617 F.2d 590 | Ct. Cl. | 1980
delivered the opinion of the court:
This is a suit for proposal preparation costs by a disappointed offeror in a negotiated procurement for an automatic data processing (ADP) system. Plaintiff argues the award of an ADP contract by the Mine Enforcement and Safety Administration (MESA) to a competing offeror, Honeywell Information Systems, Inc., (Honeywell) was arbitrary and capricious under the standards delineated in Keco Industries, Inc. v. United States, 192 Ct. Cl. 773, 428 F.2d 1233 (1970) (hereinafter, "Keco I”) and Keco Industries, Inc. v. United States, 203 Ct. Cl. 566, 492 F.2d 1200 (1974) (hereinafter, "Keco II”).
I.
FACTS
The procurement in dispute began with a Request for Proposals (RFP) No. S2751008 issued by MESA, United States Department of the Interior,
To be eligible for award of the fixed-price contract contemplated by this particular negotiated procurement RFP, an offeror had successfully to pass specified "benchmark” tests utilizing the equipment it proposed to furnish under the contract. Award was to be made to the offeror submitting the lowest priced offer (as evaluated) of those offerors who had successfully passed the benchmark tests. But the Government was completely free to reject any or all offers received. The RFP also required that the successful offeror rerun the benchmark tests upon installation of the computer system under the contract.
Plaintiff Burroughs, Honeywell, and other companies submitted timely proposals. In late November and early December, MESA determined that plaintiff and Honeywell had successfully passed the benchmark tests, and thus were eligible for award.
On December 16, 1975, MESA informed plaintiff and Honeywell they were required to submit their "best and final” offers no later than 2:00 p.m. EST on December 31, 1975. The office of MESA’s contracting officer for the procurement was in Denver, Colorado. But to give the
Plaintiff submitted its best and final offer to MESA at 1:30 p.m. EST in Arlington, Virginia, on December 31,1975. Honeywell submitted its best and final offer at 1:50 p.m. Honeywell's offer, however, was accompanied by a letter which stated in pertinent part:
* * * The enclosed cost tables contain an error. They are currently being reprinted and will be in your hands by 3 PM today. The arithmetic error is approximately $120,000 in evaluated cost and will result in an increase in cost to the tables enclosed.
The contracting officer (in Denver) was advised of these circumstances by telephone at about 2:00 p.m. EST on December 31, 1975. Plaintiffs lowest offer was for an estimated evaluated price of $1,944,561 for a proposed "systems life of 65 months.” Honeywell’s "uncorrected” cost tables reflected an estimated evaluated price of $1,784,395. The contracting officer by telephone accepted Honeywell’s statement of an arithmetic error of approximately $120,000 and decided that $120,000 would be the maximum change to the cost tables that he would accept. Thus, the contracting officer determined Honeywell had submitted an acceptable offer consisting of the original $1,784,395 stated in its proposal plus the $120,000 indicated in its letter for a total of $1,904,395; substantially below plaintiffs offer of $1,944,561. Honeywell’s corrected cost tables were delivered shortly thereafter at 2:45 p.m. EST. The tables indicated a total estimated evaluated price of $1,877,749, an increase of only $93,354 over the "uncorrected” cost tables but well within the error of "approximately $120,000” noted in the earlier communication. With the belief he was acting within the authority of Section 1.7 of the RFP,
On January 1, 1976, the Burroughs and Honeywell proposals were brought to Denver for further evaluation. Both proposals were found to be technically responsive to the requirements of the RFP by the benchmark committee and MESA’s technical evaluation committee. The proposals were also reviewed during the first week of January 1976 by a contract specialist on the contracting officer’s staff, Kathryne Hughes. Miss Hughes discovered that Honeywell’s best and final offer did not mention, nor did it show, several system components which had been shown on Honeywell’s benchmark proposal. The three missing components were one MXF 6004, one MTF 1045 and one MTF 1041.
The two proposals were also evaluated for cost computation accuracy. MESA found that both Burroughs and Honeywell had not computed costs as specified in the RFP and reevaluated the prices as follows: Honeywell at $1,884,874; Burroughs at $1,977,816. The contracting officer awarded the contract to Honeywell on February 10, 1976, as the lowest priced offer which had passed the benchmark tests and was technically acceptable. On June 21, 1976, after it had been installed, the Honeywell system successfully passed the rerun of the benchmark tests as called for by the contract.
