SUFI Network Services, Inc. ( 2015 )


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  •                ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS
    Appeal of --                                )
    )
    SUFI Network Services, Inc.                 )      ASBCA No. 55306
    )
    Under Contract No. F4 l 999-96-D-0057       )
    APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT:                     Frederick W. Claybrook, Jr., Esq.
    Brian T. McLaughlin, Esq.
    Crowell & Moring LLP
    Washington, DC
    APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT:                    Lt Col James H. Kennedy III, USAF
    Air Force Chief Trial Attorney
    Christopher S. Cole, Esq.
    Joel B. Lofgren, Esq.
    Trial Attorneys
    OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE JAMES
    ON REMAND FROM THE U.S. COURT OF FEDERAL CLAIMS
    AND THE U.S. COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE FEDERAL CIRCUIT
    SUFI Network Services, Inc. (SUFI), submitted a $131, 169,649 .62 claim,
    comprised of 28 counts, to the Air Force Non-Appropriated Funds Purchasing Office
    (AFNAFPO) contracting officer (CO) under the captioned contract. In January 2006
    SUFI appealed to the Board from the CO's deemed denial of its claim. The Board's
    21November2008 decision sustained the appeal in the amount of$3,790,495.65.
    SUFI Network Services, Inc., ASBCA No. 55306, 09-1BCAii34,018 at 168,291
    (SUFI VIII). In deciding SUFI's multiple motions for reconsideration, we ultimately
    increased SUFI's award to $7,416,751.52. SUFI Network Services, Inc., 10-1 BCA
    ii 34,415 at 169,887 (SUFI XI).
    In 2011 SUFI filed for Wunderlich Act review by the U.S. Court of Federal
    Claims (COFC) with respect to 12 of the 28 counts decided by the Board (counts I, III,
    V, VI, VII, VIII, IX, XI, XV, XVI, XVIII, and XXII). The COFC on 8 November
    2012 awarded SUFI $114,138,259.99, net of the $4,625,821.35 awarded by this Board,
    on 10 of those 12 counts (counts I, III, V, VI, VII, VIII, XI, XVI, XVIII, and XXII).
    SUFI Network Services, Inc. v. United States, 
    108 Fed. Cl. 287
    , 321 (2012) (SUFI
    XIV). The COFC left undisturbed the 18 SUFI counts (II, IV, IX, X, XII, XIII, XIV,
    XV, XVII, XIX, XX, XXI, XXIII, XXIV, XXV, XXVI, XXVII and XXVIII) on which
    the Board awarded 
    $2,790,930.17. 108 Fed. Cl. at 321
    . 1
    The parties cross-appealed from that COFC decision to the United States Court
    of Appeals for the Federal Circuit (CAFC), on the referenced 10 counts. The CAFC's
    29 May 2014 decision in SUFI 
    XVI, 755 F.3d at 1326
    , affirmed in part, reversed in
    part, vacated in part, and remanded "to the Court of Federal Claims, with instructions
    to remand to the Board for further factual findings consistent with this opinion" as
    described below. Familiarity with the prior SUFI decisions is assumed.
    In SUFI XV/the CAFC: (1) affirmed the COFC's decision (affirming the
    Board's decision) on count IX, Kapaun Line Fee~ and affirmed the COFC decision in
    part on count XVI, Lost 
    Profits, 755 F.3d at 1322-23
    , 1325-26; (2) reversed the
    COFC's decisions on count I, Calling Cards, on the issue oflost revenues, and count
    VIII, Prime Knight 
    Lodgings, 755 F.3d at 1313-14
    , 1320-21, holding that the Board's
    damage calculations for both counts were supported by substantial evidence;
    (3) vacated and/or reversed the COFC's decisions and remanded to the Board for
    further fact-finding on the following counts by number, designation and CAFC
    citation:
    Count 
    Designation 755 F.3d at III
       Hallway/Lobby DSN Phones                  1316-17
    v      Other Operator Numbers and Patching       1318
    VI     Early DSN Abuse                           1319
    VII    Delta Squadron                            1320
    XI     German Troops Housing                     1321
    XVI    Post-Termination Lost Profits (in part)   1322
    and (4) reversed the COFC's ruling that SUFI was entitled to overhead expenses in its
    breach damages and equitable adjustments for extra work (finding no reason to disturb
    the Board's finding oflack of proof of such overhead expenses), but ordered a remand
    to the Board to include 10% profit "for all work and out-of-pocket expenses, whether
    incurred as a result of a contract change or 
    breach." 755 F.3d at 1324
    .
    After receipt of the COFC's remand order, on 18 August 2014 the Board
    ordered the parties to recommend remand procedures and sought their views on an
    ADR mediation. SUFI proposed that no new evidence be adduced, stated that the
    parties' recent discussions of an ADR mediation "did not bear fruit" and asked the
    1
    The Federal Circuit stated: "That amount [$2, 790,930.17] became final." SUFI
    Network Services, Inc. v. United States, 755F.3d1305, 1311 (Fed. Cir. 2014).
    2
    Board on remand to adopt the procedure the COFC used of issuing a draft decision
    leaving blanks for the parties to fill-in the amounts due. The Air Force proposed that
    the Board take judicial notice of certain facts or to admit expert testimony on such
    facts. The Board's 16 September 2014 order stated that the evidentiary record remains
    closed and set a remand action schedule, which did not include the COFC draft
    decision procedure. On 2 October 2014 the Board denied the Air Force's motion to
    take judicial notice of 11 proposed facts regarding telephone usage trends and base
    closures.
    We identify the CAFC's specific remand instructions and state, as appropriate, our
    supplemental findings 2 or conclusions, or both, with respect to the remanded counts.
    Count I, Calling Cards
    The CAFC's decision on count I did not expressly remand the issue of adding
    10% profit to the Board's damages award for extra work and claim preparation costs,
    nor did it require any further fact-finding 
    thereon. 755 F.3d at 1313-14
    . However, it
    did remand for Board addition of profit "for all work and out-of-pocket expenses" and
    saw "no error in the Board's selection of a 10% profit rate." 
    Id. at 1324.
    Hence we
    interpret that remand order to embrace counts I, III, V, VI, VII, VIII and XI.
    SUFI calculates $1,650.97 as 10% profit on the $16,509.67 in extra work, claim
    preparation costs and out-of-pocket expenses awarded on count I (app. remand hr. at
    30). SUFI VIII, 09-1BCAii34,018 at 168,275; SUFI IX, 09-2 BCA ii 34,201 at
    169,094. SUFI also avers that the Board miscalculated the $14,034.60 costs for extra
    work and claim preparation, which should be corrected to $14,448.58, for a $413.98
    difference ($14,448.58 - $14,034.60), plus $41.40 for 10% profit (app. remand br.
    at 31 ). Respondent contests the 10% profit on the claim preparation fee, because it is
    uncertain whether profit was already included in the Board's claim preparation
    calculations, but does not dispute SUFI's "minor amount" of $413.98 (gov't remand
    reply hr. at 13-14 ).
