JACOBS TECHNOLOGY INC. v. USA
Filing
80
PUBLISHED OPINION of 69 opinion previously filed under seal denying Defendant's motion to dismiss Jacobs Technology Inc.'s claims included in 51 Defendant's motion to dismiss, and in the alternative, cross-motion and response. Signed by Judge Edward J. Damich. (ef) Copy to parties.
In the United States Court of Federal Claims
No. 11-180C
(Consolidated with Case No. 11-190C)
(Filed: May 16, 2011)
(Released for Publication: May 26, 2011)1
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JACOBS TECHNOLOGY INC.,
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Plaintiff,
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v.
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THE UNITED STATES,
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Defendant,
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and
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IBM GLOBAL BUSINESS SERVICES, *
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Defendant-Intervenor. *
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Robert J. Symon, Bradley Arant Boult Cummings LLP, Washington, D.C., for Jacobs
Technology Inc. (Plaintiff and Defendant-Intervenor).
K. Elizabeth Witwer, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, United States Department of
Justice, Washington, D.C., for Defendant.
Thomas P. Humphrey, Crowell & Moring, LLP, Washington, D.C., for IBM Global Business
Services (Defendant-Intervenor and Plaintiff).
1
This opinion was originally issued under seal on May 16, 2011, pending a determination among the parties
whether to propose redactions of proprietary or other confidential information. The parties have advised the Court
that they have no redactions to propose.
OPINION AND ORDER
DAMICH, Judge
Before the Court in this consolidated bid protest case is the Defendant United States‟ (the
“Government‟s”) motion to dismiss the complaint of Plaintiff Jacobs Technology Inc. (“Jacobs”)
for lack of jurisdiction. In brief, following a competitive procurement, the United States Special
Operations Command (“USSOCOM” or the “agency”) awarded Jacobs an Information
Technology Services Management contract. IBM Global Business Services (“IBM”), an
unsuccessful bidder, filed a bid protest with the United States Government Accountability Office
(“GAO”), and the agency stayed performance of the contract. GAO sustained two grounds of
IBM‟s bid protest and recommended that the agency issue an amendment to the solicitation and
allow offerors to submit revised proposals. The agency adopted GAO‟s recommendations.
Jacobs then filed a bid protest complaint in this court on March 21, 2011, challenging the
agency‟s decision to follow GAO‟s recommendations.2
Pertinent to this opinion, Jacobs filed a motion for judgment on the administrative record
on April 11, 2011. On April 25, 2011, the Government filed its Motion to Dismiss, and in the
Alternative, Cross-Motion for Judgment upon the Administrative Record and Response to
Plaintiffs‟ Motions for Judgment on the Administrative Record.3 On the instant motion to
dismiss, the Government urges the Court to dismiss Jacobs‟ claims because: (1) they fall outside
the Tucker Act; (2) they are not ripe for review; (3) Jacobs lacks standing, both under Article III
of the United States Constitution and under 28 U.S.C. § 1491; and (4) the agency action is
committed to agency discretion by law.
For the reasons explained below, the Government‟s motion to dismiss Jacobs‟ claims is
denied.
Jacobs’ Claims Are Within the Scope of the Tucker Act
The pertinent part of the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491(b)(1), grants the Court
jurisdiction “on an action by an interested party objecting to a solicitation…for bids or proposals
for a proposed contract or to a proposed award or the award of a contract or any alleged violation
of statute or regulation in connection with a procurement or a proposed procurement.” Although
this provision grants the Court jurisdiction over (1) a “solicitation,” (2) a “proposed award” (3)
an “award” or (4) “any alleged violation of statute or regulation in connection with a
procurement or a proposed procurement,” the Government argues that, in addition to objecting to
a solicitation, a proposed award or an award, a party must point to a violation of a specific statute
or regulation. In other words, it is not enough to invoke this Court‟s jurisdiction simply to allege
that an agency acted arbitrarily in rescinding an award, taking corrective action, and resoliciting
a contract. Authority for this (seemingly extraordinary) proposition, according to the
2
IBM filed its protest in this court on March 28, 2011, challenging both the initial procurement (on the grounds not
addressed by GAO) and challenging the amended solicitation that the agency issued in response to GAO‟s
recommendations. On motion by the parties, the Court consolidated the bid protest cases of Jacobs (Case No. 11180C) and IBM (Case No. 11-190C). Each plaintiff is also a defendant-intervenor in the other plaintiff‟s case.
