MARKEY, Chief Judge.
Appeal from the decision of the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals (board),
New England Tank Industries of New Hampshire, Inc.,
No. 26474, 88-1 BCA ¶ 20,395 at 103,156, affirming the Contracting Officer’s (CO’s) decision denying New England Tank Industries of New Hampshire Inc.’s (NET’s) claim for equitable adjustment for services performed under Contract No. DSA 600-02-C-1801 (the Contract) and rejecting NET’s argument that the government had invalidly exercised its renewal option. We vacate and remand.
Synopsis
This case presents a happily rare, but sad and seamy scenario in which, by concealing facts from its contracting partner, the government succeeded in repeatedly renewing yearly contracts for goods and services the market price of which had long ago increased well beyond the contract price. The primary concealed fact was a regulation governing the funding source the government could cite in the contract. Government compliance with that regulation would have required a change in the contract, enabling the contractor to refuse renewal. To “keep the contract” the government misrepresented its authority in knowingly citing an unauthorized funding source. When the contractor learned the truth and sued, the government says it was bound by its renewal and therefore so was the contractor. Unlike the more common case, in which the government cites its agent’s lack of authority as a defense, the government here attempts to use that self-created lack of authority, hidden by its own decision not to publish its authority-denying regulation, as a sword.
BACKGROUND
Contract at Issue
In 1959, NET’s predecessor in interest contracted with the government to own and operate the Defense Fuel Support Point in Newington, New Hampshire.
The basic Contract had a fixed five year term, NET being paid a “use charge” amount per tank per month, plus additional amounts per barrel received into storage per year exceeding a stated amount. The Contract did not contain a funding limitation clause that would have made payment contingent upon availability of appropriated funds.
Section IX of the Contract gave the government annual options to renew for fifteen additional one-year periods
“upon the same terms and conditions”
(emphasis added) as the basic contract, except that the government was to pay NET a set “use charge” per barrel of shell capacity per year.
The five-year term of the Contract expired on 20 July 1965. The parties stipulated that Section IX of the Contract “required the Government to notify NET of its exercise of the option to renew for the following year on or before June 20th of each year during the renewal period.”
Id.
at 103,158. It is well settled that to properly exercise that option, the government’s acceptance of the offer had to be unconditional and in exact accord with the terms of the contract being renewed.
See id.
at 103,166 (and authorities cited).
Administration of the Contract
Beginning in 1965, the Department of the Air Force, the administering agency, annually exercised its renewal option. In exercising each option, the practice was to issue a modification obligating from the Air Force Stock Fund an amount covering the entire one-year renewal period. The Air Force had authority to fund fuel supply contracts from a stock fund only because the Air Force Stock Fund Charter expressly waived the requirements of Department of Defense (DoD) Directive 7420.1 § VIII, 11 A(6) (hereinafter cited as 7420.1).
Directive 7420.1, titled “Regulations Governing Stock Fund Operations”, has not been published in the Federal Register or Code of Federal Regulations (CFR),
id.
at 103,158. Nonetheless, 7420.1 notes in section IV.A that Defense Agencies are “subject to the provisions of these Regulations.”
In addition, a number of code sections and regulations apply generally to DoD funding and stock funds.
E.g.,
10 U.S.C. § 2208(h) (requiring Assistant Secretary of Defense (ASD) to promulgate stock fund regulations); 10 U.S.C. § 2202 (DoD funds may be obligated only in accordance with regulations); 32 C.F.R. § 236.1 (1975) (all DoD directives dealing with procurement are issued pursuant to 10 U.S.C. § 2202); 32 C.F.R. § 286 (1975) (describing availability of DoD information to public); 32 C.F. R. § 289 (1975) (procedures for obtaining DoD Directives in “7000” series).
In 1973, the Defense Fuel Supply Center (DFSC), a division of the Defense Supply Agency (DSA) (now the Defense Logistics Agency), took over the administration of fuel supply contracts. To smooth the transition to DFSC control, the Assistant Secretary of Defense (Contracts) (ASD(C)) authorized the DFSC to finance the ninth contract renewal from the DSA’s Defense Stock Fund. That authorization was given on an interim basis, “pending approval of a revised charter.” 88-1 BCA at 103,159. On 22 May 1973, DFSC exercised the government’s option to obtain the ninth renewal. The renewal obligated against the DSA Division of Defense Stock Fund $149,480, an amount sufficient to cover the entire one-year ninth renewal period.
