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Kansas City Power & Light Co. v. United States, 15-348 (2019)

Court: United States Court of Federal Claims Number: 15-348 Visitors: 13
Judges: Margaret M. Sweeney
Filed: May 10, 2019
Latest Update: Mar. 03, 2020
Summary: In the United States Court of Federal Claims No. 15-348C (Filed Under Seal: April 25, 2019) (Reissued for Publication: May 10, 2019) ************************************* KANSAS CITY POWER & LIGHT CO., * * Plaintiff, * Motion for Summary Judgment; RCFC 56; * Indemnification; Duty to Defend; v. * Negligence; Contract Disputes Act; Statute * of Limitations; Offset; Collateral Source THE UNITED STATES, * Rule; Contract Remedies; Subject Matter * Jurisdiction Defendant. * **************************
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           In the United States Court of Federal Claims
                                          No. 15-348C
                              (Filed Under Seal: April 25, 2019)
                           (Reissued for Publication: May 10, 2019)

*************************************
KANSAS CITY POWER & LIGHT CO., *
                                    *
            Plaintiff,              *               Motion for Summary Judgment; RCFC 56;
                                    *               Indemnification; Duty to Defend;
v.                                  *               Negligence; Contract Disputes Act; Statute
                                    *               of Limitations; Offset; Collateral Source
THE UNITED STATES,                  *               Rule; Contract Remedies; Subject Matter
                                    *               Jurisdiction
            Defendant.              *
*************************************

Roy Bash, Denver, CO, for plaintiff.

Amanda Tantum, United States Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for defendant.

                                   OPINION AND ORDER

SWEENEY, Chief Judge

        Plaintiff Kansas City Power & Light Co. (“KCP&L”) seeks reimbursement of its
expenses associated with settling a wrongful death lawsuit. KCP&L alleges that it is entitled to
recoup those costs from defendant because the United States General Services Administration
(“GSA”) breached its contractual obligation to defend KCP&L and indemnify KCP&L for its
expenses in that case. Defendant moves for summary judgment pursuant to Rule 56 of the Rules
of the United States Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”). For the reasons discussed below, the
court grants in part and denies in part defendant’s motion.

                                           I. FACTS

        On August 19, 2005, the GSA entered into a contract to obtain electrical service for the
Hardesty Federal Complex (“Hardesty Complex”) from KCP&L, Compl. ¶ 6, the only electricity
provider that serviced the area, Def.’s Mot. App. (“DA”) 176. The contract included conditions
of service that KCP&L was legally required to apply to every similarly situated customer.
Compl. ¶¶ 39-40; see also Compl. Ex. 8 at 2 (informing the GSA that negotiation would be futile


        The court issued this opinion under seal and asked the parties to propose redactions.
The parties filed a joint status report on May 9, 2019, in which they stated that they had no
proposed redactions.
because KCP&L’s “rates, terms, and conditions are required by law to be uniform for all
customers within each customer class”). See generally Compl. Ex. 6 (conditions of service). Of
particular import here, one of those conditions of service was that the customer (here, the GSA)
agree to defend and indemnify KCP&L with respect to claims related to the latter’s work
supplying electrical service. Compl. Ex. 6 at 22. Specifically, the GSA was obligated to

       indemnify, save harmless and defend [KCP&L] against all claims, demands, cost
       or expense, for loss, damage or injury to persons or property, in any manner
       directly or indirectly connected with, or growing out of the distribution or use of
       the electric service by the [GSA] at or on the [GSA’s] side of the point of
       delivery.

Id. Pursuant to
this contract, KCP&L provided the GSA with electrical service to, among other
places, Building 13—an electrical vault in the Hardesty Complex. Compl. ¶ 9.

        KCP&L, after entering into its contract with the GSA, obtained excess-liability insurance
from Associated Electric and Gas Insurance Services Limited (“AEGIS”).1 DA 145; see also
Excess Insurance, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014) (“An agreement to indemnify against
any loss that exceeds the amount of coverage under another policy.”). See generally DA 1-54
(policy). Pursuant to the policy, AEGIS agreed to indemnify KCP&L for covered losses in
excess of KCP&L’s $1,000,000 self-insured retention. 
Id. at 3-4.
AEGIS and KCP&L further
agreed, in a section of the policy titled “Subrogation,” that

       [i]nasmuch as this POLICY is excess insurance [KCP&L’s] right of recovery
       against any person or organization cannot be exclusively subrogated to [AEGIS].
       It is, therefore, understood and agreed that in case of any payment hereunder,
       [AEGIS] will act in concert with all other interests concerned[ ] (including
       [KCP&L’s]) in the exercise of such rights of recovery. The apportioning of any
       amount which may be so recovered shall follow the principle that any interest
       (including [KCP&L’s]) which has paid an amount over and above any payment
       hereunder, shall first be reimbursed up to the amount paid by it; [AEGIS] is then
       to be reimbursed out of any balance then remaining up to the amount paid
       hereunder; lastly, the interests (including [KCP&L’s]) of which this coverage is in
       excess are entitled to claim the residue, if any. Expenses necessary to the recovery
       of any such amounts shall be apportioned between the interests concerned
       (including [KCP&L’s]), in the proportion of their respective recoveries as finally
       settled.

Id. at 15.
In the next section of the policy, titled “Changes and Assignment,” AEGIS and
KCP&L expressly agreed that “[t]he terms of this POLICY shall not be waived or changed, nor


       1
         Specifically, KCP&L’s parent company—Great Plains Energy, Inc.—procured
coverage under a policy that included its subsidiaries. DA 8; see also 
id. at 145
(explaining how
KCP&L obtained coverage); 
id. at 204
(acknowledging that KCP&L is a wholly owned
subsidiary of Great Plains Energy, Inc.).



