ARMED SERVICES BOARD OF CONTRACT APPEALS
Appeal of -- )
)
Public Warehousing Company, K.S.C. ) ASBCA No. 58088
)
Under Contract No. SPM300-05-D-3128 )
APPEARANCES FOR THE APPELLANT: Michael R. Charness, Esq.
Bryan T. Bunting, Esq.
Elizabeth Krabill Mcintyre, Esq.
Vinson & Elkins LLP
Washington, DC
APPEARANCES FOR THE GOVERNMENT: Daniel K. Poling, Esq.
DLA Chief Trial Attorney
John F. Basiak, Jr., Esq.
Keith J. Feigenbaum, Esq.
Kari L. Scheck, Esq.
DLA Troop Support
Philadelphia, PA
OPINION BY ADMINISTRATIVE JUDGE O'CONNELL
ON THE GOVERNMENT'S MOTION TO DISMISS
The government moves to dismiss this appeal without prejudice pending the
resolution of a criminal case against appellant in the Northern District of Georgia. In
the alternative, the government requests a stay. We deny the motion to dismiss but
grant the motion to stay.
STATEMENT OF FACTS (SOF) FOR PURPOSES OF THE MOTION
1. The "prime vendor" contract at issue in this appeal, as well as 2 earlier
prime vendor contracts awarded to appellant, have thus far been the subject of at least
11 panel decisions by the Board. 1 In this opinion, we will describe only those facts
necessary for the pending motion.
1 Pub. Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 56116, 08-1BCA,33,787 (PWC I)
Pub. Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 56116, 09-1BCA,34,038 (PWC II)
Pub. Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 56116, 09-2 BCA, 34,264 (PWC Ill)
Pub. Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 56888, 09-2 BCA, 34,265 (PWC IV)
Pub. Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 56022, 13 BCA, 35,201 (PWC V)
Pub. Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 57510, 13 BCA, 35,314 (PWC VJ)
Pub. Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 58078, 13 BCA, 35,460 (PWC VII)
2. In July 2005, the Defense Logistics Agency (DLA) awarded
Public Warehousing Company, K.S.C. (PWC) Contract No. SPM300-05-D-3128
(the PVII contract) to deliver food, beverages and related items to military units
and other authorized customers in Iraq (compl. iJ 6; gov't mot. at 2).
3. PWC transported the food and other items on trucks that traveled in
convoys. It contends that in December 2007 U.S. military personnel began requiring it
to provide extra semi-truck tractors (bobtails) not required by the contract; the bobtails
were used to recover appellant's assets as well as the assets of other contractors in the
convoys when they experienced breakdowns or other problems during the trips.
(Compl. iii! 12, 16-17) Appellant contends that it had no choice but to comply because
the government would not have allowed its trucks in the convoys (id. iii! 17-18).
4. On 24 October 2011, PWC submitted a certified claim to the contracting
officer seeking about $7.5 million (R4, tab 44). The contracting officer did not issue a
final decision and on 20 April 2012 PWC filed this appeal based on a deemed denial.
5. On 8 November 2016, we granted the government leave to amend its answer
to plead affirmative defenses of fraud in the inducement, first material breach,
sovereign acts doctrine, political question doctrine, assumption of risk, and failure to
mitigate. PWC, ASBCA No. 58088 (PWC XI).
6. Seven years earlier, November 2009, a grand jury in the Northern District of
Georgia issued an indictment against PWC for various fraud offenses arising from the
contract at issue. That case is still pending.
