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American Tel. & Tel. Co. v. U.S., 177 F.3d 1368 (1999)
Keyeite Yellow Flag - Negative Treatment
Distinguished by Gengler v. U.S. ex rel. its Dept. of Defense and
Navy. E.D.Cal.. August 24.2006
F.3d 1368
United States Court of Appeals,
Federal Circuit.
AMERICAN TELEPHONE
AND TELEGRAPH COMPANY,
and
Lucent Technologies Inc.,
Plaintiffs—Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES,
Defendant/Cross—Appellant.
Nos. 95- 5153, 95- 5154.
May 26, 1999.
Synopsis
Contractor sued Government under
Contract Disputes Act for recovery
of expenditures under research and
development contract. The Court of
Federal Claims, John P. Wiese, J., 32
Fed.CI. 672, ruled that contract was
void and that quantum meruit relief
was available, but certified questions
for interlocutory appeal. The Court
of Appeals originally affirmed, but,
on rehearing en banc, the Court
of Appeals, Pauline Newman, Circuit
Judge, held that: (1) Navy contracts for
development of ship-towed, undersea
surveillance system was for "major
system or subsystem," for purposes
of statute prohibiting Department of
Defense from entering into fixed price
contracts for development of major
system or subsystem exceeding $10
million unless certain conditions were
met, and (2) Department's failure to
comply with statute's requirements did
not render contract void ab initio.
Questions
answered
and
case
remanded.
Rader, Circuit Judge, concurred in the
result and filed opinion in which Mayer,
Chief Judge, and Lourie, Circuit Judge,
joined.
Plager, Circuit Judge, dissented in part,
concurred in part, and filed opinion.
Opinion, 124 F.3d 1471, vacated.
West Headnotes (5)
Ill
Public Contracts
• Compensation
United States
• Compensation
Navy
contract
for
development of ship-towed.
undersea surveillance system
was for "major system or
subsystem,"
for
purposes
of
statute
prohibiting
Department of Defense from
entering into fixed
price
contracts for development of
major system or subsystem
exceeding $10 million unless
certain
conditions
were
met, notwithstanding either
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agency's reliance on separate
statute to define major system
as having $75 million floor
or fact that contract was
funded over multiple years.
10 U.S.C.A. § 2302(5); Act
December 22, 1987, § 101(b),
Sec. 8118, 101 Stat. 1329.
9 Cases that cite this headnote
121
Administrative Law and
Procedure
e- Erroneous or
unreasonable construction;
conflict with statute
Although
an
agency's
interpretation of a statute
it
administers
is
indeed
entitled to deference, agency
discretion does not extend
to changing a clearly stated
dollar figure.
Cases that cite this headnote
131
Public Contracts
1— Compensation
United States
Compensation
Failure
of
of
Defense
with statute
Department
to
comply
setting forth
internal review and reporting
requirements for fixed price
contract for development of
major system or subsystem
exceeding $10 million did not
render such contract void
ab initio, as statute itself
did not announce sanction
of contract invalidity, and
contract
had
been
fully
performed. Act December 22,
1987, § 101(b), Sec. 8118, 101
Stat. 1329.
24 Cases
that
cite
this
headnote
141
Public Contracts
offr. Unauthorized or Illegal
Contracts
United States
o- Unauthorized or Illegal
Contracts
Invalidation of government
contract is not a necessary
consequence when a statute
or
regulation
has
been
contravened, but must be
considered
in
light
of
the statutory or regulatory
purpose, with
recognition
of the strong policy of
supporting the integrity of
contracts made by and with
the United States.
13 Cases that cite this
headnote
151
Contracts
o- Nature and Essentials in
General
The invalidation of a contract
after
it
has
been
fully
performed is not favored.
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11
Cases that cite this
headnote
Attorneys and Law Firms
*1369 C. Stanley Dees, McKenna &
Cueno, L.L.P., of Washington, DC,
argued for plaintiffs-appellants. With
him on the brief was J. Keith Burt. Of
counsel on the brief were Thomas R.
Suher, and Dean L. Grayson, Lucent
Technologies, Inc., of Washington,
DC.
Bryant G. Snee, Assistant Director,
Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil
Division,
Department
of
Justice,
of Washington, DC, argued for
defendant-cross appellants. With him
on the brief was David M. Cohen,
Director. Of counsel on the brief were
Robert D. Hogue, James H. Haag,
Attorneys, Office of General Counsel,
Department of the Navy, of Arlington,
Virginia.
Caryl A. Potter, III, Sonnenschein
Nath & Rosenthal, of Washington, DC,
for amicus curiae Electronic Industries
Alliance and Aerospace Industries
Association of America, Inc. With him
on the brief were Elizabeth A. Ferrell,
of Washington, DC; Alan M. Posner,
of Chicago, Illinois; and Roger K.
Heidenreich, of St. Louis, Missouri.
John Lloyd Rice, Miller & Chevalier,
Chartered, of Washington, DC, for
amicus curiae Federal Circuit Bar
Association. With him on the brief was
Clarence T. Kipps, Jr. Of counsel on the
brief were L. James D'Agostino, Reed
Smith Shaw & McClay, of McLean,
Virginia; and George Hutchinson,
Executive Director, Federal Circuit Bar
Association, of Washington, DC.
Before
MAYER,
Chief
Judge,
NEWMAN,
PLAGER,
LOURIE,
CLEVENGER, RADER, SCHALL,
BRYSON, and GAJARSA, Circuit
Judges. *
Opinion
Opinion for the court filed by Circuit
Judge NEWMAN, in which Circuit
Judges
CLEVENGER,
SCHALL,
BRYSON,
and
GAJARSA
join.
Opinion concurring in result filed by
Circuit Judge RADER, in which Chief
Judge MAYER and Circuit Judge
LOURIE join. Opinion dissenting-in-
part and concurring-in-part filed by
Circuit Judge PLAGER.
NEWMAN, Circuit Judge.
We took this appeal and cross-appeal
en banc to reconsider the questions
of law presented, upon certification
for interlocutory appeal, concerning
the applicability of § 8118 of the
Defense Appropriations Act of 1987 to
a contract between the Department of
the Navy and the American Telephone
and Telegraph Company. The Court of
Federal Claims ruled that in view of the
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failure of the Department of Defense to
comply with § 8118, the contract, which
had been performed, was void ab initio.
We now hold that the contract was
not void, and remand to the Court of
Federal Claims for further proceedings
in accordance with this premise.
The Reduced Diameter Array Contract
This contract arose in Cold War
response to the new
ultra-quiet
Soviet
submarines,
which
were
difficult to monitor using available
technology and equipment. Effective
antisubmarine response requires that
hostile submarines be reliably detected,
classified, located, and tracked. The
Navy, among its programs for this
purpose,
employed
an
integrated
undersea acoustic sonar system called
the Surveillance Towed—Array Sensor
System (SURTASS). In SURTASS a
suitably equipped surface vessel tows an
array of undersea detection equipment
through the ocean, while the equipment
collects and transmits appropriate data
for processing on shipboard and for
transmission to shore-based facilities.
The President's Annual Report *1370
to the Congress for fiscal 1987, on
the topic of Antisubmarine Warfare
Forces, referred to SURTASS as
"[o]ne of our most important ongoing
programs in this area." Id. at 188.
On
December
31,
1987,
after
competitive bidding, the Navy awarded
AT & T a fixed price incentive
fee contract for a subsystem of
SURTASS, referred to as the Reduced
Diameter Array. The contract was
a
"Total
Package
Procurement,"
requiring design of shipboard and
shore-based electronics, ship-winch
interface and tow cable, and an
acoustic and electronic array some
8,000 feet long, to meet the new Soviet
submarine capabilities. The contract
required research, development, and
the delivery and
testing of an
engineering development model, at
a fixed ceiling price of $19,221,630,
and included an option to the
Navy to acquire a second engineering
development model at a fixed ceiling
price of $3,510,253, and an additional
option to acquire three production-
level models at a fixed ceiling price of
$8,475,466.
