Columbus Regional Hospital v. United States ( 2019 )


Menu:
  •             In the United States Court of Federal Claims
    No. 18-1299C
    Filed: October 10, 2019
    )
    COLUMBUS REGIONAL HOSPITAL                    )
    )
    Plaintiff,                )
    )      Keywords: Disaster-Relief Grants,
    v.                                            )      Dismissal, RCFC 12(b)(1), Express
    )      Contract, Implied-In-Fact Contract, Third
    THE UNITED STATES,                            )      Party Beneficiary
    )
    Defendant.                 )
    )
    )
    Joshua D. Schnell, Ice Miller LLP, Washington, D.C., for plaintiff; Christian H Robertson II, Ice
    Miller LLP, Washington, D.C., of counsel.
    Mariana Teresa Acevedo, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of
    Justice, Washington, D.C., for defendant, with whom was Ramoncito J. deBorja, Federal
    Emergency Management Agency, Washington, D.C., of counsel.
    MEMORANDUM OPINION AND ORDER
    HERTLING, Judge
    Plaintiff Columbus Regional Hospital (the “Hospital”) challenges the disallowance and
    recovery of certain Stafford Act disaster-relief grant funds by the defendant, the United States,
    acting by and through the Federal Emergency Management Agency (“FEMA” or the “Agency”).
    The Hospital claims that FEMA breached an express or implied contract, or breached the
    contract with the State of Indiana to which the Hospital was a third-party beneficiary. The
    Agency moved to dismiss the complaint for lack of jurisdiction and failure to state a claim.
    Because the Hospital has failed to establish the jurisdictional facts that demonstrate it either
    holds a contract with FEMA or is a third-party beneficiary of the State of Indiana’s contract with
    FEMA, the defendant’s Motion to Dismiss (ECF 13) for lack of jurisdiction is granted, and the
    complaint is dismissed.
    I.     BACKGROUND
    A.      Factual Background
    In June 2008, the area of Indiana where the Hospital is located experienced severe
    flooding. That flooding caused significant damage to the Hospital’s facilities, especially its
    utility plant, medical and lab equipment, and first floor. In response to the flood, President Bush
    declared under the Stafford Act, a disaster designated as FEMA-1766-DR (the “Disaster
    Declaration”). See 73 Fed. Reg. 35,146 (June 20, 2008). The Disaster Declaration permitted
    FEMA to provide financial assistance in the form of disaster grants under the Stafford Act. 1
    The parties do not dispute that pursuant to the Disaster Declaration and the Stafford Act,
    FEMA and the State of Indiana entered into an agreement (the “FEMA-Indiana Agreement” or
    the “Agreement”) for FEMA disaster assistance in Indiana. Under the Agreement, “the State
    agree[d] to be the grantee for all grant assistance provided under the Stafford Act[.]” (Complaint
    Exhibit (“Compl. Ex.”) 1 at A4, A5 (ECF 1); see also id. at A1 (stating that all funding provided
    is for FEMA-1766-DR).) The FEMA-Indiana Agreement provided that the State “agree[d] to
    comply with all applicable laws and regulations, including but not limited to . . . [laws and
    regulations] that govern standard grant management practices[.]” (Id. at A5.) The FEMA-
    Indiana Agreement placed all grant-administration obligations, including an obligation to process
    recovery of public assistance in the event of error, fraud, or misrepresentation, and to refund any
    recovered funds to FEMA, upon the State of Indiana. (Id. at A1, A6-A8.)
    Following the flooding, the Hospital submitted a formal request under the FEMA-Indiana
    Agreement so that the Hospital could repair its damaged basement and first floor. (Compl. Ex. 2
    (ECF 1).) The Hospital’s request was granted as Public Assistance Identification No. 005-
    U0FZF-00, and the State provided the Stafford Act funds, subject to the restrictions set out in the
    Agreement, including the requirement that the Hospital adhere to the federal grant and
    procurement regulations at 2 C.F.R. § 215.62. (See, e.g., Compl. Ex. 2 (ECF 1); Compl. Ex. 3
    (ECF 1) at A14.) FEMA also documented the Hospital’s projects through Project Worksheets,
    which specifically refer to the FEMA-declared disaster, FEMA-1766-DR. (Compl. Exs. 10-19.)
    Despite the Project Worksheets, the FEMA-Indiana Agreement made the State of Indiana
    responsible for “monitor[ing] the Hospital’s subgrant activities to ensure compliance with
    Federal procurement standards.” (Compl. Ex. 3 (ECF 1) at A16.)
