Ingalls Shipbuilding, Inc. (Ingalls) appeals from two decisions of the Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals (ASBCA) and from the denial of reconsideration of one of them. In ASBCA No. 38323,
As the three appeals involve the same certifying official and raise common issues of law, we consolidated them for decision. Because the ASBCA’s determination that Ingalls did not satisfy the certification requirements was not supported by substantial evidence and was not in accordance with law, we reverse and remand Nos. 91-1417 and 91-1444 and dismiss as moot No. 91-1505.
BACKGROUND
The dispositive facts for purposes of the instant appeals are undisputed. Mr. E.B. Robbins, Ingalls’ Vice President of Administration, certified the underlying CDA claims to the Navy contracting officer. When he certified those claims, Mr. Robbins was an elected corporate vice president who reported directly to the President of Ingalls, Mr. St. Pé, at Ingalls’ facilities in Pascagoula, Mississippi. The Pascagoula shipyard was the location for the performance of the contracts to construct the LHD-1 Amphibious Assault Ship, and Mr. Robbins’ office was near that of Mr. St. Pé’s in the Administration Building at the shipyard site.
By formal resolution of Ingalls’ Board of Directors, Mr. Robbins was:
Individually authorized and empowered, without benefit of further authorization of [the] Board of Directors relative thereto, to execute and deliver in the name and under the seal of the Corporation, all legal documents, contracts of routine nature, federal, state, county and city information reports, tax returns, license, insurance and qualification applications, judicial process and pleadings, and to do and perform such other acts and things as may, in the regular and ordinary affairs of the Corporation be essen *488 tial, appropriate and in the best interest of the corporation.
ASBCA No. 38323,
In addition, according to Ingalls’ “Functional Responsibility” statement for the Vice President of Administration, Mr. Robbins had responsibility to:
A. Supervise and direct the management of Contracts Administration activities which include the negotiation of new business contracts and claims, maintenance of the Contracts Correspondence Control Release System, guarantee/warranty deficiencies and Guaranty Survey negotiations, and the maintenance and publication of Company Policies, Standard Procedures and Organization Manuals.
B. Supervise and direct the management of Finance activities which include maintaining the financial systems and financial data and providing adequate and timely support to other departments.
C. Supervise and direct the management of Information Systems activities which include all automatic data processing services required to support Ingalls.
D. Supervise and direct the management of Estimating/Cost Engineering activities which include contract change estimates, overhaul estimating, budgeting, progressing and evaluating direct costs associated with material dollars and labor man-hours, and special contract-related projects.
Id. (emphasis added). With respect to “Contracts Administration activities,” Mr. Robbins testified by deposition that it included “responsibility to help ensure that we, we the company, completely comply with our contract obligations and that we maintain our rights under the contract also.” Another aspect of his responsibilities was to confirm that all contract changes and modifications are amenable to the company, the government, and technical and contract requirements.
Although Mr. Robbins attended weekly staff meetings which dealt with diverse aspects of the management of the shipyard, id. at 119,753, he was not directly responsible for manufacturing and engineering ships or purchasing most materials. For example, Mr. Robbins did not supervise Ingalls’ employees who actually performed the construction work. Nor was he in charge of allocating capital assets to the contracts or checking work quality. Other vice presidents were responsible for these aspects of operations.
DISCUSSION
I.
The CDA defines our standard of review for decisions of agency boards of contract appeals:
[T]he decision of the agency board on any question of law shall not be final or conclusive, but the decision on any question of fact shall be final and conclusive and shall not be set aside unless the decision is fraudulent, or arbitrary, or capricious, or so grossly erroneous as to necessarily imply bad faith, or if such decision is not supported by substantial evidence.
41 U.S.C. § 609(b) (1988). To the extent that the ASBCA's determinations turned on its interpretation of FAR 33.207(c)(2), they present questions of law subject to
de novo
review.
United States v. Boeing Co.,
II.
Under the first prong of the certification regulation, a proper certifier would be “[a] senior company official in charge at the contractor’s plant or location involved.” 48 C.F.R. § 33.207(c)(2)(i). The ASBCA found, and we agree it had a basis in substantial evidence, that “Mr. Robbins is a senior company official at the location involved.” No. 38323,
Therefore, the only remaining requirement of FAR 33.207(c)(2)(i) is that Mr. Robbins be “in charge.” The ASBCA found that although Mr. Robbins “was influential [and] exercised control over the business part of [Ingalls’] affairs,” “[h]e had no say over construction where the claim has it [sic] roots and had no authority to submit claims ... over $2,000,000.00 without first getting approvals from others including the President.” No. 38323,
The ASBCA, however, misconstrued the “in charge” requirement of the certification regulation as clarified in
Grumman.
To be in charge within the meaning of the FAR, a certifier need not be in charge of the plant or location, only of the contract.
2
Nor need he have direct supervisory authority over every aspect of the contract’s performance, such as construction and engineering. Neither the regulation nor
Grumman
requires or even contemplates such parsing of a contractor’s operations and corporate structure. But, a certifying official must have “primary responsibility for the execution of the contract.”
