Highland's Progress Payment Request No. 45, dated 31 March 2012,
sought $76,829.81 (R4, tab 183 at 1, 31). Highland represented that subcontractor
payment amounts, totaling $202,000, were listed in Progress Payment Request No. 45
as follows: AZAD AFGHANISTAN Construction Company, $75,000; HKCC
Company, $50,000; and ZABUL, $77,000 (id. at 1-3). Notably, except for HKCC and
EKCC the subcontractors and amounts identified correspond to the Confirmations of
Cash Receipt that appellant had previously provided to the Corps (see finding 41 ). As
it did in its Progress Payment Request No. 44 (see finding 40), appellant certified that
it had not, to date, retained any subcontractor earnings (R4, tab 183 at 1-3). Appellant
did not invoice for the costs of fuel or maintenance for the temporary power generators
(id. at 4). The Corps received Progress Payment Request No. 45 on 10 April 2012
(R4, tab 149 at 1).

       45. As with Progress Payment No. 44, the Corps did not retain any of Progress
Payment No. 45 but rather withheld the progress payment altogether. The Corps
withheld all of Progress Payment No. 45 for "lack of payment to subcontractors, lack
of approved schedule, and lack of progress." (R4, tab 149 at 1)

8   It is unclear what work Highland was referring to in this portion of its schedule; as
           previously discussed, Modification No. POOOl l, not No. POOOlO, established
           additional work for the site electrical distribution system (see finding 25).
           However, the work added by Modification No. POOO 11 is identified elsewhere
           in appellant's schedule (R4, tab 79 at 32-33).

                                             20
       7. Termination and Appeal

       46. By Serial Letter No. H-0007, dated 14 April 2012, Highland notified the
Corps that "as of April 20, 2012 [Highland] will no longer be fueling or paying the
lease for the generators that were used to provide temporary power" to the site.
Highland continued as follows:

               We feel this is most unfortunate but regrettably we cannot
               afford to fund your modification. If you would like this
               temporary service to continue please pay our invoices for
               this service.

               We do not feel that the delay in delivering the permanent
               power is something we could have controlled and we do
               not feel that there is any precedent for your refusal to pay
               for this modification until the issues of permanent power
               can be worked out. We need to know as soon as possible
               of your intentions for this service so we can coordinate the
               requirements for this MOD; if it is your desire for this
               service to continue uninterrupted.

(R4, tab 81)

        47. In Serial Letter No. H-0004, dated 14 April 2012 - about a week after
submitting its proposed revised schedule - Highland argueq that its ability to complete
the work on time had been hampered by numerous "unforeseen and uncontrollable"
causes of delay. Highland identified "Incident A" as "Delay in Power to the Site,"
which consisted of"[a] NATO action at the Afghanistan-Pakistan border [that] caused
Pakistan to close the border" that "delayed the delivery of key components to the
underground electrical system" and "also allowed 3 of the transformers to be hijacked
while the shipment sat idle for weeks at the border." Also, Highland asserted that the
requirement for a 250A breaker in the MV load distribution switchgear required by
Modification No. POOOl l was "not what is required," and "[w]hen we tried to get
clarification we met resistance and an uncooperative attitude." Finally, there was the
matter of the nonconforming transformers:

               [T]he transformers [that were delivered to] the site do not
               meet the specified ... configuration; we have researched
               the difference between what is there and what was
               specified and find that what we have delivered is superior
               to the specified type especially considering the remote
               location. We submitted a request for variance only to


                                            21
             have it flatly rejected; no explanation or comment.. ..
             This will add additional delay to the power as we will
             have to bring a factory[ -]trained technician to the site to
             make the changes.

(R4, tab 82 at 1) (Emphasis added) Highland identified "Incident B" as "ANA Project
Interference," which consisted of "disruption and delay [the ANA battalion] routinely
brings to the project, locking up our managers, and harassing our employees whenever
something in [the barracks or shower/toilet/ablution facilities] goes wrong," including
"one encounter when a member of the ANA assaulted one of our employees."
Additionally, Highland argued that the close proximity of the site to the ANA barracks
precluded Highland from making up lost time by means of night work, and the ANA
"[would] not allow any Pakistani workers on the CSB site." Highland's "Incident C,"
"Poor Subcontractor Performance," ranged from its alleged inability to terminate even
non-performing subcontractors due to the nature of the Afghan legal system, to
outright fraud and bribery by subcontractors, to subcontractors with "hidden agendas"
who had been overpaid yet still complained to the Corps about lack of payment. (Id. at
2) Finally, "Incident D," which Highland identified as "Weather Delays," referred to
the heavy rainfall during the second week of November 2011, but did not identify how
many days were actually impacted by unusually severe weather, as required by the
contract's Time Extensions clause (see finding 10) (id. at 2-3). Highland did not
identify whether any critical path work was delayed by the alleged "incidents," nor did
appellant indicate the duration of any such delays.

        48. The Corps responded with Serial Letter No. C-0116, dated 15 April 2012.
The Corps asked Highland to "[p]lease clarify ... that as of April 20, 2012, [Highland]
will refuse to supply the fuel and generators that supply temporary power for the ANA
[CSB] project as required by modification P00013" by no later than noon, Afghanistan
time, on 16 April 2012. (R4, tab 83)

      49. Highland responded to the Corps' letter on 16 April 2012 stating:

             We have informed the [Corps] that 100% withholding of
             all payments for CSB will have serious consequences to
             the project. In your letter C-0116 you state we are
             "refusing" to supply the fuel and generators for
             temporary power; we do not wish to enter into a battle of
             semantics but we are not refusing. We simply do not
             have the money to pay for this. The MOD POOO 13, if it is
             still active[,] requires that we be compensated for the
             supply of the generators and the fuel to run them. We
             have not received the compensation for ... supplying this
             service as our approved invoice has been denied.


                                           22
               Therefore[,] as you are refusing to pay for this service[,]
               we will no longer be able to supply it according to the
               terms of MOD P00013.

(R4, tab 84)

        50. By Serial Letter No. C-0117, dated 18 April 2012, the Corps advised
Highland that "[a] Government inspection of the CSB project site over the last several
days has revealed that [Highland] is only averaging approximately 25 construction
personnel working mainly on the 7 buildings near completion." The Corps noted that it
had not observed any of Highland's workers on some of the larger buildings and stated
that the "lack of work force makes it apparent that [Highland] has abandoned its
worksite, or is preparing to do so." The Corps directed Highland, if it "disagree[ d] that
[it had] no interest in continuing with the [work]," to "provide a corrective action plan to
mitigate the issue oflack of progress." Finally, the Corps advised Highland that "it has
been brought to the Government's attention that select [Highland] employees have not
recently received their payrolls" and ordered Highland to "immediately show evidence of
employee payments." (R4, tab 85)

       51. The parties held a progress meeting on 20 April 2012 (R4, tab 86). Whi'le the
meeting minutes reflect that Mr. Reardon stated that Highland was "currently financially
insolvent from his perspective" (id. at 1), Mr. Reardon subsequently contested that
portion of the meeting minutes (R4, tab 800 at 5, tab 805; tr. 4/279). Mr. Reardon did
not, however, dispute the following portion of the meeting minutes:

                      a) Without financing, continued power via the
               generators and storage tanks leased from an outside
               supplier was no longer feasible beyond 22 APR 2012.
                      b) Extra fuel was currently available for 2 days
               of power. No further provisions have been made by the
               contractor beyond that period. It is expected that the
               current fuel will run out on 22 APR 2012.
                      c) Power outages were principally caused by
               mechanical failure. The personnel in charge of
               maintaining the generators have not been paid for two
               months. Without personnel to perform maintenance
               function[ s], a higher likelihood and occurrence of these
               events would occur.

