Opinion PER CURIAM.
In
Delta Data Systems Corp. v. Webster,
Delta Data requested a reselection and submitted further financial data, but no further discussions were accorded. Instead, the FBI restored to Delta Data the points it had deducted for financial considerations. The Bureau once again selected SDC as the contractor for the procurement on grounds of “monetary savings,” i.e., lower initial out-of-pocket cost, and “technical superiority of the equipment.” Minutes of Meeting of Contract Review Board at 2 (Nov. 16, 1984). Delta Data obtained from the District Court a preliminary injunction against the award. Civil Action No. 83-3051 (Nov. 30,1984) (Order) (“Nov. 30,1984 Order”). The FBI moved this court for a stay or summary reversal; Delta Data moved for a summary affirmance.
On the substance of the matter, the District Court was correct to find a high probability that Delta Data will succeed on the merits. Regardless of whether the FBI was free to consider initial out-of-pocket cost under the circumstances of this procurement, the other basis for the Bureau’s action, the finding of “technical superiority,” was evidently invalid since it was based on live test demonstrations carried out after the original selection date.
See
Memorandum of W.E. Baugh, Jr. to Mr. Groover at 2-3 (Nov. 9, 1984). The
nunc pro tunc
reselection which we authorized Delta Data to demand in our prior opinion was a reselection based upon the information before the Bureau at the time the original determination was made. This was clear from the whole purpose of the exercise, which was to “[p]ut[] the disappointed bidder in the economic position it would have occupied but for the error____”
Despite the probable correctness of Delta Data’s position, however, the District Court erred in protecting Delta Data’s rights by the means of enjoining continuing performance of the SDC contract. Such an injunction, though unusual, is sometimes accorded at the initial stage of contractor selection,
see Motor Coach Industries, Inc. v. Dole,
If Delta Data is selected, the FBI shall award the contract to Delta Data. If the FBI decides not to honor that contract but to proceed with its arrangements with SDC ... Delta Data may thereupon pursue its appropriate remedies under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491 (1982).
*940 Id. at 207. We thus envisioned that the FBI would be free to pursue its arrangements with SDC that had progressed to a stage inappropriate for court-directed recall.
That situation is not changed by the fact that the Bureau has chosen, by mutual agreement with SDC, to modify its original contract, now proceeding under what the parties call a “bridge contract” for a relatively small percentage of the original purchases, and letting the remainder out for a new bid. For purposes relevant here, that novation still represents SDC’s contract “under Solicitation 2591,” Nov. 30, 1984 Order at 1, which we said should remain unaffected by court order, rather than an entirely new award over which the District Court might exercise some powers of injunction.
We therefore set aside the preliminary injunction; and a corollary of our reasoning in doing so is that an injunction against continuation of the SDC contract cannot be awarded as part of the District Court’s final relief in this case. Rather, relief will be limited to the plaintiff’s Tucker Act remedies — and more specifically, bid preparation costs,
see, e.g., Alchemy, Inc. v. United States,
In different circumstances, our course might be to dissolve the preliminary injunction and remand to the District Court with instruction that, if it finds the FBI considered subsequently developed facts, it require the Bureau to reconduct the selection properly. By reason of the fragmentation of the contract, however, there no longer exists the massive $50 million procurement that induced us in our earlier opinion,
see
So ordered.
Notes
. There is not even a colorable basis for the Bureau’s argument that out-of-pocket cost was an independently efficacious ground. The minutes of the Contract Review Board clearly rested the determination upon both points jointly, stating that ”[t]he Board approved the recommended reselection due to the monetary savings and technical superiority of the equipment____” Minutes of Nov. 16, 1984 at 2.
