In this case, we address an important and difficult question involving the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729 et seq. We must determine whether the release of a qui tam claim, when entered into without the United States’ knowledge or consent, and prior to the filing of an action based on that claim, is enforceable. We hold that it is not.
BACKGROUND
In November 1988, Michael Green (“Appellant”), a former employee of Northrop, filed a complaint in California Superior Court against Northrop and several unnamed defendants alleging a number of state-law causes of action stemming from his termination by Northrop in October 1988. According to Green, while working as a criminal investigator for Northrop’s Advanced Systems Division, he uncovered evidence that Northrop had “double charged” the U.S. Air Force for equipment procured for the B-2 bomber program. Green maintained that he was discharged for having brought this information to the attention of certain Northrop officials and because he sought the advice of an attorney.
Northrop and Green eventually negotiated a settlement of this suit, and entered into a “Settlement Agreement and General Release” (the “Release”) on April 16,1990. The Release stated in general terms that the parties desired to settle “once and forever, all of the matters which have arisen between them including but not limited to disputes relating to or arising out of the Action and Green’s employment with and separation from Northrop.” Northrop agreed to pay Green $190,000 in return, inter alia, for his agreement to:
release, acquit and forever discharge Northrop [and its] employees ... from any and all claims ... rights to payment ... actions and causes of action of every nature, under any theory under the law, whether ... statutory or other of any jurisdiction, whether known or unknown ... which he had or held, or has or holds, or may claim to have or to hold by reason of any and all matters ... including, but not limited to, those arising out of or relating to the Action and/or Green’s employment with and separation from Northrop.
Subsequently, on January 11, 1991, Green filed a complaint under the qui tam provisions of the False Claims Act (“FCA” or “Act”) against Northrop, a third party contractor known as Autek Systems Corporation, and several individual employees of both companies. The complaint alleged that the defendants conspired to submit false claims to the United States “for costs associated with the procurement of Automated Test Equipment (ATE) that Northrop was required to deliver under the B-2 contract.” As in the original suit filed in the California courts, Green contended that the defendants engaged in, among other practices that violated the FCA “double billing,” and that “[w]hen [Green] began conducting an investigation with respect to the subjects of this lawsuit,” he “informed Northrop’s Security Department that he had found and documented corruption at the Executive Management Level in the B-2 Division,” but that he was “ordered to close his investigation” and subsequently was terminated.
Following the filing of this action under seal, the United States, in accordance with the FCA, see 31 U.S.C.A. § 3730(b) (West Supp.1994), undertook an investigation of the allegations made in the complaint. In February 1992, after conducting an inquiry that lasted several months, the United States de *957 dined to intervene in the suit. Defendants Northrop and Norm Bussard (“Appellees”) subsequently moved for summary judgment, raising two arguments. First, Appellees contended that, as part of the release, Green had bargained away his right to bring a qui tam action, and therefore had “discharged all claims against Northrop and Bussard.” Second, Appellees asserted that, as consequence of having bargained away his qui tam claim, including his statutory right to recovery, Green could not “demonstrat[e] a personal stake in the outcome sufficient to satisfy [Article III] standing requirements.” Accordingly, Appellees maintained that the action should be dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
The district court agreed with Appellees on both counts, and entered summary judgment in their favor on July 15, 1992. 1 The district court concluded that the April 16, 1990, agreement unambiguously “released all claims that Green had or held against Northrop ... including the statutory right to payment he seeks to recover under the False Claims Act in this qui tam action.” Furthermore, the court determined that, because the government had elected not to intervene in the action, “there are no public policy considerations which would bar the enforcement of the General Release. On the contrary, public policy strongly favors the enforcement of ‘ironclad and enforceable general releases.’ ” Finally, the court held that, because Green had “bargained away his right to payment under the False Claims Act, as well as any right to employment by Northrop, ... he lost any standing he might have otherwise had to bring a qui tam action against Northrop.” The court, therefore, dismissed the action for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Green timely appealed to this court, and he makes three arguments. First, Green maintains that, even if the district court determined correctly that he waived his rights to bring a qui tam action under the FCA by entering into the Release, the settlement of such a claim is void as a matter of public policy when entered into without the assent of the United States. Second, Green asserts that the district court erred in holding that the Release included either his right to bring a qui tam action or his statutory right to a portion of the recovery, attorneys’ fees, or costs. Third, Green contends that the district court erred in determining that his standing to maintain a qui tam suit depended on his ability to recover the statutory award, and insists instead that injury-in-fact to the United States is all that a relator must demonstrate to establish Article III standing.
