Court Opinion

ID: 8213236
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2022-10-11 21:01:30.213451+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T16:42:21.380713
License: Public Domain

In the United States Court of Federal Claims
                                                No. 21-1807
                                   (Filed Under Seal: December 17, 2021)
                                        (Reissued: October 11, 2022) 1

                                         NOT FOR PUBLICATION

    **************************************
    XEROX CORPORATION,                      *
                                            *
                      Plaintiff,            *
                                            *
             v.                             *
                                            *
    THE UNITED STATES,                      *
                                            *
                      Defendant,            *
                                            *
    and                                     *
                                            *
    TRIDENT E&P, INC.,                      *
                                            *
                      Defendant-Intervenor. *
    **************************************

Jonathan S. Aronie, Sheppard Mullin Richter & Hampton LLP, Washington, DC, counsel for
Plaintiff.

Matthew J. Carhart, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, DC, counsel for Defendant.

                                          OPINION AND ORDER

DIETZ, Judge.

        Xerox Corporation (“Xerox”), Plaintiff in this post-award bid protest, challenges the
award of a contract by the Defense Logistics Agency (“DLA” or the “Agency”) to Trident E&P,
Inc. (“Trident”). Before the Court is Xerox’s motion to supplement the administrative record
with intra-agency communications and documents. Because the motion seeks documents that
were before the Agency during the decision-making process, the Court treats it as a motion to

1
  This Opinion and Order was filed under seal on December 17, 2021, see ECF No. 48, in accordance with the
Protective Order entered on September 9, 2021, see ECF No. 13. The parties were given an opportunity to identify
protected information, including source selection information, proprietary information, and confidential information,
for redaction. On January 7, 2022, the parties filed a joint status report in which only Defendant-Intervenor proposed
redactions. ECF No. 58. On September 1, 2022, Defendant-Intervenor filed a status report withdrawing its
redactions. ECF No. 80. Accordingly, the Court reissues this opinion without any redactions.
complete, rather than supplement, the administrative record. The government does not oppose
the inclusion of one email referenced in the administrative record, but Xerox has failed to meet
its burden to show that the remainder of the documents it requests are properly part of the record.
Accordingly, Xerox’s motion is GRANTED-IN-PART and DENIED-IN-PART.

I.      BACKGROUND

       Though Xerox’s post-award bid protest challenges the subject procurement on multiple
grounds, the present motion to supplement the administrative record pertains only to one of those
grounds—namely, DLA’s evaluation of Trident’s compliance with the Solicitation’s single
manufacturer requirement. See Memo. in Supp. of Pl.’s Am. Mot. at 3, ECF No. 39-1
[hereinafter Pl.’s Mem.]. The Court limits its recitation of the facts only to those relevant to
Xerox’s motion to supplement the administrative record.

        A.       Factual Background

       In 2019, DLA issued Solicitation No. SP7000-19-R-1001 (the “Solicitation”) for the
award of a single contract to provide commercial copier machines and similar devices, along
with associated technical support and supplies, for use aboard military ships. See AR211-12.2
Following a technical evaluation of the proposals from Xerox and Trident and a reverse auction,
Trident was selected for the contract as the Lowest Price Technically Acceptable offeror.
AR9029-30.

        Among the Solicitation’s technical requirements, Performance Work Statement (“PWS”)
§ 21.1.37 stated that “Class I-IVC & Production Devices must be a single manufacturer” (the
“single manufacturer requirement”). AR 9127. In response to a vendor’s request to consider
removing the requirement, DLA stated that “the devices must be a single manufacturer due to the
certifications needed for each device placed onboard/ network [sic] and the Navy policy of
continuity.” AR60.

       Trident’s first proposal, submitted in April 2019, was facially noncompliant with the
single manufacturer requirement. See AR1492-1732. Trident stated that it had “teamed with
Hewlett Packard (HP) and Ricoh USA,” AR1501, and, indeed, proposed production devices
from both manufacturers. See AR1520.