Grumman,
Mr. Robbins’ responsibilities included supervising and directing Contracts Administration, which “[p]rovide[d] guidance to all other [personnel] on company contractual rights and obligations.” He was authorized by Board resolution to “execute contracts ... and judicial process and pleadings.” ASBCA No. 38323,
III.
That Ingalls’ internal policy required the President as well as Mr. Robbins and other officials to approve claims over two million dollars is immaterial to whether Mr. Robbins was in charge of contract performance. Since both the President and Mr. Robbins must sign, the company policy reflects merely a cheeks and balances procedure rather than a corporate delegation of primary responsibility for contract performance exclusively to its President.
Moreover, the plain language of the FAR, which states that “[a] senior company official in charge” can certify, indicates that more than one person in a corporation may be authorized to certify claims. 4
Nor does anything else in the record negate our conclusion that Mr. Robbins was in charge of the subject contracts at the Pascagoula shipyard within the meaning of FAR 33.207(c)(2)(i). The government, for instance, stresses that Mr. Robbins did not view himself to be in charge of the shipyard when the President,' Mr. St. Pé, was present. Brief for Appellee at 7, 28. Mr. Robbins’ own perception of whether or not he was in charge is simply irrelevant to our legal determination which must be based on actual, not perceived, facts. Moreover, he need not be in charge of the shipyard. There is no evidence that Mr. Robbins required prior approval of a more responsible official before “directing” contract performance. 5 Therefore, he had primary responsibility for the contracts. Trying to find gaps in Mr. Robbins’ responsibility, the government further notes that Mr. Robbins did not go on sea trials and that he did not brief Navy officials at quarterly program reviews. Id. at 28. But those facts, standing alone, only describe specific actions of other employees; they *491 prove nothing about who has primary responsibility for contract performance—the pertinent inquiry under FAR 33.207(c)(2)(i). Accordingly, substantial evidence does not support the ASBCA’s determination that Mr. Robbins did not satisfy FAR 33.-207(c)(2)(i) as correctly construed. Lacking substantial evidence, the ASBCA erred by dismissing Ingalls’ appeals for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
IV.
Our conclusion that Mr. Ingalls satisfies the FAR is consistent with the legislative history of the CDA. In addition to intending that the certifier be able to bind the company under contract law, Congress clearly intended that the certifier also bind the company under civil fraud statutes. S.Rep. No. 1118, 95th Cong.2d Sess. 7-8 (1978),
reprinted in
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5235, 5241-42 [hereinafter
Senate Report
] (relying on Admiral Hyman Rickover’s testimony before two Senate subcommittees). Before the subcommittees, Admiral Rickover stated that the CDA should require “the contractor [to] submit to the Government a certificate signed by a
senior responsible contractor official,
which states that the claim and its supporting data are current, complete and accurate.”
Contract Disputes Act of 1978: Joint Hearings on S. 2292, S. 2787, and S. SI 78, Before the Subcomm. on Federal Spending Practices and Open Government of the Senate Comm. on Governmental Affairs and the Subcomm. on Citizens and Shareholders Rights and Remedies of the Senate Comm. on the Judiciary,
95th Cong., 2d Sess. 21 (1978) [hereinafter
Joint Hearings
] (emphasis added). In a section of its report entitled, “Discouraging the unwarranted submission of contractor claims,” the Senate Committee said that, according to Navy witnesses, a “substantial number of these outstanding claims were greatly inflated.”
Senate Report
at 8,
reprinted in
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5242. The Committee then noted: “In fact, some have been turned over to the Justice Department for
investigation of fraud." Id.
(emphasis added). It then said: “Section 4(b) of the act is designed to specifically address the inflated claim problem by assigning
stiff penalties
to contractors who engage in such practice.
Id.
(emphasis added). The “penalties” referred to are for civil fraud, including under the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. § 231 et seq., which is specifically mentioned in the Committee report.
Id.
at 20,
reprinted in
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5254. In addition, section 4(b) itself allows the government to sue contractors for fraud. Hence, it is beyond serious argument that Congress intended the CDA to deter and redress fraud. Indeed, this court recently restated our precedent that the FAR requirement fosters that intent: “The [FAR] requirement goes to the very ‘integrity of the federal procurement system and the public fisc,’
Universal Canvas, Inc. v. Stone,
Low-level officials, although often able to bind the corporation in contract, could not inculpate a corporation in the context, for example, of large shipbuilding or other defense contracts. Yet these were the very contracts concerning which Congress most wanted to deter fraudulent claims. By appointing a low-level official to certify claims, a large contractor could escape liability for fraud. Deterrence would fail. Therefore, the desired deterrence can only work if the certifier is senior enough and involved enough in contract performance to make the corporation itself liable for fraud.
That Congress wanted not only deterrence but also liability is clear. Hence, the discussion of “stiff penalties” and the Committee’s assertion that under section 4(b) a fraudulent contractor “shall be liable to the Government____”
Senate Report
at 19,
reprinted in
1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5253. Indeed, our precedent has long recognized that Congress saw the two working hand-in-hand.