7. The superseding indictment in that case charges PWC with major fraud
against the United States, wire fraud, and conspiracy to commit major fraud. The·
government's theories include allegations that PWC misrepresented the expected prices
of a market basket of goods in submitting its proposal for the contract and that it
overcharged the government in a variety of ways, including: the use of costlier vendors
that provided PWC a prompt payment discount; improperly charging the government
for warehousing and distribution costs; inflating prices from distributors and vendors;
improperly retaining rebates, allowances and discounts; and reducing the pack size of
products to increase distribution fees. (Gov't mot. at 6-7; app. opp'n at 6-7)
Pub. Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 58078, 14-1 BCA ii 35,574 (PWC VIII)
Pub. Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 56022, 15-1 BCA ii 36,062 (PWC IX)
Pub. Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 59020, 16-1BCAiJ36,366 (PWC X)
Pub. Warehousing Co., ASBCA No. 58088, slip op. (8 Nov. 2016) (PWC XI)
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DECISION
The Constitution does not require a stay of civil proceedings pending the
outcome of criminal proceedings but a tribunal has the discretion to stay the civil
proceeding, postpone civil discovery, or impose protective orders and conditions.
Afro-Lecon, Inc. v. United States, 820 F.2d 1198, 1202 (Fed. Cir. 1987). The decision
to stay a proceeding is made on a case-by-case basis, using a flexible approach that
balances the parties' interests. Id.
The parties are in general agreement with respect to the factors that we consider
in determining whether this appeal should be dismissed or stayed based upon potential
interference with criminal proceedings (gov't mot. at 9; app. opp'n at 13-14).
These factors include: ( 1) whether the facts, issues, and
witnesses in both proceedings are substantially similar;
(2) whether the on-going investigations would be
compromised in going forward with the case; (3) whether
the proposed stay could harm the non-moving party; and
(4) whether the duration of the requested stay is
reasonable.
PWC, ASBCA No. 56116, 08-1BCA~33,787 at 167,227 (PWC I) (citing, inter alia,
Landis v. North American Co., 299 U.S. 248, 254-55 (1936)).
A review of the precedent of the Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit, and
its predecessor court, the Court of Claims, 2 indicates that our reviewing court has
generally been amenable to requests for a stay when there is a parallel criminal matter.
A brief review of precedent, starting with the Supreme Court's decision in Landis, will
be helpful in considering this motion.
As we observed above, Landis has informed the standard that we apply.
However, it is important to consider Landis in its proper context because the Supreme
Court's decision arose from a much different set of facts than we have in this appeal.
Specifically, the core issue was whether the Public Utility Holding Company Act of
1935 was constitutional. Landis, 299 U.S. at 249. At one time the government faced
47 lawsuits in 13 districts on this issue. Id. at 252. The question before the Court was
whether the plaintiffs in one case could be forced to stand aside, through a judicially
imposed stay, while another district court resolved a similar case involving other
2 In South Corp. v. United States, 690 F.2d 1368, 1370 (fed. Cir. 1982), the Federal
Circuit adopted as precedent the decisions of the Court of Claims issued before
the close of business on 30 September 1982. Decisions of the Court of Claims
are, therefore, binding on the Board.
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companies. Id. at 249-55. Thus, there were no pending criminal actions against the
respondents that the Court had to factor into its analysis.
Notwithstanding this distinction, the Supreme Court made several important
statements in Landis. The Court explained that a tribunal has the inherent power to
control its docket by issuing stays, which require weighing competing interests and
maintaining an even balance. The proponent of the stay must make out a clear case of
hardship or inequity in going forward if there is even a fair possibility that the stay will
cause damage to someone else. The Court held that "[ e]specially in cases of
extraordinary public moment, the individual may be required to submit to delay not
immoderate in extent and not oppressive in its consequences if the public welfare or
convenience will thereby be promoted." Stays of an indefinite duration are an abuse
of discretion in the absence of a pressing need; a stay must be kept in the bounds of
moderation. 299 U.S. at 254-56.
Peden v. United States, 512 F.2d 1099 (Ct. Cl. 1975), is a step closer to the
facts in this appeal. In Peden, a worker who had been removed from government
employment sought review of that decision at the Civil Service Commission (CSC).