The
contract
was
successfully
performed by AT & T over a period of
five years. With the price adjustments
to which the Navy agreed during
performance, the final fixed price
was approximately $34.5 million. AT
& T states that technical problems
and
unknowns arose
throughout
performance, and that its total cost was
at least $91 million. The Navy rejected
AT & T's requests for restructuring the
contract and other relief, although AT
& T directed attention to § 8118 of
the Defense Appropriations Act and
relevant Department of Defense policy
directives concerning procurement of
research and development for new
technologies.
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AT & T duly brought suit in the
Court of Federal Claims under the
Contract Disputes Act. On cross
motions for summary judgment the
issues arising from the enactment of
§ 8118 were presented and argued.
The Court of Federal Claims ruled
that § 8118 applied to this contract,
that it had not been complied with
by the Department of Defense, and
that the contract consequently was void
ab initio. Responding to AT & T's
proposal that the appropriate remedy
was to reform the contract into the
cost-reimbursement form favored by
§ 8118, the Court of Federal Claims
held that since there had never been a
valid contract it could not be reformed.
The court held, however, that AT &
T was entitled to compensation for
its work on the basis of quantum
meruit, on a theory of implied-in-
fact contract. Before proceeding to
determine quantum, the court certified
for interlocutory appeal, in accordance
with 28 U.S.C. § 1292(d)(2), the
following questions:
(i) whether a contract executed in
violation of statutory restrictions on
the obligation and expenditure of
appropriated funds may be declared
void from the start at the instance of
the performing contractor, and, if so,
(ii)
whether
compensation
for
benefits
conferred
upon
the
Government (pursuant to the voided
contract) can be predicated on an
implied-in-fact contract with the
amount of recovery to be determined
pursuant
to
unjust
enrichment
principles.
A panel of the Federal Circuit, by split
decision, affirmed the ruling that the
contract was void ab initio. The court
also held that no relief was available
to AT & T on any theory, except
perhaps to replevin the goods that had
been delivered to the Navy. Upon the
petitions of both sides we have reheard
the matter en banc. I
Section 8118 of the Defense
Appropriations Act of 1987
Concern about the use of fixed price
contracts for research and development
*1371
phases
pervades
defense
procurement. In 1971 Department of
Defense Directive (DODD) 5000.1
stated that "[i]t is not possible to
determine the precise production cost
of a new complex defense system
before it is developed," and established
the policy of using cost-reimbursement
price terms for procurement of research
and
development.
The
Directive
stated: "Fixed price contracts are
normally not appropriate for research
and development phases." DODD
5000.1 & D.9.g (as amended, Sept.
1, 1987). The Federal Acquisitions
Regulations
governing
R
&
D
contracts also embodied this policy.
See, e.g., 48 C.F.R. § 35.006(c)
(1984-1998) ("Because the absence of
precise specifications and difficulties
in estimating costs with accuracy
(resulting in a lack of confidence in cost
estimates) normally precludes using
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fixed-price contracting for R & D, the
use of cost-reimbursement contracts is
usually appropriate.")
The record states that in the 1980s,
despite these policy directives, the Navy
returned to fixed price contracting
for
R
&
D as
part
of the
Total Package Procurement concept.
This in turn led to congressional
investigations
and
hearings.
An
investigation conducted by the House
Appropriations Committee concluded
that for the development phases
of new technologies, the Navy's
use
of
fixed
price
contracting
resulted in program delays, cost
overruns, contractor claims, non-
participation,
and
litigation.
See
Surveys & Investigations Staff, Report
to the Comm. on Appropriations, U.S.
House of Representatives: Navy Fixed
Price Contracting in the Research,
Development,
Test and Evaluation
(RDT & E) Account, 100th Cong.,
1st Sess. (1987). The Report stated
that: "Although Navy officials at
the headquarters level have predicted
immense success for the acquisition
policy, the opinions expressed by Navy
and other Service field procurement
officials and technical experts indicated
that [fixed price contracting] generally
[has] proved unsuitable in an R
& D environment." Id. at ii. The
Report concluded that the nature
of
the
work
in
research
and
exploratory development contracting
"most frequently necessitates" use of
the cost-reimbursement type contract.
Id. at 11.
At ensuing hearings on the 1988
Defense budget, concern was expressed
about the continuing use of fixed
price contracts for high-cost, high-
risk development projects, as well
as concern for meeting congressional
oversight and allocation obligations
under this form of procurement.
Department of Defense Appropriations
for
1988:
Hearings
Before
the
Defense Subcomm. of the Comm. on
Appropriations, 100th Cong., 454-
55 (1987). Legislatively implementing
these concerns, the House included in
the Defense Appropriations Act of 1987
the provision that became § 8118:
§ 8118. None of the funds provided
for the Department of Defense in this
Act may be obligated or expended for
fixed price-type contracts in excess of
$10,000,000 for the development of
a major system or subsystem unless
the Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition determines, in writing,
that program risk has been reduced
to the extent that realistic pricing
can occur, and that the contract type
permits an equitable and sensible
allocation of program risk between
the contracting parties: Provided,
That the Under Secretary may
not delegate this authority to any
persons who hold a position in the
Office of the Secretary of Defense
below the level of Assistant Under
Secretary of Defense: Provided
further, That the Under Secretary
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report
to the Committees on
Appropriations of the Senate and
House of Representatives in writing,
on a quarterly basis, *1372 the
contracts which
have obligated
funds under such a fixed price-type
developmental contract.
Pub.L. No. 100-202, § 8118, 101
Stat. 1329, 1329-84 (Dec. 22, 1987).
The accompanying Conference Report
reiterated congressional concern that
the risks of failure and of cost
uncertainties be allocated equitably
between government and contractor,
and stressed the desire to "maintain
the government's credibility as a
reliable business partner." H.R. Conf.
Rep. No. 100-498 at 623 (Dec. 22,
1987). Congress referred to the burden
of a fixed price contract on the
contractor when the miscalculation of
development cost may have been that
of the government agency as well as
the contractor, and to the reluctance
of some highly qualified firms to enter
into such contracts. The Conference
Report was unambiguous: "Fixed price
contracts are normally not appropriate
for research and development phases."
Id. at 624. Thus Congress acted to
adjust the risks of developing the
advanced technologies needed in the
service of national defense.
Application of Section 8118
[lj Section 8118 prohibited the award
of certain fixed price-type contracts
unless the program risk was evaluated
at a high level within the Defense
Department, and required quarterly
reports of such awards to the House and
Senate Appropriations Committees.
The government argues first that '8118
did not apply to the Reduced Diameter
Array contract, thus eliminating any
need for the Navy to have complied
with the statute. The Court of Federal
Claims correctly held otherwise.
Section 8118 by its terms applies to
"fixed price-type contracts in excess
of $10,000,000 for the development of
a major system or subsystem." The
government argues that the Reduced
Diameter Array is not a "major
system," referring to a memorandum
issued six weeks after enactment of §
8118 wherein the Under Secretary of
Defense defined "major system" for the
purposes of § 8118 as a system having
a contract cost of over $75,000,000. In
a Memorandum for Service Acquisition
Executives, Directors of the Defense
Agencies issued February 11, 1988,
Under Secretary of Defense for
Acquisition Costello instructed that
"[t]he definition of major system at 10
U.S.C. § 2302(5) is the definition of
that term for the purpose of [§ 8118]."
This content was incorporated into
SECNAV Instruction 4210.6A (April
13, 1988).
