Crowley Government Services, Inc. v. GSA ( 2022 )


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  •  United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT
    Argued February 15, 2022               Decided July 1, 2022
    No. 21-5242
    CROWLEY GOVERNMENT SERVICES, INC.,
    APPELLANT
    v.
    GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION AND ROBIN CARNAHAN,
    IN HER OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS ADMINISTRATOR OF THE
    GENERAL SERVICES ADMINISTRATION,
    APPELLEES
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Columbia
    (No. 1:21-cv-02298)
    James Y. Boland argued the cause for appellant. With him
    on the briefs were Nicholas M. DePalma and Kevin W.
    Weigand.
    Steven Hazel, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice,
    argued the cause for appellees. With him on the brief were
    Brian M. Boynton, Acting Assistant Attorney General, Mark B.
    Stern, Attorney, and Nitin Shah, General Counsel, General
    Services Administration. Stephanie R. Johnson and R. Craig
    Lawrence, Assistant U.S. Attorneys, entered appearances.
    2
    Before: SRINIVASAN, Chief Judge, HENDERSON and
    JACKSON*, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge HENDERSON.
    KAREN LECRAFT HENDERSON, Circuit Judge: Crowley
    Government Services, Inc. sued the General Services
    Administration and its Administrator (collectively, GSA),
    seeking declaratory and injunctive relief to halt the GSA’s
    purported practice of interfering with payments owed to
    Crowley under its contract with the United States
    Transportation Command (TRANSCOM). Crowley argues
    that the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), 
    5 U.S.C. §§ 701
    –706, and the general federal question statute, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1331
    , confer subject matter jurisdiction on the district court
    to review the GSA’s alleged violation of the Contract Disputes
    Act of 1978, 
    41 U.S.C. § 7103
    (g), and the Transportation Act
    of 1940, 
    31 U.S.C. § 3726
    (b).1 The question is whether
    Crowley’s suit against the GSA, which is not a party to
    Crowley’s contract with TRANSCOM, is “at its essence”
    contractual, Megapulse, Inc. v. Lewis, 
    672 F.2d 959
    , 968 (D.C.
    Cir. 1982)—including whether Crowley “in essence” seeks
    more than $10,000 in monetary relief from the federal
    government, Kidwell v. Dep’t of Army, Bd. for Corr. of Mil.
    Recs., 
    56 F.3d 279
    , 284 (D.C. Cir. 1995)—such that it is
    subject to the exclusive jurisdiction of the United States Court
    of Federal Claims (Claims Court) pursuant to the Tucker Act,
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (a). The district court answered affirmatively
    and dismissed Crowley’s complaint for lack of subject matter
    * Circuit Judge, now Justice, Jackson was a member of the
    panel at the time the case was argued but did not participate in this
    opinion.
    1
    Crowley also invoked the Declaratory Judgment Act,
    
    28 U.S.C. §§ 2201
    –2202, for its requested declaratory relief.
    3
    jurisdiction. Crowley Gov’t Servs. v. GSA, No. 21-cv-2298,
    
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *9–11, *12 (D.D.C. Oct. 22, 2021).
    We disagree. Crowley’s action against the GSA in district
    court is not “at its essence” contractual because Crowley does
    not seek to enforce or recover on the contract with
    TRANSCOM. Nor does Crowley “in essence” seek monetary
    relief from the federal government in district court. Rather, it
    requests declaratory and injunctive relief that, if granted, would
    have considerable value independent of (and not negligible in
    comparison to) any monetary recovery Crowley may
    ultimately attain in other proceedings. Accordingly, we reverse
    and remand to the district court.
    I. BACKGROUND
    In November 2016, Crowley,2 which “provides marine
    solutions, energy, and logistical services in domestic and
    international markets,” entered a procurement contract with
    TRANSCOM, a unit of the Department of Defense (DOD).3
    Compl. ¶¶ 12, 19, No. 21-cv-2298, Crowley Gov’t Servs. v.
    GSA (D.D.C. Aug. 30, 2021), reprinted in Joint Appendix
    (J.A.) 6, 8–9. Crowley agreed to “provide[] various logistical,
    planning, and transportation coordination services to assist
    [TRANSCOM] with managing a large and complex network of
    moving goods and cargo for the [DOD].” 
    Id. ¶ 20
    , reprinted in
    J.A. 9. Under the contract, government shippers send Crowley
    orders for cargo shipments to and from DOD facilities within
    2
    TRANSCOM awarded the contract to Crowley’s predecessor-
    in-interest, Crowley Logistics, Inc. We refer to the company as
    “Crowley.”
    3
    Reviewing the dismissal of a complaint for lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(b)(1),
    “we accept the facts alleged by the plaintiff as true.” Schnitzer v.
    Harvey, 
    389 F.3d 200
    , 202 (D.C. Cir. 2004).
    4
    the continental United States. Crowley, which does not handle
    or take possession of the cargo, coordinates the shipment
    process by subcontracting to third parties the transportation of
    the cargo from its origin and to its destination. Crowley’s
    contract with TRANSCOM sets forth performance standards
    for the transportation process, including delivery timeframes,
    permissible reasons for deviating from the timeframes and
    methods for calculating the timeframes. At the time Crowley
    filed its complaint, Crowley had coordinated approximately 1.2
    million shipments for TRANSCOM under the contract.
    This dispute arises from the GSA’s audits of Crowley’s
    invoices to TRANSCOM for payment for services provided
    under the contract. The GSA, which all parties agree is not
    party to the contract, asserted authority to audit Crowley’s
    invoices pursuant to the Transportation Act. See 31 U.S.C.
    3726(b) (authorizing GSA to “conduct pre- or post-payment
    audits of transportation bills of any Federal Agency”). Through
    the audits, the GSA concluded that Crowley had, inter alia,
    misapplied agreed-upon exceptions for delays in cargo
    delivery, used the wrong method for calculating transit times
    and submitted invoices based on improperly completed
    government documentation. As a result, the GSA has issued
    more than 50,000 Notices of Overcharge (NOCs) totaling
    approximately $37 million to Crowley since 2018.4
    4
    As the district court explained, TRANSCOM uses “a third-
    party payment system, operated by a bank, through which GSA
    ‘unilaterally applie[s] off-sets to future payments to Crowley’
    pursuant to the NOCs, without coordinating such offsets with
    [TRANSCOM]” or other DOD agencies. Crowley Gov’t Servs. v.
    GSA, No. 21-cv-2298, 
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *3 (D.D.C. Oct. 22,
    2021) (quoting Contracting Officer’s Final Decision Regarding
    Certified Claim, Defense Freight Transportation Services (DFTS),
    Contract HTC711-17-D-R003 ¶ 3(f)(1) (Dec. 30, 2020), reprinted in
    5
    In January 2020, Crowley objected to the GSA’s asserted
    authority to conduct the audits and submitted a claim to
    TRANSCOM’s Contracting Officer challenging various
    categories of the NOCs under a provision of the contract it
    argued was governed by the Contract Disputes Act. See
    