The CSC suspended proceedings in the case for about 20 months because of a district
court criminal case based on the same facts that led to his removal. In considering this
delay, the Court of Claims stated: "it has long been the practice to 'freeze' civil
proceedings when a criminal prosecution involving the same facts is warming up or
under way." Id. at 1103. Such a freeze, "rises out of a sense that deferrable civil
proceedings constitute improper interference with the criminal proceedings if they
chum over the same evidentiary material." The Court of Claims upheld the propriety
of the stay. Id. at 1103-04.
In Litton Systems, Inc. v. United States, 215 Ct. Cl. 1056 (1978), the Board
conducted a hearing that resulted in a monetary award to the appellant. The appellant
later filed suit in the Court of Claims to obtain payment of the award. On the same
day, a grand jury returned an indictment against the appellant for submission of a false
claim. The government relied on the criminal case to file affirmative defenses, a
counterclaim, and a special plea in fraud at the Court of Claims. The District Court
later dismissed the indictment for prosecutorial misconduct, which the government
appealed to the Fourth Circuit. Id. at 1056-57.
In analyzing whether proceedings should be stayed pending resolution of the
criminal charges, the Court of Claims observed that determining w~ether the claim
was false would require a great deal of overlap of witnesses and other evidence with
the criminal prosecution if it was revived by the Fourth Circuit. It also observed that
the "possible pendency of parallel civil and criminal proceedings involving at least
many of the same matters cautions us to try to be sure that the broader discovery
permissible in civil proceedings is not unnecessarily used to compromise parallel
criminal proceedings." Litton, 215 Ct. Cl. at 1057-58 (citing Peden, 512 F.2d at 1104).
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Based on these considerations, as well as comity for the Fourth Circuit and the
clarification that could be provided by its decision, the Court of Claims held that the
case should be stayed until the Fourth Circuit ruled. At that time, the issue as to
whether the case should be stayed for the duration of the criminal proceedings could be
examined. Litton, 215 Ct. Cl. at 1057-58.
In Luigi Goldstein, Inc. v. United States, 217 Ct. Cl. 733 (1978), the Court of
Claims affirmed a trial judge's order suspending proceedings because of a criminal
matter. In Goldstein, however, the criminal matter was still at the grand jury
investigation stage; no indictment had even been issued. The Court of Claims did not
explain its reasoning in depth but, citing Peden and Litton, it again stated that it was
"reluctant to require the Government to proceed in civil litigation when related
criminal procedures are still in progress." Id. at 734.
Finally, in Afro-Lecon, the Federal Circuit vacated an order of the General
Services Board of Contract Appeals denying a request for a stay during the pendency
of parallel criminal proceedings. The twist in this case was that it was the contractor
that requested the stay after its officers, former employees and consultants were
advised by counsel not to participate in discovery to avoid incriminating themselves.
Afro-Lecon, 820 F.2d at 1200. The court of appeals remanded the case to the board,
directing it to apply a flexible approach that balanced the needs of both parties.
Id. at 1202-07 .- The court did so while observing the potential that broad civil
discovery rules may be used by both sides to gain an improper advantage in the
criminal case. Id. at 1203-04 (citing, inter alia, Peden); see Skip Kirchdorfer, Inc.,
ASBCA Nos. 32637, 35074, 89-1BCA~21,193 at 106,955.
With this precedent in mind, we return to the four factors identified in PWC I:
Factor I: Similar Facts, Issues, Witnesses
In support of its motion, the government has submitted a letter to DLA from
John A. Hom, the United States Attorney for the Northern District of Georgia, dated
30 September 2016 (gov't mot., ex. 1), in which Mr. Hom requests that DLA move to
dismiss this appeal pending the outcome of the criminal case. In this letter, Mr. Hom
contends that the affirmative defenses pied by DLA in this appeal "encompass
identical issues as the pending criminal case" in the district court (gov't mot. at 7).