       In September 2019, after an amendment to the Solicitation, Trident submitted a revised
proposal in which it stated that it was now “teamed with Hewlett Packard (HP) for this
requirement,” removing the reference to Ricoh USA. AR3919. Confirming compliance with the
single manufacturer requirement, Trident further stated, “HP will be providing equipment and
support for Class I-IVC devices, Production Color, Production Black and White, and Desktop

2
 The government filed the administrative record in two consecutively paginated parts: an initial record, ECF No. 29,
and a supplementary record following remand, ECF No. 38. The Court cites to pages in either part of the
administrative record as “AR___.”

                                                         2
Printers.” Id. Trident proposed devices with HP model numbers and provided specification
sheets for each. See AR3940-83. Xerox questions the authenticity of two of these specification
sheets, noting that they contain explicit references to devices manufactured by Canon. Pl.’s
Mem. at 7-8; see AR3977-83.

        A Source Selection Evaluation Board (“SSEB”), empaneled by DLA to evaluate offerors’
compliance with the technical requirements, expressed its own skepticism regarding Trident’s
proposed devices. A September 2020 memorandum from the SSEB sought “additional
clarification with concerns to the devices proposed by [Trident] for Production Color and
Production B/W,” noting “discrepancies with the models proposed.” AR7727. After internet
research of the proposed models, “[t]he SSEB was unable to find documentation that these
devices are currently in production by HP [in accordance with] PWS . . . [§] 21.1.37.” Id. Due to
these concerns, the “SSEB request[ed] [original equipment manufacturer] documentation that the
devices proposed for Production Color and B/W [were] currently in production by HP.” Id. A
month later, a second SSEB memorandum reiterated its concerns—this time after “contact with
independent HP partners and a HP Technical consultant confirm[ed] that HP does not currently
produce devices that operate in the range between 80 and 120 pages per minute.” AR7732.

        The SSEB’s technical evaluations of Trident’s proposal reflect these concerns. In October
2020, the SSEB rated Trident as “Unacceptable” with respect to the single manufacturer
requirement, noting that “[d]evices for Production Color & B/W currently provided are not
actively produced. Verified by HP reseller.” AR7738. A November 2020 evaluation changed this
rating to “Acceptable” but with an asterisk, accompanied by a note that the SSEB was
“requesting documentation to establish requirement of 21.1.37 is being met.” AR7768. A
February 2021 evaluation removed the asterisk but retained the note. AR8987. In April 2021, the
SSEB’s final technical evaluation rated Trident’s proposal as acceptable on all requirements,
removing the note regarding the single manufacturer requirement and qualifying Trident for the
award. See AR9011-24; AR9016.

        As stated by the contracting officer, two intervening events may help explain the changes
between evaluations. See AR9962-65. First, following the October 2020 “Unacceptable” rating,
a member of the SSEB conversed with an HP product manager, who explained HP’s special
order process in which “HP configures its existing production lines as needed to fill the special
orders as they came in.” 3 AR9952. According to the product manager, these orders “are
primarily used for vendors with very specific needs and are mostly used for government
contracts.” Id. Second, in response to an Evaluation Notice following the November 2020
evaluation, Trident provided a certification letter from the Chief Technology Officer at HP
Federal, stating: “HP certifies that the equipment [Trident] proposed . . . are commercial items

3
  The existence and contents of this conversation were revealed and added to the administrative record only upon
remand during this litigation. See infra Part I.B.

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currently in production as new equipment as of the date of Trident’s final revised proposal
submission and will be in production for six months after contract award.”4 AR7851.

       With the proposals from both Trident and Xerox deemed technically acceptable, DLA
conducted a blind reverse auction between the two offerors in April 2021. See AR9029-31.
Trident submitted the lowest bid and was selected for the award. Id.

        B.       Procedural History

        Following an unsuccessful protest at the United States Government Accountability
Office, see AR9926-35, Xerox filed its claim in this Court on September 3, 2021. See Compl.,
ECF No. 1. Xerox challenges DLA’s administration of the reverse auction system and three
aspects of the technical evaluation of Trident’s proposal. See id. ¶ 48. As relevant here, Xerox
argues that, in light of the skepticism expressed by the SSEB, the Agency’s determination that
Trident’s proposal complied with the Solicitation’s single manufacturer requirement was
unreasonable. See id. ¶¶ 49-50. The government filed the administrative record on September 24,
2021. See ECF No. 29.