    After receiving disaster-assistance funding, the Hospital contracted with Paul Davis
    Restoration, Inc. (“Davis”) for remediation, McCarthy Building Company (“McCarthy”) for
    hospital reconstruction, Rollins Construction Company, LLC (“Rollins”) for a flood-mitigation
    wall, and Ernst & Young (“EY”) for grant administration. The parties do not dispute that these
    contracts were all subject to FEMA’s oversight through the Project Worksheets.
    Five and a half years after the flood, FEMA’s Office of the Inspector General (“OIG”)
    issued an audit report, detailing its review of the Hospital’s contracts with Davis, McCarthy,
    Rollins, and EY. As a result of the OIG audit, FEMA ultimately disallowed certain costs under
    each contract (the “Disputed Costs”), totaling about $10.9 million. FEMA disputed the costs of
    the Davis and McCarthy contracts because both were impermissible cost-plus-percentage-of-cost
    contracts. See Federal Acquisition Regulation 16.102(c). FEMA disputed Davis’s 15% markup
    and McCarthy’s 4.5% markup. FEMA disputed the Rollins contract because it was awarded
    without including required contract provisions, considering small-business subcontractors, and
    without full and open competition. FEMA recovered the entire contract value. FEMA also
    recovered the entire contract value of the EY contract, which was awarded without defining the
    1
    This decision cites the version of the Stafford Act, 42 U.S.C. § 5172 (eff. Oct. 13, 2006 to Dec.
    17, 2015), and its regulations in effect at the time of the Disaster Declaration.
    -2-
    scope of work, considering small-business subcontractors, including required contract
    provisions, and without full and open competition.
    In addition to the Disputed Costs, the parties disputed certain other costs, prompting the
    Hospital to file a district court action in the Southern District of Indiana in 2011. The Hospital
    alleged that FEMA owed it for (1) replacement equipment purchased new instead of refurbished,
    contrary to FEMA regulations, and (2) FEMA-eligible damages covered by insurance instead of
    FEMA funds. The district court granted FEMA’s motion for summary judgment on certain
    counts and dismissed others. On appeal, the Hospital moved to transfer its case to this court.
    The Seventh Circuit affirmed the Southern District of Indiana’s ruling and denied the motion to
    transfer. Columbus Reg’l Hosp. v. Fed. Emergency Mgmt. Agency, 
    708 F.3d 893
     (7th Cir. 2013).
    B.      Procedural Background
    Following its audit, on December 4, 2013, the FEMA OIG issued an audit report
    recommending that FEMA recover the Disputed Costs. Despite the Hospital’s rebuttal, FEMA
    recovered the Disputed Costs on April 10, 2014.
    The Hospital twice administratively appealed FEMA’s recovery of the disputed costs,
    alleging grounds like those presented in this case. FEMA denied both appeals. This case
    followed.
    The Hospital’s complaint, filed in this court on August 28, 2018, raises five counts and
    seeks $9,612,831.19 in damages, attorneys’ fees, costs, and interest, and any other relief that the
    Court deems just and appropriate. FEMA moved to dismiss the complaint; the parties fully
    briefed that motion, and the Court heard oral argument on August 13, 2019. The Court granted
    FEMA’s motion to dismiss as to Count V, for illegal exaction, following the oral argument. The
    Court requested additional briefing, which is now complete, on third-party beneficiary issues.
    II.    JURSIDICTION AND STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The Tucker Act provides this Court with jurisdiction “to render judgment upon any claim
    against the United States founded . . . upon any express or implied contract with the United
    States, or for liquidated or unliquidated damages in cases not sounding in tort.” 28 U.S.C.
    § 1491. The Tucker Act “operate[s] to waive sovereign immunity for claims premised on other
    sources of law (e.g., statutes or contracts)[,]” if those sources of law “‘can fairly be interpreted as
    mandating compensation by the Federal Government.’” United States v. Navajo Nation, 
    556 U.S. 287
    , 290 (2009) (quoting United States v. Testan, 
    424 U.S. 392
    , 400 (1976)). This Court
    only has jurisdiction under the Tucker Act when a plaintiff is in privity of contract with the
    Government. Park Properties Assocs., L.P. v. United States, 
    916 F.3d 998
    , 1002 (Fed. Cir.
    2019), petition for cert. filed No. 19-268 (Aug. 29, 2019). The plaintiff bears the burden of
    proving, by a preponderance of evidence, that the court possesses subject-matter jurisdiction. Id.
