Petitioner, in May, 1956, agreed to furnish canteen covers to
the United States under a contract containing a standard "disputes"
clause requiring the contracting officer to decide "any dispute
concerning a question of fact arising under [the] contract," and
providing for appeal to the department head or his representative,
whose decision was to be final unless judicially determined to have
been fraudulent, arbitrary, capricious, or so grossly erroneous as
necessarily to imply bad faith. The Government later tested
material samples and rejected them as not meeting contract
specifications. Petitioner agreed to a price reduction, and
completed the contract in December, 1956. In March, 1959,
petitioner allegedly first learned the nature of the Government's
tests, and, in October, 1961, demanded an equitable adjustment in
the contract price, asserting in the claim filed with the
contracting officer that the tests constituted a change in contract
specifications. In February, 1963, the board of contract appeals
affirmed the contracting officer's rejection of the claim. About
five months later, petitioner sued in the District Court on its
claim, alleging that the board's decision was capricious,
arbitrary, and not supported by substantial evidence. The District
Court, without deciding whether the claim arose under the contract
within the meaning of the disputes clause, upheld the Government's
contention that the cause of action accrued when performance of the
contract was completed, and was thus foreclosed by 28 U.S.C. §
2401(a), which bars a civil action against the United States unless
the complaint is filed within six years "after the right of action
first accrues." The Court of Appeals affirmed.
Held:
1. When administrative proceedings with respect to a
contractor's claim subject to the disputes clause in a government
contract extend beyond the completion of the contract, his right of
action "first accrues" within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. §
2401(a) when the administrative action is final, and not before.
Nager Electric Co., Inc. v. United States, 177 Ct.Cl. 234,
368 F.2d 847, followed. Pp.
386 U. S.
510-522.
Page 386 U. S. 504
(a) The "civil action" referred to in § 2401(a) is a civil
action in a court of competent jurisdiction. P.
386 U. S.
510.
(b) With respect to claims arising under the disputes clause of
a government contract, the contractor has, in effect, agreed to
convert what might otherwise be claims for breach of contract into
claims for equitable adjustment. P.
386 U. S.
511.
(c) Adjustment of such claims, as provided in the contract, must
be made by the contracting officer subject to appeal to the
department head or his representative, here, the board of contract
appeals, and not until that board has acted is the contractor's
claim subject to court adjudication. P.
386 U. S.
511.
(d) The contractor must seek the relief provided for under the
contract or be barred from any relief in the courts. P.
386 U. S.
512.
(e) The court review, which is not
de novo, is focused
upon the validity of the administrative decision, pending the
making of which the contractor cannot know what his justiciable
claim is. Pp.
386 U. S.
512-514.
(f) To hold that the six-year limitation period runs from the
contract completion date, as the Government urges, would deprive
the contractor of judicial review where administrative proceedings
extend more than six years beyond that date, a result which would
conflict with the policy underlying the Wunderlich Act. P.
386 U. S.
514.
(g) Determination of when a "cause of action" first "accrues"
must be made with regard to the practical ends to be served by
statutes of limitations.
McMahon v. United States,
342 U. S. 25, and
other cases not involving the Tucker Act, distinguished. Pp.
386 U. S.
516-519.
(h) In enacting a general statute limiting suits by the
Government to those which are brought within
"six years after the right of action accrues or within one year
after final decisions . . . in applicable administrative
proceedings required by contract or by law"
(28 U.S.C. § 2415), Congress manifested no intention to
construe § 2401, which governs a private litigant's right to
sue the Government. Pp.
386 U. S.
519-522.
2. The determination of whether petitioner's claim arose under
the contract or involved a breach of contract claim, which accrued
no later than the contract completion date, will be open on remand
to the District Court. P.
386 U. S.
522.
