Lead Opinion
The United States appeals from the June 26, 1992 judgment of the United States Claims Court.
BACKGROUND
Wilner was awarded a contract by the United States Department of the Navy to construct an Operational Trainer Facility at Camp Pendleton, California. Wilner,
Dissatisfied with the contracting officer’s award, Wilner brought an action on the claim in the Claims Court under the CDA, contending that government conduct was the legal cause of all of the delay to the project, from the original contract completion date through the date the Navy accepted the project as completed. Wilner’s claim was directed mainly to alleged delay costs arising from duct revision work, open web joist (OWJ) revision work, and smoke detector work. Id. at 263.
At trial, Wilner presented evidence relating to the duct revision work, the OWJ revision work, and the smoke detector work. Id. at 264-72. Although the Claims Court found that the government was responsible for delay to each of these activities, it determined that the evidence presented by Wilner was
Eventually, following a careful and thorough review of the evidence presented at trial, the Claims Court found that the only critical path delay attributable to the government resulted from the duct revision work and that that delay extended the project from February 27, 1987, to May 29, 1987, a total of 91 calendar days. Id. at 275. Having so concluded, the court stated: “The problem that the court perceives is that its determinations thus far reflect the government-caused delays as proved by plaintiff at trial, rather than what the court perceives, but plaintiff failed to prove, to be the actual government-caused delays.” Id. at 277 (emphasis added). The court also stated that, “[d]ue to the absence of a critical path analysis,” and without considering the contracting officer’s final decision, it was “unable to determine whether delays caused by the Navy were properly compensable as critical path delays.” Id. at 279. Thus, the court made it clear that Wilner had failed to prove his case.
The Claims Court, however, did not enter judgment based upon its finding of 91 calendar days of government-caused delay. Rather, relying upon J.D. Hedin Construction Co. v. United States,
After considering Mr. Lindstrom’s final decision, the Claims Court modified his calculations to increase the delay compensation awarded to Wilner by $26,271.49 plus interest, based upon 259 calendar days of government-caused critical path delay (instead of the 260 days of critical path delay found by the contracting officer). Id. at 280-81. The court also rejected the government’s claim for repayment of $133,094.79 in delay compensation already paid to Wilner for lack of jurisdiction. Id. at 279.
I
The government contends that the Claims Court erred as a matter of law by failing to conduct a proper de novo review pursuant to the CDA. Specifically, the government argues that, in ruling for Wilner, the Claims Court “deferred completely to the contracting officer’s decision” and therefore made improper use of the decision under the CDA. The government does not challenge the finding of the Claims Court that the evidence at trial established that the Navy was responsible for 91 calendar days of critical path delay. Neither does the government challenge the Claims Court’s dismissal of its claim for repayment of the $133,094.79 credit. The government does, however, seek repayment of the $17,259.46 net award to Wilner. Wilner, on the other hand, contends that the Claims Court conducted a proper de novo review and that its decision was based upon evidence admitted at trial, which included both the contracting officer’s testimony and his final decision.
In view of the contentions of the parties, resolution of this appeal requires a two-step process. First, we must determine the method by which the Claims Court decided the case. Then, we must determine whether, as a matter of law, that method of decision was proper under the CDA. It is to the former question that we turn first.
