ASBCA 61122

Board: ASBCA Agency: U.S. Army Corps of Engineers Appellant: Aspen Consulting, LLC Date: 2020-10-14 Outcome: denied
View full appeal with AI analysis on ProtestIntel →
ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS Appeal of - ) ) Aspen Consulting, LLC ) ASBCA No. 61122 ) Under Contract No. W9127S-13-C-6003 ) APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: Gerald H. Werfel, Esq. Ian A. Cronogue, Esq. Baker, Cronogue, Tolle & Werfel, LLP McLean, VA APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Michael P. Goodman, Esq. Engineer Chief Trial Attorney Allen S. Black, Esq. Siobhan Fabio, Esq. Engineer Trial Attorneys U.S. Army Engineer District, Little Rock OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE MCILMAIL On October 14, 2020, we denied the appeal of appellant, Aspen Consulting, LLC, in which Aspen seeks $264,470.79 (plus interest) that it says represents two contract payments, pursuant to Invoice Nos. 201501-1 and 201501-2, that the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (government) misdirected to an account at Commerzbank (a German bank), arising from work performed to outfit the U.S. Army Health and Dental Clinics in Rose Barracks, Vilseck, Germany.1 Aspen Consulting, LLC, ASBCA No. 61122, 20-1 BCA ¶ 37,715 at 183,088. The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit reversed, holding that the government materially breached the contract by making those payments to an account other than the one listed in the Central Contractor Registration, in violation of Federal Acquisition Regulation 52.232-33 (2003). Aspen Consulting, LLC v. Sec’y of Army, 25 F.4th 1012, 2022 WL 385913 at *4 (Fed. Cir. 2022). Familiarity with both opinions is presumed. In its opinion, the Court noted, regarding the government’s payment defense (which our opinion had not addressed) that “[p]ayment is an affirmative defense, and the defendant bears the burden of proof,” and directed that on remand “[i]f the government establishes that the misdirected funds . . . were subsequently used for Aspen’s benefit. . . 1 In our opinion we stated that Aspen sought $264,470.70, which amount Aspen referenced in its brief (app. br. at 13). However, Aspen’s complaint seeks $264,470.79 (compl. at 7 ¶ 26). the Board is ‘required to credit the government’ with the value of those funds used for Aspen’s benefit,” stating that “[a] debtor who makes contractually required payments to a third party or to a different account will have a ‘valid defense’ to a breach of contract claim if it can show that the misdirected payments benefitted the creditor.” Id. In support of its payment defense, the government points to the September 23, 2019 declaration of Anna Muth (gov’t br. at 26, 49; gov’t reply at 17, 19), who was a business manager for Aspen’s operations in Germany (R4, tab I-22 ¶ 3). Ms. Muth states: In my position, I was personally responsible to insure that each Vilseck vendor and subcontractor got paid. That also included making sure that each employee who worked on the Vilseck project for Aspen was properly compensated. From the inception of the Vilseck contract until my last day working for Aspen, I made sure that every invoice that was presented and every hour that was worked was paid from the Commerzbank account. . . . Based upon my records, . . . I can state in good faith that the funds deposited by the U.S. Army, Corps of Engineers in the Aspen Commerzbank account pursuant to payment of Aspen invoices [Invoice Nos. 201501- 1 and 201501-2] were all expended to satisfy the following expenses: a. Invoice #4530, D&T Shop, 43.638,73 Eur b. Invoice #N/A, Schabel, 10.043,60 Eur c. Invoice #PO0001, Andreas Schmidt, 5.820,29 Eur d. Invoice #39593, ITBoost, 2.257,91 Eur e. Invoice #D976453, SKSonic, 195,16 Eur f. Invoice #6, BFrench Consulting, GmbH, 2.038,47 Eur g. Invoice #17984, BFrench Consulting GmbH, 203,74 Eur h. Invoice #D80054, MediTrade, 733,04 Eur i. Invoice #1656882, Henry Schein, 2.652,51 Eur j. Invoice #PSI000246, SIOTS, $98,232.82 k. Invoice #PSI000280, SIOTS, $7,539.65 l. Invoice #6003VILSECK2015, Ben French Consulting, 16.721,93 Eur m. Invoice #D005237, EWald, 5.243,14 Eur n.