    41 U.S.C. § 7103
    (a), (g) (instructing contractors to submit
    claims against federal government to contracting officer,
    whose decision “is final and conclusive and is not subject to
    review by any forum, tribunal or Federal Government agency,
    unless an appeal or action is timely commenced as authorized
    by this chapter”). After reviewing Crowley’s challenges, the
    Contracting Officer issued three final decisions covering
    various aspects of the claims, two in August 2020 and another
    a few months later in December 2020. Most relevant here, the
    Contracting Officer concluded in the December 2020 final
    decision that “the NOCs are erroneous,” “are not factually
    supportable, and, hence, are not valid” and “should not have
    been issued.” Contracting Officer’s Final Decision Regarding
    Certified Claim, Defense Freight Transportation Services
    (DFTS), Contract HTC711-17-D-R003 ¶¶ 3(a)–(e) (Dec. 30,
    2020), reprinted in J.A. 37. Although he agreed with Crowley
    that the funds withheld by the GSA, which “remain[ed] in
    GSA’s possession,” properly belonged to Crowley, the
    Contracting Officer determined that TRANSCOM “has no
    authority to order GSA to pay from its own funding source for
    disputed NOCs” and “does not have any authority to order
    payment from the U.S. Treasury’s miscellaneous receipts
    account.” 
    Id. ¶ 3
    (f)(2), reprinted in J.A. 38. He then advised
    that Crowley could pursue the funds only “through the GSA
    Post-Payment Audit dispute process, appealable to the Civilian
    J.A. 38). TRANSCOM, through the DOD, pays the full amount of
    the invoice to the bank and the GSA deducts the NOC amount from
    payments owed to Crowley, directing the withheld funds to a
    “miscellaneous receipts account” of the United States Treasury. 
    Id.
    6
    Board of Contract Appeals of the U.S. Court of Federal
    Claims.” 
    Id.
     (citing 
    41 C.F.R. §§ 102-118.600
     et seq.).
    Notwithstanding the Contracting Officer’s final decisions, the
    GSA had, until recently, continued to issue NOCs to Crowley.
    Joint Status Report ¶ 2, Crowley Gov’t Servs. v. United States,
    No. 21-cv-1405 (PEC) (Fed. Cl. May 26, 2022), ECF No. 45
    (“The parties have negotiated a separate agreement in which
    the United States will temporarily suspend the issuance of
    Notices of Overcharge (‘NOCs’) and any deductions for
    outstanding NOCs until November 19, 2022.”).
    In May 2021, Crowley filed suit against TRANSCOM in
    Claims Court, alleging breach of contract for nonpayment of
    services and seeking money damages and declaratory relief, as
    TRANSCOM had not reimbursed Crowley for the payments
    offset by the GSA. Compl. ¶¶ 1, 49–60, Crowley, No. 21-cv-
    1405 (PEC) (Fed. Cl. May 27, 2021), ECF No. 1. After the
    United States moved to dismiss, Crowley amended its
    complaint, adding an alternative count against the GSA under
    
    49 U.S.C. § 14705
    , seeking recovery of the charges already
    deducted by the GSA through the 
    31 U.S.C. § 3726
    (b) audits.
    Am. Compl. ¶¶ 17, 98–102, Crowley, No. 21-cv-1405 (PEC)
    (Fed. Cl. Aug. 26, 2021), ECF No. 8. Crowley submits to us
    that it included the alternative count “only as a last resort to
    preserve [its] monetary claim due to the three-year statute of
    limitations” but also maintains that “[s]ection 14705 does not
    apply and cannot provide a jurisdictional basis for Crowley to
    challenge GSA’s violation of the Contract Disputes Act’s
    finality clause.” Appellant’s Br. 21 n.3. Crowley’s action,
    which remains pending in Claims Court, is currently at the
    discovery stage. See Joint Status Report, supra, ¶ 5.
    Several days after filing its amended complaint in Claims
    Court in late August 2021, Crowley filed a two-count
    complaint against the GSA in district court. Count I alleged that
    7
    the GSA exceeded its statutory authority by improperly
    auditing Crowley’s invoices and issuing NOCs in violation of
    (1) the Transportation Act, 
    31 U.S.C. § 3726
    (b), because
    Crowley is not a “carrier or freight forwarder” and its invoices
    are not “transportation bills” under the statute, 
    id.
     § 3726(a),
    and (2) the Contract Disputes Act, 
    41 U.S.C. § 7103
    (g),
    because the NOCs contravene the TRANSCOM Contracting
    Officer’s final decisions and the statute’s so-called finality
    clause. Compl. ¶¶ 108–26, reprinted in J.A. 20–22; see also
    Appellant’s Br. 6–10 (arguing dispute resolution schemes
    under Transportation Act and Contract Disputes Act are
    mutually exclusive and cannot both apply to same contract).
    Count II alleged, in the alternative, that the GSA’s actions are
    ultra vires, thus warranting judicial review and injunctive relief
    because no other remedy is available. Compl. ¶¶ 127–37,
    reprinted in J.A. 22–23. The GSA’s audits, Crowley
    maintained, caused it “certain, imminent, and unrecoverable
    harm,” Appellant’s Br. 12, including: (1) significant time and
    expense reviewing and challenging thousands of NOCs, (2) the
    uncertainty of being subjected to what it characterizes as the
    mutually exclusive dispute resolution schemes of the Contract
    Disputes Act and the Transportation Act and (3) degraded
    performance and inability to meet the requirements of its
    contract with TRANSCOM, see Compl. ¶¶ 71, 85, 87,
    reprinted in J.A. 15, 17.
    In its Prayer for Relief, Crowley sought (1) a judgment
    declaring that the Transportation Act does not authorize the
    GSA to audit the contract; (2) a judgment declaring that the
    GSA’s NOCs, which contradict the Contracting Officer’s final
    decisions, violate the Contract Disputes Act; and (3) an
    injunction prohibiting the GSA from conducting additional
    audits of Crowley’s invoices and issuing NOCs. It expressly
    stated, however, that it “seeks no monetary relief . . . or other
    contractual remedy.” 
    Id. ¶ 107
    , reprinted in J.A. 20. Crowley
    8
    asserted that jurisdiction was proper in district court under
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1331
     because its action arises under the APA,
    