               Mr. Reardon also informed the government that
               [Highland] headquarters had instructed him to pull the
               generators on 20 APR 2012. However, Mr. Reardon had



                                            23
              not done so due to the safety concerns of the personnel on
              site and those that occupy the man camp.

(R4, tab 86 at 1) The meeting minutes reflect that when asked about appellant's plans
to finish the project, Mr. Reardon stated:

              [H]e could not complete the project. He informed the
              Government that without financing from his company he
              could not complete the electrical wire for primary power
              distribution. He also stated that he and his personnel have
              not been paid for two months and that if their workers were
              not funded they intended to leave the site sometime around
              May 1st, 2012.

         ~ 6, tab 800 at 5, tab 805) According to the meeting minutes, the area
(Id. at 2,
engineer, Mr. Tony Oby, then informed Mr. Reardon that:

              [H]e was to contact his company and inform them that the
              Government considers [Highland] as having abandoned the
              job site. As such, the government will not disburse any
              funding on CSB ... until [a Highland] principal presents
              himself to [the Corps] to explain their company's plan for
              completion of the CSB ... project.

Mr. Oby further informed Mr. Reardon that this principal should present himself by no
later than Sunday, 22 April 2012. (R4, tab 86 at 3)

        52. Highland responded to the Corps' Serial Letter No. C-0117 and the minutes
of the parties' 20 April 2012 meeting with its Serial Letter No. S-0010. Highland
objected to the Corps' assertions that it had abandoned the site and to the Corps'
direction to produce a principal by 22 April 2012, stating: "If it is your desire that a
principal return to the site you should provide proper notification with a reasonable
date." Highland accused the Corps of "using tactics that are not supported by the
FAR' s [sic] and showing bad faith in negotiations and agreements made at the local
level," and of "deliberately trying to destroy our business ... using an ends justifies the
means mentality to accomplish this goal." Highland concluded its letter, however, by
stating that "we are committed to completing our Kandahar projects." (R4, tab 87)

       53. Highland emailed its Serial Letter No. S-0010 on 21 April 2012 to the
Corps at 10:07 local time. The Corps responded by email an hour later, directing
appellant to "notify the Government as to exactly when the generators and fuel tanks
will be removed." (R4, tab 88 at 4)



                                            24
      54. On 22 April 2012, Highland sent the Corps Serial Letter No. S-0110
summarizing a "LIFE SUPPORT TAKE OVER PLAN" discussed during a meeting
between appellant and the Corps that occurred on 21 April 2012. The letter, signed by
Mr. Reardon, cautioned the Corps that:

              I am ordered by the HLH headquarters to remove the rental
              generators (4) ... as of Sunday the twenty second of April or
              before.



              Any and all disruptions in [the three major life support
              systems: power, water, and waste removal] elicit[] an
              immediate response from the ANA where they are very
              angry and demand resolution forthwith.

(R4, tab 803 at 1)

         55. By email on 22 April 2012, at 8:18 local time, Highland's Engineer Mujtaba
informed the Corps that Highland had "decided to displace the generators and fuel tank
today," and that he would give the Corps an update when they were displaced (R4, tab 88
at 3-4 ). Within five minutes, the Corps responded by email to remind Highland that,
"[a]s discussed with John Reardon yesterday, [Highland] shall not remove the fuel tanks,
they are Government property." The Corps reiterated its concerns regarding the fuel
tanks with another email ten minutes later: "[Y]ou are not to touch the fuel tanks as they
are government property. You are to notify immediately once your guys set foot on
ground to disrupt the power generation at the CSB." (Id. at 3)

        56. At 9:01 local time on 22 April 2012, appellant sent the Corps an email
stating: "To let you know with the disrupt of power for CSB; our guys are standby to
disconnect the power now so [w ]e are waiting for your kind response in this regard."
The Corps responded by email at 9:06 local time, notifying Highland that "it is your
contractual obligation to keep power running to the barracks and occupied facilities at
the CSB" and asking "how are you planning to rectify the situation?" (R4, tab 88 at 2)
Highland did not respond to the Corps' 9:06 email, and at 10:22 the Corps sent appellant
an email that stated in pertinent part:

              I have been notified that the fuel for the temporary
              generation has run out at the CSB construction site. I
              reiterate that it is your contractual obligation to provide
              temporary power to the project site until you are able to
              complete the remaining construction. Please respond to



                                            25
                this email ASAP with your corrective action to restore
                temporary power.

                If I don't receive a response from you within the next
                hour, I will take your non-response as concurrence that
                you do not have a corrective action. I await your response
                by 11:21 AM.

(Id. at 1-2) At 11:23, the Corps sent appellant the following email:

                John, Willie, Bill & Sabah, as of 11 :21 AM we have
                received no response from you providing a corrective course
                of action, with respect to continuing to provide temporary
                power to the CSB project. With that being said, it is this
                office's position that you have breached your contract.

(Id. at 1) Highland responded to the Corps' 11 :23 email at 1:41, stating: "As far we are
in progress [Highland] HQ has already sent the attached serial letters regarding this
issue." Attached to Highland's 1:41 email were Highland's Serial Letter No. H-0004
(see finding 50); appellant's Serial Letter No. H-0008 (see finding 52); a document titled
"CS45 (Revise Schedule)"9 ; and appellant's Serial Letter No. H-0007 (see finding 49).
(R4, tab 88 at 1)

        57. At 2:24 local time on 22 April 2012, the Corps issued the following
direction to another contractor, ITT Exelis Mission Systems (ITT), to take over the
task of providing temporary power to the CSB:

                Please proceed with the hookup, testing, startup, etc. of the
                new system. The Commander wants to emphasize safety
                and if ITT feels threatened or is threatened, please
                withdraw immediately and let us know.

(R4, tab 90 at 1-2) At 3:02, ITT informed the Corps by email that:

                We went to hook up the power to the CSB just now and
                found that [Highland] had turned their generator back on
                and was supplying power.

                We directed our people to stop and wait for additional
                guidance.

9
    It is not apparent from the record whether this is the same proposed revised schedule
           that was attached to appellant's Serial Letter No. H-0005 (see finding 46).

                                             26
At 3: 15, ITT sent the Corps another email: "[Highland] just switched the power back
off. We're working with the [Corps] to resolve this issue." (Id. at 1)

       58. The Corps' Quality Assurance Report for 22 April 2012 states: "It is unclear
who shut the electrical power off for the barracks and latrine. [Highland] claims that they
didn't [and] that the O&M contractor did so" (R4, tab 185, vol. 2, Rpt. 996).

