Dynasciences Corp. v. United States

23 Cont. Cas. Fed. 81,511, 214 Ct. Cl. 643, 1977 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 74, 1977 WL 5318
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedJuly 8, 1977
DocketNo. 62-72
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 23 Cont. Cas. Fed. 81,511 (Dynasciences Corp. v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Dynasciences Corp. v. United States, 23 Cont. Cas. Fed. 81,511, 214 Ct. Cl. 643, 1977 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 74, 1977 WL 5318 (cc 1977).

Opinion

Per Curiam:

This is a petition, originally filed in this court, for redetermination of plaintiffs excessive profits for its fiscal year ended June 30, 1967. We have jurisdiction under 50 U.S.C. App. § 1218, as amended. The Renegotiation Board, by unilateral order dated November 23, 1971, determined that plaintiff realized excessive profits in the said 1967 fiscal year in the amount of $125,000, ($111,676 after adjustment on account of state income taxes, and before computation of the federal tax credit), leaving it with 11.3% of profit on its renegotiable sales. See Chart A for summary.

The case was tried before Trial Judge David Schwartz who has submitted a recommended decision and conclusion of law under Rule 134(h). He would reduce the determination to $67,000 and both parties except. After briefing and oral argument, the court agrees with the said recommended decision and adopts the same as its own, except that it does not agree with a few statements and findings by the trial judge, as will be set forth hereinafter. Because of the precedential importance of the matters wherein we differ, we have elected to leave Trial Judge Schwartz’s opinion to stand and to state in this preliminary discussion how we support his conclusion in part on other grounds. Thus, the thrust of our independent conclusions will more plainly appear. We adopt as our own the findings of fact, except as specified hereinafter, but they are not printed herewith, having been furnished to the parties. All the most significant facts are stated in the opinion.

The case was tried in February 1975, and the defendant benefits from the nonapplication to this case of the standards of proof defendant must in future meet as announced in Major Coat Co. v. United States, 211 Ct. Cl. 1, [648]*648543 F.2d 97 (1976). We labor to construct an informed and reasoned excessive profits redetermination from the scanty materials furnished here.

The plaintiff, a Pennsylvania corporation with a place of business at Blue Bell, Pennsylvania, was organized in 1962 and in its first years was engaged almost wholly in research and development (R&D) under defense contracts and subcontracts. Its area was apparently solution of problems involving aviation, electronics, and optics. In its year ending June 30, 1966, it took on a large amount of production work, wholly or almost wholly the manufacture of devices it had itself invented, designed, and tested. In

1966, for tax reasons, it incorporated a wholly-owned manufacturing subsidiary, D. C. Products, Inc., which had from the first a calendar fiscal year. D. C. Products’ sales were to plaintiff except for inconsequential quantities. Years prior to 1966 were not comparable to 1967 due to the absence of production contracts and were not renegotiated because the defense business was below the statutory floor. The renegotiation of the parent’s 1966 fiscal year was conducted on a basis consolidated with the subsidiary’s January-June figures, showing $1,965,000 of consolidated renegotiable sales and consolidated profits of 12.5% thereon, and the Renegotiation Board issued a clearance. The R&D work was only 19% and production 81% that year.

The business as it developed in 1966 and continued in 1967, operated on or beyond the periphery of available technology, where ambitious tasks were assigned, and where failure in a portion of them was to be expected, and did not necessarily reflect discredit on the contractor. Even in the production stage of the business, the products were new, the producer’s inventions and not produced by others; if it appeared by hindsight they were put in production too soon, this was as likely the mistake of defendant or its prime contractors as of plaintiff. There was a situation of immediate war necessity where the inventions, if successful, met keenly felt wants. David Bushnell did not wait to perfect his submarine before he tried to torpedo the British Warship EAGLE in 1776. Hence, the trial judge properly disregards some evidence of defective performance.

[649]*649In renegotiation of the parent for 1967, the subsidiary was not consolidated, because consolidation was allowable but once when the companies had different fiscal years. The R&D work had risen to 26% of the total and production was 74%. The nonconsolidation of the subsidiary operated unfavorably to the contractor as the "value added” was correspondingly reduced. "Value added” is normally a necessary element under the factor "Character of Business” to justify as reasonable a substantial profit on a manufacturing operation. Butkin Precision Mfg. Corp. v. United States, 211 Ct. Cl. 110, 129, 544 F.2d 499, 509 (1976). D. C. Products, Inc. was renegotiated the same time as the parent. The record shows that plaintiff had requested "concurrent” renegotiation and the practical difference between that and the simultaneous renegotiation that occurred does not appear. The Board cleared the subsidiary and made the assessment above-stated against the parent.

Upon the publication of Renegotiation Staff Bulletin 25 in 1957 (not then published in F.R. or C.F.R.), the Board was committed to the proposition that renegotiation was intended to apply to affiliated or related contractors, in the absence of different and substantial minority interests, "on a collective group basis,” and that "the excessive profits of persons performing defense contracts should be determined with respect to the totality of their operations.” "Consolidation is merely a technique of convenience,” not a "means of producing different substantive results.” The same result should be generally reached if the members of the group are renegotiated separately but concurrently. This Bulletin was afterwards, in 1959, revised, and was published in the Federal Register, 34 F.R. 7436 in 1969, and is now part of the Code, 32 C.F.R. § 1499.2-18 (Rev. 1976). It is shortened and much of the above language is left out; however, loss offset was still allowed in concurrent renegotiation of related but unconsolidated companies. But concurrent renegotiation was limited to companies that could have consolidated. The original 1957 language is believed to state the intent of Congress correctly. See comment in Nichols, Equalizing Profit and Loss in Renegotiation, 45 Va.L.Rev. 41, 54 (1959). Thus, the unavailability of consolidation here should not have affected or controlled [650]*650the result. The best method of ascertaining how the case would have come out under consolidation is actually to construct consolidated figures as a check on the reasoning and the application of the statutory factors and not as a basis for the final determination. With unchallengeable propriety (though challenged by plaintiff nevertheless) defendant’s expert, Dean Edward M. Kaitz of the Georgetown School of Business Administration, and the trial judge, have both done this here. The reasons are unusually cogent: (1) the use by parent and subsidiary of the same plant, without segregation; (2) the use by the subsidiary of the parent’s inventions as the designs of its products; (3) the fact that the inter-company billings are controverted and shown to be more than predictably lacking in artistic verisimilitude; and (4) only by consolidating the review year can it be effectively compared with 1966.

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23 Cont. Cas. Fed. 81,511, 214 Ct. Cl. 643, 1977 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 74, 1977 WL 5318, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dynasciences-corp-v-united-states-cc-1977.