In the United States Court of Federal Claims
FREEALLIANCE.COM, LLC, et al., Nos. 24-cv-53, 24-cv-126 Plaintiffs, Filed Under Seal: October 11, 2024 v.
THE UNITED STATES, Publication: October 18, 2024 1 Defendant.
MEMORANDUM AND ORDER 2
This case arises out of the United States Department of Defense’s Defense Logistics
Agency’s (DLA or Agency) effort to procure technology services across the DLA IT Enterprise.
See Complaint, D&G Support Servs., LLC v. United States, Case No. 24-126 (ECF No. 1). This
is Plaintiff D&G Support Services, LLC’s (D&G) second attempt to lodge a bid protest in
conjunction with this procurement. Previously, D&G filed a pre-award bid protest after the DLA
had rejected its proposal at Phase 1 of the award evaluation process. See id. In considering D&G’s
prior protest, this Court agreed with D&G that the Agency’s initial evaluation of its proposal
contained several infirmities and accordingly remanded the case to the DLA to reevaluate the
1 This Memorandum and Order was filed under seal, in accordance with the Protective Order entered in this case (ECF No. 10) and was publicly reissued after incorporating all redactions proposed by the parties. (ECF No. 73). The sealed and public versions of this Memorandum and Order are otherwise identical, except for the publication date and this footnote. 2 Citations throughout this Order reference to the ECF-assigned page numbers, which do not always correspond to the pagination within the document. proposal. See Order, dated Aug. 8, 2024 (ECF No. 55) (Remand Order); Transcript, dated Aug.
8, 2024 (ECF No. 60) (Ruling) at 47:22–49:23. On Remand, the DLA reevaluated D&G’s
proposal, but despite the reevaluation, D&G’s proposal remained ineligible from proceeding to
Phase 2 of the evaluation. See Plaintiff D&G Support Services, LLC’s, Motion for Leave to File
an Amended Complaint (ECF No. 65) (Pl. Mot.) at 2–3; see also Joint Status Report, dated Aug.
23, 2024 (ECF No. 62) (Post-Remand Report) at 1. Plaintiff has stated its intent to challenge the
DLA’s reevaluation of its proposal, and accordingly seeks to file an amended complaint in support
of its anticipated follow-on protest. Amended Complaint (ECF No. 65-1) (Am. Compl.).
Pending before this Court is Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to File an Amended Complaint.
See Pl. Mot. D&G seeks to add two new counts (Counts I and II) and to modify two counts alleged
in its existing complaint (Counts III and IV). See Pl. Mot. at 3; see generally Am. Compl.
Defendant United States (Defendant or Government) opposes this Motion only with respect to
Counts I and II 3 on the grounds that Plaintiff’s proposed amendments: (i) were unduly delayed,
(ii) would be futile, and (iii) would prejudice Defendant. Def. Resp. at 8–15, 15−18, 18−19.
This Court has considered the parties’ briefs, arguments, and applicable law. For the
reasons explained below, Plaintiff’s Motion for Leave to File an Amended Complaint is
GRANTED.
BACKGROUND
I. The J6 Enterprise Technology Services Procurement
Between January 9 and January 31, 2024, D&G and seven other Plaintiffs filed directly-
related, pre-award bid protests against the United States regarding the DLA’s solicitation to
3 Defendant does not oppose D&G’s Motion with respect to Counts III and IV. See Defendant’s Response to Plaintiff’s Motion to Amend Complaint (ECF No. 68) (Def. Resp.) at 7 n.6.
2 procure technology services across the DLA IT Enterprise. 4 Consolidation Order at 3. The
Solicitation, known as the J6 Enterprise Technology Services or “JETS” 2.0 procurement, involved
two phases. Administrative Record (AR) at 3663–64, Harmonia Holdings Grp., LLC, et al. v.
United States, Case No. 24-31 (ECF No. 29). The Agency first evaluated offerors’ Phase 1
submissions. AR at 3663–64. Only those receiving an overall rating of “Acceptable” or higher
could advance to Phase 2 of the evaluation. Id. In the process of assigning an overall rating to
each proposal, the Agency assigned strengths, weaknesses, and substantial weaknesses to various
aspects of each proposal. See, e.g., id. at 37637–40, 37652, 43457–60. The Agency initially found
that each of the eight plaintiffs were ineligible to advance to Phase 2 of the evaluation. See
Unopposed Motion for Consolidation at 4, Harmonia Holdings Grp., LLC et al., Case No. 24–31
(ECF No. 20).
II. Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record
During the course of this litigation and after receiving the Administrative Record, six of
the eight plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed their cases. Three plaintiffs did so on their own accord, 5
two plaintiffs voluntarily dismissed after the Agency took corrective action and accepted their
proposals for consideration in Phase 2 of the evaluation, 6 and one plaintiff voluntarily dismissed
4 The Court consolidated each of the eight cases, designating Harmonia Holdings Grp., LLC, et al. v. United States, Case No. 24–31 (ECF No. 29) as the lead case. See Consolidation Order, dated Feb. 2, 2024 (ECF No. 21) (Consolidation Order) at 3–4. For reasons stated below, the Clerk of Court subsequently designated FreeAlliance.com, LLC as the lead case. See Minute Order, dated Mar. 19, 2024; infra at note 6. 5 Between February 28 and March 4, 2024, Maximus Federal Services, Inc., Storage Strategies, Inc., and Arch Systems, LLC filed respective Notices of Voluntary Dismissal without prejudice. See Notices of Voluntary Dismissal Without Prejudice, Harmonia Holdings Grp., LLC, et al., Case No. 24–31, (ECF Nos. 30, 31, 32). 6 On March 13, 2024, Defendant notified the Court of its decision to take corrective action regarding Plaintiffs Harmonia Holdings, LLC and RCHP, LLC. See Defendant’s Status Report
3 after the Agency reevaluated its proposal, but still concluded that the plaintiff was ineligible to
advance Phase 2. 7 Only Plaintiffs D&G and Chickasaw Service Solutions, LLC (CSS) remained
in the case. See Joint Stipulation of Dismissal of Case No. 24-53 (ECF No. 50).
Subsequently, D&G, CSS, and the Government filed motions for judgment on the
administrative record. See Defendant’s Cross-Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record
(ECF No. 35) (Defendant’s MJAR); CSS’s Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record
(ECF No. 27); D&G’s Motion for Judgment on the Administrative Record (ECF No. 29) (D&G’s
MJAR). On July 23, 2024, this Court conducted oral argument on the three pending MJARs. See
Transcript, dated July 23, 2024 (ECF No. 54) (MJAR Hearing Transcript). Due to the expedited
nature of this case, the parties consented to a ruling on the record, which this Court issued on
August 8, 2024. See Ruling at 4:22–25; Remand Order. While the Court granted in part
Defendant’s MJAR, dismissing two counts of both D&G’s 8 and CSS’s complaints, the Court also
Regarding Corrective Action (ECF No. 35) at 1. On March 19, 2024, Plaintiffs Harmonia Holdings Group, LLC and RCHP, LLC filed Notices of Voluntary Dismissal without prejudice. See Notices of Voluntary Dismissal Without Prejudice (ECF Nos. 37, 38). The Clerk of Court subsequently designated FreeAlliance.com, LLC as the lead case. See Minute Order, dated Mar. 19, 2024. 7 On June 4, 2024, Defendant notified the Court of its decision to take corrective action regarding Plaintiff Freealliance.com, LLC (FreeAlliance). See Defendant’s Notice of Corrective Action and Motion to Amend Briefing Schedule (ECF No. 40) at 1. However, after corrective action, FreeAlliance was still unable to move on to Phase 2. See Defendant’s Status Report Regarding Corrective Action and Notice Regarding Defendant’s Motion to Amend the Administrative Record (ECF No. 45). Fifteen days later, FreeAlliance voluntarily dismissed its case. See Joint Stipulation of Dismissal of Case No. 24–53 (ECF No. 50). 8 The Court dismissed Count I and II of D&G’s complaint. See Ruling at 48:2–6; Remand Order at 1. Count I of D&G’s complaint alleged that the Agency had applied unstated evaluation criteria because it did not inform offerors that they needed to include an approach in their proposal for each of the lower tier subtasks. See D&G Support Services, LLC v. USA Amended Complaint, Case No. 24–126, Complaint (ECF No. 1) ¶¶65–105; D&G MJAR at 4–7. Count II of D&G’s complaint alleged that the Solicitation was latently ambiguous because, inter alia, it failed to put
4 ruled in favor of CSS and D&G on some of their remaining claims. See Ruling at 48:2–6, 8–18.