II
We disagree with Wilner’s contention that the contracting officer’s testimony at trial provides support for the Claims Court’s decision and that the Claims Court relied upon both the contracting officer’s testimony and final decision. We have carefully reviewed both the contracting officer’s testimony and the decision of the Claims Court. As far as the contracting officer’s testimony is concerned, the contracting officer did not provide testimony which independently established 259 calendar days of government-caused delay. Mr. Lindstrom testified that, in making his decision, he attempted to weigh equally the interests of the Navy and the contractor, and he noted that it was the practice of his office to ascertain that a com-pensable delay had occurred before granting delay compensation. Mr. Lindstrom stated that his final decision was based upon the results of a technical review performed by the Navy’s Engineering Construction Division and upon the opinions of a Navy technical analyst, a consultant, and counsel, who conducted a legal review of the technical analysis. However, Mr. Lindstrom did not conduct an independent analysis of Wilner’s delay claim. In addition, he had no firsthand knowledge of the events that transpired during performance of the contract and no specific recollection of the documents he reviewed in making his final decision. Significantly, at no point in his testimony did Mr. Lindstrom state why he believed that the delays which Wilner experienced fell on the critical path of the project so that they delayed the overall completion of the project. Moreover, counsel for Wilner asked no questions designed to elicit such information. Thus, this is not a case in which the contracting officer testified to any facts underlying the claim. Mr. Lindstrom merely explained the process he followed in making the award. In short, Mr. Lindstrom explained what he relied upon for the conclusions in his final decision. His testimony, however, added nothing to, and provided no support for, those conclusions.
Turning to the decision of the Claims Court, in awarding Wilner $26,271.49 in additional compensation, the court did not rely upon testimony of Mr. Lindstrom independently establishing 259 days of government-caused delay. Had there been testimony of Mr. Lindstrom upon which the court could, and did, rely, it would not have been necessary for the court to state that, “[d]ue to the absence of a critical path analysis,” and without considering the contracting officer’s final decision, it was “unable to determine whether delays caused by the Navy were properly compensable as critical path delays.” Wil-ner,
We thus conclude that Mr. Lindstrom’s testimony provided no support for the Claims Court’s award to Wilner. We also conclude that the Claims Court made its award to Wilner based solely upon the fact that, in his final decision, Mr. Lindstrom determined that the government was responsible for 260 calendar days of delay to the project. We now address the question of whether the court’s approach was correct.
Ill
The CDA provides that “[a]ll claims by a contractor against the government relating to a contract shall be in writing and shall be submitted to the contracting officer for a decision.” 41 U.S.C. § 605(a). As far as the contracting officer’s decision is concerned, the CDA states that “[sjpecific findings of fact are not required, but, if made, shall not be binding in any subsequent proceeding.” Id. The CDA further provides that, after a contracting officer renders a decision upon a claim, a contractor may bring an action directly on the claim in the Court of Federal Claims. 41 U.S.C. § 609(a)(1). In the Court of Federal Claims, the action proceeds “de novo in accordance with the rules of the ... court.” 41 U.S.C. § 609(a)(3).
In Assurance Co. v. United States,
[Tjhe Disputes Act itself suggests that, where an appeal is taken to a board or court, the contracting officer’s award is not to be treated as if it were the unappealed determination of a lower tribunal which is owed special deference or acceptance on appeal.
Assurance,
The plain language of the CDA and our decision in Assurance make it clear that when suit is brought following a contracting officer’s decision, the findings of fact in that decision are not binding upon the parties and are not entitled to any deference. The contractor has the burden of proving the fundamental facts of liability and damages de novo. See Servidone Constr. Corp. v. United States,
The plain language of the CDA and our decision in Assurance also make it clear that, in court litigation, a contractor is not entitled to the benefit of any presumption arising from the contracting officer’s decision. De novo review precludes reliance upon the presumed correctness of the decision. See Renegotiation Bd. v. Bannercraft Clothing Co.,
IV
As noted above, in its decision, the Claims Court relied upon J.D. Hedin Construction Co. v. United States,
The Claims Court’s reliance on Hedin was misplaced. Hedin predates the effective date of the CDA by more than ten years, and “[w]ith the passage of the [CDA], a new era in the resolution of Government contracts emerged.” Tuttle/White Constructors, Inc. v. United States,
V
One final point should be noted. Nothing we say today should be viewed as suggesting that a contracting officer is not competent to offer testimony in a board of contract appeals hearing or in a trial in the Court of Federal Claims. Subject to the Federal Rules of Evidence, in any given case contracting officer testimony certainly is admissible. Neither should anything we say today be viewed as suggesting that a contracting officer’s final decision has no place in a board of contract appeals proceeding or in litigation in the Court of Federal Claims. Such a decision — or at least the submission of a claim requesting such a decision — is of course necessary to establish jurisdiction in the board or the court, to give one example that comes to mind. See 41 U.S.C. § 605(a), (e). The critical point is that, in this case, the Claims Court erred as a matter of law by using Mr. Lindstrom’s final decision in a way that was inconsistent with the CDA’s requirement of de novo review of Wilner’s claim.
