CBCA 7695
Board: CBCA
Agency: Department of State
Appellant: Framaco International Inc.
Date: 2024-08-29
Outcome: denied
THIS OPINION WAS INITIALLY ISSUED UNDER PROTECTIVE ORDER AND
IS BEING PUBLICLY RELEASED IN ITS ENTIRETY ON SEPTEMBER 4, 2024
DENIED: August 29, 2024
CBCA 7695
FRAMACO INTERNATIONAL INC.,
Appellant,
v.
DEPARTMENT OF STATE,
Respondent.
Douglas L. Patin, Erik M. Coon, and Jennifer M. Ersin of Bradley Arant Boult
Cummings LLP, Washington, DC; and Sam Z. Gdanski and Abraham S. Gdanski of Gdanski
Law PC, Teaneck, NJ, counsel for Appellant.
Thomas D. Dinackus, Matthew S. Tilghman, and Alexandra N. Wilson, Office of the
Legal Adviser, Buildings and Acquisitions, Department of State, Washington, DC, counsel
for Respondent.
Before Board Judges BEARDSLEY (Chair), RUSSELL, and OâROURKE.
RUSSELL, Board Judge.
Appellant, Framaco International Inc. (Framaco), has filed 131 cases with the Board
(certain of which are consolidated) based on its contract with respondent, Department of
State (State or agency), Bureau of Overseas Building Operations (OBO), to construct an
embassy compound in Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea.
CBCA 7695 2
This decision is being issued in accordance with the Boardâs order on further
proceedings of October 19, 2023 (Order), which largely adopted the partiesâ proposal to
resolve approximately 100 of appellantâs non-consolidated appeals brought pursuant to
Board Rule 53 (48 CFR 6101.53 (2023)), along with certain claims in four of its consolidated
appeals that were not based on Government-caused delay. See Rule 53 (governing
accelerated procedures, which are available at an appellantâs election but limited to appeals
involving amounts in dispute of $100,000 or less); see also Rule 1(a) (âThe Board may alter
[its] procedures on its own initiative or on request of a party to promote the just, informal,
expeditious, and inexpensive resolution of a case.â). The Order states that â[t]he presiding
judge with the two members of the panel . . . will decide the following appeals for which the
parties will submit briefing: CBCA 7508, 7512, 7513, 7549, 7561, 7572, 7573, 7625, 7695,
7712, 7847, and 7859 (âSelected Appealsâ).â The Order additionally states, âDecisions
rendered by the panel will be in summary form either in writing or orally, if a hearing is held;
will be final and conclusive; will not be set aside, except for fraud; and will not be
precedential.â
As agreed to by the parties, quantum in the non-consolidated appeals and certain
claims in four of Framacoâs consolidated appeals to which the Order applies will be decided
based on a formula derived from any damage amounts awarded to Framaco in the Selected
Appeals. In a subsequent joint response filed with the Board on March 19, 2024, the parties
confirmed that the Order applies to the appeals described above.
This appeal (CBCA 7695) arises from Stateâs denial of Framacoâs claim for $68,636
for costs related to the installation of a lightning protection system (LPS), which required
installation of bonding material between aluminum aerfoil sunshades and the carbon steel
supporting structure (i.e., the steel trusses to which the sunshades were attached). For
reasons stated below, we deny the appeal.
Background
I. The Contract
In September 2015, State awarded Framaco a firm-fixed-price contract, initially
valued at approximately $97 million, to construct the New Embassy Compound (NEC) in
Port Moresby, Papua New Guinea. Appeal File, Exhibit 1 at DOS-PTMO-00982321.1 The
project was originally designed in 2010 as a âStandard Secure mini-Compoundâ (SSmC)
with a scope including a lock-and-leave new office building, a perimeter security wall and
1
All exhibits are found in the appeal file, unless otherwise noted.
CBCA 7695 3
fence, a main compound entry pavilion (MCAP), a service entry/utility building, and a
support annex. Exhibit 2 at DOS-PTMO-00982414. Construction of the SSmC facility
began in 2012, but in 2013, after forty percent of the project was completed, a future marine
detachment was planned for Port Moresby and the embassy staffing requirement was
increased. Id. State therefore descoped the work under the 2012 contract and closed out that
contract. The project was redesigned under an expanded NEC, incorporating the completed
portions of the SSmC project as well as surplus equipment and materials, where appropriate.
Id.