Defense v. Northrop Grumman Corporation ( 2019 )


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  •   United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    SECRETARY OF DEFENSE,
    Appellant
    v.
    NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION,
    Appellee
    --------------------------------------------
    NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION,
    Appellant
    v.
    SECRETARY OF DEFENSE,
    Appellee
    ______________________
    2018-1945, 2018-1990
    ______________________
    Appeals from the Armed Services Board of Contract
    Appeals in Nos. 57625, 60190, Administrative Judge Rob-
    ert T. Peacock.
    ______________________
    Decided: November 15, 2019
    ______________________
    DANIEL B. VOLK, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil
    Division, United States Department of Justice,
    2               DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION
    Washington, DC, argued for Secretary of Defense. Also
    represented by JOSEPH H. HUNT, ROBERT EDWARD
    KIRSCHMAN, JR., PATRICIA M. MCCARTHY; ROBERT LYN
    DUECASTER, Contract Disputes Resolution Center, Defense
    Contract Management Agency, Chantilly, VA.
    DONALD B. VERRILLI, JR., Munger, Tolles & Olson LLP,
    Washington, DC, argued for Northrop Grumman Corpora-
    tion. Also represented by GINGER ANDERS; CHARLES BAEK,
    STEPHEN JOHN MCBRADY, NICOLE J. OWREN-WIEST, Crow-
    ell & Moring LLP, Washington, DC.
    ______________________
    Before PROST, Chief Judge, BRYSON and REYNA, Circuit
    Judges.
    REYNA, Circuit Judge.
    The Secretary of Defense appeals a final decision of the
    Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals finding that the
    United States Government improperly disallowed certain
    retirement benefits costs that Northrop Grumman Corpo-
    ration asserts are eligible for reimbursement. Northrop
    Grumman Corporation conditionally cross-appeals the
    Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals’ finding that the
    retirement benefit costs are unallowable under the appli-
    cable regulations because they were calculated using an
    improper accounting method. Because substantial evi-
    dence supports the Armed Services Board of Contract Ap-
    peal’s finding that Northrop Grumman Corporation never
    claimed and will never claim any of the disputed retire-
    ment benefits, we affirm and do not reach the cross-appeal.
    BACKGROUND
    I. Post-Retirement Benefits Costs
    This dispute concerns Northrop Grumman Corpora-
    tion’s (“Northrop”) accounting of costs for providing post-
    retirement benefits (“PRB”).      PRBs are non-pension
    DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION                    3
    benefits that are made available to employees upon their
    retirement. Examples of PRBs include post-retirement
    health care, life insurance, disability benefits, and other
    welfare benefits. Relevant to these appeals is that PRBs
    can be modified or eliminated entirely, unlike pension ben-
    efits which cannot be modified by the employer.
    The Federal Acquisition Regulation (“FAR”) 1 permits
    contractors such as Northrop to seek reimbursement from
    the federal government for its PRB costs. Only those PRB
    costs that are “allowable,” however, may be reimbursed by
    the government. Effective July 25, 1991, the FAR was
    amended to add FAR 31.205-6(o), which governed allowa-
    bility of reimbursement of PRB costs in government con-
    tracts. This amendment required PRB costs assigned to a
    given year to be funded by that year’s tax return deadline
    in order to be allowable. While the amendment permitted
    the use of accrual accounting 2 methods for PRB costs, it did
    not expressly require that any specific accounting standard
    be used. However, effective February 27, 1995, the FAR
    was amended again, this time to require the use of the ac-
    counting standards set out in the Statement of Financial
    1   The version of the FAR in effect on July 8, 2005,
    applies to this case.
    2   Accrual accounting (unlike cash accounting) fo-
    cuses on when transactions occur, rather than when pay-
    ments are made. Because PRB plans are funded well
    before retirement occurs and benefits are paid out, accrual
    accounting relies on actuarial assumptions such as life ex-
    pectancy to predict future costs while allocating those costs
    to current years.
    4              DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION
    Accounting Standards 106 (“FAS 106”) 3 to determine al-
    lowable PRB costs in government contracts. 4
    At the time of the 1995 FAR amendment, Northrop ac-
    counted for its PRB costs using an accounting method that
    conformed to the requirements established by the Deficit
    Reduction Act of 1984 (“DEFRA”) rather than FAS 106.
