INTEGRITY MANAGEMENT INTERNATIONAL, INC., a California
Corporation, Plaintiff- Appellant,
v.
TOMBS & SONS, INC., a Kansas Corporation, and Leroy C.
Tombs, Defendants- Appellees.
No. 85-2247.
United States Court of Appeals,
Tenth Circuit.
Dec. 30, 1987.
Gary D. McCallister of Davis, Wright, Unrein, Hummer & McCallister, Topeka, Kan., for plaintiff-appellant.
Timothy J. Arehart of McDonald, Dykes, Christlieb, Leitner & Preston, Overland Park, Kan., for defendants-appellees.
Before McKAY, SEYMOUR and MOORE, Circuit Judges.
SEYMOUR, Circuit Judge.
Tombs & Sons, Inc. (Tombs) was the low bidder on a small business set-aside contract. Integrity Management International, Inc. (IMI), the second low bidder, filed a protest claiming that Tombs was not a small business within the meaning of the Small Business Act and its regulations. After the Small Business Administration determined that Tombs did not meet its small business standards, IMI brought this diversity suit against Tombs, claiming unjust enrichment, intentional interference with its economic advantage in securing contract rights, and fraud and misrepresentation. The district court held that state common law actions to enforce the Small Business Act are preempted by federal law, and ordered judgment to be entered in favor of Tombs. Integrity Management Int'l, Inc. v. Tombs & Sons, Inc.,
I.
The Small Business Administration (SBA) administers a number of programs under the Small Business Act, 15 U.S.C. Secs. 631-650 (1982 & West Supp.1987). One of these, the small business set-aside program, is designed to ensure that small businesses receive a fair proportion of the federal government's procurement contracts. The businesses involved self-certify that they are in fact small businesses; the SBA makes size determinations only after a protest is made by a contracting officer or an interested party. 13 C.F.R. Sec. 121.8(a) (1987).
In February 1982, the United States Military Academy at West Point solicited bids for a one-year 100% set-aside food service contract with four one-year options to renew. Thirteen bids were submitted. Tombs was the low bidder, IMI the second low bidder.1 Aware of another food service contract held by Tombs, IMI believed that Tombs exceeded the size limits imposed by SBA regulations and was therefore ineligible to bid on the West Point contract. IMI filed a timely protest with the procurement office at West Point.
Tombs' original financial statements and income tax returns for the years 1979-1981 showed amounts that, when averaged, exceeded the $5.5 million size-limitation standard then used by the SBA.2 Nevertheless, Tombs certified itself as a small business. After IMI filed its protest, Tombs revised its statements, thereby reducing the amounts shown to a level that complied with the SBA standard. Neither the original nor the revised statement included receipts from an affiliated corporation, Global Supply Company, that sold supplies to Tombs on the West Point and other projects. The SBA's Form 355 that Tombs submitted in response to IMI's protest showed only the revised amounts and did not include the receipts from Global. Based only on the information submitted, the SBA regional office determined that Tombs was a small business. The West Point contracting officer then awarded the contract to Tombs.
IMI filed an appeal of the regional office's determination with the SBA Size Appeals Board. After reviewing Tombs' original financial statements, its income tax returns, receipts from Global, and the revised financial statement submitted to the regional office, the Board determined that Tombs was a large business. IMI then filed this action, asserting that Tombs had misrepresented itself as a small business in order to secure the contract award.
II.
As we discuss below, two considerations guide us on the issue of preemption. First, the question to be addressed is that of Congress' intent. To ascertain that intent we look not only to the statute and its legislative history, but also, where those are silent or unclear, to the agency charged with carrying out the statute's mandate. The extent of the authority given to the agency determines whether it has the power to preempt state law, and the agency's policies, practices, and regulations are evidence of whether the agency has in fact done so.
Second, the focus of our inquiry is not federal procurement, or even small business set-aside contracts, but the remedy for violation of the Small Business Act and its regulations. It is entirely possible for the substantive area of the law to be an area of exclusive federal concern, and nevertheless for state common law remedies to apply. See Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp.,
State law may be preempted by an express congressional statement, by federal occupation of the field, or by direct conflict with federal law. In Louisiana Pub. Serv. Comm'n v. Federal Communications Comm'n,
" when Congress, in enacting a federal statute, expresses a clear intent to pre-empt state law, when there is outright or actual conflict between federal and state law, where compliance with both federal and state law is in effect physically impossible, where there is implicit in federal law a barrier to state regulation, where Congress has legislated comprehensively, thus occupying an entire field of regulation and leaving no room for the States to supplement federal law, or where the state law stands as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full objectives of Congress."