363 F.2d 407, reversed and remanded.
Page 386 U. S. 505
MR. JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
The standard disputes clause in government contracts requires
that "any dispute concerning a question of fact arising under this
contract," not disposed of by agreement, shall be decided by the
contracting officer, with the right of appeal within 30 days to the
department head or his representative (normally a board of contract
appeals), whose decision shall be final
"unless determined by a court of competent jurisdiction to have
been fraudulent, arbitrary, capricious, or so grossly erroneous as
necessarily to imply bad faith. [
Footnote 1]"
The "arising under" claims
Page 386 U. S. 506
subject to final administrative determination are those claims
asserted under other clauses of the contract calling for equitable
adjustment of the purchase price or extensions of time upon the
occurrence of certain events. [
Footnote 2] One of these clauses is the so-called
"changes" clause, which permits the contracting officer to make
changes within the scope of the contract, provides that, if any
change causes an increase or decrease in the cost of, or the time
required for the performance of, the work, "an equitable adjustment
shall be made in the contract price or delivery schedule," and
states that failure to agree upon an adjustment shall be a question
of fact within the meaning of the disputes clause. [
Footnote 3]
Page 386 U. S. 507
This case involves a claim for an equitable adjustment, asserted
under the changes clause and rejected by the contracting officer
and the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals. The contractor
brought suit in the District Court under 28 U.S.C. 1346 [
Footnote 4] alleging that the decision
of the Board was arbitrary, capricious and not supported by
substantial evidence. The District Court dismissed the case as
barred by 28 U.S.C. § 2401(a), which provides that
"Every civil action commenced against the United States shall be
barred unless the complaint is filed within six years after the
right of action first accrues. . . ."
The principal question here is whether the "right of action"
with respect to a claim within the disputes clause first accrues at
the time of the final administrative action or at an earlier
date.
The facts are quite simple. On May 14, 1956, petitioner
contracted with the United States to furnish a specified number of
canteen covers which were to be
Page 386 U. S. 508
lined with mildew-resistant felt of certain specifications. The
Government, which was authorized to inspect materials to be used
under the contract, tested and rejected certain samples of felt
purchased by petitioner because they allegedly did not contain the
contract quantities of mildew inhibitors. Petitioner agreed to a
price reduction, however, and was permitted to complete the
contract. Final delivery, originally scheduled for October 11,
1956, was made on December 14, 1966. Allegedly, in March, 1959,
petitioner first discovered the nature of the tests which the
United States had performed on the felt. Claiming that the use of
such tests was not within the contemplation of the contract and
constituted a change in contract specifications, petitioner filed a
claim with the contracting officer in October, 1961, demanding an
equitable adjustment in the contract price in the form of a refund
of the price reduction and compensation for increased costs
occasioned by substantial delay resulting from the Government's
rejection of the felt samples. The contracting officer denied the
claim. On February 28, 1963, the Board of Contract Appeals affirmed
the contracting officer's decision. On July 31, 1963, more than six
years after petitioner had completed performance of the contract,
petitioner brought suit in the District Court alleging that the
Board's decision was capricious, arbitrary, and not supported by
substantial evidence, and that it was entitled to an equitable
adjustment as provided in the contract. The United States, among
other things, denied that the claim was within the disputes clause,
and asserted that the suit was time-barred by § 2401(a).
Without deciding whether the claim arose under the contract within
the meaning of the disputes clause, the District Court dismissed
the suit as barred by the statute of limitations. The Court of
Appeals, sitting en banc, affirmed in a five-to-four decision. 363
F.2d 407. Relying on
McMahon v. United States,
342 U. S. 25, and
its own
Page 386 U. S. 509
decision in
States Marine Corp. of Delaware v. United
States, 283 F.2d 776, which arose under the Suits in Admiralty
Act, the majority below concluded that the right of action first
accrued no later than December 14, 1956, the date of the final
delivery of the disputed canteen covers, and was therefore
time-barred by § 2401(a). The court disagreed with the
decision of the Court of Appeals for the Third Circuit in
Northern Metal Co. v. United States, 350 F.2d 833, which,
like
States Marine, supra, involved the Suits in Admiralty
Act. 41 Stat. 525, as amended. The Court of Appeals for the Third
Circuit had agreed with
States Marine as to when the time
bar begins to run, but had held that the statute was tolled during
the pendency of the administrative proceedings. Because of this
apparent conflict, we granted certiorari, 385 U.S. 811. We
reverse.
Since the decision below, the Court of Claims has decided
Nager Electric Co., Inc. v. United States, 177 Ct.Cl. 234,
368 F.2d 847, a unanimous decision by that court supported by an
exhaustive opinion by Judge Davis dealing with the application of
the "first accrual" language of 28 U.S.C. § 2501 [
Footnote 5] to both breach and disputes
clause claims under the typical government contract. The conclusion
of the Court of Claims was that it would adhere to what it
considered to be its longstanding rule: (1) when administrative
proceedings with respect to a contractor's claim subject to the
disputes clause extend beyond the completion of the contract, his
right of action first accrues when the administrative action is
final, [
Footnote 6] and not
before,
Page 386 U. S. 510
and (2) when the contractor has breach claims as well as
disputes clause claims, the statute begins to run on breach claims
as well only at the conclusion of administrative action on the
claims arising under the contract. [
Footnote 7] As will be evident below, we do not reach the
question of breach claims in this case. But with respect to claims
arising under the contract, such as one asserted under the changes
clause, we agree with the Court of Claims, and essentially for the
reasons which that court articulated.