    5 U.S.C. §§ 701
    –706. It moved for a preliminary injunction
    and the GSA moved to dismiss under Federal Rules of Civil
    Procedure 12(b)(1) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and
    12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. See Crowley, 
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *1.
    The district court granted the GSA’s motion to dismiss for
    lack of jurisdiction and denied Crowley’s motion for a
    preliminary injunction as moot. 
    Id. at *1, *12
    . It concluded that
    it lacked subject matter jurisdiction because Crowley “has a
    contract dispute with the government exceeding $10,000 in
    value, and the forum prescribed by statute to hear such disputes
    is the Court of Federal Claims.” 
    Id. at *6
    . Crowley’s complaint
    seeking declaratory and injunctive relief is “in essence” a claim
    for monetary relief, the district court reasoned, because the
    non-monetary relief Crowley seeks is “‘negligible in
    comparison’ to the uncollected contractual proceeds at issue.”
    
    Id. at *9
     (quoting Kidwell, 
    56 F.3d at 284
    ). It reached this
    conclusion by comparing what it characterized as Crowley’s
    “primary harm”—$180,000 in personnel time lost to reviewing
    and challenging the NOCs—to the $37 million in alleged
    overcharges, or what it deemed the “real amount at stake.” Id.;
    see Compl. ¶¶ 81–82, reprinted in J.A. 16 (“Crowley estimates
    that it has already cost Crowley at least $180,000 in personnel
    time attempting to review, assess, and challenge the NOCs. . . .
    [It] has expended significant resources challenging GSA’s
    authority to conduct audits and make determinations that are
    contrary to the Contracting Officer’s” final decisions.).
    The district court also determined that Crowley’s claims
    are in essence contractual because the GSA’s “audits have no
    significance outside the context of collection on the contract”
    and Crowley’s complaint would not exist “were it not for
    9
    certain rights to payment promised in the [c]ontract.” Crowley,
    
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *10–11 (citing Spectrum Leasing Corp.
    v. United States, 
    764 F.2d 891
     (D.C. Cir. 1985)). Finally, the
    district court rejected Crowley’s ultra vires claim as a “side-
    door attempt to invoke the district court’s jurisdiction” and to
    “escape the jurisdictional strictures imposed by the Tucker
    Act.” Id. at *11. Crowley appealed.
    “In granting the [GSA’s] motion to dismiss, the [d]istrict
    [c]ourt issued a final appealable order, which this court has
    jurisdiction to review pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1291
    .” Tootle v.
    Sec’y of Navy, 
    446 F.3d 167
    , 172 (D.C. Cir. 2006). A district
    court’s dismissal for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is
    reviewed de novo. 
    Id. at 173
    . Although our review of a
    complaint purportedly implicating Tucker Act jurisdiction
    focuses on its “substance, not merely its form,” Kidwell,
    
    56 F.3d at 284
    , “where the jurisdiction of the court turns on
    whether the complaint seeks monetary relief, the court must
    generally limit itself to the four corners of the complaint,”
    Tootle, 
    446 F.3d at
    174 (citing Wolfe v. Marsh, 
    846 F.2d 782
    (D.C. Cir. 1988) (per curiam)).
    II.   ANALYSIS
    The United States and its agencies are generally immune
    from suit in federal court absent a clear and unequivocal waiver
    of sovereign immunity. See Kalodner v. Abraham, 
    310 F.3d 767
    , 769 (D.C. Cir. 2002) (citing Lane v. Pena, 
    518 U.S. 187
    ,
    192 (1996)). Via the APA, the Congress has provided a limited
    waiver of sovereign immunity for claims against the United
    States “seeking relief other than money damages” for persons
    “adversely affected or aggrieved by agency action.” 
    5 U.S.C. § 702
    . Section 702’s sovereign immunity waiver does not
    apply, however, “if any other statute that grants consent to suit
    expressly or impliedly forbids the relief which is sought.”
    10
    Perry Cap. LLC v. Mnuchin, 
    864 F.3d 591
    , 618 (D.C. Cir.
    2017) (quoting 
    5 U.S.C. § 702
    ).
    The Tucker Act gives the United States Court of Federal
    Claims jurisdiction
    to render judgment upon any claim against
    the United States founded either upon the
    Constitution, or any Act of Congress or any
    regulation of an executive department, or
    upon any express or implied contract with the
    United States, or for liquidated or
    unliquidated damages in cases not sounding
    in tort.
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (a)(1). We have interpreted the Tucker Act
    “to confer exclusive jurisdiction over breach of contract claims
    against the United States seeking more than $10,000 in
    damages on the Court of Federal Claims,” Hammer v. United
    States, 
    989 F.3d 1
    , 2 (D.C. Cir. 2021) (citing 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1346
    (a), 1491(a); Greenhill v. Spellings, 
    482 F.3d 569
    , 573
    (D.C. Cir. 2007)), and thus “to ‘impliedly forbid[]’ contract
    claims against the Government from being brought in district
    court under the waiver in the APA,”5 Perry Cap., 864 F.3d at
    618–19 (quoting Albrecht v. Comm. on Emp. Benefits of Fed.
    Rsrv. Emp. Benefits Sys., 
    357 F.3d 62
    , 67–68 (D.C. Cir. 2004)
    (alteration in original)); see also Bowen v. Massachusetts,
    