                                               -2-
shall an assignment of interest under this POLICY be binding, except by an Endorsement to this
POLICY issued by [AEGIS].” 
Id. at 16.
       While KCP&L was providing electrical service to the Hardesty Complex, David
Eubank—a GSA employee—sustained fatal injuries in Building 13 on August 10, 2006. Compl.
¶ 15. On March 27, 2007, his widow (the “Eubank claimant”) filed a lawsuit in state court (the
“Eubank action”)—on behalf of herself and her children—against KCP&L in which she pleaded
negligence and loss-of-consortium claims stemming from the incident in Building 13. See DA
56-61.

       Shortly after the Eubank action was filed, KCP&L retained the services of Shughart
Thompson & Kilroy (“Shughart”), a law firm, to defend KCP&L in the Eubank action. See 
id. at 62.
Shugart began providing legal services related to that case on April 3, 2007, and first
provided KCP&L with an invoice for those services on June 12, 2007. See 
id. KCP&L paid
that
invoice on June 28, 2007. See 
id. at 220-21.
        As part of their work in the Eubank action, Shughart attorneys prepared and filed
KCP&L’s third-party petition against two GSA employees. 
Id. at 67-77.
In response to the
third-party petition, the United States—represented by Assistant United States Attorney Charles
Thomas (“AUSA Thomas”)—substituted itself for the federal employees and removed the case
to the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri (“district court”) on
November 15, 2007. 
Id. at 79-82.
     On December 18, 2007, Lawrence Ward—a Shughart attorney—sent a letter to AUSA
Thomas in which Mr. Ward stated:

       I am writing this letter on behalf of [KCP&L] to demand that your client, the
       United States of America, agree to defend, indemnify and hold harmless
       [KCP&L] against all claims, demands, costs or expenses for loss, damage or
       injury to plaintiffs Kembra Eubank, et al. in [the Eubank action]. This demand is
       based upon the contractual obligations of the United States of America . . . .

Id. at 87.
On March 6, 2008, Thomas Fisher—another Shughart attorney—sent a letter to AUSA
Thomas in which Mr. Fisher requested that the United States answer Mr. Ward’s December 18,
2007 letter. 
Id. at 98.
The next day—March 7, 2008—AUSA Thomas responded that he would
“get together a response to [the] December 18 letter. However, as I told [Mr. Ward] by phone
not long after the letter, I am confident that the United States cannot in any event agree to
indemnify KCP&L or hold it harmless.” 
Id. at 103.
Consistent with AUSA Thomas’s message,
the United States neither defended KCP&L in the Eubank action nor indemnified KCP&L for its
expenses in that case. 
Id. at 158.
       On April 17, 2009, the district court dismissed the United States from the Eubank action
and remanded the case to the state court. See Compl. ¶ 26-27; see also Order 8, Eubank v. Kan.
City Power & Light, No. 07-0861-CV-W-GAF (W.D. La. Apr. 27, 2009). KCP&L and the
Eubank claimant subsequently agreed to a settlement, which the state court approved on May 18,
2010. Compl. ¶ 27.



                                              -3-
         On November 17, 2010, KCP&L submitted a claim for reimbursement to its excess-
liability insurer—AEGIS—for some of the expenses that KCP&L incurred in defending and
settling the Eubank action. DA 106; see also 
id. at 145
(describing KCP&L’s relationship with
AEGIS). Specifically, KCP&L requested $3,010,764.64 for reimbursement of its settlement and
defense costs—the sum of its settlement expense ($2,250,000.00) and defense costs
($1,760,764.64) minus the self-insured retention ($1,000,000.00). 
Id. at 106.
AEGIS paid the
claim on November 23, 2010. 
Id. at 108.
        On September 12, 2012, KCP&L and AEGIS executed an agreement titled “Waiver of
Subrogation/Reimbursement Interest and Assignment” (“Assignment Agreement”).2 
Id. at 109-
10. In the portion of the agreement germane to the present motion, KCP&L and AEGIS stated:

                 It is hereby agreed that [AEGIS] waives any and all rights to subrogation
        or reimbursement it may have or be entitled to as set forth in the said Excess
        Liability Insurance Policy and hereby assigns in full, without recourse, all rights,
        title and action it has or may have pertaining in any way to the Eubank case or the
        recovery against any other party of money expended in that case to which it may
        otherwise be entitled, all such monies and recovery to be considered the sole and
        exclusive property of Great Plains Energy, Inc. and [KCP&L].

                It is further agreed that all fees and expenses known or unknown arising
        out of any recovery, settlement or suit against any party is and shall remain the
        sole responsibility of Great Plains Energy, Inc. and [KCP&L]. Great Plains
        Energy, Inc. and [KCP&L] each expressly agrees not to seek any reimbursement
        from AEGIS related to the Eubank case.

               It is the intent of the parties to be legally bound by this agreement.

Id. at 109.
         On June 25, 2014, KCP&L submitted a claim to the contracting officer (“CO”)
requesting reimbursement from the GSA for the expenses that KCP&L incurred in defending and
settling the Eubank action. See generally Compl. Ex. 1. Specifically, KCP&L claimed that it
was owed $4,006,138.14: $2,250,000.00 for the settlement and $1,756,138.14 in defense costs.3
Id. at 2.
The CO denied the claim on January 27, 2015. See generally Compl. Ex. 5.

        2
          KCP&L and AEGIS did not (1) identify the Assignment Agreement as an endorsement
to the policy (despite doing so for other changes) or (2) style the agreement in the same manner
as the other endorsements to the policy. See DA at 20-53 (endorsements executed with
contract); 
id. at 109-10
(Assignment Agreement); see also 
id. at 16
(allowing changes, waivers,
or assignments only if there is an endorsement).
        3
         KCP&L, for unstated reasons, requested more for its defense costs from AEGIS than
from the CO. Compare DA 106 (requesting that AEGIS pay $1,760,764.64 for defense costs),
with Compl. Ex. 1 at 2 (requesting that the CO award $1,756,138.14 for defense costs).