        59. At 10:38 on 23 April 2012, Highland's Safety Manager, Willie Fouche,
sent the Corps the following email:

               I like to inform you that we run out of diesel for the
               generator at the ANA barracks.

               We have a small amount of diesel in our generator to
               supply water for the ANA.

               We don't have any person that will supply us with diesel
               without any money to pay for it.

(R4, tab 91)

       60. On 23 April 2012, the Corps issued Serial Letter No. C-0119 terminating the
contract for default. The justification given by the CO for the default termination was
appellant's failure "to provide temporary power ... according to the agreement signed by
both parties on November 10, 2011," bilateral Modification No. P00013 (R4, tab 2 at 6;
see finding 27). The CO offered the following explanation in the termination decision:

                      [Highland] first informed the Government on
               April 14, 2012, via serial letter H-0007, that as of April 20,
               2012 [Highland] would no longer fuel or pay the lease for
               the generators that were being used to provide temporary
               power to CSB site. In serial letter H-0007 [Highland]
               claimed that ifthe Government continued to refuse payment
               on [Highland's] pay requests numbered 44 and 45 temporary
               power service would be interrupted. Further, when the
               Government, on April 15, 2012 requested adequate
               assurances that [Highland] would continue to provide
               temporary power [Highland] again reiterated that unless the
               Government compensated [Highland,] service would not be
               supplied according to the terms of modification POOO 13.
               [Highland's] assertion that the Government's failure to
               approve pay requests numbered 44 and 45 would lead to a


                                            27
              disruption in temporary power is uncontainable [sic].
              According to our records [Highland] has been paid for
              [CLIN] 0017 in the amount of$1,782,790.76 out of the
              $1,916,895.14. No further disbursements have been made
              due to the overpayment on this project. [Highland] has
              completed 86.5% of project; however, [Highland] has been
              paid 89% of the contract value. There is currently 2.5%
              ($903,553.79) of uncompleted work that has been paid, this
              is considered overpayment.

                     [Highland] has given the Government many excuses
              as to why the permanent power was not in place as of
              March 1, 2012. Irrespective of any excuse [Highland] had
              a contractual obligation to provide temporary power and
              [Highland] stopped providing temporary power ....
              [Highland's] failure to provide temporary power to the
              CSB site is a breach of [Highland's] contractual duties ....

(R4, tab 2 at 6)

       61. On 29 April 2012, HLH responded by letter to the termination notice taking
exception to the notice (R4, tab 92).

      62. On 19 July 2012, appellant timely appealed to this Board from the default
termination.

                                      DECISION

        A termination for default is a "drastic sanction ... which should be imposed (or
sustained) only for good grounds and on solid evidence." JD. Hedin Constr. Co. v.
United States, 
408 F.2d 424
, 431 (Ct. Cl. 1969); see also MIC/CCS, JV, ASBCA
No. 58242, 14-1 BCA, 35,612 at 174,434. The government bears the initial burden of
proving the propriety of the default termination. Lisbon Contractors, Inc. v. United States,
828 F.2d 759
, 765 (Fed. Cir. 1987); New Era Contract Sales, Inc., ASBCA No. 56661
et al., 11-1BCA,34,738 at 171,022. If the government carries its burden, the burden
then shifts onto appellant to show that the default was excusable, ADT Constr. Grp., Inc.
by Timothy S. Cory, Ch. 7 Tr., ASBCA No. 55358, 13 BCA, 35,307 at 173,312, either
because the government materially breached the contract thereby discharging appellant's
duty to perform, McDonald Welding & Mach. Co., ASBCA No. 36284, 94-3 BCA
, 27,181 at 135,442; the failure was beyond appellant's control and without its fault or
negligence or that of its subcontractors or suppliers; or the CO's default decision was
arbitrary or capricious or an abuse of discretion, Shubhada Indus., Inc., ASBCA
No. 54016, 08-1BCA,33,733 at 167,017.


                                           28
       The government argues that it was justified in exercising its right under
common law to terminate the contract for default because appellant anticipatorily
repudiated the contract by refusing to provide temporary power to the ANA barracks
without additional compensation (gov't br. at 65-67) and by failing to respond
adequately to the government's 28 March 2012 cure notice (id. at 59, 69-70), and
because appellant actually repudiated the contract by interrupting the temporary power
on 22 April 2015 (id. at 59, 68-69). The government argues alternatively that the
default termination was proper because appellant's refusal to provide temporary power
breached its duty to proceed under the Disputes clause (id. at 67) and because the CO
reasonably believed that appellant failed to prosecute the work with the diligence
necessary to ensure its completion by the date agreed upon (id. at 50-57, 61-62).

        Appellant contends that its refusal to provide temporary power to the ANA
barracks was excused because the government improperly withheld two entire progress
payments, thus materially breaching the contract and rendering appellant financially
unable to buy fuel to run the temporary generators (app. br. at 43-50). Alternatively,
appellant argues that it was entitled to an equitable adjustment of time totaling "at least
5.5 months (from March 1, 2012 to August 28, 2012)" (id. at 50, 57), due to numerous
"excusable delays," including severe flooding in November 2011; the Afghanistan
government's expulsion of skilled Pakistani workers in the fall of 2011; the closure of the
border between Afghanistan and Pakistan from November 2011 through July 2012,
which resulted in a "freight embargo"; the hijacking of critical transformers along the
Pakistani border in November 2011; security issues; and "substantial ongoing changes to
the power, potable water and sanitary sewer systems, which were never resolved" (id. at
51, 55-56, 64). Appellant also argues that, by waiting until 23 April 2012 to terminate
the contract, the government waived its right to terminate the contract for delay (id. at
58-59). Finally, appellant argues that the government's termination decision was
improper because the CO failed to provide a cure notice prior to terminating the contract
(id. at 63 ); failed to consider potential "excusable delays" (id. at 60-61 ); and failed to
perform an analysis of the factors set forth at FAR 49.402-3 (id. at 62).

A. Anticipatory Repudiation

         1. Appellant anticipatorily breached the contract by refusing to continue
            providing temporary power without additional compensation

        Paragraph (d) of the contract's Default clause states that the government's
termination rights and remedies as set forth in paragraph (a) "are in addition to any other
rights and remedies provided by law or under this contract" (finding 11). Paragraph (d) of
the Default clause thus reserves the government's common law rights, All-State Constr.,
Inc., ASBCA No. 50586, 06-2 BCA ii 33,344 at 165,341-42, including its summary right to
terminate a contract for default following a contractor's anticipatory repudiation of its


                                           29
contractual obligations, G&G W Painting, Inc., ASBCA No. 50492, 01-2 BCA ii 31,492 at
155,484 (citing DWS, Inc., ASBCA No. 33245, 87-3 BCA ii 19,960); cf Scott Aviation,
ASBCA No. 40776, 91-3 BCA ii 24,123 at 120,726 ("The Government, however, retains its
common law right to terminate the contract. .. when the contractor has anticipatorily
repudiated the contract.").