At about this same time, NET began requesting DFSC “to renegotiate the rates [paid NET] under the contract” “to change the contract from a losing, to, at least, a break-even situation.” Citing changes in the economy “beyond [its] control,” such as the imposition of excise taxes on imported crude oil, costs of complying with stricter EPA and Coast Guard regulations, and wage increases, NET estimated its costs would exceed contract payments by approximately $50,000 per year. A similar request from another contractor estimated that “present contract payments are one-sixth to one-tenth below commercial termi-nalling rates.... ” Based on those letters and other evidence, the board found that “NET’s persistent requests to renegotiate the terms of the Newington terminal contract gave the Government reason to know that NET would refuse to continue performance of its contract upon the same terms and conditions if the renewal option was not exercised timely and unconditionally.” 88-1 BCA at 103,163.
DSA Stock Fund Charter
On 15 March 1974, the Director of DSA submitted a proposed revision of the charter to the ASD(C). That proposed revision did not include an exemption from 7420.1. Indeed, the Director’s memorandum accompanying the revision effectively recognized 7420.1 in stating that “[a]doption of this charter will require discontinuation of reimbursement from the Defense Stock Fund for operation-and-maintenance type costs of bulk petroleum facilities previously financed by the Air Force Stock Fund.”
Id.
The memorandum did, however, effectively request a waiver of 7420.1 in seeking approval to continue “the present [stock fund] method of operation and funding” through Fiscal Year (FY) 1975 (1 July 1974 to 30 June 1975),
i.e.,
for the tenth renewal, and to “implement the change [to annually appropriated operation and maintenance (O & M) funding] in the method of operation and funding effective with Fiscal Year 1976” (1 July 1975 to 30 June 1976),
i.e.,
for the eleventh renewal.
Id.
at 103,160.
On 24 May 1974, the Commander of the DFSC asked DSA to consider seeking authority to use stock funds for obtaining multiyear contracts for fuel storage services. The Commander expressed concern that existing contracts, presently funded with stock funds, “could be lost to DSA if it is necessary to modify the contracts to use single-year [O & M] funds.”
Id.
In a 17 June 1974 memorandum, ASD(C) approved the proposed revision to the charter of the DSA Division of Defense Stock Fund. That revised charter did not include an exemption from 7420.1 for fuel storage facilities and bulk petroleum facilities, though section IV.B of the revision did contain the required exemption for other uses not here relevant, such as into-plane fueling and commercial testing of fuel samples. The memorandum approved deferral of the transition to use of annually appropriated 0 & M funds (which per ASPR l-318(a) must have an “availability of funds” clause limiting the government’s liability) until FY 1976.
There is no doubt, and it is uncontested, that neither DFSC nor DSA thought it had authority to cite the stock fund when exercising the government’s eleventh option to renew. Yet they did cite the stock fund, and did so expressly to avoid the possibility that NET would learn about and seize upon any change in funding source (including a funding limitation clause) as a basis for refusing to continue performance of the contract at a loss.
Indeed, as the board found, the government
knew
that inclusion of a “subject to availability” clause in its renewal, rather than citation of the stock fund, would possibly “provide [NET] a basis for refusing to renew.”
Id.
at 103,162. In finding 37 the board detailed an Autumn 1974 DFSC memorandum:
The memorandum observed that the rate schedules and purchase option prices under several long-term, 10 U.S.C. § 2388 service contracts “are extremely low” (i.e. favorable to the Government) and that these contracts may be lost “if DFSC is limited to use of 0
&
M [operation & maintenance] money (one year funds).” Specific concern was expressed that the one year renewal option for the [NET] contract “may be lost because [the contract does] not contain a funding limitation clause,” noting that ASPR 1-318 “imposes the ‘subject to availability of funds’ requirement on contracts funded annually.” The memorandum concluded by recommending “utilization of the Defense Stock Fund, DSA Division to finance service contracts at bulk fuel terminals.” (Parentheticals & brackets in original).
Id.
at 103,161;
see also
findings 40, 43, 47 & 48,
id.
at 103,161-163, in which the board detailed the government’s knowing effort to hide the facts from NET.
NET’s Claim
NET did not become aware of any impediment to DFSC’s authority to exercise the option, with citation of the stock fund or otherwise, until August of 1980.
Id.
at 103.165. Soon after becoming aware of the facts, however, NET submitted a certified claim in the amount of $639,849, alleging
inter alia
that it was “entitled to an equitable adjustment for work performed at the direction of the government pursuant to an invalid option exercise.”
