Relators Philip Marsteller and Robert Swisher brought this action against their former employer, MD Helicopters (“MD”), and codefendants Patriarch Partners (“Patriarch”), Lynn Tilton, and Colonel Norbert Vergez, under the qui tam provision of the False Claims Act (“FCA” or “Act”),
In the district court, the defendants moved under Federal Rules of Civil Procedure 12(b)(6) and 9(b) for dismissal for failure to state a claim. They asserted that the complaint failed the specificity requirements applicable to allegations of fraud and that, in any event, the claims did not adequately state a case for liability. The district court granted the motion. It concluded that the complaint failed to establish liability under the implied certification theory, because the relators had not alleged adequately that a defendant had violated an express condition of payment or a material contractual requirement. The district court also concluded that the relators did not plead a fraud in the inducement theory, but that, if they had, it would have failed for the same reasons as the implied certification theory.
The relators have appealed. During the pendency of this appeal, the Supreme Court has examined the implied certification theory in Universal Health Services, Inc. v. United States ex rel. Escobar, - U.S. -,
Accordingly, we vacate the judgment of the district court and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
I
BACKGROUND
A.
The allegations of the complaint concern a series of specific contracts between MD, an Arizona corporation that manufacturers high-performance helicopters, and the Army. The relators, Mr. Marsteller and Mr. Swisher, are the former Director of Sales and Marketing and the former Director of Military Business Development, respectively, for MD. Both are also Army veterans; indeed, Mr. Swisher remains a Major in the Army Individual Ready Reserve. At all times relevant to this action, Ms. Tilton has been CEO of MD and of Patriarch. Patriarch, which was founded and is wholly owned by Ms. Tilton, is a debt and equity investment and manage
From 2010 to 2012, Col. Vergez was a project manager at the Army’s Non-Standard Rotary Wing Aircraft Office (“NSRWA”) in Huntsville, Alabama. NSRWA is responsible for the procurement and support of non-standard rotor-craft, including procurement for the foreign military sales program (“FMS”) of the Department of Defense. In his role at NSRWA, Col. Vergez was personally and substantially involved in issuing, selecting, negotiating, pricing, and awarding FMS contracts.
The core of the complaint addresses five contracts between MD and the Army in 2011 and 2012. Under these agreements MD provided: (1) six helicopters to the Afghan Air Force, (2) logistical support to the Afghan Air Force, (3) three helicopters to the El Salvador Air Force, (4) two helicopters to the Government of Costa Rica, and (5) twelve helicopters to the Saudi Arabian National Guard. The forty-five-page complaint describes the interactions between MD and NSRWA on each of these bids and contracts. In describing several of the bid processes, the complaint alleges that the Army requested pricing data, presumably to establish the commercial reasonableness of the price proposed in MD’s bid. The complaint alleges that MD cherry-picked the highest priced prior sales and omitted lower-dollar sales. With respect to one such contract, for example, the complaint asserts that, in response to the Army’s request for a sales history,
MD only provided the Army information regarding the October 11, 2011 sale of an MD 500E to the Columbus, Ohio Police Department for the base price of $1,802,282, but did not disclose any other prior sales, including the May 20, 2011 sale of a new MD 500E helicopter to Fuchs Helikopter for the base price of $1,550,000. The Army relied on MD’s incomplete disclosure and was deprived of its ability to effectively negotiate a reasonable and lower price which caused the agreed base price for each aircraft to be higher than it would have been if MD had fully complied with the Army’s request for pricing data.[2 ]
With respect to’ án'other contract for helicopters for the Saudi Arabian National Guard, the complaint alleges that MD’s Chief Operations Officer sent a draft bid to Ms, Tilton that included a price of $2,178,000 and noted that the base price for the aircraft was $2,150,00Q.
The complaint also contains allegations about Col, Vergez’s relationship with MD and his dealings with Ms. Tilton. According to the allegations, although he previously had met other MD employees, Col.
The complaint also alleges that Col. Ver-gez anticipated retirement from active service in late 2012. While his actions for MD’s benefit were ongoing, Ms. Tilton and Col. Vergez discussed, over the course of approximately a year, his own future employment at MD or at. Patriarch. In February 2012, Col, Vergez notified the Army of his disqualification from engaging in procurement activities involving MD because he had an offer of future employment from the company. During the following month, Col. Vergez participated in talks with MD and a private helicopter vendor, toured an MD facility with them, and signed in as a representative of the Army. In summer 2012, Col. Vergez signed a written employment contract with Patriarch to direct, at a salary more than double his military base pay, MD’s Civil and Military Programs. Mr. Marsteller had a conversation with an MD manager during this period in which both agreed that the employment relationship was illegal.