By letters dated April 12 and June 28, 1976, to the Comptroller General of the United States, plaintiff protested the contract’s award to Honeywell on a variety of grounds. In the decision, Burroughs Corp., 56 Comp. Gen. 142 (1976), 76-2 CPD ¶ 472, on reconsideration, 56 Comp. Gen. 506 (1977), 77-1 CPD ¶ 256, plaintiffs protest was sustained and a recompetition of the contract, between Burroughs and Honeywell only, was recommended. Upon review of the facts the Comptroller General found, inter alia:
(1) Section II.2.1 of the RFP required offerors to propose "fixed prices, or prices which can be finitely determinable” for the initial contract and option periods. Honeywell’s submission of its proposal át 1:50 p.m. on December 31, 1975, with the qualification that it contained an error of "approximately $120,000” failed to meet this requirement.
(2) Because, in the Comptroller General’s view, Honeywell did not submit a legitimate offer before the 2:00 p.m. deadline, Honeywell’s delivery of its "corrected cost tables”
(3) The technical portion of Honeywell’s best and final communication proposed equipment different from that previously proposed and benchmark tested. That.is, Honeywell’s best and final offer lacked the three systems components mentioned above. The contracting officer improperly permitted Honeywell to correct these technical errors after the closing date.
In view of the foregoing deficiencies the Comptroller General ordered a recompetition and affirmed the decision on reconsideration. Honeywell Information Systems, Inc., 56 Comp. Gen. 506 (1977), 77-1 CPD ¶ 256.
In August 1978 MESA (which by that time had become the Mine Safety and Health Administration, MSHA, of the Department of Labor) provided the Comptroller General new information concerning its ADP needs indicating it was impossible to comply with the restricted recompetition recommendation. Instead, MSHA wished to enter into a new, fully competitive procurement to meet its expanding data processing needs. After audit of MSHA’s information, the Comptroller General in February 1979 withdrew the prior recommendation of a restricted procurement.
We note that nowhere in the entire consideration of the case, neither in his decision of December 9, 1976, nor his reconsideration of April 13, 1977, nor in his final reconsideration of February 1979, did the Comptroller General ever mention any possible entitlement of Burroughs to proposal preparation costs.
II.
POSITIONS OF THE PARTIES
Plaintiffs position may be simply stated. This court’s decision in Keco Industries, Inc. v. United States, 203 Ct. Cl. 566, 492 F.2d 1200 (1974), (Keco II), plaintiff contends, held that a bidder-claimant is entitled to bid preparation costs when the Government’s conduct toward that bidder is "arbitrary and capricious.” Keco II, id. at 574, 492 F.2d at 1203. A major factor to be considered in judging whether
For its part, defendant vehemently argues that while there may have been minor irregularities in the ADP contract award (anticipated by section 1.9(b) of the RFP), nothing occurred which rises to the level of arbitrary and capricious conduct. Defendant emphasizes that in this situation of negotiated procurement, the contracting officer was vested with a far greater measure of discretion than exists in a procurement utilizing formal advertising. The actions he took were pursuant to the exercise of this discretion and with the intent of avoiding the elimination of one offeror in a procurement where only two offerors remained. Defendant points out that plaintiff failed even to allege bad faith conduct on the part of the contracting officer, proof of which is a crucial factor under the Keco II standards; thus plaintiffs burden of proof is substantially greater than it would be otherwise. Defendant further claims that Burroughs’ proposal was technically unacceptable; since Burroughs would thus have been barred from
Finally, we note again in passing, that the Comptroller General never even mentioned Burroughs’ possible entitlement to proposal preparation costs in his three decisions and further, that the Government in any event, had the right to reject all offers if it so desired, under section 1.9 of the RFP.
III.
THE COMPTROLLER GENERAL’S DECISIONS
Before analyzing the factors enumerated in Keco II for the recovery of proposal preparation costs it is necessary to clarify the impact the Comptroller General’s findings and conclusions have on the question before us. The Court of Claims is not bound by the views of the Comptroller General nor do they operate as a legal or judicial determination of the rights of the parties. See Font v. United States, 219 Ct. Cl. 335, 593 F.2d 388 (1979). In this particular case the parties do not dispute the Comptroller General’s factual conclusions, consequently there is no reason for this court not to accept these facts on cross-motions for summary judgment. Insofar as the legal conclusions of the Comptroller General are concerned, he determined that award of the contract to Honeywell was improper. Regardless of whether the court agrees with this legal conclusion, Keco II states that "proven violation of pertinent statutes or regulations can, but need not necessarily, be a ground for recovery [of proposal preparation costs],” (emphasis added). 203 Ct. Cl. at 574, 492 F.2d at 1204. The questions of legal error in a procurement, and entitlement to "bid” or "proposal” preparation costs are therefore quite distinct. The Comptroller General decided the former question, not the latter; we have only the latter before us. Furthermore, even in cases where the Comptroller General has found the existence of
The point is, the Comptroller General’s earlier decisions do not by any means mandate that plaintiff is entitled to its proposal preparation costs. Such entitlement can be determined only after scrutiny of the Keco factors. And where, as here, the Government error concerns only the prevailing proposal and not the claimant’s own rejected proposal, there must be "a careful examination of the claimant’s particular rights and interests with respect to that specific type of misconduct.” Keco II, 203 Ct. Cl. at 578, 492 F.2d at 1206; see section IV, infra.