    487 U.S. 879
    , 910 n.48 (1988) (observing Claims Court’s
    exclusive jurisdiction of Tucker Act claims seeking more than
    $10,000 “is not based on any language in the Tucker Act
    5
    The Little Tucker Act “gives district courts concurrent
    jurisdiction with the Court of Federal Claims in most Tucker Act
    cases seeking less than $10,000.” Kidwell v. Dep’t of Army, Bd. for
    Corr. of Mil. Recs., 
    56 F.3d 279
    , 283 (D.C. Cir. 1995) (citing
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1346
    (a)(2)).
    11
    granting such exclusive jurisdiction” and is exclusive “only to
    the extent that Congress has not granted any other court
    authority to hear the claims that may be decided by the Claims
    Court”); Van Drasek v. Lehman, 
    762 F.2d 1065
    , 1071 n.10
    (D.C. Cir. 1985) (noting that Claims Court’s exclusive
    jurisdiction of Tucker Act claims is not based on text of statute,
    but on fact the Congress rarely grants district courts jurisdiction
    of such claims).
    Because the Tucker Act does not expressly forbid the relief
    sought by Crowley, the district court correctly identified the
    critical overarching question to be whether the statute
    “impliedly forbids” such relief. Crowley, 
    2021 WL 4940953
    ,
    at *6 (quoting 
    5 U.S.C. § 702
    ). As explained below, we
    conclude that it does not and that the district court has
    jurisdiction of Crowley’s claim under the APA.
    A.    TUCKER ACT JURISDICTION
    Our longstanding test for determining whether a claim
    falls within the exclusive jurisdiction of the Claims Court
    pursuant to the Tucker Act appears straightforward. “[A]n
    action against the United States which is at its essence a
    contract claim lies within the Tucker Act and . . . a district court
    has no power to grant injunctive relief in such a case.”
    Megapulse, 672 F.2d at 967 (emphasis added). Whether a
    claim is “at its essence” contractual for the Tucker Act
    “depends both on the source of the rights upon which the
    plaintiff bases its claims, and upon the type of relief sought (or
    appropriate).” Id. at 968.
    In examining “the source of the rights upon which the
    plaintiff bases its claims,” Megapulse’s first prong, we
    recognize that “[c]ontract issues may arise in various types of
    cases where the action itself is not founded on a contract.” Id.
    (listing, as examples, “a license . . . raised as a defense in an
    12
    action for trespass, or a purchase contract . . . raised to counter
    an action for conversion”). But we have explicitly rejected the
    “broad” notion “that any case requiring some reference to or
    incorporation of a contract is necessarily on the contract and
    therefore directly within the Tucker Act” because to do so
    would “deny a court jurisdiction to consider a claim that is
    validly based on grounds other than a contractual relationship
    with the government.” Id. at 967–68. Indeed, “the mere fact
    that a court may have to rule on a contract issue does not, by
    triggering some mystical metamorphosis, automatically
    transform an action . . . into one on the contract and deprive the
    court of jurisdiction it might otherwise have.” Id. at 968. That
    said, we have cautioned plaintiffs that this court
    “prohibit[s] . . . the creative drafting of complaints,” for
    example, by “disguis[ing]” a claim for money damages as one
    for equitable relief, to avoid the jurisdictional consequences of
    the Tucker Act. Kidwell, 
    56 F.3d at 284
    ; see also Megapulse,
    672 F.2d at 969. In conducting this inquiry, we “make rational
    distinctions between actions sounding genuinely in contract
    and those based on truly independent legal grounds,”
    Megapulse, 672 F.3d at 969–70. We consider whether, among
    other factors, the plaintiff’s asserted rights and the
    government’s purported authority arise from statute, see, e.g.,
    id. at 969 (Tucker Act “does not necessarily apply where the
    government defendants are charged with having acted beyond
    the scope of their statutory authority”), whether the plaintiff’s
    rights “exist[] prior to and apart from rights created under the
    contract,” Spectrum, 
    764 F.2d at 894
    , and whether the plaintiff
    “seek[s] to enforce any duty imposed upon” the government
    “by the . . . relevant contracts to which” the government “is a
    party,” Perry Cap., 864 F.3d at 619.
    Megapulse’s second prong considers “the type of relief
    sought.” 672 F.2d at 968. Here, we are guided by our case law
    that has identified the “explicitly contractual remedy” of
    13
    specific performance and the “prototypical contract remedy” of
    money damages as types of relief that are “specific to actions
    that sound in contract.” Perry Cap., 864 F.3d at 619 (quoting
    A & S Council Oil Co. v. Lader, 
    56 F.3d 234
    , 240 (D.C. Cir.
    1995)). The crux of this inquiry, however, boils down to
    whether the plaintiff effectively seeks to attain monetary
    damages in the suit. Accordingly, under the second prong of
    Megapulse, “a claim is subject to the Tucker Act and its
    jurisdictional consequences if, in whole or in part, it explicitly
    or ‘in essence’ seeks more than $10,000 in monetary relief
    from the federal government.”6 Kidwell, 
    56 F.3d at
    284 (citing
    Megapulse, 672 F.2d at 967–68); cf. Bowen, 
    487 U.S. at 916
    (Scalia, J., dissenting) (“[D]istrict court jurisdiction is not
    established merely because a suit fails to pray for a money
    judgment.” (citing cases)). Narrowing our focus further, a
    plaintiff does not “in essence” seek monetary relief “as long as
    [the] complaint only requests non-monetary relief that has
    ‘considerable value’ independent of any future potential for
    monetary relief” and “as long as the sole remedy requested is
    declaratory or injunctive relief that is not ‘negligible in
    comparison’ with the potential monetary recovery.” Kidwell,
    56 F.3d at 284 (citation omitted). Exclusive jurisdiction in
    Claims Court under the Tucker Act does not lie “merely
    because [a plaintiff] hints at some interest in a monetary reward
    from the federal government or because success on the merits
    6
    Both parties appear to recognize that a claim must satisfy both
    the Megapulse test and the Kidwell test to fall within the Claims
    Court’s exclusive Tucker Act jurisdiction and that Kidwell’s test for
    monetary relief is included in Megapulse’s remedy prong. See
    Appellant’s Br. 31 (Crowley arguing that “a claim must be both for
    money and contractual” to satisfy Kidwell and Megapulse (emphases
    omitted)), 45 (referencing Kidwell monetary-relief conclusion in
    Megapulse remedy-prong analysis); Tr. of Oral Arg. at 23 (GSA
    stating that it “see[s] that second Megapulse prong and the sort of
    Kidwell test as coextensive”).
    14
    may obligate the United States to pay the complainant.” Id.
    (citing Vietnam Veterans of Am. v. Sec’y of the Navy, 
    843 F.2d 528
    , 534 (D.C. Cir. 1988) (“It is . . . clear that a claim is not for
    money merely because its success may lead to pecuniary costs
    for the government or benefits for the plaintiff.”)). “[E]ven if
    the plaintiff filed the complaint with an eye to future monetary
    awards, a district court with otherwise appropriate jurisdiction
    may hear the claim and grant the proper equitable relief.” 
    Id.
    With these principles in mind, we turn to Crowley’s
    complaint in district court to determine if it is “at its essence”
    a contract claim. Megapulse, 672 F.2d at 967.
    B. APPLICATION OF MEGAPULSE
    1. Source of the Right
    We begin with the source of the right upon which Crowley
    bases its claim. But we must first properly characterize
    Crowley’s asserted right before we can proceed to identify its
    source. Crowley contends that it has the right “to be free from
    government action beyond [its] congressional authority,”
    Appellant’s Br. 42, and that the GSA has infringed upon this
    right by auditing Crowley’s invoices without authority under
    the Transportation Act, 31 U.S.C.§ 3726(b), and in violation of
    the Contract Disputes Act’s finality clause, 
    41 U.S.C. § 7103
    (g). Compl. ¶¶ 111–22, reprinted in J.A. 20–21.
    Crowley’s asserted right is clear enough on the face of the
    complaint. We therefore cannot agree with the district court’s
    characterization of the right in question as Crowley’s “alleged
    rights to certain monies.” Crowley, 
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *10.
    Indeed, Crowley makes no claim here based on a right to
    money owed by TRANSCOM, the GSA or any other
    government agency under the contract. In fact, it explicitly
    disclaims any effort to vindicate such a right in district court.
    See Compl. ¶ 107, reprinted in J.A. 20 (“Crowley seeks no
    15
    monetary relief (for the offsets or otherwise) or any other
    contractual remedy from” the district court.).
    We next identify the source of Crowley’s asserted right.
    We conclude that the sources of Crowley’s claimed right are
    the statutes identified in Crowley’s complaint. Its claimed right
    sounds more in the nature of tort, not by virtue of its contract
    with TRANSCOM. To begin, Crowley “do[es] not seek to
    enforce any duty imposed upon” the GSA by Crowley’s
    contract with TRANSCOM.7 Perry Cap., 864 F.3d at 619. As
    all agree, the GSA owes no duty to Crowley under the contract.
    It is neither a party to, a beneficiary of nor an assignee under
    the Crowley-TRANSCOM contract. And Crowley did not seek
    in district court an order compelling the GSA to perform or
    fulfill any obligations to Crowley created by the contract.
    Further, determining whether the GSA infringed
    Crowley’s rights as alleged in the complaint requires primarily
    an examination of the statutes the GSA has purportedly
    violated, not of Crowley’s contract with TRANSCOM.
    Whether the GSA exceeded its authority to audit Crowley’s
    invoices under the Transportation Act because Crowley is not
    a “carrier or freight forwarder,” 
    31 U.S.C. § 3726
    (a), and
    whether the GSA violated the Contract Disputes Act, 
    41 U.S.C. § 7103
    (g), by contravening the TRANSCOM Contracting
    Officer’s final decisions are not questions the district court can
    answer by examining a contractual promise made by the GSA
    to Crowley. No such promise exists, as the GSA and Crowley
    7
    The United States has acknowledged as much in Claims
    Court. Defendant’s Motion to Dismiss at 9, Crowley, No. 21-cv-1405
    (PEC) (Fed. Cl. Aug. 9, 2021), ECF No. 7 (“Whatever claims
    Crowley may have against GSA, the law is clear that GSA’s actions
    do not give rise to a breach of contract claim against [TRANSCOM]”
    and “the actions of one Government agency cannot give rise to a
    breach of contract claim against a different agency.”).
    16
    have no contractual relationship. Rather, the district court must
    determine whether Crowley is a “carrier or freight forwarder”
    under the Transportation Act such that the GSA exercised
    proper authority in conducting the audits and whether the GSA
    did in fact violate the Contract Disputes Act as alleged.
    Crowley’s “position is ultimately based, not on breach of
    contract, but on an alleged governmental . . . violation of” the
    Transportation Act and the Contract Disputes Act, Megapulse,
    672 F.2d at 969; that is, its asserted right “exist[s]
    independently of [the] contract” with TRANSCOM, Spectrum,
    
