Aecudyne Corporation supplies military materiel under 27 contracts with the Department of Defense. Six relators filed this
qui tom
action under the civil provisions of the False Claims Act, 31 U.S.C. §§ 3729-3733. Count I of the complaint alleged that Aecu-dyne failed to test properly some control and sensor electronic assemblies for the Modular Pack Mine System and supplied false data about their conformity to specifications. Count II contended that Aecudyne falsely certified (by submitting invoices) that it was in compliance with all legal requirements, when it was not living up to its obligations under the environmental laws. Count II sought to explore uncharted territory. Aecu-dyne protested both the legal and the factual sufficiency of the relators’ theories, but the district judge declined to dismiss or grant summary judgment on Count II.
The Attorney General took over the prosecution of Count I, see 31 U.S.C. § 3730(b)(4)(A), but left Count II in the hands of the relators. After two years of motions, discovery, and other maneuvering, the parties settled the case en bloc. Aecu-dyne agreed to pay $12 million to the United States, which agreed to remit 22 percent of this recovery ($2,640,000) to the relators under 31 U.S.C. § 3730(d). The relators agreed to accept this award as full compensation for their services. Aecudyne also “agree[d] to pay Relators’ reasonable expenses, attorneys’ fees and costs in an amount and manner to be determined by the Court in accord with the provisions of 31 U.S.C. § 3730(d)(1), (2).” On July 12, 1995, the district court dismissed the ease in reliance on the settlement, and the relators soon filed a request for some $1.5 million in fees and costs.
What happened next was extraordinary: Aecudyne told the district court that the only “reasonable” fee is nominal because the relators would have lost had they litigated Count II to judgment. Having settled the
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ease, and therefore surrendered (in exchange for some valuable concession, no doubt) its opportunity to receive a decision on the merits, Accudyne offered its view of the merits as a reason to avoid paying the attorneys’ fees it had agreed to pay. A saying about having one’s cake and eating it too comes to mind. (So does: “That takes the cake!”) Accudyne contends that (a) all
qui tam
suits violate Article II § 2 cl. 3 of the Constitution because relators are not appointed as either “Officers of the United States” or “inferior Officers”; (b)
qui tam
suits offend the separation of powers; (c) “punitive” recoveries for false claims violate the due process clause of the fifth amendment; (d) relators lack standing to sue (though they aren’t parties at all, see
United States ex rel. Hall v. Tribal Development Corp.,
The district judge was not impressed by these 14 arguments, individually or collectively, and awarded more than $1.2 million in fees and costs. We
are
impressed — impressed that Accudyne’s behavior is outrageous. This case was settled; Accudyne did not appeal from the judgment on the settlement, and therefore has no business invoking the defenses it could have raised had the ease been litigated to judgment. Accudyne could have bargained for a settlement limited to Count I. It tells us that the Department of Justice was interested only in Count I and thought Count II worthless. If so, Accudyne could have paid $12 million to settle Count I while reserving its right to litigate (and avoid attorneys’ fees on) Count II. This strategy would have entailed taking the risk that the relators would win and recover something on top of the $12 million (plus attorneys’ fees beyond those incurred to the date of settlement). But Accudyne didn’t take the risk of loss and therefore could not hope for the thrill of victory. It settled both counts for a flat payment, which was not allocated between claims. What is more, Accudyne promised as part of the settlement to pay the relators’ reasonable fees and costs. The re-lators could have released their claim to fees,
Evans v. Jeff D.,
The rule that prohibits continuing litigation of matters resolved by settlement, see
Hudson v. Chicago Teachers Union,
After Congress gave supplemental jurisdiction a statutory basis in 28 U.S.C. § 1367, it is unclear what it means to assert that a court lacks jurisdiction over one count of a complaint. No one doubts that Count I was within the court’s adjudicatory competence; the
suit
therefore was within the district court’s power to decide, see
Channell v. Citicorp National Services, Inc.,
Now we grant that § 3730(e)(4)(A) offers Accudyne some comfort. It says:
No court shall have jurisdiction over an action under this section based upon the public disclosure of allegations or transactions in a criminal, civil, or administrative hearing, in a congressional, administrative, or Government Accounting Office report, hearing, audit, or investigation, or from the news media, unless the action is brought by the Attorney General or the person bringing the action is an original source of the information.
This subparagraph uses the magic word “jurisdiction.” It bears only on argument (h) in the list above; none of the others has any jurisdictional significance. And of course contention (h) was settled along with the rest. The district court ruled against Accu-dyne on both prongs: it held that the firm’s
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environmental problems had not been disclosed in one of the listed ways, and that at all events one of the relators was “an original source of the information.”
For what it is worth, we doubt that § 3730(e)(4)(A) uses the word “jurisdiction” in the sense of adjudicatory power, which is conferred by §§ 1331, 1345, and 3732(a) rather than “this section” (see. 3730). In context, the word appears to mean that once information becomes public, only the Attorney General and a relator who is an “original source” of the information may represent the United States. This does not curtail the categories of disputes that may be resolved (a real “jurisdictional” limit) but instead determines who may speak for the United States on a subject, and who if anyone gets a financial reward. “Jurisdiction” is a notoriously plastic term. See
Szabo Food Service, Inc. v. Canteen Corp.,
Contentions (j) through (n) were all that remained before the district court after the settlement. We do not think it necessary to discuss these at length. Accudyne’s position is inconsistent with
Gusman v. Unisys Corp.,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
Displaying the innumeracy so common at the bar, Accudyne’s legal team contends that the allocation is knowable, even though not specified. The argument runs like this. Under § 3730(d), if the Attorney General takes over an action, the relator receives an award between 15 percent and 25 percent of the proceeds; if the Attorney General does not take over, then the relator is entitled to 25 percent to 30 percent of the proceeds. We know that these six relators received 22 percent of the $12 million; hence the entire recovery must have been based on Count I. This is nonsense — first because in settlement the relators might have surrendered their statutory entitlement to avoid the risk of getting nothing, and second because Accudyne’s lawyers did not do *940 their math. Let us suppose the relators received the minimum 25 percent cut of any recovery on Count II. What is the maximum this recovery can be, provided the relators also got the statutory minimum 15 percent of any proceeds from Count I? In other words, 0.15x + 0.25y equals 0.22(x+y), where x is the recovery on Count I and y the recovery on Count II. When x+y equals $12 million, y equals $8.4 million. So if all statutory requirements were observed Count II was worth anywhere between $0 and $8.4 million.
