General Power Engineering Associates, Inc., B-292170, May 28, 2003
Case: B-292170
Agency:
Protester: General Power Engineering Associates, Inc., B
Date: 2003-05-28
Denied
B-292170
May 28, 2003
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Highlights
DIGEST Contracting agency properly rejected bid as late where record shows that the bid was delivered by commercial carrier to the agency's loading dock after the time set for receipt of bids. Log book maintained by security guards in charge of monitoring the loading dock is acceptable evidence of the time of receipt of the bid even though the guards are not government employees since the log is maintained by the guards in the regular course of monitoring the loading dock for the agency and there is no reason to challenge the log's authenticity or reliability. GPEA's bid was sent via Airborne Express. The bid was received at the agency's loading dock at 2:14 p.m. on January 23. No other delivery from Airborne Express is noted on the log for that day.
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General Power Engineering Associates, Inc., B-292170, May 28, 2003
DIGEST
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DECISION
General Power Engineering Associates, Inc. (GPEA) protests the rejection of its bid as late under invitation for bids (IFB) No. DACW5603-B-1001, issued by the Army Corps of Engineers for replacement of three generator air coolers at the Webbers Falls Powerhouse, Webbers Falls, Oklahoma.
We deny the protest.
The IFB, issued on November 27, 2002, required that bids be received by 2:00 p.m. on January 23, 2003. For hand-carried bids, the IFB stated that bids had to be received in the depository located in room 361 of the issuing office by the specified closing time.
GPEA's bid was sent via Airborne Express, a commercial carrier. According to the contracting agency, the bid was received at the agency's loading dock at 2:14 p.m. on January 23, after the designated closing time. As support for its position, the agency points to the log maintained by the security guards who monitor the loading dock; that log contains an entry showing "Airborne Deliv[ery] to COE [Corps of Engineers]" on January 23 at "1414," or 2:14 p.m. No other delivery from Airborne Express is noted on the log for that day. The contracting specialist states that she first located the package containing GPEA's bid in her office on January 27. Based on its conclusion that the bid was received late, the agency rejected the bid and so notified GPEA by letter dated January 28.
It is a bidder's responsibility to deliver its bid to the proper place at the proper time, and late delivery generally requires rejection of a bid. /1/ Inland Marine Indus., B-233117, Feb. 16, 1989, 89-1 CPD Para. 165 at 3. Acceptable evidence to establish the time of receipt of a bid includes the agency's time/date stamp on the bid, other documentary evidence of receipt maintained by the agency, and oral testimony or statements of government personnel. Federal Acquisition Regulation Sec. 52.214-7(c) (governing the treatment of late bids, and incorporated into the IFB here). In this case, the agency has submitted both documentary evidence of late receipt--the log maintained by the security guards at the loading dock--as well as a statement from the contracting specialist explaining that she first received the GPEA's bid on January 27.
GPEA contends that the agency has not adequately shown that its bid was received late. GPEA challenges the agency's reliance on the log maintained by the security guards because the guards are not government employees. In our view, the log is acceptable evidence of the time of receipt. It is undisputed that the log is a record maintained by the security guards in the regular course of monitoring the loading dock for the agency, and there is no reason to challenge its authenticity or reliability. The fact that the log is compiled by security guards who are contract employees rather than government employees does not preclude reliance on the log. See J. L. Malone & Assocs., B-290282, July 2, 2002, 2002 CPD Para. 116 at 5.
GPEA itself submitted a copy of a "customer cartage manifest" from Airborne Express that purports to show that the bid package was delivered to the loading dock at 11:49 a.m. on bid opening day. /2/ Commercial carrier records, standing alone, however, do not serve to establish the time of delivery to the agency, since they are not evidence of receipt maintained or confirmed by the agency. Valenzuela Eng'g, Inc., B-280984, Dec. 16, 1998, 98-2 CPD Para. 145 at 3. In any event, to the extent that GPEA relies on the Airborne Express document to establish that its bid was not in fact late, receipt of a bid at a mailroom or other receiving area does not constitute receipt at the office specified in the IFB. Inland Marine Indus., supra.
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