See International Telephone & Telegraph v. United States,
453 F.2d 1283, 197 Ct.Cl. 11 (1972).
The Board’s Decision
The board stated that NET’s appeal “revolves exclusively around the effectiveness of unilateral modification 36 [the eleventh renewal notice], dated 20 June 1975, as an exercise of the renewal option provided by section IX of the contract.” 88-1 BCA at 103.166. The board also said that:
The effectiveness of the option exercise depends, in turn, on whether modification 36 unconditionally bound both the option- or, NET, and the optionee, the Government, for the entire one-year eleventh contract renewal period, from 21 July 1975 through 20 July 1976. If both par
ties were so bound, then the Government prevails. If the parties were not bound unconditionally, then NET’s appeal must be sustained.
Id.
(citations omitted).
The board focused on “whether there was any basis at all upon which the Government could, if it chose, repudiate its obligations under the modification and treat the renewal as voidable.”
Id.
at 103,-167.
Though the board agreed with NET that DFSC’s and DSA’s “authority to use the Defense Stock Fund for fuel storage terminal contracts was limited [by Directive 7420.1] to financing services to be performed before 1 July 1975,”
id.
at 103,-168, it disagreed with NET’s argument that the government’s unauthorized citation of the stock fund and disregard of 7420.1 meant that “modification 36 was not binding on the government and could have been disaffirmed by the government.”
Id.
at 103,169.
Distinguishing, without citation of authority, between regulations having the “force and effect of law” binding on “federal agencies or their officers and employees,”
id.
at 103,170, and regulations “having such general applicability and legal effect as to create legally binding rights in and obligations on the public,”
id.,
the board concluded that “the Government was bound by modification 36 and could not thereafter disaffirm it” because: (1) 7420.1 was not published in the Federal Register [or incorporated by reference],
id.
at 103,-173 & n. 31; (2) NET had no actual knowledge of its terms at the time DFSC exercised the option for the eleventh renewal period or for many years thereafter,
id.
at 103,173; and (3) “the exercise of the renewal option was in all other respects within the scope of the contracting officer's authority.”
Id.
The board said its holding “obviate[d] consideration of the Government’s arguments” that: (1) use of the stock fund, even if mistaken, was within the contracting officer’s actual authority to exercise the renewal option; and (2) 7420.1 was merely an internal procedural or housekeeping instruction of an accounting or administrative nature and thus would have no legal effect even if it had been published.
Id.
at 103,173 n. 32.
ISSUES
(1) Whether the DSA and DFSC had authority to use and cite the stock fund to finance the eleventh contract renewal.
(2) If DSA and DSFC lacked such authority, whether their purported exercise of the eleventh renewal of the contract was nonetheless valid and effective.
OPINION
Introduction
NET’s main argument on appeal is that the board incorrectly extended
Federal Crop Insurance Corp. v. Merrill,
332 U.S. 380, 384, 68 S.Ct. 1, 3, 92 L.Ed. 10 (1947) (where regulation was published, and agent
exceeded his authority, a contractor could not bind the government) in holding that the government was bound because it did not publish its authority-denying regulation. In NET’S view, “[t]he proper inquiry under
Merrill, ...
is simply whether a statute or legislative-type regulation curtailing an agent’s actual authority existed, rather than whether the agent or the party contracted with had any knowledge of the limitations on the agent’s authority.” Thus, says NET, because “[government agents, unlike their private counterparts, possess only actual authority and cannot act with either apparent or inherent authority,” and because “[the CO’s] actions [sic, the actions of DSFC and DSA] with respect to [the renewal notice] exceeded the scope of his [their] authority, violated statutes and legislative-type regulations,” “the government was not bound by his [their] actions.” NET concludes: “Since one party, the government, was not bound by the purported option exercise, that exercise was ineffective and the contract lapsed ... on July 20, 1975.”
The government does not defend before us the board’s view on the effect of non-publication. On the contrary, it joins NET in saying that the board’s view “appears squarely to contradict the holding of
{Merrill].”
The apparent concern of the government is that adherence to the board’s view would bind the government to all unauthorized contracts where lack of authority was not actually or constructively (as by publication) known to the contractor.
1.
Authority to Cite the Stock Fund
The government here argues, as it did to the board, that DSA and DFSC did have actual authority to cite the stock fund, thus both DSA and NET were bound to the option.
