Acrow Corp. of America v. United States

96 Fed. Cl. 270, 2010 U.S. Claims LEXIS 944, 2010 WL 5153440
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedDecember 17, 2010
DocketNo. 10-682C
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 96 Fed. Cl. 270 (Acrow Corp. of America v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Acrow Corp. of America v. United States, 96 Fed. Cl. 270, 2010 U.S. Claims LEXIS 944, 2010 WL 5153440 (uscfc 2010).

Opinion

FINAL ORDER AND MEMORANDUM OPINION ON SUPPLEMENTATION OF THE ADMINISTRATIVE REC[271]*271ORD1

CHRISTINE O.C. MILLER, Judge.

The parties to a post-award bid protest filed under 28 U.S.C. § 1491(b)(1) (2006), have disputed the contents of the administrative record that properly is before the court. Their disputes concern documents, including affidavits and declarations, not the fruits of depositions or testimony taken in aid of a bid protest. Similar issues have spawned many opinions by the United States Court of Federal Claims. The rules of engagement should be simple, but they are not for two reasons. First, 31 U.S.C. § 3556 (2006), requires that on a bid protest to the Court of Federal Claims a decision of the Office of Government Accountability (the “GAO”) “shall be considered to be part of the agency record subject to review.” Id. Second, the Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims contemplate that “the record” before the GAO is filed as a “core document[]” relevant to a protest. See RCFC, App. C, ¶¶ 22(u), 23.2 None of these three provisions expands or restricts the type of documents that a protestor, awardee or putative awar-dee, or the Government can bring before the court: 1) documents that the contracting officer considered in reaching his decision; 2) documents existing at the time of the decision that the contracting officer, given the matters that he addressed, should have considered in reaching his decision; and 3) documents referring to facts existing at the time of the contracting officer’s decision that show that the contracting officer’s decision was biased, tainted, or affected by a conflict of interest. The documents that properly supplement the administrative record are those that fall into categories 1 and 2.

Some documents properly “supplement” the administrative record where necessary to ensure meaningful judicial review because they were before the contracting officer, but he failed to consider them, or because documents that the contracting officer did consider were not included in the agency record due to error or oversight. Other documents that properly “supplement” the administrative record are considered during the protest as documents that supply important information that, typically, fills gaps in the record and is required for meaningful judicial review. Some documents may not qualify as supplementation in that they “do not clarify any matter that was or was not considered at the agency level, as they do not represent information that should have been considered, was considered, was insufficiently considered, or was considered incorrectly.” Blue & Gold Fleet, LP v. United States, 70 Fed.Cl. 487, 494 & n. 9 (2006), aff'd, 492 F.3d 1308 (Fed.Cir.2007).

The peripheral motions practice concerning supplementation, with its attendant burdens, costs, and delays (and demonstrable likelihood that rulings issue on documents that should not be considered and will not be considered), could be curtailed if the deci-sional law uniformly recognized 1) that a party to a bid protest in the Court of Federal Claims properly may rely on documents that satisfy any one or more of the three criteria listed above; and 2) the arguments concerning what documents properly may be considered in connection with the bid protest are reserved for resolution with the merits of the motion for preliminary injunction or motion for judgment on the administrative recoi’d (ruling on the complaint for permanent injunction). The court then would be in a more informed position to understand exactly [272]*272what role the documents should have played in the challenged procurement decision. Such is the case in the instant matter — as more documents trickled into the court record, the court was better able to understand what documents actually were in the administrative record before the contracting officer at the time of her decision.

On December 3, 2010, plaintiff filed Plaintiffs Second Motion To Supplement the Administrative Record and Motion To Clarify or Alter/Amend the Court’s Order on Supplementation and Memorandum in Support. On December 9, 2010, the court entered an order that it would rule on the motion without further briefing on the parties’ cross-motions for judgment on the administrative record. The court’s previous speaking orders, entered on November 5 and 12, 2010, insofar as they address the same subject matter3 have been incorporated in this order, and the court vacates the former orders and enters this order incorporating and clarifying them, nunc pro tunc, in order to advance the interests of coherent jurisprudence. This order enters on the same date as the court’s opinion on the cross-motions, which is based on the record developed by the parties’ briefs on the merits. That opinion more particularly discusses the materiality of the disputed documents.

FACTS

The following facts represent that state of the record as of November 12, 2010, the date on which briefing was completed on the parties’ respective motions regarding supplementation of the administrative record and on which the court entered its second order on supplementation. The facts relating to plaintiffs December 3, 2010 pending motion to supplement are not restricted to that time frame. The findings herein do not represent findings of fact on the merits of plaintiffs protest.

Plaintiff protests the award of Solicitation No. W56HZV-09-R-0480 (the “Solicitation”) to defendant-intervenor Mabey Bridge & Shore, Inc. (“MBSI”), on the ground that the United States Army TACOM Life Cycle Management Command (“TACOM”) improperly determined that MBSI was a responsible offeror. The Solicitation included a firm, fixed-price five-year requirements contract, with two one-year options, to build a Line of Communication Bridge (“LOCB”) system that transports ground forces in the U.S. Army across dry and wet “gaps.” Admin. Ree. (“AR”) filed Oct. 19, 2010, at 49. LOCB systems “ensure support forces are able to move freely and without delay throughout a given theater of operation.” Compl. filed Oct. 8, 2010, ¶ 14.

The Solicitation articulated the method of determining which proposal provided the “best value,” stating, in relevant part:

[T]he Government will evaluate the following factors: Experience, Price, Technical and Small Business Participation. Experience is equal in importance to Price. Price is more important than Technical. Technical is more important than Small Business Participation. The non-price factors when combined are more important than Price.
(a) [The Government will] award a contract to the offeror that:
(1) ... provides the best value to the Government if factors in addition to price are identified elsewhere in this solicitation, and
(3) meets all the responsibility criteria at FAR 9.104.

AR at 161-62. The responsibility determination mandated: “Per FAR 9.103, contracts will be placed only with the Contractors that the Contracting Officer determines to be responsible. Prospective Offerors ... must be able to demonstrate that they meet standards of responsibility set forth in FAR 9.104.” AR at 161.

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Bluebook (online)
96 Fed. Cl. 270, 2010 U.S. Claims LEXIS 944, 2010 WL 5153440, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/acrow-corp-of-america-v-united-states-uscfc-2010.