                                                 -4-
                                  II. PROCEDURAL HISTORY

         On April 6, 2015, KCP&L initiated this suit to recover what it paid in connection with the
Eubank action. KCP&L alleges that the GSA breached its contractual duties to defend and
indemnify KCP&L in connection with that case.4 Specifically, KCP&L avers that the GSA was
obligated to defend and indemnify KCP&L because the Eubank claimant’s claims were
connected to the distribution of electrical service on the GSA’s side of the point of delivery.
KCP&L asks the court to award it $4,006,138.14—in the sum of the $2,250,000.00 it paid to
settle the Eubank action and the $1,756,138.14 it paid to defend itself in that case.

         Defendant moves for summary judgment. After the completion of initial briefing on that
motion, the court directed KCP&L to file an amended complaint. The court explained that an
amended complaint was necessary because KCP&L argued in its response brief that it was
litigating assigned claims but did not plead such claims in its complaint as required by RCFC
9(n).5 After KCP&L filed an amended complaint, the parties filed a joint status report in which
KCP&L maintained that it was not litigating assigned claims. The court proceeded to strike
KCP&L’s amended complaint because it was neither compliant with RCFC 9(n) nor responsive
to the court’s order: KCP&L did not discuss assigned claims. Subsequently, the court invited
the parties to file supplemental summary judgment briefing on damages and the related
assignment issues. The parties have now fully briefed defendant’s motion for summary
judgment.6 The parties did not request oral argument, and the court deems oral argument
unnecessary. Thus, defendant’s motion is ripe for adjudication.

                                  III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

      Summary judgment is appropriate when there is no genuine issue of material fact and the
moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law. RCFC 56(a); Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
477 U.S. 317
, 322 (1986). A fact is material if it “might affect the outcome of the suit under the

        4
          KCP&L technically pleads one claim for “contractual indemnity” and another claim for
“breach of contract,” but KCP&L alleges in both claims that the GSA breached the same
contractual obligations: the duties to defend and indemnify. Compare Compl. ¶¶ 57-65
(contractual indemnity), with 
id. ¶¶ 66-75
(breach of contract). The court sees no reason to
afford significance to the labels assigned by KCP&L especially given that the parties, through
multiple rounds of briefing, have not drawn any distinction between the claims. Therefore, the
court construes KCP&L’s pleading as containing a breach-of-contract claim related to the GSA’s
duty to defend (“duty-to-defend claim”) and another breach-of-contract claim pertaining to the
GSA’s duty to indemnify (“indemnification claim”).

        Pursuant to RCFC 9(n), a party “pleading a claim or part of a claim, ownership of
        5

which was acquired by assignment or other transfer, . . . must include a statement describing
when and upon what consideration the assignment or transfer was made.”
        6
         In this decision, any citations to briefs refer to the briefs that the parties filed in
connection with defendant’s motion for summary judgment.



                                                   -5-
governing law.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
477 U.S. 242
, 248 (1986). An issue is
genuine if it “may reasonably be resolved in favor of either party.” 
Id. at 250.
        The moving party bears the initial burden of demonstrating the absence of any genuine
issue of material fact. 
Celotex, 477 U.S. at 323
. The nonmoving party then bears the burden of
showing that there are genuine issues of material fact for trial. 
Id. at 324.
Both parties may carry
their burden by “citing to particular parts of materials in the record, including depositions,
documents, electronically stored information, affidavits or declarations, stipulations (including
those made for purposes of the motion only), admissions, interrogatory answers, or other
materials” or by “showing that the materials cited do not establish the absence or presence of a
genuine dispute, or that an adverse party cannot produce admissible evidence to support the
fact.” RCFC 56(c)(1)(B). However, “[i]f the evidence is merely colorable, or is not significantly
probative, summary judgment may be granted.” 
Anderson, 477 U.S. at 249-50
(citations
omitted). Entry of summary judgment is mandated against a party who fails to establish “an
element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at
trial.” 
Celotex, 477 U.S. at 322
.

        The court must draw all inferences from the underlying facts in the light most favorable
to the nonmoving party. Matsushita Elec. Ind. Co. v. Zenith Radio Corp., 
475 U.S. 574
, 587
(1986). However, the court must not weigh the evidence or make findings of fact. See
Anderson, 477 U.S. at 249
(“[A]t the summary judgment stage the judge’s function is not
himself to weigh the evidence and determine the truth of the matter but to determine whether
there is a genuine issue for trial.”); Contessa Food Prods., Inc. v. Conagra, Inc., 
282 F.3d 1370
,
1376 (Fed. Cir. 2002) (“On summary judgment, the question is not the ‘weight’ of the evidence,
but instead the presence of a genuine issue of material fact . . . .”), abrogated on other grounds by
Egyptian Goddess, Inc. v. Swisa, Inc., 
543 F.3d 665
(Fed. Cir. 2008) (en banc); Ford Motor Co.
v. United States, 
157 F.3d 849
, 854 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (“Due to the nature of the proceeding, courts
do not make findings of fact on summary judgment.”); Mansfield v. United States, 
71 Fed. Cl. 687
, 693 (2006) (“[T]he Court may neither make credibility determinations nor weigh the
evidence and seek to determine the truth of the matter. Further, summary judgment is
inappropriate if the factual record is insufficient to allow the Court to determine the salient legal
issues.” (citation omitted)).