That argument is based on the above-mentioned June 17, 1974 memorandum from the ASD(C):
I believe the planning which you are jointly conducting with the Military Services to finance directly the operation and maintenance type costs of bulk petroleum facilities is in consonance with the policy I enunciated ... Approval is granted to defer implementation until Fiscal Year 1976.
The government says DSA had authority to use the stock fund to finance the option, and was therefore unconditionally bound by its exercise of the option, because: (1) “[i]t is well established that, as long as funds are obligated in the fiscal year authorized, they may be spent in the following fiscal year” (citing 31 U.S.C. § 1502(a) and numerous Comptroller General cases); (2) the June 17 memorandum “expressly authorized DSA to continue to obligate the stock fund to finance bulk petroleum contracts until fiscal year 1976 — or through June 30, 1975”, the end of FY 1975; and (3) the option was exercised nine days before the close of FY 1975, at the time DSA gave renewal notice. Thus, says the government, “contrary to NET’S assertion,” “neither DSA nor NET could have disavowed the option.”
The government does not argue that no facts of record support the board’s finding that, despite the June 17 memorandum, DSA’s and DFSC’s authority to cite the stock fund did not exist. The government does argue, unpersuasively, that the board erred when it “conclude[d] that DSA’s ‘failure to proceed in an unqualified manner’ regarding use of the stock fund ... undermined DSA’s authority to so obligate the funds.”
The government’s argument incorrectly assumes that the June 17 memorandum expressly gave DSA authority to cite the stock fund, and that the board so found. In reality, the board discussed the issue of authority broadly and looked to contemporaneous events to shed light on that authority and on the asserted “plain meaning” of the memorandum. Though the board correctly recognized that performance of the contracts in FY 1976 would make no difference «/the alleged authorization had occurred, it correctly found that no such authority had been given.
In finding that DSA and DFSC lacked authority to cite the stock fund, the board made these subsidiary findings: (1) DFSC officials failed to proceed in “an unqualified manner” in “financpng] the entire renewal periods of all four 10 U.S.C. § 2388 contracts during [FY] 1975,”
id.
at 103,168, of which the NET contract was one; (2) in dealing with a similar contract (the Holly contract), DSA Comptrollers only authorized DFSC Comptrollers to renew that contract “without ‘subject to availability’ language ... ‘a month at a time,’ ”
id.
at n. 21; (3) “responsible DSA and DFSC fiscal officials harbored the belief that the stock fund was available only for financing fuel storage services to be performed up to but not beyond 30 June 1975,”
id.;
(4) “deposition excerpts [cited by the Government to the contrary] are not credible and conflict with evidence of the deponents’ contemporaneous conduct and beliefs,”
id.;
(5) in May of 1975 “DSA requested OSD to furnish a memorandum granting tentative approval of DSA’s plan to continue using the stock fund into [FY] 1976, but no such memorandum was sent before September 1975.”
Id.
The quoted subsidiary findings totally undermine the government's assertions about the “plain meaning” of the June 17 memorandum and fully support the board’s finding that DSA’s authority was limited to “financing services to be
performed
before 1 July 1975.”
Id.
(emphasis added). Nothing of record would remotely indicate that that finding, or any of the five subsidiary findings, was not supported by substantial evidence.
2.
Validity of the
Renewal
The board’s three reasons for holding that the government could not dis-affirm its renewal cannot withstand analysis: (1) lack of publication was the government’s doing; (2) NET’S lack of knowledge stemmed from the government’s lack of publication; and (3) that the government’s exercise of its option was authorized “in all other respects” is simply irrelevant. We need say no more about the board’s reasons for its “could not disaffirm” determination, because the board was answering the wrong question.
The dispositive question is whether the government’s exercise of its option to renew the contract was valid or invalid. As above noted, the board recognized that an attempt to alter the contract terms would “render ineffective the purported exercise of an option,” and that insertion of an “availability of funds” clause renders the option exercise “invalid”,
see
88-1 BCA at 103,166, and neither party quarrels with those statements of the law. It is uncontested that if the government had complied with 7420.1 NET would have had the right to avoid further performance of the Contract.
The board did state that the issue is “the consequences of [exceeding] that [7420.1] limitation.” The board did not speak to that issue, however. It focused solely on the wrong question,
i.e.,
whether there was a basis on which the government could have disaffirmed the option, once it had exercised it. Resolution of that question does not resolve whether the purported exercise of the option was invalid
ab initio,
due to DSA’s deceitful and knowing contravention of 7420.1. Nor does resolution of
the board’s question answer whether the government is entitled to gain from the deceit perpetrated by its agents.