       In order to demonstrate an anticipatory repudiation, the government must show
appellant "communicated an intent not to perform in a positive, definite, unconditional
and unequivocal manner, either by ( 1) a definite and unequivocal statement by the
contractor that it refuses to perform or (2) actions which constitute actual abandonment
of performance. Production Services & Technology, Inc., ASBCA No. 53353, 02-2
BCA ii 32,026 at 158,293 (quoting Jones Oil Co., ASBCA No. 42651 et al., 98-1 BCA
ii 29,691at147,150).

        The record clearly shows that appellant positively, definitely, unconditionally,
and unequivocally refused to continue providing temporary power without additional
fuel payments by the government. Here, appellant by its 14 April 2012 letter and
communications and actions through 23 April 2012 positively, definitely,
unconditionally, and unequivocally refused to provide power as required by
Modification No. POOO 13 unless it received additional payment for doing so
(findings 46, 49, 51, 54-55, 59). Appellant's attempt to suggest in its 16 April 2012
letter that it is somehow not refusing to provide temporary power, while demanding
additional payment for it (finding 49), does not change the character of its earlier
letter. A party's refusal to perform its contractual obligations in the future without a
change to the contract has been held to constitute anticipatory repudiation. Free &
Ben, Inc., ASBCA No. 56129, 11-1BCAii34,719 at 170,954 (refusing to perform
without a change to the contract is anticipatory repudiation); Howell Tool and
Fabricating, Inc., ASBCA No. 47939, 96-1BCAii28,225 at 140,941 (anticipatory
repudiation where contractor manifested a positive and unequivocal intention not to
render performance until it received a contract price increase). We conclude that
appellant's correspondence of 14-23 April 2012 was an anticipatory breach of
appellant's obligation to provide power. Appellant did not refuse to perform the
contract altogether, however, so whether appellant's refusal to provide power was an
anticipatory repudiation depends on whether the obligation to provide power was a
material requirement of the contract.

       2. Appellant's anticipatory breach was material and thus it was a repudiation

       A breach is material if it relates to a matter of vital importance or goes to the
essence of the contract. Tzell Airtrak Travel Grp. Corp., ASBCA No. 57313,
11-2 BCA ii 34,845 at 171,410 (citing Thomas v. HUD, 
124 F.3d 1439
, 1442 (Fed. Cir.
1997)). "The standard of materiality for the purposes of deciding whether a contract
has been breached 'is necessarily imprecise and flexible."' Stone Forest Indus., Inc. v.


                                           30
United States, 
973 F.2d 1548
, 1550-51 (Fed. Cir. 1993) (quoting RESTATEMENT
(SECOND) OF CONTRACTS§ 241 cmt. a). In determining the materiality of a breach,
we may consider some or all of the "significant" circumstances from THE
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 241:

              (a) the extent to which the injured party will be deprived of
              the benefit which he reasonably expected;

              (b) the extent to which the injured party can be adequately
              compensated for the part of that benefit of which he will be
              deprived;

              (c) the extent to which the party failing to perform or to
              offer to perform will suffer forfeiture;

              ( d) the likelihood that the party failing to perform or to
              offer to perform will cure his failure, taking account of all
              the circumstances including any reasonable assurances;

              (e) the extent to which the behavior of the party failing to
              perform or to offer to perform comports with the standards
              of good faith and fair dealing.

Consumers Oil Co., ASBCA No. 24172, 86-1BCA~18,647 at 93,713-14. "[I]t is not to
be expected that, in every case, each of the five[§ 241] circumstances will be pertinent.. ..
It is to be expected, however, that circumstance (a) ('the extent to which the injured party
will be deprived of the benefit which he reasonably expected') will always be a pertinent
consideration." Hansen Bancorp, Inc. v. United States, 
367 F.3d 1297
, 1312 (Fed. Cir.
2004); see also Consumers Oil, 86-1 BCA ~ 18,647 at 93,713-14 (it is "important" to
consider the extent to which the injured party will be deprived of the benefit of the
exchange). Ultimately, whether a breach is a material breach depends on the nature and
effect of the violation in light of how the particular contract was viewed, bargained for,
entered into, and performed by the parties. Stone Forest, 973 F .2d at 15 51.

         The record before us indicates that the obligation to provide power was material.
We first begin with an examination of the plain language of the contract, construing the
contract so as to effectuate its spirit and purpose and giving reasonable meaning to all of
its parts. ECCI-C Metag, JV, ASBCA No. 59031, 15-1BCA~36,145 at 176,420. From
the outset, the contract identified the site electrical distribution system as a priority
life-support system and required appellant to provide temporary power to the soldiers'
facilities on the CSB until they were connected to a permanent power source (Finding 13 ).
The parties reaffirmed the essentiality of this requirement with their bilateral Modification
No. P00013 which, while allocating the risk of providing temporary power to the


                                            31
government up to a specified date and thereafter to appellant, established beyond cavil that
temporary power would be provided to the CSB until permanent power was connected
(see finding 27). That the parties agreed not to turn over any more buildings to the
government until the CSB power system was connected to the Camp Hero power plant
(see finding 26) underscores the importance of providing temporary power to the soldiers'
facilities: while the parties had some latitude to determine when power could be provided
to non-life-essential facilities, they had no such latitude with respect to essential
life-support systems such as power, water, and waste removal. A failure to any of those
systems would render the CSB quarters, barracks, and shower/toilet/ablution facilities
unusable to the ANA soldiers and thereby wholly deprive the government of its
expectations under the contract. See RESTATEMENT (SECOND)§ 241(a). Moreover, the
parties were aware that the ANA soldiers had, on repeated occasions, reacted to
short-duration power interruptions, and both the government and appellant had good cause
to believe that a longer power interruption might result in rioting and mayhem (see
findings 33, 54). In short, the government could not be adequately compensated for the
harm could result from a failure to provide power. See RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF
CONTRACTS § 241 (b ). Providing temporary power to the CSB was a material requirement
of the contract; appellant's refusal to do so was therefore an anticipatory repudiation. 10

         3. The requirement to provide power was non-severable

        Whether the repudiation of one contract requirement justifies termination of the
entire contract depends on whether that requirement is severable from the rest of the
contract work. When a contract requirement is severable or divisible and a contractor is
delinquent in only that one aspect of the contract work, it is improper for the CO to
terminate for default the entire contract. Overhead Elec. Co., ASBCA No. 25656, 85-2
BCA ii 18,026 at 90,470-71, aff'd, 
795 F.2d 1019
(Fed. Cir. 1986) (table). In Stone
Forest, 973 F.2d at 1552
(citing RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS§§ 237, 240),
the court stated:

                If only a severable portion of a contract was breached, the
                non-breaching party can recover damages for that portion
                of the contract but its remaining contractual duties are not
                discharged. However, if a contract is not clearly divisible,
                in accordance with the intention of the parties, the
                breaching party cannot require the non-breaching party to
                continue to perform what is left of the contract."


10   Although the government argued anticipatory repudiation (gov't br. at 65-69),
         appellant did not address anticipatory repudiation in either its post-hearing brief
         or surreply brief. Appellant does not contend that the temporary power
         requirement is severable from the remainder of the contract.