    764 F.2d at 894
    .
    We find Crowley’s claim against the GSA to fall within
    that category of cases identified in Megapulse in which
    “[c]ontract issues may arise” but “the action itself is not
    founded on a contract.” 672 F.2d at 968. Specifically, we find
    convincing Crowley’s analogy of its claim to the common law
    claim of tortious interference with contractual relations. See
    Appellant’s Reply Br. 7 n.3; Tr. of Oral Arg. at 10 (Crowley
    “analogize[s] [its] case . . . to a tortious interference-type
    case”); see also Megapulse, 672 F.2d at 969 (“[P]ublic officials
    may become tort-feasors by exceeding the limits of their
    authority.” (quoting Land v. Dollar, 
    330 U.S. 731
    , 738 (1947)).
    The elements of tortious interference are “substantially similar
    in most jurisdictions” and commonly include: “(a) a contract or
    valid business relationship or expectancy; (b) knowledge by the
    defendant of the contract or relationship; (c) intentional
    interference by the defendant which induces the breach of
    contract or relationship; (d) the absence of justification; and
    (e) resulting damages.” 9 Stuart M. Speiser et al., American
    Law of Torts § 31:45 (2022) (noting that some courts do not
    consider breach of contract to be essential element of tortious
    interference claim). With the exception of damages, which
    Crowley explicitly disclaims in its complaint, Crowley has
    alleged, as part of its claim under the APA, the remaining
    17
    elements of tortious interference: it has a valid contract with
    TRANSCOM; the GSA knew of the contractual relationship as
    it sought to review Crowley’s invoices for payment under the
    contract; the GSA intentionally interfered with the contract
    through allegedly unauthorized audits and the issuance of
    NOCs; and the GSA allegedly lacked authority for its actions
    under the Transportation Act and the Contract Disputes Act.
    The Tucker Act, however, does not extend to the Claims Court
    jurisdiction of tort claims.8 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    (a)(1) (granting
    jurisdiction for “cases not sounding in tort”). Because a
    plaintiff could not bring this type of tort action in Claims Court
    in the first place, that Court would not have exclusive
    jurisdiction of them. And the same goes for Crowley’s
    analogous statutory claims.
    We believe the district court made several errors in its
    examination of the source of the right. First, as explained, it
    misidentified the right Crowley sought to vindicate in its action
    against the GSA. Crowley, 
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *10
    (identifying “rights to certain monies” rather than asserted right
    to be free from allegedly unauthorized audits and NOCs). Next,
    it misinterpreted Megapulse to impose a “but-for” test for
    identifying the source of the right. Crowley, 
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *11 (“[b]ut for” the GSA’s withholding of
    payments allegedly owed to Crowley under the contract,
    “neither complaint [in Claims Court or district court] would
    exist”); see also Appellees’ Br. 9 (“Absent its agreement with
    [TRANSCOM], Crowley would have no claims to assert.”).
    Imposing such a test, however, contravenes Megapulse’s
    express rejection of the “argument that the mere existence of
    such contract-related issues . . . convert[s] [the] action to one
    based on the contract.” 672 F.2d at 969. Granted, Crowley’s
    8
    The Little Tucker Act includes the same prohibition. See
    