    Following the 1995 FAR amendment, Northrop continued
    to account for its PRB costs for government contracting
    purposes using the DEFRA method, even though that
    method was no longer in compliance with the FAR.
    The DEFRA and FAS 106 both require the use of ac-
    crual accounting methods, but the actuarial assumptions
    underlying each method are different. The primary differ-
    ence between the DEFRA method and the FAS 106 method
    is that the DEFRA method calculates PRB costs based on
    current medical costs, while the FAS 106 method calcu-
    lates PRB costs to include future increases in medical costs.
    J.A. 32. As a result, annual PRB costs computed using the
    DEFRA method typically start lower and increase over
    time whereas annual PRB costs computed using the FAS
    106 method typically start higher and decrease over time.
    J.A. 2.
    3    FAS 106 as issued in 1990 is available on the Fi-
    nancial Accounting Standards Board’s website at
    https://www.fasb.org/jsp/FASB/Document_C/DocumentPa
    ge?cid=1218220123671.
    4    After the February 27, 1995, amendment,
    FAR 31.205-6(o)(2)(iii) provided in relevant part that “to be
    allowable, PRB costs . . . must be measured and assigned
    according to Generally Accepted Accounting Principles.”
    FAR 31.205-6(o)(2)(iii) (1995); see also 59 Fed. Reg. 67045
    (Dec. 28, 1994). It is undisputed that the reference to “Gen-
    erally Accepted Accounting Principles” in FAR 31.205-
    6(o)(2)(iii) refers to FAS 106. J.A. 3.
    DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION                    5
    Between 1995 and 2006, Northrop filed disclosure
    statements with the government on numerous occasions,
    disclosing its continued use of the DEFRA method. The
    government was aware that Northrop was not in compli-
    ance with the FAR, but it did not object to Northrop’s con-
    tinued use of the DEFRA method because its use resulted
    in lower reimbursement costs to the government. J.A. 99.
    Indeed, had Northrop used the FAS 106 method between
    1995 and 2005, the government would have paid an addi-
    tional $253 million during that period. See J.A. 32; Oral
    Arg. at 15:18–15:34; see also J.A. 1000 (member of DCAA
    testifying that the government saved $253 million between
    1995 and 2006). In addition, both the Defense Contract
    Management Agency (“DCMA”) and the Defense Contract
    Audit Agency (“DCAA”) informed Northrop during these
    years that the agencies found “no instances of noncompli-
    ance with applicable Cost Accounting Standards or with
    FAR Part 31 cost principles.” J.A. 4; see also J.A. 3–6. Alt-
    hough not reflective of official policy, DCMA even used
    Northrop’s continued use of the DEFRA method in its in-
    ternal training documents as an example of acceptable ac-
    counting methods under the FAR. J.A. 10, 33. 5 At the
    time, DCMA members interpreted the FAR’s requirement
    that FAS 106 method be used as setting a ceiling on allow-
    able costs under the regulations, concluding that the differ-
    ence between the DEFRA and FAS 106 calculations would
    not become unallowable even if not assigned and funded
    within a given year as required by FAR 31.205-6(o)(3). 6 
    Id. 5 Internally,
    there was disagreement between mem-
    bers of the DCMA and the DCAA about whether Northrop’s
    continued use of the DEFRA method was acceptable.
    6    FAR 31.205-6(o)(3) provided: “To be allowable,
    costs must be funded by the time set for filing the Federal
    6              DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION
    Because PRB cost calculations under the DEFRA
    method increase over time, and calculations using the FAS
    106 method decrease over time, Northrop predicted that its
    PRB cost calculations using the DEFRA method would ex-
    ceed those allowable under the FAR and FAS 106 in 2015.
    To avoid this eventuality, Northrop in 2006 switched from
    using the DEFRA method to using the FAS 106 method.
    As part of the switch, Northrop was required to calculate
    its “transition obligation”—the difference between the PRB
    costs that would have accrued had Northrop adopted the
    FAS 106 method in 1995 and the PRB costs that actually
    accrued due to its continued use of the DEFRA method. See
    56 Fed. Reg. 41,738, 41,739 (Aug. 22, 1991); FAS 106,
    ¶ 110. Northrop’s transition obligation in 2006 would have
    been approximately $305 million.