3
For purposes of this opinion, the Court refers to the Government‟s brief as “Def.‟s Mot. to Dismiss.”
2
Government, includes the Federal Circuit case of Distributed Solutions, Inc. v. United States, 539
F.3d 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2008) and the Court of Federal Claims case of Data Monitor Systems, Inc.
v. United States, 74 Fed. Cl. 66 (2006).
Jacobs asserts that it is “challenging the agency‟s amendment to the solicitation, the
resolicitation of proposals, and the de facto rescission of [its] contract” and that it need not allege
violation of a statute or regulation “as a predicate to relief.” Pl. Jacobs‟ Opp‟n to Def.‟s Mot. to
Dismiss (“Jacobs‟ Opp‟n”) 6 n.2. Jacobs emphasizes the language of the Tucker Act granting
this Court jurisdiction over objections to solicitations, proposed awards and awards (quoted
above), and it also notes the last phrase of the provision: “without regard to whether suit is
instituted before or after the contract is awarded.” It points to several recent decisions of the
Court of Federal Claims4 and to bid protest decisions in the Federal Circuit that have proceeded
without seeing a jurisdictional issue on facts and allegations similar to Jacobs‟.5
This Court is not persuaded by the Government‟s argument. It seems to be based on a
conflation of two different grounds for jurisdiction stated in the Tucker Act, namely, (1)
objecting to a solicitation, a proposed award or an award and (2) objecting to an “alleged
violation of statute or regulation in connection with a procurement or a proposed procurement.”
In the statute, the latter cause of action is preceded by “or,” which clearly indicates that this is a
separate ground of jurisdiction. Furthermore, there is no Federal Circuit authority for the
Government‟s argument, and this Court is not persuaded by the only Court of Federal Claims
case that seems to support it.
The Federal Circuit case relied on by the Government, Distributed Solutions, is not
relevant, because this case concerned only the ground of “violation of statute or regulation.” In
this posture, it seems unobjectionable that there would be a requirement of alleging a specific
statute or regulation for this court to have jurisdiction. It does not stand for the proposition that
alleging the violation of a specific statute or regulation is a requirement when a case is brought
on a solicitation, a proposed award or an award that is alleged to be arbitrary or capricious.
This Court is not persuaded by the Court of Federal Claims‟ case of Data Monitor
Systems (DMS), because it seems that the court in DMS may also have conflated the separate
jurisdiction grounds of solicitation, proposed award or award, on the one hand, and violation of a
statute or regulation, on the other. In that case, the Air Force awarded a contract to Data Monitor
Systems (DMS). T Square, an unsuccessful bidder, filed two successive protests before the
GAO, both of which were dismissed. The Air Force, however, decided to take corrective action
by terminating DMS‟s contract and resoliciting the contract. DMS then filed a bid protest in the
Court of Federal Claims, alleging that the proposed termination of the original contract was
wrongful and that the decision to resolicit the contract was arbitrary. Data Monitor Sys. Inc. v.
United States, 74 Fed. Cl. 66, 70 (2006). The Government argued lack of jurisdiction, one of the
grounds being that the challenge to the resolicitation did not fall within the court‟s bid protest
4
Ceres Gulf, Inc., v. United States, 94 Fed. Cl. 303, 316-17 (2010); Centech Group, Inc., v. United States, 78 Fed.
Cl. 496, 506-07 (2007); Turner Constr. Co., Inc. v. United States, 94 Fed. Cl. 561, 583-84 (2010); Sheridan Corp.
v. United States, 95 Fed. Cl. 141, 144, 151 (2010).