We assume for the purposes of analysis that, as Appellees insist, the Release encompassed both Green’s right to bring a qui tam action as well as any recovery that might flow from that action. Nonetheless, we hold that this aspect of the Release is unenforceable because its enforcement would impair impermissibly a substantial public policy. 2 Consequently, we conclude that the *958 district court’s holding that Green lacks standing to pursue this action, and therefore, that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction, cannot be sustained. 3
DISCUSSION
I. Is the Enforceability of the Release Governed by Statutory Interpretation or Federal Common Law?
As an initial matter, the parties dispute sharply the proper focus of this court’s inquiry. Appellant contends that the enforceability of the release of a
qui tam
claim must be measured by the federal common law test articulated by the Supreme Court in
Town of Newton v. Rumery,
We agree with Appellees that we
first
must resolve an issue of statutory interpretation. The Court in
Rumery
did not hold that its test was applicable to every federal enactment. Rather, the Court drew upon “traditional common law principles” because that body of law informs “the principles governing § 1983 actions.”
Rumery,
Although we agree with Appellees that we first must attempt to ascertain Congress’s intent with respect to the enforceability of the prefiling release of qui tam claims, we disagree with Appellees’ additional contention that our analysis necessarily ends after construing the statute. There is a crucial difference between concluding that Congress intended a release to be enforceable and merely determining that, as a matter of stat *959 utory interpretation, there is an insufficient basis for inferring that Congress intended a release not to be enforceable. In the latter circumstance, we would be faced with a “gap” in the statutory scheme.
However, merely because a “gap” is encountered does not mean that a vacuum necessarily is created. State law, if not preempted, presumptively supplies the missing rule.
See O’Melveny & Myers v. FDIC,
— U.S. -, -,
II. Statutory Interpretation
Accordingly, we first must ascertain congressional intent with respect to the enforceability of a prefiling release of a
qui tarn
claim entered into without the United States’ knowledge or consent. This is a question of statutory interpretation that we address de novo.
See, e.g., United States ex rel. Killingsworth v. Northrop,
A.
The FCA is silent as to the enforceability of a prefiling release of a
qui tarn
claim. Congress did address, however, the ability of relators, defendants, and the United States to enter into settlements
following
the filing of a
qui tarn
claim. Section 3730(b)(1) provides that a
qui tarn
action “may be dismissed
only
if the court
and
the
Attorney General
give
written consent
to the dismissal and their reasons for consenting.” 31 U.S.C.A. § 3730(b)(1) (West Supp.1994) (emphasis added). We have ruled that, in the absence of a later decision by the government to intervene,
see United States ex rel. McGough v. Covington Technologies Co.,
Appellees maintain that Congress’s decision to address the enforceability of
post
filing settlements of
qui tarn
claims ends our analysis, and that we must
presume
from Congress’s silence that it intended prefiling releases of such claims to be enforceable. In making this argument, Appellees rely on the canon of construction, invoked frequently in cases in which the issue is whether to imply a private right of action, that courts must “presum[e] that a remedy was deliberately omitted from a statute ... when Congress has enacted a comprehensive legislative scheme including an integrated system of procedures for enforcement.”
E.g., Northwest Airlines,
*960
We find that the canon favored by Appellees simply is not relevant to the resolution of the question presented by this case. In the cases in which the canon traditionally has been applied, the question has been whether the statute at issue permits an implied private right of action. The canon serves to ensure that courts do not upset a “comprehensive legislative scheme” by creating additional “procedures for enforcement” that Congress did not intend.
