Heyer Products Company v. United States

177 F. Supp. 251, 147 Ct. Cl. 256, 1959 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 119
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedOctober 7, 1959
Docket96-55
StatusPublished
Cited by35 cases

This text of 177 F. Supp. 251 (Heyer Products Company 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
Heyer Products Company v. United States, 177 F. Supp. 251, 147 Ct. Cl. 256, 1959 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 119 (cc 1959).

Opinion

*252 WHITAKER, Judge.

Plaintiff’s petition alleges that the defendant, through the Ordnance Tank Automotive Center, Ordnance Corps, Department of the Army, issued an invitation to it and to others to bid on 5,500 low voltage circuit testers; that it put in a bid of $205,975, which it says was the low bid, but that the contract was awarded to the Weidenhoff Company, whose bid was $190,043 higher. Under these facts, it alleges that it had a legal right to an award of the contract, and, hence, it is entitled to recover the expense it incurred in putting in its bid and its loss of profit.

Before going further, let us say that the only question with which we are confronted, of course, is whether or not plaintiff’s rights have been violated, not whether or not the award of this contract was in the public interest. Even should we think the expenditure of the Government’s money was wasteful and that proper care was not taken to protect the public treasury- — upon which we express no opinion — that is beside the point in this case. Unless we find that plaintiff has been deprived of some right, it cannot recover, however improvident the Government’s agents may have been.

In our former opinion on defendant’s motion to dismiss, delivered on May 1, 1956, 140 F.Supp. 409, 135 Ct.Cl. 63, we held that plaintiff’s petition contained sufficient allegations to make out a case of discrimination against it and of favoritism toward the successful bidder, and that, if the allegations were true, it would be impossible to conclude that that bid had been accepted which was most advantageous to the Government, as required by the Armed Services Procurement Act of 1947 (62 Stat. 21). 1 Nevertheless, we said that that act afforded plaintiff no basis for recovery of his loss of profits, because it was passed for the benefit of the Government, and not for the benefit of the bidder.

We add that plaintiff cannot recover its loss of profits on a contract implied in law, because Congress has not consented to suits on such quasi-contracts.

However, we said that by the solicitation for bids, the Government impliedly promised that it would give honest and fair consideration to all bids received and would not reject any one of them arbitrarily or capriciously, but would award the contract to that bidder whose bid in its honest judgment was most advantageous to the Government. If in the instant case the OTAC, in rejecting plaintiff’s bid, did not act in good faith, but arbitrarily and capriciously, it breached its implied promise when it solicited bids, for the breach of which plaintiff may recover the expenses it had incurred in submitting its bid.

So the question before us is, was plaintiff’s bid rejected in good faith or arbitrarily or capriciously? If its rejection was not fraudulent nor arbitrary nor capricious nor so unreasonable as to necessarily imply bad faith, plaintiff has established no right of recovery.

Defendant says it was rejected because the sample plaintiff submitted did not comply with the specifications. The invitation for bids provided:

“Bid sample must be furnished for test and evaluation.
* ■X’
“(c) Item being furnished as same must conform in every respect to the item the facility intends supplying to meet the Government requirements.
“(d) Any sample failing in any portion of tests will be deemed sufficient basis for rejection.”

It cannot be denied that plaintiff was a responsible contractor who had been in the business of manufacturing automotive test equipment for 25 years, and had manufactured thousands of low voltage circuit testers both for the Government and for such manufacturers as General Motors, Ford, Chrysler, Standard Oil, and others. This being so, if the *253 sample it was required to submit with its bid complied with the specifications, there would seem to be no justification for rejecting its bid and awarding the contract to Weidenhoif, whose bid was almost twice that of plaintiff’s. Defendant suggests no justification other than the failure of the sample to comply with the specifications. So, if the sample did comply with them, the conclusion must be that there was gross discrimination against plaintiff in favor of Weidenhoff, which would be a breach of the Government’s implied promise that no bid would be arbitrarily rejected, and that that bid would be accepted which in the honest judgment of the awarding authority was most advantageous to the Government.

We proceed to inquire whether plaintiff’s sample complied with the specifications. The defendant’s agents and officials say it did not in several respects. These agents and officials are, first, the employees in the testing laboratory, second, a Mr. Ryff, the project engineer, third, a Mr. Newcomb, Chief of the Tools and Equipment Branch of the Procurement Division of the Ordnance Tank Automotive Center, who was Mr. Ryff’s superior, and fourth, a Mr. Vogrin, who was the buyer in the OTAC assigned to procure these testers.

There were ten bids, but only six bidders submitted samples. Just before the invitations for bids were issued Mr. Ryff directed the testing laboratory to make certain specified tests to determine whether the samples to be submitted complied with the specifications.

Plaintiff complains that bidders were not notified, in advance of the bidding, of the tests to which the samples were to be put. Of course not. They were such tests as defendant deemed necessary to ascertain if the samples complied with the specifications. Even if the specifications had said nothing about tests, plaintiff should have known that they would be tested, and should have been glad to have them tested; but the specifications expressly said that they would be. All samples were put to the same test. No other bidder complained, so far as the record shows.

After the tests had been made, the laboratory reported that plaintiff’s sample was defective in the following respects :

“1. Two of the terminal screws could be removed by hand (Fig. 2).
“2. Electrostatic effect was very bad on both meters. The meters did . not recover except by breathing on the meter windows (Fig. 20).
“3. The voltmeter readings were more than 2% low (of full scale deflection) from 9 to 10 volts on the 0-10 volt range (Fig. 15).
“4. The voltmeter readings were more than 2% low (of full scale deflection) from 90 to 100 volts on the 0-100 volt range prior to tapping of the meter. This calibration data was obtained after the tester was subjected to the vibration test.
“5. The No. 8 cable failed the high temperature test (Table XII).”

Accompanying this report, and in support of it, were detailed reports of various tests made and a number of graphs and photographs.

Mr. Ryff, the project engineer, had been in daily contact with the laboratory while the tests of the several samples were being made and was kept informed of the results of them.

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Bluebook (online)
177 F. Supp. 251, 147 Ct. Cl. 256, 1959 U.S. Ct. Cl. LEXIS 119, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/heyer-products-company-v-united-states-cc-1959.