The Court remanded the case to the Agency for reevaluation, holding that two of the alleged
infirmities in the Agency’s evaluation of D&G’s and CSS’s proposals required reevaluation by the
Agency. Id. at 35:9–15. Specifically, the Court found that the Agency: (1) failed to properly
document its rationale for differentiating weaknesses and significant weaknesses because the
Agency applied the wrong standard under FAR 15.001, and (2) failed to properly document its
rationale for assigning D&G and CSS an overall rating of “Marginal.” Id. at 36:12–19; see also
Remand Order at 1–2.
III. Reevaluation of Proposals
On remand, the DLA reevaluated both D&G’s and CSS’s proposals. See Post-Remand
Report at 1. D&G’s and CSS’s overall ratings remained unchanged. Both received a rating of
“Marginal” and remained ineligible for consideration in Phase 2. See AR at 47837–38, 47869–
70. 9
The Agency assigned D&G the same weaknesses and significant weaknesses in the
reevaluation, this time correctly applying the FAR 15.001 standard. See, e.g., AR at 47873–74.
The Agency further complied with this Court’s Ruling by offering a rationale for assigning D&G
an overall rating of “Marginal.” See AR at 47869–70; see also Ruling at 49:2–4; Remand Order
at 1–2.
offerors on notice that they must address subcomponents of subtasks. Id. at ¶¶106–134; D&G MJAR at 7–9. 9 Defendant moved unopposed to amend the Administrative Record to include the DLA’s reevaluation. See Defendant’s Motion to Amend the Administrative Record (ECF No. 63); see also Minute Order granting Defendant’s unopposed Motion to Amend the Administrative Record, dated Aug. 29, 2024; Notice of Filing Amendment to the Administrative Record (ECF No. 66-1).
5 The Government supplied D&G and CSS with the results of the Agency’s reevaluation on
August 20, 2024. See Post-Remand Report at 1. D&G informed the Government that it believed
further proceedings were necessary and that it would file a motion to amend its complaint. Id.
CSS, on the other hand, decided to dismiss its case, leaving D&G as the sole remaining plaintiff.
See Joint Stipulation of Dismissal of Case No. 24-cv-94 (ECF No. 64).
IV. Motion for Leave to File an Amended Complaint
On August 30, 2024, just 10 days after receiving the results of the Agency’s reevaluation,
D&G filed the present Motion for Leave to File an Amended Complaint, attaching its proposed
amended complaint to its Motion. See Pl. Mot; Am. Compl. D&G seeks to add two new counts
(Counts I and II) to its complaint and to modify the two remaining counts of its original complaint
(Counts III and IV). See Pl. Mot. at 3; see generally Am. Compl. ¶¶ 78–96, 97–113, 114–478,
479–489. Defendant does not oppose D&G’s proposed amendments to Counts III and IV. Def.
Resp. at 7 n.6.
In Count I, D&G alleges that the DLA applied an unstated evaluation criterion in its
reevaluation. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 78–96. Specifically, D&G contends that two sentences in the
Agency’s reevaluation demonstrate that the Agency applied an unstated evaluation criterion in
assigning D&G a “Marginal” overall rating:
.” AR at 47870; see also Pl. Mot. at 3.
D&G submits that these two sentences reveal that the Agency applied an “unstated standard in
evaluating D&G’s proposal that demanded strengths to outweigh weaknesses and significant
weaknesses.” Am. Compl. ¶¶ 85–91; see also Pl. Mot. at 3.
6 Count II of D&G’s proposed amended complaint alleges a disparate treatment claim. Am.
Compl. ¶¶ 97−113. Specifically, D&G contends that the Agency only applied the alleged unstated
criterion described in Count I to D&G’s proposal, but not to other offerors’ proposals. See id.; Pl.
Mot. at 3; Plaintiff’s Reply to Defendant’s Response to Plaintiff’s Motion to Amend Complaint
(ECF No. 69) (Reply) at 7.
On September 13, 2024, Defendant filed its Response in opposition to D&G’s Motion to
Amend with respect to Counts I and II of the proposed amended complaint. Def. Resp. at 7 & n.6.
Defendant argues this Court should not grant D&G leave to amend Counts I and II because the
proposed amendments: (1) were unduly delayed, (2) would be futile, and (3) would prejudice
Defendant. Id. at 8–15, 15−18, 18−19. On September 20, 2024, D&G filed its Reply in support
of its Motion, and accordingly the Motion is now ripe for adjudication. See Reply.
