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Procurement

Government Contracts Legal Round-Up | 2022 Issue 13 – Government Contracts, Procurement & PPP

Welcome to Jenner & Block’s Government Contracts Legal
Round-Up, a biweekly update on important government contracts
developments. This update offers brief summaries of key
developments for government contracts legal, compliance,
contracting, and business executives. Please contact any of the
professionals at the bottom of the update for further information
on any of these topics.

Investigations and Enforcement

Does the DOJ Have the Ability to Dismiss Declined
Qui Tams?

The Government’s ability to dismiss qui tam cases
is subject to multiple standards, from an “unfettered
right” to only after intervention and on terms the court seems
proper, and other stops in between. The Supreme Court granted cert
in United States, ex rel. Polansky v. Executive Health
Resources, Inc.
, to resolve this circuit split in a case which
will be watched carefully by the Government, realtors’ counsel,
and defense counsel alike.

Supreme Court Cases

1. Biden v. Texas, No. 21-954 (June 30,
2022)

  • The Supreme Court provided further analysis describing the
    options available to agencies on remand.

  • This is an important and developing issue of administrative law
    that often arises in bid protests, particularly at the Court of
    Federal Claims (COFC), where procurement decisions are frequently
    remanded back to agencies to either provide further explanation for
    a prior decision or issue a new decision altogether.

  • Biden v. Texas builds on the Supreme Court’s 2020
    decision in Department of Homeland Security v. Regents of
    University of California
    , and confirms that when an agency
    decides to issue a new decision on remand, as opposed to simply
    providing further explanation for its initial decision, the agency
    has discretion to provide new justifications for its actions.

The mechanics and procedural rules that apply to agencies on
remand is an increasingly prominent issue in COFC bid protests,
particularly those involving corrective action. This is an area
where protest practice is often driven by precedents outside the
COFC, and even outside the Federal Circuit. Protest counsel should
keep an eye on developments in this area of administrative law.

Claims Cases

1. Raytheon Co. v. United States, No.
19-883C (June 30, 2022)

  • In a much-anticipated decision from a long-running data rights
    dispute between Raytheon and the Army, COFC Judge Kaplan held that
    Raytheon’s vendor list did not constitute “technical
    data” covered by the standard DFARS noncommercial Rights in
    Technical Data clause, 252.227-7013.

  • This dispute stemmed from the Army’s attempt to require
    Raytheon to regularly submit its vendor lists relating to
    Raytheon’s contract to provide engineering services in support
    of the Patriot weapons system.

  • When Raytheon provided the list, it included proprietary
    legends restricting the Army’s ability to release the data to
    third parties—that is, to potential competitors.

  • The Army disputed Raytheon’s proprietary markings,
    contending the vendor lists qualified as “technical
    data.” that the Army had broader rights to use and distribute
    than Raytheon’s proprietary markings would allow.

  • After analyzing the text and regulatory history of the DFARS
    data rights clause, the court disagreed with the government’s
    position, granting relief in favor of Raytheon.

This case is an important contribution to the longstanding and
ongoing discussion between DoD agencies and defense contractors
regarding the need to balance (a) contractors’ investments in
proprietary business methods and (b) DoD’s needs to maintain
access to competitively priced maintenance and support services for
major weapons systems. This decision is a justified win for
contractors, but the discussion is far from over.

2. CiyaSoft Corp., ASBCA No. 59913 (June
1, 2022)

  • This ASBCA decision follows from a significant 2018 ASBCA
    opinion finding that the Army was bound by and breached a
    commercial software license that CiyaSoft incorporated into its
    contract to sell the Army translation software.

  • After finding for CiyaSoft on entitlement, the Board remanded
    the matter to the parties to negotiate quantum.

  • Ciyasoft returned to the Board after negotiations broke down;
    according to CiyaSoft, the government was continuing to dispute
    issues that CiyaSoft considered resolved in the entitlement
    decision. CiyaSoft and the Army could not agree as to (a) whether
    the license terms restricted the Army to 20 unique single users or
    permitted more than 20 individual users as long as no more than 20
    copies of the software were deployed at once, and (b) whether
    CiyaSoft failed to mitigate its damages.

  • The Board found a genuine dispute of material fact relating to
    whether the license permits more than 20 single users, denying
    CiyaSoft’s motion for summary judgment on that issue, and
    disagreed with the government’s theory that CiyaSoft had a duty
    to mitigate damages before contract performance began.