    We reviewed the evidence supporting our finding 11 in SUFI VIII for SUFI
    employees Ansola, Congalton, Smith and Broyles who performed extra work and
    claim preparation for count I. We derived their hourly rates by dividing by 2,080
    hours their annual salaries, including bonuses and educational allowances, but not
    "profit." 09-1BCAii34,018 at 168,219; SUFI IX, 09-2 BCA ii 34,201at169,094
    (correcting Ansola's annual salary to $77,500). Out-of-pocket costs excluded profit
    2
    Supplemental findings in this decision are numbered starting with S 1 to avoid
    confusion with findings in the Board's 11 prior SUFI decisions.
    3
    ($618.77) and interest ($106.08). We hold that $1,650.97 in profit is not a double
    recovery.
    SUFI's June 2005 claim listed 368.65 hours for count I claim preparation (app.
    remand br. at 30-31, attach.Fat 1-3). However, a 7.25 hour entry was misstated as
    7.15 hours, and a 1.5 hour entry was omitted (id., attach Fat 1-3 n.4). 3 Thus, the total
    claim preparation hours were 370.25(368.65+1.6). SUFI was awarded $10,179.47 for
    368.65 hours of claim preparation. SUFI VIII, 09-1BCAif34,018 at 168,276,
    169,290; SUFI IX, 09-2 BCA if 34,201 at 169,094. The claim preparation amount for
    370 .25 hours is $10,593 .46, which is $413 .99 more than $10, 179 .4 7. Profit at 10% on
    $413.99 is $41.40, totaling $455.39. We hold that SUFI is entitled to recover an added
    $2,106.36 ($1,650.97 + $455.39) on count I.
    Count III, Hallway/Lobby DSN Phones
    The Board denied recovery of lost revenues for the Air Force's breach of
    contract by delaying and refusing to remove all hallway and lobby DSN phones from
    lodging facilities because "[t]he call data SUFI used for phone x.4619 to calculate lost
    revenue damages did not distinguish between official and non-official calls." SUFI
    VIII, 09-1BCAif34,018 at 168,242. On reconsideration, we found that 1,738,387
    minutes were a "fair and reasonable approximation of the non-official calls," and
    ultimately awarded $1,296,723.50 in lost revenues. SUFI IX, 09-2 BCA if 34,201
    at 169,089; SUFI XI, 10-1 BCA if 34,415 at 169,887. The CAFC ruled that the COFC
    erred in determining $53,700,352.41 for count III damages, vacated that ruling and
    remanded count III to the Board for "reconsideration" of specified issues regarding
    lost revenues due to DSN 
    calls. 755 F.3d at 1316-17
    .
    The CAFC ordered the Board to address or reconsider the following: whether
    an adverse inference should be drawn from the missing government DSN phone call
    records; whether any evidence supports the Board's methodology to derive the
    percentages of non-official DSN phone calls; our failure to provide adequate support
    for rejecting SUFI's contention that the reasonable number of additional minutes it
    would have had on its network, but for the Air Force breaches, was the number of
    non-local minutes on the DSN phones; what was the magnitude of "real-world record
    facts" that might affect the "purchase-limiting effect" of SUFI's long distance rates for
    guest room telephones; the legal and evidentiary bases of our apparent premise that
    SUFI could not charge for in-room access to the DSN for "official" long distance calls;
    SUFI's "evidence to correct the Ramstein Building No. 303 DSN phone start date
    from October 2000 to October 1999" and to "correct ... the 10,135 average monthly
    rate to 10,609' [long distance] minutes per month" per phone and "reconsider its
    3
    We verified that SUFI omitted 1.6 hours of claim preparation (tr. 13119-21, 6/74-75).
    4
    rejection of the weighted-midpoint starting date for interest on damages." 755 F.3d
    at1315-17.
    SUPPLEMENTAL FINDINGS OF FACT
    S 1. Our July 2009 decision stated that SUFI "excluded local calls from the lost
    revenues it calculated for surrogate phone# 4619." SUFI IX, 09-2 BCA ii 34,201
    at 169,089; (misciting ex. B205, tab 4A at 212). That statement derived from SUFI's
    "NOTE: LOCAL DSN NUMBER CALLS ARE NOT INCLUDED IN THE ABOVE
    DATA," which note is not in exhibit B205, tab 4A at 212, but is in SUFI's 30 June
    2005 claim (R4, tab 80A at 1725). In July 2009 we did not verify whether the phone
    x.4619 data queries support the foregoing NOTE. On remand we reviewed the x.4619
    data queries (R4, tab 80A at 1726) to determine whether those queries verify SUFI's
    exclusion of local calls from the x.4619 call data.
    S2. Modification No. 0005 added to contract§ C, ii 3.1.1.3, "DSN SERVICE.
    The contractor shall provide DSN connectivity for in-room use. The level ofDSN
    service shall be limited to base level. Base level includes DSN telephone prefixes
    within the base's immediate area." (R4, tab 8 at 1) SUFI II, 04-2 BCA ii 32,714 at
    161,863. The bases SUFI serviced had the following local DSN telephone prefixes:
    Rhein Main, 330; Spangdahlem, 452/542; Bitburg, 453; Ramstein, 479/480;
    Landstuhl, 486/488; Vogelweh/Kapaun, 489; and Sembach, 496 (ex. BI 09 at 8, 10, ex.
    Bl 10 at 1-8, 11, 14, 24-26, 36-37, 46-47, 54, 59-61, 65, ex. B205, tab 4A at 211).
    SUFI VIII, 09-1BCAii34,018, finding 109(b).
    S3. SUFI's data queries for the x.4619 call data used in both its 30 June 2005
    claim (R4, tab 80A at 1726) and in its 13 February 2007 updated claim (ex. B205,
    tab 4A at 212), excluded calls to local DSN telephone prefixes 479, 480, 486, 488, 489
    and 496. SUFI labeled these data queries "Query statement (long distance calls)" (ex.
    B223; tr. 23/63). SUFI's foregoing data queries omitted local DSN prefixes for Rhein
    Main (330) and Spangdahlem (452, 542) 4 (R4, tab 80A at 1726, ex. B205, tab 4A at
    212). Hence, SUFI's 2005 statement, "LOCAL DSN NUMBER CALLS ARE NOT
    INCLUDED IN THE ABOVE DATA," is accurate to the extent that it is supported by
    its 2005/2007 data queries. Therefore, the record confirms that SUFI excluded local
    calls for surrogate phone x.4619 call data originating from each air base SUFI cited in
    count III except Rhein Main and Spangdahlem.
    S4. Among thousands of guests SUFI serviced in 9 years, the record includes
    30 guest complaints that the long distance rates were unreasonable (ASBCA No. 54503,
    4
    SUFl's count III did not claim damages from lodging guests at Bitburg (local prefix
    453) (ex. B205, tab 4A at 206-97, 211).
    5
    R4, tab 220). Those complaints do not show whether those guests continued to use
    guestroom phones or used hallway/lobby DSN phones.
    SS. Unlike the call data query for phone x.4619 described in finding S3,
    SUFI's 2005 and 2007 call data queries for phones x.6998 and x.6999 did not exclude
    local calls from the bases SUFI serviced namely, Rhein Main, Spangdahlem, Bitburg,
    Ramstein, Landstuhl, Vogelweh, Kapaun and Sembach. (R4, tab 84A at 2656;
    ex. B205, tab 8A at 360, ex. B224 at 1-2)
    S6. SUFI began its tabulation of total long distance revenues derived from
    Ramstein in January 1997, Rhein Main in March 1997, Vogelweh/Kapaun in April
    1997, Landstuhl in June 1997, Spangdahlem in December 1998 and Sembach in May
    1999 (ex. B205, tab 16A at 430-38; gov't remand br. appendices A-F).
