The United States (“government”) seeks review of a final decision of the Court of Federal Claims awarding Barrett Refining Corp. (“Barrett”) the fair market value of the goods it delivered under one contract and dismissing the United States’ counterclaims for amounts that the United States paid in excess of fair market value on three other contracts.
Barrett Refining Corp. v. United States,
BACKGROUND
The facts central to this appeal are discussed below. For additional background, all the facts of this case are explained in great detail in two thorough and well-written opinions from the Court of Federal Claims.
Id.; Barrett Refining Corp. v. United States,
Barrett entered into four contracts with the Defense Fuel Supply Center, now called the Defense Energy Support Cen.ter, that are relevant to the present appeal.
Barrett 1,
In a separate and earlier action, the government’s standard price adjustment clause was held to be unenforceable because it failed to comply with the Federal Acquisition Regulations.
MAPCO Alaska Petroleum, Inc. v. United States,
The parties did not agree on a valuation.
Bairett 2,
The government appeals to this court, asserting error in the valuation methodology and the dismissal of its counterclaims. We have exclusive appellate jurisdiction. 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3) (1994).
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
This court reviews legal conclusions from the Court of Federal Claims de novo, and reviews factual findings for clear error.
Alger v. United States,
This court reviews discretionary decisions from the Court of Federal Claims, such as the selection of a method of determining fair market value, for an abuse of discretion.
Seravalli v. United States,
B. Analysis
1. Barrett’s Quantum Valebant Claim a.
The government first raises the threshold question of whether the Court of Federal Claims had jurisdiction to consider Barrett’s claim for
quantum valebant
relief.
1
The government suggests that Barrett’s claim relies on an implied-in-law contract and correctly points out that the Court of Federal Claims has no jurisdiction over such contracts. However, the court does have jurisdiction over implied-in-fact contracts.
United States v. Mitchell,
In the present case, the Court of Federal Claims found that “[o]nce the unauthorized [price escalation] clause is struck out, ... [the] express contract simply incorporates an implied-in-fact promise by the government to pay at least fair market value for the fuel delivered by Barrett under the contract.”
Barrett 2,
The government is, at least implicitly, also challenging the court’s finding of an implied-in-fact contract. That question, to which we now turn, goes not to jurisdiction, but to whether Barrett has stated a claim upon which relief can be granted.
City of Cincinnati,
The Supreme Court has defined an implied-in-fact contract as “an agreement ... founded upon a meeting of minds, which, although not embodied in an express contract, is inferred, as a fact, from conduct of the parties showing, in the light of the surrounding circumstances, their tacit understanding.”
Balt. & Ohio R.R. v. United States,
Given that the price escalation clause was unauthorized and unenforceable,
2
we agree with the Court of Federal Claims’ implicit legal conclusion that there was no longer any express clause covering price escalation, and thus, nothing to preclude an implied-in-fact agreement on that term. We also agree with the Court of Federal Claims’ factual finding of a promise by the government to pay at least fair market value.
Barrett 2,
This court has previously identified four requirements of an implied-in-fact contract: (1) mutuality of intent to contract; (2) consideration; (3) lack of ambiguity in offer and acceptance; and (4) actual authority in the government representative to bind the government.
City of Cincinnati,
b.
We now address the merits of the Court of Federal Claims’ decision to provide Barrett quantum valebant relief based on the implied-in-fact contract. The government presents three challenges. First, the government asserts that the Court of Federal Claims did not provide quantum valebant relief, but rather reformed the contract, or at least utilized a “reformation approach.” Second, the government objects to the failure to utilize a comparable sales approach to determine fair market value. Third, the government objects to the selection of a naphtha-based index instead of a gasoline-based index as the basis of the price escalation. We treat these in turn.
The government’s first challenge, that the court reformed the contract or used a reformation approach, is without merit. The Court of Federal Claims clearly explained that it was providing
quantum valebant
relief and clearly utilized a
quantum valebant
approach. The government emphasizes, however, that in determining fair market value the court: (1) replaced the price index of the unauthorized price escalation clause with an alternate price index; and (2) used the word “reformation” on a single occasion in its opinion to refer to this replacement.
Bar
*1061
rett 2,
The government’s second challenge, that the Court of Federal Claims erred in not using a comparable sales method, is also without merit. This court has stated that the comparable sales method is not mandated and that this court is “unwilling to restrict the trial courts to any single basis for determining fair market value.”
Seravalli
The government’s third challenge, that the selection of a naphtha-based index was error because it did not preserve the bargain of the parties as much as the selection of a gasoline-based index would have, also fails. The government’s argument is based on the fact that the unauthorized escalation clause called for the use of a gasoline-based index. However, the government does not dispute the Court of Federal Claims’ finding that the naphtha-b'ased index “provides data that more closely reflects the product Barrett was actually selling.”
Barrett 2,
2. The Government’s Counterclaims
a.
The government argues that the court erred by not analyzing all four contracts at issue in the same manner. The government correctly notes that it paid more than the fair market value, as determined by the court, for three of the four contracts at issue. Arguing from this, the government asserts that it has a claim for these differentials or, in the alternative, that they should be used to offset the deficiency in the fourth contract.