In constructing its bright line test that would make publication determinative of whether the government is bound by a regulation directing use of a funding source, the board ignored the severely adverse affect on the contractor. NET is unable to recover the fair market value of the services it provided, merely because, says the board, 7420.1, though violated by DSA, was unpublished. The government controls publication of its regulations, and its decision not to publish enabled it here to pretend that its citation of the stock fund was proper. To say that the government may escape the consequences of actions knowingly contrary to its agent’s authority, by the twin devices of concealing the facts from its contractor and taking care not to publish the authority-denying regulation, smacks too much of a “heads-I-win&emdash; tails-you-lose” approach unworthy of our government.
The board’s attempt to distinguish regulations binding on government agents and those binding on the public, and its indication that unpublished regulations create no rights in the public, whatever may be its validity in other contexts, need not detain us long here. 7420.1 by its very terms applies
only
to the government’s contracting agents.
The board’s citation of
Turney v. United States,
115 F.Supp. 457, 126 Ct.Cl. 202 (1953) does not support its broad view that the government violation of a regulation not disclosed to the public cannot invalidate a transaction with a contractor unaware of the limitations. 88-1 BCA at 103,171. In
Turney,
unlike the facts here, the unpublished regulation conflicted with a statute which was necessarily given precedence. Further, in
Turney,
as in
Kurz & Root Co.,
ASBCA No. 17146, 74-1 BCA II 10,543 [available on WESTLAW, 1974 WL 1628]
aff'd,
227 Ct.Cl. 522 (1981), and again unlike the facts here, a contractor sought to bind the government to the terms of a contract. There is no authority for the inverse proposition resulting from the board’s reliance on nonpublication,
i.e.,
that the government may properly violate its own regulation applicable only to its own actions when it is to the benefit of the government to do so, induce the contractor’s performance by hiding that violation from him, make it impossible for the contractor to find out by not publishing the regulation, and then, when the scheme is uncovered, ask the court to give its actions legal effect.
We recognize that the consequence of the government’s failing to follow regulations in this case could be an equitable adjustment paid out of the public fisc and further recognize the presence of elements similar to those present in the enforcement of an equitable estoppel against the government.
See Lyng v. Payne,
476 U.S. 926, 933-35, 106 S.Ct. 2333, 2338-39, 90 L.Ed.2d 921 (1986). Indeed each element of the typical equitable estoppel against the government situation is present here.
See Emeco Indus, v. United States,
202 Ct.Cl. 1006, 1014-19, 485 F.2d 652, 657-60 (1973) (listing & applying the elements of equitable estoppel against the government);
see also Fink Sanitary Service, Inc.,
53 Comp.Gen. 503, 506-07 (1974).
The facts of this unique case make NET’S cause even more compelling than those in which the result has been labeled “equitable estoppel”. Here NET is
not
attempting to bind the government to the contract. Nor does it attempt to bind the government to its agents' misrepresentations. On the contrary, NET wishes the agent had complied with 7420.1 and seeks equitable adjustment for the consequences it suffered when DSA’s deceit precluded it from learning the true facts and exercising its rights. Far from using lack of actual authority as a shield for the public fisc, the board’s view would allow the government to use that lack as a sword against a contractor and thus to protect the fruit of its agent’s deceit.
Nor do we expect that the
government’s conduct in this case will be repeated so often as to constitute a grave risk to the public fisc. Nor do we view the public fisc so sacrosanct in each and every case as to place its protection before the candor and fair dealing a free society is entitled to expect from its government.
In sum, we do not view this case as controlled by
Heckler v. Community Health Services,
467 U.S. 51, 60, 104 S.Ct. 2218, 2224, 81 L.Ed.2d 42 (1984),
Schweiker v. Hansen,
450 U.S. 785, 788, 101 S.Ct. 1468, 1470, 67 L.Ed.2d 685 (1981) (per cu-riam) (cases recognizing the strong interest of government in protecting the public fisc and refusing to decide what type of conduct, if any, would entitle a private citizen to estop the government), or any other case.
Issue on Remand
It is difficult to perceive how a regulation that has been held by the board, and now by this court, to have unequivocally denied authority to use the stock fund can be said to have been non-mandatory. Further, as above indicated, we abhor the DSA and DFSC’s scheme in which they knowingly and secretly conspired to cite the stock fund, in contravention of 7420.1, to save a contract favorable to the government and devastatingly unfavorable to the government’s contracting partner. Nonetheless, we are bound by the rules of the judicial process to forgo deciding at this stage the issue argued by the government and by-passed by the board. That issue, though variously stated by the board, is whether 7420.1 is a mandatory or binding regulation.