    28 U.S.C. § 1346
    (a)(2).
    18
    claim presupposes the existence of a contract, as without one
    the GSA would have no invoices to audit. But the right
    Crowley seeks to vindicate is not a contract right and its action
    in district court only “require[s] some reference to or
    incorporation of [the] contract.” 
    Id. at 968
    . These references to
    contract issues are insufficient to “deprive the [district] court
    of jurisdiction it might otherwise have.” 
    Id.
    Third, the district court mistakenly relied on our 1985
    Spectrum decision. See Crowley, 
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *10;
    see also Appellees’ Br. 14 (“This case resembles Spectrum in
    all relevant respects.”). There, a software and hardware
    services provider in a contractual relationship with the GSA
    challenged the GSA’s withholding of payment of certain
    invoices based on Spectrum’s alleged failure to fulfill its
    contractual obligations. Spectrum, 
    764 F.2d at 892
    . Spectrum
    sued in district court for the GSA’s alleged violations of the
    Debt Collection Act of 1982, 
    31 U.S.C. §§ 3701
     et seq.
    Spectrum is inapposite for multiple reasons. See infra II.B.2.
    Most significantly, unlike in this case, the GSA was a party to
    the contract at issue in Spectrum, squarely indicating that the
    claims against the GSA in that case arose under the contract.
    The plaintiff in Spectrum sought to vindicate its right to
    payment under its contract with the GSA but the Debt
    Collection Act “confer[ed] no such right in the absence of the
    contract itself.” 
    764 F.2d at 894
    . We concluded that the Debt
    Collection Act “might impose procedural requirements on the
    government having some impact on the contract, [but] the Act
    in no way creates the substantive right to the remedy Spectrum
    seeks.” Id.; see also 
    id.
     at 892 n.1 (describing Debt Collection
    Act’s “procedures and safeguards designed to assure due
    process protections to delinquent government debtors and to
    enhance the ability of the federal government to collect its
    debts”). In other words, “Spectrum’s right to the . . . payments
    arose only upon creation and satisfaction of its contract with
    19
    the government.” 
    Id. at 894
    . Crowley, by contrast, has no right
    to anything from the GSA under its contract with
    TRANSCOM—and certainly no right to payment—and it seeks
    to vindicate an entirely different sort of right from Spectrum’s
    asserted right.
    For these reasons, we conclude that the source of the right
    upon which Crowley bases its claim against the GSA is not its
    contract with TRANSCOM and therefore the complaint does
    not fall within the Claims Court’s exclusive Tucker Act
    jurisdiction under the first prong of Megapulse.
    2. Relief Sought
    We turn next to “the type of relief sought.” Megapulse,
    672 F.2d at 968. We conclude that Crowley’s requested
    declaratory and injunctive relief is “not specific to actions that
    sound in contract.” Perry Cap., 864 F.3d at 619. Crowley seeks
    neither the “prototypical contract remedy” of damages, id.
    (quoting Lader, 
    56 F.3d at 240
    ), nor “the classic contractual
    remedy of specific performance,” Spectrum, 
    764 F.2d at 894
    .
    And, critically, Crowley does not “in essence” seek more than
    $10,000 in monetary relief from the federal government, as the
    declaratory and injunctive relief sought has “considerable
    value” apart from and is not “negligible in comparison” to any
    potential monetary recovery that Crowley might obtain in other
    proceedings. Kidwell, 56 F.3d at 284.
    Crowley’s complaint expressly “seeks no monetary relief”
    or money damages. Compl. ¶ 107, reprinted in J.A. 20; see also
    Tootle, 
    446 F.3d at 174
     (first examining whether complaint
    explicitly requests monetary damages); Kidwell, 
    56 F.3d at 284, 285
     (same, stating Tucker Act applies if complaint
    “explicitly” seeks more than $10,000 in damages). In its Prayer
    for Relief, as noted earlier, supra at 7, Crowley seeks only
    declaratory and injunctive relief. Compl. Prayer for Relief
    20
    ¶¶ A–C; see also Smalls v. United States, 
    471 F.3d 186
    , 190–
    91 (D.C. Cir. 2006) (consulting complaint’s prayer for relief to
    determine remedy sought).
    The resolution of our inquiry under the second prong of
    the test articulated in Megapulse accordingly turns on whether
    Crowley’s complaint “in essence” seeks monetary relief.
    Kidwell, 
    56 F.3d at 284
    . It does not. “[M]ost importantly, the
    equitable relief sought by [Crowley] has significant value.”
    Tootle, 
    446 F.3d at
    174–75. Crowley put forth a host of non-
    monetary benefits it would attain with a ruling in its favor in
    district court. These include: the ability to direct its resources
    to fulfilling its obligations under the contract rather than
    analyzing and challenging tens of thousands of audits and
    NOCs; the certainty of knowing whether the dispute resolution
    procedures under the Contract Disputes Act or the
    Transportation Act apply; an answer to the question whether
    the GSA has authority to audit Crowley’s invoices generated
    by its contract with TRANSCOM; and, perhaps most
    significantly, the ability to provide services to TRANSCOM
    and perform its contractual obligations free of the GSA’s
    alleged interference. Compl. ¶¶ 82, 84, 85, 86, 87, reprinted in
    J.A. 16–17. The value of this non-monetary relief to Crowley’s
    business operations and professional reputation is arguably just
    as considerable as the value of relief from the stigma or “shame
    associated with failing to receive an honorable discharge” from
    the military that we found sufficient to take a complaint outside
    the Claims Court’s exclusive jurisdiction under the Tucker Act.
    Kidwell, 56 F.3d at 285 (military veteran, who did not
    explicitly seek monetary relief, brought APA action
    challenging Army Board for Correction of Military Records’
    refusal “to change his military files to indicate a ‘medical’
    discharge rather than [a] general discharge” (id. at 281)).
    Indeed, continuing to operate under the cloud of the GSA’s
    audits and NOCs—and the resulting performance difficulties it
    21
    creates—could conceivably jeopardize Crowley’s ongoing
    contractual relationship with TRANSCOM, which runs
    through July 31, 2024, or its potential to win future contracts
    with other parties.
    Moreover, “any monetary benefits that might flow if
    [Crowley] prevails on [its] non-monetary claims will not come
    from the District Court’s exercise of jurisdiction.” Tootle,
    