1. We start with the obvious: Section 2401(a) provides a time
limit upon bringing civil actions against the United States. The
"civil action" referred to is a civil action in a court of
competent jurisdiction.
Cf. Unexcelled Chemical Corp. v. United
States, 345 U. S. 59. Such
a civil suit is seemingly barred if the right to bring it first
accrued more than six years prior to the date of filing the suit.
Our initial inquiry is, therefore, when the right of the contractor
in this case to bring suit in the District Court
Page 386 U. S. 511
first accrued. In our opinion, if its claim arose under the
contract, it first accrued at the time of the final decision of the
Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals, that is, upon the
completion of the administrative proceedings contemplated and
required by the provisions of the contract.
With respect to claims arising under the typical government
contract, the contractor has agreed, in effect, to convert what
otherwise might be claims for breach of contract into claims for
equitable adjustment. The changes clause, for example, permits the
Government to make changes in contract specifications. Such changes
are not breaches of contract. They do give rise to claims for
equitable adjustments which the Government agrees to make, if the
cost of performance is increased or the time for performance
changed. But whether and to what extent an adjustment is required
are questions to be answered by the methods provided in the
contract itself. The contractor must present his claim to the
contracting officer, whose decision is final unless appealed for
final action by the department head or his representative, here the
Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals. Until that Board has
acted, the contractor's claim is not subject to adjudication in the
courts. [
Footnote 8] Until
then, he has only the right to have the existence and extent of his
claimed adjustment determined by the administrative process agreed
upon. But, as we have said, the "right of action" of which §
2401(a) speaks is not the right to administrative action, but the
right to file a civil action in the courts against the United
States. Under the contract we have here, the contractor's claim was
subject only to administrative, not judicial, determination
Page 386 U. S. 512
in the first instance, with the right to resort to the courts
only upon the making of that administrative determination.
It is now crystal clear that the contractor must seek the relief
provided for under the contract or be barred from any relief in the
courts. In
United States v. Holpuch Co., 328 U.
S. 234, the question was whether a contractor's failure
to exhaust the administrative appeal provisions of a government
construction contract bars him from bringing suit in the Court of
Claims to recover damages. The Court held that it did. According to
the Court, the disputes clause
"is a clear, unambiguous provision applicable at all times and
binding on all parties to the contract. No court is justified in
disregarding its letter or spirit. . . . It creates a mechanism
whereby adjustments may be made and errors corrected on an
administrative level, thereby permitting the Government to mitigate
or avoid large damage claims that might otherwise be created.
United States v. Blair, 321 U. S. 730,
321 U. S.
735. This mechanism, moreover, is exclusive in nature.
Solely through its operation may claims be made and adjudicated as
to matters arising under the contract. . . . And, in the absence of
some clear evidence that the appeal procedure is inadequate or
unavailable, that procedure must be pursued and exhausted before a
contractor can be heard to complain in a court."
328 U.S.
234,
328 U. S.
239-240.
See also United States v. Blair,
321 U. S. 730, and
United States v. Callahan Walker Co., 317 U. S.
56,
317 U. S. 61, where
the disputes clause procedures are described as the "only avenue
for relief."
2. Even when the contractual scheme has run its course and the
contractor is free to file his suit in court, he is not entitled to
demand a
de novo determination of
Page 386 U. S. 513
his claim for an equitable adjustment. The evidence in support
of his case must have been presented administratively, and the
record there made will be the record before the reviewing court.
United States v. Carlo Fianchi & Co., 373 U.
S. 709;
United States v. Utah Construction Co.,
384 U. S. 394. The
court performs principally a reviewing function. Only if it is
alleged and proved that the administrative determination was
arbitrary, capricious, or not supported by substantial evidence may
the court refuse to honor it. This much is clear not only from the
disputes clause itself, but from the Wunderlich Act. [
Footnote 9] In that statute, entitled "An Act
to permit review . . . ," 68 Stat. 81, Congress widened the scope
of judicial review, but, at the same time, recognized the finality
of the administrative decision absent the specified grounds for
setting it aside. The focus of the court action is the validity of
the administrative decision. Until that decision is made, the
contractor cannot know what claim he has or on what grounds
administrative
Page 386 U. S. 514
action may be vulnerable. It is only then that his claim or
right to bring a civil action against the United States matures,
and, as the Court of Claims said, that he has "the right to demand
payment . . . the hallmark of accrual of a claim in this court."