Northwest Airlines,
By contrast, it is clear that, here, the FCA permits a qui tam suit to be brought by private parties and that such a remedy is a key part of the statute’s “integrated system” for enforcement. Id. The question is only whether Congress intended that private parties be able to release this clearly available remedy without the consent of the government. In such a circumstance, the canon is of no help. The general presumption that Congress did not intend to create remedies by implication provides no guidance as to whether Congress intended to permit parties to release a particular remedy that it expressly created, and, if so, under what circumstances. In fact, it may be more consistent with the enforcement scheme set up by Congress to prevent parties from releasing the remedy without first obtaining the government’s consent. Accordingly, we conclude that the presumption urged by Appellees is not warranted here.
B.
We find it inappropriate to presume Congress’s intent from its failure to resolve the question expressly. Given the lack of any textual answer to this question or any relevant legislative history, we have no basis for inferring that Congress intended the release at issue to be enforceable or unenforceable. Congress’s silence on the matter of prefiling releases could reflect just as reasonably its failure- to contemplate the issue, its desire to leave resolution of the issue to the courts, its approval of such prefiling releases, or its determination that government consent is required. Therefore, we are faced with a “gap” in the statutory scheme. Accordingly, we must apply federal common law.
III. Federal Common Law
A.
1.
It is well established that federal common law properly is invoked to determine the validity of a release of a statutorily-conferred federal right.
See, e.g., Botefur v. City of Eagle Point,
Merely because federal common law governs the matter, however, does not mean that the rule must be uniform.
Kamen v. Kemper Fin. Servs., Inc.,
2.
Because the FCA does not direct us to formulate uniform common law rules, we apply the Kimbell Foods test. We conclude that formulation of a uniform federal common law rule is justified.
Upholding the release at issue in this case would frustrate the policies underlying the
qui tarn
provisions of the FCA.
See infra.
Although state law might emphasize the same general principles we apply below in assessing the validity of the release,
see Rumery,
Uniformity, moreover, is necessary to prevent parties, through use of choice-of-law clauses, from selecting as governing law the law of a state that is most likely to uphold the release.
Cf. Petro-Ventures, Inc. v. Takessian,
B.
Accordingly, we find it appropriate to fashion a uniform federal common law rule to determine the validity of releases such as the one at issue in this case. As with section 1983 actions, which are governed by “traditional common law principles,”
Town of Newton v. Rumery,
In
Rumery,
the Supreme Court held that “a promise is unenforceable if the interest in its enforcement is outweighed in the circumstances by a public policy harmed by enforcement of the agreement.”
Id.
In
Davies v. Grossmont Union High Sch. Dist.,
Accordingly, in Davies, we first inquired whether the right waived “by its nature [was] one that implicate[d] the public interest,” id. at 1398, and the extent to which the public interest would be harmed by enforcement of waiver, see id. at 1397-98. Next, we focused on “the factors that favor enforcement.” Id. at 1398. We first acknowledged the “admittedly important” policy that “favor[s] enforcement of private agreements and the encouragement of settling litigation.” Id. We noted, however, that this interest would be present “in every dispute over the enforceability of an agreement terminating litigation.” Id. Consequently, we reasoned that:
where a substantial public interest favoring nonenforcement is present, the interest in settlement is insufficient. Otherwise there would be no point to the Rumery balancing test: since the interest in settlement is present in every ease, every settlement agreement would be enforced. Clearly, then, when there is a substantial public interest that would be harmed by enforcement ... the party seeking enforcement must, at the least, advance some important interest in addition to the interest in settlement.
Id. (emphasis added).
Davies
thus requires us (1) to determine whether the agreement waives a right that impacts upon the public interest; (2) determine whether a
substantial
public interest would be impaired by enforcement of the agreement; and (3) to ascertain the reasons apart from the general interest in settling disputes that support enforcing the agreement.
6
If no substantial public interest would be impaired by the agreement, we must consider, as the Court did in
Rumery,
all the factors that bear on whether “the public interest in enforcement of the agreement outweigh the policies furthered by non-enforcement.”
Davies,
C.
We first conclude that enforcing the release at issue in this case would impair a substantial public interest. Specifically, we find that enforcing the Release would threaten to nullify the incentives Congress intended to create in amending the provisions of the False Claims Act in 1986.
1.
The history and structure of the FCA and its
qui tam
provisions is well described elsewhere.