CONCLUSION
The judgment of the Claims Court in favor of Wilner is vacated, and the case is remanded for further proceedings. The government has asked us to direct the entry of judgment in its favor in the amount of $17,259.46. On the record before us, however, we are unable to say whether it is entitled to such a result. On remand, therefore, the Court of Federal Claims is directed to determine whether either Wilner or the government is entitled to an award in view of the finding — based upon the evidence at trial — that the Navy was responsible for 91 days of critical path delay with respect to the duet revision work. The court should then enter judgment accordingly.
COSTS
Each party shall bear its own costs.
VACATED and REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS.
Notes
. The Federal Courts Administration Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-572, § 902(a), 106 Stat. 4506, 4516, changed the name of the United States Claims Court to the “United States Court of Federal Claims.” Except where the context requires otherwise, we refer to the trial court by the name which it had while this matter was pending before it.
. Wilner v. United States,
. Wilner v. United States,
. Wilner also requested compensation for weather-related delays. Wilner contended that, but for delays attributable to the government, he would have completed the project before it experienced weather delays. The Claims Court concluded that, because the contract was extended by bilateral modifications, it was impossible for Wilner to prove that he would have completed the project before weather interfered. Id. at 276-77. The issue has not been raised on appeal.
. A “critical path” is a way of grouping interrelated activities in a construction project. A delay to an activity that is on the "critical path" usually results in a corresponding delay to the completion of the project. "The reason that the determination of the critical path is crucial to the calculation of delay damages is that only construction work on the critical path had an impact upon the time in which the project was completed.” G.M. Shupe, Inc. v. United States,
Regarding the duct revision work, the Claims Court stated: "Without a critical path analysis, the court cannot exclude the possibility that the contractor caused concurrent delay on the project.” Wilner,
. The contracting officer did not issue a final decision demanding that Wilner return the $133,094.79 credited to him. Accordingly, the Claims Court ruled that, as far as the proceedings before it were concerned, the government was limited to seeking return of the net award of $17,259.46 which the contracting officer had made to Wilner.
. The Claims Court distinguished Assurance on the ground that, unlike Assurance, facts “justifying rejection of the contracting officer’s determination of critical path delay days and additional work days ... are not present in this case." Wilner,
. Moreover, as noted in Assurance, Court of Claims precedent after Hedin held that, in the event of an appeal to a board of contract appeals under the disputes clause of a government contract, the contracting officer's decision was deemed "vacated” and enjoyed "no presumptive validity whatever.” Southwest Welding & Mfg. Co. v. United States,
. Our respected dissenting colleague states that “neither the CDA's 'de novo' provision nor its requirement that the contracting officer's fact findings be nonbinding constituted a change in the law with respect to J.D. Hedin." This statement brings into sharp focus the fundamental point of difference between the majority and the dissent. Our holding today is based upon the conclusion that the CDA did, in fact, constitute such a change in the law with respect to Hedin. In view of this fundamental point of difference, we do not believe that any useful purpose would be served by debating the subsidiary points raised in the dissent.
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting, with whom NEWMAN, Circuit Judge, joins.
