Gemini Electronics, Inc. v. United States

65 Fed. Cl. 55, 2005 U.S. Claims LEXIS 95, 2005 WL 834635
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedApril 8, 2005
DocketNo. 04-166C
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 65 Fed. Cl. 55 (Gemini Electronics, Inc. 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
Gemini Electronics, Inc. v. United States, 65 Fed. Cl. 55, 2005 U.S. Claims LEXIS 95, 2005 WL 834635 (uscfc 2005).

Opinion

OPINION

HORN, Judge.

This ease arises from a 1999 “Public Telecommunications Service Agreement” (the Agreement) between the plaintiff, Gemini Electronics, Inc. (Gemini) and the United States Postal Service (USPS) to install and maintain pay telephones in USPS facilities. The plaintiff, Gemini, argues that the USPS breached the Agreement by not permitting Gemini to install pay telephones in USPS facilities outside of the USPS Chicago District, a geographic region that includes the City of Chicago and certain surrounding areas. The defendant claims that the Agreement with Gemini was limited only to the USPS Chicago District.

FINDINGS OF FACT

This case was originally filed in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Illinois and was transferred to this court. Initially, the plaintiffs complaint in this court was dismissed, without prejudice, because the plaintiff had failed to submit its claim to the contracting officer before filing suit. See 41 U.S.C. § 605(a) (2000) (“All claims by a contractor against the government relating to a contract shall be in writing and shall be submitted to the contracting officer for a decision.”). The plaintiff subsequently submitted its claim to the USPS contracting officer. The USPS contracting officer denied plaintiffs claim, whereupon the plaintiff filed a second amended complaint in this court. A trial was held in Chicago, Illinois.

In 1992, the USPS executed an Agreement with Illinois Bell Telephone Company, subsequently Ameritech, for the installation and maintenance of pay telephones in USPS facilities throughout the State of Illinois, including the Northern, Central and Southern Illinois USPS Districts. Attached to the 1992 Agreement with Ameritech was an “Exhibit A — Rider Illinois,” which listed pay telephones to be installed in USPS facilities throughout the State of Illinois, including the Northern, Central, and Southern Illinois Districts. The Ameritech Agreement expired on September 30, 2000.

In 1999, the USPS, specifically, the Chicago District, which at the time covered the City of Chicago and a limited, defined geographic region of the surrounding area, solicited bids for pay telephone services for certain USPS facilities. The USPS received responses to its solicitations from three providers, Ameritech, Gemini, and MCI. After presentations by two of the bidders, Ameri-tech and Gemini, the USPS ultimately awarded Gemini the Agreement to install and maintain pay telephones in the USPS facili[58]*58ties. The terms of this Agreement are the subject of the present suit.

At the trial, Willie Wilson, the President and Chief Executive Officer of Gemini, testified that the idea for Gemini to bid for pay telephone services with the USPS derived from conversations between himself, Chicago Congressman Danny Davis and Rufus Porter, the District Manager and Postmaster of the USPS Chicago District, as well as an employee of Mr. Wilson and several ministers, regarding minority participation in federal contracts and community outreach through Gemini’s involvement. Conversations also occurred between Mr. Wilson, Mr. Porter and J.T. Weeker, the former Vice President of the USPS Great Lakes Region, who was Mr. Porter’s immediate supervisor. Mr. Wilson stated that he intended for the profits from the Agreement to go to local churches. In furtherance of the Agreement’s public purpose, after Gemini won the Agreement, and before it actually entered into the Agreement with the USPS, a celebratory, mock signing ceremony of the Agreement was held at Chicago’s Navy Pier on September 27, 1999. According to Mr. Wilson, among those present during the mock singing were Willie Wilson, Congressman Danny Davis, Congressman Bobby Rush, Rufus Porter and J.T. Weeker, among others.

After the USPS had solicited bids for pay telephone services, and before Gemini bid on the Agreement, Gemini requested, and the USPS provided, information on the facilities where the new pay telephones could be installed. The parties disagree as to the specific information provided to the bidders with respect to the facilities to be included in the Agreement. Phyllis Flynn was a USPS Information Technology Specialist for the Chicago District when the USPS solicited the telephone Agreement. At the trial, Ms. Flynn testified that she provided all bidders with information on the solicitation and the Agreement, and that the information she provided included locations only within the Chicago District.

Mr. Wilson, however, stated that he remembered reviewing the information provided by Ms. Flynn, and testified in court that the information included locations inside and outside the Chicago District. According to Mr. Wilson, “Mr. Weeks [sic] said we would be covering all of his area, which was the Chicago area, O’Hare, the Northern District and Central Illinois.” Additionally, at one point before the Agreement was executed, Rufus Porter assigned Wiley Barnes, of his staff, to provide Gemini a tour of the areas in which Gemini was to install its telephones. According to Mr. Wilson, during this tour, Mr. Barnes brought personnel from Gemini to USPS facilities in the Chicago District, as well as in the Central Illinois District. During the trial, Mr. Wilson also testified that when preparing his bid, he referred to and relied upon the Ameritech Agreement and the “Exhibit A — -Rider Illinois” list of locations attached to the Ameritech Agreement, which included areas outside of the Chicago District.

Before the Agreement with the USPS was executed, Gemini provided a draft of the Agreement to Maria Fuhrmann, now Maria Infanger, an attorney for the USPS’s Law Department in Chicago, Illinois, for review and comments. On October 13 and 14, 1999, Ms. Infanger provided her written comments regarding Gemini’s draft Agreement to counsel for Gemini. Ms. Infanger also was the attorney for the USPS who was present when the USPS and Gemini signed the Agreement.

The Agreement between the USPS and Gemini was signed on October 21, 1999, by Rufus Porter, on behalf of the USPS, and Willie Wilson, on behalf of Gemini.1 Present at the signing of the Agreement on October 21, 1999, were Rufus Porter, Willie Wilson, Maria Infanger, Phyllis Flynn and several Gemini employees. The Agreement provided for a five-year term and gave Gemini the right to install and maintain public telephones in certain USPS facilities. According to the Agreement, Gemini would pay the [59]*59USPS a commission of 25 percent of the telecommunications revenue received by Gemini from the pay telephones.

Most of the language and terms set forth in the Agreement between Gemini and the USPS are not in dispute, with the exception of one key disagreement-the precise locations where Gemini was to be permitted to install its telephones. The signed Agreement between the USPS and Gemini, references an Exhibit A. Specifically, Section 6 of the Agreement between Gemini and the USPS states, in relevant part that:

6. Premises. The Premises are described as the following locations that are owned, managed, leased, or operated by USPS and that are subject to this agreement:

See attached Exhibit A.

A dispute exists as to which Exhibit A, if any, was attached to the Agreement when it was executed by the parties, and as to whether the Exhibit A attached, or intended to be attached, to the Agreement included USPS facilities outside of the Chicago District. Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
65 Fed. Cl. 55, 2005 U.S. Claims LEXIS 95, 2005 WL 834635, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gemini-electronics-inc-v-united-states-uscfc-2005.