                                         IV. ANALYSIS

        Defendant moves for summary judgment on the grounds that (1) KCP&L’s claims are
barred by the statute of limitations and (2) KCP&L cannot shift liability for its own negligence
because it possessed superior bargaining power when negotiating with the GSA. In the
alternative, defendant moves for summary judgment on that portion of KCP&L’s request for
damages based on expenses that were reimbursed by AEGIS. Otherwise stated, defendant asks
the court to reduce KCP&L’s potential recovery.

       The crux of defendant’s motion concerns contractual rights and remedies. Because the
government is a party to the contract at issue, the court is guided in its analysis by federal
common law when there is no controlling statutory or regulatory provision. See Prudential Ins.
Co. of Am. v. United States, 
801 F.2d 1295
, 1298 (Fed. Cir. 1986) (“It is well settled that



                                                -6-
contracts to which the government is a party . . . are normally governed by federal law, not by
the law of the state where they are made or performed.”). When “existing federal law is not
determinative,” the court “tak[es] into the account” the “best in modern decision and discussion,”
id., which involves
“looking to general . . . contract law principles as they are embodied in state
law pronouncements,” Ginsberg v. Austin, 
968 F.2d 1198
, 1200 (Fed. Cir. 1992).

                                    A. Statute of Limitations

        Defendant first argues that KCP&L’s claims are barred by the statute of limitations set
forth in the Contract Disputes Act of 1978 (“CDA”) because the claims accrued more than six
years before KCP&L submitted them to the CO. Specifically, defendant asserts that there are
three viable accrual events—when KCP&L’s attorneys started billing for the Eubank action
(April 2007), when KCP&L received an invoice from its attorneys (June 2007), or when KCP&L
learned that the GSA would not provide indemnification (March 2008)—and each of those
events occurred more than six years before KCP&L submitted its claim in June 2014. Defendant
contends that, at each of the aforementioned times, KCP&L knew all the facts establishing the
GSA’s purported liability.7 KCP&L counters that its claims accrued on May 18, 2010—when
the Missouri state court approved the settlement in the Eubank action—because that is when the
GSA’s liability became fixed in a sum certain. Even if the court concludes that KCP&L’s claims
are time barred, KCP&L argues that its failure to timely submit its claim to the CO does not
preclude it from recovering those expenses that were incurred in the six years before KCP&L
submitted the claim.

        Pursuant to the statute of limitations in the CDA, a party seeking relief under a
government contract must file its claim with the CO within six years of the claim accruing.8 41
U.S.C. § 7103(a)(1), (4) (2012). There are two considerations that bear on an analysis of the
statute of limitations: what is a claim and when does it accrue? See 
id. § 7103(a)(4).
A claim is
“a written demand or written assertion by one of the contracting parties seeking, as a matter of

       7
           In its reply brief, defendant highlights the specific (and narrow) legal propositions it
raised in its motion that KCP&L did not directly respond to in its response brief and asserts that
KCP&L’s failure to address those contentions is a concession. See, e.g., Def.’s Reply 20
(asserting that “KCP&L does not respond to our explanation that the collateral source rule does
not apply . . . [so KCP&L] has conceded that [defendant’s position] is correct”). Defendant’s
approach is not helpful to the court. It is clear from KCP&L’s response brief that KCP&L is not
making the dispositive concessions “identified” by defendant; indeed, KCP&L mounts a
vigorous (and at times persuasive) argument for why it should prevail. Simply stated, KCP&L’s
decision to not respond to discrete portions of defendant’s argument is not a concession when it
is clear from KCP&L’s brief that KCP&L is disputing defendant’s thesis. Cf. The Ravens Grp.,
Inc. v. United States, 
119 Fed. Cl. 100
, 110 (2007) (concluding that the plaintiff conceded an
issue by not responding to the main point of the defendant’s argument).
       8
           The failure to timely file a claim with the CO does not deprive this court of jurisdiction
over the dispute; instead, the government can raise the plaintiff’s noncompliance with the statute
of limitations as an affirmative defense. Sikorsky Aircraft Corp. v. United States, 
773 F.3d 1315
, 1320-22 (Fed. Cir. 2014).



                                                 -7-
right, the payment of money in a sum certain, the adjustment or interpretation of contract terms,
or other relief arising under or relating to the contract.” 48 C.F.R. § 2.101 (2018). A claim
accrues on “the date when all events, that fix the alleged liability of either the Government or the
contractor and permit assertion of the claim, were known or should have been known. For
liability to be fixed, some injury must have occurred. However, monetary damages need not
have been incurred.” 
Id. § 33.201.
The critical question is when KCP&L knew or should have
known all of the events fixing the GSA’s purported liability such that KCP&L could present its
duty-to-defend and duty-to-indemnify claims to the CO.

                                     1. Duty-to-Defend Claim

        Turning first to KCP&L’s duty-to-defend claim, there are four distinct events that needed
to occur to fix liability: (1) KCP&L and the GSA’s execution of a contract, (2) the GSA’s
purported obligation to provide KCP&L with a defense, (3) the GSA’s refusal to provide
KCP&L with a defense, and (4) KCP&L’s sustainment of damages as a result of the GSA’s
refusal. See San Carlos Irrigation & Drainage Dist. v. United States, 
877 F.2d 957
, 959 (Fed.
Cir. 1989) (explaining the elements of a breach-of-contract claim); see also Alder Terrace, Inc. v.
United States, 
161 F.3d 1372
, 1377 (Fed. Cir. 1998) (“Generally, ‘[i]n the case of a breach of a
contract, a cause of action accrues when the breach occurs.’” (quoting Mfrs. Aircraft Ass’n v.
United States, 
77 Ct. Cl. 481
, 523 (1933))). The undisputed facts establish the dates for each of
these events. First, the parties executed a contract on August 19, 2005. Second, the GSA’s duty
to provide a defense would have ripened on the day that the Eubank claimant filed her
complaint—March 27, 2007—because a party becomes obligated to provide a defense when the
allegations in the underlying complaint encompass conduct covered by a duty-to-defend
provision. See, e.g., Callas Enters., Inc. v. Travelers Indem. Co. of Am., 
193 F.3d 952
, 955 (8th
Cir. 1999) (“To determine whether an insurer does have a duty to defend, a court compares the
allegations made in the underlying complaint with the relevant language of the insurance
policy.”); see also Lagestee-Mulder, Inc. v. Consol. Ins. Co., 
682 F.3d 1054
, 1056 (7th Cir.
2012) (“The factual allegations of the complaint determine whether there is a duty to defend.”).9
Third, KCP&L became aware that the GSA would not defend KCP&L when AUSA Thomas
conveyed that decision to KCP&L’s attorney on March 7, 2008.10 Fourth, KCP&L incurred