                                              32
Determining whether portions of the work under a single contract are divisible from the
balance of the contract is not an easy question, as there is no bright line rule for
determining contract severability. Aptus Co. v. United States, 
62 Fed. Cl. 808
, 812 (2004)
(citing JOHN CIBINIC, JR. & RALPH C. NASH, JR., ADMINISTRATION OF GOVERNMENT
CONTRACTS 963 (3d ed. 1995)). Contracts may be considered severable or divisible where
corresponding parts of the performances promised by each party may be regarded as agreed
equivalents. Consumers Oil, 86-1BCA,18,647 at 93,709. This principle, which is meant
to mitigate the risk of unjust forfeiture, is expressed in section 240 of the RESTATEMENT
(SECOND) OF CONTRACTS, as follows:

              If the performances to be exchanged under an exchange of
              promises can be apportioned into corresponding pairs of
              part performances so that the parts of each pair are
              properly regarded as agreed equivalents, a party's
              performance of his part of such a pair has the same effect
              on the other's duties to render performance of the agreed
              equivalent as it would have if only that pair of
              performances had been promised.

        Several factors guide the analysis of severability, such as whether the requirements
are capable of being performed separately and whether the conduct of the parties suggests
that they are "separate in character." Bulova Techs. Ordnance Sys. LLC, ASBCA
No. 57406, 14-1 BCA, 35,521 at 174,098-99. In determining the severability of contract
requirements, we look to "the intent of the parties, as gleaned from the four comers of the
instrument," Pennsylvania Coal & Coke Corp. v. United States, 
108 Ct. Cl. 236
, 250
(1947), "the nature of the work required by the contract, and the contract's overarching
purpose," 
Aptus, 62 Fed. Cl. at 812
. See, e.g., Bulova, 14-1BCA,35,521 at 174,099;
Plum Run, Inc., ASBCA Nos. 46091, 49203, 05-2 BCA, 32,977 at 163,365-66
(considering interrelatedness of construction subCLINs ); Overhead Elec., 85-2 BCA
, 18,026 at 90,471-72 (considering line-item pricing structure in a lump sum construction
contract); R.E. Lee Elec. Co., ASBCA Nos. 6195, 6447, 61-1BCA,3002 at 15,606
(considering parties' communications during performance, as well as the structure of the
reprocurement contract).

        The record indicates that the requirement to provide power was not severable from
the rest of the work under the contract. Again, we begin our analysis with the contract.
As discussed, the contract terms of the site electrical distribution system and of bilateral
Modification No. POOO 13 clearly established the requirement to provide temporary power
to the CSB until permanent power was connected (findings 13, 27). The original site
electrical distribution system requirement wholly and inseparably included this
requirement to provide temporary power (see finding 13). Although Change Order
No. A00003 (finding 19) and the subsequent Modification No. P00013 (finding 27)
established a complicated series of subCLINs to cover the costs of leasing generators,


                                           33
paying for fuel and maintenance, and moving or demobilizing generators, those CLIN
structures did not create a separate, agreed-equivalent pair of obligations capable of
standing alone apart from appellant's requirement to connect the site electrical
distribution system to the power plant. By the very terms of Modification No. P00013,
the subCLINs related to leasing, maintaining, and fueling the generators expired on
1March2012 regardless of whether temporary power was still required. The
overarching obligation to provide temporary power to the CSB could be discharged only
by the connection of the site electrical distribution system to the Camp Hero power plant
(finding 27). Thus, the requirement to provide temporary power is inextricable from the
requirement to complete the site electrical distribution system. Accordingly, we hold that
the requirement to provide temporary power is not severable from the requirement to
connect the site electrical distribution system to the Camp Hero power plant. Cf 
Aptus, 62 Fed. Cl. at 813
(contract not severable given the "interdependent nature of the several
tasks, and the unified purpose to which they are a part"); Overhead Elec., 85-2 BCA
~ 18,026. Nor is the site electrical distribution system requirement severable from the
rest of the contract. During their global settlement negotiations, and prior to executing
Modification No. P00013, the parties agreed that the government would not accept any
more buildings until the CSB power system was connected to the Camp Hero power plant
(see finding 26). Based on this record, the conduct of the parties and the contract terms,
the site electrical distribution system was critical and therefore was not severable.

      Appellant positively, definitely, unequivocally, and unconditionally refused to
provide power unless it was paid more, above and beyond the amount agreed upon by
the parties in Modification No. P00013, and this refusal amounted to a material breach
of a non-severable contract requirement. We conclude that appellant anticipatorily
repudiated the contract and the government was therefore justified in summarily
terminating the contract for default. 11

         4. Appellant's anticipatory repudiation was inexcusable

       The government having carried the burden of proving the propriety of the default
termination, appellant must now show that its default was excusable. See ADT, 13 BCA
~ 35,307 at 173,315. As discussed above, to do so appellant must demonstrate either that
there exists some excusable cause for its default beyond its control and without its fault
or negligence or that, as a result of a prior material breach by the government, appellant
had a legal right of avoidance, thereby discharging its duty to perform and relieving it of
the default termination. See, e.g., McDonald, 94-3 BCA ~ 27,181 at 135,442; Thomas S.


11   Because we find that the government was justified in terminating the contract for
         default because appellant anticipatorily repudiated the contract, we need not
         and do not consider the government's alternative arguments. Cf Cox & Palmer
         Constr. Corp., ASBCA Nos. 38739, 38746, 92-1BCA~24,756 at 123,528.

                                           34
Rhoades, ENG BCA No. 6025 et al., 97-1BCA~28,672. We consider each of
appellant's arguments in tum.

              a. The government did not materially breach by withholding progress
                 payments

        Appellant argues that the government's failure to make progress payments was a
material breach that excused appellant's further performance (app. br. at 44-50). As
appellant states, a prior material breach by the government would discharge appellant's
duty to perform and relieve appellant of the default termination and its consequences.
See Malone v. United States, 
849 F.2d 1441
, 1445-46 (Fed. Cir. 1998); see also
Christopher Village, L.P. v. United States, 
360 F.3d 1319
, 1334 (Fed. Cir. 2004) ("A later
breach 'is justified ... by the other party's [prior] failure."') (quoting RESTATEMENT
(SECOND) OF CONTRACTS§ 237 cmt. b (1981)); Stone 
Forest, 973 F.2d at 1550
("Upon
material breach of a contract the non-breaching party has the right to discontinue
performance of the contract, and to seek redress in accordance with law."). The
government's failure to make progress payments when they are due is a classic example
of such a prior breach. See, e.g., Frank Pigeon v. United States, 
27 Ct. Cl. 167
, 175-76
(1892) (government's wrongful withholding of 100% of two consecutive progress
payments as an indemnity against the chance of possible failure on the part of the
contractor was a material breach); DWS, 87-3 BCA ~ 19,960 at 101,050 ("if the
Government unjustifiably fails to pay amounts indisputably due and owing under the
contract, the contractor may declare the Government to be in breach of contract and stop
its performance."). Additionally, if appellant establishes that the CO breached the
contract by wrongfully withholding progress payments, appellant must then demonstrate
that the government's breach is material. TRS Research, ASBCA No. 51712, 01-1 BCA
~ 31,149; Consumers Oil, 86-1BCA~18,647 at 93,713-14.