121
Section 2302(5) is a provision
of chapter 137 of Subtitle A—
General Military Law, which as then
written defined "major system" as a
system costing more than $75,000,000
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for research, development, test, and
evaluation:
10 U.S.C. § 2302(5). The term "major
system" means a combination of
elements that will function together
to produce the capabilities required
to fulfill a mission need. The elements
may include hardware, equipment,
software or any combination thereof,
but excludes construction or other
improvements to real property. A
system shall be considered a major
system if (A) the Department of
Defense is responsible for the
system and the total expenditures
for research, development, test,
and evaluation for the system
are estimated to be more than
$75,000,000 (based on fiscal year
1980 constant dollars) or the eventual
total expenditure for procurement of
more than $300,000,000 (based on
fiscal year 1980 constant dollars)....
The government argues that the agency
had discretion to define the § 8118
"major system" in accordance with
'2302(5), and thereby to place a
$75,000,000 floor on the systems to
which § 8118 would apply. However, it
was not within the agency's discretion
to rewrite § 8118 to replace the statutory
threshold of $10,000,000 with that
of $75,000,000. Although an agency's
*1373 interpretation of a statute
it administers is indeed entitled to
deference, agency discretion does not
extend to changing a clearly stated
dollar figure. See Chevron, U.S.A., Inc.
v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 842-43, 104 S.Ct.
2778, 81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984) ("if the
intent of Congress is clear, that is the
end of the matter").
In addition, the AT & T contract
itself, and the Space and Naval
Warfare Systems Command's guide
to the SURTASS, described the
Reduced
Diameter
Array
as
a
"subsystem." Subsystems were not
defined in § 2305(5) and were not
mentioned in the Memorandum of the
Under Secretary. However, subsystems
costing more than $10,000,000 were
explicitly included in § 8118. Although
the government now argues that the
Under Secretary's Memorandum and
SECNAV Instr. 4210.6A really covered
a major system or a subsystem of
a major system, this interpretation is
contrary to the plain text of these
documents. It is apparent that the
Memorandum was contrary to the
statute, and in all events that it did not
include subsystems such as the Reduced
Diameter Array.
The government also argues that not
all of the funds expended under
the Reduced Diameter Array contract
were appropriated in the corresponding
Appropriations Act, and thus that
the § 8118 prohibition on obligating
or expending funds does not apply.
Indeed, the contract was structured
for multi-year incremental funding.
However, it is undisputed that the
starting research and development
effort drew on several millions of
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dollars of appropriated funds. The
multi-year funding does not excuse the
Defense Department from compliance
with § 8118.
Moreover,
contrary
to
the
government's argument, which is made
but not strongly pressed, this case does
not involve a funding deficiency or
implicate the Anti—Deficiency Act, 31
U.S.C. § 1341. See Hercules Inc. v.
United States, 516 U.S. 417, 427, 116
S.Ct. 981, 134 L.Ed.2d 47 (1996) ("The
Anti-Deficiency Act bars a federal
employee or agency from entering into
a contract for future payment of money
in advance of, or in excess of, an
existing appropriation."); see generally
Ferris v.
United States, 27 Ct.CI.
542, 546 (1892) ("An appropriation
per se merely imposes limitations
upon the Government's own agents ...
its insufficiency does not pay the
Government's debts, nor cancel its
obligations, nor defeat the rights of
other parties.") There is no issue in this
case of lack of appropriated funds.
We affirm the determination of the
Court of Federal Claims that §
8118 applies to this contract. The
government does not dispute that
the requirements of § 8118 were not
met by the Department of Defense.
There is no assertion that the Under
Secretary of Defense for Acquisitions
made or had made the program risk
and pricing determinations required
by § 8118, and no report of this
contract is stated to have been made to
the Senate and House Appropriations
Committees. Although the government
stresses that the contract was awarded
only nine days after the enactment of §
8118, this does not excuse the failure of
all compliance.
Consequences of Agency
Noncompliance With § 8118
PI We turn to the certified question
of the consequences of this failure
of compliance by the Department of
Defense. AT & T states that § 8118
was enacted at least in part for its
protection, and that the agency, by
failing to obey the law, can not deprive
AT & T of the protection of the
law. AT & T argues that § 8118
is a "mandatory statute" restricting
the agency's authority to obligate and
expend funds, and that the Navy's
direct contravention of § 8118 rendered
the Reduced Diameter Array contract
void ab initio.
The
government
responds
that
Congress chose and intended to enforce
§ 8118 *1374 through its oversight
powers, and that AT & T can not
benefit from whatever lapses may
have occurred within the Department
of Defense in its compliance with
congressional oversight legislation. The
government stresses that § 8118 did not
provide that these fixed price contracts
were prohibited, but only that the
Defense Department must review the
risk and its allocation at a specified
executive level, and must report to
Congress on a quarterly basis.
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14]
Legislative intent and precedent
both lead to the conclusion that the
AT & T contract was not void ab
initio as a consequence of the agency's
noncompliance. Invalidation of the
contract is not a necessary consequence
when a statute or regulation has been
contravened, but must be considered
in light of the statutory or regulatory
purpose, with recognition of the strong
policy of supporting the integrity of
contracts made by and with the United
States. In United States v. Mississippi
Valley Generating Co., 364 U.S. 520,
81 S.Ct. 294, 5 L.Ed.2d 268 (1961) the
Court explained that when a statute
"does not specifically provide for the
invalidation of contracts which are
made in violation of [its provisions]"
the court shall inquire "whether
the sanction of nonenforcement is
consistent with and
essential
to
effectuating the public policy embodied
in [the statute]." Id. at 563, 81
S.Ct. 294. Thus the policy underlying
the enactment must be considered
in determining the remedy for its
violation, when the statute itself does
not announce the sanction of contract
invalidity.
The policy embodied in § 8118
is elucidated in the congressional
response when § 8118 did not receive
full compliance from the Department of
Defense. See Alabama Rural Fire Ins.
Co. v. United States, 215 Ct.C1. 442, 572
F.2d 727, 733 (1978) ("illegality may
be proved with reference to legislative
history"). Congress simply tightened
the reporting provision, by moving
from after-the-fact quarterly reports
to before-award reports. Indeed, the
House version of § 8118 had initially
required before-award reports, but
this was dropped in Conference in
favor of the Senate version "to
reduce the appearance of congressional
micromanagement." H.R. Conf. Rep.
No. 100-498 at 623 (Dec. 22, 1987).
The Conference Report stated that if
Defense Department policy did not
become more uniform, "more severe
restrictions" would be imposed. Id. This
remark carries no hint of, and indeed
belies, an interpretation that § 8118 was
intended, upon enactment, to invalidate
any contract made without meeting
its internal review and reporting
requirements, for such a "restriction"
would already be extremely "severe."
The statutory shift to before-award
reports in succeeding years would be a
trivial discipline indeed, if meanwhile
all of the fixed price contracts within the
statutory scope, although in the process
of performance, or as in this case fully
performed, were void ab initio.
Only a few months after enactment
of § 8118 the House Appropriations
Committee
reported
that
the
"enforcement of existing policy in this
area has not yet been demonstrated,"
H.R.Rep. No. 100-681 at 147 (June 10,
1988), and recommended a pre-award
reporting requirement (which was
included in the enactment for the next
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fiscal year). The Senate Armed Services
Committee, considering this renewal,
stated explicitly that noncompliance
was not intended to be "the basis for
litigating the propriety of an otherwise
valid contract":
The committee recognizes that there
are circumstances in which fixed-
price development contracts are
appropriate (e.g., when costs and
foreseeable program risks can be
reasonably anticipated), and the
committee expects the Department to
establish clear guidelines under this
section for use of such contracts.
*1375 It is the intent of the
committee that this section be
applied in a manner that best serves
the government's interests in the long
term health of the defense industry,
and that this section not be used as
the basis for litigating the propriety of
an otherwise valid contract. Nothing
in this section shall be construed
to affect the requirements of section
8118 of the Department of Defense
Appropriations Act, 1988.