See Shelly and Loy v. United
*492
States,
The Admiral’s emphasis on “a senior responsible contractor official” implies that more was involved than whether the certifier had mere personal knowledge of all the details. Indeed, most of the Admiral’s testimony concerned contractor fraud against the government; he analogized contractor certification to taxpayer certification. In both cases, a senior official must sign if the corporation is to be held accountable. After testifying at length about the fraud problem, “Admiral Rickover ... submitted written suggestions for amending the Act, which were reprinted in the report of the hearings in the middle of his testimony and which were substantially similar to the actual language of sections 6(c)(1) and (2).”
Paul E. Lehman, Inc. v. United States,
For claims of more than. $50,000, the contractor shall certify that, the claim and supporting data are current, complete and accurate when the claim is submitted, and also certify that the conclusion in the claim accurately reflects the contract adjustment for which the contractor believes the Government is liable.
Joint Hearings at 13.
Admiral Rickover wanted to deter contractors from filing inflated claims which cost the government substantial amounts to defeat. He sought to do so by subjecting contractors to financial risk if their claims were unreasonable. [Citation omitted.] Admiral Rickover viewed the certification requirement as a necessary prerequisite to the consideration of any claim. The provisions Congress adopted to include the certification requirement were based upon Admiral Rickover’s written suggestions and fairly must be deemed to have incorporated his view concerning the effect of the certification requirement.
Lehman,
As discussed above, the legislative history conclusively established that fraudulent claims were at the core of Rickover’s and Congress’ concerns. As noted, requiring a high-level official to sign the certification would deter fraud because by his signature such officer would expose the corporation to potential liability under civil fraud statutes. Such exposure was the paramount motivation for the addition to the CDA of the certification requirement by amendment on the Senate floor on the day of its passage. See 124 Cong.Rec. 36,267 (1978) (stating that section 5(c) of the Act, which includes the certification requirement, “has been amended due to the concerns expressed by ... Admiral Rickover____”). This purpose is plainly well served by the FAR which requires certification for corporations by a high-level official rather than merely any employee with authority to bind the corporation in contract. The FAR does no more than demand Admiral Rickover’s “senior responsible contractor official.” It is therefore entirely consistent with the legislative history that illuminates Congressional intent in adding the certification requirement.
An analysis of the FAR in light of Congressional intent shows that the FAR is perfectly consistent with that intent. That analysis is set forth in
Grumman,
*493 If the contractor is not an individual, the certification shall be executed by—
(i) A senior company official in charge at the contractor’s plant or location involved; or
(ii) An officer or general partner of the contractor having overall responsibility for the conduct of the contractor’s affairs.
48 C.F.R. § 33.207(c)(2). Clearly, the FAR in no way conflicts with any language in section 605.
The only question left is whether the language is inconsistent with "clearly discernible legislative intent" not apparent in the statute itself.
True v. Office of Personnel Management,
CONCLUSION
Since we hold that Mr. Robbins was a proper certifying official under FAR 33.-207(c)(2)(i), we express no opinion on the other issues that Ingalls raised on appeal. For the reasons stated above, the decisions of the ASBCA in No. 38323, 91-2 BCA If 23,904 and in its companion, No. 40220, are reversed and remanded for adjudication on the merits as the ASBCA does have jurisdiction because the certification by Mr. Robbins did meet the requirements of the FAR. The appeal from the decision of the ASBCA denying reconsideration in No. 40220, 92-1 BCA If 24,373, is dismissed as moot.
REVERSED-IN-PART, REMANDED-IN-PART, AND DISMISSED-IN-PART.
COSTS
Costs are awarded to the contractor.
Notes
. The government points out that Mr. Robbins’ office was located in a building away from the industrial area where the ships were built, and that he rarely visited the work site. Brief for Appellee at 7. Such facts, however, do not affect our analysis under the FAR. First, the regulation refers to "plant or location,” a broader concept than individual buildings. The FAR also does not dictate some minimum presence at the actual work site within the plant or location. Indeed, we are not surprised that "a senior company official in charge at the contractor’s plant” has an office in the Administration Building and is not "walking the lines” of the industrial area.
. In
Universal Canvas, Inc.
v.
Stone,
In most circumstances, an individual in charge of the plant where the contract is performed will also have primary responsibility for the contract’s execution. Therefore, as a kind of short hand, panels may have referred to an individual as being "in charge of the plant” as synonymous with "in charge of the contract” because being the former was conclusive proof as to the latter.
.We note that several
pre-Grumman
decisions of agency boards of contract appeals had construed the "in charge” language of FAR 33.-207(c)(2)(i) consistently with the
Grumman
panel.
See, e.g., Emerson Electric Co.,
ASBCA
*490
No. 37352,
. At least two Board opinions have acknowledged that this part of the FAR can refer to multiple officials.
See In re McDonnell Douglas Missile Systems Co.,
ASBCA No. 37712,
. On one modification, the record shows that Mr. Robbins negotiated contract changes within cost and profit parameters Ingalls' parent company had established. Although Mr. Robbins kept Mr. St. Pé advised of the negotiations, he nevertheless had primary responsibility for performance of the contracts on behalf of Ingalls, including contract changes.
