Aspen Consulting, LLC v. Secretary of the Army, No. 21-1381 (Fed. Cir. 2022)
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Aspen sought compensation for the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers’ failure to deposit contractual payments in the account designated in its contract to outfit U.S. military health and dental clinics in Germany. The contract required payment using the Electronic Funds Transfer (EFT) information contained in the Central Contractor Registration (CCR) database. After making two payments to an account (CZ) not listed in the database for Aspen, the government maintained that Aspen held the payee out as having “apparent authority to negotiate” on behalf of Aspen and “to sign contract modifications, submit invoices, submit requests for equitable adjustments[,] and submit delay cost proposals.” The Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals held that the government did not breach the contract.
The Federal Circuit reversed. When the government made the payments to the CZ account, Aspen had not changed its EFT information in the CCR database to the CZ account. The government breached the contract by making its payments to an account other than the one listed in the CCR database; the breach was material. On remand, the Board must determine whether the government has established an affirmative defense of payment. The parties dispute whether depositing funds into the CZ account benefitted Aspen but that issue cannot be resolved on appeal.
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