(Emphasis added.) S.Rep. No. 100-
326, 100th Cong., 2d Sess. at 105
(May 4, 1988). This explicit statement
of intent weighs heavily against
judicial invalidation of "an otherwise
valid contract," for the clearly stated
congressional purpose is contrary.
These congressional responses, made
with
knowledge of the agency's
imperfect compliance with § 8118,
negate any reasonable inference that
Congress intended simply to render
void
ab
initio,
even
after
full
performance, any fixed price contract
for which the Under Secretary's review
of risk allocation and the report to
the Committees were omitted. Congress
can not have intended to charge
the contracting partner with adverse
consequences depending on whether
the Defense Department carried out the
internal responsibilities and filed the
reports that Congress required.
Nor
is it
the judicial role to
discipline the agency's noncompliance
with the supervisory and reporting
instructions of congressional oversight.
See
Longshore
v.
United States,
77 F.3d 440, 443 (Fed.Cir.1996)
("Congress has undoubted capacity to
oversee the performance of Executive
Branch agencies, consistent with its
constitutional authority. It is not for
this court to instruct Congress on how
to oversee and manage its creations.");
E. Walters & Co. v. United States, 217
Ct.CI. 254, 576 F.2d 362, 367 (1978)
("The fact that a procurement practice
is prohibited does not necessarily mean
that it is therefore actionable. The
discipline to be administered in such
cases is a responsibility of the cognizant
procurement officials within the agency
[and not] by this court"); cf. National
Treasury Employees Union v. Campbell,
654 F.2d 784, 794 (D.C.Cir.1981)
(by statutory requirement that the
Comptroller General report on certain
expenditures "Congress itself is in a
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position to monitor and enforce its
spending limitations. It is not for
us to question the effectiveness of
existing remedies and infer additional
remedies.")
Both the DoD administration of §
8118, and the congressional response
to this administration, make clear
that Congress did not intend that
this enactment would terminate fully
performed contracts because of this
flawed compliance.
151 Precedent reinforces our conclusion
that the Reduced Diameter Array
contract is not void ab initio. The
invalidation of a contract after it has
been fully performed is not favored.
Precedent shows that those contracts
that have been nullified, based on a
failure to meet a statutory or regulatory
requirement, are contracts that have
not been substantially performed. E.g.,
Alabama Rural Fire Ins. Co. v. United
States, 215 Ct.CI. 442, 572 F.2d 727,
733-34 (1978). In Prestex, Inc. v.
United States, 162 Ct.CI. 620, 320 F.2d
367, 374-75 (1963), the court held a
contract invalid, and refused to allow
any recovery because no performance
had occurred. It is not surprising that
much of the litigation raising issues of
violation of statute or regulation at the
inception of government contracts has
arisen in the bid protest context, where
the asserted illegality has been explored
before substantial performance has
occurred. E.g., CACI, Inc. v. Stone,
990 F.2d 1233, 1235 (Fed.Cir.1993);
Schoenbrod v. United States, 187 Ct.CI.
627, 410 F.2d 400, 403-04 (1969). We
take incidental note that the case at
bar also involved a disappointed bidder
raising post-award objections, *1376
and that none of the objections were
based on § 8118.
In
Harbor
Gateway
Commercial
Property Owners' Ass'n v. United States
Environmental Protection Agency, 167
F.3d 602 (D.C.Cir.1999), a case stressed
in the dissenting opinion hereto, the
court voided an EPA action because the
Governor had not signed the request
as the statute required. However,
there was no issue of performance,
or reliance, or any other contractual
element. It is not before us to decide
whether either party to the Reduced
Diameter Array contract could have
voided the contract early in its life
and without penalty; the contract was
performed for over five years, with no
record suggestion from either party that
because of § 8118 there was no contract.
Judicial reluctance to annul performed
contracts when the government did not
comply with a statutory or regulatory
requirement was explained by the Court
of Claims in John Reiner & Co. v.
United States, 163 Ct.CI. 381, 325 F.2d
438, 440 (1963), stating that "the court
should ordinarily impose the binding
stamp of nullity only when the illegality
is plain." In Reiner the court recognized
the "dilemma" of a contractor who
becomes aware, while deep in the
performance of a contract, of a possible
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procurement illegality he did not cause:
the contractor must either continue
to perform a contract of uncertain
validity, or discontinue performance
and risk severe penalties if a court later
disagrees with his assessment of the
illegality.
When a contract or a provision
thereof is in violation of law but
has been fully performed, the courts
have variously sustained the contract,
reformed it to correct the illegal
term, or allowed recovery under an
implied contract theory; the courts
have not, however, simply declared the
contract void ab initio. For example,
in LaBarge Products v.
West, 46
F.3d 1547, 1552-53 (Fed.Cir.1995)
there was an illegal disclosure by
the government during bidding; this
court noted that the contract had
been substantially performed and held
that a valid contract existed despite
the violation. In Beta Systems, Inc. v.
United States, 838 F.2d 1179, 1185-
86 (Fed.Cir.1988) the court allowed
reformation of the contract price term
to correct a regulatory violation, stating
that "[t]he risk of unintentional failure
of a contract term to comply with a
legal requirement does not fall solely
on the contractor." In Urban Data
Systems, Inc. v. United States, 699 F.2d
1147, 1154 (Fed.Cir.1983) the court
held that a contract price term that
was contrary to law did not invalidate
the fully performed contract. In Trilon
Educational Corp. v. United States,
217 Ct.C1. 266, 578 F.2d 1356, 1360
(1978) the court sustained a contract
that was awarded after the contracting
officer had negligently failed to meet
a regulatory responsibility; the court
held that the non-compliance with
regulation was "a matter for internal
resolution" and "did not render the
resultant contract a nullity." In Clark
v. United States, 95 U.S. 539, 542, 24
L.Ed. 518 (1877) the Court held a parol
contract void for violation of the statute
of frauds, but allowed recovery on an
implied contract theory.
The entirety of precedent strongly
supports our conclusion that the
Reduced Diameter Array contract
is not void ab initio.
Precedent
does not favor the invalidation,
based on governmental noncompliance
with internal review and reporting
procedures, of a contract that has been
fully performed by either contracting
party. 2
*1377 Although the parties discuss
possible remedies, the issue of what
relief may be available to AT & T
is not before us, for the Court of
Federal Claims did not consider AT
& T's claims on the premise that the
underlying contract was not void. We
have not considered this issue, and
express no view thereon.
Answers to the Certified Questions
For the reasons we have discussed, we
conclude that the agency's failure to
comply with the obligations of § 8118
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did not render the Reduced Diameter
Array contract void ab initio. Any
failure by the Department of Defense in
its internal compliance with § 8118 can
not be invoked, particularly after full
contract performance, either to strip the
Navy of authority to have entered into
the contract or to bar AT & T from
presenting such claims, if any, that it
may have.
The second certified question relates to
remedy, but is based on the premise that
the contract was void ab initio. Since
that premise is incorrect, we do not
reach the second certified question.
Costs
Each party shall bear its costs.
QUESTIONS ANSWERED; CASE
REMANDED.
RADER, Circuit Judge, concurring in
the result, in which MAYER, Chief
Judge, and LOURIE, Circuit Judge,
join.
Because § 8118 of the Defense
Appropriations Act does not apply to
this contract, I concur. Section 8118
provides in relevant part:
None
of
the
funds provided for
the Department of
Defense in this Act
may be obligated or
expended for fixed-
price-type contracts in
excess of $10,000,000
for the development
of a major system or
subsystem....
(emphasis added). This particular
section of the U.S.Code does not
supply a definition of "major system."