       In order to show that the government breached the contract by wrongfully
withholding progress payments, appellant must first show that the progress payments
were, in fact, due. See, e.g., ADT, 13 BCA ~ 35,307 at 173,316-17; Versar, Inc., ASBCA
No. 56857 et al., 12-1 BCA ~ 35,025 at 172, 126. There is no absolute right to progress
payments. Davis Group, Inc., ASBCA No. 48431, 95-2 BCA ~ 27,702 at 138,092.
Progress payments are authorized by statute, 10 U.S.C. § 2307, which requires that "any
payment for work in progress (including materials, labor, and other items) under a
defense contract that provides for such payments is commensurate with the work
accomplished that meets standards established under the contract." 10 U.S.C.
§ 2307(e)(l); see also Fortec Constructors, ASBCA No. 27480, 83-2 BCA ~ 16,727 at
83,186. The Payments clause for this contract (finding 7), therefore requires the
contractor to substantiate and certify its requests for progress payments and payment
under the clause "is subject to such things as contract compliance, substantiation of work
done, and the CO's exercise of discretion in certain respects." Versar, 12-1 BCA
~ 35,025 at 172,126.



                                          35
         A CO's discretion in deciding whether or not to withhold a progress payment is
very broad. US. Fid. & Guaranty Co. v. United States, 
676 F.2d 622
, 630-31 (Ct. Cl.
1982). In addition to showing that it met all of the contractual conditions precedent to
receiving a progress payment, appellant must also demonstrate that the CO abused his or
her "considerable discretion" by withholding the payment. TGC Contracting Corp. v.
United States, 
736 F.2d 1512
, 1515 (Fed. Cir. 1984) (appellant's burden to show that
progress payments were erroneously withheld); Carro & Carro Enterprises, Inc., ASBCA
No. 59485, 15-1BCAii35,915 at 175,572-73 (appellant's burden to show government
failed to pay amounts due under the Payments clause for fixed-price construction); ADT,
13 BCA ii 35,307 at 173,316 (citing Technocratica, ASBCA No. 44347 et al., 94-1 BCA
~ 26,584 at 132,288). For example, the Schedules clause, FAR 52.236-15, gives the CO
discretion to withhold approval of progress payments if the contractor fails to provide the
CO with an acceptable work schedule within a specified time frame (finding 10). The
Payments clause (finding 9), too, gives the CO considerable discretion in deciding
whether payment is warranted given the amount of work completed and the quality of the
work. ADT, 13 BCA ii 35,307 at 173,316 (withholding proper where contractor failed to
adequately substantiate work performed); see also Morganti Nat'l., Inc. v. United States,
49 Fed. Cl. 110
, 142 (2001), aff'd, 
36 F. App'x 452
(Fed. Cir. 2002) (withholding proper
under FAR 52.232-5(b) for deficiencies in work); ON! Constr., Inc., ASBCA No. 45394
et al., 96-2 BCA ~ 28,277 at 141,184 (withholding proper where contractor made no
progress in the time frame leading up to the unpaid invoice). Furthermore, where matters
affecting progress payments are in dispute, the CO is entitled to give the government the
benefit of the doubt in exercising his or her discretion. Davis Grp., 95-2 BCA ii 27,702 at
138,093 (citing Fortec, 83-2 BCA ii 16,727).

       Appellant has not established that it was actually due the payments which the
government withheld. At the time the government decided to withhold Progress Payment
Nos. 44 and 45, there was no approved schedule (findings 32, 34, 39, 45). Under such
circumstances, the Schedules clause permits a CO to withhold a progress payment
(finding 8). Although not required by the Payments clause, the government notified
appellant on multiple occasions that its failure to provide the CO with an up-to-date and
complete schedule could have an adverse effect on its receiving progress payments
(findings 32, 34).

       Additionally, the many and varied instances, over an extended period of time, in
which subcontractors brought issues of non-payment to the government's attention
provided ample justification to withhold progress payments until the issues were
investigated and the matters resolved to the CO's satisfaction (see findings 20-22, 36, 42).
We have previously upheld the CO's discretion to withhold progress payments when,
despite a contractor's certification that payments to subcontractors had been made from
previous progress payments, the CO received complaints of nonpayment from one, then
several, sub~ontractors and suppliers. See Dan F. Harrison Constr., Inc., ASBCA


                                           36
No. 41572, 91-2 BCA ii 23,949 at 119,926 ("In light of [the contractor's certification
regarding payments to subcontractors], it was reasonable for the [CO] to bring to
appellant's attention and to investigate the subcontractor's nonpayment complaint prior to
further processing of [the progress payment]."). We hold this to be such a case.

       The government was justified in withholding progress payments after appellant
repeatedly and consistently failed to provide a practicable schedule conforming to the
requirements of the Schedules clause. Additionally, the government was justified in
withholding progress payments in order to investigate the subcontractors' numerous
and extended complaints of non-payment despite appellant's certifications to the
contrary. We conclude that withholding Progress Payment Nos. 44 and 45 was a
reasonable exercise of discretion, and thus the government did not breach by doing so.

                b. Appellant's anticipatory repudiation was not otherwise excusable

       Appellant contends that in the time between the parties' global settlement
modifications (see findings 23-27) and the default termination (see finding 60), numerous
events occurred that constituted "excusable delays" under the Default clause and the
Other Changes in Contract Performance clause (app. hr. at 50-57). 12 This, appellant
argues, entitles appellant to 5.5 months excusable delay, which would extend the
completion date for establishing permanent power from 1 March 2012 to 28 August 2012
and excuse the default (app. hr. at 50-51, 55,).

       Assuming, arguendo, that appellant proves entitlement to excusable delay, it
would only entitle appellant to an extension of time; it would not excuse appellant's
anticipatory repudiation. The government did not default appellant for failing to provide
permanent power by 1 March, it invoked its common law remedy under the Default
clause for anticipatorily repudiating its obligation under Modification No. P00013 to
provide temporary power until a permanent power system was functioning (see finding
60). This repudiation was a material breach of the contract. Accordingly, in order to
prove that its anticipatory repudiation was excused by one or more "excusable delays,"
appellant must show that such "excusable delays" entirely discharged its remaining
duties. B.F. Goodrich Co., ASBCA No. 19960, 76-2 BCA ii 12,105 at 58,157-58;
RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS§ 261 cmt. e ("[I]fthe performance remains
practicable and it is merely beyond the party's capacity to render it, he is ordinarily not
discharged."). This requires appellant not only to prove the "excusable delay," but also
to prove that it constituted the non-occurrence of a basic assumption of the contract and
rendered performance impracticable. RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 261; cf
A-Greater New Jersey Movers, Inc., ASBCA No. 54745, 06-1 BCA ii 33,179 at 164,433;
Howell Tool, 96-1BCAii28,225 at 140,941 (appellant's anticipatory

12
     Appellant refers to the Other Changes in Contract Performance clause (finding 3) as
        the "Combat" clause.


                                            37
repudiation was not excusable "within the meaning of the Default clause" where
appellant failed to prove financial inability to perform).