    446 F.3d at 175
    . Again, Crowley does not ask the district court
    to issue an order compelling the GSA to pay or award any
    monetary relief whatsoever. Cf. Spectrum, 
    764 F.2d at 894
    (plaintiff sought “order compelling the government to pay
    money owed in exchange for goods procured under an
    executory contract”). “[A]ny monetary recovery [Crowley]
    might be entitled to in the future,” including in Claims Court,
    “would be entirely separate from” the district court’s exercise
    of jurisdiction and award of the requested declaratory and
    injunctive relief. Tootle, 
    446 F.3d at 175
    ; Vietnam Veterans,
    
    843 F.2d at 534
     (“claim is not for money merely because its
    success may lead to pecuniary costs for the government or
    benefits for the plaintiff”). The fact that Crowley may obtain
    monetary relief from the United States in Claims Court if it
    succeeds in its suit against the GSA in district court “is
    insufficient to deprive the district court of jurisdiction.” Smalls,
    
    471 F.3d at 190
    .
    The district court correctly concluded that this second
    Megapulse inquiry is controlled by Kidwell, Crowley,
    
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *8, but it incorrectly applied the test we
    articulated there, see 
    id. at *9
    . First, it labeled Crowley’s
    purported expense in investigating and challenging the NOCs,
    which amounted to an estimated $180,000 that “cannot be
    recovered,” as the “primary harm” redressable by a ruling in
    Crowley’s favor. Id.; see Compl. ¶¶ 81–82, reprinted in J.A.
    16. Although the district court acknowledged that this expense
    22
    “would not be compensated by any money damage award
    either here [in district court] or at the [Claims Court],” it
    nevertheless compared that figure—and only that figure—to
    the $37 million allegedly withheld by the GSA to conclude that
    the former is “negligible in comparison” to the latter and
    therefore “in essence” a claim for monetary relief. Crowley,
    