See Schweiker v. Hansen,
450 U.S. 785, 789, 101 S.Ct. 1468, 1471, 67 L.Ed. 2d 685 (1981) (not all agency documents have binding force);
Nordstrom v. United States,
342 F.2d 55, 59, 169 Ct.Cl. 632, 638 (1965) (legal rights flow from mandatory, not directory, requirements). It is mandatory regulations that “have the force and effect of law.”
Accardi v. Shaugnessy,
347 U.S. 260, 265, 74 S.Ct. 499, 502, 98 L.Ed. 681 (1954);
see Morton v. Ruiz,
415 U.S. 199, 235, 94 S.Ct. 1055, 1074, 39 L.Ed. 2d 270 (1974) (“it is incumbent upon agencies to follow their own procedures,” even where those procedures “are possibly more rigorous than otherwise would be required”); Hor
ner v. Jeffrey,
823 F.2d 1521, 1529-30 (Fed.Cir.1987) (distinguishing between “legislative” and “interpretive” rules);
Voge v. United States,
844 F.2d 776, 779 (Fed.Cir.1988) and
Boddie v. Department of Navy,
827 F.2d 1578, 1580 (Fed.Cir.1987).
We recognize that “not ‘every piece of paper emanating from a Department or independent Agency is a regulation,’ ”
Doe v. Hampton,
566 F.2d 265, 281 (D.C.Cir.1977) (quoting
Piccone v. United States,
407 F.2d 866, 877, 186 Ct.Cl. 752, 771-72 (1969) (Nichols, J., concurring)), yet we also note the statutory prohibition of the obligation of DoD funds except in accord with regulations, 10 U.S.C. § 2202, and that 7420.1 was created pursuant to specific statutory authority, refers to itself as a regulation, and contains no grant of discretion but, on the contrary, employs mandatory terms such as “will not” and “will” rather than directory terms such as “should.”
See Community Nutrition Institute v. Young,
818 F.2d 943, 947 (D.C.Cir.1987) (use of “mandatory, definitive language is a powerful, even potentially dispositive, factor”);
compare American Business. Ass’n v. United States,
627 F.2d 525, 532 (use of “will” indicates statement is binding norm)
with Guardian Federal Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. FSLIC,
589 F.2d 658, 667 (D.C.Cir.1978) (use of “may” indicates statement is a “general statement of policy”).
Classifying 7420.1 in the first instance is not an inquiry “well suited to an appellate court.”
Doe v. Hampton,
566 F.2d 265, 281 (D.C.Cir.1977);
see Piccone,
407 F.2d at 877. Notwithstanding the board’s holding that 7420.1 was a denial of authority, our inquiry would be inadvisable here, where the board declined to consider the government’s argument that 7420.1 is not a binding regulation, the record on appeal contains merely the text of 7420.1, and the parties have not focused on the issue. The board found incredible the exculpatory, after-the-fact testimony of DSA and DFSC representatives, but the record is devoid of statements by an authoritative official of DoD, the agency that issued 7420.1. Though it may be difficult to imagine how a regulation that denies authority to use the stock fund was intended to permit that use, the Supreme Court has stated that the intent of the issuing authority is a factor to consider.
See Thorpe v. Housing Authority of City of Durham,
393 U.S. 268, 89 S.Ct. 518, 21 L.Ed.2d 474 (1969). Such intent, if ascertainable, is entitled to deference.
See Brock v. Cathedral Bluffs Shale Oil Co.,
796 F.2d 533, 537 (D.C.Cir.1986) (Scalia, J.).
Accordingly, we remand to the board for the sole purpose of determining the DoD’s intent in issuing 7420.1 at the time it was issued. That intent may be ascertained by examining “the language, its context, the persons or offices affected, and any available extrinsic evidence,”
Hampton,
566 F. at 281, including the factors above noted. If the board determines that 7420.1 is a “binding regulation”,
Brock,
796 F.2d at 533, a decision should be issued forthwith for NET.
CONCLUSION
The decision of the board in favor of the government is vacated and the case is remanded for a determination of whether 7420.1 is a mandatory regulation binding on the government and for such further proceedings, consistent with this opinion, as the board may deem necessary.
COSTS
Each party to bear its own costs.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
BALDWIN, Senior Circuit Judge, concurs in the result.