Two Shields v. United States ( 2016 )


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  •   United States Court of Appeals
    for the Federal Circuit
    ______________________
    RAMONA TWO SHIELDS, MARY LOUISE
    DEFENDER WILSON, INDIVIDUALLY, AND ON
    BEHALF OF ALL OTHERS SIMILARLY SITUATED,
    Plaintiffs-Appellants
    v.
    UNITED STATES,
    Defendant-Appellee
    ______________________
    2015-5069
    ______________________
    Appeal from the United States Court of Federal
    Claims in No. 1:13-cv-00090-LB, Judge Lawrence J.
    Block.
    ______________________
    Decided: April 27, 2016
    ______________________
    KENNETH E. MCNEIL, Susman Godfrey LLP, Houston,
    TX, argued for plaintiffs-appellants. Also represented by
    SHAWN L. RAYMOND; ANDRES HEALY, Seattle, WA; NANCIE
    GAIL MARZULLA, Marzulla Law, LLC, Washington, DC.
    ROBERT HARRIS OAKLEY, Environment and Natural
    Resources Division, United States Department of Justice,
    Washington, DC, argued for defendant-appellee. Also
    represented by JOHN C. CRUDEN.
    ______________________
    2                                          TWO SHIELDS   v. US
    Before PROST, Chief Judge, MOORE and TARANTO, Circuit
    Judges.
    PROST, Chief Judge.
    Appellants Ramona Two Shields and Mary Louise De-
    fender Wilson brought this action against the United
    States, seeking redress for themselves and other Native
    Americans in connection with the government’s alleged
    mismanagement of oil-and-gas leases on Indian allotment
    land. The United States Court of Federal Claims found in
    favor of the government, granting summary judgment on
    Count I and dismissing Counts II and III. J.A. 1–30. We
    affirm.
    I
    Pursuant to the General Allotment Act of 1887 and
    the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, the United States
    is the trustee of millions of acres of Indian allotment land.
    The Bureau of Indian Affairs (“BIA”), under the Secretary
    of the Interior, is the federal bureau responsible for
    managing the trust lands.
    Much of this case turns on events from a prior case,
    commonly referred to as the Cobell litigation. We there-
    fore begin with a discussion of the facts and circumstanc-
    es surrounding that case.
    A
    In 1996, the Cobell class action lawsuit was filed on
    behalf of more than 300,000 Native Americans. The
    plaintiffs alleged that the government had mismanaged
    their Individual Indian Money (“IIM”) accounts by failing
    to account for billions of dollars relating to leases of
    allotment land for oil extractions and logging. The litiga-
    tion was complex and drawn-out, and eventually settled
    in 2011. See Cobell v. Salazar, No. 96-1285, 2011 WL
    TWO SHIELDS   v. US                                        3
    10676927 (D.D.C. July 27, 2011). It is the details of the
    Cobell settlement that are relevant here.
    The Cobell settlement provided that, following the en-
    actment of legislation to carry it out, an amended com-
    plaint would be filed. The amended complaint set forth
    several different categories of claims. One was “historical
    accounting claims” asserted by members of the “historical
    accounting class”—these claims were closely tied to the
    government’s mismanagement of IIM accounts that was
    the focus of the original complaint. J.A. 652. Another
    category of claims was much broader—it included any
    “land administration claims” held by the “trust admin-
    istration class,” a class defined as including those individ-
    uals that held, as of the Record Date of September 30,
    2009, “a recorded or other demonstrable ownership inter-
    est in land held in trust or restricted status.” J.A. 656.
    The land administration claims were broadly defined as
    any “known and unknown claims that have been or could
    have been asserted through the Record Date [of Septem-
    ber 30, 2009] for Interior Defendants’ alleged breach of
    trust and fiduciary mismanagement of land, oil, natural
    gas, mineral, timber, grazing, water and other resources
    and rights.” J.A. 653.
    Importantly, the settlement agreement included an
    opt-out provision. Members of the trust administration
    class who failed to opt out of the settlement would be
    “deemed to have released, waived, and forever dis-
    charged” the government from any claims falling within
    the scope of the settlement, including any land admin-
    istration claims. J.A. 686.
