Mid-West Construction, Ltd. v. The United States

387 F.2d 957, 181 Ct. Cl. 774
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 2, 1968
Docket123-66
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 387 F.2d 957 (Mid-West Construction, Ltd. v. The 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
Mid-West Construction, Ltd. v. The United States, 387 F.2d 957, 181 Ct. Cl. 774 (cc 1968).

Opinion

DAVIS, Judge.

Plaintiff, a Canadian corporation, submitted a bid for the construction of a road near Petersburg, Alaska, in response to an invitation with a total small business set-aside issued by the Forest Service of the Department of Agriculture in May 1964. (A total small business set-aside means that the entire award is to go to a “small business.”) After the bids were opened in June and plaintiff’s was determined to be low, the next low bidder, B & A and Yutan Construction Company (Yutan), protested that Mid-West was not a “small business” under 13 C.F.R. § 121.3-2(g) (1963), which requires an otherwise eligible “concern” to have “a place of business located in the United States * * * ” in order to qualify. The contracting officer forwarded the protest to the nearest regional office (Seattle) of the Size Standards Division, Small Business Administration (SBA). The Seattle office’s decision in favor of plaintiff was affirmed in the District of Columbia on July 13 by the Acting Director of the Size Standards Division.

On July 14th the contracting officer telegraphed Mid-West that its bid had been accepted. On the same day, Yutan notified the contracting officer that it was filing an appeal of the Acting Director’s ruling with the Size Appeals Board of SBA. A few days later it also protested the' contract award to the Comptroller General. The contracting officer replied to Yutan on July 14 that he had awarded the contract to plaintiff because “any further delay in the procurement action of IFB No. 1-64-18 [the award in issue] would be disadvantageous to the Government.”

On August 28 the Size Appeals Board issued an opinion, adopted by the SBA Administrator, that plaintiff failed to qualify. The Comptroller General, agreeing with the Appeals Board, recommended that plaintiff’s contract be canceled. See 44 Comp.Gen. 253 (1964) (No. B-154756). The acting contracting officer notified Mid-West by a letter of December 7th that its contract was canceled as an erroneous award. (It is important to note at once that the contract did not contain a termination-for-convenience article.)

Even before December 7th, plaintiff, dissatisfied with the decision of the Size Appeals Board, filed suit in the United States District Court for Alaska against the SBA Administrator, the Chief of the Forest Service, and the contracting officer, demanding a declaratory judgment that the Board’s determination was invalid, and seeking temporary and permanent injunctions to restrain the defendants from making an award to anyone other than plaintiff. Midwest Constr. Co., Ltd. v. Foley, Civil No. J-2-64 (D. Alaska, filed Sept. 11, 1964). In March 1965 the court ordered the complaint amended to state that it was a suit to review an administrative proceeding under Section 10 of the Administrative Procedure Act as amended, 5 U.S.C. §§ 701-706 (1965-66 Supp. II), and directed plaintiff to serve upon the defendants “a designation of the administrative [Appeals Board] record to be reviewed.” Upon plaintiff’s failure to comply with that directive, the court (in June 1965) dismissed the action under F.R.Civ.P. 41(b).

After the cancellation of its contract, plaintiff also sought administrative relief. Contending that the Government was in total default, it submitted a claim for damages to the contracting officer in March 1965. That officer concluded that he lacked jurisdiction to consider it. Mid-West appealed, and in January 1966 the Department of Agriculture Board of Contract Appeals, with the company’s *959 consent, dismissed the appeal for want of jurisdiction. 1

Plaintiff then filed its petition in this court, claiming that the contract was legally binding on the Government (and, therefore, its attempted disavowal was a breach) because the contracting officer had the authority to make an award no matter what the outcome of Yutan’s appeal to the Size Appeals Board, and, alternatively, because Mid-West was in fact a small business at the time of the award (and, therefore, the decisions of the Board and the Comptroller General to the contrary were erroneous and invalid). Defendant has responded by moving for summary judgment.

We start by putting wholly to one side plaintiff’s secondary argument (that it was in fact a qualified “small business”), and all the points and counterpoints that follow upon that theme. As we see the case, it makes no difference whether or not (a) plaintiff was an eligible bidder, (b) the Size Appeal Board’s determination was erroneous or invalid, (c) SBA’s determinations of eligibility are subject to judicial review in any forum, (d) the Alaska District Court had jurisdiction to consider plaintiff’s suit there, and (e) that court’s dismissal of Mid-West’s action, with prejudice, is binding here on the question of the validity of the administrative determination of size. We can assume, without in any way deciding, that plaintiff was actually not qualified, that the Board’s adverse holding was correct, that we cannot review the legality of that ruling, and that in any event the District Court’s action conclusively rules, for this case, that Mid-West was not in fact eligible.

We clear the decks in this way because, for us, the case turns entirely on the question whether the contracting officer was authorized, in the circumstances, to make the award to plaintiff even though the company was not truly a “small business.” That narrow issue of contracting authority is governed by the pertinent regulations, which we must sketch in some detail. There are two sets — the Small Busines Administration Regulations (SBAR) and the Federal Procurement Regulations (FPR)— which interconnect and have equal bearing. 2

The regulations each provide that bids for set-asides received from firms not qualifying as small businesses (as defined in the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. §§ 631-647 (1964, 1965 Supp. I, 1965-66 Supp. II), and the regulations under it) are to be rejected as nonresponsive. 13 C.F.R. § 127.15-2 (1963) (SBAR); 41 C.F.R. § 1-1.706-5 (1964) (FPR). But this generality must be read together with other sections dealing specifically with the procedures for determining small business status and the effect of those determinations (or lack thereof) on federal procurement activity. The SBA regulations say, for instance, that. “[i]n the absence of a written protest or other information which would cause him to question the veracity of the self-certification [by the bidder in its bid that it qualifies as a small business], the contracting officer shall acept the self-certification at face value for the particular procurement involved.” 13 C.F.R. § 121.3-8(d) (1963). Under the FPR the officer, if there is no protest, is to accept the representation “as conclusive for the purpose of a specific procurement.” 41 C.F.R. § 1-1.703-1 (1964). 3

*960

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387 F.2d 957, 181 Ct. Cl. 774, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mid-west-construction-ltd-v-the-united-states-cc-1968.