    S7. SUFI first activated its telephone network at Ramstein guest lodgings on
    14 December 1996 ("cut over") (ex. B205, tab 4A at 122), and hence it was
    susceptible of misuse ofDSN phones for long distance calls.
    S8. SUFI first corrects a $131,006.03 omission ofRamstein 303 lost revenues
    in its calculated $23,459,215.92 for unknown DSN phone numbers (ex. B205, tab 4A
    at 207, 211) (app. remand br. at 84 n.18). SUFI based its count III lost revenues on
    x.4619 call data (id. at 122 n.3). SUFI's 13 February 2007 updated count III net lost
    revenues were $53,692,407.91, including $23,459,215.92 for 95 unknown DSN phone
    numbers listed in 89 lines and $30,233,191.99 for known DSN numbers (id. at 211).
    Among those $53,692,407.91 are $176,778.72 for Spangdahlem building 38, number
    542-5130 (id. at 170) and $2,135,213.46 for unknown numbers in Rhein Main
    buildings 600, 632, 633 and 634, totaling $2,311,992.18 (id. at 206-07).
    S9. In SUFI's $23,459,215.92 total lost revenues calculated for unknown
    numbers, SUFI failed to include the first 2 of the 89 lines of entries for Ramstein 303,
    whose amounts were $25,184.46 and 105,821.56 (ex. B205, tab 4A at 206-07).
    SIO. Our review of SUFI's remand brief, attachment F, shows that we omitted
    .25 hours of Mr. Broyles' 27 September 2003, 3.75 hour entry (ex. B205, tab 4B).
    Sl 1. SUFI's 15 January 2010 motion for reconsideration in SUFI XI, stated:
    "The weighted midpoint is obtained by spreading the 'phone-months' for both the
    known and unknown phone numbers over the periods of usage, keeping a running total
    by month, dividing the grand total by 2, and seeing where the half-way usage point
    falls, which is February 21, 2000" (app. mot. at 11 n.5).
    6
    DECISION ON COUNT III
    We address first whether SUFI's lost revenues must exclude "official" calls and
    whether a reasonable measure of such lost revenues can be derived from the number of
    non-local minutes of DSN phone use. SUFI's contract proposal stated that it expected
    to receive the "exclusive right to transport [sic] long distance traffic and a percentage
    of any revenue derived from that traffic." The contract stated that SUFI's guaranteed
    "pricing for long distance traffic" was $0.99 per minute. SUFI Network Services, Inc.,
    ASBCA No. 54503, 04-2 BCA ii 32,714 at 161,857 (SUFI II), contract§ B, ii 5.4.2. 5
    The contract did not expressly or by implication require SUFI to exclude "official"
    long distance calls from its revenue base. Modification No. 0005 limited SUFI's
    duties to provide only local DSN calls at no cost. Thus, we hold that the contract
    included official calls among the long distance calls to whose revenues SUFI was
    entitled. SUFI JI, 04-2 BCA ii 32,714 at 161,857, 161,859-61, 161,863.
    On remand we reviewed the x.4619 phone data queries to determine whether
    they verify that SUFI excluded local calls from the x.4619 call data. (Finding S 1)
    Modification No. 0005 added to contract§ C, ii 3.1.1.3, "DSN SERVICE,"
    which limited the level of DSN service to base level, including "the base's immediate
    area." The bases SUFI serviced had the following local DSN prefixes: Rhein Main,
    330; Spangdahlem, 452/542; Bitburg, 453; Ramstein, 479/480; Landstuhl, 486/488;
    Vogelweh/Kapaun, 489; and Sembach, 496. (Findings Sl, S2)
    SUFI's data queries for the x.4619 call data used in both its 30 June 2005 claim
    and in its 13 February 2007 updated claim, excluded calls to the local DSN prefixes
    for Ramstein, Lundstuhl, Vogelweh/Kapaun and Sembach but omitted local DSN
    prefixes for Rhein Main (330) and Spangdahlem (452, 542). SUFI labeled these data
    queries "Query statement (long distance calls)." SUFI's count III statement that it
    excluded local calls for surrogate phone x.4619 call data originating from each air base
    it serviced is accurate except for Rhein Main and Spangdahlem. (Finding S3)
    The Board's SUFI VIII decision rejected SUFI's use of telephone 4619 call data
    for the principal reason that such data do not provide "a basis by which we can
    reasonably determine the extent of official and non-official calls in the baseline phone
    x.4619 call data SUFI used." 09-1BCAii34,018 at 168,242. In light of the CAFC
    decision, the distinction of "official" from "non official" calls is not material under the
    terms of this contract.
    5
    SUFI argued in its December 2008 motion for reconsideration that "the relevant
    contractual distinction is between local and long distance traffic ... not between
    official and non-official" (SUFI IX, app. mot. at 30).
    7
    With respect to the risk of uncertainty of proof of damages, we give SUFI the
    benefit of an adverse inference drawn from the missing government DSN call records.
    SUFI 
    XVI, 755 F.3d at 1315
    (citing Bigelow v. RKO Radio Pictures, Inc., 
    327 U.S. 251
    , 265 (1946) ). Accordingly, we hold that one can reasonably determine from the
    x.4619 long distance call data SUFI's lost revenues attributable to hallway/lobby DSN
    calls (except for Rhein Main and Spangdahlem calls).
    We tum to whether, as respondent argues, SUFI's count III lost revenues should
    be discounted because of the opportunity of guests to be reimbursed for official long
    distance calls and the magnitude of "real-world record facts" regarding the effects of
    SUFI's long distance rates. From among thousands of guests SUFI serviced in 9 years,
    the record includes 30 hotel guest complaints that the long distance rates were
    unreasonable. Those complaints do not show whether the complaining guests continued
    to use guestroom phones or used hallway/lobby DSN phones. (Finding S4) We hold that
    these record facts do not support any discount of SUFI's count III lost revenues.
    SUFI suggests the use of Delta Squad DSN phones x.6998 and x.6999 as
    alternative surrogate DSN phone numbers (app. remand br. at 39, 42). Unlike the call
    data query for phone x.4619 described above, SUFI's 2005 and 2007 call data queries for
    phones x.6998 and x.6999 did not exclude local calls from the bases SUFI serviced,
    namely, Rhein Main, Spangdahlem, Bitburg, Ramstein, Landstuhl, Vogelweh, Kapaun
    and Sembach. (Finding S5) Hence, Delta Squad DSN phones x.6998 and x.6999 are not
    equivalent to x.4619 for purposes of measuring count III lost revenues.
    The government argues that we should measure SUFI's count III lost revenues
    "by comparing SUFI's actual revenue immediately before and after the addition or
    removal of hallway/lobby [DSN] phones" (gov't remand br. at 6-8, 13, 15). SUFI
    began its tabulation of total long distance revenues derived from Ramstein in January
    1997, Rhein Main in March 1997, Vogelweh/Kapaun in April 1997, Landstuhl in June
    1997, Spangdahlem in December 1998 and Sembach in May 1999 (finding S6).