This is the latest in an important and growing line of decisions
from the ASBCA, COFC, and Federal Circuit relating to the
resolution of software licensing disputes with the federal
government, which can raise incredibly complex issues of sovereign
immunity, jurisdiction, entitlement, and quantum. Companies and
counsel working in this space should pay careful attention to the
CiyaSoft litigation.

Protest Cases

1. AGMA Security Service, Inc. v. United
States
, No. 20-926C (June 26, 2022)

  • Judge Horn issued a decision carefully walking through the
    elements of a small business bid protester’s claim for attorney
    fees under the Equal Access to Justice Act (EAJA); the decision
    provides a helpful summary of this unfortunately complex area of
    law.

  • After analyzing legal entitlement and examining the evidence
    presented as to the attorney hours worked litigating the underlying
    bid protest and EAJA request, the court granted recovery of nearly
    $33,000 in fees and expenses.

While EAJA does provide a vehicle for small business protesters
to recover some amount of legal fees, this decision, like many
before it, confirms that EAJA litigation is remarkably complex,
with significant litigation risk for the small business seeking
recovery. Accordingly, the best practice is often to reach a
negotiated settlement of attorney fees to avoid this additional
round (if not rounds) of contentious litigation.

2. Castellano Cobra UTE MACC
LEY
18-1982
, B-420429.4 (June 17,
2022)

  • This protest arises from a Navy task order award to acquire
    base improvements in Rota, Spain.

  • Typical of procurements requiring performance in foreign
    countries, the solicitation required offerors to comply with
    various aspects of local Spanish law.

  • When the Navy made award to a US-based company, Castellano
    filed a protest at GAO arguing that the awardee did not have a
    mandatory Certificate of Classification from the Spanish government
    and had not properly organized its joint venture under Spanish
    law.

  • The Navy took corrective action, which Castellano challenged as
    unreasonably narrow for failure to broadly review whether the
    initial awardee complied with Spanish law.

  • GAO dismissed the protest as premature on the basis that the
    corrective action is still ongoing; however, GAO also agreed with
    the agency that the general solicitation requirement to comply with
    Spanish law is an issue of contract administration that GAO will
    not consider.

Special Counsel Nathaniel Castellano predicts that
Castellano Cobra (no relation) will be one of the
best-named GAO bid protest decisions of the decade. It also serves
as a reminder of the complex issues that arise in procurements that
require performance in foreign countries, which are often subject
to local labor laws and other unique requirements of the host
country.

3. American Fuel Cell & Coated Fabrics
Company
, B-420551, B-420551.2 (June 2, 2022) (Published
June 13, 2022)

  • GAO denied a protest alleging that the awardee failed to comply
    with the requirements in DFARS 252.204-7019/7020 to perform and
    post in the Supplier Performance Risk Assessment (SPRS) a current
    NIST SP 800-171 DoD assessment.

  • During discussions, the government assigned a deficiency to an
    offeror for having no records in SPRS. The offeror ultimately
    posted a score in SPRS and received an award.

  • The protester argued that the awardee’s proposal should
    have been rejected for failing to demonstrate compliance with these
    cyber requirements. GAO agreed that that the documentation did not
    show that the awardee was compliant because there was no indication
    that the company had performed a basic assessment or posted the
    summary level score into SPRS, as required by the clauses.

  • GAO denied the protest, however, because the protester could
    not demonstrate prejudice in this multiple-award procurement given
    its significantly higher price and limited confidence past
    performance rating.

Compliance with new and evolving cybersecurity requirements
continues to be an increasingly important compliance and bid
protest risk area. While this protest was denied due to lack of
competitive prejudice, we expect protesters to continue to raise
similar grounds.

4. Chicago American Manufacturing LLC,
B-420533, B-420533.2 (May 23, 2022) (Published July 5,
2022)

  • GAO sustained the protest where a firm quoted a product under
    its Federal Supply Schedule (FSS) contract that did not meet the
    solicitation’s requirement.

  • The solicitation sought new furniture in several buildings in
    South Korea, and included specifications and requirements for all
    solicited items, including a metal bunkbed that must accommodate a
    38″x80″ mattress.

  • The awardee’s FSS catalog, however, included a bed that was
    only 78 inches long, or two inches short, of the solicitation’s
    requirements. While the awardee’s quotation specified the
    correct dimensions, GAO found that this was inconsistent with the
    FSS contract whose terms are contractually binding and not subject
    to alteration.

It is well established that an agency may not use FSS procedures
to purchase items not listed on a vendor’s GSA schedule. Thus,
as a precondition for receiving an order, all items quoted and
ordered must be on a vendor’s FSS contract.

The content of this article is intended to provide a general
guide to the subject matter. Specialist advice should be sought
about your specific circumstances.

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