L-3 Communications Corp. v. United States

99 Fed. Cl. 283, 2011 WL 1957681
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedMay 20, 2011
DocketNo. 10-538C
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 99 Fed. Cl. 283 (L-3 Communications Corp. 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
L-3 Communications Corp. v. United States, 99 Fed. Cl. 283, 2011 WL 1957681 (uscfc 2011).

Opinion

OPINION AND ORDER

WOLSKI, Judge.

Pending before the Court are plaintiffs, defendant’s, and intervenor’s motions for judgment on the administrative record, filed pursuant to Rule 62.1(c) of the Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”). For the reasons that follow, defendant’s and intervenor’s motions are GRANTED and plaintiffs motion is DENIED.1

I. BACKGROUND

This ease deals with one portion of a $1,678 billion foreign military sale (“FMS”) of F-16s and related services to Egypt. At issue here is the procurement of flight simulators to train Egyptian pilots on use of the new F-16s. Though a contract has not yet been awarded, Egypt has chosen, and the United States Air Force (“USAF”) has accepted, Lockheed Martin Simulation, Training and Support (“LM STS” or the “simulation unit”) — a unit of defendant-intervenor Lockheed Martin Corp. (“Lockheed” or “interve-nor”) — as the sole source for this requirement. Admin. R. (“AR”) at 103-14.

On September 25, 2008, Egypt submitted a letter of request to the USAF for twenty-four F-16s. AR at 1-2. In connection with this procurement, Egypt requested one flight simulator to train its pilots. AR at 30. In a May 19, 2009 sole source request, Egypt requested that several companies participate in the procurement on a sole source basis. AR at 40-42. Included in that list was L-3 Communications Corporation (“L-3” or “plaintiff’) as the source of the simulator. AR at 42. The justification for this sole source request was that, in accordance with the Security Assistance Management Manual (“SAMM”),2 “Egypt has [established a [history of [procurement for [ajrtieles or [services from these [suppliers and [wjishes to [cjontinue for [ejquipment [standardization and [consequent benefits of [ljogistics [support.” AR at 42.

On July 10, 2009, LM STS submitted directly to Egypt a proposal to provide two simulators for $[XXXX], exclusive of costs added by the USAF. AR at 91. Included [286]*286with that unsolicited proposal was a statement of work describing in detail all activities that LM STS would undertake as well as the technical aspects of its simulators. AR at 337-54.

Apparently swayed by LM STS’s proposal, Egypt submitted a new sole source request document on August 12, 2009. AR at 103. Like the May sole source request, this request listed several contractors and the portions of the procurement for which they would be responsible. AR at 103-05. Unlike the May sole source request, the August 12, 2009 sole source request did not include L-3 as providing the simulator; instead, LM STS was designated as providing, among other items, the simulator. AR at 105. While the August 12, 2009 sole source contained the same justification language as the May sole source request, AR at 105, it also said that the request was

based on the critical need to cover Egypt defense operational requirements for the shared goals with [the United States] & to catch the production line and work load at Lockheed Martin for the new F-16 to avoide [sic] work stoppage at [Lockheed Martin] production line that will affect the price & lead time of the [aircraft] production & to ensure the continuity of production line to cover the need of [Egypt] for the [aircraft] to be delivered late 2012 up to late 2013.

AR at 103.

In addition to the August 12, 2009 sole source that named several contractors, Egypt submitted a sole source request on August 19, 2009 for only the flight simulator and named LM STS as the contractor. AR at 106-07. Egypt presented five explanations for this request. AR at 107. First, Egypt referenced the SAMM paragraphs C6.3.4 and Table C6.T2.3.3 Id. Second, Egypt selected LM STS based on their experience and quality in providing simulators to both the USAF and other countries. Id. Third, Lockheed Martin was the original equipment manufacturer for the F-16s. Id. Fourth, LM STS was said to have considerable technical advantages. Id. And fifth, Egypt had a “[h]istory of [p]rocurement for [articles or [services from Lockheed [M]ar-tin which led to benefits of Logistics Support.” Id.

On October 27, 2009, the Air Force’s program support manager for the Egyptian F-16 program submitted the August 12, 2009 sole source request for approval. AR at 108-09. No mention was made of the May 2009 or the August 19, 2009 sole source requests. AR at 109. That same day, the USAF Sole Source Office determined that the request met “the required criteria” from “SAMM Table C6.T2.3 and 4,” and requested a “determination of legal sufficiency” from the Air Force’s Materiel Command Law Office. AR at 111. Two days later, on October 29, 2009, an attorney-advisor from the law office responded with the determination that the August 12, 2009 sole source request was legally sufficient. AR at 112. Ultimately, on December 17, 2009, the August 12, 2009 sole source request received official approval. AR at 114.

During the approval process, the USAF submitted, on October 9, 2009, to the Speaker of the House of Representatives a report describing the proposed sale to Egypt of the F-16s. AR at 95-102. The notification list[287]*287ed major defense equipment, such as the planes themselves and spare engines, and non-major defense equipment, such as GPS and fuel tanks. AR at 96-97. Under a listing of “[ajlso included” items was “personnel training and training equipment.” AR at 97. The notice also identified individual companies involved with the proposed sale. AR at 99. Included in that list was LM STS (listed as Fort Worth, Texas) and L-3 (listed as Arlington, Texas). Id.

On December 24, 2009, after sending the notice to Congress and receiving internal approval for the sole sources, the USAF and Egypt entered into a Letter of Offer and Acceptance (“LOA”). AR at 115. The LOA contains several references to LM STS as the sole source of a simulator. AR at 125, 143-44, 172. While the first page of the LOA refers to this procurement as an “FMS Credit (Non-Repayable)” sale, AR at 115, the LOA contains provisions obligating Egypt to pay the total cost of the procurement, even if it exceeds the estimate, AR at 177. To help in financial planning, the LOA provides a schedule of payments detailing the payment amounts and dates to cover the entire cost of the procurement. AR at 129-30. On June 24, 2010, the USAF and Egypt amended the LOA to make changes in some of the non-simulator line items. AR at 313-329. The amendment left the payment schedule largely intact. AR at 314. The one change was that instead of showing an initial deposit of $[XXXX], AR at 129, it showed an amount received from purchaser of $[XXXX] and an amount due with the amendment of $[XXXX]. AR at 322.

In the period between the signing of the LOA and the amendment, there was some discussion regarding the quantity of simulators that Egypt wanted. On January 6, 2010, a senior manager at LM STS emailed a lieutenant colonel at the USAF “to make sure there [wa]s no confusion” regarding LM STS’s offer to Egypt. AR at 203-04. The simulator unit “assumed it was deal’ that the simulator line item included two simulators.” AR at 204. The company was, however, receiving conflicting information on the number expected. Id. The USAF lieutenant colonel first responded that the LOA indeed said one simulator, but the dollar amount covers two simulators. AR at 203. The number of simulators, he said, would be corrected in the then-forthcoming amendment. Id.

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