5
Centech Group, Inc. v. United States, 554 F.3d 1029, 1036 (Fed. Cir. 2009); Chapman Law Firm Co. v. Greenleaf
Constr. Co., 490 F.3d 934, 938 (Fed. Cir. 2007).
3
jurisdiction as stated in the Tucker Act. The court stated that the plaintiff in a bid protest must
object to (1) a solicitation, (2) a proposed award, (3) an award or (4) an alleged violation of
statute or regulation in connection with a procurement or a proposed procurement. The court
then described the DMS‟s claim: “Plaintiff maintains that it is an interested party objecting to the
„award of a federal procurement contract‟ and „related violation of statute or regulation in
connection with the procurement.‟” Id. at 72. After identifying what appear to be two grounds
for bid protest jurisdiction, the DMS court then stated:
Plaintiff does not, however, point to any specific statute or regulation that was
violated by the Air Force's decision to resolicit the contract; rather, plaintiff
contends that the entire statutory scheme that governs procurements and permits
agencies to reopen discussions is violated if the agency exercises its powers
arbitrarily.
Id. at 72-73. Thus characterized, the court found plaintiff‟s contention to be outside
Congress‟ intention in enacting the Tucker Act, and it concluded: “[T]he violation
claimed must be rooted in a specific statute or regulation and plaintiff alleges no such
violation here.” Id. at 73.
This Court is inclined to agree with the DMS court that the allegation of a violation of
statute or regulation requires specificity. However, this Court disagrees that alleging a specific
statutory or regulatory violation is a prerequisite for jurisdiction over a solicitation, a proposed
award, or an award, if this is what the court in DMS intended to hold.6
Several Court of Federal Claims cases reject the proposition that allegation of specific
statutory or regulatory violations is necessary for the court to have jurisdiction over solicitations,
proposed awards or awards, as Jacobs has pointed out. The most prominent of these cases is
Centech Group, Inc. v. United States, which was before the Court of Federal Claims and the
Federal Circuit. Actually, there are three Centech opinions that are relevant to the case at bar.
The first Centech opinion involved the issue of standing. In the second, the court touches upon
jurisdiction in the context of discussing the standard of review of an agency‟s action pursuant to
a GAO recommendation. Finally, there is the Federal Circuit opinion. Therefore, this Court will
refer to the opinion on standing as Centech I, the opinion mentioning jurisdiction as Centech II,
and the Federal Circuit opinion as Centech III.
Centech involved a challenge to an agency‟s de facto rescission of its services contract
and its decision to reopen discussions and solicit revised proposals as corrective actions the
agency took to implement a recommendation by the GAO. Concerning jurisdiction, the Court of
Federal Claims in Centech II stated:
The Court's role in a bid protest is to assess whether the agency's procurement
decision was “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of discretion, or otherwise not in
6
This Court notes that the DMS court went on to examine the resolicitation for arbitrariness, concluding that it was
not arbitrary. Data Monitor Sys., 74 Fed. Cl. at 73. Therefore, it seems that the DMS court was addressing only the
ground of objections to violations of statute or regulation.
4
accordance with law.” The fact that an agency procurement action was taken as
corrective action resulting from a GAO bid protest does not alter this landscape or
immunize the agency action from judicial review. The Court of Federal Claims
possesses jurisdiction to determine if a corrective action taken by an agency in
response to a bid protest was reasonable under the circumstances.
79 Fed. Cl. 562, 574 (2007) (citations omitted). On appeal to the Federal Circuit (Centech III),
although the court did not focus on jurisdiction under the Tucker Act as an issue, it
“proceeded…as though such jurisdiction exist[ed],” as Jacobs points out in its brief. Jacobs‟
Opp‟n 7. For example, the Federal Circuit stated: “We have stated that „a procurement agency's
decision to follow [GAO's] recommendation even though that recommendation differed from the
contracting officer's initial decision was proper unless [GAO's] decision itself was irrational.‟”
Centech III, 554 F.3d 1029, 1039 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (citation omitted).