Today the court has taken a significant step, overruling fifty years of precedent, abolishing the rule on evidentiary admissions seriously unquestioned until now, and agreeing with the government’s position against contractors doing business with the government. The majority’s stated reason for this position is that it is mandated by the Contract Disputes Act (CDA) of 1978, 41 U.S.C. §§ 605(a), 609(a)(3) (1988), which requires any appeal to the United States Court of Federal Claims (Claims Court)
I
There is nothing in the CDA which prohibits the use of the contracting officer’s findings and conclusions as evidence in a subsequent de novo proceeding. See Lathan Co. v. United States,
The contracting officer, administering the contract for the government, has direct and intimate knowledge of the relevant facts. The contracting officer’s decision necessarily entails many factual findings. It is unlike a “judgment.” When a judgment is vacated, it is “canceled,” “rendered void,” or “set aside.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1548 (6th ed. 1990). In other words, it no longer has force. However, setting aside the contracting officer’s decision does not also erase the evidentiary value of the findings and other information relevant to a dispute. When factual findings are not contradicted on the appeal they can be given probative weight without requiring the contractor to reprove the facts. The majority now rejects this possibility, holding that the CDA requires full relitigation in a trial de novo. The court’s new literal interpretation of de novo goes too far because it would require the Court of Federal Claims to discard all contracting officer findings, and require the litigants to reproduce all the raw data, and the court to reconduct any essential analyses or investigations which may have already been performed by or for the contracting officer. The court so requires, whether or not the contracting officer’s findings are placed in dispute by the government. Not only is this interpretation of “vacated” in conflict with 48 C.F.R. § 33.212 (1993) of the FAR, but its effect runs counter to this court’s decisions that have rejected litigating positions which waste resources and time or needlessly encumber the dispute resolution process. See Andersen Consulting v. United States,
Since enactment of the CDA in 1978, this court, as well as the agency boards and the Claims Court, have all made use of the contracting officer’s findings and/or testimony as evidence of the ultimate matters at issue in a subsequent de novo hearing.
This court in Assurance did not depart from the practice whereby a contracting officer’s findings can serve as evidence of the ultimate matters at issue. In the case at bar it was the government that called the contracting officer as a witness and attempted to discredit his decision. What difference would it have made in Assurance whether the contracting officer’s findings were sound or full of errors if they had no evidentiary value of the ultimate matters at issue? (Except, perhaps, to prove fraud.) Put another way, if the contracting officer’s findings, particularly undisputed findings, cannot be used as evidence of the ultimate matters at issue, then any testimony by the contracting officer either supporting or disowning that decision would be meaningless. However, in Assurance both the board and this court used such testimony as evidence to justify a reduction in the contractor’s award.
It appears as if the government and the majority are attempting to have it both ways. The government sought Contracting Officer Lindstrom’s testimony before the Claims Court as evidence in an attempt to discredit his finding of 260 days of government-caused delay, but now seeks to bar the use of that finding as evidence in support of the court’s decision. If, as in Assurance, the contracting officer’s testimony can be used as evidence to reduce an award, it should also be available as evidence to sustain an award.
To summarize, the CDA does not preclude the use of the contracting officer’s findings, decision, and testimony as evidence of the ultimate matters at issue in a subsequent de novo proceeding. Such evidence has often and routinely been presented, and has facilitated the dispute resolution. In fact, the FAR requires the contracting officer to provide the reviewing tribunal with “information and support.” To disregard the contracting officer’s evidence would be absurd, not to mention a tremendous waste of government and contractor litigation effort, because the contracting officer has the complete picture of the agency’s side of the dispute. Also, the contracting officer can sometimes be looked upon as an expert witness who is free to testify as to the ultimate matters at issue. Finally, as shown above, the Federal Circuit, Claims Court, agency boards, and the Court of Claims have all permitted evidentiary use of the contracting officer’s nonbinding findings and conclusions in a de novo proceeding.