However, § 2302(5) of title 10 of
the United States Code, which relates
to government procurement contracts
generally, defines "major system:"
The
term
"major
system"
means
a
combination
of
elements
that
will
function
together
to
produce
the
capabilities
required
to fulfill a mission
need....
A
system
shall be considered a
major system if (A)
the Department of
Defense is responsible
for the system and the
total expenditures for
research,
development, test and
evaluation
for
the
system are estimated
to
be more than
$75,000,000
...
or
(C) the system
is
designated a "major
system" by the head of
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the agency responsible
for the system.
Therefore, the term "major system"
refers to systems either with estimated
costs above $75,000,000 or systems
"designated a `major system' by the
head of the agency responsible for the
system." See 10 U.S.C. § 2302(5) (1986).
Shortly after enactment of § 8118,
both the Department of Defense and
the Navy incorporated this statutory
definition into their interpretation of
that section. As the agency charged with
interpretation and application of the
statute, the Department of Defense's
reasonable interpretation of § 8118
deserves deference. See Chevron U.S.A.,
Inc.
v. Natural Resources Defense
Council, Inc., 467 U.S. 837, 844, 104
S.Ct. 2778, 81 L.Ed.2d 694 (1984).
The Department of Defense and Navy's
interpretation alone gives meaning
to all of the words in the statute.
Both the Court *1378 of Federal
Claims' interpretation and this court's
interpretation in this opinion would
render the "major system or subsystem"
language superfluous and would invoke
§ 8118 for any fixed-price contract
in excess of $10,000,000. This court
chooses that course on the reasoning
that the agency's interpretation "rewrite
[s] § 8118 to replace the statutory
threshold of $10,000,000 with that of
$75,000,000." This reasoning, however,
discounts the statute's alternative
method of categorizing a project as a
"major system," namely, designation
by the head of the agency. Thus,
a project beneath the $75,000,000
threshold of 10 U.S.C. § 2302(5) could
nonetheless qualify as a "major system"
upon designation by the head of the
agency.
This
court's
opinion
discounts
the
reasonable
reconciliations
of
the $10,000,000 contract amount
requirement with the "major system"
classification requirement. Under the
agency's
reasonable
interpretation,
the $10,000,000 contract amount
requirement serves as a floor for
invoking § 8118 in contracts involving
a project designated as a "major
system" by the department head.
Furthermore, the $10,000,000 contract
amount requirement does not lose
its
meaning
for
systems
whose
estimated costs exceed $75,000,000.
Development of a major system
typically requires multiple contracts
with multiple developers. In these cases,
the $10,000,000 requirement serves as a
floor for application of § 8118 to each
contract involved in the development
of that "major system." Similarly, the
$10,000,000 trigger amount excludes
from § 8118 any subsystem contracts
within a major system which do not
satisfy this threshold amount. For these
reasons, the $10,000,000 threshold
continues to govern in conjunction
with the $75,000,000 threshold for a
"major system." In sum, these dual
thresholds work together and provide a
reasonable explanation for the agency's
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interpretation of these statutes. Because
reasonable, the agency's interpretation
deserves deference.
Even
without
deference
to
the
Departments of Defense and Navy,
their proposed interpretation of § 8118
alone gives meaning to all the statute's
terms and should therefore govern this
court's resolution. As noted above, this
is the only interpretation which supplies
meaning to all of the terms of the
statute. Specifically, this is the only
interpretation which gives meaning
to the term "major system" as well
as the $10,000,000 contract amount
requirement.
Finally, I read the term "subsystem" in
§ 8118 as linked to "major system" by
its context within the statute. Although
neither 10 U.S.C. § 2302(5), nor the
interpretations of § 8118 proffered
by the Department of the Defense
or the Navy address the definition
of "subsystem," the statute itself ties
the definition of this term to the
term "major system." In essence, this
interpretation would apply § 8118
to "major systems and subsystems
of major systems." This reading
preserves the statute's "major system
or subsystem" requirement rather than
expanding application of § 8118 to
all fixed-price-type contracts exceeding
$10,000,000.
Furthermore, to my eyes, this appeal
does not present the question of
whether this Reduced Diameter Array
is a "subsystem" of a "major system."
Although AT & T asserted below
that the Reduced Diameter Array
subsystem was a part of SURTASS,
and that SURTASS was a major system
according to the requirements of 10
U.S.C. § 2302(5), by consent of the
parties before the Court of Federal
Claims, that issue is not a subject of
the certified appeal. For these reasons, I
would not apply § 8118 to the Reduced
Diameter Array contract at issue in this
appeal.
PLAGER, Circuit Judge, dissenting-in-
part and concurring-in-part.
I
must
respectfully dissent. The
court refuses to honor an explicit
mandate of an *1379 unequivocal
Congressional enactment. "Legislative
history" cannot justify that refusal.'
A court has a responsibility to arrive
at the right result in a case; it also
has the obligation to explain itself in a
manner that does no harm to the fabric
of the law. Though the right result may
eventually emerge, the route the court
takes to get there has the potential
for causing considerable harm to legal
principles that I deem important.
In the first part of its opinion, the court
describes the Government's efforts over
time to adjust the risks that are inherent
in cutting-edge R & D contracts so that
they are fair both to the Government
and the contractor. See slip op. at 1369-
70. These efforts begin at least in 1971
with DODD 5000.1, and culminate,
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American Tel. & Tel. Co. v. U.S., 177 F.3d 1368 (1999)
for purposes of this case, with the
enactment in 1987 of § 8118 as part
of that year's Department of Defense
("DoD") Appropriations Act. See id. at
1370-72. As the court explains, § 8118
prohibited using Government funds for
fixed price-type R & D contracts except
under certain conditions.
The court then sets out the history of the
R & D contract at issue in this case, and
concludes, correctly, that Section 8118
applies to this DoD fixed price-type
alleged contract. See id. at 1372-73. The
court concludes, again correctly, that
the exception provided in the statute,
permitting a fixed price-type R & D
contract under certain conditions, is not
applicable since the DoD did not take
the steps necessary to qualify for an
exception. See id.
This is the same conclusion on the
point reached by the Court of Federal
Claims, which this court now affirms.
The court rejects the Government's
various arguments to the contrary, and
finally concludes this part of its analysis
with the statement that: "Although the
government stresses that the contract
was awarded only nine days after the
enactment of § 8118, this does not
excuse the failure of all compliance." Id
Given that the court recognizes the
language of the Act to expressly
prohibit the use of Government funds
for such a contract, the obvious and
ineluctable conclusion would appear to
be that there was no contract, since
as a matter of law such contracts
were prohibited, and since there could
be no consideration offered for the
contractor's promised performance.
Remarkably, the court reaches exactly
the opposite conclusion, and finds
the contract valid, and presumably
enforceable. For the reasons I shall
explain, I cannot join the court in this.
1.
Omitting the inapplicable exception
language and its related provisos,
the operative words of the statute
are clear and to the point: "None
of the funds provided for the PoDI
in this [Appropriations' Act may be
obligated or expended for fixed price-
type contracts...." It is a rule of
constitutional law that, in absence of
an express appropriation, agencies may
not spend, and a fortiori cannot validly
contract to spend, any federal dollars.
See U.S. Const. art. I, § 9, cl. 7
("No Money shall be drawn from
the Treasury, but in Consequence of
Appropriations made by Law."). The
Supreme Court earlier reversed us when
in another context we failed to properly
apply that principle. See Office of
Personnel Management v. Richmond,
496 U.S. 414, 110 S.Ct. 2465, 110
L.Ed.2d 387 (1990).
Here, we do not have simply an
omission of authorization to expend;
we have an outright prohibition:
"None of the funds *1380 [otherwise
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appropriated] may be expended ..." for
the precise purpose for which the DoD
contracted. Surely it should not be
necessary for Congress to have added:
"and we mean it," or perhaps, "and we
mean it, and if you try, it won't be any
good, so don't even bother."