177 Ct.Cl. at 252, 368 F.2d at 859.
3. To hold that the six-year time period runs from the
completion of the contract, as the Government insists, would have
unfortunate impact. The contractor is compelled to resort to
administrative proceedings, which may be protracted and which may
last not only beyond the completion of the contract, but continue
for more than six years thereafter. If the time bar starts running
from the completion date, the contractor could thus be barred from
the courts by the time his administrative appeal is finally
decided. This would be true whether he wins or loses before the
board of appeals. Even if he prevailed there and was granted the
equitable adjustment he sought, the Government would be immune from
suit to enforce the award if more than six years had passed since
the completion of the contract. This is not an appealing result,
nor, in our view, one that Congress intended. The Wunderlich Act
evidences a congressional purpose to insure adequate judicial
review of administrative decisions on claims arising under
government contracts; it is very doubtful that it anticipated no
review at all if administrative proceedings, compulsory on the
contractor, continued for more than six years beyond the contract's
completion date. [
Footnote
10]
Page 386 U. S. 515
The Government suggests that the contractor may easily avoid
such untoward results by the timely filing of a protective suit
which could remain inactive pending the conclusion of
administrative proceedings. But the contractor is not legally
entitled to ask the courts to adjudicate his claim as an original
matter. Nor can he sensibly ask the courts to review a decision
which has not yet been made. He cannot, with honesty, make the
necessary allegations to support an action for review until the
administrative process is completed and the agency decision known.
Since it would remain quiescent until the administrative decision
is rendered, the protective suit would be a sheer formality, in any
event -- a procedural trap for the unwary and an additional
complication for those who manage the dockets of the courts.
Certainly it would be no help to those contractors for whom it is
already too late to file such a suit, which is true of the
petitioner in this case. [
Footnote 11]
4. The Government challenges what the Court of Claims in
Nager Electric considered to be the longstanding rule
found in its own past cases. It asserts that many of the cases from
which the purported rule was sifted do not involve the standard
disputes clause, and those that do state the rule by way of dictum
only. But we think the Court of Claims fairly reflected the thrust
and tenor
Page 386 U. S. 516
of its prior opinions. [
Footnote 12] At least, based on those cases, the ordinary
contractor would have been wholly justified in concluding that he
had six years from the conclusion of administrative proceedings to
file his suit. Nor, aside from the decision in this case, have we
been cited to any court of appeals decisions in Tucker Act (24
Stat. 505) cases which are contrary to the rule followed by the
Court of Claims.
5. This brings us to the cases in this Court upon which the
Government and the Court of Appeals have relied:
McMahon v.
United States, 342 U. S. 25;
Soriano v. United States, 352 U.
S. 270, and
Unexcelled Chemical Corp. v. United
States, 345 U. S. 59. None
of them was a Tucker Act suit involving a disputes clause claim.
McMahon was an action brought by an injured seaman against
the United States for negligence and unseaworthiness. The Suits in
Admiralty Act requires actions to be brought within two years after
"the cause of action arises." The Clarification Act, 57 Stat. 45,
50 U.S.C.App.
Page 386 U. S. 517
§ 1291(a), which brought such a seaman's suit within the
ambit of the Suits in Admiralty Act, permits court action only if
the claim has been administratively disallowed, but sets no time
within which a claim must be presented to the administrative body.
The Court held that the limitations period ran from the time of the
injury, not from the date of the disallowance of the claim. The
Court saw no indications that Congress, in passing the
Clarification Act, intended to postpone the usual time of accrual
of the cause of action until the date of disallowance, since this
would permit the claimant to postpone indefinitely the commencement
of the running of the statutory period.
The Court has pointed out before, however, the hazards inherent
in attempting to define for all purposes when a "cause of action"
first "accrues." Such words are to be
"interpreted in the light of the general purposes of the statute
and of its other provisions, and with due regard to those practical
ends which are to be served by any limitation of the time within
which an action must be brought."
Reading Co. v. Koons, 271 U. S. 58,
271 U. S. 62;
see also United States v. Dickinson, 331 U.
