Magnus Pacific Corporation v. United States ( 2016 )


Menu:
  •             In the United States Court of Federal Claims
    No. 13-859 C
    (Filed July 13, 2016)
    UNPUBLISHED
    * * * * * * * * * * * * *          *
    MAGNUS PACIFIC CORP.,             *
    *        RCFC 15(a)(2); Amendment of
    Plaintiff,       *        Answer to Bring Counterclaim;
    *        Jurisdiction Exists for One
    v.                      *        Portion of Proposed
    *        Counterclaim; No Undue Delay;
    THE UNITED STATES,                 *        No Undue Prejudice.
    *
    Defendant.       *
    * * * * * * * * * * * * *          *
    Daniel L. Baxter, Sacramento, CA, for plaintiff.
    A. Bondurant Eley, United States Department of Justice, with whom were
    Benjamin C. Mizer, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General, Robert E.
    Kirschman, Jr., Director, Martin F. Hockey, Jr., Assistant Director, Reta E. Bezak,
    Trial Attorney, Washington, DC, for defendant.
    ________________________
    OPINION
    ________________________
    Bush, Senior Judge.
    On June 10, 2016, defendant filed an opposed Motion for Leave of Court to
    File Amended Answer with Counterclaim. This motion has been fully briefed on
    an expedited basis. See Order of June 13, 2016. The court also solicited oral
    argument on the motion, but only on a jurisdictional issue the court raised sua
    sponte. See Order of June 28, 2016. For the reasons stated below, defendant’s
    motion is granted in part and denied in part.
    Defendant’s motion is brought under Rule 15(a)(2) of the Rules of the
    United States Court of Federal Claims (RCFC). The rule states that “[t]he court
    should freely give leave [to amend a pleading] when justice so requires.” Id.
    Leave to amend a pleading should not be granted, however, when the proposed
    amendment would be futile. Foman v. Davis, 
    371 U.S. 178
    , 182 (1962).
    Amendment of an answer to include a counterclaim outside of this court’s
    jurisdiction would be a futility. See, e.g., Shell Oil Co. v. United States, 
    123 Fed. Cl. 707
    , 727 (2015) (denying the government’s motion for leave to amend its
    answer, in part, because the proposed counterclaim was barred by this court’s
    jurisdictional statute of limitations); Joseph Morton Co. v. United States, 
    3 Cl. Ct. 780
    , 782-83 (1983) (considering whether the government’s proposed counterclaim
    was within this court’s jurisdiction), aff’d, 
    757 F.2d 1273
     (Fed. Cir. 1985). Leave
    to amend may also be denied for reasons of undue delay or undue prejudice.
    Foman, 
    371 U.S. at 182
    .
    I.    Jurisdictional Inquiry
    Defendant’s proposed counterclaim has two distinct parts: (1) a government
    claim for $466,092 retained by the contracting officer related to Contract
    Modification M004; (2) a government claim for an additional sum of $279,448
    related to Contract Modification M004. Proposed Amended Answer ¶¶ 55-56.
    For the sake of clarity, the court refers to the $466,092 portion of the
    government’s proposed counterclaim as the ‘retainage claim.’ The $279,448
    portion of the government’s proposed counterclaim can be succinctly described as
    the ‘recalculation claim.’ Because this court’s jurisdiction over the distinct
    portions of the government’s proposed counterclaim was in doubt, the court raised
    its jurisdictional concern sua sponte. See Arctic Corner, Inc. v. United States, 
    845 F.2d 999
    , 1000 (Fed. Cir. 1988) (“A court may and should raise the question of its
    jurisdiction sua sponte at any time it appears in doubt.”) (citation omitted). The
    government bears the burden of establishing jurisdiction over its proposed
    counterclaim. See, e.g., Rocovich v. United States, 
    933 F.2d 991
    , 993 (Fed. Cir.
    1991) (“A party seeking the exercise of jurisdiction in its favor has the burden of
    establishing that such jurisdiction exists.” (citing KVOS, Inc. v. Associated Press,
    2
    
    299 U.S. 269
    , 278 (1936))).
    A.     The Retainage Portion of the Government’s Proposed
    Counterclaim
    For this court to take jurisdiction over a government counterclaim under the
    Contract Disputes Act of 1978 (CDA), 
    41 U.S.C. § 7103
    (a)(3) (2012), the
    government’s claim must have been the subject of a contracting officer’s final
    decision. See, e.g., Sharman Co. v. United States, 
    2 F.3d 1564
    , 1568 (Fed. Cir.
    1993) (“Under the CDA, a final decision by the contracting officer on a claim,
    whether asserted by the contractor or the government, is a jurisdictional
    prerequisite to further legal action thereon.”) (citations and footnotes omitted),
    overruled on other grounds by Reflectone, Inc. v. Dalton, 
    60 F.3d 1572
     (Fed. Cir.