       9
           In the absence of controlling precedent or directives in statutory or regulatory text, the
court looks to the state-law principle espoused in decisions such as Callas and Lagestee for
analyzing when a party becomes obligated to provide a defense under a contract provision. See
Ginsberg, 968 F.2d at 1200
. The aforementioned decisions are well-reasoned and persuasive;
indeed, a determination at the outset of litigation of whether a party has a duty to defend is
important for giving the party contracting for such a defense the benefit of its bargain.
Moreover, the court has not found (and the parties have not provided) any authority suggesting
that a different standard is appropriate.
       10
           The GSA decided not to defend KCP&L earlier than March 7, 2008. See DA 103
(explaining that AUSA Thomas conveyed the United States’ position to Mr. Ward (KCP&L’s
attorney) “not long after” Mr. Ward’s December 18, 2007 letter). The court, however, must
focus on when KCP&L became (or should have been) aware of the GSA’s breach. See 48
C.F.R. § 33.201 (explaining that a claim accrues when the claimant knew or should have known
the facts giving rise to liability); accord FloorPro, Inc. v. United States, 
680 F.3d 1377
, 1381


                                                 -8-
damages as soon as it received AUSA Thomas’s message because AUSA Thomas conveyed that
KCP&L should continue paying its own costs in the Eubank action and would not receive
reimbursement for previously incurred attorney’s fees. Simply stated, KCP&L knew all the facts
fixing the GSA’s purported liability for the breach of its contractual duty to defend by March 7,
2008—more than six years before KCP&L submitted its claim to the CO.

        KCP&L misses the mark with its argument that it was unable to file a claim on March 7,
2008, because it could not request a sum certain until it stopped incurring legal fees in the
Eubank action on May 18, 2010—the date that its settlement was approved by the state court. A
party can submit a request for a sum certain even if it will incur further damages. See Tecom,
Inc. v. United States, 
732 F.2d 935
, 937 (Fed. Cir. 1984) (explaining that a party does not need to
resubmit a claim to the CO if the claim increases as a result of matters developed in litigation);
J.S. Alberici Constr. Co., ENGBCA No. 6179, 97-1 BCA ¶ 28639 (“A ‘sum certain’ need not
remain fixed throughout the claims process, so long as the information provided to the
Government is accurate to the extent possible, and provides adequate notice of a monetary claim
against the Government to permit adjudication.”). Indeed, “the fact that [a claimant’s] losses
would continue to accrue does not relieve [the claimant] of its obligation to provide a certified
claim regarding its losses to date.” L-3 Commc’n Integrated Sys., L.P. v. United States, 132 Fed.
Cl. 325, 333 n.8 (2017). Thus, KCP&L could have requested a sum certain reflecting what it had
paid its attorneys in the Eubank action before the conclusion of that case.

       In sum, KCP&L’s duty-to-defend claim accrued by no later than March 7, 2008—the
date when KCP&L could request a sum certain and knew all the facts fixing the GSA’s
purported liability. Because KCP&L did not file that claim with the CO until June 25, 2014,
more than six years after it accrued, the claim is barred by the CDA’s statute of limitations.

        The court is not swayed by KCP&L’s argument that the statute of limitations only bars
that part of its damages that were incurred more than six years before it filed a claim with the
CO. Damages can only be divided in that manner if they flow from a continuing claim. See
Wason v. United States, 
179 Ct. Cl. 623
, 631 (1967); see also Boling v. United States, 
220 F.3d 1365
, 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (explaining that, with a continuing claim, each breach of a duty
constitutes a new cause of action). To fall within the scope of the continuing claim doctrine, a
“plaintiff’s claim must be inherently susceptible to being broken down into a series of
independent and distinct events or wrongs, each having its own associated damages.” Brown
Park Estates-Fairfield Dev. Co. v. United States, 
127 F.3d 1449
, 1456 (Fed. Cir. 1997). The
doctrine, however, does not apply when a plaintiff “really only point[s] to one alleged wrong by

(Fed. Cir. 2012) (holding that a claim accrued when the claimant became aware of the breach of
contract). Although AUSA Thomas informed KCP&L’s counsel prior to March 7, 2008, of the
information necessary for KCP&L to believe that the GSA was in breach of its defense
obligation, the parties did not supply a date for that conversation. DA 103. Thus, March 7,
2008, is the earliest date that KCP&L knew or should have known that the GSA would not
provide a defense supported by the materials before the court. To the extent that there is a
dispute over whether KCP&L became aware of the GSA’s purported breach earlier than March
7, 2008, the dispute is immaterial because an earlier date would still result in KCP&L’s duty-to-
defend claim being untimely.



