Source: s3://data.kl3m.ai/documents/govinfo/USCOURTS/USCOURTS-caDC-93-05345/USCOURTS-caDC-93-05345-0/pdf.json

Nature of Suit Code: 890
Nature of Suit: Other Statutory Actions
Cause of Action: 

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United States Court of Appeals

FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT

Argued February 16, 1995 Decided June 9, 1995

No. 93-5345

A&S COUNCIL OIL COMPANY, INC., ET AL.,

APPELLEES

v.

PHILIP LADER, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS

ADMINISTRATOR OF THE UNITED STATES SMALL

BUSINESS ADMINISTRATION,

APPELLANT

Appeal from the United States District Court

for the District of Columbia

(87cv01969)

Daniel F. Van Horn, Assistant United States Attorney, argued the cause for appellant. With him on

the briefs were Eric H. Holder, Jr., United States Attorney, R. Craig Lawrence and John D. Bates,

Assistant United States Attorneys.

Julius E. Mensah argued the cause and filed the brief for appellees.

Before: BUCKLEY, WILLIAMS and SENTELLE, Circuit Judges.

Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge WILLIAMS.

WILLIAMS, Circuit Judge: In the early 1980s the Small Business Administration

subcontracted with three minority- owned smallbusinessesto performfederal procurement contracts

under its § 8(a) program. The companies lost moneyor at any rate failed to make the profits they

anticipated. They sued the SBA's Administrator, alleging that the SBA acted arbitrarily and

capriciously and in excess of its statutory authority because the contract prices failed to guarantee

them a "reasonable profit". The district court found that the SBA was "unjustly enriched" by its

enforcement of the contracts, and that "[t]his unjust enrichment amounts to a taking of private

property without just compensation in violation of the fifth amendment to the Constitution of the

United States." A&S Council Oil Co., Inc. v. Saiki, 799 F. Supp. 1221, 1235, 1238-39 (D.D.C.

1992) ("A&S Council"). On that basis, the court awarded plaintiffs money damages of $3.3 million,

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plus interest from the time of the alleged taking. A&S Council Oil Co., Inc. v. Bowles, Civ. No. 87-

1969-OG, order at 1-2 (D.D.C. Sept. 28, 1993).

We find that plaintiffs' claims cannot properly be characterized as "takings" claims.

Furthermore, though at times plaintiffs cloak the claims in language evocative of the Administrative

Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 702 (1988), they are in fact contract claims covered by the Contract

Disputes Act ("CDA"), 41 U.S.C. §§ 601-613 (1988 & Supp. V 1993). The CDA provides the

exclusive avenue for relief for all such contract claims against the United States. But because the

plaintiffsfailed to exhaust their administrative remedies under theCDA, no judicialreview is available

to them. We therefore reverse and remand to the district court with instructions to dismiss the case.

* * *

Under its § 8(a) program, the Small Business Administration enters supply contracts with

federal government procurement agencies and then arranges to perform those contracts by

subcontracting with "socially and economically disadvantaged small business concerns". 15 U.S.C.

§ 637(a) (Supp. V 1993). A&S Council Oil Company, Williams Fuel Oil Service, and L.H. Smith

Oil Corporation qualified to participate in the program and entered into one or more subcontracts

with the SBA to supply petroleumproductsto military bases and other government installationsfrom

1981 to 1985. In 1987 they filed this suit, alleging that they had been unable to make a profit on the

subcontracts because of the method used to determine the contract prices.

That method was established in a December 5, 1979 "Interagency Agreement" between the

SBA and the Defense Logistics Agency, a division of which, the Defense Fuel Supply Center,

purchases petroleum products for use by the military and other federal agencies. This Agreement

governed all procurements of petroleum products by the DFSC from § 8(a) companies from its

execution through 1985; it thus covered all the subcontracts relevant to this case. Under its terms,

§ 8(a) subcontracts to supply petroleum products were to be at a "fair market price", which the

Agreement defined as the "highest award price for the competitively solicited items (by type of

product and method of delivery)" for a particular commercial market area. Thus, where multiple

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contracts had been competitively awarded for the same product in the same area, the § 8(a)

companies would receive a price equal to the highest of the awarded prices. If only one similar

contract had been awarded in a given area, that contract set the "fair market price". The SBA used

the formula to calculate the price at which it offered each of the subcontractsin question to plaintiffs.