    FEMA moved to dismiss the Hospital’s claim for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under
    Rule 12(b)(1) of the Rules of the Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”). In such cases, to determine
    jurisdiction, the Court accepts “as true all undisputed facts asserted in the plaintiff's complaint
    and draw[s] all reasonable inferences in favor of the plaintiff.” Trusted Integration, Inc. v.
    United States, 
    659 F.3d 1159
    , 1163 (Fed. Cir. 2011). The plaintiff “has the burden of
    -3-
    establishing jurisdiction by a preponderance of the evidence.” Fid. & Guar. Ins. Underwriters,
    Inc. v. United States, 
    805 F.3d 1082
    , 1087 (Fed. Cir. 2015). If the court finds that it lacks
    subject-matter jurisdiction over a claim, RCFC 12(h)(3) requires the court to dismiss that claim.
    FEMA also moved to dismiss the Hospital’s complaint for failure to state a claim, under
    RCFC 12(b)(6).
    III.   SUMMARY OF THE ARGUMENTS
    The crux of the Hospital’s claim centers on whether the FEMA-Indiana Agreement is a
    contract, and whether the Hospital is a party to, or third-party beneficiary of, that contract. The
    Hospital argues that it is a party to an express or implied contract with FEMA under the umbrella
    of the FEMA-Indiana Agreement. The Hospital also argues that it was a third-party beneficiary
    of the Indiana-FEMA Agreement. The Hospital argues that FEMA breached the contract terms
    by recovering the Disputed Costs because those costs were authorized by an approved
    agreement, the costs were reasonable, the purpose of the grant was accomplished, and because
    the Hospital did not materially fail to comply with the Agreement and sought only reasonable
    and appropriate costs.
    FEMA rejects the Hospital’s claim that a contract exists, and moved to dismiss on the
    grounds that this Court lacks jurisdiction over the Hospital’s claim because there is no
    enforceable contract. First, FEMA argues that the FEMA-Indiana Agreement is a grant from
    FEMA as a sovereign, the United States has not waived sovereign immunity, and the statutory
    and regulatory framework the Hospital cites does not create contractual obligations. Second,
    FEMA argues that the Hospital does not sufficiently allege the basic contract requirements of
    offer, acceptance, and consideration, which are required jurisdictional facts. Third, FEMA
    argues that if there were a contract, it lacked definite terms. Alternatively, FEMA argues that
    even if there were a contract, it would be between Indiana and FEMA, so the Hospital is only a
    subcontractor, and therefore is not in privity with FEMA.
    In response, the Hospital argues that the Court has jurisdiction over its claims because the
    Hospital has either an express or implied contract, which provides for money damages, and is in
    privity of contract with FEMA. Alternatively, if there was no contract, the Hospital argues that it
    was a third-party beneficiary of the FEMA-Indiana Agreement because it was a foreseeable
    beneficiary of the Agreement.
    Thus, FEMA’s motion to dismiss turns on the threshold question of whether the FEMA-
    Indiana Agreement is a contract, as well as whether the Hospital is party to an express or implied
    contract with FEMA, or whether the Hospital is a third-party beneficiary to the FEMA-Indiana
    Agreement.
    IV.    DISCUSSION
    A.      FEMA-Indiana Agreement
    As a threshold matter, the Hospital’s claims of an express contract or third-party
    beneficiary status are contingent upon the FEMA-Indiana Agreement being a contract. The
    -4-
    Court of Claims held in State of Texas v. United States that a Disaster Assistance Agreement
    which meets those basic requirements is a contract because
    the defendant’s valid execution of a document, which it prepared and titled
    “Federal-State Disaster Assistance Agreement,” specifying that “Federal
    assistance will be made available in accordance with (various specified
    laws, Executive Orders and regulations)” obligates defendant to provide
    such assistance as called for by the parties’ Agreement.
    
    210 Ct. Cl. 522
    , 527-58 (1967). The “Federal-State Disaster Assistance Agreement” in State of
    Texas was a contract because it conditioned the receipt of federal funds on compliance with
    federal procurement regulations. 2
    The FEMA-Indiana Agreement has a similar form to the agreement at issue in State of
    Texas—the Agreement provides the State of Indiana with federal assistance, conditioned upon
    the State’s compliance with federal grant and procurement requirements. Whatever this Court
    thinks of the ruling in State of Texas, it is bound, until that case is overturned by a higher court,
    to follow its precedential predecessor court to find that the FEMA-Indiana Agreement is a
    contract over which the Court has Tucker Act jurisdiction. 3 Accordingly, the Court must
    consider the Hospital’s express contract and third-party beneficiary claims.