Another persuasive case is Ceres Gulf, Inc. v. United States, 94 Fed. Cl. 303 (2010). In
that case, Ceres Gulf, a contract awardee, filed a bid protest challenging the decision of the Army
to rescind the award of the contract and to solicit revised bids as corrective action after a
competing bidder had filed a prior bid protest. The Government filed a motion to dismiss,
arguing that the court did not have jurisdiction under the Tucker Act. Id. at 307-08. “The parties
agree[d] that Ceres Gulf was not asserting a post-award bid protest or contending that the Army
violated a statute or regulation in connection with the…procurement.” Id. at 315. Instead, the
dispute centered on “whether Ceres Gulf's objection to the Army's corrective action should be
considered a challenge to a „solicitation by a Federal agency for bids or proposals‟ for purposes
of the Court's pre-award bid protest jurisdiction.” In particular, the Government argued that the
court did not have jurisdiction over the solicitation because Ceres Gulf did not challenge any
terms in the amended solicitation nor did Ceres Gulf maintain that it was being prevented from
competing for a new award. Id.
In a very comprehensive review of the cases and in a well-reasoned explanation, the
Ceres Gulf court concluded that “[the Government‟s] narrow application of the Court's bid
protest jurisdiction is contrary to established law.” Id. at 315. The court distinguished DMS on
the fact that (1) it involved a termination of a contract and (2) it involved “violat[ion of] a
statutory or regulatory scheme.” Id. at 316 n.4.
This Court subscribes to the reasoning in Ceres Gulf and holds that this Court has
jurisdiction under the Tucker Act to hear Jacobs‟ claims. The disjunctive treatment of the causes
of action stated in the Tucker Act is clear, and the jurisprudence of the Court of Federal Claims
and the Federal Circuit over many years confirms that it is sufficient for this Court‟s jurisdiction
that an interested party challenge a resolicitation, merely alleging that the agency was arbitrary in
doing so.
5
Jacobs’ Claims Are Ripe For Review
In essence, the Government argues that Jacobs' claims are not ripe for review because the
agency has not made a final award. It may very well be, the Government argues, that Jacobs will
be the awardee under the resolicitation.
This argument was rejected by the Court of Federal Claims in Ceres Gulf v. United States
In this Court‟s judgment, the Ceres Gulf court thoroughly explored this point; therefore, this
Court adopts Ceres Gulf‟s reasoning and conclusion on the ripeness issue.
The court in Ceres Gulf begins with the classic statement on ripeness drawn from Abbott
Laboratories v. Gardner, 387 U.S. 136 (1967): “The Court takes into account two factors when
determining whether an agency action is ripe for review: (1) „the fitness of the issues for judicial
decision,‟ and (2) „the hardship to the parties of withholding court consideration.‟” Ceres Gulf,
94 Fed. Cl. at 317. Under the first factor, when considering an agency decision, as the
Government rightly argues, the decision must be final. An agency‟s decision is considered final
where “it (1) „marks “the consummation of the agency's decision making process,”‟ i.e. it must
not be merely tentative or interlocutory, and (2) “„the action [is] one by which rights or
obligations have been determined, or from which legal consequences will flow.”‟” Id. The court
further elaborated on the first factor: “The first factor thus requires the Court to consider whether
further factual development would advance its ability „to deal with the legal issues presented.‟”
Id. Next, the court elaborated on the second factor: “The second factor takes into account
whether „withholding court consideration of an action causes hardship to the plaintiff where the
complained-of conduct has an “immediate and substantial impact” on the plaintiff.‟” Id.
In this case, as in Ceres Gulf, the agency‟s decision to resolicit the contract requires
Jacobs to compete again for a solicitation it had previously won. USSOCOM has effectively
voided its previous decision to award the contract on the original terms to Jacobs.7 Thus, the
first factor is satisfied. As for the second factor, it is clear that Jacobs has to undergo the expense
and effort of recompeting, and now it has only the possibility of being an awardee. Therefore,
the second factor is satisfied.