        On October 7, 2021, Xerox filed its first motion to supplement the administrative record
and conduct limited discovery. See ECF No. 32. Xerox sought leave to take depositions of two
individuals—the Chief Technology Officer of HP and the Chairperson of the SSEB—who have
first-hand knowledge of Trident’s compliance with the single manufacturer requirement and the
Agency’s awareness of such compliance. Id. at 1. Xerox further sought to supplement the
administrative record with “all correspondence between the [DLA Contracting Services Office
(“DCSO”)] and the SSEB relating to the SSEB’s evaluation of Trident’s compliance with the
Solicitation’s single manufacturer requirement[.]” Mem. in Supp. of Pl.’s Mot. at 17, ECF No.
32-1.

        Xerox’s motion prompted the government to move for a voluntary remand to the Agency,
stating that it “learned of an oral communication involving a member of the [SSEB] that is not
reflected in the written documentation contained in the administrative record, and of which the
contracting officer did not know when he certified the administrative record.” See Def.’s Unopp.
Mot. for Remand at 2, ECF No. 33. The Court granted the unopposed motion and stayed the case
for two weeks for remand proceedings. See Remand Order, ECF No. 34.

       On remand, the contracting officer confirmed the decision to award the contract to
Trident after considering the newly discovered information. AR9965. The information consisted
of a memorandum from an SSEB member recounting various attempts to confirm Trident’s
compliance with the single manufacturer requirement, including the aforementioned oral

4
  The Evaluation Notice requested clarification only of Trident’s compliance with PWS § 21.1.15, not the single
manufacture requirement. See AR7777.4. As such, the parties dispute whether HP’s letter was intended to address
the single manufacturer requirement and the extent to which it did or did not. See Pl.’s Mem. at 13-14; Def.’s Opp’n
to Pl.’s Mot. at 3-4, ECF No. 44.

                                                         4
communication with an HP product manager regarding HP’s special order process. AR9951-52;
see supra Part I.A. Attached to the memorandum were emails between members of the SSEB in
which they express the need to confirm such compliance. AR9953-61; see, e.g., AR9957 (“We
will definitely have to do the work to make sure we are not getting lied to.”). Upon unopposed
motion, the government supplemented the administrative record with these documents and the
contracting officer’s remand decision memorandum. See ECF No. 38.

        On November 5, 2021, Xerox filed a second motion to supplement the administrative
record, renewing and replacing its previous motion. See Pl.’s Mem. at 2 n.1. Xerox has dropped
its request to conduct depositions and instead renews only its request for “all documents and
correspondence between the [SSEB] and the [DCSO] relating to the SSEB’s evaluation of
Trident’s compliance with the Solicitation’s single manufacturer requirement.” Id. at 2-3. The
government opposes Xerox’s motion. See Def.’s Opp’n to Pl.’s Mot., ECF No. 44 [hereinafter
Def.’s Opp’n].

II.    LEGAL STANDARDS

        In a bid protest, “the ‘primary focus’ of the court’s review of agency decision making
‘should be the materials that were before the agency when it made its final decision.’” Joint
Venture of Comint Sys. Corp. v. United States, 100 Fed. Cl. 159, 166 (2011) (quoting Cubic
Applications, Inc. v. United States, 37 Fed. Cl. 345, 349-50 (1997)). For effective judicial review
under the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) standards that govern bid protests, “the court
must have a record containing the information upon which the agency relied when it made its
decision as well as any documentation revealing the agency’s decision-making process.”
Vanguard Recovery Assistance v. United States, 99 Fed. Cl. 81, 92 (2011) (citing Citizens to
Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402, 420 (1971)). Appendix C of the Rules of the
United States Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”) lists “core documents” that may be relevant to
a bid protest, including “the agency’s evaluations of the protester’s, awardee’s, or other
interested parties’ offers, proposals, or other responses to the solicitation, including supporting
documentation[.]” RCFC App’x C ¶ 22(n). This list is not exhaustive, as Appendix C requires
the government “to produce the core documents and the remainder of the administrative
record[.]” Id. ¶ 23 (emphasis added).