    We disregard the government's new theory of revenue comparison before and
    after adding and removing hallway/lobby DSN phones for several reasons. SUFI saw
    hallway/lobby DSN phones in Ramstein and Rhein Main guest lodgings in February
    1996 before contract award. SUFI VIII, 09-1 BCA ii 34,018 at 168,235. SUFI first
    activated its telephone network at Ramstein guest lodgings on 14 December 1996
    ("cut-over"), and hence it was susceptible to the abuse of long distance calling on DSN
    phones at that time (finding S7). Starting in mid-December 1996 SUFI repeatedly
    asked the Air Force to remove those DSN phones. 09-1BCAii34,018 at 168,236.
    Therefore, it is apparent that there is no valid "before" breach period to compare to the
    breach period for determining lost revenues. Moreover, the government's new theory
    8
    was not raised at the Board in SUFI VIII, IX, X, and XI, and hence was waived, see
    Roscoe-Ajax Construction Co. v. United States, 
    499 F.2d 639
    , 649-50 (Fed. Cir. 1974),
    and the CAFC's mandate did not order the Board to make revised findings and to
    decide such a theory.
    SUFI based its count III lost revenues on x.4619 call data. SUFI's 13 February
    2007 updated count III net lost revenues were $53,692,407.91, including
    $23,459,215.92 for 95 unknown DSN phone numbers listed in 89 lines and
    $30,233,191.99 for known DSN numbers. In that $53,692,407.91 are $176,778.72 for
    Spangdahlem building 38, number 542-5130 and $2,135,213.46 for unknown numbers
    in Rhein Main buildings 600, 632, 633 and 634, totaling $2,311,992.18. (Finding SS)
    SUFI first corrects the foregoing $23,459,215.92 due to a $131,006.02 omission
    ofRamstein 303 lost revenues for unknown DSN phone numbers (app. remand br.
    at 84 n.18). In the $23,459,215.92 unknown numbers total lost revenues, SUFI failed
    to include the first 2 of the 89 lines of entries for Ramstein 303, whose amounts were
    $25,184.46 and 105,821.56, totaling $131,006.02. Thus, the adjusted 13 February
    2007 lost revenues amount for unknown numbers is $23,590,221.94 ($23,459,215.92
    + $25,184.46 + 105,821.56)6 (app. remand br. at 84). SUFI next adjusted that
    $23,590,221.94 by $97,855.46 to $23,688,077.40 to correct the start date for Ramstein
    303 from October 2000 to October 1999 (id. attach. L, tab 4A, page IRR). Thus, the
    adjusted total lost revenues are $53,921,269.39 ($53,692,407.91+25,184.46 +
    105,821.56 + $97,855.46).
    SUFI multiplied $53,921,269.39 by 1.0468 to adjust the x.4619 phone usage
    from 10,135 min.Imo. to 10,609 min.Imo. (SUFI VIII, 09-1BCAii34,018,
    finding 111), producing an adjusted net lost income amount of $56,444,784.80 (app.
    remand br., attach.Lat 3). We adjust the $2,311,992.18 amount for the Spangdahlem
    and Rhein Main DSN phones by that 1.0468 factor, resulting in $2,420,193.42, and
    deduct from $56,444,784.80 that $2,420,193.42 and the $1,296,723.50 awarded in
    SUFI IX, X, and XI. Therefore, the additional net lost income amount is
    $52,727,867.88 ($56,444,784.80 - 2,420,193.42 - 1,296,723.50).
    In SUFI IX on count III we awarded $2,758.43, including $773.96 for extra
    work and $1,984.47 claim preparation costs. 09-2 BCA ii 34,201 at 169,089, 169,094.
    Therefore, we add $275.84 for 10% profit on that $2,758.43. SUFI avers that the
    Board miscalculated that $2,758.43 by $12.09 (app. remand br. at 85, attach. F). Our
    review of SUFI's attachment F shows that we omitted .25 hours of Mr. Broyles'
    27 September 2003, 3.75 hour entry (finding SlO). The correct total amount is
    6
    We have verified that the 89 lines of unknown numbers total $23,590,221.94.
    9
    $2,770.60, an increase of $12.17, which, with 10% profit, is $13.39. Thus, the total
    count III award for profit is $289.23 ($275.84 + 13.39).
    In SUFI XI the Board rejected SUFI's assertion that "the weighted midpoint for
    damages is February 21, 2000" as "inconsistent with the unweighted midpoints we
    used in our prior decisions." 10-1BCAii34,415 at 169,887. SUFI's 15 January 2010
    motion for reconsideration in SUFI XI, stated: "The weighted midpoint is obtained by
    spreading the 'phone-months' for both the known and unknown numbers over the
    periods of usage, keeping a running total by month, dividing the grand total by 2, and
    seeing where the half-way usage point falls, which is February 21, 2000" (finding
    Sl 1). The total number of hallway/lobby DSN phones per month at all guest lodgings
    from December 1996 through May 2005 was 7,400.5, one-half of which is 3,700.25.
    The number of such phones from December 1996 to 21February2000 is 3,714.
    (Gov't remand reply hr. appx. I) These government data comport with SUFI's
    explanation of the weighted midpoint. Accordingly, the Board accepts SUFI's
    21 February 2000 weighted midpoint for starting interest on count III damages.
    Count V, Other Operator Numbers Patching
    The CAFC stated:
    We agree with SUFI that the Board's determination
    on Count V is not supported by substantial evidence. Even
    if SUFI did not carry its burden to prove that all of the
    calls in question were long-distance calls, there was no
    basis for the Board's conclusion that none of the calls
    could be counted towards SUFI' s recovery.
    The CAFC remanded count V "to the Board for reconsideration of whether SUFI's
    evidence provided a reasonably certain estimate - a fair and reasonable
    approximation - of damages from this 
    breach." 755 F.3d at 1318
    .
    SUPPLEMENTAL FINDINGS OF FACT
    S 12. The government had call records for the 34 local numbers for indirect
    operator access that could have confirmed whether those calls were patched to the
    operator for long distance toll-skipping calls, but did not produce such records (tr.
    18/138-40).
    10
    DECISION ON COUNT V
    In count V SUFI claimed breach damages: for direct operator access, the total
    minutes called from 5 numbers; for indirect operator access, calls from 34 local
    destination numbers that had 60 or more calls of 10 minutes or more; and for AMC, the
    difference between the usage during the months the auto-attendant feature was
    available and the average call usage before and after such period. SUFI VIII, 09-1
    BCA ii 34,018 at 168,251-52, findings 166-67.
    The government argues that SUFI' s damages are "wildly overstated" because it
    failed to sustain the burden of proof that all operator patched calls would have been
    made on the SUFI network (gov't remand br. at 55). The government had call records
    for the 34 local numbers for indirect operator access that could have confirmed
    whether those calls were patched to the operator for long distance toll-skipping calls,
    but did not produce such records (finding S 12). We draw an adverse inference from
    such absence of government call records which overcomes the "evidentiary lacuna"
    that the patched calls were not made to local numbers, our rationale for denying all but
    $3,004.15 in damages to SUFI. SUFI VIII, 09-1BCAii34,018 at 168,254.