Id. at 1898 (citations omitted). On the question of civil remedies for violations of the Small Business Act by bidders, Congress has preserved an immaculate silence.3 No provision addresses the question, and the legislative history is silent as well.4 The first method of preemption is thus not in issue. Indeed, because we are concerned only with state remedies for violations of state causes of action between bidders on set-aside contracts, only the last of these methods is arguably applicable.5
A. Statutory Preemption
The objective of the Small Business Act is clearly stated in section 631 of the Act:
"It is the declared policy of the Congress that the Government should aid, counsel, assist, and protect, insofar as is possible, the interests of small-business concerns in order to preserve free competitive enterprise, to insure that a fair proportion of the total purchases ... and services for the Government ... be placed with small-business enterprises, to insure that a fair proportion of the total sales of Government property be made to such enterprises, and to maintain and strengthen the over-all economy of the Nation."
15 U.S.C. Sec. 631(a) (1982).
Tombs argues, and the district court agreed, that Congress' "second primary goal" in enacting the Small Business Act was "to assure that government contracts were performed in a timely and competent manner." Integrity Management,
Indeed, there are plausible and persuasive arguments both for and against preemption in this case. Arguments for preemption include: 1) the burden on successful bidders faced with lawsuits and the consequent disincentive to bid for and accept set-aside awards, 2) the incentive provided by a state law remedy for unsuccessful bidders to use that remedy, which holds out the potential for gaining contract profits without contract performance, instead of the federal regulatory scheme for protesting, and 3) the fact that a state law remedy, if any, would depend entirely on the existence of and standards set in the Small Business Act and would operate in an area--federal procurement--that can be of no interest to the states.
Arguments against preemption include: 1) the lack of harm to the government from state law remedies between bidders, because the contract, once awarded, is treated as presumptively valid,6 2) the incentive provided for unqualified large businesses not to bid on set-aside contracts, and most significantly, 3) the strong presumption against preemption of state law, particularly in those areas of law traditionally regulated by states, such as actions for fraud and unjust enrichment. We discuss these briefly.
1. Burdens on Bidders
The argument that a private cause of action to remedy violations of the Small Business Act would unduly burden successful bidders was first made in Savini Constr. Co. v. Crooks Bros. Constr. Co.,
Id. at 1359. Tombs repeats and expands on these propositions. Brief of Defendant-Appellee at 8-11.
This argument has been accorded less weight in the context of determining whether a state right of action to enforce the Small Business Act may exist. See Icono v. Jensen Constr. Co.,
Moreover, to whatever extent the availability of a state common law remedy produces negative effects on successful qualified bidders, these effects are at least partially offset by the positive effects of such a remedy on other bidders. While we recognize that the possibility of being sued is one that no business views with enthusiasm, we believe that the principal effect of such a possibility is that bidders will take greater care to ensure that they meet the SBA's size standards. Finally, a state cause of action to enforce the Small Business Act would discourage businesses that are not small, like Tombs, from improperly attempting to secure set-aside contracts, see Tectonics,
2. Incentives
Absent a state right of action, an unsuccessful bidder has at least two avenues of redress. It can request a size determination from the SBA, see 13 C.F.R. Secs. 121.8-121.9 (1987), or it can bring suit under the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. Sec. 702 (1982). See Cincinnati Elec. Corp. v. Kleppe,
We do not think the contrast is so stark. Unsuccessful bidders have been unsuccessful in court where they did not have a ruling from the SBA that the successful bidder was too large. See Ferguson-Williams, Inc. v. Bamsi, Inc.,
Moreover, bidders have an incentive to obtain the contract itself rather than merely seeking its profits. Because procurement officers may consider factors other than the lowness of the bids offered, see 48 C.F.R. Secs. 13.104, 14.407-2, 15-605(b) (1987), familiarity with a previous awardee would presumably work to that firm's benefit when procurement officers make future decisions. Bidders thus have good reason to challenge the size of the low bidder before the contract is awarded.
3. Area of Federal Concern
Tombs argues persuasively that the states' interest in adjudicating actions between bidders on federal set-aside contracts is minimal.
"The Small Business Act applies to and effects [sic] only those involved in federal procurement. It reaches, not the public generally, but those having very specific [relationships] with the federal government itself. The law and the regulations promulgated under it regulate the relationship between the federal government and others, not between citizens themselves....