It is not uncommon for Congress to
put prohibitions such as that contained
in § 8118 in Acts appropriating funds
to executive branch agencies.' A
recent case in point: Congress, in an
Appropriations Act which included
the U.S. Environmental Protection
Agency, 3 specified that "none of
the funds made available under
this heading may be used by the
Environmental Protection Agency ...
[for certain described activities affecting
states]
unless
the
Administrator
receives a written request ... from the
Governor of the State...." The EPA,
on the basis of an authorizing letter
from a state official, not the Governor,
undertook such activity with regard to
certain property in California. Affected
interests appealed.
Judge Sentelle, writing for the Court of
Appeals for the District of Columbia
Circuit, found that the state official's
letter did not meet the terms of the
statute, and readily concluded that,
in the absence of a letter from the
Governor himself, the EPA action was
"null and void," and "was necessarily
invalid." Harbor Gateway Commercial
Property Owners' Ass'n v. United States
Envtl. Protection Agency, 167 F.3d 602,
607 (D.C.Cir.1999). 4
In response to the Government's
argument that EPA officials considered
themselves to be in compliance, and
in any event an invalidation of the
action would require that the action
be done again and would just cost the
Government more money, the District
of Columbia Circuit answered:
We refuse to ignore
the plain
language
of the Act in order
to
avoid
potential
costs which would
not
have
arisen
had EPA complied
with
the
statute's
language in the first
instance. Indeed, when
a statute's meaning
is
clear,
and
the
enactment is within
the
constitutional
authority of Congress,
the "sole function of
the courts is to enforce
it according to its
terms."
Id. at 606 (emphasis added). That seems
to be the law on the subject; I know of
no cases to the contrary, and the court
here cites none.
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In this case, AT & T, after due
negotiation with the Navy, offered
to make and sell to the Navy for
an agreed fixed price a submarine-
detecting piece of equipment. The Navy
accepted the offer, and proposed to pay
for the work using funds from the 1987
Appropriations Act that contained the
express prohibition set out above. As
the Harbor Gateway court explained,
the Navy's action was "null and void,"
and "necessarily invalid."
Furthermore, the Navy's action in
this case was taken for the purpose
of entering into a contract. But
the Navy was legally incapable of
using Government funds unless it told
Congress what it was up to in the
manner required by the statute, which
the Navy chose not to do. (It is
difficult *1381 not to believe that
both parties were fully aware of the
statute and simply chose to ignore
it, though that is of no moment
to the issue before us. 5 ) Thus,
not only was the act of contracting
prohibited by statute, but as a matter
of basic contract law no legally-
binding contract could be created:
offer, acceptance, and consideration
remain a fundamental requirement for
a legally-binding contract, whether
between private parties or between a
private party and the Government.
See, e.g., Harbert/Lummus Agrifuels
Projects v. United States, 142 F.3d
1429, 1434 (Fed.Cir.1998); Trauma
Serv. Group v. United States, 104 F.3d
1321, 1325 (Fed.Cir.1997). Here, the
Government could neither offer or
pay consideration; no consideration, no
contract, end of discussion, at least with
respect to contract validity under basic
contract principles.
2.
I cannot agree with the court that
the "purpose" of the statute overrides
its express terms. The court tells us
that this statute "must be considered
in light of the statutory or regulatory
purpose, with recognition of the strong
policy of supporting the integrity of
contracts made by and with the United
States." Slip op. at 1374. Clearly,
however, the purpose of this statute,
expressed in no uncertain language, is
exactly the opposite-it is intended to
prevent contracts with the United States
in contravention of its terms, not to
support them.
It has been some years since a
court-invented "purpose" so blatantly
repealed a Congressional enactment.
Last century, in Rector, etc. of Holy
Trinity Church v. United States, 143
U.S. 457, 471, 12 S.Ct. 511, 36
L.Ed. 226 (1892), the Supreme Court
announced that this is a "Christian
nation," and on that basis concluded
that the purpose of a statute that
banned immigration of foreign workers
could not possibly be to prevent
an English clergyman from coming
to work in the United States. In
this century, and certainly in recent
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times, purpose-inventing by judges has
received the opprobrium it deserves
when used as an excuse for ignoring the
law.
Professor Dickerson, one of the early
writers on statutory interpretation,
described the process of purpose-
inventing as if he had this case in mind:
As with
legislative
intent, the danger in
presuming an actual
legislative
purpose
beyond
what
is
expressly or impliedly
revealed is that the
interpreter will either
attribute to the statute
a purpose of his own
contriving or search
for actual purpose so
relentlessly that he
goes beyond the limits
of the appropriate
available evidence.
Reed Dickerson, The Interpretation and
Application of Statutes 92 (1975).
Writing more formally for the Court a
half-century ago, Justice Jackson said,
"we take the Act as Congress gave it
to us, without attempting to conform it
to any notions of what Congress would
have done if the circumstances of this
case had been put before it." Western
Union TeL Co. v. Lenroot, 323 U.S. 490,
501, 65 S.Ct. 335, 89 L.Ed. 414 (1945).
In the same vein, and more recently, the
Supreme Court, Justice Scalia writing,
said, "Courts may not create their own
limitations on legislation, no matter
how alluring the policy arguments for
doing so,...." Brogan v. United States,
522 U.S. 398, 118 S.Ct. 805, 811-12,139
L.Ed.2d 830 (1998).
In support of its position, the court
cites various pieces of what it describes
as legislative history. However, a
prerequisite to judicial use of legislative
history,
even
relevant
legislative
history, is a finding that *1382 the
statute at issue is ambiguous. "Our
first step in interpreting a statute is to
determine whether the language at issue
has a plain and unambiguous meaning
with regard to the particular dispute
in the case. Our inquiry must cease if
the statutory language is unambiguous
and `the statutory scheme is coherent
and consistent.' " Robinson v. Shell
Oil Co., 519 U.S. 337, 117 S.Ct.
843, 136 L.Ed.2d 808 (1997) (Justice
Thomas, writing for a unanimous
Court) (quoting United States v. Ron
Pair Enters., Inc., 489 U.S. 235, 240, 109
S.Ct. 1026, 103 L.Ed.2d 290 (1989)). To
the court's credit here, the majority does
not pretend to find in this unequivocal
statute any ambiguity. Rather, it
simply concludes that committee report
language, nowhere addressed to the
specific problem before us, trumps
statutory clarity. 6
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The committee report language the
court cites includes certain 1988 House
and Senate reports. In the first place,
this so-called legislative history is not
history - that is, the House and Senate
Reports the court cites with such
authority (see maj. op. at 1374-75)
were written after § 8118 was enacted
in 1987, and relate to later-considered
legislation. How the views of a later
Congress, not contained in actual
legislation, can be seen as amending or
modifying prior legislative acts, is not
explained. And, even assuming that any
of that legislative history is relevant to
understanding the 1987 Act, the only
consistent thread in all of it is the
expression of congressional irritation
and frustration with the DoD's (or at
least the Navy's) stubborn insistence on
doing what Congress wanted stopped.
Further, when examined, even the
terms in which the language of the 1988
Senate Report was written, heavily
relied upon by the court to support
its conclusion, see maj. op. at 1375,
fail to support the court's view. The
Report states that "this section [not
8118 of the 1987 Act, but a later-
proposed section] not be used as the
basis for litigating the propriety of an
otherwise valid contract." S.Rep. No.
100-326, at 105 (1988). Since by its
terms a contract in direct violation of
8118 is not "otherwise valid," the
statement proves nothing with regard to
8118, whether it be the 1987 version
or the proposed 1988 version. And in
case a court should miss that point,
the very next sentence in the Report
is: "Nothing in this section shall be
construed to affect the requirements
of section 8118 of the Department of
Defense Appropriations Act, 1988." Id.
