MEMORANDUM
This action is a constitutional challenge to a portion of the protest provisions of the Competition in Contracting Act of 1984 (CICA), 31 U.S.C. §§ 3551-3556. The plaintiff is the United States, represented by the Department of Justice. The defendants are two disappointed bidders on contracts with the Department of Commerce. The Comptroller General of the United States has intervened as a party defendant. See Order of January 10, 1992. The provision at issue is 31 U.S.C. § 3554(c). It provides for the payment of certain bid protest costs when the Comptroller General, an agent of Congress, determines thаt a disappointed bidder is entitled to such costs. Plaintiff claims that this provision violates separation of powers embodied in the Constitution because the payments would be effected by Executive Branch agencies.
Defendants Instruments, S.A., Inc. (Instruments) and Fisons Instruments/VG Instruments (Fisons) have moved tо dismiss for lack of jurisdiction; plaintiff has filed a motion for summary judgment; and Instruments, Fisons and the Comptroller General have filed cross-motions for summary judgment. For the reasons that follow, the action will be dismissed.
I.
In enacting CICA, Congress intended to promote competition in the government’s procurеment of goods and services.
Ameron, Inc. v. United States Army Corps of Engineers,
(A) filing and pursuing the protest, including reasonаble attorneys’ fees; and
(B) bid and proposal preparation.
31 U.S.C. § 3554(c)(1). The statute goes on to provide that such protest cost awards “shall be paid promptly by the Federal agency concerned out of funds available to or for the use of the Federal agency for the procurement of propеrty and services.” 31 U.S.C. § 3554(c)(2). It is this protest cost award provision that is challenged here.
In March 1989, the Department of Commerce requested bid proposals for a chemical beam epitaxy system. Defendants Instruments and Fisons submitted bids, were denied the contract and filed protests with the Comptroller General. In 1990, the Comptroller General declared both companies entitled to protest costs under § 3554(c)(1). Fisons submitted a claim to the Department of Commerce for $21,-615.28, and Instruments submitted a claim for $54,622.89. The agency has not paid those claims, nor has it formally denied thеm.
Plaintiff, relying on such cases as
Metropolitan Washington Airports Authority v. Citizens for Abatement of Aircraft Noise, Inc.,
— U.S. -,
In moving to dismiss on jurisdictional grounds, defendants Instruments and Fi-sons argue that this action presents no case or controversy and that a decision' on the merits of the constitutional question would constitute an advisory opinion. In particular, defendants observe that a regulation — in effect since 1985 and final since 1989 — independently binds Executive agencies to award protest costs when the Comptroller General declares a disаppointed bidder entitled to such costs. That regulation, using language similar to § 3554(c), provides:
Award of protest costs. (1) GAO may declare an appropriate interested party to be entitled to the costs of
(i) Filing and pursuing the protest, including reasonable attorneys’ fees; • and
(ii) Bid and proposal preparation.
(2) Costs awarded under subparаgraph (1) of this section shall be paid promptly by the agency out of funds available to or for the use of the agency for the acquisition of supplies or services.
50 Fed.Reg. 25,680, 25,681, codified at 48 C.F.R. § 33.104(g) (1985) (the “1985 regulation”): Since the Executive has obligated itself to abide by the Comptroller General’s determinations, the defendants maintain, the present dispute presents no impermissible encroachment on the Executive’s authority by the Legislative Branch. The Comptroller General, while joining in the *814 defendants' argument, frames the issue in terms of plaintiff’s standing to challenge the constitutionality of § 3554(c). In addition, thе Comptroller General argues that prudential considerations call for a denial of declaratory relief.
Plaintiff responds by arguing that the 1985 regulation does not independently bind the Executive because it is merely an “implementing” regulation which restates § 3554(c). In addition, plaintiff cоntends that the 1985 regulation has no effect in this case because it has been amended. Effective August 5, 1991, the applicable regulation states that protest costs “may be paid by the agency....” 48 C.F.R. § 33.104(h) (1991) (emphasis added) (the “1991 regulation”). Although the 1991 regulation went into effect after the defendаnts pursued their protests (and, in fact, after this lawsuit was initiated), the regulation itself purports to apply retroactively to “all recommended awards of protest costs ... which have not yet been paid.” Id.
II.
Initially there is a question as to whether this district court is the proper forum for еntertaining the present action. The Declaratory Judgment Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 2201-2202, is procedural only: it added a remedy to those available in the federal courts but did not extend the courts’ jurisdiction.
Shelly Oil Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co.,
In determining the proper forum, it is appropriate to consider where and whether the claim which is the target of plaintiff’s preemptive and anticipatory complaint would lie. The mirror image of plaintiff’s requested declarаtory relief would be an action by the defendants — disappointed bidders — against the United States for payment of protest costs in excess of $10,000. Such an action, which has not been brought by the defendants, would lie not in this Court but in the Claims Court, because the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491, vests exclusive jurisdiction ovеr such claims in the latter forum.
See United States v. Hohri,
Nevertheless, it is not clear that this Court is divested of jurisdiction by virtue of the fact that plaintiff could raise its constitutional argument as a defense to a claim brought against it in the Claims Court. In several cases the Supreme Court has approved district court entertainment
*815
оf declaratory judgment actions as stating claims directly under the Constitution, even where no separate injunction or damages are sought.
See, e.g., Powell v. McCormack,
It is not necessary, however, to resolve this apparently pioneer issue of original jurisdiction, with its constitutional implications. The ultimate and decisive points are that the separation of powers question is not ripe for decision, and that, in any event, prudential considеrations counsel decisively against declaratory relief in the circumstances here.
A constitutional challenge must present “a real and substantial controversy admitting of specific relief through a decree of conclusive character, as distinguished from an opiniоn advising what the law would be upon a hypothetical state of facts.”
Haworth,
Similar prudential considerations animate the well-settled discretion of federal courts to deny declaratory relief.
See Hewitt v. Helms,
Second, it is possible that the 1991 regulation would be upheld as a valid administrative implementation of § 3554(c). It is true that, at least facially, the 1991 regulation appears to cоnflict with § 3554(c) itself: the regulation provides that protest costs “may be paid” by the agency, while the statute uses the words “shall be paid.” However, it is a time-honored principle that statutes are to be construed to avoid constitutional infirmity, based on the theory articulated in
Ashwander
that constitutional issues should not be reached where they can be avoided.
See, e.g., Edward J. De Bartolo Corp. v. Florida Gulf Coast Bldg. & Constr. Trades Council,
Third, as noted above, a case raising the constitutionality of § 3554(c) is currently pending in the Claims Court. In that case, moreover, there appears to be a definite and concrete dispute between the parties because the government has aсtually been sued for the protest costs and has raised the constitutional issue as a defense.
Finally, Congress itself has been addressing the issue. Each House of Congress was actively — and so far as appears, favorably — considering legislation during the last session which would codify a versiоn of the 1991 regulation. The Department of Justice on behalf of the United States has indicated to Congress that it supports this codification, suggesting that if passed the President would sign it.
Thus, it appears that the constitutional issue is susceptible to early resolution, either by action of the bidders аnd the agency under the 1991 regulation, or by codification of that regulation by Congress. In these circumstances it would be prudent to heed the Supreme Court’s caution “against declaratory judgments on issues of public moment, even falling short of constitutionality, in speculative situations.”
Rickover,
Accordingly, an accompanying Order grants the defendants’ motions to dismiss the action.
