Alfa Laval Separation, Inc. (“Alfa Laval”) appeals the judgment of the Court of Federal Claims,
Alfa Laval Separation, Inc. v. United States,
Background
Alfa Laval has been the sole-source provider of centrifugal fuel oil purifiers to the Navy for over 20 years. After a 1996 maintenance inspection, Alfa Laval informed the Navy that certain purifiers on the Navy’s DD963 class destroyers were beyond repair, and offered to supply updated models for a total cost of approximately $18.9 million, at a per-unit price of approximately $350,000. This price was lower than the $387,814.67 average unit price Alfa Laval had charged the Navy in
Alfa Laval submitted three proposals ranging in price from $19.4 million to $23.6 million. Westfalia was the only other of-feror submitting a proposal, at $13.7 million, a price about $5 million less than Alfa Laval’s lowest proposal and $10 million less than Alfa Laval’s highest proposal. Because Westfalia had not yet manufactured the exact purifier it proposed to supply, the evaluation panel granted West-falia extensions under the RFP, allowing it to meet several of the testing requirements with extrapolated data from" other purifiers it has manufactured. The panel lacked “a set of measurements ... demonstrating [Westfalia’s] compliance with the solicitation’s Type II [vibration] testing requirements.”
Alfa Laval,
After a three-day trial on the merits, the Court of Federal Claims entered judgment in favor of the government and Westfalia. The court found that the Navy violated the applicable procurement statute and regulation by awarding the contract to Westfalia, because Westfalia’s proposal did not meet the Type II vibration testing requirement, but that the mistake was not sufficiently prejudicial to Alfa Laval to justify relief.
Discussion
Although we review legal conclusions of the Court of Federal Claims
de novo,
we disturb its factual findings only if they are “clearly erroneous.”
See Alger v. United States,
To prevail in a bid protest, a protester must show a significant, prejudicial error in the procurement process.
See Statistica, Inc. v. Christopher,
Westfalia and the government do not dispute that Westfalia’s proposal was technically noncompliant in that it failed to comply with the Type II vibration test requirement. But this error was not insignificant. As the trial court held, “regardless of the panel’s view of the appropriateness of the standard [set out in the RFP],
Alfa Laval contends, and we agree, that the Navy’s error was prejudicial. The only bid competing with Alfa Laval was unacceptable under the standards set out in the RFP. Thus, it was error to find that Alfa Laval, the incumbent, responsible supplier, had no “substantial chance” to receive the contract award absent the Navy’s error in awarding the contract to Westfalia.
The trial court based its finding “on considerations of price,” noting the “colossal price difference” between Westfalia’s offer ($13.7 million) and Alfa Laval’s lowest priced offer ($19.4 million), as well as the difference between Alfa Laval’s own sole-source proposal ($18.9 million) and the lowest bid Alfa Laval submitted in the competitive process ($19.4 million).
See
Westfalia’s contention that Alfa Laval’s own offer did not meet the requirements of the solicitation and therefore was not eligible for award is meritless. The trial court found that “[h]ad the evaluators correctly analyzed the data,” they would have found Alfa Laval’s proposal “irrefutably compliant.”
Finally, appellees’ suggestion that Alfa Laval was required to put on evidence demonstrating that Westfalia’s lack of Type II vibration data accounted for the price differential between its offer and Westfalia’s has no basis in law. A protester demonstrates prejudice by showing “that there was a substantial chance it would have received the contract award” if the government had not violated the law.
Statistica,
Conclusion
Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Federal Claims is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