IV.
THE KECO II CRITERIA
The opinion in Keco II sets forth four general criteria controlling entitlement to "bid” preparation costs. Keco II, 203 Ct. Cl. at 574, 492 F.2d at 1203-04. Subjective bad faith on the part of procuring officials will normally warrant recovery of these costs. Not far removed from the bad faith test is the second factor, proof that there was "no reasonable basis” for the administrative decision. Action by the Government which has no reasonable basis, the court noted, is often equated with conduct motivated by subjective bad faith. Keco II, id. at 575, 492 F.2d at 1204. Next, the degree of proof of error is related to the amount of discretion entrusted to the procurement officials by applicable statutes and regulations, i.e., the greater the discretion granted to a contracting officer, the more difficult it will be to prove the decision was arbitrary and capricious. Fourth, a proven violation of pertinent statutes or regulations is not necessarily, but can be, a ground for recovery. Application of these principles depends upon the type of dereliction committed by the Government and whether the dereliction occurred with respect to claimant’s own bid or that of a competitor.
Several of the above factors are especially relevant to resolution of this particular case. First, there is no sugges
It is also of key significance that the procurement in this case was conducted in the context of negotiation rather than by formally advertised bidding. In formally advertised bidding the pertinent statutes and regulations are far more strict about the conduct of the procurement than in a negotiated one, consequently in negotiated procurement the contracting officer is entrusted with a relatively high degree of discretion. For example, in formal advertising, a contracting officer is prohibited from considering a bid which does not conform to the invitation for bids. See 10 U.S.C. § 2305 (c)(1976), Nash & Cibinic, Federal Procurement Law 345 (3rd ed. Vol. I, 1977). Yet this concept is not applicable to negotiation, where the contracting officer is permitted to conduct oral or written discussions with offerors whose proposals vary from the RFP.
V.
ANALYSIS
The specific actions of the contracting officer which plaintiff complains were arbitrary and capricious are: (1) his decision that Honeywell had submitted an acceptably firm price though its proposal was qualified by an increase
Before addressing these points we are constrained to emphasize once again the limited nature of our decision. We decide only whether the contracting officer’s actions were arbitrary and capricious under Keco II. The contracting officer’s compliance, vel non, with the RFP and applicable regulations impinges upon this question in some degree, but it is merely one factor we consider in the broader context of his discretion, the reasonableness of and motivation for his decisions and whether the regulations allegedly violated were designed for the benefit of the plaintiff-offeror. The narrower question of whether the contract award was proper is not before us. In any event, to conclude that an offeror is automatically entitled to its proposal preparation costs because the Government may have violated (or hypothetically did violate) the terms of the RFP or certain regulations drastically oversimplifies the approach outlined in Keco II.
We turn first to plaintiffs complaint that the contracting officer was arbitrary and capricious by accepting Honeywell’s proposal with its increase of "approximately” $120,000. Plaintiff makes no suggestion at all that the contracting officer was motivated by bad faith in accepting this proposal. Instead, it is clear the contracting officer as shown by his affidavit had sought to avoid the situation of a sole source procurement, for that would have been, realistically speaking, exactly the result if he had excluded Honeywell’s proposal. Sole source procurements are strongly discouraged by the procurement regulations which state that all purchases are to be made on a competitive basis to the maximum practicable extent. 41 C.F.R. § 1-1.301 (1979). As far as the contracting officer knew, the error Honeywell wanted to correct was nothing more than an arithmetic one in a long, detailed and complex set of cost tables. Moreover, since the contracting officer treated the $120,000 "approxi
Furthermore, plaintiffs attack against the contracting officer’s decision to accept the "approximate” price proposal is based on a weak position since the requirement of including a price in negotiated proposals was never intended for the benefit of offerors, especially not for disappointed offerors. As the court noted in Keco II, "Not every regulation is established for the benefit of bidders as a class, and still fewer may create enforceable rights for the awardee’s competitors.” 203 Ct. Cl. at 578, 492 F.2d at 1206.