    In December of 2010, Congress passed the Claims
    Resolution Act of 2010, which ratified the settlement and
    funded it with $3.4 billion. See Pub. L. 111-291, 
    124 Stat. 3064
     (Dec. 8, 2010). The amended complaint was duly
    filed with the district court, the settlement approved, and
    judgment entered in 2011. Cobell, 
    2011 WL 10676927
    . In
    4                                          TWO SHIELDS   v. US
    accordance with the settlement terms, the district court
    provided notice of the settlement, including class mem-
    bers’ opt-out right. The fairness of the opt-out process
    was challenged in court (including alleged violations of
    Fifth Amendment due process and the notice provisions of
    Fed. R. Civ. Pro. 23), but those challenges were ultimately
    rejected. See 
    id.,
     aff’d, 
    679 F.3d 909
     (D.C. Cir. 2012), cert
    denied, 
    133 S. Ct. 543
     (2012).
    B
    Appellants in this case, Ms. Two Shields and Ms.
    Defender Wilson, are “Indian allotees” who hold interests
    in allotment land located on the Fort Berthold Indian
    Reservation in North Dakota. Appellants’ allotments are
    located on part of the Bakken Oil Shale—one of the
    country’s largest contiguous deposits of oil and natural
    gas.
    Pursuant to legislation enacted in 1998, Fort Berthold
    allotees cannot lease their oil-and-gas interests unless the
    Secretary approves the lease as “in the best interest of the
    Indian owners of the Indian Land.” Pub. L. No. 105-188,
    
    122 Stat. 620
     (1998) (“Fort Berthold Act”) (amending 
    25 U.S.C. § 396
    ). This approval step is “intended to ensure
    that Indian mineral owners desiring to have their re-
    sources developed are assured that they will be developed
    in a manner that maximizes [the Indian owners’] best
    economic interests and minimizes any adverse environ-
    mental impacts or cultural impacts resulting from such
    development.” 
    25 C.F.R. § 212.1
    (a).
    In 2013, Appellants sued the government for violating
    its obligations relating to approval of oil-and-gas leases on
    Fort Berthold allotment lands. Appellants alleged that,
    between 2006 and late 2009, a company called Dakota-3
    obtained leases on thousands of acres of Fort Berthold
    allotment land at below-market rates, then turned around
    and sold those leases to the Williams Companies in No-
    vember of 2010 for a profit of nearly $900 million. Appel-
    TWO SHIELDS   v. US                                      5
    lants alleged that the BIA knew the below-market rates
    were not in the Indian owners’ best interests, but none-
    theless rubber-stamped every Dakota-3 lease.
    The complaint contained three counts. The primary
    one, Count I, alleged that the BIA breached its fiduciary
    duty under 
    25 U.S.C. § 396
     to ensure leases are in the
    best interests of the Indian owners. The government
    sought summary judgment on this count, arguing that
    Appellants were barred from asserting it by the Cobell
    settlement. It is undisputed that Ms. Two Shields and
    Ms. Defender Wilson are members of the trust admin-
    istration class and that they failed to opt out of the set-
    tlement. 1 The government therefore argued that it was
    entitled to summary judgment because Count I was a
    land administration claim released by Appellants’ failure
    to opt out of the Cobell settlement. The Court of Federal
    Claims agreed, granting summary judgment for the
    government. J.A. 14–21.
    The complaint’s Counts II and III were made in the
    alternative. In Count II, Appellants alleged that the
    government breached a wholly separate fiduciary duty—a
    duty to have disclosed to Appellants, during the Cobell
    settlement proceedings, information relating to the Fort
    Berthold claims Appellants assert in this case. The Court
    of Federal Claims dismissed this count for lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction, agreeing with the government that
    there was no source of federal law that set forth the
    specific fiduciary duty alleged to be breached. J.A. 25–27.
    In Count III, Appellants alleged that the Claims Resolu-
    tion Act of 2010 was a legislative taking of Counts I and
    1    While Appellants refused to concede that they
    were members of the trust administration class below, the
    Court of Federal Claims made a finding that they were
    members of the class, and Appellants do not dispute that
    finding on appeal.