    B.      Express Contract
    Counts I and II of the Hospital’s complaint allege that FEMA breached its contract with
    the Hospital. The existence of an express contract is a jurisdictional fact, which the Hospital as
    the plaintiff has the burden to prove in order to maintain its complaint for breach of contract
    against FEMA. Thus, the Hospital’s Counts I and II are contingent upon this Court finding
    either an express contract between the Hospital and FEMA, or that the Hospital is otherwise in
    privity of contract with FEMA. Neither is present here, so this Court lacks jurisdiction over
    Counts I and II.
    2
    The Agency argues that the FEMA-Indiana Agreement is an “agreement to agree” because “the
    recipients of funds are not identified, nor are the amounts to be given.” This characterization is
    inaccurate. The FEMA-Indiana Agreement makes clear that the recipient of funds is the State of
    Indiana. The Agreement incorporates FEMA’s disaster designation, FEMA-1766-DR, which
    obligates FEMA to provide 75% of the eligible cost of disaster assistance to the State.
    3
    The Federal Circuit’s decision in Trauma Services Group v. United States, is inapposite. 
    104 F.3d 1321
    , 1324 (Fed. Cir. 1997). In Trauma Services, the Federal Circuit dismissed the
    complaint for failure to state a claim when a complaint that a Memorandum of Agreement for
    health-care services, not including support personnel, did not expressly allow the plaintiff to pass
    the cost of its x-ray technician to the government. The Circuit’s decision in Trauma Services
    turns on the contents of a contract and does not diminish, let alone displace, the controlling
    precedent in State of Texas.
    -5-
    1.     Project Worksheets Were Not a Contract
    The Hospital argues that the Project Worksheets, which were issued under the FEMA-
    Indiana Agreement, constitute a contract and entitle the Hospital to Stafford Act assistance
    thereunder. Not so. An express contract exists when there is mutuality of intent, offer,
    acceptance, and consideration. See, e.g., Trauma Serv. Grp. v. United States, 
    104 F.3d 1321
    ,
    1325 (Fed. Cir. 1997).
    The FEMA-Indiana Agreement provides that only Indiana is the grantee for “all grant
    assistance provided under the Stafford Act.” Pursuant to the Stafford Act and its implementing
    regulations, FEMA could only provide Stafford Act funds through the FEMA-Indiana
    Agreement. See 42 U.S.C. § 5172(a); 44 C.F.R. § 206.44(a); see also 73 Fed. Reg. 35,146-02
    (June 20, 2008). Thus, by statute, implementing regulation, and the terms of the Agreement,
    only the State of Indiana could receive Stafford Act funds as a grantee. The Project Worksheets
    support that conclusion by including on each page a header that specifically refers to the Disaster
    Declaration for the State of Indiana, FEMA-1766-DR, which made the State of Indiana the sole
    grantee for all Stafford Act funding. (Compl. Ex. 1 (ECF 1) at A4, A5.) Further, the Project
    Worksheets also reflect the State of Indiana’s obligations to the Hospital under the Agreement.
    (See Compl. Ex. 12 (ECF 1) at 341 (“PRIOR TO THE DISBURSEMENT OF APPROVED
    FUNDS, THE GOVERNOR’S REPRESENTATIVE MUST BE PROVIDED WITH
    DOCUMENTATION . . .” (capitalization in original).) By their own explicit terms, the Project
    Worksheets do not constitute an express contract between the Hospital and FEMA.
    2.     The Hospital Was Not in Privity With FEMA
    Because the Project Worksheets do not constitute an express contract between the
    Hospital and FEMA, the Hospital must otherwise prove that it was in privity of contract with
    FEMA under the FEMA-Indiana Agreement to maintain its express contract claims. A plaintiff
    must be in privity of contract with the government in order to have standing to sue for breach of
    contract. Anderson v. United States, 
    344 F.3d 1343
    , 1351 (Fed. Cir. 2003). Without that privity,
    the Court lacks jurisdiction to hear a complaint. See Park Properties, 916 F.3d at 1002; see also
    Flexfab LLC v. United States, 
    424 F.3d 1254
    , 1259, 1264 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
    Privity is established when “(1) the prime contractor was acting as a purchasing agent for
    the government; (2) the agency relationship between the prime contractor and the government
    was established by clear contractual consent; and (3) the contract stated that the government
    would be directly liable to the vendors for the purchase price.” Park Properties, 916 F.3d at
    1004.
