With a little bit of light lifting (Chewie?) I found an interesting article posted by a Philadelphia law firm, Berger & Montague, PC who does FCA cases, and they describe various methods used by the federal courts to determine damages and specifically the 3x multiple of damages.
It appears it often depends what circuit court in which one files ones claim as there are competing judgments between circuit courts as to the correct methodology. Essentially there are two methods, the
Gross Trebling Approach versus the
Net Trebling Approach
In the
gross trebling approach, the court trebles the amounts paid by the government and then subtracts any value received by the government.
In the
net trebling approach, any amounts or value the government has received is subtracted from the amount the government has paid and the result is then trebled.
Depending on which approach is used there can be a huge difference in damages. Berger & Montague give the following example,
"Assume that as a result of false claims, the government paid $300,000 for services that had a value of $185,000. A comparison of the two methods illustrates the impact of these different methods of damage calculation:
Gross Trebling (300,000 x 3) minus 185,000 equals 715,000
Net Trebling (300,000 minus 185,000) x 3 equals 345,000
There are competing judgments on the correct approach. The article states,
" ... the United States and the Department of Justice rely on a decision of the Supreme Court in
United States v. Bornstein, 423 U.S. 303, 314 (1976) where the court agreed that False Claims Act "damages should be [multiplied] before any compensatory payments are deducted because that method of compensation most faithfully conforms to the language and purpose of the Act" . This view has also been accepted by the Ninth Circuit,
United States v. Eghbal, 548 F.3rd 1281, 1285 (9th Cir. 2008).
On the other hand in the 7th Circuit,
"the Seventh Circuit rejected the government's approach to calculating damages,
United States v. Anchor Mortgage Corp., 711 F.3rd. 745 (7th Cir. 2013). The court found that the defendants provided false information with regard to a number of residential mortgage loans insured by the Federal Housing Administration (FHA).
The trial court had adopted the gross trebling damage calculation. The appellate court disagreed, holding that a net trebling approach should be used with the government's damages, before trebling, being "the amount paid on the guarantee less the value of the collateral", id, at 751. In doing so, based on its interpretation of a footnote, it read Bornstein to support the net trebling approach . The Anchor court rejected the conclusion of Eghbal."
For the full article on the other aspects of how damages are assessed in FCA cases go to the following link,
http://www.bergermontague.com/pract...should-false-claims-act-damages-be-calculated
This may remove some of the speculation in the Clinic about how damages are calculated in these cases (however when it comes to a Clinic debate, even the logic of this article may not be enough to temper the free-for-all of a raucous
argument)