S. 745,
331 U. S. 748.
Cases under the Suits in Admiralty Act do not necessarily rule
Tucker Act claims. The purpose of the Clarification Act was to
prevent unnecessary litigation by providing for notice of injury to
the United States and for the opportunity to settle claims
administratively. But while suit was permitted only if a claim had
been "disallowed," the applicable regulations provided that, if a
claim was not rejected within 60 days after filing, it would be
deemed to have been administratively disallowed and the claimant
would be free to enforce his claim. There was no chance for
administrative action to consume the entire limitations period, and
therefore bar all resort to the courts.
In disputes clause cases, however, final administrative action,
which the claimant must await, may occur more
Page 386 U. S. 518
than six years after the completion of the contract. When it
does, the claimant would be time-barred if the six-year period is
measured from the date of final performance. Nor does the claimant
in cases like the one before us have unlimited discretion as to
when to file his claim. The standard changes clause [
Footnote 13] requires him to present his
claim within 30 days, and most other clauses in government
contracts calling for an equitable adjustment
Page 386 U. S. 519
also contain their own time limitations. Where this is not true,
the contractor cannot delay unreasonably in presenting his claim.
This is the rule the Court of Claims follows.
See Nager
Electric, supra, 177 Ct.Cl. at 259, 368 F.2d at 864.
Nor do
Soriano or
Unexcelled control this
case. In
Soriano, the six-year time bar was held to run
from the date of the requisitioning of foodstuffs and equipment by
Philippine guerrilla forces, and not from the date of the
disallowance of a claim filed with the Army Claims Service. The
majority in that case expressly held that the administrative action
was not a prerequisite to suit in the Court of Claims. Likewise, in
Unexcelled, where the statutory period was held to run
from the date of the breach of statutory duty under the
Walsh-Healey Act (49 Stat. 2036), rather than from the date of the
administrative determination of the liquidated damages due the
Government, it seems apparent that the United States, to which
damages were payable, could have brought suit without first
resorting to administrative remedies.
6. Finally, the Government relies on Public Law 89505 80 Stat.
304, 28 U.S.C. § 2415 (1964 ed., Supp. II), enacted on July
18, 1966, which, for the first time, established a general statute
of limitations on government tort claims and on suits by the
Government for money damages founded on any contract, express or
implied. Such suits must now be brought within
"six years after the right of action accrues or within one year
after final decisions have been rendered in applicable
administrative proceedings required by contract or by law."
As an example of such administrative proceedings, the relevant
committee reports and hearings mentioned the administrative
proceedings required under the standard disputes clause contained
in government contracts. H.R.Rep. No. 1534, 89th Cong., 2d Sess.,
at 4; S.Rep. No 1328, 89th Cong., 2d Sess., at 3; Hearing on H.R.
13652 before Subcommittee
Page 386 U. S. 520
No. 2 of the House Committee on the Judiciary, 89th Cong., 2d
Sess., 7 (1966). Based on this new provision, the Government argues
that Congress necessarily assumed that the right of action of the
United States in disputes clause situations first accrues, and the
limitations period begins to run, prior to the completion of
administrative proceedings. Otherwise there would have been no need
for the one-year period following final administrative decision in
order to save actions which might otherwise be barred by the
six-year limitation. What this amounts to, the Government says, is
a congressional construction of the similar "first accrual"
language of the older limitations on private actions contained in
§ 2401(a) and § 2501. Likewise, it argues, this
construction precludes holdings such as that of the Third Circuit
in
Northern Metal Co. v. United States, 350 F.2d 833, to
the effect that the statute is tolled during the pendency of
administrative proceedings.
This argument is not without force. There is no question of the
power of Congress to define the limits of its waiver of sovereign
immunity. But we are not convinced that Congress intended to issue
any determinative construction of § 2401 in formulating and
passing § 2415. Neither in the hearing on H.R. 13652 nor in
the committee reports did Congress focus on the first accrual
language of § 2401, on the existing construction of that
language by the Court of Claims or any other court, or on the
situation of the government contractor desiring to sue the United
States during or after the conclusion of administrative proceedings
under the disputes clause. The bill was recommended to the Congress
by the Department of Justice at the time the Department was
litigating
Nager Electric in the Court of Claims, in which
the Department ultimately took the position that the private
contractor's right of action first accrues no later than the
completion of the contract.
