Banks v. United States , 741 F.3d 1268 ( 2014 )


Menu:
  •   United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    JOHN H. BANKS, ET AL.,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant-Appellee.
    ______________________
    2012-5067
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States Court of Federal
    Claims in consolidated Nos. 99-CV-4451, 99-CV-4452, 99-
    CV-4453, 99-CV-4454, 99-CV-4455, 99-CV-4456, 99-CV-
    4457, 99-CV-4458, 99-CV-4459, 99-CV-44510, 99-
    CV44511, 99-CV-44512, 00-CV-365, 00-CV-379, 00-CV-
    380, 00-CV-381, 00-CV-382, 00-CV-383, 00-CV-384, 00-
    CV-385, 00-CV-386, 00-CV-387, 00-CV-388, 00-CV-389,
    00-CV-390, 00-CV-391, 00-CV-392, 00-CV-393, 00-CV-394,
    00-CV-395, 00-CV-396, 00-CV-398, 00-CV-399, 00-CV-400,
    00-CV-401, 05-CV-1353, 05-CV-1381, and 06-CV-072,
    Chief Judge Emily C. Hewitt.
    ______________________
    Decided: January 28, 2014
    ______________________
    EUGENE J. FRETT, Sperling & Slater, P.C., of Chicago,
    Illinois, argued for plaintiffs-appellants. Of counsel on
    the brief were MARK E. CHRISTENSEN, Christensen &
    BANKS   v. US                                            2
    Ehret, LLP, of Chicago, Illinois, and JOHN EHRET, of
    Olympia Fields, Illinois.
    ELIZABETH ANN PETERSON, Attorney, Environment &
    Natural Resources Division, United States Department of
    Justice, of Washington, DC, argued for defendant-
    appellee. With her on the brief was IGNACIA S. MORENO,
    Assistant Attorney General.
    BRIAN T. HODGES, Pacific Legal Foundation, of
    Bellevue, Washington, and R.S. RADFORD, of Sacramento,
    California, for amicus curiae Pacific Legal Foundation.
    ______________________
    Before RADER, Chief Judge, LINN, and WALLACH, Circuit
    Judges.
    WALLACH, Circuit Judge.
    These consolidated individual actions were brought by
    thirty-seven lakefront property owners seeking just
    compensation under the Fifth Amendment of the United
    States Constitution for a partial physical taking of their
    respective properties by the United States Army Corps of
    Engineers (“Corps”). The United States Court of Federal
    Claims dismissed the actions as time-barred. Because the
    Court of Federal Claims violated this court’s mandate in
    Banks v. United States (Banks II), 
    314 F.3d 1304
    , 1310
    (Fed. Cir. 2003), and clearly erred in finding that
    Appellants knew or should have known of their claims
    before 1952, the Court of Federal Claims’ dismissal is
    reversed.
    BACKGROUND
    I. The St. Joseph Harbor Jetties
    Beginning in the 1830s, the Corps began constructing
    two major harbor jetties on Lake Michigan near the St.
    Joseph River. These jetties protrude outward from the
    BANKS   v. US                                              3
    mouth of the river into the body of the lake. They were
    periodically extended until 1903, when they reached their
    current length. After 1903, major construction on the
    jetties ceased until 1950, when the Corps began a project
    to encase the jetties in steel-sheet piling. This project was
    completed in 1989.
    Appellants (also referred to as “Plaintiffs”) are
    landowners along approximately four and one-half miles
    of the eastern shore of Lake Michigan, south of the jetties.
    This shoreline is eroding naturally, but Appellants allege
    the jetties block the flow of sand and sediment from the
    river and the lakeshore north of their properties.
    Specifically, they argue that the structures interrupt the
    natural littoral drift within the lake, leading to increased
    erosion on their properties, amounting to an unlawful
    taking under the Fifth Amendment.
    The Corps has also been concerned with erosion along
    the Lake Michigan shoreline. In 1958, the Corps released
    a “Beach Erosion Control Study” (the “1958 Study”) that
    examined the effects of beach erosion on Berrien County,
    Michigan, where the St. Joseph jetties are located. This
    Report documented increased erosion in certain areas as a
    result of the jetties and recommended that a nourishment
    program “be initiated at the earliest practicable date.”
    J.A. 5939. This program did not target Appellants’ land
    because the land was then private and ineligible for
    federal funding. Nonetheless, the project was expected to
    benefit them by “restoration of normal littoral drift” in the
    area. J.A. 5959.
    In 1968, Congress enacted the “Rivers and Harbors
    Act,” which authorized the Secretary of the Army to
    “investigate, study, and construct projects for the
    prevention or mitigation of shore damages attributable to
    Federal navigation works.” River and Harbor Act of 1968,
    Pub. L. No. 90-483, § 111, 
    82 Stat. 731
    , 735 (1968)
    (codified as amended at 33 U.S.C. § 426i (2012)).
    BANKS   v. US                                              4
    Pursuant to this authority, the Corps proposed a plan to
    mitigate the erosion caused by the jetties by dumping
    sand into feeder beaches located to the north of
    Appellants’ properties. This endeavor was projected to
    “provide the quantities of littoral material interrupted by
    the [jetties] to the shores downdrift.” J.A. 5061.
    Implemented in 1976, the mitigation plan “involved
    placing fine sand from the harbor maintenance dredging
    on the downdrift [southerly] beaches.” Banks v. United
    States (Banks I), 
    49 Fed. Cl. 806
    , 818 (2001), rev’d, 
    314 F.3d 1304
     (Fed. Cir. 2003) (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted).     After fifteen years of beach
    nourishment, the mitigation efforts shifted to using
    coarser sediment, in the hope it would have a longer
    retention time than fine sand. Eventually, in 1995, the
    Corps dumped “barge-loads of large rocks into the lake.”
    Id. at 819.
    In relation to these projects, the Corps released a
    series of reports in 1973, 1996, 1997, and 1999 on the
    erosive effects of the jetties and the progress of mitigation
    efforts. There is also an April 20, 1998, newspaper article
    relating to the erosion.
    The 1973 Report “has been described, without
    contradiction, ‘as the first credible look at the St. Joseph
    Harbor structures in estimating the total amount of
    material trapped in the structures.’” Banks v. United
    States, 
    78 Fed. Cl. 603
    , 612 (2007) (“Liability Op.”). The
    Corps started implementing mitigation programs after
    this Report.
    The 1996 Report concluded that the St. Joseph
    shoreline was “in a state of recession” and that the erosion
    that occurs during lakebed downcutting 1 is “permanent.”
    1 Downcutting is explained as follows: “If the sand
    cover to glacial till is depleted, the energy of the waves
    and the shifting of the sand, which acts as ‘sandpaper,’
    BANKS   v. US                                               5
    Larry E. Pearson, Andrew Morang & Robert B. Nairn,
    U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, Geologic Effects on
    Behavior of Beachfill and Shoreline Stability for
    Southeast Lake Michigan 9, 48 (1996) (“1996 Report”).
    However, the Report also indicated uncertainty regarding
    the effects of mitigation efforts: the mitigation program
    “may provide at least partial protection to the underlying
    glacial till along and offshore of the feeder beach and the
    waterworks revetment section of shore. It is unclear
    whether the beach nourishment is having any negative or
    positive impact along the 3.5-km revetment section of
    shoreline south of the waterworks.” Id. at 49; see also
    Banks II, 
    314 F.3d at 1307
    .
    The 1997 Report observed that some areas were
    benefitting from nourishment but in other areas the
    results were “questionable.”       J.A. 5516.       The 1999
    Report—made public in 2000—identified Lake Michigan
    as a cohesive, rather than sandy, shoreline, and stated
    that “‘[e]rosion of the consolidated layer [underlayer of a
    cohesive coastline] is generally irreversible.’” 2 Banks I, 49
    can cause the lake bottom to erode and thus lower in a
    process referred to as ‘downcutting.’” Liability Op., 78
    Fed. Cl. at 622.
    2 “The composition of the lakebed is relevant because
    the composition affects erosion and mitigation processes.”
    Liability Op., 78 Fed. Cl. at 622. A sandy lakebed is made
    up of materials that are loosely deposited, or easily
    dispersed.     Id. at 621.       Thus, according to the
    Government’s expert, “as long as the sand supply south of
    the harbor is restored to the pre-harbor levels, then we
    can assume directly that the erosion will remain the same
    as pre-harbor levels, all other things aside.” Id. (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). Conversely, in a
    cohesive lakebed, the materials are bound together and
