Sherbrooke Turf, Inc. v. Minnesota Department of Transportation , 345 F.3d 964 ( 2003 )


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  •                     United States Court of Appeals
    FOR THE EIGHTH CIRCUIT
    ___________
    No. 02-1665
    ___________
    Sherbrooke Turf, Inc.,                *
    *
    Plaintiff - Appellant,          *
    *
    v.                              *
    *
    Minnesota Department of               *
    Transportation, et al.,               *
    *     Appeal from the United States
    Defendants - Appellees,         *     District Court for the
    *     District of Minnesota.
    United States of America, et al.,     *
    *
    Intervenor Defendant Appellees. *
    ___________
    No. 02-3016
    ___________
    Gross Seed Company,                     *
    *
    Plaintiff - Appellant,            *
    *
    v.                                *
    *   Appeal from the United States
    Nebraska Department of Roads, et al.,   *   District Court for the
    *   District of Nebraska.
    Defendants - Appellees,           *
    United States Department of           *
    Transportation, et al.,               *
    *
    Intervenor Defendant Appellees. *
    ___________
    Submitted: May 15, 2003
    Filed: October 6, 2003
    ___________
    Before LOKEN, Chief Judge, FAGG and MURPHY, Circuit Judges.
    ___________
    LOKEN, Chief Judge.
    Since 1982, the federal highway statutes have required that ten percent of
    federal highway construction funds be paid to small businesses owned and controlled
    by “socially and economically disadvantaged individuals,” as that term is defined in
    § 8(d) of the Small Business Act (
    15 U.S.C. § 637
    ). See Surface Transportation
    Assistance Act of 1982, Pub. L. No. 97-424, § 105(f), 
    96 Stat. 2097
    , 2100. Two non-
    minority contractors filed these separate actions challenging the current statute and
    Department of Transportation (DOT) regulations, as implemented in Minnesota and
    Nebraska. In the Minnesota action, plaintiff Sherbrooke Turf, Inc. (“Sherbrooke”),
    sued the Minnesota Department of Transportation (MnDOT) and its Commissioner
    to enjoin this aspect of the State’s federally-assisted highway program. In the
    Nebraska action, plaintiff Gross Seed Company (“Gross Seed”) sued the Nebraska
    Department of Roads (NDOR) and its Director.1 In each case, with the
    constitutionality of a federal statute at issue, the United States and DOT intervened
    as additional defendants. In the Minnesota action, the Associated General
    1
    Eleventh Amendment immunity may bar the claims against MnDOT and
    NDOR, which are state agencies, but the state officials may be sued for injunctive
    relief. See Will v. Mich. Dep’t of State Police, 
    491 U.S. 58
    , 66-67, 71 n.10 (1989).
    -2-
    Contractors of America and its Minnesota affiliate appeared as amicus on behalf of
    plaintiff Sherbrooke.
    Sherbrooke and Gross Seed provide landscaping services to prime contractors
    on federally assisted highway projects. In each lawsuit, the district court2 held that
    the subcontractor plaintiff has standing to assert its constitutional claims. We agree.
    The stipulated facts demonstrate that Sherbrooke and Gross Seed have bid on
    federally assisted highway projects in the past, will continue to bid in the future, and
    suffer competitive harm when contracts are awarded to others under DOT’s
    Disadvantaged Business Enterprises (DBE) program. See Adarand Constructors, Inc.
    v. Peña, 
    515 U.S. 200
    , 211-12 (1995). Turning to the merits, the district courts
    concluded that the DBE program as implemented in Minnesota and Nebraska satisfies
    strict scrutiny review, both facially and as applied, as the Tenth Circuit concluded
    following the Supreme Court’s remand in Adarand. Adarand Constructors, Inc v.
    Slater, 
    228 F.3d 1147
     (10th Cir. 2000) (Adarand II), cert. granted then dismissed as
    improvidently granted, 
    532 U.S. 941
    , 
    534 U.S. 103
     (2001). Sherbrooke and Gross
    Seed appeal, arguing the district courts erred in concluding that the federal DBE
    program satisfies strict scrutiny and in concluding that Minnesota and Nebraska need
    not establish that their implementation of the DBE program survives independent
    strict scrutiny review as well. We affirm.