On learning the "fair market price", of course, plaintiffs could have declined to contract; in no case

were § 8(a) companies compelled to enter contracts.

Intheir originalcomplaint, plaintiffs based their claims of district-court jurisdiction and waiver

of sovereign immunity on the SBA's "sue and be sued" clause, 15 U.S.C. § 634(b)(1); the grant of

federal question jurisdiction, 28 U.S.C. § 1331; the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 702;

and the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(2), as well as other statutes no longer relevant. They

sought money damages of $15 million and declaratory relief on the basis of six counts, the first four

of which the plaintiffs abandoned in district court. See A&S Council, 799 F. Supp. at 1226. Count

V recited SBA regulations implementing § 8(a), as well as SBA Standard Operating Procedures,

which stated that SBA policy was to enter into subcontracts that would allow companies to earn a

"reasonable profit". It asserted that the SBA's conduct in negotiating and implementing the

Interagency Agreement "was contrary to SBA rules and policies[and] arbitrary, capricious, an abuse

of discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law." Count VI claimed that the Small Business

Act did not authorize the Administrator "to enter into agreements fixing prices to be paid by federal

procuring agencies to subcontractors under the 8(a) program", a claim that (at least by the time of

this appeal) appears to rest on 15 U.S.C. § 637(a)(3), which provides that a small business selected

to perform a procurement contract under this program "shall, when practicable, participate in any

negotiation of the terms and conditions ofsuch contract." Thus, the theory runs, the SBA exceeded

its statutory authority and its own regulatory constraints by negotiating and implementing the

Interagency Agreement.

The district court initially understood plaintiffs to be making contract claims. Finding that

under the Tucker Act and the Contract Disputes Act the district court lacked jurisdiction over claims

in excess of $10,000 arising out of contracts with the government, the court transferred the case to

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1During the course of this litigation, the United States Claims Court was renamed the Court of

Federal Claims. See Federal Courts Administration Act of 1992, Pub. L. No. 102-572, 106 Stat.

4506. This opinion will simply refer to it as the "Claims Court". 

2

Indeed, even the July 17, 1987 filing in the district court was beyond the 12 months period

allowable for suit in the Claims Court challenging the adverse decision of a contracting officer,

which occurred April 2, 1986. See 41 U.S.C. § 609(a)(3); A&S Council Oil Co., Inc. v. United

States, 16 Cl. Ct. at 744, 746. 

the United States Claims Court.1 A&S Council Oil Co., Inc. v. Abdnor, Civ. No. 87-1969-OG, Mem.

op. at 13-15 (D.D.C. March 2, 1988).

Once transferred, plaintiffs encountered another problem. The Claims Court held that, to the

extent that the plaintiffs' claims were grounded on the CDA, it too lacked jurisdiction, because

plaintiffs had failed to satisfy jurisdictional exhaustion requirements. A&S Council Oil Co., Inc. v.

United States, 16 Cl. Ct. 743, 748 (1989). Two of the plaintiff companies, Williams and Smith, had

never submitted their claims to a contracting officer. The third, A&S Council, had submitted a claim

and lost, but then had failed to perfect a timely appeal to either the Armed Services Board ofContract

Appeals or the Claims Court. Id. at 746.2In considering whether to retransfer the case to the district

court, however, the Claims Court found that none of the claims involved "damages stemming from

contract performance or non-performance". Rather, it viewed plaintiffs as seeking "damages for

alleged illegal conduct occurring in and around October 1979 when the Interagency Agreement was

executed, which injuries were subsequently quantified after entering into the contracts." Id. at 748.

It therefore transferred the case back to the district court under 28 U.S.C. § 1631 (1988).

Once back in the district court, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and

plaintiffs abandoned the Tucker Act as a basis for jurisdiction, saying that they "have not

characterized their complaint as sounding ... in contract." See Plaintiffs' Reply Memorandum in

Support of Motion for Summary Judgment, at 2. The district court then granted summary judgment

for plaintiffs on Counts V and VI. It found statutory violations by the SBA and, without further

explanation, characterized plaintiffs' resulting losses as an unconstitutional taking of their property.

