This is an appeal by a Miller Act surety from a partial summary judgment by the Claims Court (No. 6-82C (Oct. 4, 1984)) denying the surety’s claim for the recovery of a progress payment of $23,163.50, alleged by the surety to have been improperly paid the prime contractor by the Government after it had notified the Government that the contractor was in default. We vacate and remand for further proceedings.
BACKGROUND
Balboa Insurance Company (“Balboa”) was the surety for the contractor, Chemical Engineers & Constructors, Inc. (“CEC”), on contract N62467-79-C-2604 (“contract”) entered into August 8, 1979, for alterations to an existing structure at the Naval Training Center, Orlando, Florida. Balboa provided CEC Miller Act (40 U.S.C. §§ 270a- *1160 270d (1982)) payment and performance bonds.
The fifth payment, at issue here, was requested from the Government by CEC on January 30, 1980. According to Navy interoffice memoranda, the amount of completed performance under the contract at that time was 91%. Payment was authorized on February 1, 1980. Balboa received written notice by early February that led it to believe that CEC was in financial straits and would not be able to fulfill its payment and performance obligations. On February 14, 1980, it addressed a letter to this effect to the Contracting Officer (received the next day) demanding that no further contract funds be released without its consent. A Government check in the amount of $23,-163.50 was issued and disbursed to CEC on February 21, 1980, nevertheless.
Subsequently, CEC authorized the Government to make future contract payments directly to Balboa. (The sixth progress payment check, also issued to CEC, was disputed in the Claims Court, but is not at issue in this appeal.) In June, 1980, the Government terminated the contract, and another firm completed the contract. Balboa asserted that it should have received the fifth payment check and, when the Government denied liability, sought recovery of that amount in the U.S. Claims Court. 1
The opinion of the Claims Court was issued from the bench. The court granted the Government’s motion for summary judgment and denied the Government’s liability to the surety. It is from this judgment that Balboa appeals.
OPINION
A. Jurisdiction
The Government argues that because it owes no duty to protect the surety from its principal, CEC, during performance, payment to the contractor is “not an appropriate subject for judicial review to determine whether the Government considered the surety’s interests.” Further, it contends that a surety is similar to a subcontractor, who is not in privity of contract with the Government. Thus, it concludes that neither the Claims Court nor this court possesses jurisdiction over the suit of a surety against the United States to recover an allegedly improperly paid progress payment.
Decisions of our predecessor court and the Supreme Court make clear that a surety is
not
in the same position as that of a subcontractor or materialman.
E.g., United Electric Corp. v. United States,
Although it is conceivable that under certain circumstances a surety could assert rights against the Government under the
*1161
third-party beneficiary rule,
see Montana Bank of Circle, N.A. v. United States,
[T]he surety was entitled to the benefit of all the rights of the laborers and materialmen whose claims it paid and those of the contractor whose debts it paid. The surety then is subrogated to the rights of the contractor who could sue the Government since it was in privity of contract with the United States. The surety is likewise subrogated to the rights of the laborers and materialmen who might have superior equitable rights to the retainage but no right to sue the [United States].
The Government further contends that neither the Claims Court nor this court has jurisdiction over a claim by a surety for non-retained funds, as opposed to those not yet disbursed. It premises this argument on the assertion that
[C]ases involving a surety’s claim to retainages, ... in which the Government’s role has been described as that of a “stakeholder,” are readily distinguishable from this action, since those cases involve rights arising through subrogation, upon satisfaction by the surety of outstanding subcontractor claims____ The concept of the United States as a stakeholder does not arise in a case such as this where the competing claims are those of the surety vis-a-vis the contractor. Rather, the theory is only applicable where the competing interests are those of the surety on the one hand and an assignee of the contractor on the other.
This assertion is untenable.