    I. The Legislative Background.
    Prior to the 1982 statute designating ten percent of federal highway funds for
    minority small business contractors, a comparable provision in the Public Works
    Employment Act of 1977 was upheld in Fullilove v. Klutznick, 
    448 U.S. 448
     (1980).
    2
    In the Minnesota action, the HONORABLE JAMES M. ROSENBAUM, Chief
    Judge of the United States District Court for the District of Minnesota. In the
    Nebraska action, the HONORABLE LYLE E. STROM, United States District Judge
    for the District of Nebraska.
    -3-
    However, the constitutionality of mandatory set-asides based on racial factors was
    placed in doubt by later Supreme Court’s decisions -- City of Richmond v. J. A.
    Croson Co., 
    488 U.S. 469
    , 498-99 (1989), which struck down the City’s thirty percent
    set-aside for minority small businesses, and Adarand, which held that all government
    race-based classifications are subject to strict judicial scrutiny. 
    515 U.S. at 235
    .
    Following Adarand, the District of Minnesota invalidated the statutory ten percent
    set-aside of federal highway funds and DOT’s then-existing regulations, “as applied
    to highway construction contracts in the State of Minnesota.” In re Sherbrooke
    Sodding Co., 
    17 F. Supp. 2d 1026
    , 1037-38 (D. Minn. 1998). As a result, the DBE
    program was suspended in Minnesota in 1999.
    In the wake of these judicial decisions, Congress passed the Transportation
    Equity Act for the 21st Century (“TEA-21”), which continued the ten percent
    designation subject to DOT implementation. Pub. L. No. 105-178, § 1101(b)(1), 
    112 Stat. 107
    , 113. DOT then promulgated the new implementing regulations here at
    issue in 49 C.F.R. pt. 26. See 
    64 Fed. Reg. 5096
     (Feb. 2, 1999).
    The revised DBE program provides contracting advantages to small businesses
    owned and controlled by “socially and economically disadvantaged individuals.”
    “Socially disadvantaged individuals are those who have been subjected to racial or
    ethnic prejudice or cultural bias because of their identity as a member of a group
    without regard to their individual qualities.” 
    15 U.S.C. § 637
    (a)(5). “Economically
    disadvantaged individuals are those socially disadvantaged individuals whose ability
    to compete in the free enterprise system has been impaired due to diminished capital
    and credit opportunities as compared to others in the same business area who are not
    socially disadvantaged.” 
    15 U.S.C. § 637
    (a)(6)(A). In determining whether a
    contractor qualifies as a DBE, grantee States must employ a rebuttable presumption
    that women and members of most racial minority groups are socially and
    economically disadvantaged. See TEA-21, § 1101(b)(2)(B), 112 Stat. at 113,
    incorporating 
    15 U.S.C. § 637
    (d)(3)(C) and 
    13 C.F.R. § 124.103
    (b). An individual
    -4-
    whose personal net worth exceeds $750,000 is not economically disadvantaged. See
    
    49 C.F.R. § 26.67
    (b). Small businesses do not qualify if their earnings exceeded
    $16.6 million per year in the previous three fiscal years. TEA-21 § 1101(b)(2)(A),
    112 Stat. at 113.
    II. Strict Scrutiny Review.
    Sherbrooke and Gross Seed contend that the federal highway DBE program,
    on its face and as applied in Minnesota and Nebraska, violates the equal protection
    component of the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process Clause. Adarand established that
    a federal program employing race-based classifications or remedies “must be
    analyzed by a reviewing court under strict scrutiny.” 
    515 U.S. at 227
    .3 Though the
    DBE program confers benefits on “socially and economically disadvantaged
    individuals,” a term that is facially race-neutral, the government concedes that the
    program is subject to strict judicial scrutiny, no doubt because the statute employs a
    race-based rebuttable presumption to define this class of beneficiaries and authorizes
    the use of race-conscious remedial measures. See Adarand, 
    515 U.S. at 212-13
    .4
    Thus, the statute’s race-based measures “are constitutional only if they are narrowly
    tailored to further compelling governmental interests.” Grutter v. Bollinger, 
    123 S. Ct. 2325
    , 2337-38 (2003). The Court has cautioned courts conducting this review
    3
    Although TEA-21 is in part an exercise of Congress’s power under the
    Spending Clause, that does not affect the constitutional analysis. “Congress may
    employ racial or ethnic classifications in exercising its Spending or other legislative
    powers only if those classifications do not violate the equal protection component of
    the Due Process Clause of the Fifth Amendment.” Fullilove, 
    448 U.S. at 480
    (plurality opinion); see United States v. Am. Library Ass’n, Inc., 
    123 S. Ct. 2297
    ,
    2303 (2003).