    At the same time it adopted the FAS 106 method,
    Northrop amended its PRB plans. The amendment capped
    the annual amount Northrop would contribute to the PRB
    plans independent of future healthcare cost increases,
    thereby limiting the benefits available to its employees un-
    der those plans. As a result of this “negative plan amend-
    ment,” Northrop’s PRB cost obligations were reduced by
    approximately $307 million. Northrop subtracted these
    savings from its transition obligation, as required by FAS
    106. Northrop notified DCMA of its PRB plan amendment
    and its switch to the FAS 106 accounting method on Octo-
    ber 23, 2006, and November 3, 2006, respectively.
    On July 26, 2007, DCMA issued a notice of its intent to
    disallow costs. DCMA took the position that Northrop’s
    transition obligation was unallowable in future accounting
    periods because Northrop did not measure or fund its PRB
    income tax return or any extension thereof. PRB costs as-
    signed to the current year, but not funded or otherwise liq-
    uidated by the tax return time, shall not be allowable in
    any subsequent year.” FAR 31.205-6(o)(3) (1995).
    DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION                    7
    plans between 1995 and 2006 using the required FAS 106
    method, and therefore failed to timely assign the unfunded
    difference between the higher FAS 106 amount and the
    lower DEFRA amount to those years. J.A. 27. DCMA is-
    sued a Final Determination on April 9, 2008, disallowing
    approximately $253 million of Northrop’s PRB costs from
    its post-2006 reimbursement submissions. 7 Northrop sub-
    mitted a certified claim for these funds on May 20, 2010.
    DCMA denied Northrop’s claim on February 18, 2011. As
    a result of the government’s disallowance, Northrop has de-
    ducted the disputed $253 million from its annual PRB cost
    reimbursement submissions since 2007, amortized over a
    20-year period—approximately $12.7 million annually.
    II. Proceedings Before the Board
    Northrop appealed DCMA’s denial to the Armed Ser-
    vices Board of Contract Appeals (“the Board”). The Board
    bifurcated the proceedings into two phases—entitlement
    and quantum. The Board held an evidentiary hearing in
    each phase.
    A. Entitlement Phase
    During the entitlement phase, the Board determined
    that Northrop’s use of the DEFRA method was not in com-
    pliance with FAR 31.205-6(o). J.A. 12. The Board pointed
    to Northrop’s concession that “there is no dispute that the
    DEFRA method did not comply with GAAP requirements,”
    as required by the FAR. 
    Id. The Board
    also found that by
    7   Of the $304,754,315 that constituted Northrop’s
    transition obligation prior to factoring in its negative plan
    amendment, DCMA allowed $51,392,803, finding those
    PRB costs to be applicable to contracts awarded prior to the
    February 27, 1995, FAR amendment that required the use
    of the FAS 106 method. J.A. 1292 n.10. The remaining
    $253,361,512 in disallowed PRB costs is at issue in this ap-
    peal.
    8              DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION
    not using the FAS 106 method, Northrop did not timely
    fund its PRB obligations to the full extent permitted by the
    FAR. 
    Id. According to
    the Board, this rendered $253 mil-
    lion of Northrop’s transition obligation unallowable under
    FAR 31.205-6(o)(3). J.A. 12–13. The Board rejected sev-
    eral of Northrop’s arguments, including its contention that
    the FAS 106 method only set a ceiling for allowable costs
    under the FAR and any costs up to that amount should be
    allowable notwithstanding Northrop’s failure to fund those
    costs. J.A. 13–16. The Board explained that “no such lan-
    guage is contained” in FAR 31.205-6(o)(3), and thus the
    plain language of that regulation contradicted Northrop’s
    arguments. J.A. 13.
    The Board determined, however, that it could not re-
    solve Northrop’s argument that the government’s disallow-
    ance was improper because the negative amendment to
    Northrop’s PRB plans ensured that the $253 million in dis-
    puted PRB costs “have never been and will never be
    claimed or incurred.” J.A. 16. The Board explained that
    there was inconsistent testimony as to whether Northrop
    included the unallowable costs in its reimbursement sub-
    missions in 2007 and subsequent years, and those submis-
    sions were not in the record. J.A. 11, 16. The Board left
    the resolution of these quantum issues until the next phase
    of the proceedings. J.A. 17. Northrop moved for reconsid-
    eration, which the Board denied. J.A. 19–24.