A&S Council, 799 F. Supp. at 1238-39. On March 26, 1993, after further briefing, the court issued

an opinion defining the scope of plaintiffs' recovery"the profit marginsthey should have earned on

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their subcontracts"and referred the calculation of damages to mediation. A&S Council Oil Co.,

Inc. v. Saiki, Civ. No. 87-1969-OG, Mem. op. at 4 (D.D.C. Mar. 26, 1993). As a result of the

mediation, the parties fixed the amount to which plaintiffs would be entitled under the finding of

liability; both parties reserved the right to appeal various issues. On September 18, 1993, the district

court entered its final order and judgment in accordance with the parties' partial settlement. A&S

Council Oil Co., Inc. v. Bowles, Civ. No. 87-1969-OG, Mem. op. (Sept. 18, 1993). The SBA filed

a notice of appeal on November 3, 1993.

* * *

As a threshold matter, plaintiffs contend that we lack jurisdiction because the SBA failed to

appeal within 60 days of the district court's March 1993 order defining the scope of recovery and

referring the quantification issuesto mediation. See 28 U.S.C. § 2107(b) (specifying 60 days as time

limit for filing appeal in action in which the United Statesis a party); Fed. R. App. P. 4(a)(1) (same).

They assert that that order left undone only a "mechanical and uncontroversial" determination of

damages and was therefore final and appealable. See, e.g., Parks v. Pavkovic, 753 F.2d 1397, 1401

(7th Cir. 1985).

We disagree. In Parks the damage computation remaining involved only submission by

plaintiffs of "receipts or other evidence showing what they have paid or still owe", matters that the

court found "unlikely to engender dispute or controversy" and "requir[ing] no analytic or judgmental

determinations that might ... give rise to other appealable questions." 753 F.2d at 1402; cf. St.

Mary's Health Center v. Bowen, 821 F.2d 493, 497-98 (8th Cir. 1987) (mere need to calculate sum

of damages, where amounts to be added were listed in the record and undisputed, does not destroy

finality of order). Here the district court recognized that the damage calculations were the subject

of controversy and thus provided not only for mediation but also for the possibility that mediation

would fail. Mem. op. of Mar. 26 at 12. Indeed, the mediation lasted several days as the parties'

experts debated the issue of the proper "profit" to award plaintiffs. Therefore, the case became

appealable only when the district court entered a judgment with the amount of damages. See Apex

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Fountain Sales, Inc. v. Kleinfeld, 27 F.3d 931 (3d Cir. 1994) (appeal premature where order to

determine amount of damages by submission to an audit leaves a highly contested dispute as to

calculation of net profit). Defendant's appeal was timely filed.

* * *

Because the SBA is an agency of the United States, it enjoys sovereign immunity except to

the extent waived, "and the terms of its consent to be sued in any court define that court'sjurisdiction

to entertain the suit." United States v. Sherwood, 312 U.S. 584, 586 (1941). To determine whether

any asserted waiver is applicable, we must classify plaintiffs' claims. This is no easy matter here.

Counts V and VI use such language as "arbitrary and capricious" and "in excess of statutory

authority", which makes them sound like APA claims, yet plaintiffs pray for money damages of $15

million, relief that the APA's waiver of sovereign immunity explicitly excludes. See 5 U.S.C. § 702

(limiting waiver to actions "seeking relief other than money damages"); see also Hubbard v.

Administrator, EPA, 982 F.2d 531, 532 (D.C. Cir. 1992) (en banc).

Both parties now suggest that insofar as plaintiffs raised a takings claim, there is jurisdiction

in the district court under the SBA's "sue-and-be-sued" clause, 15 U.S.C. § 634(b)(1),

notwithstanding possible negative implications from the Tucker Act's grant of jurisdiction over

takings claims to the Claims Court, 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1). We do not reach that issue, however,

for we see no way in which plaintiffs' assertions can properly be classified as "takings" claims.

Plaintiffs made no takings claim in their complaint. The term first appeared in this litigation, as far

as we have been able to determine, in an eight-line throwaway passage in plaintiffs' March 18, 1991

"Memorandum of Points and Authorities in Support of Plaintiffs' Motion for Summary Judgment",

pp. 10-11. Another eight lines appear in "Plaintiffs' Reply Memorandum in Support of Motion for

Summary Judgment", p. 3. The concept is then invoked summarily in the district court's opinion on

the merits, first in a conclusory statement that the case arises under the takings clause, A&S Council,

799 F. Supp. at 1229, 1234, and in its merits conclusion that the SBA's "unjust enrichment amounts

to a taking", id. at 1238-39. So far as we can tell, it was not until their responsive brief on appeal that

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plaintiffs even tried to identify a property interest that might have been taken, naming their

"regulatory entitlement ... to earn a fair return (i.e., profit) on their investments in these 8(a)

contracts, without interference fromthe operation ofthe InteragencyAgreement." More specifically,

they say that the Interagency Agreement:

is analogous to the rate order which is the focus of state utilities Takings Clause

cases, wherein investment returns might be so unjust as to be confiscatory not only

of the assets but also of the anticipated return on those assets. Duquesne Light Co.

v. Barasch, 488 U.S. 300 (1989).