See generally United States ex rel. Springfield Terminal Ry. Co. v. Quinn,
The vital importance of this incentive effect is demonstrated by the reasons set forth by Congress in 1986 in undertaking the first extensive revision of the Act since its enactment in 1863. Congress expressed its judgment that “sophisticated and widespread fraud” that threatens significantly both the federal treasury and our nation’s national security only could successfully be combatted by “a coordinated effort of both the Government and the citizenry.” S.Rep. No. 345, 99th Cong., 2d Sess. 2-3 (1986),
reprinted in
1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. 5266, 5267-68 [hereinafter Senate Report]. Emphasizing both difficulties in detecting fraud that stem largely from the unwillingness of insiders with relevant knowledge of fraud to come forward,
see id.
at 4,
reprinted in
1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5269, and “the lack of resources on the part of Federal enforcement agencies” that often leaves unaddressed “[a]llegations that perhaps could develop into very significant cases,”
id.
at 7,
reprinted in
1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5272, Congress sought to “increase incentives, financial and otherwise, for private individuals to bring suits on behalf of the Government,”
id.
at 2,
reprinted in
1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5267. Congress’s overall intent, therefore, was “to encourage more private enforcement suits.”
Id.
at 23,
quoted in
1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5288-89;
see also Killingsworth,
The importance of the Act’s incentive effect is evidenced clearly in the revised Act’s structure. A relator who properly brings a claim will generally receive a share of the recovery as well as eligibility for attorneys’ fees and costs. See 31 U.S.C.A. § 3730(d) (West Supp.1994). This is true even if the government decides to intervene and conducts the action itself, see id. § 3730(d)(1), or elects to pursue its claim in an administrative proceeding, see id. § 3730(c)(5). The right to recovery clearly exists primarily to give relators incentives to *964 bring claims. 8 Moreover, the extent of the recovery is tied to the importance of the relator’s participation in the action and the relevance of the information brought forward. 9 This demonstrates not only the importance of the incentive effect, but that Congress wished to create the greatest incentives for those relators best able to pursue claims that the government could not, and bring forward information that the government could not obtain.
The Act’s jurisdictional provisions also demonstrate Congress’s concern with maintaining adequate incentives for those who materially would advance the goals of revealing fraud and supplementing government enforcement efforts. Under the Act, if an action is “based upon the public disclosure of allegations or transactions in” certain specified proceedings, reports, or mediums, a
qui tam
action cannot be brought unless the relator “is an original source of the information” on which the allegations are based. 31 U.S.C.A. § 3730(e)(4)(A) (West Supp.1994). We held in
Wang
that “section 3730(e)(4)(A) requires a
qui tam
plaintiff to have played some part in his allegation’s original public disclosure.”
Wang,
We recognize that creating incentives for those with knowledge of fraud to come forward was not Congress’s sole objective. In carefully crafting provisions that specify the relator’s recovery and in amending the jurisdictional provisions, it is clear that Congress attempted “to walk a fine line between encouraging whistle-blowing and discouraging opportumstic behavior.”
Quinn,
*965 The balance struck by Congress in the Act, however, clearly operates against the background assumption that relators’ incentives to bring claims would not otherwise be frustrated. As discussed above, Congress clearly was of the judgment that, without creating incentives for relators to bring qui tam actions, the government in many cases might not even learn of the fraud. Moreover, the concerns with deterring frivolous suits and protecting the rights of the United States in a claim are not implicated when the relator chooses not to file. Accordingly, when we consider, as we do here, a release of a claim in the prefiling period, it is clear that our focus must be on what impact the release will have on the incentive effect Congress intended to create and the importance of that incentive effect in achieving the FCA’s goals of detecting and deterring fraud on the government.
2.
We think it plain that enforcing a prefiling release of a qui tam claim would dilute significantly the incentives that Congress attempted to augment in amending the Act. If the release will be enforced, a party will have no right or reason to file a qui tam claim. We further believe that impairing these incentives will impair significantly the operation of the FCA. Although not all qui tam claims will be settled prior to the filing of an action, it appears that, for the reasons discussed below, relators have significant incentives to enter into such agreements. And although, as Appellees maintain, enforcing the Release at issue in this case would not prohibit a relator from coming forward with information concerning Appellees’ alleged misconduct, our analysis of the structure and purposes of the Act demonstrates that this consideration is not dispositive. If the qui tam provisions never had been enacted, presumably whistleblowers still could come forward. The Act reflects Congress’s judgment that incentives to file suit were necessary for the government to learn of the fraud or to spur government authorities into action; permitting a prefiling release when the government has neither been informed of, nor consented to, the release would undermine this incentive, and therefore, frustrate one of the central objectives of the Act.
