THOMAS C. WHEELER, Judge.
Plaintiff, WHR Group, Inc. ("WHR"), prevailed in a bid protest,
In January 2013, the Federal Bureau of Investigation ("FBI") issued a competitive solicitation to procure relocation services for its personnel when they are required to move. The FBI limited the solicitation to companies holding a GSA Federal Supply Schedule contract to provide such services. "Relocation services" for FBI personnel are designed to minimize the inconvenience of moving, and include home sale services, home marketing services, destination area services, reports, mortgage counseling, property management services, special handling transactions, and move management services.
The FBI received proposals from seven offerors who met all of the technical requirements.
The FBI at first opposed the Brookfield protest, but later changed its course following an "outcome prediction" conference with the GAO attorney assigned to the case. The FBI elected to resolve Brookfield's protest by entering into a settlement agreement on June 7, 2013.
In response to CapRelo's protest of the fourth award to Brookfield, the FBI first filed a motion to dismiss which the GAO denied. Following GAO's denial, the FBI announced its intention to take "corrective action."
On the merits of the protest before Judge Block, WHR prevailed in all respects. On August 12, 2013, Judge Block entered a temporary restraining order ("TRO") preventing the FBI from proceeding with a new procurement. On March 21, 2014, Judge Block granted WHR's motion for judgment on the administrative record and entered a permanent injunction again preventing any new procurement. The Court entered a final judgment on March 27, 2014. The time for filing an appeal expired on May 27, 2014, but none of the parties filed an appeal. WHR's motion for recovery of attorneys' and expenses followed on June 17, 2014.
The basis for the granting of injunctive relief was that the FBI's decision to take corrective action was not rationally related to any procurement defect. The protest filed by CapRelo, the fourth lowest offeror, against the Brookfield award, the sixth lowest offeror, did not implicate any of the three lowest priced awards. There was no rational justification for canceling the solicitation and starting over with a new procurement.
To receive an award of attorneys' fees and expenses under EAJA, five conditions must be met: (1) the fee application must be submitted within 30 days of final judgment in the action and be supported by an itemized statement; (2) at the time the civil action was initiated, the applicant, if a corporation, must not have been valued at more than $7,000,000 in net worth or employed more than 500 employees; (3) the applicant must have been the "prevailing party" in a civil action brought by or against the United States; (4) the Government's position must not have been "substantially justified;" and (5) there cannot exist any special circumstances that would make an award unjust. 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(A), (B);
An EAJA fee application is timely if it is submitted within 30 days of final judgment in the action. 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(1)(B). The term "final judgment" means "a judgment that is final and not appealable." 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(2)(G). In the present case, the Court entered its judgment on March 27, 2014, and the 60-day appeal period expired on May 27, 2014 without any party taking an appeal.
WHR meets the size and net worth standards necessary to be eligible for an award under EAJA. 28 U.S.C. § 2412(d)(2)(B)(ii). Through the declaration of Robert Keefe, WHR's President, the Court is satisfied that WHR has at all relevant times employed far fewer than 500 persons, and that its net worth was below the $7,000,000 threshold. In an exhibit to his declaration, Mr. Keefe has attached an audited financial statement for 2013 showing a net worth of less than $7,000,000. Defendant does not contest that WHR meets the size requirements of EAJA.
A plaintiff is a prevailing party under EAJA if it is granted some relief on the merits of its claim.
Where, as here, the Government loses its case on the merits, it bears the burden of showing that its position was "substantially justified."
The FBI's plan to implement corrective action took a wrong turn when the agency decided to award a fourth contract to Brookfield to resolve Brookfield's GAO protest, notwithstanding that Brookfield was only the sixth-priced offeror in line for award. Thus, in settling with Brookfield, the FBI planned to leave the three lowest-priced contracts in place, pass over the fourth- and fifth-priced offerors, and award an additional contract to Brookfield. Even though the fourth- and fifth-priced offerors were not then involved in Brookfield's GAO protest, it was naïve for the FBI to think that these passed-over offerors would not complain about the FBI's apparent favoritism toward Brookfield. Indeed, in addition to awarding a fourth contract to Brookfield, the FBI executed the aforementioned settlement agreement with Brookfield specifically anticipating that these passed-over offerors might file a new protest at the GAO or the Court of Federal Claims. The June 7, 2013 settlement agreement provided in part:
Administrative Record ("AR") 1813 (emphasis added).