Similarly, the government contends in its brief that the conduct it alleges in its
affirmative defenses is "indistinguishable" from the conduct alleged in the superseding
indictment (gov't mot. at 10). For example, it states in its fraud-in-the-inducement
defense that PWC submitted market basket data and invoices in its proposal that were
artificially low, knowing that they would rise post-award, which is the same conduct
alleged in count one of the superseding indictment (id.). In addition, DLA states that
its first material breach defenses are substantially similar to the indictment. For
example, the government contends in both that PWC overcharged the government by
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failing to purchase less expensive products than it was instructed to purchase because
the vendor did not provide PWC a prompt payment discount. (Id.) See PWC XI.
PWC contends that the affirmative defenses are not similar to the criminal case.
It bases this contention on the requirement that the government prove specific intent in
the criminal case, which, according to PWC, the government does not have to prove at
the Board in connection with its affirmative defenses (app. opp'n at 13-14). PWC also
points out that its constructive change claim concerning the bobtails is unrelated to the
criminal case or the fraud-in-the-inducement and first material breach affirmative
defenses (id. at 14-15). However, PWC does not appear to dispute that the affirmative
defenses and the criminal case involve the same basic facts and witnesses.
We agree with the government that there is a great deal of similarity between
the criminal case and its fraud-in-the-inducement and first material breach affirmative
defenses. Indeed, the government seems to have used the indictment as a model in
crafting its affirmative defense. Thus, for example, both the Board and the district
court would be called upon to adjudicate the government's contentions that PWC
submitted artificially low market basket pricing in its proposal to obtain the contract,
which would involve the same or very similar facts and the same or substantially
overlapping witnesses. See PWC XI. Moreover, even if we credit PWC's argument
that the criminal case is distinct because the government must prove a specific intent to
defraud, we do not believe that this changes the fact that the issues in the two cases are
similar. As the government observes in its reply, even if its affirmative defenses at the
Board do not require it to prove specific intent, it has alleged in those affirmative
defenses that PWC acted with knowledge and intent. For example, it alleges in
paragraph 5 of its affirmative defenses that PWC knew that the prices it was
submitting were artificially low (reply at 5). Thus, we agree with the government that
even if the precise elements of the affirmative defenses do not line up with the
criminal offenses, the alleged criminal intent of PWC's officers and directors are
relevant to this appeal.
Accordingly, we conclude that there is sufficient similarity of facts, witnesses
and issues that this factor weighs in favor of the government.
Factors II & III: Balancing the Harms
Both parties contend that they will be harmed if the Board does not issue a
decision in its favor. The government is primarily concerned that PWC will use the
much more liberal discovery available at the Board to its advantage. Echoing the
decisions in Peden, Litton, Goldstein, and Afro-Lecon, DLA and U.S. Attorney Hom
contend that PWC will gain an inappropriate advantage if it can use the civil
discovery rules to circumvent the limitations on criminal discovery in the district
court. U.S. Attorney Hom also contends that, due to the similarity in facts, witnesses,
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and issues in the two cases, it would be virtually impossible to contain discovery in
this appeal so that it does not impact the criminal case (gov't mot., ex. 1 at 5).
The government also contends that our earlier decisions show that the threat of
Board discovery prejudicing the government in the criminal case is not just a
theoretical problem. Thus, in PWC I, we granted a government motion to stay to allow
the Department of Justice to complete the criminal investigation. In that decision we
stated "[i]t is clear to us ... that PWC's primary purpose in wishing to proceed with the
appeal is to use the Board's decision to influence the direction of the on-going
investigations, and to help its position in potential settlement discussions." PWC I,
08-1BCAii33,787 at 167,229. Similarly, in ASBCA No. 56022, 13 BCA ii 35,201
(PWC V), the government moved to dismiss or to place limitations on depositions after
PWC was found to be live streaming the contracting officer's deposition to PWC's
criminal counsel, who apparently were sending questions for appellant's counsel to ask
the contracting officer. The Board denied the motion to dismiss but placed limits on
the depositions going forward.