We recognize that the FCA aims at achieving deterrence as well as restitution.
See Mortgages, Inc. v. United States Dist. Court,
To see this, one need only assume that, but for the filing of a qui tam claim, the government would be significantly less likely to learn of the allegations of fraud. Because Congress itself has made this very assumption, see Senate Report, supra, at 4-7, reprinted in U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5269-72, we find it a reasonable starting point. When the qui tam relator files suit, the relator stands to receive only a percentage of the eventual proceeds from the action; at most, this will amount to 30 percent of the recovery. See 31 U.S.C.A. § 3730(d) (West Supp.1994). Accordingly, in settlement negotiations, both the government and the relator will have incentives to maximize the expected gross recovery.
The situation changes when a potential relator and defendant enter into a prefiling release of a qui tam claim when, as we assume here, that action makes its less likely that the government will learn of the fraud. Under these circumstances, the relator is likely to keep the entire amount of the set *966 tlement proceeds. 10 Because the relator is likely to retain 100 percent as opposed to a maximum 30 percent of the recovery, a rational relator would be willing to accept a substantially smaller amount to settle the claim immediately than to preserve the right to eventually file a qui tam action in which the government would retain the lion’s share of the proceeds.
To be sure, the concerns identified above are not as pressing on the facts of this case as they would be in many other contexts. The government now has learned of the allegations of fraud made by Green. Indeed, as recounted above, the government undertook an investigation that lasted several months. On the basis of these observations, Appellees maintain that, even if the purposes of the FCA might be undermined by enforcing a general release in other contexts, enforcing the Release at issue here would not have such an effect.
It is critical to observe, however, that the government only learned of the allegations of fraud and conducted its investigation because of the filing of the qui tam complaint. If the prevailing legal rule were that prefiling releases entered into without the government’s consent or knowledge were enforceable, then it stands to reason that Green never would have filed his qui tam complaint in the first place. And, as dis-cussed above, both the structure of the Act and the legislative history reveal that it is the filing of more private suits that Congress sought to encourage, both to increase enforcement and deterrence as well as to spur the government to undertake its own investigations. 11 In light of the ex ante effects of enforcing the parties’ agreement, we reject Appellees’ contention that the policies of the FCA would not seriously be impaired by enforcing the Release.
We also find unpersuasive Appellees’ argument that the objectives of the
qui tam
provisions would not be impaired by enforcing the Release because other Northrop employees can “prosecute claims under the act in accordance with its terms.” First, we note that, on the facts of this case, it probably is not true that other, employees could prosecute the claim. By filing his wrongful termination suit in state court, Green “publicly disclosed” the allegation of fraud within the meaning of section 3730(e)(4)(A) of the Act.
See, e.g., United States ex rel. Siller v. Becton Dickinson & Co.,
Of course, as discussed above, we must look more broadly than to the facts of this ease. As a general matter, however, we think that hypothesizing the existence of other employees who possess relevant information and are willing to come forward is far too fragile a basis for enforcing the Release. There is, of course, no guarantee that such persons exist. Moreover, under Northrop’s logic, it presumably would be permissible for Northrop to enter into similar release agreements with other employees as long as Northrop stops short of demanding a release from all of its employees as a matter of course. If we were to routinely uphold prefiling releases, however, it is unclear how the government or the courts could ensure that potential relators remain.