    4
    However, the fact that the program is tailored to disqualify minority-owned
    enterprises that are not truly disadvantaged is relevant to the narrow-tailoring aspect
    of strict scrutiny analysis. Cf. Adarand, 
    515 U.S. at 259-62
     (Stevens, J., dissenting).
    -5-
    that strict scrutiny is rigorous but not always “fatal in fact.” Adarand, 
    515 U.S. at 237
    (quotation omitted).
    A. Compelling Governmental Interest.
    To survive strict scrutiny, the government must first articulate a legislative goal
    that is properly considered a compelling government interest. Neither Sherbrooke nor
    Gross Seed challenges the district courts’ conclusion that Congress and DOT acted
    to further a compelling interest. As the Tenth Circuit said in Adarand II, “we readily
    conclude that the federal government has a compelling interest in not perpetuating the
    effects of racial discrimination in its own distribution of federal funds and in
    remediating the effects of past discrimination in the government contracting markets
    created by its disbursements.” 
    228 F.3d at 1165
    ; accord Croson, 
    488 U.S. at 492
    .
    In addition to identifying a compelling government interest, the government
    must demonstrate a “strong basis in the evidence” supporting its conclusion that race-
    based remedial action was necessary to further that interest. “Racial classifications
    are suspect, and that means that simple legislative assurances of good intention
    cannot suffice.” Croson, 
    488 U.S. at 500
    . Sherbrooke and Gross Seed argue that
    Congress lacked strong evidence supporting its conclusion that race-based
    classifications and remedial measures were necessary. They argue that, in enacting
    TEA-21, Congress had no “hard evidence” of widespread intentional race
    discrimination in the contracting industry, relying instead on misrepresentations
    contained in “Appendix I,” a Department of Justice summary of more than fifty
    documents and thirty congressional hearings on minority-owned businesses prepared
    in response to the Adarand decision. See Appendix -- The Compelling Interest for
    Affirmative Action in Federal Procurement: A Preliminary Survey, 
    61 Fed. Reg. 26050
     (May 23, 1996). Sherbrooke and Gross Seed point to Government reports and
    their own expert’s report questioning the persistence of racial discrimination in
    -6-
    highway construction and argue that we must conduct a de novo review of this
    legislative record.
    We agree we must take a hard look at the evidence, and we have done so. We
    conclude that Congress had a strong basis in the evidence to support its conclusion
    that race-based measures were necessary for the reasons stated by the Tenth Circuit
    in Adarand II, 
    228 F.3d at 1167-76
    . As the Tenth Circuit’s analysis demonstrates,
    Congress has spent decades compiling evidence of race discrimination in government
    highway contracting, of barriers to the formation of minority-owned construction
    businesses, and of barriers to entry. In rebuttal, Sherbrooke and Gross Seed presented
    evidence that the data was susceptible to multiple interpretations, but they failed to
    present affirmative evidence that no remedial action was necessary because minority-
    owned small businesses enjoy non-discriminatory access to and participation in
    highway contracts. Thus, they failed to meet their ultimate burden to prove that the
    DBE program is unconstitutional on this ground. See Rothe Dev. Corp. v. U.S. Dep’t
    of Def., 
    262 F.3d 1306
    , 1317 (Fed. Cir. 2001).
    Finally, Sherbrooke and Gross Seed argue that MnDOT and NDOR must
    independently satisfy the compelling government interest aspect of strict scrutiny
    review. Under the prior law -- when the ten percent federal set-aside was more
    mandatory and Fullilove, not strict scrutiny, provided the governing constitutional
    principle -- the Seventh Circuit held that a contractor who conceded the validity of
    the federal program could not challenge a grantee State for “merely complying with
    federal law.” Milwaukee County Pavers Ass’n v. Fiedler, 
    922 F.2d 419
    , 423 (7th
    Cir.), cert. denied, 
    500 U.S. 954
     (1991); accord Harrison & Burrowes Bridge
    Constructors, Inc. v. Cuomo, 
    981 F.2d 50
    , 57 (2d Cir.1992); Ellis v. Skinner, 
    961 F.2d 912
    , 915 (10th Cir.), cert. denied, 
    506 U.S. 939
     (1992); Tenn. Asphalt Co. v.
