Labatt Food Service, Inc. v. United States

84 Fed. Cl. 50, 2008 U.S. Claims LEXIS 315, 2008 WL 4791451
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedSeptember 25, 2008
DocketNo. 08-597C
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 84 Fed. Cl. 50 (Labatt Food Service, 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
Labatt Food Service, Inc. v. United States, 84 Fed. Cl. 50, 2008 U.S. Claims LEXIS 315, 2008 WL 4791451 (uscfc 2008).

Opinion

OPINION

HORN, Judge.

FINDINGS OF FACT

Plaintiff Labatt Food Service, Inc. (Labatt) filed an application for injunctive relief on August 25, 2008, to enjoin the Defense Supply Center Philadelphia (DSC), a subordinate entity under the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA), from proceeding with award of a contract pursuant to Request for Proposals (RFP) SPM300-06-R-0063. The solicitation called for prime vendor support in furnishing a full-line of food and beverage items to military and other federal customers in the Texas and Oklahoma areas. The issues in this post-award bid protest relate to the timeliness of protester Labatt’s proposal revision, and the method of transmission to the [52]*52agency of proposal revisions by all three offerors on the RFP, namely Labatt, U.S. Foodservice, Inc. (USF), and Ben E. Keith Foods (BEK).

The solicitation described specifically how proposals and revisions of proposals were to be transmitted to the agency. Initial proposals were to be submitted in paper copy, either hand carried or mailed to the agency. All three offerors to the solicitation complied with this requirement. Labatt’s initial proposal was submitted by Federal Express, and the initial proposals from USF and BEK were hand carried to the agency. While initial proposals were to be submitted in paper copy, the solicitation also provided an agency facsimile number, authorizing facsimile as an alternative method of transmission, but for proposal revisions only. Consequently, for proposals and revisions to proposals, e-mail was not an authorized method of transmission, according to the solicitation language.

After receipt and evaluation of the three offerors’ initial proposals, the agency emailed a July 30, 2007 letter to the offerors. The letter stated that “negotiations are now opened,” and requested “additional information or clarification” on technical proposals. The letter also listed modifications to agency requirements, and corrected errors in the solicitation. The agency letter to the offer-ors stated, in part:

Your response to the above is required to clarify your proposal. Any revisions, explanations or clarifications must include any price changes resulting from the technical proposal revisions submitted. You may also take this opportunity to enhance any other portions of your proposal, as well.

A facsimile number also was included in the agency letter, which is consistent with the provision in the solicitation permitting transmission of proposal revisions by facsimile number. In spite of the call for transmission to the agency by facsimile in both the solicitation and in the July 30, 2007 agency letter to offerors, inputs from all three offer-ors were transmitted to the agency via email. Labatt characterizes the agency’s July 30, 2007 letter as an “invitation to submit material proposal revisions of both price and technical offers____” The government agrees that substantive proposal revisions resulted from the July 30, 2007 agency letter. The court’s review of the agency letter and responses to the letter confirms that the July 30, 2007 agency letter contemplated, and resulted in, proposal revisions from the offer-ors, for which transmission by facsimile was permitted, but not e-mail.

In a letter to offerors dated September 10, 2007, the agency stated that negotiations and discussions were concluded, and requested final proposal revisions from the offerors. The letter provided an agency facsimile number, which was consistent with the solicitation, to transmit proposal revisions to the agency. In this regard, the September 10, 2007 agency letter stated that, “[i]f a final proposal is not received, your current/revised offer will be used for evaluation purposes.” Labatt submitted, by facsimile, a letter indicating that it had no revisions to its earlier proposal, in effect standing on the earlier proposal revisions Labatt had submitted via e-mail. USF did not respond to the September 10, 2007 letter, similarly remaining with revisions to its earlier proposal submitted by e-mail. BEK provided proposal revisions by facsimile copy, as specified in both the solicitation and the September 10, 2007 agency letter. BEK’s revisions did not represent a completely new, stand alone proposal, but were changes/additions to its initial proposal and proposal revisions, the latter of which had been submitted by BEK using e-mail.

On November 28, 2007, USF was selected for award of the prime vendor support contract. Labatt was debriefed on December 7, 2007, filed a Government Accountability Office (GAO) protest on December 12, 2007, and a supplemental protest to the GAO on December 17, 2007. In response to filing of the protests, the agency took corrective action in the form of issuing amendment no. 0004 to the solicitation. Amendment no. 0004 to the RFP modified the submission requirements and evaluation criteria of the offerors’ experience and past performance. According to an e-mail to the offerors from the agency, the offerors were to respond to amendment no. 0004 by e-mail. Prior to the [53]*53time for response to amendment no. 0004, Labatt e-mailed an April 4, 2008 letter to the contracting officer, raising three questions concerning the amendment. Labatt characterizes its letter as an agency protest, and farther states that the agency’s response to its letter was reflected in the agency’s issuance of amendment nos. 0005 and 0006 to the solicitation. Amendment no. 0005 changed the time for the offerors to respond to amendment no. 0004. Amendment no. 0006 called for supplemental information on experience and past performance. USF and BEK e-mailed timely responses to amendment nos. 0004, 0005, and 0006. Labatt timely acknowledged amendment no. 0005 by facsimile copy and timely acknowledged amendment no. 0006 by e-mail. The government states, however, that Labatt never sent a confirmation of amendment no. 4, an assertion which was never disputed by Labatt, although it had the opportunity to do so in its reply brief.

Labatt filed another GAO bid protest on April 28, 2008. In response, the agency again took corrective action, in the form of amendment no. 0007 to the solicitation. Amendment no. 0007 increased estimated annual purchases, the guaranteed minimum, and the maximum dollar ceiling under the contract. Amendment no. 0007 was provided by the agency to the offerors via e-mail. In that same e-mail, the offerors were asked to “provide two copies of any submission via FedEx.” According to the cover e-mail, of-ferors were to respond by May 20, 2008, and according to amendment no. 0007 itself, the offerors were required to respond by May 20, 2008, at 2:00 p.m. USF made a timely response via United Parcel Service and BEK made a timely response via Federal Express. Labatt’s initial response was transmitted, not by Federal Express, but by e-mail and was received on May 20, 2008, but at 4:27 p.m. Subsequently, Labatt responded by Federal Express, but this Federal Express response was received on May 22, 2008. As a result, the contracting officer informed Labatt, by letter dated May 22, 2008, that its response was received by e-mail and that “[e]-mail transmission was not an authorized method of transmission in the above referenced solicitation.” The May 22, 2008 letter also informed Labatt that its e-mail response was late. The letter further informed Labatt that its subsequent response by Federal Express also was late and would be held unopened. On June 2, 2008, Labatt filed an agency protest on the lateness and e-mail issues, which was denied by the agency on June 2, 2008.

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Bluebook (online)
84 Fed. Cl. 50, 2008 U.S. Claims LEXIS 315, 2008 WL 4791451, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/labatt-food-service-inc-v-united-states-uscfc-2008.