Col. Vergez took terminal leave status in November 2012, but remained on active duty until May 2013. In December 2012, during a plant-wide meeting, Ms. Tilton introduced him to MD employees as “a very special person who had been very influential in MD’s receipt of Army contracts.”
B.
In 2013, relators brought this qui tarn action in the Northern District of Alabama. The United States declined to intervene. The defendants filed a motion to dismiss, and, prior to a ruling on .that motion, the relators filed an amended complaint. The amended complaint sets forth the facts as we have just described them. It then set forth six claims for relief: five FCA claims, one for each of the contracts, and one additional conspiracy claim. The relators claimed that the defendants had not complied, nor intended to comply, with the Contractor Code of Business Ethics and Conduct (“Contractor Code of Ethics”), see
In ruling on the motion to dismiss the first amended complaint, the district court had to rule on'the viability and possible scope of the implied certification theory. Under this theory, a party “impliedly certifies compliance with underlying contractual or statutory duties when submitting claims to the government” such that “[a] violation of those duties thus renders the claims false for purposes of the FCA.” United States ex rel. Osheroff v. Humana, Inc.,
Because these pre-Escobar cases .shed an important cross-light on the district court’s decision and therefore aid substantially in our understanding of the course it chose, we pause briefly to review in somewhat more detail the different perspectives that formed the legal landscape at that time. We begin with the Second Circuit’s decision in Mikes v. Straus,
The District of Columbia Circuit took a different approach to implied certification. In United States v. Science Applications International Corp.,
The District of Columbia Circuit thereafter acknowledged that although the implied certification theory could be prone to abuse, any “concern can be effectively addressed through strict enforcement of the Act’s materiality, and scienter requirements.”
Operating within this legal backdrop, the district court granted the motion. It decided that the amendbd complaint failed to state a claim under the general pleading standards of Rule 8 and, because the complaint alleged fraud, under the particularity requirements of Rule 9(b). Turning to the relators’ implied certification theory of liability, the court considered the defendants’ contention that “noncompliance with [a] statute or regulation may form the basis of an FCA claim under an implied certification theory only where the government expressly conditioned payment on compliance.”
The court declined the Government’s suggestion to limit the restrictive reading of the implied certification theory found in Mikes. Instead, it relied on an unpublished decision of this court where we had described the implied certification theory as recognizing “that the FCA is violated where compliance with a law, rule, or regulation is a prerequisite to payment” and a participant makes a claim for payment despite a knowing failure to comply with that
. The. court then stated that even if the express condition of payment approach, embodied in Mikes were incorrect, the re-lators’ claim would still fail under the more generous standards of Science Applications International Corp.,
The court rioted in a footnote that, although the response to the motion to dismiss had argued a fraud in the inducement theory of liability as well, it was absent from the pleadings. It further determined, without elaboration, that’ such a claim would “fail for the same reasons” as the implied certification claims and because it failed to meet the particularity standards of Rule 9(b).
The relators now appeal. They submit that the district court erred in rejecting their fraud in the inducement and implied certification theories of FCA liability. The Government has declined to intervene, but has filed a brief as amicus curiae. Although it takes no position on the sufficiency of the complaint, it contends that contractors who engage in the type of behavior alleged here can be liable under either an implied certification theory or a fraud in the inducement theory. MD, Patriarch, and Ms. Tilton have filed a brief addressing all of the relators’ claims. Col. Vergez, named in the - conspiracy count, has filed a separate brief focusing primarily on that count.
II
DISCUSSION
The basic standards that must guide our analysis are well established. “We review de novo the district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim under -Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6), accepting the allegations in the complaint as true and construing them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.” Timson v. Sampson,
The relators submit that the district court erred in dismissing claims' based on an implied certification theory and based on a fraud in the inducement theory. We will address in turn each of these conten-tións. Before we focus on these particular contentions, however, we will set forth the governing statutory language and examine the Supreme Court’s holding in Escobar,
A.
The FCA imposes significant financial liability on any person who “knowingly presents, or -causes to be presented, a false or fraudulent claim for payment or approval,” or “knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or used, a false record or statement material to a false or fraudulent claim.”