3.
The court finds further justification
for its emasculation of the statute
by opining that "Congress can not
have intended to charge the contracting
partner with adverse consequences
depending on whether the Defense
Department carried out the internal
responsibilities and filed the reports
that Congress required." Slip op. at
1375. The response to that observation
is that that would appear to be exactly
what Congress intended. AT & T, one
of the country's leading government
contractors,7 could be expected to be
familiar with government contracting
laws. It is difficult to imagine that AT
& T was unaware of the battle between
Congress and the DoD *1383 over
these fixed price-type contracts. At the
least, it is not irrational for Congress
to have assumed that a contractor, like
AT & T, proposing to undertake a
major R & D contract would know who
in the DoD to contact regarding the
requirements for the contract they were
negotiating, and that the DoD's lawyers
would know the relevant law.
What the court seems to have in mind
here, though it does not say so, is
the rule, sometimes called the "Golden
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Rule," that a statute should not be
understood to call for an absurd result.
Just as finding a statute ambiguous
permits a court to go beyond the terms
of the statute in searching for meaning,
the Golden Rule permits a court to
go beyond the apparent meaning of a
statute when its application would be
absurd.
Justice Kennedy described the Rule
thusly:
Where
the
plain
language
of
the
statute
would
lead
to
"patently absurd consequences," that
"Congress could not possibly have
intended," we need not apply the
language in such a fashion.... This
exception remains a legitimate tool of
the Judiciary, however, only as long
as the Court acts with self-discipline
by limiting the exception to situations
where the result of applying the plain
language would be, in a genuine
sense, absurd, i.e., where it is quite
impossible that Congress could have
intended the result, and where the
alleged absurdity is so clear as to be
obvious to most anyone.
Public Citizen v. United States Delis
of Justice, 491 U.S. 440, 470, 109
S.Ct. 2558, 105 L.Ed.2d 377 (1989)
(Kennedy, J., concurring). One must
wonder whether a statute that orders
the DoD not to spend money in a
wasteful way is "absurd" within the
definition set forth by Justice Kennedy.
Emphasizing the narrow scope of the
absurdity exception, Justice Kennedy
went on to note:
Where
it
is clear
that the unambiguous
language of a statute
embraces
certain
conduct, and it would
not
be
patently
absurd
to
apply
the statute to such
conduct, it does not
foster a democratic
exegesis for this Court
to rummage through
unauthoritative
materials to consult
the
spirit
of
the
legislation in order to
discover an alternative
interpretation of the
statute with
which
the Court is more
comfortable....
The
problem with spirits
is that they tend to
reflect less the views of
the world whence they
come than the views of
those who seek their
advice.
Id. at 473, 109 S.Ct. 2558
citations
omitted)
(Kennedy,
J.,
concurring). 8
(internal
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4.
AT & T has no rightful claim to
another penny of public money. It
agreed to build and sell a product to
the Government for a fixed price. It
performed its end of the deal, and
delivered the goods. The Government
likewise performed its part of the deal;
it paid AT & T the agreed-upon price
(actually more, as a result of negotiated
add-ons).
If the contract had been valid under
governing law, AT & T would have
no basis for claiming more money;
our precedents are unequivocal that
full payment *1384 under a valid
fixed price-type contract is all to which
a contracting party is entitled. 9 The
risk of loss for misjudging what it
takes to perform, or for deliberately
underbidding, is on the contractor, not
the Government. 10
AT & T now seeks to take advantage
of the fact that the deal it made
with the Government did not result
in an enforceable contract, which it
likely knew (and certainly should have
known) when it proposed to enter into
the agreement. AT & T demands more
money for what it has been fully paid
to do. The answer to that facially
nonsensical demand is, in a word, "no."
Perhaps the court thought it could not
get there if, in accordance with the
statute, it held the contract invalid.
Actually, the right answer is not that
difficult, even accepting the fact that
there is no legally-enforceable contract
between the parties. AT & T argues
that, since the contract it made is
unenforceable, it should be treated as
having an "implied-in-fact" contract, a
key term of which would be different
from that to which the parties actually
agreed. The different term would be
that the contract would not be for a
fixed price, but instead would be a
cost-plus contract. That would take the
contract outside the scope of§ 8118, and
give AT & T a rightful claim to all the
money for which it asks.
That would also make nonsense out
of the concept of an implied-in-fact
contract. An implied-in-fact contract
is a form of consensual contract,
reflecting the basic requirements for
such a contract including that of a
meeting of the minds. It differs from
the usual express contract only in that
the terms, instead of being expressly
stated by the parties, are derived from
their conduct. Nothing here in the
conduct of the parties suggests an
agreement to have a cost-plus contract;
on the contrary, the parties specifically
stipulated to a fixed price-type contract.
If AT & T is to have any remedy
entitling it to more than what it has been
paid, its claim must be based on some
sort of equitable claim for payment for
goods sold and delivered, a quantum
valebat claim." Even assuming for
discussion purposes that the Court
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American Tel. 8 Tel. Co. v. U.S., 177 F.3d 1368 (1999)
of Federal Claims could exercise the
powers of a court of equity, AT & T
has no equity on its side, and therefore
is not entitled to the intervention of a
court of equity.
AT & T comes to the court with unclean
hands. AT & T is not an innocent
bystander being taken advantage of
by a predator government. Both the
Government and AT & T knew exactly
what they *1385 were doing when they
entered into this deal. It simply defies
belief that AT & T was unaware of
8118 when it purported to contract
with the Government or was unaware
that the Navy was proceeding with the
contract in the manner the Navy did.
In any event, that does not matter. The
most that AT & T would be entitled to
under any equitable theory is the fair
value of the goods sold, and that value
was agreed to by AT & T when it made
the deal with the Navy. The goods are
one-of-a-kind, not to be found on the
shelf at your usual military equipment
supermarket. There can be no better
method for determining a fair price for
the goods than to see what a willing
seller would sell them for to a willing
buyer.
AT & T does not allege that it was
coerced by the Government, or that
it was caused to enter into the deal
by fraud. It simply wants more money
for a product it agreed to provide
for a price that proved, according
to AT & T, too low. An inefficient,
wasteful, or simply ignorant contractor
cannot foist off on the other contracting
party the consequences of its own
incompetence. 12 The law in a case like
this leaves the parties where it found
them. 13
The en banc court appears unwilling
to give AT & T any more money
on its so-called non-contract claim. As
I said at the beginning, a court has
a responsibility to arrive at the right
result, but also an obligation to do
no harm to the fabric of the law. A
wrong result is an injustice to one party;
distorting important legal principles is a
disservice to the entire legal system.
It is true that statutory interpretation
does not occur in a vacuum. Words
take meaning from the context in which
they are used, and, when text and
context yield genuine doubt, courts may
seek guidance from accepted canons,
from history, and from legislative
purpose when it can be authoritatively
known. In many cases, construing
Congressionally-mandated language is
as much an art as it is linguistic science.
But it is not an art in which the picture
that emerges is without constraints, or
is limited only by the imagination of the
artist.
There is an established methodology
that courts employ in construing
statutes. As the quoted excerpts
from the Supreme Court show, the
methodology is well-recognized, even
if judges do not always agree on how
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much weight to give to its various parts
in a given case. 14 The methodology
is designed to provide guidance
*1386 for the exercise of judicial
self-discipline, the self-discipline that
produces principled decisions.
This court has in the past expressly
recognized the governing principles:
"A statute is by definition the
law to be followed—not disregarded,
effectively
repealed,
rewritten, or
overruled
(unless
unconstitutional)
—in
the federal courts," In re
Mark Indus., 751 F.2d 1219, 1224
(Fed.Cir.1984), and recently reiterated
the point: "This court is empowered to
rewrite neither statutes nor regulations,
however unwise, nor does it have the
information base nor expertise to do so
effectively," Newport News Shipbuilding
& Dry Dock Co. v. Garrett, 6 F.3d 1547,
1558 (Fed.Cir.1993).