APPLICABLE LEGAL STANDARDS
Rule 15 of the Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims (Rule(s)) permits a
party to amend its pleadings “with the opposing party’s written consent or the court’s leave,” and
further states that the court should “freely give leave when justice so requires.” Rule 15(a)(2). It
is well-established that the grant or denial of an opportunity to amend pleadings is “within the
discretion of the trial court.” Datascope Corp. v. SMEC, Inc., 962 F.2d 1043, 1045 (Fed. Cir.
1992) (citing Zenith Radio Corp. v. Hazeltine Rsch, Inc., 401 U.S. 321, 330 (1971)). A court will
ordinarily grant such leave absent “undue delay, bad faith or dilatory motive on the part of the
movant, repeated failure to cure deficiencies . . . , undue prejudice to the opposing party . . . , or
futility of amendment[.]” Mitsui Foods, Inc. v. United States, 867 F.2d 1401, 1403–04 (Fed. Cir.
1989) (quoting Foman v. Davis, 371 U.S. 178, 182 (1962)).
7 DISCUSSION
As explained below, none of the reasons to deny leave to amend are present here,
especially as the proposed amended complaint seeks to address a new decision by the Agency,
issued on remand, that excludes D&G from further consideration for the procurement award.
First, D&G’s proposed amended claims are not unduly delayed, because D&G seeks to lodge
such claims in response to the Agency’s stated rationale in its court-ordered reevaluation of
D&G’s proposal. Indeed, D&G sought to file its proposed amended complaint within days of
receiving the Agency’s reevaluation results. Second, the proposed amendment would not be
futile as D&G’s proposed amended claims are plausible. Finally, the proposed amendment
would not prejudice Defendant as such an amendment will not delay resolution of this case or the
procurement as a whole.
I. D&G’s Proposed Amended Claims are Not Unduly Delayed
Defendant argues that both Counts I and II of Plaintiff’s proposed amended complaint are
unduly delayed because they “do not turn on the new. . . text in [the] agency’s reevaluation
decision” and could have been made based on the original Administrative Record, filed in
February 2024. Def. Resp. at 16–17. Plaintiff aptly notes that it could not have lodged these
claims any earlier because both counts relate to purported unstated criterion that first appeared in
the Agency’s reevaluation. Reply at 8–9.
After a review of the record and briefing in this action, it is apparent that D&G did not
act with undue delay in moving to amend its complaint. “Although delay itself is an insufficient
ground to deny amendment, if the delay is ‘undue’ [a] court may refuse to permit amendment.”
Datascope Corp., 962 F.2d at 1045 (quoting Foman, 371 U.S. at 182). Delay can be “undue”
when the party amending its pleading knew, or should have known, the factual basis for its claim
8 for an extended period before seeking to amend. See id. at 1045 (plaintiff’s delay in seeking to
amend its complaint was undue because plaintiff “was, or should have been, aware” of the factual
basis for its claim “long before” it sought to amend). Critical to a finding of undue delay is that
the party seeking to amend had prior access to the relevant information that underlies the
proposed, new amendment. See Te-Moak Bands of W. Shoshone Indians of Nevada v. United
States, 948 F.2d 1258, 1263 (Fed. Cir. 1991) (proposed amendment unduly delayed where
plaintiffs seeking to amend knew of information foundational to their proposed amendment for
eight years before they sought to amend).
In contrast, a party has not unduly delayed if it moved to amend shortly after the facts
giving rise to the claim were first capable of being discovered. See, e.g., Hanover Ins. Co. v.
United States, 134 Fed. Cl. 51, 61 (2017) (holding delay was not undue where the moving party
could not have discovered the factual basis of its claim any earlier); see also Square One
Armoring Servs. Co. v. United States, 152 Fed. Cl. 536, 552 (2021) (citing Hanover Ins., 134
Fed. Cl. at 61) (“[W]here new information is discovered during the course of discovery, courts
routinely have permitted amendments even where the moving party had previous general
knowledge of the basis of the proposed amendments.”). Accordingly, the inquiry turns on
whether D&G could or should have known of the facts giving rise to Count I and II of its proposed
amended complaint when Defendant filed the original Administrative Record.
A. Count I
As noted, D&G’s proposed Count I alleges that the Agency applied an unstated criterion
in its reevaluation of D&G’s proposal on remand. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 78–96. Specifically, D&G
contends that, in its reevaluation, the Agency required D&G’s strengths to outweigh its
weaknesses to achieve an overall rating of “Acceptable.” See Am. Compl. ¶ 91. According to
9 the proposed amended complaint, this allegation rests on just two sentences that appeared for the
first time in the Agency’s reevaluation which stated that “
” AR at 47870; Am. Compl. ¶¶
78–96. D&G argues that because these sentences appeared for the first time in the reevaluation,
D&G could not have lodged this unstated criteria claim earlier. Reply at 8–9.
