Contractors take heed – a time extension may be issued after substantial completion for specific work and the Government can still assess liquidated damages.

Under a contract with the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, a Contractor agreed to construct facilities for support services, site logistics, and command in the Kingdom of Bahrain.  The Government assessed LDs for delayed substantial completion.  Several months later, after the Contractor had demobilized from the Project site, the Government issued an RFP for extra work.  The Government accepted the Contractor’s pricing proposal for the extra work and established a deadline for completion of the same.

In its Certified Claim and on Appeal to the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals, the Contractor unsuccessfully argued the award of extra work extended the overall deadline for substantial completion of the original scope of work.  The bilateral Modification for the extra work provided in part, “This Period of Performance covers work under this modification only, not for the overall contract.”

The Board’s opinion doesn’t discuss what sort of extra work was performed.  Presumably, the use or benefit of the overall Project did not depend upon completion of the extra work.

Appeal of American International Contractors, Inc., Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals Nos. 60948 and 61166 (May 29, 2018)

Published On: October 1, 2018

Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!

  • Your Contract Can Handle COVID-19

Your Contract Can Handle COVID-19

April 9, 2020|

Uncertainty and risk are not new or novel to contractors.  Contracts reduce uncertainty and share the risk of doing or providing something.  COVID-19 may have contributed to, but it has not single-handedly created, uncertainty and risk. 

  • Jonathan Straw | Partner Kraftson & Caudle | Heavy Construction Law

Taxes Due!

March 10, 2020|

It’s tax season again, so it’s time to pay the piper.

  • Jonathan Straw | Partner Kraftson & Caudle | Heavy Construction Law

Claim Certified with Digital Signature Deemed OK

February 6, 2020|

The law is not a trend-setter.  It doesn’t readily change or adapt to tech.  So, a commonplace practice in business became a dispute when a claimant digitally certified a claim under the Contract Disputes Act.

Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!

Jonathan J. Straw
Best Lawyers® - Jonathan Straw | 2026

Share This Story, Choose Your Platform!