         Appellant has not alleged, much less proven, that any of its asserted "excusable
delays" constituted supervening circumstances that rendered performance
impracticable and thus could have discharged its duty to provide power. Appellant
argues that the cable for the site electrical distribution system was "not available," and
that "[i]t was not possible to fly in the cable because the cost would have been in the
millions of dollars" (app. br. at 25). However, appellant does not provide even rough
calculations to support its conclusory "millions of dollars" assertion or explain why
such an amount would render performance impracticable, nor does appellant address
why it would have been impracticable, to bring the cable overland from any of the
several other countries that share a border with Afghanistan. Argument is not proof.
Shubhada, 08-1BCA~33,733 at 167,019; Harvex Trading Co., ASBCA No. 38279
et al., 92-3 BCA ~ 25,027 at 124,756.

        Neither has appellant demonstrated the extremity of its resultant financial
difficulties or established a causal link between any of its asserted "excusable delays"
and its alleged inability to buy fuel or pay for generator maintenance. Both in writing
and during his testimony, Mr. Reardon stressed that appellant was not insolvent during
the time leading up to appellant's repudiation, but only that appellant needed
additional funding from the government (finding 51). Appellant has not identified any
evidence that appellant's financial situation during the time leading up to the default
termination was dire, much less that it was dire as the result of any of its asserted
"excusable delays." We are not required to scour the voluminous record, numbering
as it does in the tens of thousands of pages, to discern if any proof might exist. Webb
Elec. Co. ofFla., Inc., ASBCA No. 54293, 07-2 BCA ~ 33,717 at 166,947. "It is
well-established that the contractor assumes the risk of providing resources sufficient
to perform a contract. Undercapitalization will not excuse a failure to perform."
Rhoades, 97-1BCA~28,672 at 143,232 (citing Willems Indus., Inc. v. United States,
295 F.2d 822
(Ct. Cl. 1961), cert. denied, 
370 U.S. 903
(1962)); see also Cosmic
Constr. Co., ASBCA Nos. 24014, 24036, 88-2 BCA ~ 20,623. When it signed
Modification No. P00013, appellant agreed to assume the costs of fueling and
maintaining the generators that provided temporary power to the ANA barracks until
such time as it connected the CSB power system to the Camp Hero power plant if it
had not yet done so by 1 March 2012 (finding 27). Appellant failed to connect the
CSB power system to the power plant, and on 1March2012 the government stopped
paying for fuel to run the generators. From that point on, it was solely appellant's
obligation to fuel and maintain the generators until the CSB was connected to the
power plant. By agreeing to Modification No. P00013, appellant assumed the risk of
paying for generator fuel and maintenance after 1March2012.




                                            38
        Likewise, appellant cannot attribute its financial difficulties to any fault on the
part of the government. The government's failure or delay to make payments can
constitute a defense to a default termination only if they rendered the contractor
financially incapable of continuing performance; are the primary or controlling cause
of appellant's default; or are a material, rather than insubstantial or immaterial, breach
of the contract. Jones Oil, 98-1 BCA ~ 29 ,691 at 147,151; Consumers Oil, 86-1 BCA
~ 16,647 at 93,710. We have already held the government's withholding of progress
payments was justified and thus did not constitute a breach, and appellant has not
demonstrated that it was financially incapable of performing the contract. While the
government's withholding of the two progress payments might have exacerbated
appellant's financial difficulties, appellant has not shown that it was the primary or
controlling cause. Indeed, to the extent that appellant was having trouble paying its
subcontractors and suppliers, it appears from the record that such difficulties may have
begun as early as 1 February 2011 (finding 20), long before the government ever
withheld a progress payment. Thus, appellant has given us no reason to depart from
the normal rule that the contractor's financial difficulties are not a legitimate excuse
for its default. See, e.g., Danzig v. AEC Corp., 
224 F.3d 1333
, 1339 (Fed. Cir. 2000);
TGC, 736 F.2d at 1515
(withholding of progress payments is no excuse when the
contractor's failure to perform was "the direct result of its lack of working capital, its
negligence, and its own actions").

       Appellant has failed to carry its burden of proving that its repudiation was
excused within the meaning of the Default clause. We conclude that none of the
"excusable delays" alleged by appellant discharged its obligation to provide power,
nor did they render appellant's obligation impracticable; accordingly, they cannot
excuse appellant's anticipatory repudiation.

B. The Government Did Not Waive Its Right to Terminate for Default

        Appellant also contends that, given the parties' 1 March 2012 performance
deadline, the government waived its right to terminate for default by waiting until
23 April 2012 to terminate the contract (app. br. at 58-59). Invoking the waiver doctrine
from De Vito v. United States, 413 F .2d 1147 (Ct. Cl. 1969), appellant argues that the
government did not exercise its right to terminate in a reasonable time and that appellant
relied to its detriment upon the government's forbearance by continuing with the contract
(app. br. at 58-59). We note that there are significant differences between construction
contracts and other contracts when it comes to the doctrine of waiver in the context of the
government's right to terminate a contract for default. See MIC/CCS, 14-1 BCA ~ 35,612
at 174,435 (noting that "the De Vito 'waiver' doctrine (sometimes referred to as an
estoppel issue) normally does not apply to construction contracts absent unusual
circumstances."). Setting those differences aside, however, it is obvious that the De Vito
waiver doctrine is inapplicable to these facts. Appellant anticipatorily repudiated the
contract on 22 April 2012, and for that its contract was immediately terminated. It is


                                            39
immaterial that the deadline for performance had passed over a month previously without
either termination or the establishment of a new schedule. Appellant's anticipatory
repudiation gave the CO an independent right to terminate the contract for default.
B.F. Goodrich, 76-2 BCA ii 12,105 at 58,158; see also MIC/CCS, 14-1BCAii35,612 at
174,435 ("even ifthe government has waived a contract completion date, it may still
terminate a contract for default ifthe contractor ... materially breaches other contract
obligations"). The De Vito waiver doctrine is inapposite where, as here, the government
exercised its right to summarily terminate the contract pursuant to a contractor's
anticipatory repudiation.

        Under certain circumstances, the government might nevertheless waive its right to
terminate on the basis of a contractor's anticipatory repudiation; however, appellant has
not shown that such circumstances exist in this case. 13 The government does not waive
its right to terminate a contract for default following a contractor's repudiation simply by
urging the contractor to continue performing. Cf Mobil Oil Exploration and Producing
Southeast, Inc. v. United States, 
530 U.S. 604
, 621-22 (2000); see also Amber Resources
Co. v. United States, 
538 F.3d 1358
, 1376 (Fed. Cir. 2008); Consumers Oil, 86-1 BCA
ii 18,647 at 93,708 n.14; RESTATEMENT (SECOND)§ 257 ("The injured party does not
change the effect of a repudiation by urging the repudiator to perform in spite of his
repudiation or to retract his repudiation."). During the short time between appellant's
repudiation and the termination of the contract, the government merely urged appellant's
continued performance. After appellant continued to refuse to provide power without
receiving additional payment, the CO finally terminated the contract for default.
Accordingly, we conclude that the government did not waive its right to terminate the
contract for appellant's anticipatory repudiation.