In response, Defendant first argues that D&G could have challenged the way in which the
Agency determined D&G’s overall rating after receiving the Agency’s initial evaluation because
both the initial evaluation and the reevaluation were allegedly conducted in the same way—
reviewing each proposal’s strengths and weaknesses holistically. See Def. Resp. at 16–17.
Second, Defendant argues that D&G could have brought its challenge earlier because D&G knew
before the reevaluation that strengths were an important consideration to an offeror’s overall
rating. See id. at 17.
D&G is correct that the specific allegation in Count I of its proposed amended complaint
could not have been made prior to the Agency’s reevaluation because the initial evaluation made
no mention of this alleged criterion. See AR at 47838; Ruling at 43:8–9. The Administrative
Record filed in February 2024 is simply devoid of any indication that could be used even to infer
that the Agency employed such an alleged unstated evaluation criterion; indeed, the Agency
provided no reasoning whatsoever in its original evaluation for D&G’s “Marginal” rating. See
AR at 37645; Ruling at 42:20–43:1 (“[I]t is evident from the record that the Agency failed to
provide any explanation whatsoever for how Plaintiffs’ proposals equated to an overall rating of
Marginal besides the Agency simply listing the Marginal rating . . . . The rest of the page is
simply blank, without any explanation.”). The sole evidence of this alleged unstated criterion to
10 which D&G points are two sentences that appeared only in the reevaluation. See Am. Compl. ¶¶
83–96. Therefore, nothing in the initial evaluation could have alerted D&G to such a rationale.
See Hanover Ins., 134 Fed. Cl. at 61; see also Te-Moak, 948 F.2d at 1263.
Further, both of Defendant’s arguments are unavailing because they mischaracterize
D&G’s proposed amended claim. Compare Def. Resp. at 16–17, with Am. Compl. ¶¶ 83–96.
According to its proposed amended complaint, D&G specifically claims that upon reevaluation
the Agency required D&G’s strengths to outweigh its weaknesses to move past Phase 1 and that
D&G only learned of that unstated criterion after the reevaluation. See Am. Compl. ¶¶ 89–96.
Instead of countering this more specific argument, Defendant contends that D&G is wrong on the
merits – namely that no unstated evaluation criterion exists – and advances its arguments based
on that assumption. However, the merits are not presently at issue 10 and Defendant has failed to
demonstrate that D&G could have brought its unstated evaluation claim earlier in the case.
Accordingly, D&G did not unduly delay in asserting Count I of its proposed amended
complaint.
B. Count II
In Count II of its proposed amended complaint, D&G alleges that the Agency treated it
unequally because the unstated criterion alleged in Count I was applied to D&G, but not to other
successful offerors. Am. Compl. ¶¶ 97−113. D&G’s proposed amended complaint cites examples
of other offerors that it contends were assigned an overall rating of “Acceptable,” even though
they – like D&G – were purportedly assigned numerous and substantial weaknesses without
offsetting strengths. See id. D&G claims that these other offerors provide evidence that the
10 The Court notes that it makes no ruling on the merits of the underlying claims. The parties will advance such arguments in their upcoming, respective motions for judgment on the administrative record.
11 Agency “applied the stated rationale in the reevaluation that there must be strengths to outweigh
weaknesses to D&G’s proposal alone.” Reply at 7.
Defendant argues that D&G’s Count II is untimely because D&G could have compared its
ratings with other successful offerors with a similar configuration of strengths and weaknesses
when Defendants initially filed the Administrative Record. Def. Resp. at 18. However, it is
evident from the record that D&G could not have brought this specific claim months ago.