Page 386 U. S. 521
This position was rejected by the Court of Claims in favor of
what is considered to be its existing rule -- that the private
contractor's right to sue on a disputes clause claim first accrues
with the termination of administrative proceedings. Given the
Wunderlich Act and the prior litigative history of disputes clause
issues in this Court and in the Court of Claims, we are doubtful
that Congress intended to bar a private contractor's suit on a
disputes clause claim where administrative proceedings continue for
more than six years after the completion of the contract. Congress
understood what the impact of such a rule would be if applied to
the Government, and made due allowance for it by allowing the
Government the one-year grace period. We see no indications that it
had in mind the private litigant whose right to sue the United
States is governed by § 2401. We are hesitant to believe that,
in passing a statute aimed at equalizing the litigative
opportunities between the Government and private parties [
Footnote 14] Congress consciously
extended
Page 386 U. S. 522
a one-year saving period to the Government to overcome the
effects of protracted administrative proceedings and refused
similar relief to the contractor. At least we are sufficiently
doubtful that we prefer to await a somewhat clearer signal from the
Congress.
We therefore conclude that, if the claim filed by the contractor
in this case was a claim "arising under" the contract and was
therefore subject to administrative determination, (1) its right to
bring a civil action first accrued when the Armed Services Board of
Contract Appeals finally ruled on its claim and (2) its suit in the
District Court was timely filed. The Government in its answer to
the complaint, however, denied that the claim arose under the
contract, characterized it instead as a pure breach of contract
claim which accrued no later than the date of the completion of the
contract. The District Court did not decide this issue; nor do we.
This matter will be open on remand to the District Court. If the
claim is not within the disputes clause, the court may then
determine whether it is time-barred.
Reversed and remanded.
[
Footnote 1]
The disputes clause contained in the contract between petitioner
and the Government provides:
"Except as otherwise provided in this contract, any dispute
concerning a question of fact arising under this contract which is
not disposed of by agreement shall be decided by the Contracting
Officer, who shall reduce his decision to writing and mail or
otherwise furnish a copy thereof to the Contractor. Within 30 days
from the date of receipt of such copy, the Contractor may appeal by
mailing or otherwise furnishing to the Contracting Officer a
written appeal addressed to the Secretary, and the decision of the
Secretary or his duly authorized representative for the hearing of
such appeals shall, unless determined by a court of competent
jurisdiction to have been fraudulent, arbitrary, capricious, or so
grossly erroneous as necessarily to imply bad faith, be final and
conclusive; provided that, if no such appeal is taken, the decision
of the Contracting Officer shall be final and conclusive. In
connection with any appeal proceeding under this clause, the
Contractor shall be afforded an opportunity to be heard and to
offer evidence in support of its appeal pending final decision of a
dispute hereunder, the Contractor shall proceed diligently with the
performance of the contract and in accordance with the Contracting
Officer's decision."
For the disputes clause presently in use,
see 32 CFR
§ 597.103-12.
[
Footnote 2]
Claims not arising under those other clauses of the contract
calling for equitable adjustment, and therefore not within the
disputes clause, will sometimes be referred to herein as "breach"
claims.
See United States v. Utah Construction Co.,
384 U. S. 394,
384 U. S.
403-418.
[
Footnote 3]
The record in this case contains only excerpts from the changes
clause of the contract at issue here. The standardized version of
the changes clause for fixed-price supply contracts provides, in
its entirety, that:
"The Contracting Officer may at any time, by a written order,
and without notice to the sureties, make changes, within the
general scope of this contract, in any one or more of the
following: (i) Drawings, designs, or specifications, where the
supplies to be furnished are to be specially manufactured for the
Government in accordance therewith; (ii) method of shipment or
packing, and (iii) place of delivery. If any such change causes an
increase or decrease in the cost of, or the time required for the
performance of any part of the work under this contract, whether
changed or not changed by any such order, an equitable adjustment
shall be made in the contract price or delivery schedule, or both,
and the contract shall be modified in writing accordingly. Any
claim by the Contractor for adjustment under this clause must be
asserted within 30 days from the date of receipt by the Contractor
of the notification of change, provided, however, that the
Contracting Officer, if he decides that the facts justify such
action, may receive and act upon any such claim asserted at any
time prior to final payment under this contract. Where the cost of
property made obsolete or excess as result of a change is included
in the Contractor's claim for adjustment, the Contracting Officer
shall have the right to prescribe the manner of disposition of such
property. Failure to agree to any adjustment shall be a dispute
concerning a question of fact within the meaning of the clause of
this contract entitled 'Disputes.' However, nothing in this clause
shall excuse the Contractor from proceeding with the contract as
changed."