    We hold that SUFl's evidence provided a reasonably certain estimate-a fair and
    reasonable approximation-of damages from this breach, and accept SUFI's criteria for
    measuring damages described above. We calculate damages for count Vas follows:
    Lost revenues, Direct operator access           $ 333,471.84
    11
    "        Indirect operator access        1,193,304.05
    11
    "        ACM terminal number                46,451.17 7
    Subtotal:                                1,573,227.06
    Less: lost revenues awarded in SUFI VIII            2,448.91
    Total lost revenues                     $1,570,778.15
    Extra work damages:
    Ansola, 55.75 hours@ $37.26                         $2,077.25
    Broyles, 48.5 hours @ 21.15                          1,025.78
    Smith, 71.5 hours@ $27.29                            1,951.24
    Subtotal                                      5,054.27
    Profit@ 10%                                            505.43
    Subtotal:                                     5,559.70
    Less: extra work damages awarded in SUFI IX          2,892.20
    Total extra work damages                      $2,667.50
    7
    SUFI corrected the original figure of $46,910.42 to $46,451.17 to correspond to the
    monthly usage figures in ex. B-205, tab 6A at 326 (app. remand br. at 96-97).
    11
    These extra work hours derive from SUFI' s count V claim, SUFI VIII, 09-1 BCA
    ii 34,018 at 168,251, finding 165, applied to the Board's hourly rates (id. finding 11 ).
    We hold that the total additional recoverable damages on count V are $1,573,445.65
    ($1,570, 778.15 + $2,667.50).
    Count VI, Early DSN Abuse
    The COFC awarded SUFI $122,942.50 damages for the early DSN abuse,
    including $75,000.00 for lost 
    revenues, 108 Fed. Cl. at 316
    , 321. The CAFC reversed
    the COFC's ruling on SUFI's lost "profits" (sic, revenues) claim, vacated the COFC's
    ruling only with respect to compensation for extra work and out-of-pocket costs, and
    remanded the latter issue for determination by the 
    Board. 755 F.3d at 1319
    .
    The government argues that SUFI cannot recover its extra work and
    out-of-pocket expenses because it "elected" to analyze call records due to its unproven
    suspicion of toll skipping abuse, SUFI's claimed hours were not "actual" but an
    "estimate" and were "an excessive amount of time for an unproductive analysis"
    (gov't remand br. at 77-79).
    The government's arguments are unsound, because notwithstanding SUFI's
    failure to prove lost revenues damages, it did prove that lodging guests circumvented
    the SUFI telephone network to patch outgoing long distance calls. See SUFI VIII, 09-
    1BCAii34,018 at 168,233-34. Thus, SUFI is entitled to compensation for its extra
    work and out-of-pocket expenses in investigating such guest circumventions. SUFI
    calculates those extra work and out-of-pocket costs to reflect the Board's
    determination of the SUFI employee hourly rates, with profit, as follows:
    Stephens, 172 hrs.@ $66.83          $11,499.92
    Holzapfel, 340 hrs.@ $33.65          11,441.00
    Ansola, 1.25 hrs. @ $3 7 .26             46.58
    Subtotal                      $22,987.50
    Profit@ 10%                         $ 2,298.75
    Subtotal                      $25,286.25
    Out-of-pocket expenses              $ 1,400.00
    Profit@ 10%                             140.00
    Total                               $26,826.25
    (App. remand br. at 106-07) We hold that SUFI is entitled to recover $26,826.25 on
    count VI.
    12
    Count VII, Delta Squad
    The COFC affirmed the Board's award of breach damages of $184,314.54 for
    lost revenue, extra work and out-of-pocket costs resulting from two government DSN
    phones prior to 13 April 2000, reversed our denial of lost revenue damages for phones
    x.6998 and x.6999 SUFI installed on 13 April 2000, and awarded SUFI $1,349,877.86
    ($1,534,192.40, less the $184,314.54 Board 
    award). 108 Fed. Cl. at 309
    , 320-21.
    The CAFC vacated the COFC's ruling on the x.6998 and x.6999 phones SUFI
    installed and remanded to the Board for further findings with respect t(}-
    The circumstances under which SUFI replaced the
    last two government DSN phones with its own phones .... the
    evidence regarding the government's alleged initial refusal to
    remove the phones or eventual agreement to removal only if
    SUFI replaced them with its own phones ....
    ...If SUFI installed and maintained those phones
    only under threats that breached the contract, the Board's
    rationale for denying recovery for losses caused by the
    presence of the SUFI-installed phones cannot 
    stand. 755 F.3d at 1319-20
    .
    SUPPLEMENTAL FINDINGS OF FACT
    S13. The 8 June 1999 email of Ms. Ansola, SUFI's manager in Germany, to
    SUFI's manager, Mr. Myers, stated:
    We have a major confrontation coming up about DSN
    phones at Sembach ....
    Just found out that a couple of commanders have given
    orders to the Comms Squadron to install 8 DSN telephones
    with "free" access to the States.... These phones are going
    into ... one room each in two different lodging facility
    buildings. They also want extra DSN phones with
    worldwide access put into rooms "without" our knowledge
    for some of the officers. This situation is happening only
    at Sembach and I need to put it to a stop.
    (R4, tab 84B at 2674)
    13
    S14. Ms. Ansola's 3 February 2000 email to USAFE's Mr. Branham stated:
    Last week I met with MSgt. Washington and we discussed
    the phone line for Delta [Squad] to call directly into the
    rooms ....
    ...At first I looked the other way about the DSN phones in
    Delta Squadron's room being used for "morale calls". The
    contract clearly states that DSN is to be at a local level and
    no DSN phones outside of the rooms are to remain at the
    lodging facility except for administrative use.. . . It was
    agreed that we would leave the lobby phone unblocked so
    those TDY could make morale calls.
    We are averaging 15% of the rooms in building 210 and 212
    making calls. In the other buildings at Sembach we are
    averaging more than twice this amount. Sgt Washington told
    me that they are not monitoring the DSN phones. These
    numbers seem to indicate that the guests are doing more than
    making their weekly morale calls.
    (R4, tab 84B at 2675-76)
    S 15. Under SUFI' s "Germany Trip Report 2/27 /00 - 3/10/00" is the following:
    There remains an ongoing issue with "Delta Squad" who
    [sic] is now occupying 2 buildings. Delta
    Squadron ... remain[s] at Sembach for three months and
    then a new crew comes back in. These 2 buildings are
    doing half the amount of revenue as the other buildings.
    Our intention is to take out the govt. DSN phones, which
    are located in the Delta Squad lounge area, and replace
    them with our own DSN phones that will tie into our
    system. By doing this we will be able to monitor the DSN
    calls to see if they are abusing it. It is believed that the
    commander of Delta Squadron has told the front desk
    "not" to activate the PINS for his crew because the phone
    calls were to [sic] high. This commander is no longer at
    Sembach but will rotate back in a few months. Cecilia has
    14
    scheduled a meeting with the new commanders of Delta
    Squad to try and resol[ v ]e this issue.
    (ASBCA 54503, ex. A54 at 178-79)
    S16. In April 2000 SUFI received the Air Force's conditional approval to
    replace the two government DSN phones with two SUFI phones. Ms. Ansola testified:
    "[I]fwe didn't put our own phones in, they would not remove the [government
    phones].... I knew that I could then monitor the phones and be able to show what kind
    of abuse was happening on those two [government] phones." She discussed SUFI's
    reasoning with the COTR. (Tr. 41178-79) Ms. Ansola's chronology stated:
    2000
    February met with a Master Sergeant for Delta Squad.