    The Hospital cannot meet any of the elements of privity set out in Park Properties. First,
    the Hospital does not allege that the State of Indiana was a purchasing agent for FEMA. The
    FEMA-Indiana Agreement would not support such an argument because it expressly provided all
    grant assistance to the State of Indiana, required that the State award grants in accordance with
    the Agreement, and made the State responsible for grant compliance. The State of Indiana, not
    FEMA, bore any contractual liability to subgrantees, including the Hospital. The Agreement did
    not create the kind of “direct, unavoidable contractual liability” from FEMA to the Hospital “that
    establishes privity and thereby waives sovereign immunity.” See Park Properties, 916 F.3d at
    -6-
    1004. The Hospital does not allege the facts necessary to establish a purchasing agency
    relationship between FEMA and the State of Indiana.
    Second, the FEMA-Indiana Agreement established mutual obligations between FEMA
    and the State of Indiana through standard terms, set out in statute and regulation; it did not create
    an agency relationship between them. As above, there was no agency relationship set forth in the
    Agreement.
    Third and finally, the Hospital does not allege that FEMA was directly liable to it for the
    grant assistance. The terms of the FEMA-Indiana Agreement make clear that FEMA is solely
    liable to the State of Indiana for grant assistance, and the State was liable in turn to its
    subgrantees. The Agreement also obligated the State, as grantee, to conduct grant-award
    closeout, including “process[ing] the recovery of assistance through error, misrepresentation, or
    fraud, or if funds are spent inappropriately.” (Compl. Ex. 1 (ECF 1) at A7.) While subgrantees,
    including the Hospital, were subject to FEMA’s enforcement powers, even FEMA’s audit report
    identified that the State of Indiana—not FEMA—awarded the Hospital a grant. (Compl. Ex. 3
    (ECF 1) at A14.) FEMA’s limited enforcement actions were solely within the province of
    “‘regulatory or sovereign functions’” which do not “‘create contractual obligations.’” Carter v.
    United States, 
    98 Fed. Cl. 632
    , 636 (2011) (“Carter I”) (quoting D & N Bank v. United States,
    
    331 F.3d 1374
    , 1378-79 (Fed. Cir. 2003)). The Agreement did not make FEMA liable to the
    Hospital for any assistance whatsoever.
    There is no basis for jurisdiction over the Hospital’s express contractual claims when
    there was no privity of contract between the Hospital and FEMA.
    C.      Implied-In-Fact Contract
    In Count III, the Hospital alternatively argues that it has an implied-in-fact contract with
    FEMA, proven by the parties’ conduct and the Project Worksheets, and that FEMA breached that
    implied contract. For the Court to have jurisdiction over this claim, there must actually be an
    implied-in-fact contract between the Hospital and FEMA.
    The existence of an implied-in-fact contract is a jurisdictional fact which the Hospital, as
    the plaintiff, bears the burden to prove. Hanlin v. United States, 
    316 F.3d 1325
    , 1328 (Fed. Cir.
    2003). Such a contract “with the Government requires proof of (1) mutuality of intent, (2)
    consideration, (3) an unambiguous offer and acceptance, and (4) ‘actual authority’ on the part of
    the Government’s representative to bind the Government in contract.” Turping v. United States,
    
    913 F.3d 1060
    , 1065 (Fed. Cir. 2019) (quoting Hanlin, 316 F.3d at 1328). To determine whether
    an implied-in-fact contract exists, the Court must answer the threshold question of whether there
    was “an objective manifestation of voluntary, mutual assent.” Anderson v. United States, 
    344 F.3d 1343
    , 1353 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (citing Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 18 (1981)). To
    prove mutuality of intent, the plaintiff must objectively show “the existence of an offer and a
    reciprocal acceptance.” Id.
    As discussed above, there was no agreement between FEMA and the Hospital. FEMA
    had entered a grant agreement with the State of Indiana, and the State in turn provided a subgrant
    to the Hospital. That the Hospital agreed to conditions imposed by the State of Indiana,
    -7-
    regardless of whether those conditions were derived from the FEMA-Indiana Agreement, does
    not constitute mutuality of intent between the Hospital and FEMA.
    Further, the Hospital’s agreement with the State of Indiana provided no consideration to
    FEMA. The Hospital argues that undertaking to comply with FEMA’s regulations constitutes
    consideration, but it ignores the fact that such consideration actually flows to the State of
    Indiana, which imposed those requirements on the Hospital in the first place. It is true that
    FEMA imposed those requirements on Indiana in the Agreement, and Indiana had in turn to
    impose them on subgrantees. The requirement that grantees and subgrantees of federal disaster-
    relief programs abide by federal statutory and regulatory requirements, without more, cannot
    establish a contractual relationship between a subgrantee and FEMA. See D.R. Smalley & Sons,
    Inc. v. United States, 
    178 Ct. Cl. 593
    , 598 (1967). The Hospital has not met its burden of
    proving this alleged consideration, and thus has failed to allege a jurisdictional fact.
