Howard v. United States

31 Fed. Cl. 297, 1994 U.S. Claims LEXIS 95, 1994 WL 187750
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedApril 29, 1994
DocketNo. 386-87C
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 31 Fed. Cl. 297 (Howard 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
Howard v. United States, 31 Fed. Cl. 297, 1994 U.S. Claims LEXIS 95, 1994 WL 187750 (uscfc 1994).

Opinion

[300]*300OPINION

BRUGGINK, Judge.

This is an action brought under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1) (1988 & Supp. IV 1992). It arises out of an unusual and troubling set of circumstances. Plaintiffs seek damages for the breach of alleged oral contracts between themselves and United States Customs Service (“Customs”) personnel to compensate them for assisting in the apprehension of an alleged arms smuggler through a complex sting operation. Trial was held November 29 through December 4, 1993, in Austin, Texas. Although the court is persuaded that plaintiffs acted with good motives and in some sense became victims of the sting, they nevertheless have not established a legal entitlement to relief. We hold first that no enforceable contract, either for a commission or expenses, existed between the parties and, second, that even if an agreement to allow plaintiffs to retain a commission on the sale of weapons in the sting operation existed, the government did not breach it.

FACTS

Background

Gary Howard and Ronald Tucker (“plaintiffs”) are decorated Vietnam veterans and former law enforcement officers who reside in Texas. They met in the early 1970s while supplying information for an investigation by the United States Bureau of Alcohol, Tobacco, & Firearms (“ATF”). Both Mr. Howard and Mr. Tucker continued to provide information to various federal agencies throughout the 1970s, though each engaged in other pursuits as well.

Mr. Howard became involved in arms-deal investigations in late 1979 while in London to sell oil-drilling equipment. Having been invited to observe the closing of a crude oil sale, Mr. Howard was approached by one of the other parties present, who asked if Mr. Howard knew anyone in the small-arms business. Mr. Howard facilitated an arms transaction that he thought was legitimate; however, it turned out to be a black-market sale of arms to the Republic of South Africa, which had arranged to furnish a false end-user certificate for the arms.

Mr. Howard reported the irregular aspects of the deal to the British authorities. In the course of the ensuing investigation, Scotland Yard interviewed Mr. Howard. That interview was observed by a man later identified as Calvin White, Assistant Customs Attache at the U.S. Embassy in London. In a subsequent meeting with Mr. White, Mr. Howard agreed to act as a confidential informant for Customs. Mr. White specifically requested that Mr. Howard collect information on arms sales to Israel, the Soviet Bloc, the Middle East, and South Africa. In that capacity, Mr. Howard and Mr. Tucker, the latter by then recruited into the operation, posed as international arms dealers and assisted Customs in attempting to apprehend persons suspected of violating the U.S. arms export control laws. Two operations, denominated “Houston I” and “Houston III,” are relevant to these proceedings.

The convoluted facts leading to these operations will only be summarized, but to understand them at all, we must briefly tell a tale of two cities — Washington, D.C., and Houston, Texas. Although formally this case involves a dispute between plaintiffs and Customs, much of the relevant conflict appears to have existed between the two different cultures and outlooks of Customs headquarters in Washington and the Customs field office in Houston. In Houston, Special Agent in Charge (“SAC”) Frank Chadwick, with the help of a staff of agents that included Group Supervisor Norman Buselmeier and Special Agent Don Winkler, employed a style that headquarters later found to be unorthodox and insufficiently attuned to formalities. His immediate supervisor, Houston Regional Director (Investigations) Hulen Rigsby, evidencing at least his acquiescence in this philosophy,1 delegated substantial enforcement authority to Mr. Chadwick.

In Washington, Assistant Commissioner for Border Operations George Corcoran, aided by his deputy William Green, oversaw [301]*301Customs’ enforcement operations.2 Beneath Mr. Corcoran and Mr. Green sat the Office of Investigations, directed by Martin White. The Office of Investigations nominally controlled all Customs investigations throughout the country; however, the evidence indicates that little or no supervisory authority was exercised in the initial stages of the sting operations at issue in the case at bar. At the later stages of Houston III, when Washington tried to bring some oversight to bear on the operation, the results of the prior laissez faire approach were manifest in friction and deception. It became apparent during trial that the balmy approach of the Houston office to procedural niceties created expectations on plaintiffs’ part that were undone when exposed to the frosty winds later emanating from Washington. And therein lies this lawsuit.

Houston I

In early 1981, Mr. Howard, posing as an arms broker acting as an agent of Balotta Trading Establishment (“Balotta”), a Liechtenstein corporation controlled by Mr. Howard and Mr. Tucker, received a telephone call from another arms broker representing Ser-votech International Establishment (“Servo-tech”). The Servotech broker inquired about the purchase of weapons in the United States for delivery to the Republic of South Africa. Mr. Howard informed Customs of the proposed transaction. Shortly thereafter, plaintiffs developed a relationship with agents Winkler, Buselmeier, and Chadwick of Customs’ Houston field office.

Plaintiffs described to the Customs agents Servotech’s request, through two international arms dealers, Towers and Parks, to purchase weapons illegally. Plaintiffs volunteered to assist Customs to apprehend Towers and Parks in exchange for permission to retain a commission or brokers’ fee on the arms transaction. Mr. Chadwick testified that plaintiffs did not want to be paid by Customs; all they wanted was their normal, standard commission from sales of equipment. The agreement contemplated that Parks and Towers would pay an agreed amount for the weapons, the weapons would be purchased with this money, and plaintiffs would keep the amount of money that was not spent acquiring the weapons. (Although Mr. Chadwick testified that he made no agreement for plaintiffs to keep the “excess funds” per se, the excess funds would have constituted a five to ten percent commission had the transaction gone as planned.) Mr. Chadwick intended that plaintiffs would use the money they retained in Houston I to “run other operations.” Tr. at 38-39 (Howard testimony).

Customs agents agreed orally with plaintiffs on this matter. No agreement of any kind was reached for reimbursement of expenses for Houston I. Mr. Chadwick did, however, inform plaintiffs before the operation that he would apply on their behalf for a moiety award of 25% of the value of any items that Customs seized. See 19 U.S.C. § 1619 (1988 & Supp. IV 1992) (amended in 1984, 1986). Finally, Mr. Chadwick testified that he told plaintiffs that Customs would reimburse their travel expenses as long as they obtained prior approval for them and would purchase any evidence that plaintiffs acquired.

Parks and Towers controlled a letter of credit for approximately $1.3 million.

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Bluebook (online)
31 Fed. Cl. 297, 1994 U.S. Claims LEXIS 95, 1994 WL 187750, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/howard-v-united-states-uscfc-1994.