    1995); Joseph Morton Co. v. United States, 
    757 F.2d 1273
    , 1279 (Fed. Cir. 1985)
    (“[I]f the CDA applies, the Government’s counterclaims against [the contractor]
    must be subject to a decision by a CO before the Government can assert them in
    the Claims Court.”). The retainage claim was the subject of a contracting officer
    final decision, on January 13, 2014, before the retainage issue became a part of
    this litigation.1 See Def.’s In Limine Mot. Corrected App. at 253-54; see also Am.
    Compl. of Jan. 29, 2014, at 8. The retainage claim, therefore, satisfies the
    jurisdictional presentment requirement of the CDA.
    The cases invoked by plaintiff at oral argument, Sharman and Volmar
    Constr., Inc. v. United States, 
    32 Fed. Cl. 746
     (1995), involved factual scenarios
    where a contracting officer’s final decision on the government’s claim did not
    occur before litigation of that same claim (or a mirror-image claim brought by the
    contractor) commenced in this court. These cases, therefore, are inapposite to the
    jurisdictional analysis required for defendant’s retainage claim. The court sees no
    jurisdictional impediment to the retainage portion of the government’s proposed
    counterclaim.
    B.     The Recalculation Portion of the Government’s Proposed
    1
    / According to government counsel, a contract modification addressing the contracting
    officer’s final decision regarding the retainage was never issued, although the draft contract
    modification document (M009) appears to have been relied upon by defendant’s expert. See
    Def.’s Witness List Corrected App. at 57, 190-96.
    3
    Counterclaim
    Such is not the case for the recalculation claim. The government’s
    recalculation claim for $279,448 arose during the litigation of this case when a
    government expert reviewed various costs related to Contract Modification M004.
    Def.’s Mot. at 2. There is no record of a review or of a final decision of the
    contracting officer on the recalculation claim. Indeed, the recalculation claim
    differs from the final decision of the contracting officer expressed in his decision
    issued January 13, 2014 which stated that Contract Line Item Number 001 (CLIN
    001) should be reduced by $466,092 for changes effected by Contract
    Modification M004. The recalculation claim, instead, alleges that CLIN 001
    should have been reduced by an additional $279,448, for a total reduction to CLIN
    001 of $745,540 for changes effected by Contract Modification M004.
    The court concludes that the contracting officer was not presented with, and
    never ruled on, the government’s recalculation claim for $279,448.2 Because the
    contracting officer was never presented with the recalculation claim, and never
    issued a final decision on the government’s recalculation claim, this court has no
    jurisdiction over the recalculation claim portion of the government’s proposed
    counterclaim. In these circumstances, amendment of the government’s answer to
    include the recalculation claim portion of the government’s proposed counterclaim
    would be futile.
    The government’s recalculation claim, likewise, fails to fall within the
    mirror-image exception to the presentment requirement. This court has long held
    that government CDA counterclaims that are not the subject of a contracting
    officer’s final decision cannot proceed unless they are, at a minimum, the mirror
    image of a contractor claim denied by the contracting officer. E.g., Blinderman
    Constr. Co. v. United States, 
    39 Fed. Cl. 529
    , 557-61 (1997), aff’d, 
    178 F.3d 1307
    (Fed. Cir. 1998) (table); Kit San Azusa, J.V. v. United States, 
    32 Fed. Cl. 647
    ,
    2
    / Even if the contracting officer were now to be presented with the recalculation claim,
    his ability to issue a valid final decision on such a claim would be precluded by the Sharman
    doctrine. See, e.g., Sharman, 
    2 F.3d at 1571
     (“Once a claim is in litigation, the Department of
    Justice gains exclusive authority to act in the pending litigation [and] [t]hat exclusive authority
    divests the contracting officer of his authority to issue a final decision on the claim.”) (citations
    omitted). The amount due plaintiff under CLIN 001 and Contract Modificiation M004 has been
    in litigation since January 29, 2014.
    4
    663-64 (1995), aff’d in relevant part, 
    86 F.3d 1175
     (Fed. Cir. 1996). In Kit San
    Azusa, this court, relying on Sharman and Placeway Constr. Corp. v. United
    States, 
    920 F.2d 903
     (Fed. Cir. 1990), allowed a government counterclaim to
    proceed even though the government’s claim for liquidated damages had not been
    the subject of a contracting officer’s final decision. The exception to the
    presentment requirement, however, was narrowly construed.
    The court commented, first, that the United States Court of Appeals for the
    Federal Circuit “has allowed the Government to litigate set-offs and
    ‘mirror-image’ claims even in the absence of a direct decision by the CO.”