                                                -9-
the government, which accrued all at once at one point in time, even though it may have had later
adverse effects . . . .” 
Id. at 1457.
KCP&L concedes that its duty-to-defend claim arose from a
single event and is not a continuing claim. Indeed, the record does not reflect a series of distinct
events or wrongs with their own damages. Thus, KCP&L cannot recover damages for the
GSA’s purported breach of its duty to defend because the entire claim is barred by the statute of
limitations. The court, therefore, dismisses KCP&L’s duty-to-defend claim in its entirety.

                                  2. Duty-to-Indemnify Claim

        Unlike KCP&L’s duty-to-defend claim, defendant has not established that KCP&L’s
duty-to-indemnify claim is barred by the statute of limitations. For the purposes of defendant’s
motion, the court need only focus on when the GSA purportedly became obligated to indemnify
KCP&L for the expenses it incurred in the Eubank action. See San 
Carlos, 877 F.2d at 959
(explaining that a breach-of-contract claim requires, among other things, a duty or obligation to
perform). The undisputed facts reflect that the earliest that the GSA could incur that
responsibility was May 18, 2010—the date that the Missouri state court approved the Eubank
action settlement—because a judgment or settlement in the underlying case is a condition
precedent to a right to indemnification.11 See, e.g., Colony Ins. Co. v. Peachtree Constr., Ltd.,
647 F.3d 248
, 253 (5th Cir. 2011) (“[T]he duty to indemnify is triggered by the actual facts
establishing liability in the underlying suit, and whether any damages caused by the [indemnitee]
and later proven at trial are covered by the terms of the [contract].”); see also United Nat.’l Ins.
Co. v. Dunbar & Sullivan Dredging Co., 
953 F.2d 334
, 338 (7th Cir. 1992) (explaining that a
request for declaratory judgment concerning an indemnification obligation is not ripe until the



       11
           The court acknowledges that requiring the underlying case be resolved before a party
can file an indemnification claim is in conflict with Kellogg Brown & Root Services, Inc. v.
United States, 
115 Fed. Cl. 168
(2014). In Kellogg, another judge on this court held that a party
can submit an indemnification claim to the CO before the underlying lawsuit is resolved relying
on a determination by the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals (“ASBCA”) that such a
claim was appropriate. 
Id. at 186
n.9 (discussing In re Boeing Co., ASBCA No. 54853, 06-1
BCA ¶ 33270). The undersigned finds those two decisions are of little help. First, this court is
not bound by the Kellogg or ASBCA decisions. Dellew Corp. v. United States, 
855 F.3d 1375
,
1382 n.3 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (this court’s decisions); Gen. Elec. Co., Aerospace Grp. v. United
States, 
929 F.2d 679
, 682 (Fed. Cir. 1991) (ASBCA decisions). Second, this court is not
persuaded by the reasoning in those decisions because the judges in both cases merely reached a
conclusion without explaining how liability could be fixed before the indemnitor was obligated
to provide indemnification. See Griffy’s Landscape Maint. LLC v. United States, 
51 Fed. Cl. 667
, 673 (2001) (“We reject those [nonprecedential decisions] which we find illogical,
unpersuasive, or just plain wrongheaded. We accept as helpful authority, albeit not binding
precedent, those we find sound.”). Moreover, at least one other judge on the United States Court
of Federal Claims (“Court of Federal Claims”) has entertained the notion that a final decision in
the underlying action is required before a party is required to provide indemnification. See Tex.
Instruments Inc. v. United States, No. 09-701C, 
2011 WL 2784579
, at *4 (Fed. Cl. June 13,
2011).



                                                -10-
indemnitee is held liable in the underlying suit).12 Therefore, KCP&L’s indemnification claim
accrued no earlier than May 18, 2010, which forecloses defendant’s argument that KCP&L’s
duty-to-indemnify claim accrued more than six years before it sought relief from the CO on June
25, 2014.13

                               B. Shifting Liability for Negligence

       Defendant next argues that the GSA was not obligated to defend or indemnify KCP&L in
the Eubank action because the underlying claims concerned KCP&L’s negligence. Specifically,
defendant asserts that KCP&L could contractually shift liability for its own negligence (via an
indemnification or duty-to-defend provision) to the GSA only if the parties possessed similar
bargaining power. Defendant contends that the contract between the GSA and KCP&L was not
negotiated between equal parties because KCP&L was the only electricity provider servicing the
Hardesty Complex—i.e., KCP&L had all the power. KCP&L counters that (1) it is not a
monopoly, (2) state regulators neutralized KCP&L’s superior bargaining position, and (3) it is
not seeking indemnification for its own negligence.

        Defendant’s argument rests on a faulty premise: the notion that KCP&L possessed
superior bargaining power. Although the GSA could not obtain electrical service from another
provider, KCP&L operated under a legal framework that prevented it from taking advantage of
the GSA’s lack of options. Indeed, as KCP&L explained to the GSA, KCP&L was required by
law to provide uniform terms for all similarly situated customers. Simply stated, both parties
lacked any bargaining power because neither was in a position to negotiate changes to the
contract. The court, therefore, is not persuaded by defendant’s argument that the GSA was not
obligated to indemnify KCP&L because of unequal bargaining power during contract
negotiations.14




       12
           In the absence of any controlling precedent, the court is persuaded by the state-law
principle espoused in Dunbar and Peachtree concerning when a party becomes obligated to
provide contractual indemnification. 
See supra
note 9 (explaining significance of state-law
principles). The court’s conclusion is bolstered by the fact that the predecessor to this court, the
United States Claims Court, embraced the notion when addressing federal common law outside
the CDA context. See Keene Corp. v. United States, 
12 Cl. Ct. 197
, 210 (1987).
       13
           Defendant also does not prevail to the extent that it is arguing that KCP&L could have
filed a nonmonetary claim seeking an order compelling indemnification prior to the conclusion
of the Eubank action. KCP&L’s duty-to-indemnify claim—whether monetary or
nonmonetary—could not accrue until the GSA’s purported liability was fixed, which occurred
when the Eubank action was settled.
       14
          The court’s conclusion would apply equally to KCP&L’s duty-to-defend claim, but the
court dismissed that claim for the reasons stated earlier in this decision. 
See supra
Section
IV.A.1.