    Accordingly, there is no implied-in-fact contract, so this Court lacks jurisdiction over Count III.
    D.      Third-Party Beneficiary Status
    Finally, Count IV of the Hospital’s complaint alleges that if there is neither an express
    nor implied contract between the Hospital and FEMA, then in the alternative FEMA breached
    the Hospital’s third-party beneficiary rights under the FEMA-Indiana Agreement. The Hospital
    argues that it was a third-party beneficiary of the FEMA-Indiana Agreement when the purpose of
    the Agreement as to provide disaster aid to affected parties, specifically including Bartholomew
    County and nonprofit hospitals therein, and the Hospital itself is a nonprofit hospital in
    Bartholomew County. According to the Hospital, its status as a nonprofit hospital in an affected
    county made it a beneficiary of the binding and legally enforceable obligations imposed on
    “FEMA, States, their local governments” by the FEMA-Indiana Agreement. 44 C.F.R. §
    206.44(a).
    Third-party beneficiary status is an “‘exceptional privilege’ and ‘should not be liberally
    granted.’” Sioux Honey Ass’n v. Hartford Fire Ins. Co., 
    672 F.3d 1041
    , 1056 (Fed. Cir. 2012)
    (quoting German Alliance Ins. Co. v. Home Water Supply Co., 
    226 U.S. 220
    , 230 (1912)). To
    avail oneself of third-party beneficiary status, a party must show that it either is the intended
    beneficiary of a contract, or “fall[s] within a class clearly intended to be benefited thereby.”
    Glass v. United States, 
    258 F.3d 1349
    , 1354 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (citations omitted); State of
    Montana v. United States, 
    124 F.3d 1269
    , 1273 (Fed. Cir. 1997).
    The Supreme Court’s decision in Astra USA, Inc. v. United States, 
    563 U.S. 110
     (2011),
    and the Federal Circuit’s decision in Sioux Honey Association v. Hartford Fire Insurance
    Company Co., 672 F.3d at 1056, are instructive here. Both cases involved the rights of third
    parties to enforce contracts implementing statutory regimes—the 340B program in Astra and a
    trade anti-dumping regime in Sioux Honey.
    Astra involved the 340B program, which gives the Department of Health and Human
    Services (“HHS”) statutory authority to enter into form contracts with drug manufacturers to
    impose ceiling prices that those manufacturers may charge healthcare facilities for medications.
    563 U.S. at 115. The penalty for the drug manufacturers’ breach of contract is their termination
    from the Medicaid program. Id. The healthcare facilities that benefit from these lower prices
    -8-
    sued the drug manufacturers, alleging that the manufacturers overcharged them for drugs, and
    that the healthcare facilities, as third-party beneficiaries of the form contracts, had the right to
    enforce those form contracts. Id. at 117. The Court held that the healthcare facilities were not
    third-party beneficiaries because the 340B program did not allow for a private right of action, the
    fact that the healthcare facilities were intended beneficiaries of the 340B program did not confer
    a right to enforce that intended benefit, and the Court found that private enforcement could
    hinder HHS’s ability to enforce the program. Id. at 117, 118, 120.
    Similarly, in Sioux Honey, the plaintiffs argued that they were entitled to sue importers of
    foreign products and the U.S. Customs and Border Protection (“CBP”) under a statutory anti-
    dumping regime. 672 F.3d at 1046-47. Under that regime, importers deposit duties and fees,
    including anti-dumping penalties, with the CBP, often in the form of a customs bond. Id. The
    plaintiffs alleged that the CBP failed to collect customs bonds from certain importers and sought
    to enforce customs-bond contracts as third-party beneficiaries of the contracts. Id. at 1049. The
    Federal Circuit found that the customs-bond contracts’ “(1) treatment of the Government as a
    beneficiary; (2) failure to identify the domestic producers as beneficiaries; and (3) failure to
    mention a class of third parties that could potentially compass all domestic producers, all
    combine to strongly support the conclusions that these contracts do not ‘reflect [ ] an intention to
    benefit’ the domestic producers ‘directly.’” Id. at 1057 (quoting Glass, 258 F.3d at 1354; citing
    State of Montana, 124 F.3d at 1273). The Court reasoned that the contracts in Sioux Honey were
    like those in Astra—form contracts that are “intertwined with [a] statutory scheme,” which in
    turn does not grant a private right of action. Id. at 1058. Thus, the Court found that “where no
    private right to enforce the [customs-bond contracts] exists, permitting a party to sue as a third-
    party beneficiary would improperly render ‘the absence of [that] private right . . . meaningless.’”