    B. Quantum Phase
    During the quantum phase, the Board found that
    Northrop’s negative amendment to its PRB plans saved
    $307 million from its future PRB plan obligations, “en-
    sur[ing] that [Northrop] would not have to pay PRB costs
    arising from future increases in healthcare costs in excess
    of the fixed dollar ‘cap.’” J.A. 35. The Board further found
    that FAS 106 required Northrop to exclude these savings
    from its transition obligation calculations. 
    Id. (citing FAS
    106, ¶ 28). Citing expert testimony, the Board explained
    DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION                   9
    that because the primary difference between the DEFRA
    method and the FAS 106 method is that FAS 106 requires
    accounting for future increases in healthcare costs, “the
    costs that were eliminated before computing the transition
    obligation were the same costs that comprised the $253
    million of unfunded pre-transition costs.” 
    Id. The Board
    determined that, therefore, “it would not have been possi-
    ble for [Northrop] to include the $253 million of unfunded
    costs in its calculated PRB costs in 2007 or thereafter,”
    meaning that Northrop could not have claimed those costs
    for reimbursement. 
    Id. According to
    the Board, Northrop’s
    use of the DEFRA method therefore “did not lead to any
    recovery of claimed but unfunded costs, or to duplicate re-
    covery,” and instead benefitted the government. J.A. 35–
    36, 40.
    The Board rejected the government’s argument that
    even though Northrop did not use the FAS 106 method be-
    tween 1995 and 2006, it nonetheless still incurred the ad-
    ditional $253 million in PRB costs “by operation of law” due
    to the FAR’s requirement of using the FAS 106 method.
    The Board stated that the government “disregards funda-
    mental concepts related to cost ‘incurrence,’ and misfocuses
    on an ‘allowability’ regulation rather than [Northrop’s PRB
    plans].” J.A. 39. The Board explained that cost incurrence
    is defined by Northrop’s plan obligations, and thus the only
    costs that Northrop incurred prior to 2006 were those cal-
    culated using the DEFRA method. 
    Id. The Board
    deter-
    mined, therefore, that Northrop did not “incur” the
    disputed $253 million between 1995 and 2006. 
    Id. The Board
    also rejected the government’s argument
    that Northrop’s negative plan amendment had no effect on
    the costs Northrop incurred between 1995 and 2006. J.A.
    37, 41. The Board pointed to the unrebutted testimony of
    actuaries, who testified that Northrop’s transition obliga-
    tion was eliminated “as a consequence” of its negative PRB
    plan amendment. J.A. 41. The Board noted that the gov-
    ernment was justly concerned about allowability of
    10             DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION
    Northrop’s transition obligation because the PRB costs
    that constituted that obligation were not timely funded be-
    tween 1995 and 2006 as required by the FAR. J.A. 40–41.
    The Board explained, however, that Northrop’s negative
    plan “amendment should have assuaged and eliminated
    the government’s valid concerns here” because it “removed
    properly objectionable portions [from] the transition obli-
    gation.” J.A. 42.
    The Board further found the government’s disallow-
    ance to be inconsistent with FAR 31.201-2(c), which pro-
    vides that only costs “in excess of the amount that would
    have resulted from using practices consistent with this
    subpart are unallowable.” J.A. 38 (quoting FAR 31.201-
    2(c)) (emphasis removed). The Board explained that alt-
    hough Northrop did not use the proper accounting method,
    it was undisputed that the PRB costs that Northrop calcu-
    lated using the DEFRA method did not exceed the amount
    that Northrop could have claimed if it had used the FAS
    106 method since 1995. 
    Id. Combined with
    Northrop’s
    negative amendment to its PRB plans, this resulted in “no
    excess to disallow.” 
    Id. (emphasis removed).
        Based on its findings, the Board concluded that
    Northrop’s negative plan amendment “ensured that
    [Northrop] would never incur the costs disallowed and ef-
    fectively mooted allowability issues associated with the
    transition obligation” because Northrop “has never, and
    will never, claim, and the government will never pay,” the
    disputed $253 million in disallowed costs. J.A. 41–42. Ac-
    cordingly, the Board sustained Northrop’s appeal, explain-
    ing that “the government suffered no damages” as a result
    of Northrop’s noncompliance with FAR 31.205-6(o). J.A.