Folk-wing the district court’s dismissal of relators’ first amended complaint, the Supreme Court decided Escobar. This decision examines a claim of FCA liability based, on the implied certification theory. It is also helpful in assessing the relators’ fraud in the inducement theory. In Escobar, the relators were the parents of a disabled teenager who died from an adverse reaction to medication provided to treat a diagnosis of bipolar disorder. A mental health facility operated by Universal Health had treated their daughter pri- or to her death and then had sought reimbursement for her treatment through the Medicaid program. The parents alleged in their complaint that Universal Health submitted its itemized claims to Medicaid by employing standard reimbursement codes. These codes, continued the complaint, “made representations about the specific services provided by. specific types of professionals,” but “failed to disclose serious violations of regulations pertaining to staff qualifications and licensing requirements for these services.”
The rules of the Massachusetts Medicaid program, which paid the claims; required “satellite facilities to have specific types of clinicians- on staff, delineate[d] licensing requirements for particular positions (like psychiatrists, social workers, and nurses), and detailed] supervision requirements for other staff.”
The Court held “that the implied false certification theory can, at least in some circumstances, provide a basis for liability.”
the implied certification theory can be a basis for liability, at least where two conditions are satisfied: first, the claim does not merely request payment, but also makes specific representations about the goods or services provided; and second, the defendant’s failure to disclose noncompliance with material statutory, regulatory, or contractual requirements makes those representations misleading half-truths.
The Court went on to emphasize that, “[ujnder the Act, the misrepresentation must be material to the other party’s course, of action” and that the Act’s scien-ter requirement means that a plaintiff must show that the defendant had actual knowledge of or recklessly disregarded a condition’s materiality.
In sum, when evaluating materiality under the False Claims Act, the Government’s decision to expressly identify a provision as a condition of payment is relevant, but not automatically disposi-tive. Likewise, proof of materiality can include, but is not necessarily limited to, evidence that the defendant knows that the Government consistently refuses to pay claims in the mine run of cases based on noncompliance with the particular statutory, regulatory, or contractual requirement. Conversely, if the Government pays a particular claim in full despite its actual knowledge that certain requirements were violated, that is very strong evidence that those requirements are not material. Or, if the Government regularly pays a particular type of claim in full despite actual knowledge that certain requirements were violated, and has signaled no change in position, that is strong evidence that the requirements are not material.
Id. at 2003-04.
Escobar therefore clarified two central and interrelated principles of FCA
We now apply these principles to the complaint before us. The relators allege a series of improprieties in the relationship between Ms. Tilton,, MD, and Patriarch, on the one hand, and Col. Vergez, an officer with authority in the NSRWA contracting office on the other. Those improprieties, they contend, amount to potential violations of criminal law involving fraud, conflict of interest, bribery, or gratuity violations. The Contractor Code of Ethics, which is part of the Federal Acquisitions Regulations and is a mandatory term of acquisitions contracts, requires disclosure of any credible evidence of such conduct. The Truth in Negotiations Act sets forth certain disclosure requirements that assist the Government in determining the market value of the products it purchases, which the relators submit, “naturally affectfe] the government’s negotiation posture.”
We believe it is appropriate to afford the district court the opportunity to reconsider the allegations in light of the changed legal landscape. Escobar makes clear that the district court’s principal method for evaluating implied certification claims, under Mikes, is no longer appropriate. The Supreme Court explicitly rejected a standard for implied certification claims that focuses exclusively on whether the Government expressly designates a contractual, statutory, or regulatory obligation as a condition of payment. Whether a condition is so designated is “relevant to but not dispositive of the materiality inquiry,” but not a precondition to the theory of liability itself. Id. at 2001 (emphasis added).
Escobar now provides the district court with a more refined framework to address the questions before it. The definition of “material” contained within the statute considers whether the misrepresentation had “a natural tendency to influence, or be capable of influencing, the payment or receipt of money or property,”
We believe that the district court ought to reconsider this case for another reason: given the advent of Escobar, the district court may decide that, in fairness to the relators, they should have an opportunity
B.
The relators also challenge the district court’s conclusion, expressed, in- a footnote, that the complaint failed to allege fraud in the inducement. The district court did not discern that theory to be in the complaint. If it were in the complaint, continued the. court, it failed “for the same reasons” as the implied certification theory, and because the allegations were insufficient under the particularity standards for fraud of Rule 9(b).