"...
"It seems so painfully obvious that the body of federal law relating to procurements by the federal government is so far removed from the interests and power of the states, that actions such as this may even be beyond the jurisdiction of state courts. After all, the SBA and federal procurement statutes constitute a body of law in and of itself, which creates its own remedies for unsuccessful bidders...."
Brief of Defendant-Appellee at 14, 19. Indeed, the highest court of one state has concluded that there is "absolutely no logic in interpreting the Small Business Act to allow a state cause of action." Tectonics,
Furthermore, IMI's state law cause of action, if any, exists only because a federal statute has directed that certain contracts be set aside for entities determined by federal regulations, and in spite of normal privity of contract rules. See Icono,
Small business set-aside contracts are not merely one kind of government procurement contracts, however. They do more than provide the government with needed supplies and services; they embody a national policy of promoting free enterprise that the states have an interest in promoting as well. Moreover, unjust enrichment, intentional interference with securing a contract, and fraud are torts for which states have an interest in providing a remedy regardless of the means by which they are accomplished. Whether the kinds of misrepresentations Tombs has made in fact fall within the scope of a particular state's contract and fraud actions is not for this court to decide in the first instance. Nor do we believe that such actions would create the chaos Tombs predicts. IMI does not propose that the court below make its own determination of small business status. The federal Size Appeals Board has ruled that Tombs is not a small business. IMI merely urges the trial court to adopt this federal determination of small business status under the federal regulations as evidence of state law torts. See Tectonics,
4. Presumption Against Preemption
The reasoning above inclines us to hold that there is no preemption of state common law remedies in this case. A surer basis for that holding, however, is the near presumption against preemption of traditional state law. See Maryland v. Louisiana,
B. Regulatory Preemption
The presumption against preemption is particularly strong when Congress is silent and a federal agency that exercises a detailed and constant supervisory role in the area is also silent. The courts consider regulatory silence to be a more conclusive indication than congressional silence that preemption was not intended. See Hillsborough County v. Automated Medical Laboratories,
1. The Regulations in Question
When IMI appealed to the Size Appeals Board the determination that Tombs & Sons was a small business, the regulations then in effect provided for proceedings "essentially fact-finding and non-adversarial in nature." Hearings, if provided, were characterized as "investigative in nature and not adversary." They were to be conducted "informally." 13 C.F.R. Sec. 121.3-6(a), (e)(2)(ii) (1983). These regulations have since been revised to provide for a quasi-judicial hearing process. The purpose of the revision was "to avoid scheduling difficulties and delays previously associated with resolution of such appeals by the Size Appeals Board (Board) and to institute procedures that would better satisfy the requirements of due process by providing a more fair and efficient means for obtaining complete and reliable evidence...." 48 Fed.Reg. 55832 (1983). Nowhere in the regulations or in the comments to those regulations is there a statement on preemption.
Thus, the process provided at the time of IMI's appeal was administrative rather than quasi-judicial, and the reason given for the later revision does not speak to the availability of state common law remedies. In short, the SBA has been no more explicit on the issue of preemption than has Congress.
2. Preemption by Federal Regulation
Although federal regulations have the same preemptive effect as federal statutes, Fidelity Federal Savings & Loan Ass'n v. De La Cuesta,
The questions to be answered when preemption by regulation is the issue are, first, whether the agency intended to preempt state law, and second, if so and if that decision is a reasonable one, whether Congress intended to give the agency the authority to preempt state law. Capital Cities Cable, Inc. v. Crisp,
The language and results of cases in this area are consistent with the conclusion that unless an agency has explicitly stated an intent to preempt state law, there is a presumption that no such intent exists. The language in the cases stresses the level of detail at which agencies regulate and the relative ease of declaring regulations preemptive, as compared to legislation. Hillsborough County treats the question most eloquently.
"We are even more reluctant to infer pre-emption from the comprehensiveness of regulations than from the comprehensiveness of statutes. As a result of their specialized functions, agencies normally deal with problems in far more detail than does Congress. To infer pre-emption whenever an agency deals with a problem comprehensively is virtually tantamount to saying that whenever a federal agency decides to step into a field, its regulations will be exclusive. Such a rule, of course, would be inconsistent with the federal-state balance embodied in our Supremacy Clause jurisprudence....