Finally, as the Ceres Gulf court noted, “were the Court to dismiss Ceres Gulf's claims as
unripe for review, its current protest grounds later could be challenged as untimely should Ceres
Gulf not prevail during this second round of the procurement process,” citing to the Federal
Circuit case of Blue and Gold Fleet, L.P. v. United States, 492 F.3d 1308, 1313 (Fed. Cir. 2007)
(B&G). Ceres Gulf, 94 Fed. Cl. at 317. The court elaborated: “[A] party must challenge an
alleged impropriety in a solicitation before the closing of the bidding process in order to prevent
„waiv[ing] its ability to raise the same objection subsequently in a bid protest action in the Court
of Federal Claims.‟”8 Id.
7
The fact that the agency has “stayed” the award to Jacobs has no significance in light of the fact that the agency
has decided to recompete the contract on different terms. The stay is the equivalent of a de facto rescission.
8
In its Reply, the Government notes correctly that B&G involved a challenge to the “terms of a government
solicitation,” not a more general objection based on arbitrary or capricious agency action. The issue in B&G was
whether the objection was to the terms of the solicitation or the evaluation process once the bids were in. Having
determined that the objection was to the terms, the Federal Circuit concluded that the protestor had to have made the
6
For the reasons stated above, this Court holds that Jacobs‟ claims are ripe for
adjudication.
Jacobs Has Standing
The Government argues that Jacobs lacks standing, based on Article III of the United
States Constitution and on the Tucker Act, that is, 28 U.S.C. § 1491(b)(1). The Government
cites the Federal Circuit case of Weeks Marine, Inc. v. United States, 575 F.3d 1352, 1359 (Fed.
Cir. 2009), for this proposition. Although that case does in fact say that Article III and the
Tucker Act set out standing requirements for claims such as Jacobs‟, the court in Weeks Marine
(as the Government notes) declares that the Tucker Act has more stringent requirements than
Article III imposes. Thus, the Weeks Marine court, after mentioning the requirements of Article
III proceeds to discuss only the requirements of the Tucker Act, from which approach this Court
infers that if the Tucker Act is satisfied so is Article III. Therefore, this Court will discuss only
the standing requirements of the Tucker Act.
For standing, Weeks Marine holds that a plaintiff must (1) be an actual or prospective
bidder and (2) possess the requisite direct economic interest. Weeks Marine elaborates on “direct
economic” interest in the pre-award context by adopting the requirement that the bidder show a
“„non-trivial competitive injury which can be addressed by judicial relief.‟” Id. at 1362. The
Government does not dispute that Jacobs is a bidder. Its argument on the second requirement—
which it labels as “prejudice,” Def.‟s Mot. to Dismiss 21, is that Jacobs has not been prejudiced
by the agency‟s decision to take corrective action, because it has not lost the contract and it may
retain it once the resolicitation is concluded.
Jacobs focuses on the decision of the Court of Federal Claims case in Centech v. United
States, 78 Fed. Cl. 496 (2007), that is, Centech I. (The facts of the case have been recited above
in the discussion on jurisdiction.) Jacobs directs this Court‟s attention to a lengthy quotation in
Centech I, where the court explains why it believes that it has standing on facts that are very
similar to the ones in the case at bar. First, Centech I holds that, although the award to the
plaintiff was only “suspended,” the resolicitation was a de facto rescission of the award, because,
in actual effect, the protestor/plaintiff has to compete again for the award under different terms.
Second, the court holds that, although the protestor may win the award under the resolicitation, it
was deprived of the award that it won under the original solicitation. Therefore, the plaintiff has
standing, because (1) it is a bidder and (2) it is prejudiced by the Government‟s de facto
rescission and resolicitation.9
objection before the contract was awarded. Although the case may not apply to the circumstances in Ceres Gulf and
the case at bar, a reasonably prudent potential protestor would be at least in terrorem because of B&G. Furthermore,
the Ceres Gulf court merely observed that the protestor‟s grounds later could be challenged as untimely.