PWC counters by more or less stating that the cat is out of the bag with respect
to discovery. It observes that the government has already produced 24 million pages
of documents in the criminal case and states that, unless the government is withholding
exculpatory materials, "whatever harm broad discovery might have caused the
criminal case is a moot issue at this point" (app. opp'n at 17). Moreover, the
government states in its brief that PWC has already deposed five witnesses, including
two of the contracting officers (gov't reply at 9 n.1 ).
In light of these significant arguments from appellant, the Board conducted a
status conference on 10 November 2016 to get more information concerning the status
of discovery (see Bd. corr. ltr. dtd. 14 November 2016). The parties reported that
significant discovery has taken place, including depositions of two contracting
officers. However, the parties have not conducted discovery on the affirmative
defenses. Rather, discovery would be expanded due to the Board granting the
government leave to amend to add these affirmative defenses. Thus, the danger of
civil discovery prejudicing the criminal case still exists.
PWC also contends that it will be prejudiced by a delay caused by dismissal or
a stay. It observes that evidence may become stale or unavailable and that witnesses'
memories will dim or the witnesses will become unavailable (app. opp'n at 20-21).
PWC's concerns are indeed significant, but it shares in the blame for this matter
dragging out for so long. As we found, the government began requiring bobtails
nearly four years before PWC submitted its claim (SOF iii! 3, 4). Moreover, as we
determined in our opinion on the government's motion to amend, the docket in this
appeal has been mostly quiet since PWC filed it in April 2012, with both parties
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seemingly content to concentrate on the litigation of other appeals. PWC XI,
ASBCA No. 58088 (8 Nov. 2016).
In light of the Court of Claims and Federal Circuit's decisions in Peden, Litton,
Goldstein, and Afro-Lecon, we are reluctant to force the government to continue with
discovery in this appeal while the criminal proceedings are pending. This is even
more so where, as discussed above, PWC has some history of trying to use discovery
in Board appeals to gain an advantage in the criminal case. We conclude that the
balance of harms weighs in favor of the government.
Factor IV: Duration
In his non-final report and recommendation on PWC's venue motions in the
criminal case issued on 28 September 2016, Magistrate Judge Alan J. Baverman, in
response to a government statement that trial was "imminent," wrote: "the Court is
now in position to roll out rulings on dispositive and non-dispositive motions, but trial
will not likely occur until next year" (gov't mot., ex. 5 at 40-41 ). We construe this
statement to mean that there is a reasonable chance that the criminal case will reach
trial in 2017.
After considering the various contentions of the parties, including the
government's concern about prejudicing the criminal case and PWC's concern that
this appeal will grow stale if it is dismissed, we believe that the best way to balance the
parties' competing interests is to stay this appeal for a limited period of time to allow
the criminal case to proceed. Accordingly, we will stay this appeal for one year from
the date of this decision. At the expiration of that year, the parties shall file a joint
status report suggesting further proceedings. If the criminal case is resolved before
that time, the parties shall file the status report within two weeks of the conclusion of
the criminal case.
CONCLUSION
The government's motion to dismiss is denied. The government's alternate
motion to stay is granted, for one year from the date of this decision.
Dated: 8 December 2016
~Jio~~~
Administrative Judge
Armed Services Board
of Contract Appeals
(Signatures continued)
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I concur I concur
~~ER~
Administrative Judge Administrative Judge
Acting Chairman Vice Chairman
Armed Services Board Armed Services Board
of Contract Appeals of Contract Appeals
I certify that the foregoing is a true copy of the Opinion and Decision of the
Armed Services Board of Contract Appeals in ASBCA No. 58088, Appeal of Public
Warehousing Company, K.S.C., rendered in conformance with the Board's Charter.
Dated:
JEFFREY D. GARDIN
Recorder, Armed Services
Board of Contract Appeals
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