                                                -11-
                                     C. Double Recovery

         In the alternative to it granting summary judgment on both of KCP&L’s claims,
defendant argues that the court should reduce KCP&L’s potential recovery by the amount that
KCP&L was reimbursed for its expenses in the Eubank action by AEGIS. First, defendant
asserts that KCP&L made a judicial admission in its response brief that the disputed portion of
its damages is based on AEGIS’s assignment of its subrogation claims to KCP&L. Defendant
avers that the court lacks jurisdiction to entertain such assigned claims, and that the assignment
was ineffective pursuant to 31 U.S.C. 3727, commonly referred to as the Assignment of Claims
Act or the Anti-Assignment Act (“Act” or “Anti-Assignment Act”). 31 U.S.C. § 3727 (2012).
Second, assuming that KCP&L is litigating its own rights, defendant contends that the court must
offset KCP&L’s potential recovery by the amount that KCP&L was reimbursed for its expenses
in the Eubank action by AEGIS to prevent a double recovery that is barred by LaSalle Talman
Bank, F.S.B. v. United States, 
317 F.3d 1363
(Fed. Cir. 2003). Defendant asserts that KCP&L
would reap such a recovery if it prevails in the instant case because, by virtue of AEGIS’s waiver
of its subrogation and reimbursement rights, KCP&L would not be required to repay the
insurance proceeds it received. In other words, defendant contends that KCP&L would gain an
impermissible windfall: if it prevailed, KCP&L would recover its defense and settlement
expenses from defendant while keeping the payments it received from AEGIS for the same
expenses.

        KCP&L counters that it is entitled to recover all the damages it requested. With respect
to the judicial admission, KCP&L argues that it did not make an admission regarding assignment
because the statements at issue concerned its litigation position and judicial admissions are
limited to facts. Relatedly, KCP&L maintains that it is litigating its own claims rather than any
assigned claims, and further represents that it could not litigate assigned claims from AEGIS
because such claims are not cognizable in this court. As to defendant’s offset argument, KCP&L
responds that its decision to obtain insurance does not relieve the GSA of its obligation to
provide indemnification for all of KCP&L’s expenses. KCP&L argues that LaSalle is not
applicable here because KCP&L is seeking damages for the GSA’s breach of an indemnification
agreement. KCP&L grounds its argument in the court’s explanation in Sweet v. United States,
63 Fed. Cl. 591
(2005), that a doctor and an affiliated university could obtain reimbursement of
their defense costs under an indemnification agreement even though those expenses were paid by
their insurer.

         The court turns first to the parties’ dispute over the basis of KCP&L’s request for
damages concerning the expenses that AEGIS reimbursed. Defendant avers, based on the
purported judicial admission, that those damages are premised on KCP&L litigating claims it
received (via assignment) from AEGIS. KCP&L counters that it made no such admission and is
litigating its own claims. The court, however, need not (and does not) determine whether
KCP&L is merely litigating its own claims or is also pursuing assigned claims because KCP&L
cannot obtain damages for its reimbursed expenses under either theory.

        Insofar as KCP&L is attempting to obtain damages for assigned claims, it is asserting a
right to recovery based on AEGIS acquiring claims against the GSA via subrogation and




                                              -12-
purportedly assigning those claims to KCP&L.15 See Subrogation, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th
ed. 2014) (explaining that “an insurer that has paid a loss under an insurance policy is entitled to
all the rights and remedies belonging to the insured against a third party with respect to any loss
covered by the policy”); see also Fireman’s Fund Ins. Co. v. England, 
313 F.3d 1344
, 1351 (Fed.
Cir. 2002) (describing subrogation). KCP&L, in its supplemental response brief, correctly
acknowledges that it could not pursue such assigned claims in this court. KCP&L is correct for
at least two reasons. First, the court lacks jurisdiction to entertain the purportedly assigned
subrogation claims. Although 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a) waives sovereign immunity for claims
founded on a contract with the United States and arising under the CDA, that waiver does not
extend to subrogation claims by an insurer. Ins. Co. of the W. v. United States, 
100 Fed. Cl. 58
,
64 (2011) (addressing a contract claim under 28 U.S.C § 1491(a)(1) and concluding that a
subrogee does not have the necessary privity of contract with the government); Fid. & Guar. Ins.
Underwriters v. United States, 
119 Fed. Cl. 195
, 198-99 (2014) (reviewing a claim under 28
U.S.C. § 1491(a)(2) and holding that a subrogation claim does not arise under the CDA because
the subrogee is not a party to a government contract). Second, AEGIS’s purported assignment of
its subrogation claims is invalid under the Anti-Assignment Act because the claims have not
been decided and the United States has not recognized the assignment. See 31 U.S.C. § 3727(a)-
(b) (explaining that the Act generally renders ineffective the assignment of a claim against the
United States); 
id. § 3727(b)
(permitting an assignment after the amount of the claim has been
decided); Tuftco Corp. v. United States, 
614 F.2d 740
, 745 (Ct. Cl. 1980) (allowing an
assignment if the government has recognized the assignment).