Appellees additionally maintain that, even if the release in this ease removes the very incentives that the
qui tam
provisions of the FCA seek to foster, this result will not impair a substantial
public
interest. They argue that the public interest is not impaired because a Release entered into in the period prior to the filing of a claim, unlike a postfiling settlement, cannot foreclose the government from bringing suit. Even assuming that a postfiling settlement precludes a subsequent action by the government, we think this argument misses the point for exactly the same reason that Appellees’ missed the point with their argument that a settlement would not prevent relators from coming forward with the relevant information. As we emphasized above, the very purpose of the Act’s
qui tam
provisions is to create incentives for relators to supplement government enforcement. Although,
once
a suit is filed, the concern with ensuring that the government receives an appropriate share of the recovery is an important consideration,
see Killingsworth,
Appellees next maintain that, even if the “public interest” is impacted by diluting incentives, this effect is not “substantial.” They rely on
Rumery,
in which a plurality of the Court, noting that the plaintiff there “had no public duty to institute a § 1983 action merely to further the public’s interest in revealing police misconduct,” characterized the public interest at issue as “diffuse[ ]” and refused to “elevate” it “above Rumery’s considered decision that he would benefit personally from the [release].”
Rumery,
Section 1983 and the
qui tam
provisions of the FCA, however, serve very different goals. Section 1983 exists both to vindicate the public interest in deterring deprivations of constitutional rights and to compensate those actually injured.
See, e.g., Memphis Community Sch. Dist. v. Stachura, 477
U.S. 299, 307-09,
By contrast, the private right of recovery created by the
qui tam
provisions of the FCA exists not to compensate the
qui tam
relator, but the
United States.
12
The relator’s right to recovery exists solely as a mechanism for deterring fraud and returning funds to the federal treasury.
See Kelly,
D.
Having concluded that upholding the release in this case would impair a substantial public policy, we turn to an assessment of the interests that favor enforcement.
Appellees maintain that the most important public policy at issue in this case is “whether a defense contractor will ever be able to settle, fully and finally, the disputes that may arise with its employees.” They rely upon
Coleson v. Inspector General of the Dep’t of Defense,
At oral argument, Appellees explained that refusing to enforce a general release that encompasses qui tam claims will significantly burden not only federal defense contractors, but also hospitals, universities, and other entities that receive federal funds and face a significant volume of employment-related litigation. Appellees reason that these entities, if they lack the ability to “buy complete peace” -with employees, will be less likely to settle employment-related claims. Such a result, the argument runs, will impose significant costs on these entities, their employees, and the judicial system that, in sum, outweigh the public interest impaired by eviscerating the incentives to bring qui tam claims.
*969
In making this argument, Appellees rely primarily on the “general interest in the settlement of litigation” that we found insufficient in
Davies
to overcome the impairment of a substantial public interest.
Davies,
In fact, the imposition of these additional costs may actually further the purposes of the FCA. Presumably, the defendants who will be deterred most from settling non-FCA claims because of the possibility of a
qui tam
suit are those who face the greatest exposure under the Act.
Cf. Evans,
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that application of the Rumery/Davies test compels the conclusion that prefiling releases of qui tam claims, when entered into without the United States’ knowledge or consent, cannot be enforced to bar a subsequent qui tam, claim.
CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, we hold that the Release entered into in this case cannot be enforced to bar Appellant’s qui tam claim. The district court’s conclusions that Appellant lacked standing to pursue the action, and therefore, that the court lacked subject matter jurisdiction, accordingly are reversed. The case is remanded to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
REVERSED and REMANDED.
Notes
. The other named defendants were not made part of the district court's order and are not before us.
. In the district court, although Green similarly maintained that enforcing the Release would violate public policy, he based this argument not on the federal common law test advanced in this court, but on California law. On this basis, Appellees maintain that we cannot reach the public policy issue because it has been raised for the first time on appeal.
The substance of the two tests, however, is quite similar; accordingly, we are not convinced that the district court did not pass upon the issue raised here.
Cf. In re E.R. Fegert, Inc.,
. We therefore have no occasion to consider whether the district court properly interpreted the Release.
See Parker v. DeKalb Chrysler Plymouth,
. It is true that, in
O’Melveny & Myers v. FDIC,
- U.S. -,
*961
In
O’Melveny,
the Supreme Court carefully qualified the dicta quoted above with the statement that state law only
presumptively
controls to fill gaps in detailed statutory schemes. We think the question of the release of a federal cause of action is a situation in which this "presumption” can be rebutted. Here, the potential that state law might impair federal rights is substantial. Indeed, the
Dice
Court itself reasoned that federal rights easily could be defeated if federal law did not ultimately control the question of the validity of a release.