    are not “freely mobile.” Id. (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted).     Cohesive shores are thus “more
    BANKS   v. US                                             6
    Fed. Cl. at 823 (quoting J.A. 5637). The 1999 Report also
    found that the effects of the nourishment programs were
    limited because the programs were based on the
    assumption that the coastline was sandy, with an
    unlimited sand supply, and not cohesive. Appellants
    relied on the 1999 Report in arguing their claims were not
    time-barred and stated that “the language in this [R]eport
    is the first clear indication of permanent damage caused
    by the harbor structures.” Id. (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted).
    II. Procedural History
    This case began in 1999, when a majority of
    Appellants filed suit in the Court of Federal Claims
    against the Government claiming an unconstitutional
    taking under the Fifth Amendment. 3 See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
     (1994). In 2001, the Government filed a Motion to
    Dismiss the Complaint as being time-barred. There was
    already a “well-developed” evidentiary record before the
    complicated” because the “sand acts to abrade, sort of like
    sandpaper, the till.” Id. at 622 (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted). However, “[t]here’s no scientific
    knowledge as to . . . when you increase your erosion and
    when you may decrease your erosion.” Id. In any event,
    “what’s critical about till downcutting is . . . [o]nce it
    erodes, it does not recover.” Id. Stated simply, if a
    shoreline is sandy, mitigation will be more successful
    than if the shoreline is cohesive.
    3 The original July 9, 1999, Complaint was filed on
    behalf of a “proposed class” of “approximately 200
    landowners who own the shoreline property in the area
    extending 53,000 feet south from the St. Joseph Harbor
    jetties.” J.A. 4939. The Court of Federal Claims denied
    class certification, and the thirty-seven Plaintiffs in this
    action filed separate Complaints. Appellants’ counsel
    treats the allegations in the Complaints as the same. See
    Banks I, 49 Fed. Cl. at 808.
    BANKS   v. US                                              7
    court because the parties had been preparing for trial.
    Banks I, 49 Fed. Cl. at 809 n.4. Appellants also offered
    expert testimony from Dr. Guy Meadows, a mechanical
    engineering professor at the University of Michigan.
    The Court of Federal Claims granted the Motion and
    dismissed for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, finding
    that the claims had accrued in 1989 and were therefore
    barred by the Tucker Act’s six-year statute of limitations.
    Id. Appellants appealed, and this court reversed and
    remanded in 2003, holding that Appellants’ claims did not
    materialize until 2000, when the Corps’ Reports
    “collectively indicated that the erosion was permanent
    and irreversible.”      Banks II, 
    314 F.3d at 1310
    .
    Specifically, this court held: “We are satisfied that the
    [P]laintiffs met their jurisdictional burden before the
    Court of Federal Claims.” 
    Id.
    On remand, the Court of Federal Claims held
    separate trials on liability and damages. On June 4,
    2007, the case proceeded to the trial on liability. Liability
    Op., 
    78 Fed. Cl. 603
    . The primary issues addressed were:
    (1) the zone of influence of the jetties and whether
    Appellants’ properties were located within that zone; (2)
    whether the composition of the lakebed adjacent to the
    property was sandy or cohesive; and (3) the effectiveness
    of the beach nourishment mitigation program. 
    Id.
     at 613–
    14. The Court of Federal Claims concluded that, contrary
    to the allegations in Appellants’ Complaints, the jetties
    were impermeable to sand before they were encased in
    steel. See id. at 636. The court also found that the
    United States was liable for 30% of erosion between 1950
    and 1970, after each owner’s acquisition of his or her
    property. It held that, after 1970, the United States was
    responsible for 30% of any losses to erosion that had not
    been effectively mitigated. Id. at 656. In so concluding,
    the Court of Federal Claims “heard testimony from 22
    witnesses and received some 75 exhibits into evidence.”
    Id. at 608.
    BANKS   v. US                                             8
    Following the Liability Opinion, Appellants made
    additional motions, including a Motion in Limine based
    on the law-of-the-case doctrine to preclude (1) all evidence
    that the erosion suffered by Appellants was not
    permanent and irreversible; and (2) evidence relating to
    the composition of the nearshore lakebed adjacent to
    Appellants’ properties. J.A. 1859. The Court of Federal
    Claims denied the Motion as to both requests. Appellants
    also moved to clarify the measure of damages. The court
    granted the motion to clarify and modified its ruling,
    finding “that property owners at the time of the taking
    are entitled to compensation for ‘all damages, past,
    present, and prospective.’” J.A. 1755 (internal citation
    omitted). The court then held a trial on damages from
    April 18–21, 2011, and from April 25–28, 2011. Banks v.
    United States (Banks III), 
    102 Fed. Cl. 115
    , 120 (2011).
    After the Court of Federal Claims conducted the
    damages trial, it found there was “a jurisdictional issue
    that arose in connection with its drafting of the trial
    opinion.” Banks v. United States, 
    99 Fed. Cl. 622
    , 623
    (2011) (opinion requesting additional briefing). The court
    then directed the parties to file additional briefing
    addressing whether the Court of Federal Claims had
    jurisdiction to hear Appellants’ claims.      Id. at 626.
    Specifically, the court asked the parties to brief the
    following two questions:
    1) Given the court’s finding after the trial of
    liability that the jetties were impermeable to sand
    before they were encased in steel sheet piling, and
    given the Corps’ acknowledgement of the
    erosional impact of “harbor structures” in the
    1958 Study, on what date did [P]laintiffs’ claims
    accrue? Does the court possess subject matter
    jurisdiction to hear [P]laintiffs’ claims?
    2) Does the Federal Circuit’s determination that
    [P]laintiffs’ claims accrued with the publication of
    three Corps [R]eports on mitigation constitute the
    BANKS     v. US                                               9
    “law of the case” which may not be disturbed by
    the court notwithstanding inconsistent factual
    findings of the court after trial?
    Id.
    Following the supplemental briefing, on December 22,
    2011, the Court of Federal Claims again found it lacked
    jurisdiction. The court additionally presented findings “in
    the alternative” on the merits of the case, stating if “any
    appeal should disagree with the court’s view of its
    jurisdiction, and to avoid the possibility . . . of a repetitive
    trial, the court also presents here its findings from the
    trial.” Banks III, 102 Fed. Cl. at 120. 4
    Appellants timely appealed.          This court has
    jurisdiction pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(3) (2012).
    DISCUSSION
    The principal issues on appeal are (1) whether this
    court’s opinion in Banks II precluded the Court of Federal
    Claims from reconsidering when Appellants’ claims
    accrued for the purposes of subject matter jurisdiction,
    and (2) whether Appellants knew or should have known
    that their claims accrued by 1952.
    Specifically, the Court of Federal Claims held:
    4
    Since 1970, the Corps’ mitigation efforts have
    prevented the jetties from causing erosion to
    [P]laintiffs’ properties, with one exception.
    Further, [P]laintiffs have failed to prove, with
    regard to any of [P]laintiffs’ properties—whether
    by comparing the cost of shore protection to the
    dollar amount of their reasonably foreseeable
    damages or by some other means—that the
    installation of shore protection would be sound
    economy.
    Banks III, 
    102 Fed. Cl. 115
    .
    BANKS   v. US                                           10
    I. Standard of Review
    This court reviews legal holdings de novo and
    examines factual findings for clear error. Bell BCI Co. v.
    United States, 
    570 F.3d 1337
    , 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2009).
    “[T]he interpretation by an appellate court of its own
    mandate is properly considered a question of law,
    reviewable de novo.” Laitram Corp. v. NEC Corp., 
    115 F.3d 947
    , 950 (Fed. Cir. 1997). A dismissal for lack of
    jurisdiction by the court below is also a legal conclusion
    reviewed de novo. Tex. Peanut Farmers v. United States,
    