    Kit San Azusa, 32 Fed. Cl. at 663 (citing Placeway, 
    920 F.2d at 906-07
    ). There,
    the court opined that the Federal Circuit, in effect, deemed the contracting
    officer’s retainage of a portion of the contract price to be a decision on the
    government’s claim for those funds. Id. at 663-64. The court also interpreted
    Sharman to permit both the contractor’s and government’s mirror-image claims to
    proceed as long as one of the mirror-image claims had been “decided” by the
    contracting officer. Id. at 664 (citing Sharman, 
    2 F.3d at 1570
    ).
    The Kit San Azusa court limited the government’s counterclaim, however,
    to the amount of the retainage determined by the contracting officer. 32 Fed. Cl.
    at 664. The court stated that
    to the extent that the Government’s assessed liquidated
    damages do not exceed the amount of the retainage, the
    Government may litigate them here [as a counterclaim].
    The Government, however, is precluded from recovering
    liquidated damages over and above the amount of the
    retainage because no CO decision, actual or constructive,
    exists regarding that portion of its liquidated damages
    offset; that is, to the extent that the Government’s
    liquidated damages offset exceeds the retainage, it
    cannot be held to be the mirror image of [the
    contractor’s] claim to recover the retainage.
    Id. Kit San Azusa is the case most on point and guides the court’s decision in this
    matter.
    5
    Following Sharman, Placeway and Kit San Azusa, the government’s
    recalculation claim portion of its proposed counterclaim cannot proceed in this
    court. The recalculation portion of the government’s proposed counterclaim has
    not satisfied the presentment requirement of the CDA. The court therefore lacks
    jurisdiction over the recalculation claim for $279,448. Because this portion of the
    proposed counterclaim is futile, defendant’s motion to amend its answer must
    therefore be denied as to the recalculation claim portion of the proposed
    counterclaim.3
    At oral argument, government counsel asserted that this court possesses
    jurisdiction over the recalculation claim because the recalculation claim presents
    only a “math problem” or an issue of “quantum.” No authority was presented in
    support of this contention. The court is not convinced by this cursory reference
    that the proposed recalculation counterclaim for $279,448 can be analogized to a
    claim or counterclaim for which the quantum is adjusted slightly during litigation.
    Indeed, the entire basis for the proposed alteration of the contracting
    officer’s quantum determination rests upon the government expert’s disagreement
    with the contracting officer’s original assessment:
    Based on my review of the contract modifications and
    correspondence related to the Second Complaint for
    Action and my own volume estimates, the Mod 9
    $466,092 credit is less than the credit that should be
    expected for the reduced scope of work on the Project
    ....
    Def.’s Mot Ex. B, at 32-33. What follows that statement is a detailed explanation
    and analysis supporting exactly how the government’s expert arrived at his
    determination that the contracting officer’s withholding from Magnus Pacific was
    insufficient. Id. at 33-34. The expert’s analysis and rationale for the proposed
    increase in quantum, as presented, is a drastic departure from that issued by the
    contracting officer and is not simply a mathematical adjustment. To characterize
    3
    / The court need not reach plaintiff’s arguments that the recalculation portion of the
    government’s proposed counterclaim is barred because of undue delay and undue prejudice to
    Magnus Pacific.
    6
    the requested modification as a mere math adjustment would, in effect, supplant
    the contracting officer’s determination with that of the government expert - a
    result neither contemplated nor permitted under the CDA.
    The government’s proposed counterclaim demonstrates that the contracting
    officer’s final decision of January 13, 2014 must be radically and fundamentally
    altered to arrive at the $279,448 figure for the recalculation claim. See Proposed
    Amended Answer ¶¶ 47-54. The recalculation claim cannot be characterized as a
    mere “math problem” to permit inclusion of the proposed recalculation claim in
    the government’s amended answer. The government’s motion must therefore be
    denied in this regard.
    Government counsel’s sole comment on Kit San Azusa at oral argument
    was that the case provides only persuasive authority. The court finds that Kit San
    Azusa is persuasive where, correctly following binding precedent, it limited a
    government counterclaim before this court to the amount retained by the
    contracting officer. The government in this case has not met its burden to show
    that the court has jurisdiction under the CDA for the recalculation portion of its
    proposed counterclaim.