There is, however, no analogy whatever between the government'simposition of a rate order

that restricts a firm's ability to price its goods or services in the market and thereby earn a return on

its investment, and the government's offer of a contract at a fixed price that ultimately proves

unprofitable for a person who steps forward to grasp the offer. While the rate order affirmatively

reduces the firm's opportunities to earn a return, the contract offer at worst adds an unattractive

opportunity to those otherwise available. Accordingly, there is not even an arguable takings claim

in sight. Thus we need not resolve the relationship between the SBA's "sue-and-be-sued" clause and

the Tucker Act as an arguably exclusive avenue for takings claims.

The government has contended throughout the course of this litigation that plaintiffs' claims

are contract claims that should be channeled to the Claims Court and Federal Circuit and subject to

the CDA'sjurisdictional exhaustion prerequisites. As a conceivable alternative, however, it suggests

that the claims that the SBA violated various statutory provisions such as the APA and 15 U.S.C. §

637(a)(3) (Congress'sstatement that a small businessselected for a contract "shall, when practicable,

participate in any negotiation of the terms and conditions of such contract") and the APA might be

viewed as statutory torts. As such, the government suggests, they could possibly be tort claims not

cognizable under the Federal Torts Claims Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(b), 2671-80, and therefore not

barred by plaintiffs' failure to comply with the procedural requirements of the FTCA. Under this

theory, the SBA would be subject to suit under its "sue-and-be-sued" clause. See FDIC v. Meyer,

114 S. Ct. 996, 1000-04 (1994). (Needless to say, the government contends that, notwithstanding

jurisdiction, the claims are meritless.)

We conclude, however, that the district court was right the first time around and the Claims

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Court wrong: (1) these are contract claims (2) that are governed by the CDA. In light of the

"general principle that a federal court may determine its own jurisdiction", Vietnam Veterans of

America v. Secretary of the Navy, 843 F.2d 528, 533-34 (D.C. Cir. 1988), we do not defer to the

Claims Court finding, despite the interest in a uniform understanding of the boundaries of federal

court jurisdiction. Moreover, as we develop below, the Claims Court's ruling in this case has been

decisively rejected by its reviewing court, the Federal Circuit. See LaBarge Products, Inc. v. West,

46 F.3d 1547 (Fed. Cir. 1995).

The CDA on its face requires submission to the suitable agency contracting officer of "[a]ll

claims by a contractor relating to a contract", 41 U.S.C. § 605(a), where the term "contract"

embraces "any express or implied contract ... entered into by an executive agency for ... the

procurement of property, other than real property in being," id. § 602(a). There can be no serious

doubt that the plaintiffs entered into contracts for the procurement of property (petroleum products

and their delivery) with executive agencies (the SBA and the Defense Fuel Supply Center). See id.

§ 601(2). Only two questions thus remain: whether the claims are "relat[ed] to" the contracts in the

sense intended by § 605(a), and ifso, whether the provisions of the CDA are exclusive, especially in

light of the SBA's "sue-and-be-sued" clause.

In Megapulse, Inc. v. Lewis, 672 F.2d 959 (D.C. Cir. 1982), we held that the determination

of whether an action is " "at its essence' a contract action [for purposes of the parallel provisions of

the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. §§ 1346(a), 1491] depends both on the source of the rights upon which

the plaintiff basesits claims, and upon the type of reliefsought (or appropriate)." Id. at 968. We said

that the court must not interpret the Tucker Act's provisions for exclusive jurisdiction "in terms so

broad as to deny a court jurisdiction to consider a claim that is validly based on grounds other than

a contractualrelationship with the government", id., and on that ground permitted a reverse-Freedom

of Information Act claim even though there was some possibility that it might turn on issues of

contract interpretation. We stressed that the plaintiff sought no money damages against the United

States, id. at 969, presumably because money damages are a prototypical contract remedy and are,

in addition, excluded from § 702's waiver of sovereign immunity.