    Farris, 
    942 F.2d 969
    , 975 (6th Cir.1991). Based on this precedent, the government
    argues, and the district courts agreed, that participating States need not independently
    meet the strict scrutiny standard because under the revised DBE program the State
    -7-
    must still comply with the DOT regulations. Sherbrooke and Gross Seed respond that
    the prior cases are distinguishable, and Minnesota and Nebraska DBE programs must
    independently satisfy strict scrutiny under Croson, because the present TEA-21
    regime “is characterized by state discretion throughout.” This issue was not
    addressed by the Tenth Circuit in Adarand II.
    We conclude that neither side’s position is entirely sound. Compelling
    government interest looks at a statute or government program on its face. When the
    program is federal, the inquiry is (at least usually) national in scope. If Congress or
    the federal agency acted for a proper purpose and with a strong basis in the evidence,
    the program has the requisite compelling government interest nationwide, even if the
    evidence did not come from or apply to every State or locale in the Nation. Thus, we
    reject appellants’ contention that their facial challenges to the DBE program must be
    upheld unless the record before Congress included strong evidence of race
    discrimination in construction contracting in Minnesota and Nebraska. On the other
    hand, a valid race-based program must be narrowly tailored, and to be narrowly
    tailored, a national program must be limited to those parts of the country where its
    race-based measures are demonstrably needed. To the extent the federal government
    delegates this tailoring function, a State’s implementation becomes critically relevant
    to a reviewing court’s strict scrutiny. Thus, we leave this question of state
    implementation to our narrow tailoring analysis.
    B. Is the Revised DBE Program Narrowly Tailored?
    In addition to determining that a race-based measure serves a compelling
    government interest, a reviewing court applying strict scrutiny must determine if the
    measure is narrowly tailored, that is, whether “the means chosen to accomplish the
    government’s asserted purpose [are] specifically and narrowly framed to accomplish
    that purpose.” Grutter, 123 S. Ct. at 2341 (quotation omitted). Sherbrooke and Gross
    Seed have the ultimate burden of establishing that the DBE program is not narrowly
    -8-
    tailored. See Wygant v. Jackson Bd. of Educ., 
    476 U.S. 267
    , 293 (1986) (O’Connor,
    J., concurring); Rothe, 
    262 F.3d at 1317
    . While our compelling interest analysis
    focused on the record before Congress, the narrow-tailoring analysis looks at the roles
    of the implementing highway construction agencies.
    1. Appellants’ facial challenge to the DBE program requires us to look
    carefully at DOT’s regulations to determine whether they may be constitutionally
    applied under any set of factual circumstances. See United States v. Salerno, 
    481 U.S. 739
    , 746 (1987) (standard for facial challenges). In determining whether a race-
    conscious remedy is narrowly tailored, we look at factors such as the efficacy of
    alternative remedies, the flexibility and duration of the race-conscious remedy, the
    relationship of the numerical goals to the relevant labor market, and the impact of the
    remedy on third parties. See United States v. Paradise, 
    480 U.S. 149
    , 171, 187 (1987)
    (plurality and concurring opinions).
    Under the revised DBE program, a State receiving federal highway funds must,
    on an annual basis, submit to DOT an overall goal for DBE participation in its
    federally funded highway contracts. See 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.45
    (f)(1). The overall goal
    “must be based on demonstrable evidence” as to the number of DBEs who are ready,
    willing, and able to participate as contractors or subcontractors on federally-assisted
    contracts. 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.45
    (b). The number may be adjusted upward to reflect the
    State’s determination that more DBEs would be participating absent the effects of
    discrimination, including race-related barriers to entry. See 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.45
    (d).