Accordingly, the Claims Court did not depart from law or precedent in considering Contracting Officer Lindstrom’s findings and testimony as evidence to establish delay causation. The majority argues that the trial court simply adopted the contracting officer’s decision. This is incorrect. The trial court used the contracting officer’s findings of the
II
The Claims Court determined that the evidence presented by the contractor at the trial, taken alone, entitled Wilner to only ninety-one days of compensatory delay. Accordingly, the court then considered the contracting officer’s trial testimony to determine what weight, if any, it should be given as evidence of government-caused periods of delay.
The majority of this court concludes that the Claims Court simply deferred to the contracting officer’s decision rather than giving it evidentiary weight. The majority notes that Contracting Officer Lindstrom testified that in making his finding of 260 days of government-caused delay he relied primarily on a technical review performed by the Engineering Construction Division, and that he also relied on his technical consultants and their preparation of critical path data. The contracting officer also testified that he had no specific recollection, at the time of the trial, of the documents he reviewed several years earlier. However, these considerations go toward the weight that the contracting officer’s testimony should be given rather than to whether the trial court conducted a proper de novo review as required under 41 U.S.C. § 609(a)(3). Reliance on technical reports prepared by specialists, and the expert advice of technical consultants, is not unusual in government. In fact, contracting officers are required to use all available information. See 48 C.F.R. § 1.602-2(c) (1992); FAR § 33.212 (1992). The contracting officer is the government official responsible for obtaining and considering full information, then making a decision on behalf of the agency. The contracting officer is acting on behalf of the agency, and the availability of the contracting officer as a witness has not been challenged. The government’s position, accepted by the majority of this court, is simply that any findings of the contracting officer that favor the contractor — even when factually undisputed — cannot be used as evidence, but must be reproved on the raw data.
Precedent is to the contrary. In accordance with precedent, the Claims Court’s use of the contracting officer’s final decision in the case at bar was proper. This court’s requirement that a contractor such as Wilner must adduce the raw data at trial, through those who collected it and those who analyzed it and presented it to the contracting officer, places a heavy and unnecessary burden on contractor and government, and will price litigation with the government out of reach, to the disservice of those who are willing to serve the government.
Ill
Contracting Officer Lindstrom’s finding that the government was responsible for 260 days of delay constitutes “a strong presumption or an evidentiary admission of the extent of the Government’s liability, but always subject to rebuttal.” This principle is old and well established. J.D. Hedin Constr. Co. v. United States,
Although Contracting Officer Lindstrom’s findings were adverse to the government’s position at trial that Wilner was entitled to no compensation, the government neither contested the sufficiency of those findings
A. The Contract Disputes Act (CDA) did not constitute a change in the statutes with respect to the J.D. Hedin line of cases and is not a valid excuse to overrule them.
Prior to the CDA, a contracting officer’s decision was often reviewed by the appropriate agency board as per the standard disputes clause inserted into most government contracts. Dissatisfied parties could appeal an agency board decision to the United States Court of Claims. 28 U.S.C. § 1491 (1976). Before 1950, the Court of Claims would then conduct a de novo review of the dispute.
In 1950 the Supreme Court held that, absent fraud in the administrative decision, the Court of Claims could not conduct a de novo evidentiary hearing and was bound to the fact findings of the agency board. United States v. Moorman,
These two eases met with an unfavorable response in the public contracting community and resulted in the Wunderlich Act of May 11,1954.
However, in United States v. Carlo Bianchi & Co.,
The Court of Claims addressed the issue of de novo review again in two other cases: Anthony Grace & Sons v. United States,
In J.D. Hedin the contractor alleged that the government had changed the contract specifications and breached the contract by delaying the project’s completion. The trial commissioner conducted a de novo hearing and made findings and conclusions based on evidence produced at trial.