D&G does not simply claim that its proposal contained a similar configuration of strengths
and weaknesses to other successful offerors, and thus was treated unequally. If that were true, this
Court would likely agree that the claim would be untimely because such information was disclosed
in the original Administrative Record. Instead, D&G focuses on the purported unstated criterion
used in the Agency’s reevaluation as described in its proposed Count I to allege that the Agency
applied that specific unstated criterion to D&G, but not to other offerors. See Am. Compl. ¶ 109
(“The Agency engaged in disparate treatment when it assigned D&G a ‘Marginal’ overall rating
for not having strengths to offset the weaknesses and significant weaknesses but did not hold the
numerous other offerors outlined above to the same standard.”); Reply at 7 (claiming that an
analysis of other offerors “support[s] a claim of disparate treatment because the Agency only
applied the stated rationale in the reevaluation that there must be strengths to outweigh weaknesses
to D&G’s proposal alone”). Both of D&G’s proposed Counts I and II are narrow in scope and
derive solely from the sentences at issue in the August 2024 reevaluation. As discussed above,
such a claim could only have been brought once D&G knew of the alleged unstated criterion, and
D&G’s proposed amended complaint, supported by the record, notes that it was unaware of this
purported unstated criterion until the Agency produced its August 2024 reevaluation. See supra
Discussion Section I.A. Thus, it was not possible prior to the reevaluation for D&G to earlier raise
12 this disparate treatment allegation, or the unstated evaluation criteria claim on which it relies. See
AR at 47870.
Accordingly, as Counts I and II of D&G’s proposed amended complaint could not have
been alleged prior to the Agency’s court-ordered reevaluation of D&G’s proposal, Plaintiff did
not unduly delay amending its complaint with proposed Counts I and II.
II. D&G’s Proposed Amended Claims are Not Futile
Defendant contends that both Counts I and II of the proposed complaint would be futile
because they “find no support in the administrative record.” Def. Resp. at 8. D&G responds that
both Counts I and II adequately state a claim. Reply at 4.
D&G’s proposed amended claims are not futile. “When a party faces the possibility of
being denied leave to amend on the ground of futility, that party must demonstrate that its
pleading states a claim on which relief could be granted, and it must proffer sufficient facts
supporting the amended pleading that the claim could survive a dispositive pretrial motion.”
Kemin Foods, L.C. v. Pigmentos Vegetales Del Centro S.A. de C.V., 464 F.3d 1339, 1354–55
(Fed. Cir. 2006) (citations omitted). 11 In other words, “for purposes of reviewing [the moving
11 This Court joins other judges on the Courts of Federal Claims in noting that Kemin Foods involved a patent dispute heard by the Federal Circuit. See Smith v. United States, 120 Fed. Cl. 455, 458 n.4 (2015); Savantage Fin. Servs., Inc. v. United States, 119 Fed. Cl. 246, 252 n.3 (2014). When the Federal Circuit decides an issue in a patent case that does not involve patent law, it typically applies the law of the circuit in which the patent case arose. See Microsoft Corp. v. GeoTag, Inc., 817 F.3d 1305, 1310–11 (Fed. Cir. 2016). In Kemin Foods, the futility standard was not a patent issue and thus the Federal Circuit applied Eighth Circuit law to determine the standard. 464 F.3d at 1354–55. While such rulings by the Federal Circuit are not binding on this Court because they are not considered to be the law of the Federal Circuit, they can be instructive in nature. United Med. Supply Co. v. United States, 77 Fed. Cl. 257, 265 (2007).
Some decisions by other judges on this Court have suggested a more lenient standard applies: an amendment is futile only when a court finds it “facially meritless and frivolous.” St. Paul Fire & Marine Ins. Co. v. United States, 31 Fed. Cl. 151, 155 (1994) (citing Alaska v. United States, 15 Cl. Ct. 276, 280 (1988)); accord California by & through Yee v. United States, 145 Fed. Cl. 802,
13 party’s] motion for leave to amend . . . the salient inquiry is not whether [the moving party] is
likely to prevail on the merits, but whether the claim added by the amendment would not
withstand a motion to dismiss.” Square One Armoring Servs. Co., 152 Fed. Cl. at 545 (quoting
LW Constr. of Charleston, LLC v. United States, 139 Fed. Cl. 254, 284 (2018)). To withstand a
motion to dismiss, a plaintiff’s proposed claim and supporting factual allegations must at least
“plausibly give rise to an entitlement to relief.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 556 U.S. 662, 679 (2009).
As noted, D&G’s first proposed count alleges the Agency applied an unstated criterion
during its evaluation of D&G’s proposal on remand. See supra Discussion Section I.A.
Defendant contends that D&G’s proposed Count I is futile because the Agency did not in fact
apply the alleged unstated criterion. See Def. Resp. at 11 (“D&G’s contention fails because DLA
did not require offerors offset weaknesses with strengths to be rated at least Acceptable.”); id. at
13 (“The administrative record does not support D&G’s argument that DLA applied unstated
evaluation criteria.”). In sum, Defendant makes a merits argument – not a Rule 12(b) argument.