    409 F.3d 1370
    , 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
    II. Subject Matter Jurisdiction
    The Tucker Act allows plaintiffs to sue the United
    States for claims founded upon the Constitution, Acts of
    Congress, agency regulations, contracts with the United
    States, “or for liquidated or unliquidated damages in
    cases not sounding in tort.” 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    . Title 
    28 U.S.C. § 2501
     limits this allowance to a period of six
    years. The six-year limitation operates as a suspension of
    sovereign      immunity,     because    without    explicit
    Congressional authorization, the United States may not
    be sued. United States v. Mitchell, 
    463 U.S. 206
    , 212
    (1983) (“It is axiomatic that the United States may not be
    sued without its consent and that the existence of consent
    is a prerequisite for jurisdiction.”); United States v.
    Sherwood, 
    312 U.S. 584
    , 586 (1941). Thus, the statute’s
    six-year time frame is a limited jurisdictional window in
    which plaintiffs have the ability to bring a claim against
    the Government. 
    28 U.S.C. §§ 1491
    , 2501.
    III. The Mandate Rule
    The law-of-the-case doctrine “posits that when a court
    decides upon a rule of law, that decision should continue
    to govern the same issues in subsequent stages in the
    same case.” Christianson v. Colt Indus. Operating Corp.,
    