As the events played out, two passed-over offerors, CapRelo and TRC, did file new bid protests at the GAO aimed only at challenging the fourth contract award to Brookfield. As planned in the settlement agreement provisions quoted above, the FBI and Brookfield filed motions for summary dismissal at the GAO. AR 2031-33, 2034-43, 2051-53;
At this point, pursuant to paragraph (e) of the settlement agreement with Brookfield, the FBI announced on July 12, 2013 that it would take new "corrective action" to resolve the CapRelo protest. In transmittals to the four BPA awardees, the contracting officer stated that each of the BPAs would be canceled, and the FBI would start over with a new solicitation. AR 2068-69. There was no rational reason to disturb the three awards to Allegiance, Lexicon, or WHR, because the FBI's needs for the relocation services still existed, and CapRelo had not even challenged these three awards in its bid protest. The cancellation of all the BPAs went far beyond the permissible corrective action under the law.
An agency's corrective action must be rationally related to some procurement defect.
The record reflects that Brookfield was able to negotiate a favorable deal with the FBI in which it would either receive a fourth contract award as the sixth-priced offeror, or it would at least obtain an opportunity to rebid the procurement at the expense of the three unchallenged awardees, Allegiance, Lexicon, and WHR. The fact that the FBI agreed in the settlement to make some changes to the solicitation only if further bid protests were not summarily dismissed shows that the changes were just "window dressing" to make the cancellations of the three unchallenged contracts seem legitimate. Indeed, accepting that the FBI wanted to resolve the original Brookfield bid protest, it could have done so just by awarding a fourth contract to Brookfield without the need for any settlement agreement. The chances of the passed-over offerors filing further bid protests were so high that Brookfield's fall-back position was to at least insure a rebid to be able to compete again. The settlement agreement in itself amounted to impermissible favoritism of a single offeror that was not even in line for award.
In a rebid scenario, Allegiance, Lexicon, and WHR would be prejudiced by having to compete again for contracts they had already won in a fair competition, but now with their prices disclosed.
Judge Block concluded his opinion on the merits of WHR's protest with the following observation:
Neither party contends that there are any special circumstances to be considered in assessing WHR's claim for attorneys' fees and expenses. Therefore, this category of the five EAJA conditions need not be considered.
The EAJA allows recovery of attorneys' fees and expenses, subject to certain limitations, including a cap on the hourly rate for fees. A statutory $125 per hour cap applies to attorneys' fees claims, "unless the court determines that an increase in the cost of living or a special factor, such as a limited availability of qualified attorneys for the proceedings involved, justifies a higher fee." 28 U.S.C. § 2412 (d)(2)(A)(ii). Cost of living adjustments to the statutory cap should be freely granted.
WHR is seeking a cost of living adjustment to the statutory cap for attorneys' fees. The $125 hourly cap was established 19 years ago, in March 1996. WHR's cost of living adjustment is based on Consumer Price Index ("CPI") data between March 1996 and the date on which the legal services were rendered. Where the legal services span a number of months, as here, our Court has used the "mid-point" method to perform a CPI calculation.
WHR is claiming attorneys' fees for the period June 2013 through June 2014. The mid-point in that period is December 2013. To calculate the cost of living adjustment for March 1996 through December 2013, the statutory cap of $125 is multiplied by the CPI in December 2013 (233.049) and divided by the CPI in March 1996 (155.7). This calculation results in an inflation adjusted hourly rate of $187.10. Defendant does not oppose this hourly rate.
WHR's total claim for attorneys' fees and expenses is $110,657.59. This amount is comprised of 565 attorney hours at a rate of $187.10 per hour ($105,711.50), 12.4 hours of paralegal and summer associate time at $145 per hour ($1,798.00), and out-of-pocket expenses of $3,148.09. The Government challenges only a portion of these fees and costs which were incurred between the time this case was ripe for decision (September 20, 2013) and the time the Court's decision was issued (March 21, 2014). The Government asserts that WHR's attorneys continued to bill time to this protest after the matter had been fully briefed. The Government states that the time entries either were for unnecessary work, or for work related to other litigation.
WHR explains that the legal services spent between September 20, 2013 and March 21, 2014 (29.6 hours) predominantly were undertaken in responding to Defendant's notices to the Court of the FBI's intention to continue issuing noncompetitive extensions of the Brookfield task order, for months at a time, rather than obtaining relocation services through WHR's validly awarded BPA.
Based upon the foregoing, the Court awards EAJA attorneys' fees and expenses to WHR in the amount of $110,657.59. The clerk is directed to enter judgment in WHR's favor in this amount.
On or before June 30, 2015, the parties shall carefully review this opinion for competition-sensitive, proprietary, confidential or other protected information, and submit to the Court proposed redactions to this opinion, if any, before it is released for publication. The parties are requested to minimize their requested redactions so that the Court may publish as much of the decision as possible.
IT IS SO ORDERED.