C. The Default Termination was Neither Procedurally Inadequate nor an Abuse
   of Discretion

        Turning now to appellant's final defense, we conclude that appellant has failed to
show that the default termination was procedurally inadequate or an abuse of discretion.
The Default clause (finding 7) requires neither a cure notice nor a show-cause letter prior to
terminating a construction contract for default. ON!, 96-2 BCA ii 28,277 at 141,180. Even
so, a pre-termination cure notice would have been unnecessary in this case given appellant's
anticipatory repudiation. See, e.g., Polyurethane Prods. Corp., ASBCA No. 42251, 96-1

13
     Although it does not, strictly speaking, bear on the question of waiver, we note that
         appellant never retracted its repudiation. See Mobil 
Oil, 530 U.S. at 621
;
         RESTATEMENT (SECOND) OF CONTRACTS § 256 ("The effect of a statement as
         constituting a repudiation .. .is nullified by a retraction of the statement if
         notification of the retraction comes to the attention of the injured party before
         he materially changes his position in reliance on the repudiation or indicates to
         the other party that he considers the repudiation to be final.").

                                              40
BCA ii 28,154 at 140,545 (cure notice requirement "dispensed with" by contractor's
anticipatory repudiation); Mission Valve & Pump, 69-2 BCA ii 8010 at 37,243 (CO is not
required to go through "useless motions").

        Nonetheless, the Default clause does not mandate termination; it merely gives the
CO the discretion to terminate for default. US. Coating Specialties & Supplies, LLC,
ASBCA No. 58245, 15-1 BCA ii 35,957 at 175,708 (citing Radar Devices, Inc., ASBCA
No. 43912, 99-1 BCA ii 30,223 at 149,528). Such discretion must be reasonably exercised,
even after a contractor anticipatorily repudiates a contract. McDonald, 94-3 BCA ii 27,181
at 135,450 (citing Darwin Constr. Co. v. United States, 
811 F.2d 593
, 596-97 (Fed. Cir.
1987)); A-Greater, 06-1BCAii33,179 at 164,432-33. The factors set forth in FAR
49.402-3(±) alert the CO to areas of concern to possibly consider; however, the CO's
consideration of the FAR factors is merely one element to be considered in evaluating the
totality of the circumstances involved in the situation. Michigan Joint Sealing, Inc.,
ASBCA No. 41477, 93-3 BCA ii 26,011at129,323-24. While consideration ofthe FAR
factors may aid in determining whether there has been an abuse of discretion in the
decision to terminate, the regulation does not confer any rights on the defaulting contractor,
All-State Constr., 06-2 BCA ii 33,344 at 165,342, and failure to consider one or more of the
factors would not require a default termination to be converted into a termination for
convenience, DCX, Inc. v. Perry, 
79 F.3d 132
, 135 (Fed. Cir. 1996). "In determining
whether there has been an abuse of discretion, we examine whether there was subjective
bad faith; whether there was a reasonable basis for the decision; the degree of discretion
reposed in the CO; and whether applicable regulations and laws have been observed.''
Shubhada, 08-1 BCA ii 33,733 at 167,019 (citing F&L Packing Corp., ASBCA No. 42362,
93-1 BCA ii 25,305 at 126,063). The burden of proof is appellant's. American Renovation
& Constr. Co., ASBCA Nos. 53723, 54038, 09-2 BCA ii 34,199 at 169,061.

        Here, appellant challenges only the CO' s rationale for terminating the contract and
the extent to which she complied procedurally with regulations. In particular, appellant
challenges the CO's failure to consider potential "excusable delays" (app. br. at 60-61 ).
However, the record clearly shows that the CO gave due consideration to appellant's
alleged excusable delays and adequately documented her rationale in the termination
decision: "[Highland] has given the Government many excuses as to why the permanent
power was not in place as of March 1, 2012. Irrespective of any excuse [Highland] had a
contractual obligation to provide temporary power and [Highland] stopped providing
temporary power .... [Highland's] failure to provide temporary power to the CSB site is a
breach of [Highland's] contractual duties." (Finding 60) In alleging its excuses,
appellant did not show how any of them had impacted work on the critical path or even
how long any of the alleged excuses lasted. Moreover, to excuse appellant's repudiation,
appellant would need to have at least alleged the existence of some supervening event
that discharged its performance obligations, and did not do so. We hold that the CO's
analysis of appellant's alleged excuses was appropriately detailed given the level of
specificity with which appellant alleged them. Cf A-Greater, 06-1 BCA ii 33,179 at


                                           41
 164,433; Jones Oil, 98-1BCAii29,691at147,150-51. Moreover, the record indicates
that the parties had long recognized an "urgent need" to provide temporary power to the
CSB (findings 19, 27, 33), and that based on recent past experience both the CO and
appellant's own project manager feared that an extended interruption to the power would
result in rioting and havoc among the Afghan soldiers living in the barracks (findings 51,
54). The record shows that the "urgency of the need" for continued temporary power was
at the forefront of the CO's consideration. See FAR 49.402-3(f). Given appellant's
refusal to perform and the availability of other contractors who could provide temporary
power, we have no basis to conclude that the CO acted arbitrarily or capriciously in
determining that terminating the contract was in the government's best interest.
Cf David R. Levin, Tr. in Bankr.for Rosedale Dairy Co., ASBCA No. 5077, 59-1 BCA
ii 2061 at 8, 705 (prompt termination "fully justifie[d]" by the urgent need for milk to be
supplied on a daily basis). Appellant has thus failed to carry its burden of proving the CO
abused her discretion. In light of appellant's anticipatory repudiation and the perceived
threat of grievous harm to health and security posed thereby, we conclude that the CO
followed procedural requirements and her decision to terminate the contract for default
was not an abuse of discretion.

                                    CONCLUSION

       The government has shown that appellant anticipatorily repudiated its
obligation to provide temporary power to the ANA barracks, justifying the termination
of the contract for default. Appellant has failed to show that its repudiation was
excused by a prior material breach by the government, that its contractual duties were
discharged by supervening circumstances, that the government waived its right to
terminate or that the default termination was either procedurally inadequate or an
abuse of discretion. Therefore, the appeal is denied.

       Dated: 30 March 2016




                                                  dministrative Judge
                                                 Armed Services Board
                                                 of Contract Appeals

(Signatures continued)




                                           42
I concur                                         I concur




MARK N. STEMPLER
Administrative Judge
                                                 ~SHACKLEFORD
                                                 Administrative Judge
Acting Chairman                                  Vice Chairman
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 No. 58243, Appeal of
Highland Al Hujaz Co., Ltd., rendered in conformance with the Board's Charter.

       Dated:



                                                 JEFFREY D. GARDIN
                                                 Recorder, Armed Services
                                                 Board of Contract Appeals




                                           43

Source:  CourtListener

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