    486 U.S. 800
    , 815–816 (1988) (internal quotation marks
    BANKS   v. US                                              11
    and citation omitted). The rule encourages both finality
    and efficiency in the judicial process by preventing
    relitigation of already-settled issues. 
    Id. at 816
    . The
    mandate rule, encompassed by the broader law-of-the-
    case doctrine, dictates that “an inferior court has no
    power or authority to deviate from the mandate issued by
    an appellate court.” Briggs v. Pa. R. Co., 
    334 U.S. 304
    ,
    306 (1948); see also Cent. Soya Co. v. Geo. A. Hormel &
    Co., 
    723 F.2d 1573
    , 1580 (Fed. Cir. 1983) (explaining that
    the law-of-the-case doctrine was “judicially created to
    ensure judicial efficiency and to prevent the possibility of
    endless litigation”). Once a question has been considered
    and decided by an appellate court, the issue may not be
    reconsidered at any subsequent stage of the litigation,
    save on appeal. Cf. In re Sanford Fork & Tool Co., 
    160 U.S. 247
    , 255 (1895) (“Whatever was before [the Supreme
    Court], and disposed of by its decree, is considered as
    finally settled. . . . If the circuit court mistakes or
    misconstrues the decree of this court, and does not give
    full effect to the mandate, its action may be controlled . . .
    upon a new appeal.”).
    Under the mandate rule, a court below must adhere to
    a matter decided in a prior appeal unless one of three
    “exceptional circumstances” exist: (1) subsequent evidence
    presented at trial was substantially different from the
    original evidence; (2) controlling authority has since made
    a contrary and applicable decision of the law; or (3) the
    decision was clearly erroneous “and would work a
    manifest injustice.” Gindes v. United States, 
    740 F.2d 947
    , 950 (Fed. Cir. 1984) (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted). This rule is limited to issues “actually
    decided, either explicitly or by necessary implication” in
    the previous litigation. Toro Co. v. White Consol. Indus.,
    Inc., 
    383 F.3d 1326
    , 1335 (Fed. Cir. 2004).
    Appellants’ first jurisdictional argument is that the
    Court of Federal Claims violated this court’s mandate and
    that none of the three exceptions gave it the power to do
    BANKS   v. US                                            12
    so. The Government counters that the Court of Federal
    Claims “correctly concluded that the issue here—whether
    Banks knew or should have known of the claims before
    the refurbishment and mitigation projects were
    undertaken in the 1950s and 1970s—was not considered
    or decided by this Court in Banks II.” Appellee’s Br. 30.
    To determine whether this court’s mandate in
    Banks II was violated, its scope must first be established.
    The Banks II court prefaced the analysis by stating its
    focus: “The issue before this court on appeal is whether
    the Court of Federal Claims erred in finding that the
    [P]laintiffs’ claims fell outside the applicable statute of
    limitations.” Banks II, 
    314 F.3d at 1308
    . After applying
    the analogous case of Applegate v. United States, 
    25 F.3d 1579
     (Fed. Cir. 1994), the court held that:
    We are satisfied that the [P]laintiffs met their
    jurisdictional burden before the Court of Federal
    Claims on the basis of the justifiable uncertainty
    of the permanence of the taking caused by the
    actual mitigation efforts of the Corps. The statute
    of limitations did not begin to run until the Corps
    issued the 1996, 1997, and 1999 Reports. Because
    each [R]eport was issued less than six years
    before [P]laintiffs filed their [C]omplaints, each
    [C]omplaint was timely.
    Banks II, 
    314 F.3d at 1310
     (citation omitted).
    On remand, the Court of Federal Claims again
    dismissed the case, finding Appellants’ Complaints were
    untimely. It held its dismissal was not barred by the
    mandate rule, on the ground that this court’s decision did
    not address “whether [P]laintiffs’ claims accrued before
    the [G]overnment made its first promises of mitigation.”
    Banks III, 102 Fed. Cl. at 150. Finding that “the jetties
    were impermeable to sand before they were encased in
    steel sheet piling,” id. at 131, the Court of Federal Claims
    held the Appellants’ claims accrued before 1952 and
    BANKS   v. US                                            13
    dismissed the case for want of jurisdiction. The Court of
    Federal Claims found that for Appellants’ claims to have
    been timely filed, the erosion must have stabilized after
    1952, six years before the 1958 Study, which Appellants
    argued created justifiable uncertainty about the
    permanence of the taking. Id. at 133–34.
    The Government argues that Banks II never decided
    whether the claims accrued before 1952, because both this
    court and the Court of Federal Claims “accepted as true
    the allegations of the Complaints, including the allegation
    that the jetties caused no damage before 1950.”
    Appellee’s Br. 31–32. The Government therefore contends
    that the Court of Federal Claims did not violate the
    mandate rule when it considered that issue on remand.
    The problem with the Government’s position is that
    neither the Court of Federal Claims nor this court
    accepted as true all the allegations in Appellants’
    Complaint. When reviewing a motion to dismiss for lack
    of subject matter jurisdiction, a court accepts only
    uncontroverted factual allegations as true for purposes of
    the motion. Gibbs v. Buck, 
    307 U.S. 66
    , 72 (1939). “If a
    motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction,
    however, challenges the truth of the jurisdictional facts
    alleged in the complaint, the district court may consider
    relevant evidence in order to resolve the factual dispute.”
    Reynolds v. Army & Air Force Exch. Serv., 
    846 F.2d 746
    ,
    747 (Fed. Cir. 1988); see also Engage Learning v. Salazar,
    