The Government’s reasoning, that in this case the United States was not in the position of a “stakeholder” of the funds it had already disbursed to CEC, is based on its distinguishing cases in which the United States was found to be a “stakeholder” and the surety sought only the recovery of a retainage still in the possession of the Government. We are not persuaded that a difference exists for the purposes of jurisdiction. When a contractor defaults under the contract, the obligation of the surety then arises under its performance and payment bonds. When the surety then finances the contract to completion, it is subrogated to the contractor’s property rights in the
contract balance. Pearlman v. Reliance Insurance Co.,
[W]hen plaintiff [the surety] notified defendant of the unpaid claims of laborers and materialmen and asserted a claim to the unpaid contract balance, the defendant still held [as yet unpaid funds]. At that time, the Government asserted no claim to the [funds] so that the Government held that amount as a stakeholder *1162 with full knowledge that the surety and the assignee claimed a right to the money-
We agree with the conclusion of the Court of Claims that, upon notification by the surety of the unsatisfied claims of the materialmen, the Government became a stakeholder with respect to the amount not yet expended under the contract that it holds at the time of notification of default. However, we can discern no reasonable basis for the Government’s distinction between retainages and progress payments when, as in this case, the surety informed the Government of the contractor’s alleged breach before the payment was disbursed.
American Fidelity Fire Insurance Co.,
The Government fails to show
any
support for its contention that the United States may not become a stakeholder when the surety’s suit involves the contractor itself rather than a contractor’s assignee; nor is there any meaningful distinction between them in the context of this case. An assignee of a defaulted contractor is also subrogated to the contractor’s rights,
First National City Bank v. United States,
We disagree with the Government’s argument that language in
Newark Insurance Co. v. United States,
Surely a stakeholder, caught in the middle between two competing claimants, cannot, in effect, decide the merits of their claims by the mere physical act of delivering the stake to one of them. If his position as stakeholder becomes uncomfortable, and the claimants do not take steps to get a judicial solution of the question, the law has provided him with an interpleader proceeding by which he can deposit the stake in court and walk out free of the annoyance of being in the middle.
If it is made to appear that the Government’s officials, after due notice of the facts giving rise to an equitable right in the plaintiff surety company, and of the plaintiff’s assertion of such a right, paid out, without a valid reason for so doing, the money in question to someone other than the plaintiff, the plaintiff will be entitled to a judgment.
In
National Surety Corp. v. United States,
While it is true that many of the cases have dealt solely with retainage, it is apparent that this stems from the fact *1163 that the retainage is in many instances all that is left to battle over when the surety discovers that a default exists. It is clear from a review of the cases that the Courts make no distinction between earned progress payments and retained percentages in determining the surety’s equitable rights upon the contractor s default
The surety’s rights apply to the total fund, no matter what it is called, which remains in the hands of the United States (or any owner-obligee) at the time notice of default under its bond is established.
(Emphasis supplied.)
Accord, American Fidelity Fire Insurance Co.,
Finally, we disagree with the Government’s assertion that the Court of Claims did not resolve the issue of whether it possesses jurisdiction in a situation similar to the one here. Several cases, although not decided on the merits in favor of a plaintiff surety, have recognized jurisdiction over a surety’s cause.
E.g., United States Fidelity,
In v¡ew 0f the foregoing, we hold that both the Claims Court and this court have jurisdiction to hear the claim of a Miller Act surety against the United States for funds allegedly improperly disbursed to a contractor.
B. Propriety of Summary Judgment
The party moving for summary judgment bears the burden of establishing that the material facts are not in dispute and entitle it to judgment as a matter of law. 6 J. Moore, W. Taggart, and J. Wicker, Moore’s Federal Practice ¶ 56.15[3] (2d ed. 1985). If an issue of credibility exists, or if the movant fails to establish that there is no genuine issue over any material issue of fact, the motion must be denied.
United States v. Diebold, Inc.,
In response to Balboa’s assertions in the Claims Court that the Government either did not exercise discretion, or, in the alternative, acted unreasonably in issuing the fifth progress payment to CEC, the Government moved for summary judgment, contending that its agents acted reasonably, and produced evidence describing some of the events leading to the February *1164 21 issuance of the progress payment to CEC. The Government’s evidence establishes as an uncontested fact that, as of January 30, contract performance was on schedule. On the basis of this “undisputed” fact alone, the Claims Court determined that the Government’s decision to pay CEC rather than Balboa was reasonable. Balboa argues that the court failed to consider a number of factors that the Court of Claims has determined to be important to resolution of the issue of reasonableness.