    6                                         TWO SHIELDS   v. US
    II, in violation of the Fifth Amendment. The Court of
    Federal Claims dismissed this count as well, finding that
    Counts I and II did not amount to a cognizable property
    interest that could be the subject of a takings claim be-
    cause they lacked a final judgment; that Appellants could
    not show an unjust taking occurred; and that, in any
    event, Count III appeared to be a due process claim
    “masquerading” as a takings claim, and therefore outside
    the Court of Federal Claims’ jurisdiction. J.A. 27–29.
    Appellants now appeal to us. We have jurisdiction
    pursuant to 
    28 U.S.C. § 1295
    (a)(3).
    II
    We review a summary judgment determination by the
    Court of Federal Claims “completely and independently,
    construing the facts in the light most favorable to the non-
    moving party.” Am. Airlines, Inc. v. United States, 
    204 F.3d 1103
    , 1108 (Fed. Cir. 2000). We review de novo the
    Court of Federal Claims’ dismissals based on lack of
    jurisdiction, Holmes v. United States, 
    657 F.3d 1301
    , 1309
    (Fed. Cir. 2011), and failure to state a claim for which
    relief can be granted, Hartford Fire Insurance Co. v.
    United States, 
    772 F.3d 1281
    , 1284 (Fed. Cir. 2014).
    A
    We begin with what both parties agree is the primary
    question in this case: whether the Cobell settlement bars
    Appellants from now asserting Count I against the gov-
    ernment. We treat the Cobell settlement as a contract,
    VanDesande v. United States, 
    673 F.3d 1342
    , 1350 (Fed.
    Cir. 2012), the proper interpretation of which is a ques-
    tion of law, Landmark Land Co. v. FDIC, 
    256 F.3d 1365
    ,
    1373 (Fed. Cir. 2001). Appellants offer four reasons why
    the Cobell settlement should not be interpreted as releas-
    ing their claims. We take each in turn.
    First, Appellants argue that Count I does not fall
    within the definition of “land administration claims,”
    TWO SHIELDS   v. US                                         7
    which is limited to only those claims that could have been
    asserted by the Record Date of September 30, 2009.
    Appellants contend that the crucial event in this case was
    the November 2010 sale of leases from Dakota-3 to the
    Williams Companies, at a profit—that Appellants’ claims
    did not accrue until that time and thus do not meet the
    September 30, 2009 cut-off date for “land administration
    claims.”
    Appellants are correct that “a claim does not accrue
    until all events necessary to fix the liability of the defend-
    ant have occurred.” Catawba Indian Tribe v. United
    States, 
    982 F.2d 1564
    , 1570 (Fed. Cir. 1993). But the
    November 2010 sale to the Williams Companies was not
    an event necessary to fix the government’s purported
    liability. Instead, “[a] cause of action for breach of trust
    traditionally accrues when the trustee ‘repudiates’ the
    trust and the beneficiary has knowledge of that repudia-
    tion.” Shoshone Indian Tribe of Wind River Reservation v.
    United States, 
    364 F.3d 1339
    , 1348 (Fed. Cir. 2004). “A
    trustee may repudiate the trust by express words or by
    taking actions inconsistent with his responsibilities as a
    trustee.” 
    Id.
     Here, the government’s purported liability
    was fixed at the time it allegedly repudiated its trust
    duties as set forth in § 396—when it approved the Dako-
    ta-3 leases at below-market rates. Appellants do not
    argue that they lacked knowledge of the below-market
    rates at the time of approval, nor do they argue that any
    of the approvals occurred after the September 30, 2009
    cut-off date. Thus, although the November 2010 sale to
    the Williams Companies was, in some sense, a final link
    in the chain, Appellants’ claims had accrued, and could
    have been asserted, back when the BIA approved the
    below-market Dakota-3 leases. Count I therefore is a
    “land administration claim” settled by Cobell—it compris-
    es “known and unknown claims that have been or could
    have been asserted through the Record Date [of Septem-
    ber 30, 2009].”
    8                                          TWO SHIELDS   v. US
    Second, Appellants argue that the Cobell settlement’s
    payment mechanics show that Count I was not released.