"Moreover, because agencies normally address problems in a detailed manner and can speak through a variety of means, including regulations, preambles, interpretive statements, and responses to comments, we can expect that they will make their intentions clear if they intend for their regulations to be exclusive. Thus, if an agency does not speak to the question of pre-emption, we will pause before saying that the mere volume and complexity of its regulations indicate that the agency did in fact intend to preempt....
"...
"Finally, the FDA possesses the authority to promulgate regulations pre-empting local legislation that imperils the supply of plasma and can do so with relative ease.... Moreover, the agency can be expected to monitor, on a continuing basis, the effects on the federal program of local requirements. Thus, since the agency has not suggested that the county ordinances interfere with federal goals, we are reluctant in the absence of strong evidence to find a threat to the federal goal of ensuring sufficient plasma."
To the same effect are R.J. Reynolds Tobacco Co. v. Durham County, --- U.S. ----,
As far as results are concerned, neither the Supreme Court nor this Circuit has found preemption by federal regulation since Fidelity Federal unless the agency had made an explicit statement. See Granite Rock, --- U.S. ----,
Conversely, preemption has invariably been found where the agency has made an explicit statement and acted within its authority. See Capitol Cities Cable,
The SBA's silence on preemption of state remedies is thus strong, although not conclusive, evidence that no preemption is intended. The nature of the size appeals process the SBA has established is further evidence. As described above, the process was deliberately non-judicial at the time of IMI's appeal and was revised for reasons unconnected to preemption. Furthermore, the appeals process is not a remedy in the traditional sense. There is no guarantee that the complaining bidder will be awarded the contract at issue even if the SBA finds that the winning bidder does not meet the size standards.10 Moreover, if the contract has already been awarded, the winning bidder may suffer no penalty with respect to that contract.11 It is merely prohibited from bidding on future contracts until it is recertified as a small business.
III.
To summarize, Congress and the SBA are silent as to preemption. There is a presumption that such silence means no preemption. The regulatory protest process available is not a substitute for a right of action. Finally, speaking with respect to another area of exclusively federal law (nuclear safety), the Supreme Court has suggested that "[i]t is difficult to believe that Congress would, without comment, remove all means of judicial recourse for those injured by illegal conduct." Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp.,
While the dissent's argument is superficially appealing, we are not persuaded. The dissent avoids preemption analysis by stating that
"this is not a preemption case at all but rather a case of determining whether Congress has decided that states should be invited to enforce Congress' policies with remedies and forums of the state's choosing.
"When looking for the rights of the parties, it is logical to assume that Congress provided the remedies it intended to correspond with the rights it intended. What the majority has done is to treat Congress' immaculate silence on additional rights and remedies as an invitation to imply congressional intent to adopt state remedies as a supplemental means of enforcing its exclusive policies...."
Dissent at 2. We think the dissent has overlooked the important principle, noted above, that "the Supremacy Clause starts with the basic assumption that Congress did not intend to displace state law." Maryland v. Louisiana,
The judgment of the district court is reversed and the case is remanded for further proceedings.
McKAY, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
Whatever rights the plaintiff in this case may have, they arise from two federally legislated programs. The first is federal procurement. The second is a program designed to carry out federal small business policy by granting certain preferences in procurement contracts. No state procurement or small business policy is cited by or implicated by the plaintiff's claims. Whatever rights the plaintiff may have are determined entirely as a matter of congressional intent. Unlike Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp.,
The key to analysis in this case is not, in the first instance, what remedies are available to those who are harmed by the "exclusively federal" standards, maj. op. at 487, but whether Congress has created a right in the disappointed bidder which is wider than the remedy Congress has created. Properly speaking, this is not a preemption case at all but rather a case of determining whether Congress has decided that states should be invited to enforce Congress' policies with remedies and forums of the state's choosing.
When looking for the rights of the parties, it is logical to assume that Congress provided the remedies it intended to correspond with the rights it intended. What the majority has done is to treat Congress' "immaculate silence" on additional rights and remedies as an invitation to imply congressional intent to adopt state remedies as a supplemental means of enforcing its exclusive policies while simultaneously concluding that the "immaculate silence" precludes the same kind of implied federal remedy which would at least have the virtue of uniformity. It seems to me that implying that Congress intended state remedies is not only unwarranted by Congress' words or debates, but turns the analysis on its head.