    25, 42.
    Following the Board’s quantum phase decision, the
    government moved for reconsideration, which the Board
    denied on January 9, 2018. J.A. 45, 51. The Board rejected
    the government’s argument that the quantum phase
    DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION                   11
    decision was inconsistent with the earlier entitlement
    phase decision. The Board explained that during the enti-
    tlement phase, it only decided that Northrop failed to com-
    ply with the FAR requirement of using the FAS 106
    method. J.A. 45. The Board stated that the entitlement
    phase decision expressly left open the issue of the resulting
    financial consequences of Northrop’s noncompliance. J.A.
    46. The Board reiterated its quantum phase finding that
    “it is clear beyond cavil on a fully developed quantitative
    record that [Northrop] never has and never will incur and
    claim the disallowed costs and the government never has
    and never will pay any ‘excess’ resulting from the noncom-
    pliance.” Accordingly, the Board concluded that the gov-
    ernment failed to prove its quantum damages. J.A. 51.
    On appeal, the Secretary of Defense (“Secretary”) asks
    us to reverse the Board’s quantum phase decision that
    Northrop has never and will never claim reimbursement
    for the disputed $253 million in PRB costs because it did
    not incur those costs between 1995 and 2006. Northrop
    conditionally cross-appeals the Board’s entitlement phase
    decision that the $253 million in PRB costs that Northrop
    failed to timely fund between 1995 and 2006 are unallowa-
    ble. We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(10).
    DISCUSSION
    We review the Board’s legal conclusions de novo. Par-
    sons Glob. Servs., Inc. ex rel. Odell Int’l, Inc. v. McHugh,
    
    677 F.3d 1166
    , 1170 (Fed. Cir. 2012). Interpretation and
    application of the FAR are issues of law that we review de
    novo. 
    Id. We set
    aside the Board’s factual findings only if
    they are fraudulent, arbitrary or capricious, so grossly er-
    roneous as to necessarily imply bad faith, or not supported
    by substantial evidence. Laguna Constr. Co., Inc. v. Carter,
    
    828 F.3d 1364
    , 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2016); Rockies Exp. Pipeline
    LLC v. Salazar, 
    730 F.3d 1330
    , 1335 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (citing
    41 U.S.C. § 7107(b)(2)).
    12              DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION
    Resolution of this appeal turns on whether substantial
    evidence supports the Board’s finding that Northrop’s neg-
    ative amendment to its PRB plans effectively eliminated
    the $253 million in disputed PRB costs from its transition
    obligation such that those costs were never and will never
    be charged to the government. We conclude that it does.
    The Board found that Northrop’s negative amendment
    to its PRB plans saved $307 million from its future PRB
    plan obligations, and the Secretary does not dispute this
    finding. J.A. 35; Appellant’s Br. 27. 8 It is also undisputed
    that these savings resulted from capping the amount
    Northrop would pay in PRB costs regardless of future
    healthcare increases, thus removing the effect of those in-
    creases on its PRB cost calculations. J.A. 35; see J.A. 1539.
    The government also conceded that the major difference
    between the DEFRA method and the FAS 106 method is
    that the FAS 106 method accounts for future healthcare
    cost increases and the DEFRA method does not. J.A. 32,
    177. These undisputed facts support the Board’s finding
    that by eliminating the effect of future healthcare cost in-
    creases from its PRB obligation, Northrop’s negative plan
    amendment eliminated “the same costs that comprised the
    $253 million” in dispute. J.A. 35.
    The Board also cited to FAS 106, explaining that it re-
    quired Northrop “to exclude obligations associated with the
    future health care cost increases that were eliminated pur-
    suant” to its negative amendment prior to calculating its
    transition obligation. Id.; see also FAS 106, ¶ 28 (“[P]lan
    amendments shall be included in the computation of the
    expected and accumulated postretirement benefit
    8  The Board explained that the facts were substan-
    tively not in dispute below, and that the majority of its fac-
    tual findings were “in essence ‘stipulated.’” J.A. 26 n.2.