See Dice,
We also acknowledge that, in
Mortgages, Inc. v. United States Dist. Court,
. Although
Davies
involved the waiver of a constitutional right, and not a statutorily-conferred cause of action as did
Rumery,
we assumed, without deciding, that
Rumery
supplied the appropriate standard.
See Davies,
. As the
Davies
court noted, when an agreement that involves the government is at issue, the burden of proof, at least in the context of the "waiver of a civil right,” is on the government.
Id.
at 1397 n. 8 (citing
Lynch v. City of Alhambra,
. The Davies court also stated that it would not enforce the agreement before it because of the lack of a “close nexus” between the "specific interest the government seeks to advance in the dispute underlying the litigation and the specific right waived.” Id. at 1399. The court specifically did not address “the proper role of nexus in agreements,” such as the one at issue in this case, that “involv[e] only private parties.” Id. at 1399 n. 11. Because, as discussed below, we find the release in this case invalid independent of any issue of nexus, we do not reach this question.
. Providing the relator a right to recover, a role in the action when the government intervenes, see 31 U.S.C.A. § 3730(c)(1) (giving the relator a right “to continue as a party” notwithstanding the government’s decision to proceed with the action), and a right to object to a dismissal or settlement by the government, see id. § 3730(c)(2)(A), (B), also serve the additional purpose of giving a relator the incentive to "act[ ] as a check that the Government does not neglect evidence, cause undu[e] delay, or drop the false claims case without legitimate reasons.” Senate Report, supra, at 25-26, reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5290-91.
. If the government chooses to conduct the action, the relator will receive "at least 15 percent but no more than 25 percent of the action or settlement of the claim, depending upon the extent to which the person substantially contributed to the prosecution of the action." Id. § 3730(d)(1) (emphasis added). If the action is “one which the court finds to be based primarily on [previously publicly] disclos[ed] ... information ... the court may award such sums as it consider appropriate, but in no case more than 10 percent of the proceeds, taking into account the significance of the information and the role of the person bringing the action in advancing the case to litigation." Id. (emphasis added). A relator conducting the action herself receives no “less than 25 percent and not more than 30 percent of the proceeds of the action or settlement.” Id. § 3730(d)(2). Finally, the award may be reduced or eliminated altogether if the relator was involved in the fraud. See id. § 3730(d)(3).
. This follows from our assumption that the government is unlikely to learn of the allegations of fraud or the terms of the settlement. We need not decide, therefore, whether the United States could bring an action for unjust enrichment against a person who settles a claim for a portion of the settlement value,
cf. Mortgages,
Of course, if the government is entitled to a portion of the settlement proceeds, this only strengthens our central point. A relator will be less likely to come forward with information concerning fraud if doing so will tip off the government as to the existence of settlement proceeds to which it is entitled to a portion.
. Although the allegations Green made in his suit in the California courts may have "publicly disclosed" the allegations within the meaning of the Act, this does not necessarily require the conclusion that state-law suits by relators necessarily will inform the government of the allegations of fraud. As acknowledged by Congress, the government may lack adequate resources to engage in the necessary monitoring. Moreover, the Act's jurisdictional provisions, to which the "public disclosure” of the allegations is relevant, serves the quite different purpose of precluding suits by opportunists who lack first-hand knowledge of the fraud.
See Wang,
. We do not consider in this case whether a different analysis would be required for a claim brought under the Act’s anti-retaliation provisions, found in 31 U.S.C.A. § 3730(h).
. Appellees also argue that failure to enforce the release would, in effect, “force individuals to become qui tam plaintiffs,” Appellees' Brief at 25 (emphasis in original), an "Orwellian” result that Congress did not intend. We disagree. Refusing to enforce a Release such as that entered into in this case does not compel, although it certainly will encourage, a relator to file suit. Because Congress intended "to encourage more private enforcement suits,” Senate Report, supra, at 23, reprinted in 1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. at 5288-89, we cannot conclude that this incentive effect weighs in favor of upholding the Release.
. Despite the court’s reference to "federal statutory provisions providing rewards to ‘whistle-blowers,' ”
Coleson,