    The State must meet the “maximum feasible portion” of its overall goal through race-
    neutral means and must submit for approval a projection of the portion it expects to
    meet through race-neutral means. See 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.51
    (a), (c). If race-neutral
    means are projected to fall short of achieving the overall goal, the State must give
    preference to firms it has certified as DBEs. However, such preferences may not
    include quotas, and set-aside contracts are limited to those instances “when no other
    method could be reasonably expected to redress egregious instances of
    -9-
    discrimination.” 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.43
    (b). During the course of a year, if a State
    determines that it will exceed or fall short of its overall goal, it must adjust its use of
    race-conscious and race-neutral methods “[t]o ensure that your DBE program
    continues to be narrowly tailored to overcome the effects of discrimination.” 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.51
    (f).
    The regulations expressly declare that the statutory ten percent provision “is
    an aspirational goal at the national level,” not a mandatory requirement for grantee
    States. 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.41
    (b). Thus, absent bad faith administration of the program,
    a State’s failure to achieve its overall goal will not be penalized. See 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.47
    . If the State meets its overall goal for two consecutive years through race-
    neutral means, it is not required to set an annual overall goal until it does not meet its
    prior overall goal for a year. See 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.51
    (f)(3). In addition, DOT may
    grant an exemption or waiver from any or all requirements of the program. See 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.15
    (b).
    Like the district courts, we conclude that the DOT regulations, on their face,
    satisfy the Supreme Court’s narrow tailoring requirements. First, the regulations
    place strong emphasis on “the use of race-neutral means to increase minority business
    participation in government contracting.” Adarand, 
    515 U.S. at 237-38
     (quotation
    omitted). “Narrow tailoring does not require exhaustion of every conceivable race-
    neutral alternative,” but it does require “serious, good faith consideration of workable
    race-neutral alternatives.” Grutter, 
    123 S.Ct. at 2344-45
    . The regulations also
    prohibit the use of quotas and severely limit the use of set-asides. See Croson, 
    488 U.S. at 496
     (discussing quotas).
    Second, the revised DBE program has substantial flexibility. A State may
    obtain waivers or exemptions from any requirement and is not penalized for a good
    faith failure to meet its overall goal. In addition, the program limits preferences to
    small businesses falling beneath an earnings threshold, and any individual whose net
    -10-
    worth exceeds $750,000 cannot qualify as economically disadvantaged. See 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.67
    (b). Likewise, the DBE program contains built-in durational limits. A State
    may terminate its DBE program if it meets its annual overall goal through race-neutral
    means for two consecutive years. 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.51
    (f)(3). Moreover, TEA-21 is
    subject to periodic congressional reauthorization. Periodic legislative debate
    “assure[s] all citizens that the deviation from the norm of equal treatment of all racial
    and ethnic groups is a temporary matter, a measure taken in the service of the goal of
    equality itself.” Grutter, 123 S.Ct. at 2346 (quotation omitted).
    Third, DOT has tied the goals for DBE participation to the relevant labor
    markets. The regulations require grantee States to set overall goals based upon the
    likely number of minority contractors that would have received federally assisted
    highway contracts but for the effects of past discrimination. See 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.45
    (c)-(d) (Steps 1 and 2). Though the underlying estimates may be inexact, the
    exercise requires the States to focus on establishing realistic goals for DBE
    participation in the relevant contracting markets. This stands in stark contrast to the
    program struck down in Croson, which “rest[ed] upon the completely unrealistic
    assumption that minorities will choose a particular trade in lockstep proportion to
    their representation in the local population.” 
    488 U.S. at 507
     (quotation omitted).
    Finally, Congress and DOT have taken significant steps to minimize the race-
    based nature of the DBE program. Its benefits are directed at all small businesses
    owned and controlled by the socially and economically disadvantaged. While TEA-
    21 creates a rebuttable presumption that members of certain racial minorities fall
    within that class, the presumption is rebuttable, wealthy minority owners and wealthy
    minority-owned firms are excluded, and certification is available to persons who are
    not presumptively disadvantaged but can demonstrate actual social and economic
    disadvantage. Thus, race is made relevant in the program, but it is not a
    determinative factor. See Grutter, 
    123 S.Ct. at 2345-46
    ; Gratz v. Bollinger, 
    123 S.Ct. 2411
    , 2429 (2003) (criticizing a University of Michigan program that automatically
    -11-
    awarded twenty points to minority applicants, without individualized consideration).