In determining whether D&G’s claim is futile, this Court’s task is not to assess whether
the Agency in fact applied an unstated criterion in giving D&G’s proposal a “Marginal” rating.
Rather, this Court’s inquiry is limited to whether D&G plausibly alleged that the Agency applied
such an unstated criterion. See Square One Armoring Servs. Co., 152 Fed. Cl. at 545; Iqbal, 556
U.S. at 679. “[F]or a plaintiff to succeed on a claim of undisclosed evaluation criteria, it must
show that the procuring agency used a ‘significantly different basis in evaluating the proposals
811–12 (2019); Katzin v. United States, 115 Fed. Cl. 618, 622 (2014); Delpin Aponte v. United States, 83 Fed. Cl. 80, 91 (2008); Browder v. United States, 79 Fed. Cl. 178, 181 (2007). As D&G’s proposed amended pleading satisfies the more exacting Kemin Foods standard this Court need not choose between the two approaches.
14 than was disclosed’ in the solicitation.’” Poplar Point RBBR, LLC v. United States, 147 Fed. Cl.
201, 219 (2020) (alteration in original) (quoting PlanetSpace, Inc. v. United States, 92 Fed. Cl.
520, 536–37 (2010)). Here, as noted below, D&G plausibly alleges that the Agency used a
significantly different basis in evaluating the proposals than was disclosed in the Solicitation. See
Am. Compl. ¶¶ 78–96.
Defendant advances merits arguments in support of its position, arguing that the Agency
did comply with the correct basis for evaluating proposals as disclosed in the Solicitation and did
not apply an unstated criterion. See Def. Resp. at 11–13. Specifically, Defendant contends that
the Agency evaluated the proposal holistically, favoring strengths and disfavoring weaknesses,
before assigning an overall rating. Id. Defendant further submits that it did not require offerors
to offset weaknesses with strengths to be rated at least “Acceptable.” Id. That may be true, but
the Agency also stated in the reevaluation that “
” AR at 47870. Standing alone, these
statements can be plausibly read to suggest that the Agency required offerors to offset weaknesses
with strengths to be rated at least “Acceptable.” If true on the merits, it could reflect that the
Agency used a “significantly different basis” in evaluating the proposals than was disclosed in
the solicitation, and supporting D&G’s contention that it plausibly alleges an unstated criteria
claim. See Poplar Point RBBR, LLC, 147 Fed. Cl. at 219. To be clear, the Court does not
conclude that D&G’s proposed claims are meritorious. Indeed, while Defendant’s merits
arguments may prevail on a motion for judgment on the administrative record (a trial on the
papers in this Court), that is not the appropriate standard for determining whether this proposed
amended claim can withstand a futility challenge. See Bannum, Inc. v. United States, 404 F.3d
15 1346, 1356 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (“[J]udgment on an administrative record is properly understood as
intending to provide for an expedited trial on the record.”). The Court merely concludes here that
D&G’s proposed amended complaint plausibly alleges that Defendant applied an unstated
evaluation criterion. Defendant’s contention that amending the complaint to include Count I
would be futile is therefore unavailing.
To support its argument that Count II is futile, Defendant advances the same merits
arguments that it did for Count I. Defendant contends that D&G effectively manufactured the
purported unstated evaluation criterion, that D&G’s allegation of disparate treatment has no basis
in the Administrative Record, and therefore D&G’s disparate treatment claim must be rejected as
futile. See Def. Resp. at 15 (“[T]he evaluation standard D&G purports the agency disparately
applied is not ‘objective,’ but fictional.”); id. (“Because D&G cannot show DLA inconsistently
evaluated offerors according to an objective standard, it’s proposed Count II would be futile.”).
For a plaintiff to succeed on a disparate treatment claim, it must demonstrate that “the
agency inconsistently applied objective solicitation requirements between it and other offerors.”
Off. Design Grp. v. United States, 951 F.3d 1366, 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2020). As stated above, D&G
plausibly alleges that the Agency applied an unstated evaluation criterion by requiring D&G to
offset weaknesses with strengths to be rated at least “Acceptable.” See supra Discussion Section
II.A. Thus, Defendant’s argument that D&G cannot identify an “objective” unstated criterion is
unavailing. See Def. Resp. at 15.