    660 F.3d 1346
    , 1355 (Fed. Cir. 2011); Cedars-Sinai Med.
    Ctr. v. Watkins, 
    11 F.3d 1573
    , 1584 (Fed. Cir. 1993). In
    such cases, the plaintiff has the burden of proving subject
    matter jurisdiction by a preponderance of the evidence.
    Reynolds, 
    846 F.2d at
    748 (citing Zunamon v. Brown, 
    418 F.2d 883
    , 886 (8th Cir. 1969)). Additionally, “[i]f the Rule
    12(b)(1) motion [to dismiss] denies or controverts the
    pleader’s allegations of jurisdiction . . . the movant is
    deemed to be challenging the factual basis for the court’s
    BANKS   v. US                                            14
    subject matter jurisdiction.” Cedars-Sinai Med. Ctr., 
    11 F.3d at 1583
    .
    In Banks I, the Court of Federal Claims stated that
    “[b]ecause the parties were preparing for trial at the time
    [D]efendant filed its [M]otion to [D]ismiss, the evidentiary
    record is well-developed. The court has before it the
    anticipated trial exhibits prepared by the parties and filed
    in accordance with the pre-trial scheduling order.” Banks
    I, 49 Fed. Cl. at 809 n.4. The court then explained that
    “Plaintiffs cannot rely merely on the allegations in the
    [C]omplaint. Because [P]laintiffs bear the burden of proof
    by a preponderance of the evidence, they must offer
    relevant, competent evidence to show that they filed suit
    within six years of the accrual of their claims.” Id. at 809
    (internal citation omitted). Explicitly looking outside of
    the Complaint, the court granted the Government’s
    Motion to Dismiss, stating: “The court observes that
    [P]laintiffs’ claims that they were uncertain about the
    permanence of the erosion damage until 1999 are
    contradicted by their own evidence.” 5 Id. at 824.
    Holding those findings were clearly erroneous and
    that Appellants’ claims did not accrue until 2000, the
    Banks II court relied on the technical Reports, not solely
    on the Appellants’ allegations in the Complaint. It is
    simply inaccurate to claim that the factual allegations of
    the Complaint were taken as true by either court.
    Banks II did not “leave open” the issue of when
    Plaintiffs’ claims accrued. The Banks II court held the
    Complaints were not barred by the six-year statute of
    5   The Banks II court stated that the 1996, 1997, and
    1999 Reports were all in evidence before the Court of
    Federal Claims. Banks II, 
    314 F.3d at 1307
     (explaining
    “[t]he evidence before the Court of Federal Claims
    included three technical [R]eports issued by the Corps”).
    BANKS   v. US                                            15
    limitations. Necessary and predicate to the holding was a
    finding that the mitigation efforts delayed claim accrual.
    Because the Banks II mandate decided the accrual
    date, the Court of Federal Claims was permitted to revisit
    this issue only if one of the three exceptions to the
    mandate rule applied. The Court of Federal Claims did
    not find, and the Government did not argue, that the
    Banks II decision was clearly erroneous or that there was
    a change in controlling precedent. Thus, only the third
    exception—whether subsequent evidence presented at
    trial was substantially different from the original
    evidence—is relevant.
    The Government contends that the “most persuasive
    evidence that the jetties had caused erosion of the Banks
    properties” was the 1958 Study, which was admitted in
    July 2007, six years and four years after Banks I and
    Banks II, respectively. Appellee’s Br. 34 (citing Banks III,
    102 Fed. Cl. at 134). Appellants respond that “the
    evidence is not new, and far from being substantially
    different, is merely cumulative of the jurisdictional
    evidence that was before this [c]ourt.” Appellants’ Br. 27.
    When a party offers additional evidence that is
    consistent with previously-offered evidence, but is not
    new or different in any real sense, a court should decline
    the invitation to revisit its previous determination. See
    Intergraph Corp. v. Intel Corp., 
    253 F.3d 695
    , 698 (Fed.
    Cir. 2001) (noting that the district court stated,
    “[a]lthough Intergraph may have obtained more evidence
    related to the FTC’s actions, the Federal Circuit was
    certainly aware of the actions”); see also United States v.
    Bartsh, 
    69 F.3d 864
    , 867 (8th Cir. 1995) (finding that the
    Appellant presented “no new substantive evidence, but
    merely a recalculation of the same evidence that was
    offered at the sentencing hearing”). In the instant case,
    while the Court of Federal Claims may have examined
    the evidence more thoroughly in the bifurcated liability
    BANKS   v. US                                            16
    and damages trial, all of it was consistent with evidence
    that was before both the Court of Federal Claims on the
    Government’s Motion to Dismiss and this court on appeal
    in 2003.
    The evidence before the Court of Federal Claims after
    this court’s mandate issued was not “new” but merely
    cumulative of evidence before it in 2001. The evidentiary
    record before the Court of Federal Claims in 2001
    included the 1996, 6 1997, 7 and 1999 8 Reports, a 1998
    newspaper article, 9 and evidence from Plaintiffs’ expert,
    6    The 1996 Report, in relevant part, states that the
    shoreline is in recession and that “[e]vidence has been
    presented by Buckler (1981) showing a southward
    progression of increased erosion rates since at least 1829.
    Further studies by Buckler and Winters (1983) revealed
    average bluff recession rates for the area between St.
    Joseph and Shoreham of approximately 0.6 m/year
    between 1829 and 1977.” J.A. 5031 (emphases added).
    7 The 1997 Report makes similar findings: “The
    harbor jetties were constructed originally in 1903 and
    have been estimated to trap approximately 84,000 [cubic
    meters] of sediment per year.” J.A. 5434.
    8 The 1999 Report similarly states “the removal of
    sand from the littoral transport system has been
    occurring from the time of construction; in some cases for
    over one hundred years.” J.A. 5637 (emphasis added).
    9 In the record, and cited by the Court of Federal
    Claims in 2001, was also a 1998 newspaper article from
    the Herald-Palladium, titled “Too soon to tell if erosion
    experiment will help.” The article, quoting a physical
    scientist for the Corps, Charles Thompson, stated: “the
    project began only in the early 1970’s so basically we have
    80, 90, or 100 years of non-mitigation to make up for. . . .
    For most of the life of the St. Joseph’s Harbor structures
    [jetties], little was done to mitigate the effects of those
    BANKS   v. US                                            17
    Dr. Meadows, 10 all of which contained information similar
    to that in the 1958 Study.
    The sum of that evidence is that erosion has been
    occurring since at least 1903. The evidence was not only
    before the Court of Federal Claims in Banks I; the court
    referred to, and relied upon, it extensively. The same
    evidence was before this court in 2003, as evidenced by
    the fact that the basis for this court’s opinion in Banks II
    was the 1996, 1997, and 1999 Reports. This court is not
    persuaded that any “new” evidence required reexamining
    jurisdiction that had already been decided by this court.
    In evaluating the scope of the mandate, the actions of
    the Court of Federal Claims must not be inconsistent with
    the letter or spirit of the mandate. Engel Indus. Inc. v.
    Lockformer Co., 
    166 F.3d 1379
    , 1383 (Fed. Cir. 1999).
    Indeed, “all issues within the scope of the appealed
    judgment are deemed incorporated within the mandate
    and thus are precluded from further adjudication.” 
    Id. at 1383
    . The broad mandate issued by this court found that
    Appellants’ claims did not accrue until the 1996, 1997,
    and 1999 Reports. This decision necessarily decided that
    structures.”    Banks I, 49 Fed. Cl. at 821 (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted).
    10 The Court of Federal Claims also cited to testimony
    from Dr. Meadows that the jetties had been causing
    erosion since their completion in 1903. Specifically, Dr.
    Meadows testified that:
    The harm that has been done is the accumulated
    harm since 1903 [(the construction date of the
    harbor jetties)]. That structure has done two
    things. It has blocked the shore parallel transport
    of material from north to south and it has also
    deflected some of that material offshore and,
    hence, being lost forever once it’s beyond the
    depth of closure.
    Banks I, 49 Fed. Cl. at 817 (citation omitted).
    BANKS   v. US                                          18
    the claims did not accrue prior to 1952. The Court of
    Federal Claims’ Banks III holding that the claims accrued
    before that time is therefore reversed.
    IV. Accrual Suspension
    The Court of Federal Claims further erred in its
    analysis of accrual suspension. The accrual of a claim
    against the United States is suspended, for purposes of 
    28 U.S.C. § 2501
    , until the claimant knew or should have
    known that the claim existed (“the accrual suspension
    rule”). Boling v. United States, 
    220 F.3d 1365
    , 1373 (Fed.
    Cir. 2000) (finding that, when determining when a taking
    claim accrues, “the key issue is whether the permanent
    nature of the taking was evident such that the landowner
    should have known that the land had suffered erosion
    damage”); Hopland Band of Pomo Indians v. United
    States, 
    855 F.2d 1573
    , 1577 (Fed. Cir. 1988); Kinsey v.
    United States, 
    852 F.2d 556
    , 557 n.* (Fed. Cir. 1988) (“A
    claim does not accrue unless the claimant knew or should
    have known that the claim existed.”); see also Holmes v.
    United States, 
    657 F.3d 1303
    , 1322 n.15 (Fed. Cir. 2011).
    For the accrual suspension rule to apply, the claimant
    “must either show that the defendant has concealed its
    acts with the result that plaintiff was unaware of their
    existence or it must show that its injury was ‘inherently
    unknowable’ at the accrual date.” Young v. United States,
    