32 CFR § 7.103-2. The excerpted version of the changes
clause in this case appears in the unreported opinion of the
District Court, and it seems substantially identical to the full
clause quoted above.
[
Footnote 4]
Section 1346 in relevant part provides that the district courts
shall have original jurisdiction, concurrent with the Court of
Claims, of
". . . (2) Any other civil action or claim against the United
States, not exceeding $10,000 in amount, founded . . . upon any
express or implied contract with the United States. . . ."
[
Footnote 5]
Section 2501 provides as follows:
"Every claim of which the Court of Claims has jurisdiction shall
be barred unless the petition thereon is filed within six years
after such claim first accrues."
[
Footnote 6]
Where the administrative proceedings have not extended beyond
the date of completion of the contract, the Court of Claims' rule
has been that "the claim accrues, and the statutory period
commences, at the time of completion or acceptance (if the latter
is contemplated)." 177 Ct.Cl. 234, 242, 368 F.2d 847, 853.
[
Footnote 7]
The Court of Claims summarized its prior rulings with respect to
coexisting breach and disputes clause claims as follows:
"Reading them all together, these opinions show, we think, that,
where a contractor has both 'disputes-clause' items and
'breach-type' claims under a single contract, the following
standards have controlled in this court: (i) there should be only
one suit to enforce the various claim items; (ii) the contractor
can bring suit on the ripened 'breach-type' items before completion
of the administrative process on the 'disputes clause' items, but,
if he does so, he may well lose the latter claims unless he
includes them (by proper amendment, if necessary, as they mature)
in his court action; but (iii) the contractor need not file suit on
the 'breach-type' items until after the end of the administrative
process, when all the items have ripened and can be included in the
one petition. In sum, our rule has been that the time-bar will not
fall until six years after the administrative determination, but
suit can be filed earlier, with the plaintiff taking the risk that
he may thereby split his cause of action."
177 Ct.Cl. at 248-49, 368 F.2d at 857.
[
Footnote 8]
We do not have a situation here where the United States refuses
to process the claim in accordance with its agreement, or otherwise
departs from the agreed-upon scheme for settling disputed issues
within the disputes clause.
[
Footnote 9]
41 U.S.C. §§ 321 and 322 provide as follows:
"§ 321. Limitation on pleading contract provisions relating
to finality standards of review."
"No provision of any contract entered into by the United States,
relating to the finality or conclusiveness of any decision of the
head of any department or agency or his duly authorized
representative or board in a dispute involving a question arising
under such contract, shall be pleaded in any suit now filed or to
be filed as limiting judicial review of any such decision to cases
where fraud by such official or his said representative or board is
alleged:
Provided, however, That any such decision shall
be final and conclusive unless the same is fradulent [
sic]
or capricious or arbitrary or so grossly erroneous as necessarily
to imply bad faith, or is not supported by substantial
evidence."
"§ 322. Contract provisions making decisions final on
questions of law."
"No Government contract shall contain a provision making final
on a question of law the decision of any administrative official,
representative, or board."
[
Footnote 10]
The Committee Report on the Wunderlich Act disaffirms an
intention to confer any new rights on the contractor other than the
widened scope of review and refers specifically to the six-year
statute of limitations barring stale suits against the Government.
But the report does not suggest when the limitations period begins
to run or purport to alter or to disagree with the then-extant
judicial constructions of either § 2401 or § 2501 by the
Court of Claims or by any other court.
See H.R.Rep. No.
130, 83d Cong., 2d Sess.
[
Footnote 11]
We should in this respect heed the words of the Court of
Claims:
"The United States has known for decades that contract suits
will be timely in this court if they are filed within six years
after the administrative determination, and has probably acted on
that assumption in keeping records and retaining evidence. On the
other hand, to say abruptly at this moment that limitation runs
from the contract's completion, regardless of subsequent mandatory
administrative proceedings, would undoubtedly cut off scores of
contractors who, relying on our past decisions, have waited to
bring suit until the ending of the administrative process. There is
no adequate reason to disrupt these justified expectations."
177 Ct.Cl. at 253-254, 368 F.2d at 860.
[
Footnote 12]
The cases cited by the Court of Claims are the following:
Electric Boat Co. v. United States, 81 Ct.Cl. 361,
367-368,
cert. denied, 297 U.S. 710;
Austin Eng'r Co.
v. United States, 88 Ct.Cl. 559, 562-564;
Holton, Seelye
& Co. v. United States, 106 Ct.Cl. 477, 501, 65 F. Supp.