Additionally, D&G cites to the Administrative Record to support its contention that the
Agency treated at least some offerors’ proposals differently than D&G’s proposal with regard to
this purported unstated evaluation criterion. Am. Compl. at ¶¶ 102–08 (citing AR at 38544–57,
16 38780–93, 39039–50, 39450–62, 40141–54, 40582–95) (select citations omitted). Specifically,
D&G cites proposals by other offerors whose rated strengths did not allegedly outweigh their
weaknesses but nonetheless received an overall rating of “Acceptable.” Id. For example, D&G
identified a proposal that had
Id. at ¶ 103 (citing AR at 38544–57). At least by this example, D&G
plausibly alleges that the “the agency inconsistently applied objective solicitation requirements
between it and other offerors” and accordingly D&G’s proposed amendment is not futile. Off.
Design Grp., 951 F.3d at 1372. Today’s ruling merely confirms that D&G has made a plausible
allegation of disparate treatment in its proposed amended complaint sufficient to defeat a futility
challenge. Again, the Court makes no merits decision here.
III. The Proposed Amended Complaint Would Not Prejudice Defendant
Permitting D&G to file its proposed amended complaint will not prejudice Defendant.
When deciding to grant leave to amend “[o]ne major factor which the trial court should take into
account is the possibility of prejudice to the adverse party.” Tenneco Resins, Inc. v. Reeves Bros.,
752 F.2d 630, 634 (Fed. Cir. 1985). To successfully assert undue prejudice as a justification for
denying leave to amend, “the non-movant must demonstrate that one of the following
circumstances will result: severe disadvantage or inability to present facts or evidence; necessity
of conducting extensive research shortly before trial due to the introduction of new evidence or
legal theories; or excessive delay that is unduly burdensome.” Square One Armoring Servs. Co.,
152 Fed. Cl. at 549–50 (emphasis omitted) (quoting St. Paul Fire, 31 Fed. Cl. at 153 (1994)).
17 Further, “[m]ere annoyance and inconvenience . . . are insufficient bases to warrant a denial of a
motion to amend.” Id. at 550.
Defendant contends the proposed amendments will cause it prejudice due to “the delay
associated with resolving the new matters.” Def. Resp. at 19. This argument is unavailing for
multiple reasons. First, even if this Court did not grant D&G leave to amend its complaint with
newly asserted Counts I and II, Defendant does not oppose proceeding with Counts III and IV of
D&G’s proposed amended complaint. See Def. Resp. at 7 n.6. While Defendant hints that this
action may take longer to resolve if this Court grants D&G’s Motion for Leave to Amend,
Defendant provides no reasons for why this must be true. See Def. Resp. at 19. To start, Count
III of D&G’s proposed amended complaint reflects several changes, so additional briefing on this
new claim would be necessary regardless of whether the Court grants Plaintiff leave to amend
Counts I and II. Further, proposed Counts I and II are not uniquely complicated claims that will
slow further proceedings. This Court has faith that both parties can supply quality briefing in a
condensed timeframe if necessary.
Second, it is unclear that Defendant will suffer any prejudice while this case proceeds. The
procurement in this case has two evaluation phases, and Defendant has voluntarily stayed aspects
of Phase 2; the current stay is not due to a court-ordered injunction. See Defendant’s Notice
Regarding Remand (ECF No. 56) at 2; Ruling at 45:12–13. Indeed, all parties agreed that a
wholistic injunction of the procurement was unnecessary. Ruling at 44:5–7; MJAR Hearing
Transcript at 83:14–84:6 (Defendant’s indication that it would be unnecessary to stop the whole
procurement during reevaluation of D&G’s proposal).
18 Accordingly, as Defendant cannot demonstrate that inclusion of Counts I and II in D&G’s
proposed amended complaint will prejudice it, there is no basis for this Court to deny D&G leave
to amend on this basis as well.
CONCLUSION
For the reasons stated, D&G’s Motion for Leave to File an Amended Complaint (ECF
No. 65) is GRANTED. D&G shall FILE its Amended Complaint by October 16, 2024. The
parties are directed to CONFER and FILE a Notice attaching a proposed public version of this
Sealed Memorandum and Order, with any competition-sensitive or otherwise protected
information redacted, by October 18, 2024. Additionally, the parties are directed to CONFER
and FILE a Joint Status Report proposing a schedule for future proceedings by October 18,
2024.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Eleni M. Roumel ELENI M. ROUMEL Judge
October 11, 2024 Washington, D.C.