In its reply brief, the government appears to recognize that it has no claim under the theory of
quantum valebant.
That doctrine is an equitable one for the recovery of the value of goods or services provided.
Urban Data,
The only other theory offered by the government is its authority to recover unauthorized payments.
3
The government’s payments were at least partially unauthorized. The unauthorized portion presumably being the entire amount of the price escalation(s), because it was this amount that was calculated according to an illegal method.
MAPCO,
The government cites numerous cases for the proposition that it can recover unauthorized payments.
E.g., Wisc. Cent. R.R. Co. v. United States,
As explained earlier, the Court of Federal Claims’ Tucker Act jurisdiction does not extend to claims based on an implied-in-law contract. However, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1503 and 2508 provide the court with jurisdiction if the government brings such a claim as a counterclaim. 28 U.S.C. §§ 1503, 2508 (1994);
Cont’l Mgmt., Inc. v. United States,
b.
We turn now to whether those counterclaims stated a claim upon which relief could be granted. The Court of Federal Claims determined that the cases cited by the government, for the proposition that it could recover unauthorized payments, were all factually distinguishable. We, however, are of the opinion that even if the relevant cases can be distinguished, those distinctions do not circumvent the fact in this case that part of the government’s payments were unauthorized.
The relevant cases stand for the proposition that the government can recover unauthorized payments.
United States v. Wurts,
The Court of Federal Claims determined, and Barrett argues, that the facts of this case are distinguishable from all of the cases articulating the above proposition. Indeed, in the present case the government is attempting, through its counterclaims, to recover amounts that it was obligated to pay under a contract that has not been declared void. However,
Grand Trunk Western Railway Co. v. United States,
Although these distinctions may be compelling in another case, they are not compelling in the present one. This is because they do not undermine the rationale for allowing the government to recover unau *1064 thorized payments. As the Supreme Court stated in Wisconsin Central:
The question is not presented as between the government and its officer, or between the officer and the recipient of such payments, but as between the government and the recipient, and is then a question whether the latter can be allowed to retain the fruits of action not authorized by law, resulting from an erroneous conclusion by the agent of the government as to the legal effect of the particular statutory law under or in reference to which he is proceeding.
Barrett’s brief presents five arguments in support of the Court of Federal Claims’ dismissal of the government’s counterclaims. These are: (1) the government’s payments were not overpayments because, first, they were in the amount called for by the contract and, second, the illegality was in the method of computing the payments, not in the amounts that were paid; (2) only the price escalation clause was illegal and unenforceable, not the entire contract; (3) Barrett made no implied promise to pay back the unauthorized payments; (4) the government is not entitled to quantum valebant equitable relief; and (5) the government is prohibited by Federal Circuit case law from benefiting from its own illegal clause.
Given our analysis of the controlling cases above, the first two arguments have no merit. The third argument is irrelevant because it cannot remove the lack of authorization. We also take note, as did the Supreme Court in
Wisconsin Central,
“of the principle that parties receiving moneys illegally paid by a public officer are liable
ex aequo et bono
to refund them.”
Barrett’s last argument hinges on a statement that this court made in
Beta Systems, Inc. v. United States,
In sum, the government has stated a claim upon which relief can be granted. Moreover, the evidence shows that the payments made by the government were based on an illegal price escalation clause and, thus, were unauthorized. As a consequence, and in the absence of any compelling equitable arguments to the contrary, the government has a right to seek and recover the unauthorized payments it made.
See Wurts,
Accordingly, we vacate the Court of Federal Claims’ dismissal of the government’s counterclaims and remand for further consideration consistent with this opinion. On remand the court must determine the amount of the payments made under the unauthorized price escalation clause and order Barrett to refund that to the government, subject to Barrett’s claim for fair market value. In that process, the *1065 court should make findings regarding the base price that the government agreed to in each of the contracts in question. If the base price exceeded the fair market value, then the Court of Federal Claims should only order Barrett to refund payments made in excess of the base price.
CONCLUSION
We have found no error in the decision of the Court of Federal Claims to award Barrett quantum, valebant relief. However, the government’s counterclaims have stated a claim upon which relief could be granted and the Court of Federal Claims erred in dismissing them.
AFFIRMED-IN-PART, VACATED-IN-PART, AND REMANDED.
Notes
. This court has previously noted the difference between
quantum meruit
and
quantum valebant.
“The former is said to apply to services and the latter to goods.”
Urban Data Sys., Inc. v. United States,
. The determination in
MAPCO
that only the price escalation term was unenforceable and invalid, and that the entire contract was not invalid, is consistent with our case law.
Urban Data, 699
F.2d at 1148, 1154 (affirming "the Board’s decision that the subcontracts had invalid price terms” and stating that it was "plain that only the price terms of the two subcontracts were invalid' — not any other part of those agreements”);
AT & T v. United States,
. The government also states this theory as the recovery of overpayments. It asserts that it overpaid Barrett in the amount that its cumulative payments on any given contract exceeded the fair market value, as determined by the Court of Federal Claims, of the fuel delivered. We disagree with this characterization; the government was not limited under any provision of the contract to paying fair market value for the fuel delivered.
