armed services board of contract appeals
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This article is a studg of the methods amilable to a sab-contractor in prosecuting before the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals a claim based u...
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AYDLETT - Peggy Ann Mohon Stewart, 70, of Aydlett, died peacefully Nov. 11, 2010 at her home after a year plus battle with breast cancer. Peggy retired after more than 30 years with the Department of Defense, most of those years serving as the legal secretary for the chairman of the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals where she loved and was loved by more than 30 judges. Later she was a legal secretary for Donald Prentice at the Elizabeth City Firm of Hornthal, Riley, Ellis, and Maland. Peggy was an avid reader and relished keeping the Barco library staff busy filling her online requests for books.
She is survived by her husband of 53 years, Stan Stewart; a son, David Scott Stewart and wife Connie of Athens, Ga.; a daughter, JoAnna Massey and husband Joe of Virginia Beach; two gran...
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... which provided that unless the contract were closed in a specified time the Air Force coul... clause, was final unless appealed to the Board of Contract Appeals within 30 days. A disagreement... of the decision, respondent appealed to the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals, whose decision...
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In Catel, Inc.,1 the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals (ASBCA) provided a thorough discussion of the concepts of express, implied, and implied-in-fact contracts, as well as the authority of government officials to bind the government. Catel ultimately submitted a claim for over seventy thousand dollars, an amount including the government's use of the skiff for four hundred fifty-eight days, repair and replacement costs, and markups for overhead and profit. The government employee that entered into the agreement with Catel was not a warranted contracting officer, and had not yet been appointed as an alternate contracting officer's representative. The verbal agreement, including Catel's agreement "to allow [the government] to use the equipment with the expectation of future work...
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Failing to Include Mississippi Use Tax Equals Tough Luck X 2 Where a contractor's two sole-source fixed price contracts for renovation work included FAR 52.229-4, Federal, State, and Local Taxes (Noncompetitive Contract),4 the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals (ASBCA) denied the contractor's appeal for an equitable adjustment for payment of Mississippi use tax, which the contractor had neglected to include in its price.5 The contractor's sole argument to the ASBCA was that it was not bound by FAR 52.229-4 because of its own unilateral mistake in omitting Mississippi's 3.5% use tax from its total contract price.6 The Board said this was not a clerical or mathematical error that would entitle the contractor to reformation of the contract, but rather a judgmental error, since the co...
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...Appellee. 2010-1453. Appeal from the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals in No. 56346, A...
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...Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals. AGENCY: Defens...