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In this case, the issues of the source ofthe rights and the nature of the remedy are inextricably

linked. Plaintiffs sought money damages of $15 million. It is at least problematic to say that they

base their claims on the APA or the SBA's enabling act when the provisionsrelied on cannot possibly

provide the reliefsought. The only other relief requesteda declaratory judgment as to the validity

of an Interagency Agreement that expired 10 years agowas clearly moot when plaintiffs first filed

suit.

The point on which theClaimsCourt restedthat the claimed acts ofillegalitywere statutory

violations anterior to the contract formationdoes not seem to us to render the claims

non-contractual. In the first place, any number of standard contract doctrines, such as duress and

mistake offact, involve pre-contract behavior. And indeed, in explaining plaintiffs' alleged losses, the

language of the complaint evokes these very doctrines. Thus it speaks (falsely) of plaintiffs "being

required to accept" the offered prices, Complaint WW 50, 52, suggesting a claim of duress. And its

contention that the prices "did not reflect the real costs of ... small oil companies", id. at ¶ 50,

suggests some sort of mistake of fact.

Further, the alleged damages arose from and were defined by the combination of the anterior

illegalitywith plaintiffs'signing of and performance ofthe contracts, as plaintiffs explicitlyallege. See

Complaint at ¶ 53 (stating that the injuriesflowed fromtheir "performing" the contracts). In a recent

decision, LaBarge Products, Inc. v. West, 46 F.3d 1547 (Fed. Cir. 1995), the Federal Circuit found

that precisely that combination called for CDA jurisdiction. LaBarge had submitted the low bid on

a procurement contract, but the Army chose not to accept it, instead asking bidders for their "best

and final offers". At that point, LaBarge submitted a substantially lower bid, which the government

accepted. LaBarge performed the contract, but then submitted a claim for reformation of the contract

to the original bid price, and for extra compensation, on the grounds that the second bid solicitation

violated government contracting regulations and an implied contract of fair treatment of bidders.

The government argued unsuccessfully that such claims of anterior illegality made the case

analogous to "disappointed bidder" cases, for which many circuits, including ours, have found

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3See Irvin Industries Canada, Ltd. v. United States Air Force, 924 F.2d 1068, 1072 n.45

(D.C. Cir. 1990); Ulstein Maritime, Ltd. v. United States, 833 F.2d 1052, 1057 (1st Cir. 1987); 

Chemung County v. Dole, 781 F.2d 963, 967 (2d Cir. 1986); Choctaw Manufacturing Co. v.

United States, 761 F.2d 609, 619 (11th Cir. 1985); Coco Brothers, Inc. v. Pierce, 741 F.2d 675,

677-79 (3d Cir. 1984); United States v. John C. Grimberg Co., 702 F.2d 1362, 1374-76 (Fed.

Cir. 1983). 

4

In Hamilton Stores, Inc. v. Hodel, 925 F.2d 1272 (10th Cir. 1991), plaintiff sought relief for

an agency's award of a contract to another, allegedly in violation of plaintiff's contract-created

preferential rights, seeking the opportunity to provide the services covered by a challenged

contract, thus melding a contract claim into a disappointed bidder claim. Id. at 1279. The court

found district court jurisdiction. As plaintiff was seeking access to a new contract opportunity,

the analogy to a disappointed bidder litigation was plainly much closer in Hamilton than here or in

LaBarge, so we need not decide whether we would follow Hamilton. 

jurisdiction in the district court.3In such cases the relief sought is not money damages but

cancellation of the award to the winner. See, e.g., Chemung County v. Dole, 781 F.2d 963, 967 (2d

Cir. 1986). In LaBarge, however, because the alleged illegality "could have affected the price of the

[signed contract], there can be no doubt that a claim based on these [illegalities] "relates to' that

contract. The causal connection establishes the requisite relationship." 46 F.3d at 1553. Further,

the relief soughtreformation and additional compensation under the signed contract"clearly

"relate[d] to' the contract." Id.; see also Spectrum Leasing Corp. v. United States, 764 F.2d 891,

894 (D.C. Cir. 1985) (where plaintiff would have had no affirmative claim but for his contract rights,

action was under Tucker Act even though plaintiff alleged violations of Debt Collection Act).4 Here,

too, plaintiffs seek money damages for injury allegedly caused by their performance of a contract

tainted by illegality in its makingthe measure of damages awarded by the district court being, as

we noted before, "the profit margins they should have earned on their subcontracts". A&S Council

Oil Co., Mem. op. at 4 (Mar. 26, 1993).