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *9 (emphasis added). In doing so, it
    neglected to weigh the fact that Crowley’s complaint did not
    request retroactive relief for the monetary value of the time and
    effort spent challenging the NOCs but did, as explained above
    and as made clear in its Prayer for Relief, seek prospective
    relief from the GSA’s audits and NOCs in the future. The
    district court reached its conclusion merely by calculating the
    ratio of the value of the NOC withholdings ($37 million) to the
    asserted value of the personnel time attempting to review and
    challenge the NOCs ($180,000)—200 to 1.9 
    Id.
     But there is no
    support for this method of comparison in our case law. The
    district court cited none, 
    id.,
     and the GSA points to none, see
    Appellees’ Br. 18–19.10
    9
    The district court used $187,000 in its comparison, citing to
    Crowley’s Opposition to Motion to Dismiss. Crowley, 
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *9. We have used the figure of $180,000 throughout
    because that is the amount Crowley uses in its complaint. See Compl.
    ¶ 81, reprinted in J.A. 16.
    10
    The GSA relies on Schwalier v. Hagel, 
    734 F.3d 1218
    , 1221
    (D.C. Cir. 2013), to argue that “[w]hen a plaintiff requests multiple
    forms of relief, courts identify the ‘core’ request by comparing the
    relative value of the monetary and non-monetary remedies.”
    Appellees’ Br. 18. The GSA’s reliance on Schwalier is misplaced.
    There, the plaintiff included a request for monetary relief “on the face
    of the complaint” and thus we found “no need to peer deeper into
    [the complaint’s] substance, essence, or ‘core.’” Schwalier, 734 F.3d
    at 1221 (citing Kidwell, 
    56 F.3d at 284
    ). In addition, we do not read
    Schwalier as reducing the inquiry to the computation of a ratio in this
    manner or, perhaps more importantly, as authorizing a district court
    23
    It also erred by characterizing the $37 million as “the real
    amount at stake here.” Crowley, 
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *9. The
    district court found it “difficult to see how the requested”
    declaratory and injunctive relief “would not effect the release
    of the offsets assessed by GSA to date.” 
    Id.
     But that “is not the
    law of the circuit.” Tootle, 
    446 F.3d at 176
    . We have explicitly
    rejected a district court’s conclusion that a complaint sought
    “in essence” monetary relief because “the plain effect of a
    judgment in plaintiff’s favor would be a significant financial
    gain for plaintiff.” 
    Id.
     at 175–76 (citing district court opinion).
    Indeed, as we said in Kidwell, “[a] plaintiff does not ‘in
    essence’ seek monetary relief . . . merely because he or she
    hints at some interest in a monetary reward from the federal
    government or because success on the merits may obligate the
    United States to pay the complainant.” 56 F.3d at 284. “[E]ven
    if the plaintiff filed the complaint with an eye to future
    monetary awards, a district court with otherwise appropriate
    jurisdiction may hear the claim and grant the proper equitable
    relief.” Id.
    Crowley does not seek money in its suit against the GSA
    and the district court would not award such relief were Crowley
    to prevail. The declaratory and injunctive relief sought has
    considerable value apart from and is not negligible in
    comparison to any potential monetary recovery Crowley may
    secure in Claims Court. Therefore, under Kidwell, Crowley’s
    complaint does not request “in essence” monetary relief.
    Crowley “has gone to great lengths to demonstrate that it
    is not relying on the contract at all. It does not claim a breach
    of contract, it has limited its request for relief” in district court
    to the enforcement of the GSA’s statutory obligations, “it seeks
    no monetary damages against the United States, and its claim
    to exclude a plaintiff’s requested non-monetary relief from its
    analysis.
    24
    is not properly characterized as one for specific performance.”
    Megapulse, 672 F.2d at 969 (footnotes omitted). In other
    words, neither the source of the right on which Crowley’s claim
    is based nor the type of relief sought sounds in contract. Id. at
    968. We conclude that Crowley “has not brought a contract
    action or an otherwise disguised claim for monetary relief
    against the United States.” Id. at 971.
    Under our precedent, the Court of Federal Claims has
    exclusive jurisdiction of an action pursuant to the Tucker Act
    only if the claim in question is “at its essence” contractual. A
    plaintiff satisfies this test if its asserted right is based in contract
    and seeks “in essence” more than $10,000 in monetary relief
    from the federal government. Here, neither of those conditions
    is met. Accordingly, jurisdiction of Crowley’s action is proper
    in district court under the APA and the general federal question
    statute.11 We therefore reverse the district court’s dismissal for
    11
    The GSA maintains that Crowley can obtain all the relief it
    seeks against the GSA in the Court of Federal Claims under the
    Transportation Act. See Tr. of Oral Arg. at 22; Appellees’ Br. 22.
    Crowley disagrees. See Tr. of Oral Arg. at 26–27; Appellant’s Reply
    Br. 6 (“Crowley cannot sue GSA under the Transportation Act
    because it does not apply.”). The district court noted, albeit in dicta,
    that the “APA’s sovereign immunity waiver does not apply if . . .
    some ‘other adequate remedy in a court’ is available,” Crowley,
    
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *6 (quoting 
    5 U.S.C. § 704
    ), and agreed with
    the GSA that it “has in essence laid out a blueprint for how this matter
    can receive a fulsome hearing” in Claims Court, 
    id. at *12
    . Even
    assuming that is true, we find no reason to conclude that the Claims
    Court’s jurisdiction in such an action would be exclusive of district
    court jurisdiction, as Crowley does not seek the same relief in district
    court as it does in Claims Court. In addition, whether another
    adequate remedy exists under § 704 has no bearing on our
    jurisdictional inquiry. We have made clear that the “adequate remedy
    bar of § 704” does not address “whether there is federal subject
    matter jurisdiction.” Perry Cap., 864 F.3d at 621.
    25
    lack of subject matter jurisdiction and remand for consideration
    of the merits of Crowley’s claim.12
    So ordered.
    12
    Because we conclude Crowley’s complaint can proceed in
    district court under Count I of its complaint, we need not address its
    alternative ultra vires claim or the district court’s dismissal of that
    claim, see Crowley, 
    2021 WL 4940953
    , at *11–12.