       “Ordinarily, the government’s designation of an administrative record is entitled to a
presumption of completeness[.]” Poplar Point RBBR, LLC v. United States, 145 Fed. Cl. 489,
494 (2019). The agency-assembled record, however, “is not always a complete record of
documentary materials generated during the procurement and maintained contemporaneously
with the occurrence of the salient events or actions associated with the procurement[.]” Pitney
Bowes Gov’t Sols., Inc. v. United States, 93 Fed. Cl. 327, 331 (2010). While an agency
“exercise[s] some judgment in furnishing the court with relevant documents,” Cubic
Applications, 37 Fed. Cl. at 350, it “does not possess the discretion to makes these records
whatever it says they are.” East West, Inc. v. United States, 100 Fed. Cl. 53, 56 (2011). Allowing
the agency to retroactively delineate the scope of review may preclude the “substantial inquiry”
and “thorough, probing, in-depth review” the court must perform in reviewing an agency
                                                 5
decision. Mike Hooks, Inc. v. United States, 39 Fed. Cl. 147, 156 (1997) (quoting Overton Park,
401 U.S. at 415). As such, the presumption of completeness that attaches to the agency-
assembled record “can be rebutted with clear evidence” that the agency omitted from the record
information that it relied upon in reaching its final decision. Poplar Point, 145 Fed. Cl. at 494.

        When the contents of the agency-assembled administrative record are questioned, a
protester may move to complete the record. Id. A motion to complete the administrative record
seeks to add materials that are relevant to the challenged agency decision and were considered by
the agency in reaching its decision or generated during the decision-making process. BHB Ltd.
P’ship v. United States, 147 Fed. Cl. 226, 229 (2020); see also Comint Sys., 100 Fed. Cl. at 167.

        In contrast to a motion to complete, a motion to supplement the administrative record
“seeks to add materials that the agency did not consider but should be considered to permit a
proper evaluation of the agency’s decision.” Poplar Point, 145 Fed. Cl. at 494 (emphasis added).
The Federal Circuit has instructed that “supplementation of the record should be limited to cases
in which the omission of extra-record evidence precludes effective judicial review.” Axiom Res.
Mgmt., Inc. v. United States, 564 F.3d 1374, 1380 (Fed. Cir. 2009) (quotations omitted).

III.   DISCUSSION

        Xerox’s motion, styled as a motion to supplement the administrative record, seeks to add
to the record “all documents and correspondence between the [SSEB] and the [DCSO] relating to
the SSEB’s evaluation of Trident’s compliance with the Solicitation’s single manufacturer
requirement.” Pl.’s Mem. at 2-3. Xerox argues that the record, as it stands, “contains significant
inconsistencies” with respect to the single manufacturer requirement and “continues to exclude
highly relevant documents.” Id. at 2. According to Xerox, the missing documents will show that
“the Agency was aware of and ignored Trident’s material non-compliance” with the single
manufacturer requirement. Id. at 4.

        The government opposes the motion on two grounds. Def. Opp’n at 2. First, it argues that
Xerox “seeks predecisional intra-agency communications,” which “are, as a matter of law, not
part of the administrative record.” Id. Second, it contends that the record is complete with “the
rationale for the agency’s determination that Trident satisfied the single manufacturer
requirement.” Id.

       A.      Xerox’s Motion is Properly Treated as a Motion to Complete the
               Administrative Record

        Because Xerox’s motion seeks documents that were generated and considered by the
Agency during the decision-making process, the Court treats it as a motion to complete, rather
than supplement, the administrative record. Intra-agency emails regarding DLA’s evaluation of
Trident’s proposal fall under the broad instruction that the administrative record contains “the
materials that were before the agency when it made its final decision.” See Comint, 100 Fed. Cl.
at 166 (quotations omitted); see also Cubic Applications, 37 Fed. Cl. at 342 (“The court’s inquiry
                                                 6
is therefore based on an examination of the ‘whole record’ before the agency; that is, all material
that was developed and considered by the agency in makings its decision”) (quoting Camp v.
Pitts, 411 U.S. 138, 142 (1973)).