It is true that plaintiffs have disavowed the notion that they are making contract claims.

Instead, they say, the damages they have suffered flow from unlawful agency action. That is in a

sense true, though no more so than in LaBarge or Spectrum. In any event, plaintiffs' labelling is of

little importance. As we said in Ingersoll-Rand Co. v. United States, 780 F.2d 74 (D.C. Cir. 1985),

"a plaintiffmay not avoid the jurisdictional bar ofthe CDA merely by alleging violations ofregulatory

or statutory provisions rather than breach of contract." Id. at 77. Where the alleged damage is

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entirely due to and measured in reference to plaintiffs' performance of a contract, and is exclusively

money damages, plaintiffs' claim that the wrong originated in some statutory violation does not strip

the case of its contractual character.

* * *

Having concluded that these claims are related to plaintiffs' government contracts within the

meaning of §§ 602(a), 605(a), we come to the second question, the exclusivity of the CDA. We have

recognized a "congressional intent to provide a single, uniquely qualified forum for the resolution of

contractual disputes", Ingersoll-Rand, 780 F.2d at 78, so that, for claims over $10,000, the Claims

Court has exclusive jurisdiction except to the extent that Congress has "granted any other court

authority to hear the claimsthat may be decided by the Claims Court." Bowen v. Massachusetts, 487

U.S. 879, 910 n.48 (1988).

Here the only plausible source of such alternative authority is the SBA's "sue and be sued"

clause. Indeed, FDIC v. Meyer construed a similar "sue and be sued" clause "to have fully waived

immunity", 114 S. Ct. at 1003, and the NinthCircuit has held that the SBA's "sue and be sued" clause

allows contract claims in district court unconstrained by the CDA's administrative exhaustion

prerequisites. In re Liberty Construction, 9 F.3d 800, 801 (9th Cir. 1993).

The Contract Disputes Act, however, appears to be the paradigm of a "precisely drawn,

detailed statute" that preempts more general jurisdictional provisions. Brown v. GSA, 425 U.S. 820,

834 (1976). It purports to provide final and exclusive resolution of all disputes arising from

government contracts covered by the statute. "All claims by a contractor against the government

relating to a contract" covered by the CDA must be submitted first to the contracting officer for a

decision. 41 U.S.C. § 605(a). The contracting officer's decision on the claim "shall be final and

conclusive and not subject to review by any forum, tribunal, or Government agency, unless an appeal

or suit istimely commenced as authorized by this chapter." Id. § 605(b). Such appeals may be made

only to the appropriate agency board of contract appeals or directly to the Claims Court, id. §§ 606,

609(a)(1) & (3), but either way, the next appeal lies only to the Federal Circuit. Id. § 607(g)(1), 28

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U.S.C. §§ 1295(a)(3) & (10).

By its express terms, the CDA applies to "executive agenc[ies]", 41 U.S.C. § 602(a), which

§ 601(2) defines as encompassing not only "executive department[s]" but also (1) "independent

establishment[s]" as defined in 5 U.S.C. § 104, namely"an establishment in the executive branch [with

certain irrelevant exceptions] which is not an Executive department, military department [or]

Government corporation", plus(2) a variety of other entities including many of the entities excluded

from the definition in 5 U.S.C. § 104, such as Government corporations, the U.S. Postal Service and

the Postal Rate Commission. Despite these sweeping terms, it might still be the case that the SBA's

sue-and-be-sued clause permitted review of contract disputes outside the CDA framework.

Congress's explicit exceptionsfromthe CDA, however, render any such inference highly improbable.

Although a sue-and-be-sued clause governsthe Tennessee ValleyAuthority,see 16 U.S.C. § 831c(b)

(1988), Congress expressly exempted a limited class of TVA contractsfrom the CDA,see 41 U.S.C.

§ 602(b). The exemption would have been wholly unnecessary unless Congress assumed that a

sue-and-be-sued clause would not trump the CDA's exclusivity provisions.

* * *

Because plaintiffs' claims can only be characterized as ones "relating to" executive agency

contracts and covered by the CDA, and it is undisputed that they failed to exhaust the jurisdictional

remediesrequired for relief under the CDA, there is no need to transfer the case to the Claims Court.

We therefore reverse the judgment of the district court and remand the case with instructions to

dismiss.

So ordered.

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