In sum, since the statute before us is not
ambiguous and its application to the
case would not require an absurd result,
there is neither reason nor justification
for reaching beyond the statute to
legislative history or supposed purpose
in order to find a different answer.
Further, what little known legislative
history there is I find inapposite and
unpersuasive. Accordingly, I believe it
is our duty to apply the statute as it has
been given to us by Congress.
Thus, my answers to the questions
certified are: (1) yes, the contract is
null, void, and necessarily invalid, as
the Court of Federal Claims correctly
concluded; and (2) no, AT & T is
not entitled to any equitable or other
remedy on the facts presented, even if
the Court of Federal Claims had power
to grant such a remedy. I respectfully
dissent from the court's contrary view.
All Citations
177 F.3d 1368
Footnotes
*
Circuit Judges Rich and Michel did not participate in this decision.
1
2
1
The panel decision of the Federal Circuit, reported at American Tot & Tel. Co. v. United States, 124 F.3d
1471 (Fed.Cir.1997), was vacated and withdrawn, 136 F.3d 793 (Fed.Cir.1998). The decision of the Court of
Federal Claims is reported at 32 Fed.Cl. 672 (1995), and the certification for interlocutory appeal is reported
at 33 Fed.Cl. 540 (1995). On this rehearing amicus briefs were filed by the Federal Circuit Bar Association
and by the Electronic Industries Alliance and Aerospace Industries Association of America.
The dissenting opinion would hold the fully performed AT & T/Navy contract void ab initio, stating that the
purpose of § 8118 was to "prevent contracts with the United States in contravention of its terms". However,
Congress' stated concern was to curb the Navy's use of fixed price R & D contracting so as to "maintain
the government's credibility as a reliable business partner: H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 100-498 at 623 (Dec. 22,
1987), not to bar essential defense procurement. The dissent's proposed nullification of this fully performed
contract would do little for "the government's credibility as a reliable business partner:
A similar reaction was eloquently expressed by Chief Judge Joseph of the Oregon Court of Appeals in an
award to his colleagues. See Western Communications, Inc. v. Deschutes County, 100 Or.App. 706, 788
P.2d 1013, 1017 (Or.App.1990) (Joseph, C.J., dissenting-In-part, concurring-in-part).
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2
CI. Rust v. Sullivan, 500 U.S. 173, 111 S.Ct. 1759, 114 L.Ed.2d 233 (1991) (construing the phrase -method
of family planning" in an Act appropriating funds to the Department of Health and Human Services. subject
to a proviso that stated: "None of the funds appropriated under this subchapter shall be used in programs
where abortion is a method of family planning.").
3
See Omnibus Consolidated Rescissions and Appropriations Act of 1996, Pub.L. No. 104-134, 110 Stat.
1321-298.
4
Judge Wald dissented. She did not disagree with the court's understanding of the consequences of
noncompliance with the statute, but dissented on the grounds that the state official's letter was "the functional
equivalent" of a governor's letter. See Harbor Gateway, 167 F.3d at 607 (Wald, J., dissenting).
5
As my colleagues know, I spent some years of my life as a sea-going officer in the U.S. Navy; it is not easy
for me to be critical of the Service, but the facts are what they are.
6
The concurring opinion stays within established statutory interpretation principles by attempting to redefine
the scope of § 8118. Unfortunately, for the reasons well-explicated in the opinion of the court majority, the
attempt to have this contract escape the clutches of § 8118 fails.
7
For the year 1987, AT & T was listed as 15th among the Top 100 Federal Contractors, with
1,438 procurement actions worth something over $2 billion. See Federal Procurement Data Center,
Govemmentwide Information Systems Division, MVS. GSA, Central Office, Top 100 Federal Contractors
14 (Jan. 25, 1988). AT & T was 16th in 1988. See Federal Procurement Data Center, Governmentwide
Information Systems Division, MVS, GSA, Central Office, Top 100 Federal Contractors 14 (Feb. 2, 1989).
8
Justice Rehnquist expressed the same sentiment in United Steelworkers of America v. Weber, 443 U.S. 193,
254, 99 S.Ct. 2721, 61 L.Ed.2d 480 (1979) (Rehnquist, J., dissenting) (-Finding the desired result hopelessly
foreclosed by these conventional sources, the Court turns to a third source —the 'spirit' of the Act. But close
examination of what the Court proffers as the spirit of the act reveals it as the spirit animating the present
majority, not the 88th Congress.").
9
See, e.g., Loral Corp. v. United States, 193 Ct.CI. 473, 434 F.2d 1328, 1330 (1970) ("Mho type of contracts
in question are firm fixed-price contracts and once the price was agreed upon, that price remains fixed and
it is not subject to further negotiation, unless otherwise provided in the contract.'); see also 48 C.F.R. §
16.202-1 ("A firm fixed-price contract provides for a price that is not subject to any adjustment on the basis
of the contractor's cost experience in performing the contract."); cf. ITT Fed. Servs. Corp. v. Widnall, 132
F.3d 1448, 1451 (Fed.Cir.1997) (holding that ITT was not entitled to recovery of normal severance costs
because in a firm, fixed-price contract situation, the contractor assumes responsibility for all such costs that
may be incurred).
10
See, e.g., ITT, 132 F.3d at 1451 (Fed.Cir.1997) (agreeing with the ASBCA that in a firm fixed-price contract
situation, the contractor "assumes maximum risk and full responsibility for all such costs that may be
incurred"); see also 48 C.F.R. § 16.202-1 (placing upon the contractor "maximum risk and full responsibility
for all costs and resulting profit or loss");
Emerald Maintenance, Inc. v. United States, 925 F.2d 1425,
1430 (Fed.Cir.1991) (noting that the risk of loss was on the contractor who "should not be compensated for
incurring added expenses resulting from assuming that risk").
11
An action for goods sold and delivered, "founded on an implied assumpsit or promise, on the part of the
defendant, to pay the plaintiff as much as the goods were reasonably worth." Black's Law Dictionary 1244
(6th ed.1990).
12
It should be obvious that, just as AT & T could not claim additional payment for goods for which it has
been fully paid, it could not claim ownership of the goods for purposes of recovering them, for example, in a
replevin action. A suggestion to the contrary could not be taken seriously. Even if the law would contemplate
it, it is hard to imagine a major American contractor, whose fiscal lifeblood comes in substantial measure
from contracts with the United States Government, even thinking about replevying a secret government
weapon for resale elsewhere. Money is one thing; fiscal suicide is another.
13
See, e.g., Keystone Driller Co. v. General Excavator Co., 290 U.S. 240, 245, 54 S.Ct. 146, 78 L.Ed. 293
(1933) ("A court of equity acts only when and as conscience commands; and, if the conduct of the plaintiff
be offensive to the dictates of natural justice, then, whatever may be the rights he possesses, ... he will be
held remediless in a court of equity." (internal quotations omitted) (quoting Deweese v. Reinhard, 165 U.S.
386, 390, 17 S.Ct. 340, 41 L.Ed. 757 (1897))).
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14
The methodology of statutory interpretation, with all its ramifications, has become one of the darlings of
academic discourse, and is offered as a proper subject of study in many of the leading law schools, taught
from modem-day casebooks. See, e.g., William D. Popkin, Materials On Legislation: Political Language and
the Political Process (Found Press 2d ed.1997); William Eskridge & Philip Frickey, Cases and Materials
on Legislation—Statutes and the Creation of Public Policy (West Pub. Co.2d ed.1995); Abner Mikva & Eric
Lane, Legislative Process (Little, Brown 1995).
End of Document
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