Precision Asset Management Corp. v. United States

125 Fed. Cl. 228, 2016 U.S. Claims LEXIS 165, 2016 WL 900097
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedFebruary 26, 2016
DocketNo. 15-1495 C
StatusPublished
Cited by26 cases

This text of 125 Fed. Cl. 228 (Precision Asset Management 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
Precision Asset Management Corp. v. United States, 125 Fed. Cl. 228, 2016 U.S. Claims LEXIS 165, 2016 WL 900097 (uscfc 2016).

Opinion

Post-Award Bid Protest; Subject Matter Jurisdiction; Standing; Economic Interest; Substantial Chance.

OPINION

James F. Merow, Senior Judge

Precision Asset Management Corporation (“plaintiff’ or “Precision”) filed the instant [230]*230post-award bid protest on December 10, 2015. See Doc. 1. In the complaint, plaintiff alleges that the Department of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) failed to fairly evaluate its proposal to manage certain property for the government, and asks that the court direct HUD to reconsider its submission. See id, at 2-3.

1. BACKGROUND AND RELEVANT FACTS

The Federal Housing Authority (“FHA”), which is part of HUD, “administers the single-family mortgage insurance program.” See Doc. 27 at 11. When a homeowner defaults on an FHA-insured loan, many times, HUD ultimately acquires title to the property. See id HUD outsources the management of these properties, contracting with various outfits for asset management services. Asset management includes services related to the marketing and sales of the properties HUD has acquired. See id

A. The Solicitation

On July 25, 2014, HUD issued Solicitation No. DU204SA-13-R-0005 (the “solicitation”), requesting proposals for asset management services in twelve geographic areas. See AR at 44. The area at issue in this action, Area 5A, involves property in the states of North and South Carolina. See AR at 4031.2 Once the government received the requested proposals, the evaluation process involved two steps. First, HUD determined whether each proposal was technically acceptable, on a pass/fail basis. See AR at 4045.

Those proposals that were deemed technically acceptable, were then evaluated with the goal of determining which was the best value to HUD. See id This analysis considered past performance and price, assigning approximately the same relative importance to each. See id In order to determine the strength of a bidder’s past performance, the technical evaluation panel (“TEP”) analyzed the recency, relevancy, and quality of that performance, along with the panel’s confidence in the bidder’s ability to perform under the contract. See AR at 4048,4052.

The TEP assigned each proposal one of five adjectival ratings for confidence and quality of past performance: excellent/high confidence, good/significant confidence, fair/ some confidence, no confidence, and neutral/unknown confidence. See id In coming to these determinations, the TEP was to evaluate the three most recent, relevant references provided by the bidder. See AR at 4038.

B. Plaintiff’s Proposal

Plaintiff submitted its initial proposal for all twelve geographic areas on September 23, 2014. See AR at 1224. For Area 5A, the only area at issue in this protest, plaintiff was to XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXX, and the proposed cost was XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX. See AR at 1224, 1483. Plaintiffs proposal also included XXXXX contract references, on which HUD was to make its past performance evaluation. See AR at 1418.

By letter, dated August 27, 2015, HUD notified plaintiff that it had established a competitive range and was initiating discussions. See AR at 2996. The letter also stated that the TEP found plaintiffs proposal to be “Technically Acceptable.” See id In an attachment enclosed with the letter, HUD noted that it had identified XXXX XXXX XXXXXXXXXXX in plaintiffs proposal, and that it had XXXXXXXX XXXXXXX XXXXXXXXX AR at 2958. The only substantive note on the attachment was that while plaintiffs XXXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXX XXXXX XXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXXX XXXXXXXXXX. Id

HUD revised the solicitation several times, and plaintiff submitted its revised proposal on September 9, 2015. See AR at 3176-3207. Its revised proposal included XXXX XXXXXX XXXXX XXXXXXXX XXXXXX XXXX Doe. 1 at 8-9. Plaintiff lowered its original price by nearly XXXXXXXXX to XXXXXXX XXX, and included XXXXXX contract references. See id, AR at 3581. [231]*231After conducting its past performance evaluation, HUD assigned plaintiffs proposal a “Neutral/Unknown Confidence” rating. See AR at 3687.

C. The Award and Plaintiffs Challenge

The record lists the entities deemed technically acceptable, and in the competitive range, as follows:

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See Doc. 27 at 30 (citing AR at 3687).

The TEP recommended that HUD award the contract for Area 6A to KM Minemier & Associates (“Minemier”). AR at 3700-01. Minemier received a “Good/Significant Confidence” rating, and offered a price of $33,171,912.89. See id. The TEP chose Mi-nemieris proposal as a compromise between price and confidence rating. In selecting Minemier, the TEP reasoned:

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Id.

Plaintiff now takes issue with the way in which HUD conducted this evaluation, and contends' that it should have received a higher, .“if not the highest,” confidence rating. Doc. 1 at 13. HUD, allegedly, did not adhere to the evaluation criteria as listed in the solicitation, resulting in a rating that was arbitrary and capricious, lacking a rational basis. See id. at 14. Specifically, plaintiff alleges that: “HUD incorrectly evaluated its past performance by: (a) failing to fully and fairly consider its references: (b) assigning a rating that by the terms of the Solicitation was not applicable; (c) failing to evaluate a further reference once it determined that one of Precision’s references was ‘not relevant.’ ” Doc. 31 at 7-8. Plaintiff also contends that HUD violated its duty to engage in meaningful discussions, pursuant to 48 C.F.R. § 15.306(d). See Doc. 1 at 14.

In addition to the allegations of error with regard to the TEP’s evaluation of its proposal, plaintiff also argues in its motion for judgment on the administrative record that “the rating assigned to Minemier ... bears [232]*232no rational relation or connection with Mine-mier’s actual proposal.” Doc. 24 at 25. See also Doc. 31 at 30 (“There is, in fact, no rational or coherent basis for the TEP’s assignment of a ‘Good/Significant Confidence’ rating to Minemier.”). Plaintiff suggests it was prejudiced not only by the errors in its own evaluation, but also by HUD’s improper evaluation of Minemier.

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125 Fed. Cl. 228, 2016 U.S. Claims LEXIS 165, 2016 WL 900097, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/precision-asset-management-corp-v-united-states-uscfc-2016.