    Id. at 1058-59 (quoting Astra, 563 U.S. at 118) (alterations to Astra in original).
    Like the contracts in Astra and Sioux Honey, the FEMA-Indiana Agreement implements
    a statutory regime—the Stafford Act’s statutory mandates. The FEMA-Indiana Agreement
    incorporates the Stafford Act and FEMA’s implementing regulations, particularly 44 C.F.R. §
    206.44.
    The Stafford Act makes clear that FEMA may enter into agreements with states to
    provide federal disaster assistance, or, as referenced in the statute, FEMA “contributions.” 4 See
    42 U.S.C § 5172(a)(1). The Stafford Act cabins FEMA’s ability to aid states by limiting the
    expenses to which FEMA may contribute, requiring congressional notification before making
    any contribution, and limiting contributions to “not less than 75 percent of the eligible cost for
    4
    The Stafford Act also allows FEMA to make “contributions” to “a person that owns or operates
    a private nonprofit facility damaged or destroyed by a major disaster[,]” 42 U.S.C. §
    5172(a)(1)(B), but limits that aid to nonprofit facilities that provide “critical services,” including
    emergency medical care, or nonprofit facilities whose owners applied for Small Business
    Administration disaster loans and were determined ineligible or whose needs exceeded the loan
    amount. 42 U.S.C §§ 5172(a)(3)(A), (B). Here, the Hospital does not allege that it was eligible
    for a contribution as a private nonprofit facility. Instead, the Hospital’s allegations relate only to
    the FEMA-Indiana Agreement.
    -9-
    repair, restoration, reconstruction, or replacement[,]” subject to cost-eligibility determinations.
    42 U.S.C. § 5172(a)(4), (b), (e).
    FEMA’s regulations implementing the Stafford Act make clear that such assistance is
    paid to the state(s) where the disaster occurred, with the state as the grantee. The regulatory
    provision incorporated into the FEMA-Indiana Agreement, 44 C.F.R. § 206.44, is titled “FEMA-
    State Agreements” and provides guidance to states on providing subgrants to entities within the
    state. 44 C.F.R. § 206.44. The provisions of 44 C.F.R. § 206 also refer to affected entities,
    termed “applicants,” who apply for assistance from the state, rather than from FEMA directly.
    See, e.g., 44 C.F.R. § 206.202(a) (“This section describes the policies and procedures that
    [FEMA] use[s] to process public assistance grants to States. Under this section the State is the
    recipient. As the recipient, you [the State] are responsible for processing subgrants to applicants
    under 2 C.F.R. parts 200 and 3002, and 44 CFR part 206, and your [the State’s] own policies and
    procedures.”).
    The FEMA-Indiana Agreement refers to and incorporates the requirements and
    restrictions of the Stafford Act and its implementing regulations. (See generally Compl. Ex. 1
    (ECF 1) at A1-10.) The Agreement makes clear that it is an agreement contemplated by, and
    provided for under, the Stafford Act. The Agreement captures the Stafford Act’s statutory
    obligations. Exhibit A of the Agreement effectuates the Stafford Act’s implementing
    regulations, by identifying the Governor’s Authorized Representatives and the State
    Coordinating Officers. See 44 C.F.R. § 206.41. The FEMA-Indiana Agreement’s Exhibit B
    provides the general conditions for the grant, as required by regulation. See 44 C.F.R. §
    206.44(b) (“This Agreement . . . contains the commitment of the State and local government(s)
    with respect to the amount of funds to be expended in alleviating damage and suffering caused
    by the major disaster or emergency. The Agreement also contains such other terms and
    conditions consistent with the declaration and the provisions of applicable laws, Executive Order
    and regulations.”). The Agreement’s Exhibit C provides Disaster Grant Agreement Articles and
    incorporates the Stafford Act, the Act’s implementing regulations at title 44 of the Code of
    Federal Regulations, and relevant Office of Management and Budget circulars.