As the Court of Claims stated in
Argonaut Insurance Co. v. United States,
Where the Government is entitled to exercise its discretion, the “plaintiff has an unusually heavy burden of proof in showing that the determination made ... was arbitrary and capricious,”
Royal Indemnity Co. v. United States,
“It is common knowledge that contractors rely upon contract proceeds administered through progress payments to properly finance the contract.”
Fireman’s Fund Insurance Co. v. United States,
The following factors have been considered by the Court of Claims and other courts to be important in determining whether the Government has exercised reasonable discretion in distributing funds:
(1) Attempts by the Government after notification by the surety, to determine that the contractor had the capacity and intent to complete the job.
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. United States,
(2) Percentage of contract performance completed at the time of notification by the surety.
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. United States,
(3) Efforts of the Government to determine the progress made on the contract after notice by the surety.
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. United States,
(4) Whether the contract was subsequently completed by the contractor (not
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conclusive, but relevant to show the reasonableness of the contracting officer’s determination of the progress on the project).
See Argonaut Insurance Co.,
(5) Whether the payments to the contractor subsequently reached the subcontractors and materialmen (this goes to the equitable obligation of the Government to subcontractors and others to see that they will be paid; also, because the surety is liable to the subcontractors, any money that reaches them furthers the objectives of the surety as well as those of the Government).
United States Fidelity,
(6) Whether the Government contracting agency had notice of problems with the contractor’s performance previous to the surety’s notification of default to the Government.
United States Fidelity,
(7) Whether the Government’s action violates one of its own statutes or regulations.
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. United States,
(8) Evidence that the contract could or could not be completed as quickly or cheaply by a successor contractor.
United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. United States,
In response to the Government’s motion, Balboa presented extensive affidavit, deposition, and other evidence to the Claims Court, the underlying facts of which it would have attempted to prove at trial. Much of the evidence pertained to the factors listed above and included a portion of the Government’s own Contract Administration Manual, Federal Regulations, and the contract language itself. Further analysis and evaluation are indicated inasmuch as the Claims Court granted the Government’s motion solely on the basis that, as of January 30, over two weeks before Balboa notified the contracting officer of CEC’s default, the contract was on schedule and 91% complete. The Claims Court neither considered nor evaluated Balboa’s evidence addressed to the above-enumerated factors.
Moreover, the Claims Court found that Balboa did not submit “any proof of the type of deliberate or fraudulent conduct required.” Proof of “deliberate or fraudulent conduct” is only one way of demonstrating abuse of discretion and is
required
only when allegations of bad faith have been asserted.
See United States Fidelity & Guaranty Co. v. United States,
We are persuaded that the Government has not adequately shown the absence of dispute on all issues of material fact and, therefore, hold that summary judgment was improper.
The facts in this ease have not been sufficiently analyzed to determine whether the Government’s payment of the fifth progress payment was a reasonable exercise of the discretion conferred on the contracting agency by the terms of the contract and the applicable law and regulations. Accordingly, we vacate and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
VACATED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. In its complaint, Balboa asserted that it "was called upon to make payment to subcontractors and material suppliers of Chemical on the project, and made such payments in the amount of $66,411.68.” This figure was not disputed in the Claims Court, and the determination of the issue was precluded by the summary disposition of the case. For jurisdictional purposes, we assume that Balboa has reimbursed CEC creditors under the contract.
. The Court of Claims has upheld the superior rights of sureties’ claims against the Government over those of,
inter alia,
assignees, a financing institute, and a trustee in bankruptcy.
United Pacific Ins. Co. v. United States,
. It is apparent that with its jurisdiction arguments the Government is attempting to bootstrap its position by asserting that the "correct” result on the merits (in this case, denial of recovery to Balboa) precludes this court’s jurisdiction. From there it is an easy step for the Government to claim that because this court lacks jurisdiction, it should not even address the merits of Balboa's claims. To adopt such circular reasoning would be tantamount to holding that
whenever
a surety could not recover on a claim against the Government, the court that so held lacked jurisdiction to make such a determination. It is possible that the Government is confusing failure to state a cause of action with lack of jurisdiction,
see Montana-Dakota Utilities Co. v. Northwestern Pub. Serv. Co.,
. Contrary to the assertion of the Government, this construction of Rule 56 has not been controverted by the Claims Court.