    Accordingly, the Board adopted the undisputed facts as
    proposed by the parties. 
    Id. DEFENSE v.
    NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION                  13
    obligations.” (emphasis removed)). This evidence also sup-
    ports the Board’s findings that the disputed $253 million
    in unfunded pre-transition PRB costs were never part of
    Northrop’s transition obligation. J.A. 35.
    The Board’s findings are also supported by unrebutted
    testimony of Northrop’s independent actuary expert, Mr.
    McQuade, on which the Board relied. See 
    id. Mr. McQuade
    testified that Northrop’s negative amendment eliminated
    the disputed $253 million from Northrop’s transition obli-
    gation because the amendment eliminated $307 million
    from Northrop’s accumulated post-retirement benefit obli-
    gation on which its transition obligation was based. J.A.
    821–22. He also testified that the amended PRB costs and
    the $253 million in unfunded costs “are both based on fu-
    ture increases in healthcare costs,” and by eliminating the
    effect of those increases on its PRB obligations, Northrop’s
    amendment more than eliminated its transition obligation.
    J.A. 830. Mr. McQuade further testified that the govern-
    ment “will never pay for the $253 [million] of unfunded
    costs because those costs have been eliminated.” J.A. 822.
    This testimony is substantial evidence that supports the
    Board’s findings that it would have been impossible for
    Northrop to include the disputed $253 million in its post-
    2006 PRB cost calculations or to subsequently claim those
    costs for reimbursement from the government, and that as
    a result, the government’s disallowance of those costs was
    improper. J.A. 35, 42.
    On appeal, the Secretary frames his challenge to the
    Board’s decision as disputing the Board’s legal interpreta-
    tion and application of FAR 31.205-6(o) to undisputed
    facts. Appellant’s Br. 25; Appellant’s Reply Br. 19. We dis-
    agree with this characterization. The dispute here is not
    over whether Northrop violated FAR 31.205-6(o) by using
    the DEFRA method or whether Northrop’s $253 million in
    14             DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION
    unfunded PRB costs are unallowable. 9 Rather, the Secre-
    tary disputes the Board’s factual findings that those unal-
    lowable costs were not charged to the government by virtue
    of being excluded from Northrop’s transition obligation by
    Northrop’s negative amendment to its PRB plans. As ex-
    plained above, these factual findings are supported by sub-
    stantial evidence and are therefore “final and conclusive.”
    41 U.S.C. § 7107 (2012).
    We also disagree with the substance of the Secretary’s
    arguments. The Secretary argues that because Northrop
    underfunded its PRB costs by $253 million between 1995
    and 2006 by using a noncompliant accounting method,
    those costs will always remain “unallowable” pursuant to
    FAR 31.205-6(o)(3), and the government is therefore re-
    quired to disallow that amount from Northrop’s future PRB
    reimbursement claims. Appellant’s Br. 25–26. This argu-
    ment would have merit had Northrop not amended its PRB
    plans because that underfunded amount would then have
    been part of the Northrop’s transition obligation. As the
    Board correctly explained, however, Northrop’s negative
    plan amendment mooted the issue of allowability by elimi-
    nating the disputed $253 million from the transition obli-
    gation. J.A. 41. Thus, Northrop never actually submitted
    any unallowable costs for reimbursement, and the govern-
    ment had no basis to disallow that amount from Northrop’s
    post-2006 reimbursement submissions.
    The crux of the Secretary’s argument is his assertion
    that Northrop’s negative plan amendment was a separate
    event from its switch to the FAS 106 method. Appellant’s
    Reply Br. 4, 9; see also Oral Arg. at 4:30–4:49,
    9  In its conditional cross-appeal, Northrop does chal-
    lenge the Board’s determination at the entitlement phase
    that these costs are unallowable under FAR 31.205-6(o).
    We do not reach this question, however, because we affirm
    the Board’s quantum decision.
    DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION                    15
    http://oralarguments.cafc.uscourts.gov/default.aspx?fl=
    2018-1945.mp3. Based on this assertion, the Secretary ar-
    gues that Northrop’s negative plan amendment cannot off-
    set the disputed $253 million in PRB costs because had
    either of these events happened without the other, the gov-
    ernment would be entitled to disallow the disputed $253
    million. Appellant’s Br. 25–26; Appellant’s Reply Br. 4–10.