Meanwhile, the Supreme Court granted certiorari in both Anthony Grace and Utah. See United States v. Anthony Grace & Sons,
The decisions again caused concern in the contracting community. During hearings on the proposed CDA legislation, Congress considered whether the law should be returned to the way it was prior to Moorman and Wunderlich, so that the Court of Claims could again conduct de novo hearings in all eases. See H.R.Rep. No. 1556, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 73-81 (1978) (statement of Acting Chief Judge Davis for the Court of Claims). As a result, Bianchi, Grace, and Utah were overruled by Congress when the de novo provision of section 609(a)(3) and the nonbinding provision of section 605 were incorporated into the CDA. The Court of Claims would thereafter conduct de novo hearings in all cases since “the [Supreme Court’s] ruling of United States v. Anthony Grace & Sons was reversed by the Act.” Jacoby, swpra at 17.
To summarize, neither the CDA’s “de novo ” provision nor its requirement that the contracting officer’s fact findings be nonbinding constituted a change in the law with respect to J.D. Hedin. J.D. Hedin was decided de novo, and the trial commissioner was not bound to any prior findings. The government acknowledges this in its brief. To argue that the CDA changed the law, thereby making prior Court of Claims precedent ineffective, is simply not correct. As commentators and precedent have recognized, the line of eases cited in part III of this opinion going as far back as 1944, as well as J.D. Hedin, were reaffirmed, not over
Nevertheless, the government argues and the majority agrees that the CDA’s de novo review requirement constituted a change in the law which effectively overruled J.D. He-din, itself a case of de novo review. “It can be presumed that Congress is knowledgeable about existing law pertinent to legislation it enacts.” VE Holding Corp. v. Johnson Gas Appliance Co.,
The legislative history indicates that the purpose behind the CDA’s de novo review requirement was to return the law to the way it was prior to the Supreme Court’s decision in Wunderlich so that contractors could have the option of bringing claims directly to the Court of Claims without restriction to any agency board’s prior findings of fact. See S.Rep. No. 1118, 95th Cong., 2d Sess. 29 (1978), reprinted in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5235, 5263 (“Section 10(a) allows contractors, at their option, to bypass administrative disputes-resolving forums and seek review of adverse contracting officer decisions directly in the Court of Claims.”). Reading more into the purpose of the CDA’s de novo review provision (for example, implying that the J.D. Hedin holding was effectively overruled) would be contrary to and unsupported by the legislative history.
The legislative history of the CDA does not mention J.D. Hedin. This is in direct contrast to United States v. Anthony Grace & Sons,
Moreover, in 1969, Congress created the Commission on Government Procurement “to study the procurement process and make recommendations to improve its efficiency.” S.Rep. No. 1118, supra at 4, reprinted in 1978 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5238. That commission conducted a three-year, $7-miUion investigation and in 1972 issued a comprehensive report in six large volumes. Id. A significant part of the commission’s report dealt with “Disputes Arising in Connection with Contract Performance.” In addition to this report, Congress also received the views of lawyers, numerous bar association groups, the Department of Justice, and other administrative departments on the problems present in the area of government contract disputes. Neither the commission report nor any testimony ever asserted that J.D. Hedin or the cases that held similarly should be overruled by the new legislation. Thus, J.D. Hedin could not have been overruled by the CDA because Congress did not “speak directly” to the issue, even as it overruled other cases. United States v. Texas, — U.S. -, -,
The majority opinion contends that J.D. Hedin was effectively overruled by the CDA because under a de novo standard of review, it is inappropriate to afford weight to the administrative decision being reviewed. The authority cited by the majority and the government in support of this view is Renegotiation Bd. v. Bannercraft Clothing Co.,
First, the contracting officer’s decision is no more final today than it was prior to the CDA. Before passage of the CDA, contracting officers made nonbinding findings in breach claims, Langevin v. United States,
Second, the majority and the government’s reliance on Bannercraft Clothing is misplaced. Nowhere in its opinion does the Supreme Court hold that prior findings of the contracting officer cannot be considered and afforded evidentiary weight. Banner-craft Clothing does not even discuss the proper level of evidentiary weight which can be afforded a contracting officer’s findings. The evidentiary weight of an initial administrative decision was not even at issue in the case. Rather, the Court in Bannercraft Clothing merely stated that if a party chose to bring a renegotiation suit in the Court of Claims, that court would not be bound by prior agency determinations. Id. The statute at issue in Bannercraft Clothing, the Renegotiation Act of 1951, 50 U.S.C.App. §§ 1211-1233 (1970), was enacted eight years prior to the CDA and contained a provision expressly prohibiting the use of prior agency findings as evidence in a subsequent de novo proceeding. 50 U.S.C. § 1215(a) (1970);
Moreover, the Supreme Court has held that prior findings can be used as evidence of the ultimate matters at issue in a subsequent de novo proceeding. Chandler v. Roudebush,
The Supreme Court ruled that the trial examiner’s findings were available as evidence insofar as they were contrary to the findings of the review board in the subsequent de novo hearing. Universal Camera Corp.,
