Barr Inc. v. Town of Falmouth

488 F. Supp. 2d 5, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40794, 2007 WL 1612113
CourtDistrict Court, D. Massachusetts
DecidedJune 6, 2007
DocketCivil Action 06-12159-JLT
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 488 F. Supp. 2d 5 (Barr Inc. v. Town of Falmouth) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Massachusetts primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Barr Inc. v. Town of Falmouth, 488 F. Supp. 2d 5, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40794, 2007 WL 1612113 (D. Mass. 2007).

Opinion

*7 MEMORANDUM

TAURO, District Judge.

Background

On December 1, 2006, Plaintiff Barr Incorporated, a Connecticut corporation based in Connecticut, filed a Complaint in this court alleging that Plaintiff was the lowest bidder for a contract to build a new Falmouth Public Library. Defendant Town of Falmouth (“Falmouth”), a Massachusetts town, rejected Plaintiffs bid, after determining Plaintiff was not a responsible bidder. Defendant Falmouth instead awarded the construction contract to Defendant J.K. Scanlan Co., Inc. (“Scanlan”), a Massachusetts company based in Massachusetts. Plaintiff alleges that in finding Plaintiff not to be a responsible bidder, Defendant Falmouth did not conclude that Plaintiff was unsound financially or incompetent, but rather relied on allegations that Plaintiff had taken extra time on other projects, even though Plaintiff adequately explained those delays. Plaintiff alleges Falmouth acted arbitrarily and capriciously by considering improper and incorrect information, failing to conduct a full investigation, and refusing to accept Plaintiffs responses to Falmouth’s inquiries.

Plaintiff requested emergency injunctive relief, seeking an order to prevent Defendants from signing a contract for the Library construction project. Plaintiff argued that as it alleged only arbitrary and capricious conduct, its damages would be limited to bid preparation costs should it prevail after a contract was executed. Plaintiff contended this reduction in damages constituted irreparable harm. This court held a hearing the day the Complaint was filed and denied injunctive relief. Plaintiff appealed. On December 4, 2006, the First Circuit declined to issue injunc-tive relief. Defendants then executed the contract and filed answers in this case, denying any arbitrary or capricious action. On February 2, 2007, the First Circuit dismissed the appeal as moot. Defendant Scanlan now moves to dismiss the case for mootness. Defendant Falmouth also moves to dismiss, alleging a lack of standing and a lack of jurisdiction.

In response, Plaintiff moves to amend its Complaint, seeking monetary damages instead of an injunction. Plaintiff seeks lost profits and/or bid preparation costs. Plaintiff has declared that its bid preparation costs were $16,400. 1 The court now considers these motions.

Discussion

Claims against Defendant Scanlan

Plaintiff correctly named Scanlan as a Defendant to the initial Complaint requesting that this court enjoin Falmouth and Scanlan from entering a contract. The original complaint is now moot. The proposed amended complaint seeks damages for the town’s alleged arbitrary and capricious actions. But it literally does not state a claim against Defendant Scanlan. No identified cause of action would obligate the second lowest bidder to pay the Plaintiffs lost profits or bid preparation costs. Defendant Scanlan’s Motion to Dismiss is ALLOWED.

At oral argument, Plaintiff objected to this result only on the ground that it intends to seek leave to file a second amended complaint asserting that the contract is void. Plaintiff advanced some case law to support this proposition. But this issue is not before the court in any motion and has not been briefed. The proper action at this point is to dismiss Defendant Scanlan. Should Plaintiff seek leave to further amend its Complaint, the court will consid *8 er the issue once it is fully briefed. Accordingly, Defendant Scanlan is DISMISSED from this case WITHOUT PREJUDICE.

Standing

In its own Motion to Dismiss, Defendant Falmouth contends that Plaintiff lacks standing to challenge Falmouth’s discretionary determination that Plaintiff was not a responsible bidder. The Massachusetts courts apply a very low standing threshold to claims of this sort, and Plaintiff need not even show “but-for” causation. 2 Defendant Falmouth argues that Plaintiffs complaint does not challenge the procedures used, but rather simply the discretionary decision. Defendant analogizes this case to cases where courts refuse to review prosecutorial discretion. This analogy is not persuasive. Plaintiff has alleged that Defendant Falmouth arbitrarily considered improper factors and refused to credit certain evidence. In this way, Plaintiff is not simply attacking the result of the bidding process, but is alleging that the process itself was flawed. Such an allegation presents a justiciable situation as Plaintiff alleges it was harmed by this arbitrary process.

Available Damages

The next question presented, by both Defendant Falmouth’s Motion to Dismiss, and Plaintiffs Motion to Amend, is the question of whether Plaintiffs claim for monetary damages is limited to bid preparation costs. Massachusetts law holds that as Plaintiff alleges only arbitrary and capricious conduct, Plaintiff can only collect bid production costs. 3

Despite this law, Plaintiff argues that it should be able to recover lost profits pursuant to law of the case doctrine or estop-pel. When moving for a preliminary in-junctive relief, Plaintiff argued that it would suffer irreparable harm if an injunction did not issue because it would be limited to bid preparation costs if a contract was signed. 4 Defendant Scanlan opposed the irreparable harm argument, and the court ultimately denied injunctive relief. Plaintiff insists that the law of the case compels this court to allow an award of loss profits, and that estoppel prevents Defendants from arguing otherwise.

The record of the hearing does not support this conclusion. The court engaged in a colloquy with Plaintiffs counsel and Defendant Scanlan’s counsel, regarding Plaintiffs contention it would suffer irreparable harm. 5 Defendant Scanlan did not argue that Plaintiff could recover lost profits in a case alleging arbitrary and capricious action, but instead argued that Plaintiff had not been clear about whether it was claiming bad faith or simple arbitrary and capriciousness. 6

Defendant Scanlan also argued in-junctive relief should be denied based on a lack of showing by Plaintiff that it had a likelihood of success on the merits or that the equities favored an injunction. 7 The *9 court ultimately denied the motion for injunction without opinion. 8 Plaintiff asserts that the court disagreed with its argument that it would be limited to bid preparation costs, but the court never explicitly so ruled. 9 Instead, the court concluded that the balance of the relevant factors did not warrant preliminary injunctive relief. Neither the law of the case doctrine nor principles of estoppel preclude this court from applying clear state law that limits Plaintiff to bid preparation costs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
488 F. Supp. 2d 5, 2007 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 40794, 2007 WL 1612113, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/barr-inc-v-town-of-falmouth-mad-2007.