The strongest argument about legislative intent is the fact that Congress knew it was legislating in two areas that at the time were inventions of its own: federal procurement and federal small business policy. It would seem contradictory to suggest Congress silently intended to rely on the random distribution of state enforcement mechanisms (or their absence, see Tectonics, Inc. v. Castle Const. Co.,
There are strong reasons to suggest Congress intended no wider package of rights and corresponding remedies than it expressly provided. While they are recited by the majority in its quotation from Savini, it is important to reemphasize that the obvious conclusion to be drawn from Congress' explicit enforcement scheme is that its procurement needs take precedence over its policy of encouraging small businesses. While the majority takes considerable comfort from the fact that here we have a prior determination by the congressionally authorized agency that the defendant was not a qualified bidder, nothing in the majority opinion does or could logically suggest that along with an implied state cause of action there is an implied duty to exhaust federal administrative procedures. If the court is, in fact, suggesting otherwise, it seems to me it has shifted its theory from preemption to state enforcement of a federal cause of action. Since under the majority's approach these are state causes of action,* they can be brought in the several state courts without prior protest or administrative finding. Without federal guidance, the state courts are at liberty to decide for themselves whether the successful bidder was qualified; whether the second bidder was also qualified; and whether there was fraud or unjust enrichment or interference with a contract "right." Even when brought in federal court, as this case was, we must assume that the trial court would look to state law to determine the scope of the state law of fraud, unjust enrichment, or such other theories as imaginative lawyers might plead.
It is not the successful suit alone which discourages bidders from entering the field, but the well-known cost of defending unsuccessful suits. In cases such as this, those suits would normally be classed as complex litigation if they involved issues of valuation. It would be less discouraging to face an implied federal cause of action than fifty uncertain state ones. Against these negatives, we should be reluctant to imply congressional intent either to rely on state enforcement mechanisms or to have created, in unsuccessful bidders, a substantive "right" larger than Congress' remedies.
It seems to me that the Alabama Supreme Court in Tectonics,
Notes
Although the case was tried below, the district court made no factual findings because it concluded that federal law preempted the state common law actions under which IMI sued. The facts are not in dispute on this appeal, however
To qualify as a small business for set-aside contracts in 1982, business receipts for the three years immediately preceding the date of bidding could not average more than $5.5 million per year. Tombs self-certified to the contracting office at West Point that it was a small business, although its accountant had advised in the summer or fall of 1981 that Tombs' financial statements indicated that it had become a large business under SBA standards. Statutory penalties apply for false self-certification. 15 U.S.C. Sec. 645 (1982 & West Supp.1987)
Congress has provided criminal penalties for false statements, overvaluation of securities, embezzlement, and like offenses. 15 U.S.C. Sec. 645 (1982 & West Supp.1987)
The parties agreed below that there is no federal right of action in this case.
Tombs maintains that factor five is also implicated, arguing that "Congress clearly intended to preempt the field of government procurement contracts" through its extensive regulation. Brief of Defendant-Appellee at 7. We do assume that the several states may not regulate the manner in which federal procurement contracts are awarded. Congress has not spoken on the question with which we are here concerned, however, namely whether states may use a violation of the federal SBA standards as evidence of violations of state created causes of action. Our conclusion that the SBA's regulations do not operate to preempt state common law remedies is discussed more fully in Part III
See note 9 for a fuller discussion of this rule
Review under the Administrative Procedure Act is limited to a determination of whether agency action such as awarding a contract was arbitrary and capricious, or an abuse of discretion. See Scanwell Laboratories, Inc. v. Shaffer,
The dissent relies on Tectonics,
We do not hold that the presumption based on agency silence may not be overcome. Direct conflict between federal regulations and state law would clearly lead to preemption, even in the absence of an explicit agency statement. See Grocery Mfrs. of America v. Gerace,
See, e.g., Cincinnati Elec. Corp. v. Kleppe,
It is unclear just what the SBA's policy or practice in this situation is. Current SBA regulations do not speak to the issue, see 13 C.F.R. Sec. 121.8-.9 (1987). In contrast, we note the clarity of the relevant section of the Federal Acquisition Regulations, 48 C.F.R. Sec. 19.302 (1986). There is case law to the effect that even if a successful bidder is found not to be a small business, it is a breach of contract for the government subsequently to award the contract to another bidder after the contract has been awarded or a notice of award has been sent. See Allen M. Campbell Co. v. United States,
This court appears to be treating causes of action and remedies interchangeably when discussing this case. In my view, the two concepts may be coextensive but not interchangeable