903, 907;
Griffin v. United States, 110 Ct.Cl. 330,
372-373, 77 F. Supp. 197, 206,
rev'd on other grounds sub nom.
United States v. Jones, 336 U. S. 641;
Art Center School v. United States, 136 Ct.Cl. 218, 226,
142 F. Supp. 916, 921;
Empire Institute of Tailoring, Inc. v.
United States, 142 Ct.Cl. 165, 168, 161 F. Supp. 409, 411;
International Potato Corp. v. United States, 142 Ct.Cl.
604, 606-607, 161 F. Supp. 602, 604-605;
Clifton Products, Inc.
v. United States, 144 Ct.Cl. 806, 809, 169 F. Supp. 511,
512-513;
Cosmopolitan Mfg. Co. v. United States, 156
Ct.Cl. 142, 144, 297 F.2d 546, 547,
cert. denied sub nom.
Arlene Coats v. United States, 371 U.S. 818;
Steel
Improvement & Forge Co. v. United States, 174 Ct.Cl. 24,
29-30, 355 F.2d 627, 631.
The Court of Claims also dealt with
Aktiebolaget Bofors v.
United States, 139 Ct.Cl. 642, 644, 153 F. Supp. 397, 399, a
case containing statements seemingly contrary to those found in the
above cases.
[
Footnote 13]
The Court of Claims dealt with the matter as follows:
"Similarly, the contractor in the cases before us (and the mass
of such cases) is not left at large to present his claim
administratively whenever he likes. The Disputes clause does not
itself fix a time within which a disputed issue of fact must be
presented to the contracting officer, but that is not ordinarily
true of the various substantive contractual clauses which lead to
equitable adjustments or comparable relief under the contract.
Those specific clauses usually have built-in time limits, and where
no specific period is established in the contract, the contractor
cannot delay unreasonably.
Cf. Dawnic Steamship Corp. v. United
States, 90 Ct.Cl. 537, 579 (1940). Neither this court nor the
administrative tribunals have had any great difficulty in handling
belated claims by contractors under the various contract adjustment
articles. Contractors have not been able to extend the limitations
period unduly by unilaterally postponing the commencement of the
administrative process."
177 Ct.Cl. at 259-260, 368 F.2d at 864. The court also noted
that:
"The standard Changes clause in construction contracts provides
that claims for adjustment must be asserted within 10 days; the
Changed Conditions clause calls for an immediate notification to
the contracting officer; the Delays-Damages clause contemplates a
notice within 10 days of excusable delays; the Price Adjustment for
Suspension, Delays, or Interruption of Work clause sets 20 days as
the normal period.
See United States v. Utah Constr. &
Mining Co., 384 U. S. 394,
384 U. S.
397-399 n. 1,
384 U. S. 416 n. 14, 86 S.
Ct. 1545, 16 L. Ed. 2d 642 (1966)."
Id. at 259, n. 29, 368 F.2d at 864, n. 29. The 30-day
period within which a fixed-price supply contractor must assert his
claim for equitable adjustment arising from changes,
see
text above and
supra, n 3, may be shortened in accordance with Department
procedure, 32 CFR § 7.103-2, or with negotiation, 32 CFR
§ 597.103-2.
[
Footnote 14]
The congressional intent to "put the Government on a parity with
those private litigants who may sue" and "to equalize the position
of litigants" is sufficiently evident.
See Hearing on H.R.
13652 before Subcommittee No. 2 of the House Committee on the
Judiciary, 89th Cong., 2d Sess., 9, 11 (1966); H.R.Rep. No. 1534,
89th Cong., 2d Sess., at 4; S.Rep. No. 1328, 89th Cong., 2d Sess.,
at 2. Whether Congress succeeded in establishing exact equality
between contractors and the Government is, of course, another
question. In this regard, it is interesting to note that, in
addition to the one year following the termination of
administrative proceedings in which the Government can institute a
suit under § 2415, subsection (e) of that provision provides
that:
"In the event that any action to which this section applies is
timely brought and is thereafter dismissed without prejudice, the
action may be recommenced within one year after such dismissal,
regardless of whether the action would otherwise then be barred by
this section. In any action so recommenced, the defendant shall not
be barred from interposing any claim which would not have been
barred in the original action."
28 U.S.C. § 2415(e) (1964 ed., Supp. II).