    There is no monitoring systems in place and the flight
    crews can make unlimited calls to the States. There were
    two DSN phones for the flight crews and last year we had
    them removed and agreed to put two SUFI phones with the
    same level of service. After monitoring we discovered that
    many calls exceeded the allowable 15 minutes [for morale
    calls] and several calls were as long as 2 hours. Asked if
    they would at least have a sign in/out sheet with names and
    time on phone. Had several meetings, but nothing has
    changed and no monitoring is in place.
    (R4, tab 84B at 2684)
    S 17. On 11 April 2000 SUFI installed two SUFI phones in Delta Squad,
    Sembach Bldg. 210 (tr. 6/193, 195-97). On 12-13 April 2000 SUFI programmed those
    phones for local DSN connection to morale call number 480-4663 (ex. B205, tab 8B at
    361; tr. 12/32-33, 109, 112).
    Sl8. COTR Adams' 17 January 2001 email to USAFE's Messrs. Branham and
    White stated:
    On 11 Jan 01, SUFI brought forth concerns to the
    [CO] regarding DSN usage in ... the Delta Squadron. [The
    contractor] explained that often ... a new commander ... will
    order additional phones to be installed in the administrative
    area used by the unit. The contractor alleges that these
    phones are being used ... to make morale calls.
    15
    The contractor's interpretation of the contract is
    clear .... Military personnel supporting a unit who need to
    stay in the lodging facilities with their units, may have DSN
    access for administration work only. Use of these phones
    for morale purposes is prohibited.... SUFI Networks will
    provide one lobby telephone per lodging facility with DSN
    access for morale calls. Morale calls are defined as one call
    per week not to exceed 15 minutes in duration.
    (R4, tab 84B at 2663-64)
    S19. Ms. Ansola's 31 May 2001 email to AFNAFPO contract specialist
    Charlotte Guilmenot stated:
    We also replaced two DSN phones with our phones for
    Delta Squadron at Sembach (special flight crews) assigned
    there on a 90 day rotation. These phones, calling DSN,
    were to be used for morale calls limited to one 15 minute
    call per week. We have been able to monitor length of
    calls and found abuse. (30 minute to 2 hour calls) I have
    talked with the head operator and she does not have any
    orders to ask for control numbers. Therefore, she will put
    all calls through to the States made on a DSN phones [sic]
    without asking for control numbers or monitoring length of
    call.. ..
    ... I've asked, and been ignored, to have Delta people at
    least make the callers sign in and out when making
    "morale calls".
    (R4, tab 84B at 2682)
    S20. Ms. Ansola's 11 August 2001 email to Mr. Myers stated: "When I have
    threaten [sic] to remove the morale phones from Sembach if they did not control and
    monitor better, I was told by a commander that he would order his people to not use
    our phones. Another commander I spoke with agreed and for his 90 days we had no
    abuse." (R4, tab 84B at 2686)
    S21. Ms. Ansola's 12 June 2003 memo to USAFE's David White stated:
    Attached are copies of hours going over the two "morale"
    phones that we installed at Sembach. Over the past few
    16
    years we have sent letters, discussed with your office and
    Sam [Adams'] office, and even talked with Commanders
    to try and get some kind of control over the calls on the
    two phones ....
    There is no place in our contract that says we have to have
    morale phones. Therefore, we are giving 10 days notice
    and will remove the phones. Please let Delta know that
    they are not allowed to have the Communication Squadron
    install DSN phones to replace our telephones.
    (R4, tab 84B at 2692)
    S22. Mr. Myers' 8 August 2003 email to AFNAFPO CO Cedric Henson
    summarized the Delta Squad issues:
    C. "Morale Phones" at Sembach
    Since cut over at Sembach mid-1998, we have had a
    very big issue with "morale phones" at that location ....
    In 2000 we finally got them to agree not to install more
    DSN phones. They removed the ones they did have,
    and they were replaced by two of our phones so we
    could keep track of the calls and get an accurate
    estimate of the problem. We've asked several times
    that someone monitor the call length or have a sign
    in/sign out sheet.... The Delta guys immediately
    started calling over 500 and 700 hours per month on
    these two morale phones. Cecilia Ansola went to the
    Commanders, hotel managers, Comms, COTR, and the
    contracting office asking for assistance to stop the DSN
    abuse ....
    When we said we would remove the phones if the
    abuse was not controlled, we were told that it was "not
    a good idea as it is a touchy situation with the Delta
    Squadron." The Commander at the time told Cecilia
    Ansola that if she took out the phones they would
    boycott the phone system. Basically he would "order"
    his guys to not use the phones. Phones are still being
    17
    abused today in the Sembach lounge, and need to be
    removed.
    (R4, tab 84B at 2668-70)
    S23. Ms. Ansola talked about morale call abuse with several Delta Squad
    commanders, but "I had no success with talking with them" (tr. 41183). Ms. Ansola
    stated that COTR "didn't want me to remove them. She wanted to make sure that we
    had something confirmed because the Delta Squad .... I just know that everybody
    wanted to keep them happy ... nobody seemed to want to make an effort to have the
    phones removed from Delta Squad." (Tr. 4/181-82)
    S24. We find that none of the foregoing evidence supporting SFs 13-23 was
    opposed by any government evidence.
    DECISION ON COUNT VII
    In SUFI VIII we held that contract"§ E.2 required respondent to remove
    government-installed DSN phones in Building No. 210's Day Room outside of the
    'administrative area' and its failure to remove them on cutover in May 1999 was a
    breach of contract." 09-1BCA~34,018 at 168,262.
    In light of our supplemental findings on count VII, we conclude that SUFI:
    ( 1) did not volunteer to install phones x.6998 and x.6999 in the Day Room as a favor
    to the government, but rather to induce it to remove the last two government DSN
    phones from the Day Room and to enable SUFI to monitor Delta Squad calls for proof
    of their abuse (findings S16-Sl9), and (2) maintained phones x.6998 and x.6999 after
    13 April 2001 under protest because a Delta Squad commander told Ms. Ansola that if
    SUFI removed phones x.6998 and x.6999, he would order his people not to use SUFI's
    room phones (findings S20, S22, S23), which would breach the contract, and the Air
    Force thereafter tacitly forbade the removal of those phones. We hold that our SUFI
    VIII rationale "that respondent had no duty to remove phones x.6998 and x.6999 from
    the Day Room" was not supported by the preponderance of record evidence, and hence
    our denial of recovery for SUFI's losses caused by the presence of those phones
    cannot stand. 09-1 BCA ~ 34,018 at 168,262.
    SUFI seeks $1,335,438.00 in additional damages for count VII, comprised of
    $1,326,845.30 in lost revenues on phones x.6998 and x.6999 and $8,592.70 in extra
    work and claim preparation costs with 10% profit, net of $1,566.44 awarded in SUFI
    IX (app. remand br. at 124-26).