    We disagree.
    Both events occurred simultaneously in this case, and
    Northrop’s negative plan amendment had a direct effect on
    its adoption of the FAS 106 method. We agree that the
    amendment did not go so far as to transform Northrop’s
    underfunded $253 million in PRB costs into allowable costs
    under FAR 31.205-6(o). The amendment, however, low-
    ered the entire accumulated value of Northrop’s PRB
    plans, which was used to calculate its transition obligation.
    Thus, although the amendment did not affect the allowa-
    bility of the disputed $253 million, it cannot be viewed in
    isolation from Northrop’s adoption of the FAS 106 method
    because the amendment completely eliminated Northrop’s
    transition obligation.
    The Secretary further contends that because the two
    events should be treated separately, the government is en-
    titled to receive the full benefit of Northrop’s negative plan
    amendment. Appellant’s Br. 27; Appellant’s Reply Br. 21.
    The Secretary asserts that if Northrop had properly ac-
    counted for its PRB costs using the FAS 106 method since
    1995, then the government “would have realized the full
    $307 million in cost reductions” upon Northrop’s amend-
    ment to its PRB plans in 2006. Appellant’s Br. 27. Instead,
    the Secretary contends, the government has been deprived
    of the benefit of Northrop’s amendment. We disagree. It
    is undisputed that the government has already benefitted
    by saving $253 million between 1995 and 2006 as a result
    of Northrop’s use of the DEFRA method. See J.A. 32; see
    also J.A. 1000 (member of DCAA testifying that the gov-
    ernment saved $253 million between 1995 and 2006); Oral
    16             DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION
    Arg. at 15:18–15:34 (government’s counsel conceding that
    had Northrop used the FAS 106 method between 1995 and
    2005, the government would have paid an additional $253
    million during that period). Rather than attempting to re-
    cover a lost benefit, the Secretary in essence now seeks to
    benefit twice from Northrop’s noncompliance with FAS
    106. 10
    The Secretary next argues that the Board erred by de-
    termining that Northrop never incurred the full PRB costs
    as calculated under FAS 106, even though Northrop calcu-
    lated a lower PRB cost amount using the DEFRA method.
    Appellant’s Br. 28–31; Appellant’s Reply Br. 14–15. The
    Secretary contends that regardless of which method
    Northrop used to calculate its PRB costs between 1995 and
    2006, Northrop still incurred the same PRB costs because
    its employees were earning their benefits during that time.
    Appellant’s Br. 29–30; Appellant’s Reply Br. 16. According
    to the Secretary, those costs are therefore necessarily part
    of Northrop’s transition obligation and must be disallowed
    because Northrop did not timely fund those costs. Appel-
    lant’s Reply Br. 16. Whether Northrop incurred these
    costs, however, is immaterial to our analysis because
    Northrop never charged the government the disputed $253
    million. As a member of DCAA admitted to the Board, the
    government therefore “has not been damaged.” J.A. 933–
    34. Nor can Northrop charge those costs to the government
    in the future because its negative amendment eliminated
    10 We note that the government did not object to
    Northrop’s use of the DEFRA method while Northrop was
    saving the government money between 1995 and 2006.
    J.A. 3–5, 32–33. The government even internally approved
    of Northrop’s accounting practices. J.A. 33. It was only
    after Northrop adopted the FAS 106 method and amended
    its PRB plans to eliminate its transition obligation that the
    government changed its position.
    DEFENSE v. NORTHROP GRUMMAN CORPORATION                17
    those costs from its transition obligation, as required by
    FAS 106. See J.A. 35, 38, 820–21; FAS 106, ¶ 28.
    CONCLUSION
    We have considered the Secretary’s remaining argu-
    ments and find them unpersuasive. We conclude that sub-
    stantial evidence supports the Board’s finding that
    Northrop’s negative PRB plan amendment effectively elim-
    inated Northrop’s transition obligation. We therefore af-
    firm the Board’s decision that the government’s
    disallowance of the disputed $253,361,512 of Northrop’s
    PRB costs was improper and dismiss Northrop’s condi-
    tional cross-appeal.
    AFFIRMED
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 18-1945

Filed Date: 11/15/2019

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 11/15/2019