Claims alleging fraudulent inducement to support an FCA action derive from United States ex rel. Marcus v. Hess,
We agree with Government as amicus curiae that the allegations of the relators’ complaint could support multiple theories of fraud in the inducement. First, the allegations can.-be read to support the view that the prospective promise to comply with various provisions of law, including the Contractor Code of Ethics -and the Truth in Negotiations Act, were false when made. The Government would not have
The district court also concluded that, even if the complaint did include a fraudulent inducement theory, such a claim would fail for the “same reasons” as the implied certification claims. We have concluded that, in light of Escobar, the district court should evaluate anew the implied certification claims, both with respect to the fraudulent statements and with respect to materiality. More fundamentally, it is far from self-evident that the court’s assessment of the implied certification theory should control its disposition of the fraudulent inducement theory., Each theory of liability rests on different factual allegations. -Finally, we -are not convinced that the court’s brief mention of a failure under Rule 9(b)’s specificity requirement accurately assesses the relators’ detailed forty-five-page complaint. .
Conclusipn
The district court decided the motion to dismiss in a profoundly uncertain legal environment. The Supreme Court now has provided significant guidance. The correct course is to allow the district' court to consider this matter in light of that guidance; On remand, the district court also should consider whether to allow the plaintiffs to file a second amended complaint that conforms its allegations to the requirements of Escobar. We also conclude that the complaint did plead fraud in the inducement, and we therefore remand so that the district court can reexamine the allegations relating to that theory,
VACATED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The complaint also alleged a conspiracy count, which was the only count to name Col. Vergez.
. R.57 at 18-19, ¶ 33.
. The complaint alleges that MD did not’disclose a sale for $1,900,000 during the prior year. Id. at 23, ¶ 50.
.
. Id. at 24, ¶ 51.
.
.
. Id. at 15, ¶ 25.
. Among those recommended by Col, Vergez was Ben Weiser, the executive vice-president who challenged Ms. Tilton on the Saudi Arabian National Guard contract.
. It appears that the MD employees were concerned about the provisions of federal ethics laws applying to procurement officials and post-government employment with contractors, See generally
. R.57 at 29,11 66.
. Subsequent to the filing of the complaint, Col. Vergez pleaded guilty to two counts of ’ malting false statements, in violation of-
. The court provided an example to illustrate "[t]he logic of [its] conclusion” that the express'condition approach was too restric
. R.77 at 9.
. Specifically, the Government noted that several circuits had concluded that Mikes involved Medicare-specific considerations and should not be applied to all contexts, or that the express condition rule did not have a basis in the tex| of the Act. See R.70 at 5-7 (citing United States ex rel. Badr v. Triple Canopy, Inc.,
. R.77 at 10-11 (emphasis in original); United States ex rel. Keeler v. Eisai, Inc.,
. R.77 at 11; see also id. at 17-18.
. Id. at 13 (quoting Triple Canopy,
.
. To illustrate its point about the limits of • materiality, the Court hypothesized a contract for health services that required providers to use American-made staplers. If the Govern-mént routinely paid claims, irrespective of whether it knew of the use of foreign staplers and even though it had the right to withhold payment, the provision would not be material;
. Appellants' Amended Br. 42-43.
. Our resolution of the substantive claims equally affects the allegations concerning the conspiracy count.
. R.77 at 7 n.2. Although the label of fraudulent inducement does not appear on the face of the complaint, neither does the label of implied certification. Nor does a plaintiff's labeling of their, complaint bind us. See Johnson v. City of Shelby, - U.S. -,
. Other circuits have conceptualized such claims somewhat differently under this statute, although still acknowledging their validity:
The False Claims Act covers anyone who "knowingly makes, uses, or causes to be made or used, a false record or statement to get a false or fraudulent claim paid or approved by the Government!)”]31 U.S.C. § 3729 (a)(2), The [defendant] "uses” its-[initial fraudulent statement] when it makes ... [an] application for payment. No more is required under the statute. ... The statute requires a causal rather than a temporal connection between fraud and payment. If a false statement is integral to a causal chain leading to payment, it is irrelevant how the federal bureaucracy has apportioned the statements among layers of paperwork.
United States ex rel. Main v. Oakland City Univ.,
. See, e.g., R.57 at 18-19, ¶ 33; 35, ¶ 91 (relating to the El Salvador contract).