    529 F.3d 1380
    , 1384 (Fed. Cir. 2008) (quoting Martinez v.
    United States, 
    333 F.3d 1295
    , 1319 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (en
    banc)). The inherently unknowable test “includes a
    reasonableness component.” Holmes, 
    657 F.3d at 1320
    (“While we have stated that the ‘concealed or inherently
    unknowable’ formulation of the test for accrual
    suspension is ‘more common and more precise’ than the
    ‘knew or should have known’ formulation, we do not view
    that statement as eschewing the reasonableness
    component of the ‘inherently unknowable’ prong of the
    test.”) (internal citation omitted).
    BANKS    v. US                                            19
    The Court of Federal Claims found that Appellants’
    argument relating to accrual suspension based on the
    overruling of adverse precedent was waived because they
    did not raise it in their opening brief to that court. In the
    alternative, the court held that the accrual suspension
    rule was “inapplicable to [P]laintiffs’ claims.” Banks III,
    102 Fed. Cl. at 144. On appeal, Appellants argue that
    accrual suspension should apply because they “should not
    reasonably have been expected to know that jetty-caused
    erosion was significantly damaging their properties until
    1997.” Appellants’ Br. 23. The Government contends
    that Appellants “now raise[ ] a second accrual suspension
    argument that was not raised in the [Court of Federal
    Claims]” and that argument is waived. Appellee’s Br. 40.
    Appellants have not waived their accrual suspension
    arguments.       The Court of Federal Claims cited
    Appellants’ argument “that as late as 1997 it was not
    understood that the harbor jetties caused increased
    erosion in [P]laintiffs’ zone.       The implication of
    [P]laintiffs’ argument is that their claims stabilized no
    earlier than 1997 because it was not understood at that
    time that the jetties were causing erosion in [P]laintiffs’
    zone.” Banks III, 102 Fed. Cl. at 141. Though Banks did
    not use the term “accrual suspension” in making this
    argument, the substance is the same as that which it
    argues before this court. Accordingly, the argument is not
    waived.
    The Court of Federal Claims held that “erosion caused
    by the jetties in [P]laintiffs’ zone was a longstanding
    problem by 1952, beginning as early as 1903,” id. at 138,
    and that the forty-nine-year passage of time and “well-
    documented” erosion would have made it “clear to a
    reasonable landowner . . . that the [G]overnment had
    effected a permanent taking,” 11 id. at 140. Appellants
    11The Court of Federal Claims found that “[d]uring
    the forty-nine years between 1903, when the jetties
    BANKS   v. US                                           20
    argue that they could not have known they had a takings
    claim until 1997, when the 1997 Report issued. The
    Government counters that Appellants’ claims were not
    “inherently unknowable” and that they should have
    known about the erosion as early as 1950.
    When there is a gradual physical process, such as
    erosion or flooding, the “stabilization doctrine” delays
    claim accrual until the situation has “stabilized.” See
    United States v. Dickinson, 
    331 U.S. 745
    , 749 (1947).
    Thus, the statute of limitations under the Tucker Act only
    begins to run when it “becomes clear that the gradual
    process set into motion by the [G]overnment has effected
    a permanent taking, not when the process has ceased or
    when the entire extent of the damage is determined.”
    Boling, 
    220 F.3d at
    1370–71.
    In making the determination of permanence, a court
    considers “the uncertainties of the terrain, the difficulty
    in determining the location of the government’s easement,
    and the irregular process of erosion.” 
    Id. at 1373
    . Claims
    are deemed to accrue once the damage has “substantially
    encroached the parcels at issue and the damages were
    reasonably foreseeable.” 
    Id.
    The Government argues that even if Appellants
    inferred from the various Corps Reports that the jetties
    had not caused the specific damage to their properties,
    “[they] w[ere] on notice of the well-documented connection
    between the jetties and erosion along the shore.”
    Appellee’s Br. 46. Likewise, the Court of Federal Claims
    implies that Appellants knew or should have known that
    the jetties were causing erosion because of the “general
    reached their final length, and 1952, the jetties were
    responsible for 25% of the material eroded from Dr.
    Nairn’s study area, the ten mile segment of shoreline
    south of the jetties.” Banks III, 102 Fed. Cl. at 140.
    BANKS   v. US                                            21
    pattern of erosion that followed the lengthening of the
    jetties in 1903.” Banks III, 102 Fed. Cl. at 140.
    Two factors complicate determining when Appellants
    knew or should have known of their alleged takings
    claims. First, the shorelines of Appellants’ properties are
    subject to natural erosion and other natural fluctuations.
    As this court found in Banks II, “without human
    intervention, [erosion] occurs naturally at a rate of
    approximately one foot per year.” 
    314 F.3d at 1306
    .
    Furthermore, Lake Michigan is subject to “[s]hort period
    fluctuations up to about 1.8 feet, caused by winds and
    differences in barometric pressures, [which] occur with
    annual frequency.” J.A. 5939. Waves and storms also
    affect the shorelines: “Waves from both the northwest and
    southwest quadrants cause movement of beach material,
    but as evidenced by the much greater accumulation of
    beach material north of the St. Joseph Harbor structures,
    the predominant direction of littoral transport is
    southward.” 
    Id.
     The Government’s own expert, Dr.
    Robert Nairn, a coastal engineer, testified that the slow
    process of erosion is “masked by far larger swings in the
    width of the beaches next to [P]laintiffs’ properties caused
    by cross-shore sand transport, a cyclical process by which
    sand is moved offshore during times of high lake levels
    and returned to the shore during times of low lake levels.”
    Banks III, 102 Fed. Cl. at 121.
    That the Plaintiffs were aware of some erosion is not
    sufficient for the claim to accrue. See Nw. La. Fish &
    Game Pres. Comm’n v. United States, 
    446 F.3d 1285
    , 1291
    (Fed. Cir. 2006) (explaining because some growth of
    hydrilla is normal, the damage to Plaintiffs was not
    known until there was uncontrolled overgrowth and the
    Corps issued a final refusal to lower the water level).
    Indeed, the Corps itself stated that only 30% of the
    damage to Appellants’ shorelines was attributable to the
    Corps’ activity, meaning 70% of the damage to the subject
    properties was attributable to naturally occurring erosion.
    BANKS   v. US                                            22
    J.A. 5770. Accordingly, it is unreasonable to assume that
    a property owner should have been able to discern the
    difference between the naturally occurring erosion and
    that caused by the jetties.
    As found by this court in Banks II, Appellants could
    not reasonably have known the damage was “permanent”
    until the Corps issued its 1996, 1997, and 1999 Reports
    showing that its mitigation efforts could not reverse the
    damage caused by its jetties. Banks II, 
    314 F.3d at 1310
    .
    It is erroneous to hold Plaintiffs responsible for knowledge
    that the Government itself had disclaimed prior to the
    1997 Report. Cf. L.L.S. Leasing Corp. v. United States,
    