         KCP&L is also mistaken inasmuch as it maintains that it has a right—independent of any
assignment—to recover damages from defendant for expenses that were already reimbursed by
AEGIS. As the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (“Federal Circuit”)
explained in LaSalle, a “general principle” of contract law is “that the non-breaching party is not
entitled, through the award of damages, to achieve a position superior to the one it would
reasonably have occupied had the breach not 
occurred.” 317 F.3d at 1371
. Therefore, “[w]here
the defendant’s wrong or breach of contract has not only caused damage, but has also conferred a
benefit upon plaintiff . . . which he would not otherwise have reaped, the value of this benefit
must be credited to defendant in assessing the damages.” 
Id. (quoting Charles
T. McCormick,
Handbook on the Law of Damages 146 (1935)). This principle, however, is not absolute; it is
tempered by the collateral source rule. See 
id. at 1373.
Under that rule, “collateral benefits
received by the injured party do not reduce the damages owed by the wrongdoer . . . when there
is a tortious or negligence component to the breach, or when the equitable balance is such that
any windfall should not benefit the wrongdoer.” 
Id. 15 KCP&L
presented this theory in its initial response brief, see Pl.’s Resp. 22 (“AEGIS
did not just throw away its right to recover $3 million from the government via subrogation.
AEGIS assigned that right to KCP&L.”); accord 
id. (noting that
AEGIS “assign[ed] that
subrogation right to KCP&L”), but disavowed the theory in its supplemental response brief as a
“mischaracterization” of the rights it is litigating and a “poor choice of words,” Pl.’s Suppl.
Resp. 14-15; accord 
id. at 12
(“KCP&L took legal positions in its prior summary judgment brief
that, in retrospect, did not properly characterize the facts, and which KCP&L now clarifies.”).



                                               -13-
        The Federal Circuit’s discussion in LaSalle of the principles governing recoveries for
breach-of-contract claims appears directly applicable to the instant dispute concerning the GSA’s
purported breach of its contractual duty to indemnify KCP&L. Nonetheless, KCP&L urges the
court to adopt the conclusion in Sweet that the limiting principles in LaSalle are not applicable to
duty-to-indemnify claims. In Sweet, another judge on the Court of Federal Claims distinguished
LaSalle based on the contractual duty at issue and held that the plaintiffs could recover on an
indemnification claim despite already being reimbursed by their 
insurer. 63 Fed. Cl. at 598
.
This court, however, is not bound by Sweet. See 
Dellew, 855 F.3d at 1382
n.3. Furthermore, the
court declines to follow the conclusion in Sweet for three reasons. First, Sweet reads an
exception into the Federal Circuit’s rule that is untethered to the text of LaSalle. See 
Sweet, 63 Fed. Cl. at 598
(discussing nonprecedential decisions and stating that “[g]iven the weight of
[that] authority, the court agrees . . . that LaSalle Talman is not controlling in this indemnity
case”). Second, Sweet does not explain the conclusion that traditional theories of contract
remedies should not apply in the indemnification context. Third, the decision in Sweet is
distinguishable and the relevant analysis arguably is dicta because the plaintiffs in that case were
not seeking a windfall—they noted at oral argument their obligation to reimburse their insurers.
Id. at 598
n.5. In light of the above, the court concludes that a claim for a breach of an
indemnification agreement is subject to the rule in LaSalle: a double recovery will only be
permitted “when there is a tortious or negligence component to the breach, or when the equitable
balance is such that any windfall should not benefit the 
wrongdoer.” 317 F.3d at 1372
; see also
Coltec Indus., Inc. v. United States, 
454 F.3d 1340
, 1353 (Fed. Cir. 2006) (“There can be no
question that the Court of Federal Claims is required to follow the precedent of the Supreme
Court, our court, and our predecessor court, the Court of Claims.”).

        Applying the principles set forth in LaSalle leads to the conclusion that KCP&L is not
entitled to a double recovery. The GSA’s purported breach of contract did not involve a tortious
or negligence component because the breach flows (if at all) from a disagreement centered on
conflicting interpretations of the GSA’s contractual responsibilities in an unsettled area of law.
See United Protective Workers of Am., Local No. 2 v. Ford Motor Co., 
223 F.2d 49
, 54 (7th Cir.
1955) (noting that the breaching party was “not a wrongdoer in the tort sense” when “[t]he
dispute before [the court] arose because the parties interpreted their contract differently, and the
principles of law had not been clearly settled previously”), cited in 
LaSalle, 317 F.3d at 1372
.
For the same reason, the balance of equities also does not weigh in KCP&L’s favor; the court is
not persuaded that there is good reason to permit a double recovery for a garden-variety breach
of contract. Because the collateral source rule does not apply, KCP&L is barred from recovering
expenses that were reimbursed by AEGIS.

        In sum, KCP&L is not entitled to recover the damages it requests for its expenses that
AEGIS reimbursed regardless of whether KCP&L is seeking such expenses based on its own
claims or those that were assigned to it by AEGIS. Therefore, the court grants defendant’s
motion for summary judgment with respect to damages and reduces KCP&L’s potential recovery
by the amount of KCP&L’s claimed damages attributable to expenses that AEGIS reimbursed.




                                                -14-
                                      V. CONCLUSION

       For the reasons stated above, the court GRANTS IN PART and DENIES IN PART
defendant’s motion for summary judgment. Specifically, defendant is not entitled to summary
judgment on the merits of KCP&L’s duty-to-indemnify claim. Defendant, however, is entitled to
summary judgment on KCP&L’s duty-to-defend claim and that portion of KCP&L’s request for
damages that is premised on expenses that AEGIS reimbursed. Therefore, KCP&L’s only
remaining claim is its duty-to-indemnify claim, and KCP&L’s potential recovery is limited to
damages for its expenses that AEGIS did not reimburse.

       The parties, by no later than Thursday, May 9, 2019, shall file a joint status report in
which they suggest further proceedings in this case.

       IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                                     s/ Margaret M. Sweeney
                                                     MARGARET M. SWEENEY
                                                     Chief Judge




                                              -15-

Source:  CourtListener

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