B. The relevant portion of J.D. Hedin should not be overruled.
Since the CDA did not constitute a change in the law with respect to J.D. Hedin, the question then becomes whether the case should now be overruled in this in banc proceeding. Because the holding in J.D. He-din is in accord with the provisions of the CDA and is as valid today as when it was written, it should not be overruled.
I. The J.D. Hedin holding is in accord with the CDA.
J.D. Hedin states that the contracting officer’s findings of fact and conclusions based thereon may constitute a rebuttable presumption or admission. 41 U.S.C. § 605 provides that the contracting officer’s findings of fact cannot be binding in a subsequent proceeding. Irrebuttable presumptions are binding, while presumptions which are rebut-table are nonbinding. See Universal Restoration, Inc. v. United States,
Further, since a contracting officer’s findings are available as evidence, as discussed above, they can be used to create a rebutta-ble presumption without violating the CDA’s de novo review requirement. Presumptions are used frequently in disputes reviewed de novo. See 2 Kenneth S. Broun et al., McCormick on Evidence § 343, at 457-59 (John W. Strong ed., 4th ed. 1992) [hereinafter McCormick]. For example, proof of six or more years of delay in filing a patent infringement suit creates a rebuttable presumption of lach-es. AC. Aukerman Co. v. R.L. Chaides Constr. Co.,
A presumption has been defined as “a rule of law, statutory or judicial, by which finding of a basic fact gives rise to existence of presumed fact, until presumption is rebutted.” Black’s Law Dictionary 1185 (6th ed. 1990). Although not evidence, a presumption can be a “substitute” for evidence if it is not rebutted. Dunn v. Simmons,
The presence of a presumption does not relieve a contractor from the burden of proof it is required to bear under a de novo standard of review. Presumptions merely impose “on the party against whom it is directed the burden of going forward with evidence to rebut or meet the presumption, but [do] not shift to such party the burden of proof in the sense of the risk of nonpersuasion, which remains throughout the trial upon the party on whom it was originally east.” Fed. R.Evid. 301. This was the case in J.D. He-din where the contracting officer’s finding was presumed to be accurate absent the introduction of rebuttal evidence by the government.
2. J.D. Hedin should not be overruled because its reasoning remains valid.
Contracting officers are required to be unbiased, impartial arbiters of contractor disputes, 48 C.F.R. § 1.602-2 (1992); however, they must also be the guardians of the government’s interests. 48 C.F.R. § 1.602-2(b) (1992). Consequently, a contracting officer’s duty is' to balance contradictory interests, placing that of the government at the fore. With this in mind, the Court of Claims explained why contracting officer findings adverse to the government may constitute a presumption or admission of the extent of the government’s liability:
It is true that we are not bound by the findings of the contracting officer in a claim for damages due to delay, but there is a strong presumption that the delay was not less than that found. The contracting officer, or his representative, had day to day contact with the work and was in the best position of anyone, except the contractor, to know the extent of the delay. He is supposed to weigh the facts with an even hand before rendering his decision; but it cannot be overlooked that he is the defendant’s selection and its own employee. He is not apt to err on the side of the contractor and against his employer, whose interests he is employed to guard and protect. (Citation omitted.)