The requirement of price submissions in negotiated procurements stems from 10 U.S.C. § 2304(g) (1976) which proyides in pertinent part:
(g) In all negotiated procurements in excess of $10,000 in which rates or prices are not fixed by law or regulation and in which time of delivery will permit, proposals, including price, shall be solicited from the maximum number of qualified sources consistent with the nature and requirements of the supplies or services to be procured, and written or oral discussions shall be conducted with all responsible offerors who submit proposals within a competitive range, price, and other factors considered.
The key words, "including price,” however, were not made a part of the statute until passage of Pub. L. 90-500, 82 Stat. 851 (1968).
Plaintiffs second contention, that the contracting officer was arbitrary and capricious by finding Honeywell’s proposal technically responsive and accepting the changes Honeywell offered without conducting discussions with plaintiff is equally unpersuasive. To begin with, "Because of the broad discretion vested in the contracting officer to determine whether a proposal is technically acceptable, plaintiff has an unusually heavy burden of proof in showing that the determination made in this regard was arbitrary and capricious.” Continental Business Enterprises, Inc. v. United States, 196 Ct. Cl. 627, 637, 452 F.2d 1016, 1021 (1971). The Honeywell proposal was scrutinized by both the technical evaluation and the benchmark committees and found to be technically acceptable. Plaintiff might argue the committees were negligent or did not exercise due diligence by failing to discover the absence of the three computer components from Honeywell’s proposal. The point of Keco II, however, is that such negligence on the part of the Government does not entitle a "bidder” to preparation costs.
The committee approvals had been issued when the; contracting officer was told by Miss Hughes that three components were missing from Honeywell’s proposal. The contracting officer called Honeywell, was assured the omissions were minor, and accepted corrected pages of the Honeywell proposal which reincorporated the three missing components. No variation at all from the RFP’s actual requirements was contemplated by the technical corrections Honeywell submitted. Nor was there any change in Honeywell’s overall price by addition of the three compo
Therefore, we conclude that the contracting officer’s decision to accept the technical changes submitted by
To summarize: (1) the contracting officer’s acceptance of Honeywell’s price modification proceeded not from bad faith, but out of a regard for the policy of maintaining maximum competition in contract awards; (2) bad faith was never even alleged, much less proved. Moreover, (3) since the requirement of price submissions in negotiated procurements is designed to save the Government money, not for the benefit of competing offerors, plaintiffs assertion of a protectable interest in the enforcement of the price requirement has little support.
As for plaintiffs complaint concerning the changes Honeywell made in its technical proposal, (4) it would have been reasonable for the contracting officer to treat such changes as the correction of minor irregularities, in view of the proposal’s earlier acceptance by the technical evaluation and benchmark committees. Furthermore, these changes had already been benchmark tested and accepted prior to proposal submission on December 31, 1975. (5) If the Government was in any way negligent, Keco II holds that mere negligence on the part of the Government does not entitle a "bidder” to preparation costs.
Finally, when we add to these factors (6) the discretion given to Government officials in negotiated procurement, (7) the uncertainty that plaintiff would have won the contract regardless of the derelictions alleged, (8) the fact plaintiff complains of errors in the evaluation of a competitor’s proposal, not his own, and (9) plaintiffs heavy burden of proof, we must conclude the actions of the Government toward plaintiff were not arbitrary and capricious.
We so hold.
Keco I and Keco II are this court’s primary cases discussing a disappointed bidder’s right to sue for bid preparation costs against the Government. Keco I was before the court on defendant’s motion for summary judgment, which was denied; the case was remanded to the trial division. On the merits, the trial judge concluded plaintiff was not entitled to bid preparation costs. The court agreed with this conclusion in its opinion in Keco II.
Under Pub. L. 95-164, MESA became the Mine Safety and Health Administration and was transferred from the Department of the Interior to the Department of Labor.
Section 1.7 of the General Instructions of the RFP provided:
"1.7. LATE OFFERS AND MODIFICATIONS OR WITHDRAWALS
"(a) Any proposal received at the office designated in the solicitation after the exact time specified for receipt will not be considered
*59 "(b) Any modification of a proposal, except a modification resulting from the Contracting Officer’s request for 'best and final’ offer, is subject to the same conditions as in (a)(1) and (a)(2) of this provision.
"(c) A modification resulting from the Contracting Officer’s request for 'best and final’ offer received after the time and date specified in the request will not be considered unless received before award and the late receipt is due solely to mishandling by the Government after receipt at the Government installation.