    18
    The Air Force argues that it had no duty to remove SUFI-owned and installed
    phones because it was free to remove its phones at any time, a "contemporaneous retort
    from one of many rotating Delta Squadron commanders ... does not amount to a breach of
    contract" and its damages are excessive, inter alia, due to flawed calculation of damages
    on government DSN phones prior to April 2000 (gov't remand hr. at 81-86). We reject
    these government arguments as unsupported by our original findings in SUFI VIII and
    SUFI IX, as well as our foregoing supplemental findings on count VII.
    We hold that SUFI is entitled to recover an additional $1,335,438.00 on count VII.
    Count VIII, Prime Knight Lodgings
    The CAFC's count VIII decision stated: "[W]e reverse the [COFC] on Count
    
    VIII," 755 F.3d at 1321
    , but did not expressly remand that count to this Board.
    However, as analyzed in Count I above, the CAFC remanded for the Board to add
    10% profit "for all work and out-of-pocket expenses," 
    id. at 1324,
    including count
    VIII. The government's remand briefs do not comment on count VIII.
    SUFI seeks 10% profit on $7,400.75 in extra work and out-of-pocket expenses
    awarded by the Board on count VIII (app. remand hr. at 129). The $7,400.75
    accurately sums the $7, 01 7 .15 + 37 .26 + 21.15 + 300 .19 amount allowed for extra
    work, plus $25.00 for out-of-pocket expenses. SUFI VIII, 09-1 BCA ii 34,018 at
    168,244, 168,290; SUFI IX, 09-2 BCA ii 34,201at169,095. Ten percent of$7,400.75
    is $740.08, which amount we award to SUFI. SUFI also seeks to recover $8,086.43
    including profit for 110 hours of Mr. Stephens' extra work not awarded by the Board
    in SUFI VIII, but awarded by the COFC, on the allegation that the government did not
    contest the COFC's extra work award. However, the CAFC reversed the COFC's
    entire count VIII decision, and did not remand to the Board any issue of additional
    extra work costs other than to add 10% profit. We interpret the CAFC's phrase, "for
    all work and out-of-pocket expenses" to mean all such expenses previously awarded
    by the Board for count VIII. Therefore, we deny SUFI' s request for the additional
    $8,086.43 not so awarded.
    Count XI, German Troops Housing
    The COFC held that the Board's failure to award damages for SUFI's lost
    revenues claim based on housing non-transient German troops at Sembach Building
    212 "was clear 
    error." 108 Fed. Cl. at 317
    . On appeal, the CAFC stated:
    The Board did not ... explain why it was not awarding
    damages for SUFI' s lost profits on the phones in rooms
    occupied by the German troops. In these circumstances,
    19
    we cannot uphold the Board's decision under the
    Wunderlich Act standard of review. But the [COFC] erred
    in itself determining the proper damages for Count XI. We
    vacate the [COFC's] ruling on Count XI and order that
    count remanded to the Board for further 
    consideration. 755 F.3d at 1321
    (citation omitted).
    The government argues that if "German troops had not been lodged in Building
    No. 212, then SUFI's average revenue during the July 03-May 05 period would have
    been accordingly higher and SUFI's recovery on Count IV accordingly lower. Further
    compensation for these 23 months [under count XI] would be double counting."
    (Gov't remand br. at 88)
    SUFI argues that the government failed to present the foregoing argument to the
    Board before 2010 or to the COFC or to the CAFC on appeals, so it is untimely and
    has been waived (app. remand reply br. at 45).
    The government's argument conflicts with the facts found. SUFI's count IV,
    A&B Bed Switch, Use of Pins and LTS Switch, claimed breaches from March 2003 to
    May 2005 at Spangdahlem, Rhein Main, Ramstein, Vogelweh, and Landstuhl
    lodgings. SUFI VIII, 09-1 BCA ii 34,018 at 168,266, finding 230. SUFI' s count XI,
    German Troops Housing, claimed a breach from March 2003 through May 2005 at
    Sembach Building 212. 
    Id. at 168,268,
    finding 243. Therefore, the record does not
    show any duplication of lost revenues.
    On further consideration, we hold that SUFI is entitled to recover $50,078.64,
    composed of $49,909.02 (ex. B205, tab 12A at 385) for lost revenues and $169.62 as
    10% profit on $1,042.88 in extra work costs and $653.32 in claim preparation costs
    awarded in SUFI IX, 09-2 BCA ii 34,201 at 169,095.
    Count XVI, Lost Profits
    The CAFC panel stated: "[W]e see no error in denying recovery for the two
    facilities built at SUFI-served bases after the contract termination" and affirmed the
    COFC's "conclusion that SUFl's post-termination lost profits should be calculated for
    a term of fifteen years from the date of completion and acceptance of the telephone
    system at each site," on which basis the Board is to "recalculate damages under Count
    
    XVI." 755 F.3d at 1322-23
    .
    Thus, our count XVI recalculations are to include (i) lost revenues found by the
    Board in counts not challenged in Wunderlich Act review, (ii) lost revenues for counts
    20
    affirmed by the Federal Circuit, and (iii) the lost revenue calculations for the counts in
    this remand decision.
    SUFI argues that the Board should recalculate lost profits in the amount of
    $67,497,173.37, less the $2,646,116 the Board previously awarded for count XVI
    (app. remand Proposed Findings of Fact at 92). The Air Force argues that "completion
    and acceptance" of each phone system occurred at cut-over, SUFI should not receive a
    windfall of added years of lost profits by its alleged "breach" by failure to complete
    LFTS testing before cut-over, and its profit rates were unsustainable for 15 years into
    to future (gov't remand hr. at 91, 94, 97-101).
    The Air Force's arguments are not well taken. We are not free to disregard the
    CAFC panel's unambiguous holding that the 15-year term commenced "from the date
    of completion and acceptance" of the LFTS. The Air Force points to no evidence to
    substantiate its SUFI breach assertion. The CAFC did not order the Board to make
    fact-finding with respect to the contract cut-over, test and acceptance procedures or
    profit sustainability.
    The Board identified the methodology for calculating count XVI lost profits,
    which we applied in SUFI VIII, 09-1 BCA ii 34,018 at 168,281-86, SUFI IX, 09-2
    BCA ii 34,201 at 169,092-93, SUFI X, 10-1BCAii34,327 at 169,535, and SUFI XI,
    10-1 BCA ii 34,415 at 169,887. We use that methodology in this remand decision,
    adding the adjustments required by the CAFC's directions.
    (A) The Board accepts SUFI's claim calculation of $4,086,619.39 total actual
    revenues it received from January 2002 through May 2005, including Ramstein (R),
    $3,269,820.99; Spangdahlem (S), $434,979.71; and Rhein Main (RM), $381,818.69
    (SUFI VIII, 09-1 BCA ii 34,018 at 168,281-82, finding 318; app. remand Proposed
    Findings of Fact, attach. D, tab 17A at 1). 8
    (B) The Board adjusts SUFI's calculation of gross lost revenues due to
    government breaches from January 2002 through May 2005 to reflect the Board's
    damage decisions and those of the COFC affirmed by the CAFC, as follows:
    8
    Under SUFI's revenue accounting system, the "Ramstein" revenue also included the
    Lan4stuhl, Vogelweh, Kapaun and Sembach revenues. The "Spangdahlem"
    revenue also included the Bitburg revenues (id.).
    21
    Count                 Description                 Allocation     Gross Lost Rev.