        Though the government argues otherwise, deliberative documents fall within the scope of
the administrative record. The concept of the “whole record” focuses on the materials before the
agency, not those presented to the court. See Tauri Group, LLC v. United States, 99 Fed. Cl. 475,
480-81 (2011) (“‘[T]he administrative record already in existence’ . . . depends on what the
agency did in reaching its decision, not what it chooses to assemble after a protest is lodged.”)
(quoting Camp, 411 U.S. at 142). Indeed, the government would have a difficult task explaining
how documents covered by the deliberative process privilege are not considered “documentation
that reveals the agency’s decision-making process” and thus form part of the administrative
record. See Vanguard, 99 Fed. Cl. at 92 (emphasis added). The Court, of course, acknowledges
and agrees that “internal deliberative materials . . . are generally excluded from the record” that
the agency compiles for the purposes of a bid protest. Comint, 100 Fed. Cl. at 169. But this does
not remove such materials from the realm of the whole record that was before the agency, and
thus a request to add them to the record equates to a request to complete the record.

         The government contradicts its own stance on this issue through consecutive footnotes in
its opposition brief. See Def.’s Opp’n at 11-12 nn.2-3. In the first half of its opposition, the
government contends that Xerox seeks materials related to “the agency’s pre-decisional
deliberative process” and that “administrative records do not contain deliberative materials.” Id.
at 7. It uses this position to assert, proactively, in a footnote that no formal claim of privilege is
necessary to exclude these materials from the administrative record because they are “not
properly part of the administrative record in the first place.” Id. at 11 n.2 (quoting Oceana, Inc. v.
Ross, 920 F.3d 855, 865 (D.C. Cir. 2019)). Logically, if the government believes that these types
of materials are not part of a complete administrative record, it should agree with Xerox’s
characterization of its motion as one to supplement the administrative record. The government’s
next footnote, however, then states that because Xerox seeks documents “considered by the
relevant agency decision makers that were not included in the record,” such a motion is generally
treated as a motion to complete the administrative record. Id. at 11 n.3 (quoting Poplar Point,
145 Fed. Cl. at 494) (brackets omitted). The government, in essence, thus creates its own self-
serving circular logic: because a request for deliberative materials seeks documents that were
before agency decision makers, such a request should be treated as a motion to complete the
administrative record; and, because deliberative materials are never part of the administrative
record, such a motion should be denied.

        The Court agrees with the government that a request for deliberative materials should be
treated as a motion to complete the administrative record but disagrees that such materials are
categorically excluded from the administrative record. Deliberative materials generated during
the decision-making process are part of the whole administrative record but may be withheld
from the agency-assembled record under the deliberative process privilege.

       B.      Xerox has not Demonstrated that the Record is Incomplete
                                                  7
        Based on the above reasoning, Xerox may sustain its motion to complete the
administrative record by demonstrating the existence of documents that were considered by the
Agency and improperly omitted from the agency-assembled record. The Court finds that Xerox
has not met its burden in this instance.

        Xerox does not provide clear evidence of the existence of specific documents that were
relied upon by the Agency in reaching its final decision in order to overcome the record’s
presumption of completeness. Aside from one email referenced in the administrative record,
Xerox does not point to any specific document that is missing from the record and instead seeks
a broad category of intra-agency emails regarding the single manufacturer requirement, believing
that there must be some further explanation for the Agency’s decision. Id. at 17-18. It appears,
however, that the agency-assembled record is replete with documentation regarding the SSEB’s
evaluation of Trident’s compliance with the single manufacturer requirement and the
accompanying reasoning. E.g., AR7738, AR7768, AR 8987, AR 9016 (technical evaluations);
AR7727, AR7732 (memoranda related to evaluations). In fact, according to Xerox, much of the
documentation in the record supports its position that the Agency “had serious concerns over
discrepancies in Trident’s technical proposal relating to the single-manufacturer requirement.”
Pl.’s Mem. at 16. Unsatisfied with the Agency’s reasoning for dropping its concerns, Xerox
speculates that additional reasoning “must be found in the correspondence Xerox is seeking.” Id.
at 18. But Xerox provides no basis for its speculation that would permit the Court to order
completion of the record with such a broad class of documents.