"(e) Notwithstanding (a), (b), and (c) of this provision, a late modification of an otherwise successful (selected) proposal which makes its terms more favorable to the Government will be considered at any time it is received and may be accepted.”
The MXF 6004 is the computer system’s IOM ("input-output” multiplexer) expansion unit. As such, it augments the IOM, the component which connects the computer system’s central processing unit with the system’s peripheral devices, such as its tape and disk drives. The MTF 1045 is a code translator; the benchmark proposal showed two of these, while the best and final offer only showed one. Finally, the MTF 1041 is a component which is part of the computer system’s magnetic tape system.
Recognizing this situation the Comptroller General stated in an initial decision: "Consequently, it seems that the 'arithmetic’ error referenced by Honeywell might well have been caused by its inadvertent failure to include the IOM expansion and code translators it proposed and benchmark tested.” Burroughs Corp., 56 Comp. Gen. 142 (19Y6), 76-2 CPD ¶ 472 at p. 10-11. This implication was confirmed during oral argument of the case before this court by defendant’s attorney.
After examining defendant’s argument on this point and plaintiffs reply, we cannot say that Burroughs’ proposal was technically unacceptable, especially in view of its approval by both the technical evaluation and benchmark committees. Both proposals, Honeywell’s and Burroughs’, were approved by both committees.
See University Research Corp., Comp. Gen. Dec. B-186311, Feb. 3, 1978, 78-1 CPD ¶ 98; Harco Inc., Comp. Gen. Dec. B-189045, Jan. 26, 1979, 79-1 CPD ¶ 55.
This process is often referred to as "curing,’
1.9(b) of the RFP stated: "The Government reserves the right to reject any or all offers and to waive informalities and minor irregularities in offers received.”
In fact had there been a recompetition, it is entirely possible plaintiff, for any one of a number of reasons, could have lost proposal preparation costs a second time.
Keco II also concluded in this regard that, "The point is that, in those instances in which the alleged Government wrongdoing concerns only the prevailing bid and not the claimant’s own rejected proposal, there should be careful examination of the claimant’s particular rights and interests with respect to that specific type of misconduct. There may well be no one umbrella rule or principle for all such cases.” Id. at 578, 492 F.2d at 1206.
S.3293, 90th Cong., 2d Sess. 1, reprinted in [1968] U.S. Code Cong. & Ad. News 985,988.
The decision of whether a deviation or error constitutes a waivable informality is, naturally, one of discretion and judgment. See Excavation Construction Inc. v. United States, 204 Ct. Cl. 299, 308, 494 F.2d 1289, 1293 (1974).
DAR (ASPR) 3-805.5(d)(3), under "Disclosure of Mistakes Before Award” provides:
(3) If an offeror requests permission to correct a mistake in his proposal, a determination permitting the correction may be made, provided both the existence of the mistake and the proposal actually intended are established by clear and convincing evidence ascertainable from the solicitation and the proposal, and such correction shall not be considered discussions within the meaning of this paragraph 3-805. If, however, establishing the mistake and the intended proposal requires reference to documents, worksheets, or other data outside the solicitation and the proposal, then the correction of such a mistake may be accomplished only through the conduct of discussions with offerors in accordance with this paragraph 3-805. If the above determination cannot be made, and the contracting officer still contemplates award without discussions, the offeror shall be given the opportunity to withdraw or to verify his proposal.
Honeywell had passed the benchmark test with a specific computer configuration and the RFP required that its proposal conform to the configuration which had been benchmark tested. Honeywell’s failure to include this same configuration in its proposal was most likely, as the Comptroller General found, inadvertent. This inadvertent error could have been easily discovered by comparison of Honeywell’s proposal to its benchmark configuration and thus would be within the policy of the above cited provision.
The differences between this case and McCarty Corp. v. United States, 204 Ct. Cl. 768, 499 F.2d 633 (1974), in which we awarded bid preparation costs, are substantial and obvious. In McCarty the contracting officer improperly corrected a bid of a competing bidder with the result of displacing plaintiffs otherwise low bid. The officer furthermore had refused a proper request by plaintiff to correct its bid. The case was one of advertised bidding, not negotiation. Were it not for the clearly improper actions of the contracting officer, plaintiff in McCarty would have won the contract. Finally, plaintiff complained of derelictions in the evaluation of its own bid as well as that of a competitor. The actions of the contracting officer discriminating against plaintiff and wrongfully favoring a competitor in McCarty were tantamount to constructive bad faith.