    I             Calling Cards                       R              $ 147,138
    s                 20,750
    RM                 20,750
    II            Front Desk Patching                 R                 225,374
    III           Hallway/Lobby DSN Phones            R              19,263,415
    RM                407,484
    IV            A&B Bed/PINs/LTS                    R                 414,046
    v             Other Operator Nos.                 R               1,029,779
    VII           Delta Squad                         R               1,001,125
    IX            Sembach Line Charge                 R                 427,378
    XI            German Troops Housing               R                  49,909
    XII           Missing Rooms                       R                  73,824
    RM                 146,203
    XIII          Temporary Shutdowns                 R                  133,709
    TOTAL                                             $23,369,884
    Including Ramstein: $22,765,697; Spangdahlem: $20,750; and Rhein Main: $574,437.
    (C) We add the foregoing actual and Board-adjusted gross lost revenues,
    rounded to the nearest dollar:
    Location      Actual Rev. Lost Gross Rev.          Total Revs.
    R             3,269,821      22,765,697            26,035,518
    s              434,980           20,750               455,730
    RM             381,819          574,437               956,256
    (D) We divide the foregoing total revenues by the duration in years of
    post-2001 performance to obtain the average annual lost revenues:
    R     $26,035,518 +3.417      =    7,619,408
    s         455,730 -7- 3.417   =      133,371
    RM        956,256 -7- 2.915   =      328,047
    Total:          $8,080,826
    (E) We multiply the foregoing average annual gross lost revenues by the
    respective number of unperformed years after base LFTS acceptance of each location
    to derive total gross lost profits. The respective dates for those locations are 15 years
    22
    after LFTS acceptance for Ramstein and Spangdahlem, and 30 June 2005 for Rhein
    Main (app. proposed findings of fact, attach. D, tab 17A, n.6):
    R        $7,619,408 x 10.014 = $76,300,752
    s        $133,371 x 10.285 =     1,371,721
    RM       $328,047 x 0.083 =         27,228
    Total:          $77,699,701
    (F) We have verified the accuracy of SUFI's room adjustment factors and
    proportion them to our average annual gross lost profits (step (D)) (see app. proposed
    findings of fact, attach. D, tab 17B, notes 1 and 2), as follows:
    Year(s)               Annual Revenue      Room Adj.     Gross Lost Profit
    2005 (7 mos.)      $4,539,851             0.9996          4,538,035
    2006-2014 (9 yrs.)
    $7,752,779 x 9 =   69,775,011             1.0028        69,970,381
    2015 (@ 6 mos.)     3,349,708             1.0028         3,359,087
    Total:        77,867,503
    (G) We calculate the Air Force's revenue share from the gross lost profits (step
    (F)), less SUFI's local revenue adjustment factor of0.1345, as follows:
    Year Gross Lost Rev.        Local Rev.    Long Dist. Rev.       Rev. Share
    2005      4,538,035         76,239        4,461,796            104,852
    2006      7,752,779         130,247       7,622,532            205,046
    2007      7,752,779         130,247       7,622,532            221,053
    2008      7,752,779         130,247       7,622,532            276,698
    2009      7,752,779         130,247       7,622,532            331,580
    2010      7,752,779         130,247       7,622,532            384,176
    2011      7,752,779         130,247       7,622,532            436,771
    2012       7,752,779         130,247       7,622,532            461,163
    2013       7,752,779         130,247       7,622,532            484,793
    2014       7,752,779         130,247       7,622,532            509,185
    2015       3,349,708          59,625       3,290,083            221,094
    Totals:   77,664,280                                          3,636,411
    (H) We accept SUFI' s projected expenses for each of the 11 years of lost long
    distance call revenues, which total $15,814,524 in expenses (app. proposed findings of
    fact, attach. D, tabs l 7D, l 7E).
    23
    (I)    We recalculate SUFI's net lost profits as follows:
    Adjusted Gross lost Profits:             $77 ,867 ,503
    Less: Revenue Sharing                    ( 3,636,411)
    Less: Projected Expenses                 ( 15,814,524)
    Total Net Lost Profits:                  $58,416,568
    Less: Lost profits previously awarded      ( 2,646,116)
    Additional net lost profits              $55,770,452
    Count XVIII, SIMS/L TS Interfaces; Count XXII, Change of Air Force Switches
    The COFC held that the government was liable and increased the Board's
    award ($154,781.27) to $480,626.85 on count XVIII, and reversed the Board's denial
    of recovery on count XXII and granted SUFI's claim in 
    full. 108 Fed. Cl. at 312
    , 315.
    The CAFC panel ruled: "We vacate the [COFC's] ruling in this respect [namely,
    calculating damages directly] and order remand for the Board to determine damages
    for Counts XVIII and XXII, consistent with the [COFC's] liability 
    determinations. 755 F.3d at 1323
    .
    On both counts XVIII and XXII, the parties agree within one penny of the
    amount to be awarded to SUFI, as adjusted for Ms. Ansola's hourly rate and deducting
    the amounts previously awarded by the Board: for count XVIII, $209 ,3 51.16 and for
    count XXII $153,238.58 (app. remand br. at 141, 143; gov't remand br. at 107, 109;
    app. remand reply br. at 58, 59).
    We hold that SUFI is entitled to $209,351.16 for count XVIII and $153,238.58
    for count XXII.
    Interest
    SUFI is entitled to interest on each of the foregoing claim count amounts from
    the date specified in SUFI's claim for each count at the Federal Reserve Board (FRB)
    monthly prime rate, as held in SUFI VIII, 09-1 BCA iJ 34,018 at 168,224-25 (since the
    PSA (Partial Settlement Agreement) did not specify the interest rate, SUFI calculated,
    and respondent did not object to use of, the FRB prime interest rate) including the
    21 February 2000 weighted midpoint for starting interest on count III damages, until
    payment.
    24
    CONCLUSION
    We tabulate by count the following additional amounts awarded to SUFI in this
    remand decision (which do not include the $2, 790.930.17 awarded by the Board in the
    16 counts not appealed to the COFC):
    Count          Added Amount
    I             $      2,106.36
    III             52,728,157.11
    v                1,573,445.65
    VI                  26,826.25
    VII              1,335,438.00
    VIII                   740.08
    XI                  50,078.64
    XVI             55,770,452.00
    XVIII              209,351.16
    XXII               153)38,58
    Total:        $111,849,833.83
    We sustain this appeal to the extent set forth above, plus interest on such
    principal amount in accordance with this opinion.
    Dated: 2 February 2015
    Administrat · e
    Armed Serv
    of Contract Appeals
    I concur                                          I concur
    ~/~-
    'MARK N. STEMPLER                                 MONROE E. FREEMAN, JR.
    Administrative Judge                             Administrative Judge
    Acting Chairman                                  Acting Vice Chairman
    Armed Services Board                             Armed Services Board
    of Contract Appeals                              of Contract Appeals
    25
    I certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the Opinion and Decision of the
    Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals in ASBCA No. 55306, Appeal of SUFI
    Network Services, Inc., rendered in conformance with the Board's Charter.
    Dated:
    JEFFREYD. GARDIN
    Recorder, Armed Services
    Board of Contract Appeals
    26
    

Document Info

Docket Number: ASBCA No. 55306

Judges: James

Filed Date: 2/2/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/19/2015