    695 F.2d 1359
    , 1366 (Fed. Cir. 1982) (by taking upon itself
    the obligation to report overtime usage, the Government
    relieved the lessor of monitoring such use).             The
    Government itself explained in the 1958 Study that the
    Corps believed that the erosion was not permanent and
    could be mitigated and reversed. Banks III, 102 Fed. Cl.
    at 133. Moreover, in 1973, the Government believed that
    the jetty-induced erosion had not reached the majority of
    Appellants’ properties. 12 The Government’s mitigation
    efforts thus delayed when Appellants knew or should
    have known they had a claim.
    Without a basis for imputing knowledge of the effect
    of the jetty-caused erosion on Appellants’ properties, it
    was unreasonable to find that the Appellants were aware
    of their claim regarding the permanency of the taking
    before the 1990s Reports.
    In light of the foregoing, and because “Dickinson
    discouraged a strict application of accrual principles in
    unique cases involving Fifth Amendment takings by
    continuous physical processes,” Applegate, 
    25 F.3d at
    12  The 1973 Report found that the “area of adverse
    influence” of the jetties included properties less than
    21,000 feet south of the harbor. J.A. 5776.
    BANKS   v. US                                              23
    1582 (citing Dickinson, 
    331 U.S. at 749
    ), the Court of
    Federal Claims’ finding that Appellants knew or should
    have known of the damage prior to 1952 is clearly
    erroneous.
    V. The Alternative Merits Discussion is Not a Final,
    Appealable Decision
    In Banks III, the Court of Federal Claims stated:
    For purposes of judicial efficiency, if the reviewing
    court in any appeal should disagree with the
    court’s view of its jurisdiction, and to avoid the
    possibility of a trial opinion being drafted months
    or years after the trial, and the possibility of a
    repetitive trial, the court also presents here its
    findings from the trial.        These findings are
    presented in the alternative and, in the absence of
    jurisdiction, do not entitle [P]laintiffs to just
    compensation in the amounts determined by the
    court.
    102 Fed. Cl. at 120.        In the absence of anything
    appealable, this court lacks appellate jurisdiction. See 
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(3). To be final and appealable, see Fed.
    R. Civ. P. 54, a decision must end the litigation on the
    merits, Catlin v. United States, 
    324 U.S. 229
    , 233 (1945),
    and the judge must “clearly declare[] h[er] intention in
    this respect,” United States v. F. & M. Schaefer Brewing
    Co., 
    356 U.S. 227
    , 232 (1958). Here, contrarily, the Court
    of Federal Claims reasoned that, “[b]ecause [the]
    references [to when certain shore protection measures
    were undertaken] are scattered across several thousand
    pages of trial testimony and documentary evidence,” it
    would not decide “which of [P]laintiffs’ shore protection
    expenses were incurred between 1950 and 1970, the
    period of time during which the government was
    responsible for 30% of the erosion” “in the absence of
    briefing or a stipulation by the parties.” Banks III, 102
    Fed. Cl. at 212. It declined to “undertake to determine
    BANKS   v. US                                           24
    which of [P]laintiffs’ expenses were incurred after 1970,
    the period of time during which the [G]overnment has
    completely mitigated the erosion caused by the jetties.”
    Id. The Court of Federal Claims added that “[i]f the
    reviewing court does not agree with the court’s
    determination that it lacks jurisdiction to address
    [P]laintiffs’ claims,” it would direct the parties to file
    either a stipulation or briefing “to enable the court to
    determine which of [P]laintiffs’ shore protection expenses
    were incurred prior to 1970 and which were incurred
    subsequent to 1970.” Id.
    The Court of Federal Claims’ alternative merits
    discussion is not a final and appealable decision over
    which this court has jurisdiction. On remand, the Court
    of Federal Claims may reconsider any merits rulings that
    were rendered at a time it mistakenly believed it lacked
    jurisdiction. In light of the Court of Federal Claims’
    clearly erroneous fact finding on claim accrual, it is
    appropriate that there be no law-of-the-case or
    comparable obstacle preventing it from reconsidering its
    earlier, related findings on the merits. This court’s prior
    mandate—that the claims did not accrue until the 1999
    Report—is still law-of-the-case, binding below.
    CONCLUSION
    The Court of Federal Claims’ dismissal for lack of
    jurisdiction is reversed and the case is remanded to the
    Court of Federal Claims for further proceedings.
    REVERSED AND REMANDED
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 2012-5067