    For these reasons, we agree with the district courts that the revised DBE
    program is narrowly tailored on its face.
    2. Sherbrooke and Gross Seed also argue that the revised DBE program as
    applied in Minnesota and Nebraska is not narrowly tailored. As noted previously,
    because the revised DBE program affords grantee States substantial discretion, this
    contention requires us to examine the program as implemented by those States.
    Under the revised federal program, States “set their own goals, based on local market
    conditions; their goals are not imposed by the federal government nor do recipients
    have to tie them to any uniform national percentage.” 64 Fed. Reg. at 5102.
    Minnesota. Following promulgation of the current DOT regulations, MnDOT
    commissioned National Economic Research Associates (NERA) to study the highway
    contracting market in Minnesota. NERA first determined that DBEs made up 11.4
    percent of the prime contractors and subcontractors in the highway construction
    market. See 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.45
    (c) (Step 1). Of this number, 0.6 percent were
    minority-owned and 10.8 percent women-owned. Based upon its analysis of business
    formation statistics, NERA next estimated that the number of participating minority-
    owned businesses would be 34 percent higher in a race-neutral market. Therefore,
    NERA adjusted its DBE availability figure from 11.4 to 11.6 percent. See 
    49 C.F.R. § 26.45
    (c) (Step 1). Based on NERA’s study, MnDOT adopted an overall goal of
    11.6 percent DBE participation for federally assisted highway projects in fiscal year
    2001. MnDOT predicted that it would need to meet nine percent of that overall goal
    through race- and gender-conscious means, based on the fact that DBE participation
    in state highway contracts dropped from 10.25 percent in 1998 to 2.25 percent in
    1999, when its previous DBE program was suspended by the district court’s
    injunction in Sherbrooke. To meet its overall goal, MnDOT required each prime
    contract bidder to make a good faith effort to subcontract a prescribed portion of the
    -12-
    project to DBEs. MnDOT determines that portion based on several individualized
    factors, including the availability of DBEs and the extent of subcontracting
    opportunities on the project.
    DOT approved this MnDOT program for Fiscal Year 2001. Sherbrooke
    presented evidence attacking the reliability of the data NERA used in determining its
    recommended overall goal. But Sherbrooke failed to establish that better data was
    available or that MnDOT was otherwise unreasonable in undertaking this thorough
    analysis and in relying on its results. The precipitous drop in DBE participation in
    1999, when no race-conscious methods were employed, supports MnDOT’s
    conclusion that a substantial portion of its 2001 overall goal could not be met with
    race-neutral measures, and there is no evidence that MnDOT failed to adjust its use
    of race-conscious and race-neutral methods as the year progressed, as the DOT
    regulations require. On this record, we agree with the district court that the revised
    DBE program serves a compelling government interest and is narrowly tailored, on
    its face and as applied in Minnesota. Accordingly, the court properly granted
    summary judgment dismissing Sherbrooke’s claims.
    Nebraska. To implement the revised federal DBE program, NDOR
    commissioned MGT of America, Inc., to conduct availability and capability studies
    of DBE firms in the Nebraska highway construction market. The availability study
    found that between 1995 and 1999, when Nebraska followed the then-mandatory ten
    percent set-aside requirement, 9.95 percent of all available and capable firms were
    DBEs, and DBE firms received 12.67 percent of the contract dollars on federally
    assisted projects. After apportioning part of this DBE contracting to race-neutral
    contracting decisions, MGT recommended that NDOR set an overall goal of 9.95
    percent DBE participation and predict that 4.82 percent of this overall goal would
    have to be achieved by race- and gender-conscious means. NDOR adopted these
    recommendations in its submission to DOT for Fiscal Year 2001. NDOR required
    that prime contractors make a good faith effort to allocate a set portion of each
    -13-
    contract’s funds to DBE subcontractors. DOT approved this NDOR program for
    fiscal year 2001. Having carefully reviewed the trial record, we conclude that Gross
    Seed, like Sherbrooke, failed to prove that the revised DBE program is not narrowly
    tailored as applied in Nebraska. Accordingly, the district court properly entered post-
    trial judgment dismissing Gross Seed’s claims.
    The judgments of the district courts are affirmed.
    ______________________________
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