    II.   Plaintiff’s Challenge to Defendant’s Retainage Claim
    Very little of plaintiff’s opposition brief is devoted specifically to the
    government’s retainage claim. The court reproduces the relevant portion of the
    paragraph plaintiff devotes to this topic:
    [W]hile it is true that Magnus Pacific has at all times
    been on notice of the Government’s “inten[t] to retain”
    the $466,092.00 referenced in the First Amended
    Complaint and answer thereto, that “retention” issue is
    already fully joined via those pleadings. In that regard,
    Magnus Pacific alleges an entitlement to $431,056.00 in
    its Second Cause of Action, which is the difference
    between the $466,092.00 credit claimed by the
    Government and the $35,036.00 credit that Magnus
    Pacific contends was proper. (First Amended Complaint
    at ¶¶ 20 and 27.) Those allegations were denied by the
    7
    Government. (Answer to First Amended Complaint, at
    ¶¶ 20 and 27.) Accordingly, as to the parties’ dispute
    over this credit, a counterclaim is neither necessary nor
    appropriate to preserve the Government’s right to argue
    the relevant issues.
    Pl.’s Opp. at 3. Plaintiff cites no authority whereby this court may deny a motion
    to amend an answer to present a counterclaim merely because, in the plaintiff’s
    view, the counterclaim is “neither necessary nor appropriate.”4 Id.
    Because plaintiff concedes that the issue of the government’s right to the
    retainage of $466,092 has been “fully joined” since early 2014, the court cannot
    deny the government the opportunity to formally state its well-established
    litigation position via a counterclaim. Discovery has necessarily encompassed
    both the scope of the government’s retainage counterclaim and the scope of
    plaintiff’s claim for virtually the same amount of money.
    Further, the court does not view the government’s delay in formulating its
    retainage counterclaim as “undue.” Certainly this counterclaim could have been
    proposed earlier in the parties’ pretrial preparations. Many attorneys, however,
    revise their initial understanding of a case when an approaching trial deadline
    forces them to closely examine the strengths and weaknesses of their evidence and
    arguments. The portion of the government’s motion asserting its right to bring its
    retainage counterclaim, while somewhat delayed, was not unduly delayed in the
    context of these proceedings.
    As for “undue prejudice,” the parties have had adequate time to prepare
    their cases with respect to the $466,092 retained by the contracting officer.
    Plaintiff does not argue, and cannot argue, that Magnus Pacific has not had a full
    chance to prepare its arguments on this issue. See Pl.’s Opp. at 3 (stating that the
    “‘retention’ issue is already fully joined”). Nor has plaintiff explained how
    Magnus Pacific would be unduly prejudiced by the transformation of the
    government’s defense of the almost entirely contested $466,092 retainage into a
    counterclaim which seeks to validate that retainage.
    4
    / At oral argument, plaintiff renewed its contention that no retainage counterclaim is
    necessary to protect money that the government already possesses.
    8
    Plaintiff nonetheless argues, without explanation, that the retainage
    counterclaim is unnecessary and inappropriate. Id. Defendant appears to
    acknowledge that the necessity of its counterclaim is uncertain. See Def.’s Mot. at
    2 (stating that the retainage portion of the counterclaim is proposed “in an
    abundance of caution and in the absence of legal precedent in the area”); Def.’s
    Reply at 7 n.2 (“[T]the Government has sought leave to amend its answer to the
    extent that the Government’s retention of funds in connection with a credit might
    be construed to be in the nature of an affirmative claim in an abundance of
    caution, given the absence of definitive law in the area.”). Although the
    government might achieve the same result in this litigation with or without the
    retainage counterclaim, in the court’s view this not a sufficient reason to deny
    defendant’s motion. Because no persuasive reason to deny defendant’s request to
    bring its retainage counterclaim has been proffered by plaintiff, leave to amend the
    government’s answer to bring the retainage counterclaim must be freely given.
    III.   Conclusion
    Accordingly, it is hereby ORDERED that
    (1)    Defendant’s Motion for Leave of Court to File Amended Answer
    with Counterclaim, filed June 10, 2016, is GRANTED in part, as to
    the retainage counterclaim, and DENIED in part, as to the
    recalculation counterclaim, as stated in this order;
    (2)    Defendant shall FILE an Amended Answer and (Retainage)
    Counterclaim, on or before July 20, 2016;5
    (3)    Defendant’s Amended Answer and (Retainage) Counterclaim
    SHALL NOT INCLUDE any recalculation counterclaim or the
    following paragraphs of its proposed amended answer filed June 10,
    2016: ¶¶ 47-54, 56, and the second and third sentences of ¶ 36; and,
    5
    / The court notes that there is a typographical error in the proposed amended answer and
    counterclaim filed June 10, 2016. The date noted in ¶ 42 of the proposed amended answer is
    listed elsewhere as January 13, 2014, not January 31, 2014. See, e.g., Def.’s In Limine Mot.
    Corrected App. at 253. Defendant should correct this typographical error in its Amended Answer
    and (Retainage) Counterclaim.
    9
    (4)   Plaintiff’s Answer to Defendant’s (Retainage) Counterclaim shall
    be FILED on or before July 29, 2016.
    /s/Lynn J. Bush
    LYNN J. BUSH
    Senior Judge
    10