    Most notably, the FEMA-Indiana Agreement vests responsibility in the State of Indiana
    for pursing any and all remedial measures, including recoupment. The State of Indiana was
    required under the Agreement to comply with relevant laws and regulations, administer any and
    all subgrants, and recover public assistance in the event of error, fraud, or misrepresentation, and
    refund any recovered funds to FEMA. (Compl. Ex. 1 (ECF 1) at A1, A5, A6-A8 (State of
    Indiana “shall take necessary action . . . to cooperate with FEMA in any claim or suit in
    connection with amounts due” for moneys to be returned to FEMA).) The FEMA OIG Audit
    Report confirmed these terms and directed its recommendations to the State of Indiana, rather
    than to the Hospital. 5 Neither the Stafford Act, its implementing regulations, nor the Agreement
    provided a contractual remedy for disallowance of costs.
    5
    Although the parties do not dispute that FEMA effected the recovery of the Disputed Costs
    directly, the FEMA-Indiana Agreement made the State of Indiana, rather than FEMA,
    responsible for pursuing any claims and other recovery efforts.
    - 10 -
    The Court notes that other decisions of this Court treat third-party beneficiary status
    differently within the field of government contracts. In Carter v. United States (“Carter II”), this
    Court found that an agreement between the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”)
    and the States of Wyoming and Utah for the sale of nonfat dry milk for cattle was not an
    enforceable contract giving rights to the plaintiff cattle ranchers. 
    102 Fed. Cl. 61
    , 69 (2011).
    The Court held, however, that the States’ orders of nonfat dry milk, and the USDA’s acceptance
    of those orders, created enforceable agreements between the USDA and the States, and that the
    plaintiff ranchers were third-party beneficiaries of those agreements. Id. Carter II distinguished
    Astra because the statutory scheme in that case was different from the nonfat dry milk program’s
    statutory scheme in that “[t]here was no enforcement mechanism in the [nonfat dry milk]
    program with which a private remedy could overlap or compete.” Id. at 71. Instead, the nonfat
    dry milk program “merely allowed [the USDA] to sell any commodity it owned[,]” and
    subjected the USDA to the same private remedies as any other commercial seller. Id.
    As Astra and Sioux Honey, and unlike in Carter II, here there is a statutory enforcement
    scheme. In Carter II, there was no statutory or regulatory enforcement scheme, so when the
    USDA acted as any other seller in the market, the Court found that the United States had waived
    sovereign immunity as to the USDA for claims related to nonfat dry milk sales. Carter II, 102
    Fed. Cl. at 66. Here, by contrast, the FEMA-Indiana Agreement is a grant agreement that
    conditions the State’s receipt of disaster assistance on compliance with relevant statutory and
    regulatory obligations under the Stafford Act. The Agreement reflects that neither the Stafford
    Act nor its regulatory scheme allows for a private right of action, except the limited enforcement
    by the State. Cf. State of Texas, 210 Ct. Cl. at 527-58.
    The FEMA-Indiana Agreement is more like the contracts in Astra and Sioux Honey,
    which effectuated the relevant statutes’ obligations, identified a class of beneficiaries, and set out
    remedial schemes available only for specific claims. While the Hospital, like the healthcare
    facilities in Astra and the domestic producers in Sioux Honey, benefited from the contractual
    obligations in the FEMA-Indiana Agreement, that Agreement did not confer on the Hospital any
    right to enforce its benefits under the Agreement; instead, the Agreement and the Stafford Act
    left enforcement to the State. See Astra, 563 U.S. at 118; Sioux Honey, 672 F.3d at 1057. The
    Stafford Act only provides a right of action for the grantee state to enforce its rights.
    Accordingly, the Hospital is not a third-party beneficiary of the Agreement and cannot maintain
    a suit in this Court against FEMA.
    - 11 -
    V.     CONCLUSION
    Because the Hospital lacks an express or implied contract with FEMA, lacks privity of
    contract with FEMA, and is not a third-party beneficiary to the FEMA-Indiana Agreement, this
    Court lacks the subject matter jurisdiction to hear the Hospital’s claims. For the foregoing
    reasons, the Court GRANTS the defendant’s Motion to Dismiss for lack of subject-matter
    jurisdiction. The Clerk is directed to enter final judgment dismissing the complaint. 6 No costs
    are awarded.
    It is so ORDERED.
    s/ Richard A. Hertling
    Richard A. Hertling
    Judge
    6
    Plaintiffs, like the Hospital, claiming a violation of the law by FEMA are not left without
    judicial review and a possible remedy for such a violation. They may maintain actions in district
    court under the Administrative Procedure Act. Indeed, as noted above at I.C., the Hospital itself
    pursued such a claim, although it did not succeed on the merits.
    - 12 -