Citation Numbers: 741 F.3d 1268

Judges: Linn, Rader, Wallach

Filed Date: 1/28/2014

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 8/31/2023

Authorities (30)

Simon Zunamon v. W. G. Brown, J. P. Brown, Sr., and J. E. (... , 418 F.2d 883 ( 1969 )

United States v. Thomas Chisolm Bartsh , 69 F.3d 864 ( 1995 )

Holmes v. United States , 657 F.3d 1303 ( 2011 )

Karen S. Reynolds v. Army and Air Force Exchange Service , 846 F.2d 746 ( 1988 )

Morris Kinsey D/B/A Kinsey Farms, Inc. v. The United States , 852 F.2d 556 ( 1988 )

Central Soya Company, Inc. v. Geo. A. Hormel & Company , 723 F.2d 1573 ( 1983 )

Engage Learning, Inc. v. Salazar , 660 F.3d 1346 ( 2011 )

L.S.S. Leasing Corporation, Appellant-Cross-Appellee v. ... , 695 F.2d 1359 ( 1982 )

Gabriel J. Martinez v. United States , 333 F.3d 1295 ( 2003 )

Engel Industries, Inc. v. The Lockformer Company, Iowa ... , 166 F.3d 1379 ( 1999 )

Laitram Corporation, Plaintiff/cross-Appellant v. Nec ... , 115 F.3d 947 ( 1997 )

Intergraph Corporation v. Intel Corporation , 253 F.3d 695 ( 2001 )

cedars-sinai-medical-center-warren-s-grundfest-md-james-s-forrester , 11 F.3d 1573 ( 1993 )

w-frank-boling-we-gore-jr-george-rayford-vereen-hope-willard-in , 220 F.3d 1365 ( 2000 )

Samuel T. Gindes and Joan L. Gindes v. The United States , 740 F.2d 947 ( 1984 )

Young v. United States , 529 F.3d 1380 ( 2008 )

Don Applegate and Gayle Applegate (For Themselves and a ... , 25 F.3d 1579 ( 1994 )

The Toro Company v. White Consolidated Industries, Inc. And ... , 383 F.3d 1326 ( 2004 )

Hopland Band of Pomo Indians v. The United States , 855 F.2d 1573 ( 1988 )

john-h-banks-mary-e-banks-robert-cunat-june-m-cunat-ehret-michigan , 314 F.3d 1304 ( 2003 )

View All Authorities »