         The one email that Xerox identifies with specificity—the inclusion of which the
government does not oppose and the Court grants—exemplifies why the remainder of Xerox’s
request fails. See Pl.’s Mem. at 17; Def.’s Opp’n at 7 n.1. On voluntary remand, the contracting
officer considered a memorandum recounting conversations between an SSEB member and HP
affiliates. See AR9951-52. Attached to the memorandum were multiple emails within the SSEB,
one of which referenced “receiving another email from DCSO.” AR9958. This constitutes the
“clear evidence” needed to overcome the presumption of completeness. See Poplar Point, 145
Fed. Cl. at 494. It contains a reference to a specific document not otherwise found in the
administrative record and considered by the Agency in its decision-making process. No such
concrete evidence accompanies Xerox’s remaining requests for a broad category of documents.
The Court does not doubt, and the government does not appear to dispute, that additional intra-
agency communications exist. Def. Opp’n at 9-10. But without clear evidence to the contrary, the
Court cannot conclude that such documents are properly part of a complete record, especially in
light of the existing SSEB evaluations and supporting documentation.

        The Court agrees with the government that Xerox seeks deliberative documents and finds
that Xerox has not established that such documents were improperly withheld or that the
deliberative process privilege should be overcome. This Court has acknowledged that some
information “by its very nature would not be found in an agency record,” such as evidence of bad

                                               8
faith or improper conduct. 5 Orion Int’l Techs. v. United States, 60 Fed. Cl. 338, 343-44 (2004).
As with the more general presumption of regularity in government conduct, overcoming the
presumption of completeness of the agency-assembled record on grounds that the government
acted improperly in compiling it “must rest on a strong evidentiary footing.” See id. Xerox’s
argument that the Agency withheld unfavorable documents from the record is essentially such an
allegation. Xerox provides no evidentiary basis for its speculation that the Agency intentionally
withheld documentation that shows that “the Agency was aware of and ignored Trident’s
material non-compliance[.]” Pl.’s Mem. at 4. Similarly, Xerox makes no specific allegation that
the Agency acted in bad faith in evaluating Trident’s proposal, as would ordinarily be required to
overcome the deliberative process privilege. See Comint, 100 Fed. Cl. at 169. Nor can it be said
that Xerox seeks documents that by their nature would not be found in the record, given the
extensive documentation already present in the record of the Agency’s skepticism of Trident’s
proposal.

       Accordingly, the Court denies Xerox’s request for “all documents and correspondence
between the [SSEB] and the [DCSO] relating to the SSEB’s evaluation of Trident’s compliance
with the Solicitation’s single manufacturer requirement.”

IV.      CONCLUSION

      For the reasons stated above, Xerox’s motion to complete the administrative record is
GRANTED-IN-PART and DENIED-IN-PART. On or before December 21, 2021, the
government shall complete the administrative record with the email to the SSEB member from
DCSO, referenced in AR9957.

        Some information contained in this Opinion and Order may be considered protected
information subject to the Protective Order entered on September 8, 2021. ECF No. 13.
Accordingly, the Opinion and Order is filed UNDER SEAL. On or before January 7, 2022, the
parties SHALL CONFER AND FILE a joint status report that (i) identifies the information, if
any, that the parties contend should be redacted, (ii) explains the basis for each proposed
redaction, and (iii) includes an attachment of the proposed redactions for this Opinion.

         IT IS SO ORDERED.
                                                          s/ Thompson M. Dietz
                                                          THOMPSON M. DIETZ, Judge

5
  Orion uses this language to explain when it may be appropriate to allow discovery and supplementation of the
record with such evidence. See Orion, 60 Fed. Cl. at 343-44. The Court finds it equally applicable where, as here, a
protester believes that an agency has inappropriately withheld unfavorable documents already in existence.

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