In this case we reaffirm established law governing the application of 28 U.S.C. § 1500 (Supp. V 1993) to filings in the Court of Federal Claims. Hardwick Brothers Company II (Hardwick) appeals the judgment of the Court of Federal Claims,
At the time the trial court ruled it did not have the benefit of the Supreme Court’s review of our
UNR
decision,
Keene Corp. v. United States,
BACKGROUND
Hardwick contracted in 1980 with the COE to build an earthen levee as part of a flood control project in Missouri. In 1986 Hard-wick submitted to the Contracting Officer a certified claim under the CDA for equitable adjustments to the contract price, asserting changed conditions at the building site that resulted in increased construction costs. The COE denied the claim, and in December 1988 Hardwick sued in the Court of Federal Claims, under § 609 of the CDA. Hard-wick’s complaint in the Court of Federal Claims asserted that it was entitled to damages based on defective specifications, differing site conditions, rescission of a change proposal, contract reformation, failure to disclose superior knowledge, supervening frustration, and deficient engineering design.
The Court of Federal Claims conducted an eight-week trial of Hardwick’s claims in the summer of 1990. Due to the trial judge’s extended illness and related surgery, no opinion issued in the matter for over eighteen months. To avoid a time bar under the Federal Tort Claims Act (FTCA), 28 U.S.C. §§ 2671-80 (1988), on tort claims involving spoliation of evidence, which Hardwick asserted it had discovered while preparing for the Court of Federal Claims trial, Hardwick filed an FTCA action on March 20, 1992, in *885 the United States District Court for the Western District of Missouri. Hardwick’s district court complaint alleged that the COE provided erroneous information related to the topography of the construction site, and failed to preserve, produce, and disclose documents related to the erroneous topographic data.
On April 23, 1992, this court issued its decision in
UNR,
The United States Court of Federal Claims shall not have jurisdiction of any claim for or in respect to which the plaintiff or his assignee has pending in any other court any suit or process against the United States....
In addition to deciding whether § 1500 properly applied to the facts presented in that ease, the court in
UNR
evaluated whether § 1500 applied in numerous scenarios not before the court, including the scenario presented by this case: whether a later-filed district court action divests the Court of Federal Claims of jurisdiction under § 1500, when both actions involve the same “claims,” as defined for the purposes of the statute.
UNR,
Following the issuance of UNR, Hardwick voluntarily dismissed its district court action, less than six weeks after filing and before the Government had responded to the complaint. Shortly thereafter, the Government moved to dismiss Hardwick’s Court of Federal Claims action under § 1500, asserting that Hard-wick’s district court action involved the same claims and therefore, under UNR, divested the Court of Federal Claims of jurisdiction. The Government further asserted that the later dismissal of Hardwick’s district court action could not restore jurisdiction.
The Court of Federal Claims agreed, dismissing Hardwick’s action without prejudice. The trial court found that there was “no material difference in the operative facts in the two actions,” and that under
UNR,
which this court expressly made retroactive, dismissal was required.
Hardwick appealed the dismissal to this court. While the appeal was pending, the Supreme Court issued its review of this court’s decision in
UNR. UNR/Keene,
In this court, Hardwick’s appeal was stayed pending the issuance of our decision in
Loveladies I,
Following issuance of Loveladies I, the stay of appeal in this matter was lifted. The parties filed additional submissions addressing the effect of UNR/Keene and Loveladies I on the issue of later-filed district court actions, and Hardwick continued to press several other challenges to the trial court’s decision.
DISCUSSION
On appeal, Hardwick raises many objections to the trial court’s dismissal of its Court of Federal Claims complaint under § 1500' We need address only one: Hardwick’s assertion that under § 1500 a later-filed district court action does not divest the Court of Federal Claims of jurisdiction that was earlier properly established. The trial court rejected this argument on the grounds that this court’s decision in UNR required it to do so. As noted, in so ruling the trial court did not have before it the subsequent treatment of this issue in UNR/Keene and Loveladies I. In UNR/Keene, the Supreme Court expressly declined to overturn Tecon Engineers, and this court in Loveladies I acknowledged the continuing vitality of Tecon as an established precedent.
In Tecon Engineers, plaintiffs had filed their complaints for tax refunds in the Court of Claims. After extended discovery and other proceedings over the course of almost two years, the cases were consolidated and set for trial. Shortly before trial was to begin, plaintiffs filed in the District Court in Kentucky complaints upon the same claims. Simultaneously they moved to dismiss the pending case in the Court of Claims on the grounds that § 1500 now barred jurisdiction in that court.
The Court of Claims reviewed in detail the history of § 1500 since its enactment in 1868. It examined the language of § 1500, as first enacted and as then (and now) appearing. The court concluded that the Government’s argument, that the Court of Claims can keep jurisdiction if suit was filed there first (which it may be noted is the opposite of the Government’s current argument), was correct. After
UNR/Keene
and
Loveladies I, Tecon Engineers
remains good law and binding on this court.
Loveladies I,
Finally, we reject the Government’s argument that Tecon Engineers must be limited to the “unusual” facts of that case. Nothing in Tecon, UNR/Keene, or our recent eases citing Tecon supports such a limitation. In the case before us, after long incubation and lengthy trial, the trial court indicated that its decision on the merits of Hardwick’s claim was ready to issue, when this court’s decision in UNR prompted dismissal of the claim. Judicial economy, as well as the established law of this circuit, mandate that we remand for entry of judgment in accordance with the trial court’s decision on the merits.
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the Court of Federal Claims is reversed, and the matter remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
COSTS
Appellee to bear costs.
REVERSED AND REMANDED.
Notes
. To distinguish the
Loveladies
in banc opinion on jurisdiction from the
Loveladies
merits decision,
Loveladies Harbor, Inc. v. United States,