9
The Centech I court stated: “Defendant argues that because Plaintiff continues to be the awardee it lacks
standing. This characterization ignores the reality of what transpired here. While technically the [contracting
agency] purported to merely „suspend‟ [the protestor‟s] contract award, it went on to issue Amendment 3, solicit
what may be substantially revised proposals from all four offerors, and impanel a completely new team to evaluate
those revised proposals. . . Because [the protestor] was stripped of its status as the successful awardee de facto and
relegated to competing anew, it does not remain the successful awardee. As such, [the protestor] clearly meets the
7
This Court is persuaded by the reasoning of Centech I. In this case, the “stay” of the
award to Jacobs and the resolicitation under different terms is a de facto rescission of the award
to Jacobs, forcing Jacobs to compete on different terms and depriving it of an award that it
claims it already fairly won. Thus, Jacobs has suffered the prejudice that is required by the
second prong of the Weeks Marine test. This Court, therefore, holds that Jacobs has standing.
Agency Discretion Argument Is Not Supported
The Government argues that this Court does not have jurisdiction over Jacobs‟ claims
because an agency‟s decision to take corrective action or reconsider a matter is committed to
agency discretion and is not reviewable. The cases cited as examples of this principle are
Interstate Commerce Commission v. Brotherhood of Locomotive Engineers (ICC), 482 U.S. 270
(1987) and Magnola Metallurgy, Inc. v. United States, 508 F.3d 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2007)
(Magnola). The ICC case has nothing to do with government contracts, and in fact, the Court
held that the ICC‟s decision not to reopen a proceeding was reviewable by courts using the
arbitrary and capricious standard. 482 U.S. at 278. Magnola concerned a countervailing duty on
alloy magnesium imposed by the Department of Commerce. Again, the court held that the
decision not to reconsider was reviewable as arbitrary or capricious. 508 F.3d at 1357. The
thrust of both cases is that a court cannot review an agency decision not to reconsider based on
an allegation of material error because the decision itself is reviewable on that basis.
What the Government‟s argument boils down to is that the agency has not yet finalized
its decision-making process, which sounds like a repackaging of the ripeness argument. This
Court has already addressed this argument by pointing out that the agency has in effect rescinded
the award to Jacobs and compelled it to compete again on different terms. The Tucker Act gives
the Court of Federal Claims jurisdiction to review a “solicitation” based on the arbitrary and
capricious standard.
The Government has produced no cases on point, let alone a binding precedent, for its
contention. Nor has it explained how ICC and Magnola apply to the claims currently before this
Court. Therefore, the Government‟s “agency discretion” argument is rejected.
Conclusion
For the reasons set forth above, the Court DENIES the Government‟s motion to dismiss
Jacobs' claims for lack of jurisdiction.
CICA criteria for standing: it was an actual offeror and has a direct economic interest affected by the [contracting
agency‟s] rescission of its award and revamped solicitation effort. Although [the protestor] may have an opportunity
to receive a different award under Amendment 3 and the revised criteria, this does not deprive it of standing to
challenge the earlier procurement action, i.e., the rescission of the award it already won under what it claims was a
fair competition under the original solicitation.” Centech I, 78 Fed. Cl. at 504
8
The Court does not anticipate that decisions on the remaining motions in this
consolidated case will be issued by June 1, 2011. Thus, the Court ORDERS the following:
1. The Government shall notify the Court by May 17, 2011, if it will extend the stay of
contract award until July 1, 2011.
2. If the Government declines to extend the stay, the parties shall file their motions for
preliminary junction by May 19, 2011.
If the Government does not extend the stay of the award of the contract, the Court intends to
schedule a hearing for oral argument on granting a preliminary junction for no later than May 24,
2011.
s/ Edward J. Damich
EDWARD J. DAMICH
Judge
9
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