Irwin & Leighton,
Additionally, consider that under the CDA only the contractor, and not the government, can appeal from a contracting officer’s final decision. 41 U.S.C. § 609 (1988). Seaboard Lumber Co. v. United States,
“[Presumptions, whether created by statute or by judicial ruling, ‘arise out of considerations of fairness, public policy and probability.’ ” Aukerman,
A contracting officer’s findings and conclusions are available as evidence to be weighed with all other evidence in the record to determine the matters at issue in a subsequent de novo proceeding in court. In the case at bar, the Claims Court did not simply defer to such findings or conclusions, but said “the contracting officer’s decision is evidence before the court that must be considered and weighed.” Wilner v. United States,
where it was proper to consider it, for the contracting officer testified that his finding was derived from determinations of a technical analyst, a consultant and counsel. It was unrebutted. Relitigation to reintroduce the underlying documents and testimony was unnecessary, and was not suggested by either side at trial. A trial de novo does not require relitigation of matters that are undisputed and supported by preponderant evidence, as found by a competent trial judge. In my twenty-three years as a trial judge, unreversed, I would have held the same way. It accords with precedent, justice, and legislative history of the CDA. The majority’s judicial and legislative revisionism does not bear analysis.
For these reasons, I dissent. The trial court should be affirmed and the important, long-standing precedent of J.D. Hedin should not be discarded.
. The Federal Courts Administration Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-572, § 902(a), 106 Stat. 4506, 4516, changed the name of the United States Claims Court to the United States Court of Federal Claims. However, reference shall be made to the Claims Court since that was its designation at the time this action was commenced.
. See Edward R. Marden Corp. v. United States,
. Although J.D. Hedin addressed many issues, reference to its holding is directed only toward that portion of the decision stating that the findings of the contracting officer constitute a strong presumption or an evidentiary admission of the extent of the government’s liability, but always subject to rebuttal.
. Federal Circuit precedent is overturned either through a change in the statute or through an in banc proceeding or decision of the Supreme Court.
. At that time, the Court of Claims was composed of a trial part, which evolved in 1982 into the Claims Court (now renamed the Court of Federal Claims), and an appellate part which was incorporated into the Federal Circuit in 1982.
. See Franklin M. Schultz, Proposed Changes in Government Contract Disputes Settlement: The Legislative Battle Over the Wunderlich Case, 67 Harv.L.Rev. 217 (1953); Marion E. Harrison, Eight Years After Wunderlich — Confusion in the Courts, 28 Geo.Wash.L.Rev. 561, 563 (1960).
. I was the trial commissioner for the J.D. Hedin case.
. All disputes were heard in banc by the appellate part of the Court of Claims until Chief Judge Wilson Cowen issued a General Order on May 15, 1973, allowing the Court of Claims to sit in panels of three “as to all matters submitted and/or argued after June 30, 1973.” This order was pursuant to statute.'
. The relevant statute states in part:
"Whenever the Board makes a determination with respect to the amount of excess profits, and such determination is made by order, it shall ... prepare and furnish such contractor ... with a statement of such determination, of the facts used as a basis therefor, and of its reasons for such determination. Such statements shall not be used in the Court of Claims as proof of the facts or conclusions stated therein." (Emphasis added.)
. Alternatively, one could characterize the presumption discussed in J.D. Hedin as an inference. "At one time 'presumption' was just another word for inference. In older evidence books it is common to see circumstantial evidence discussed under the heading of 'presumptive evidence'.” 21 Charles A. Wright & Kenneth W. Graham, Jr., Federal Practice and Procedure § 5122 (1977).
. In an action before the Court of Federal Claims, the government may bring counterclaims and does have the right to appeal an adverse decision to the Federal Circuit. 41 U.S.C. § 607(g)(1)(B).