    The Cobell settlement provided that each member of the
    trust administration class would receive a base payment
    of approximately $800, plus an additional pro rata pay-
    ment based on the amount of money deposited in the
    member’s IIM account from October 1, 1985, through
    September 30, 2009. Appellants argue that these pay-
    ments “make[] no sense” as applied to the present case:
    that individuals received an average of only $1,600 under
    the Cobell settlement while they stand to receive any-
    where from $100,000 to $150,000, if successful in this
    case. Opening Br. 30. Appellants argue that invoking
    Cobell’s release language in these circumstances would
    mean that Appellants “waived their claims for nothing.”
    Id. at 31.
    Appellants’ argument is foreclosed by the simple fact
    that they chose not to opt out of the settlement. Even if
    the Cobell payments are less than satisfactory in rectify-
    ing the Fort Berthold harm, Appellants are bound by the
    settlement’s payment terms because they chose not to opt
    out. Further, challenges to the fairness and adequacy of
    the Cobell payment scheme have already been rejected.
    In 2012, the United States Court of Appeals for the Dis-
    trict of Columbia considered an argument that the Cobell
    settlement’s distribution scheme was unfair because some
    class members “likely possess more valuable claims than
    do others and . . . the per capita baseline payment under-
    compensates the former while over-compensating the
    latter, an inequity that the pro rata payment does not
    remedy.” Cobell v. Salazar, 
    679 F.3d at
    918–19. The
    court rejected this argument and closed the issue, stating
    that “the distribution scheme is fair and ‘[i]t is hard to see
    how there [c]ould be a better result.’” 
    Id. at 919
     (citation
    omitted). The court further reasoned that “the existence
    of the opt-out alternative effectively negates any inference
    TWO SHIELDS   v. US                                      9
    that those who did not exercise that option considered the
    settlement unfair.” 
    Id. at 920
    . We agree.
    Third, Appellants argue that the Cobell settlement
    should not be construed as releasing the government’s
    liability for Count I because the government failed to
    provide “full information” about Appellants’ claims (e.g.,
    details regarding the specific damages and breaches
    relating to the Fort Berthold allegations) back when the
    Cobell release was effectuated. As support for its “full
    disclosure” theory, Appellants rely on a 2003 decision
    from the Court of Federal Claims, Shoshone Indian Tribe
    v. United States, 
    58 Fed. Cl. 542
     (2003).
    The Shoshone case does not stand for the broad-
    sweeping proposition made by Appellants. At issue in
    that case was the government’s motion in limine to ex-
    clude evidence based on a letter sent by the Indian plain-
    tiffs, which the government argued constituted a release
    of the plaintiffs’ claims. Id. at 544. The Court of Federal
    Claims denied the government’s motion to exclude.
    Relying on a general treatise on trusts, the court found
    that no release occurred because the government had not
    provided plaintiffs “with the full information plaintiffs
    would have needed before releasing the claims listed in
    the 1997 letter.” Id. at 545. This decision is not control-
    ling here. First, we are not bound by decisions of the
    Court of Federal Claims. Second, as explained later in
    this opinion, more recent cases from the Supreme Court
    make clear that a general trust relationship between the
    United States and its beneficiary is not enough to impose
    an information-disclosure obligation found nowhere in the
    governing statute. See infra pp. 12–14.
    Finally, Appellants argue that the named Cobell
    plaintiffs lacked standing to assert Appellants’ Count I
    Fort Berthold claims. The Cobell settlement releases any
    claims “that were, or should have been, asserted in the
    Amended Complaint when it was filed.” J.A. 686. Appel-
    10                                        TWO SHIELDS   v. US
    lants point out that the named Cobell plaintiffs had no
    Fort Berthold oil-and-gas interests and the Cobell com-
    plaint did not contain a single fact regarding the specific
    Fort Berthold claims. They contend that the named
    Cobell plaintiffs lacked standing to assert Appellants’
    Count I Fort Berthold claims because the “alignment of
    interest and injury must be exact” as between class repre-
    sentatives and the other class members. Opening Br. 35.
    Appellants are incorrect that exact alignment of injury
    is required between class representatives and other class
    members. Id. The question, instead, is whether or not
    the claims of the class representatives and other class
    members “implicate a significantly different set of con-
    cerns.” Gratz v. Bollinger, 
    539 U.S. 244
    , 265 (2003).
    Here, it is clear that the concerns implicated by the
    Cobell claims and Appellants’ Count I claims are not
    significantly different. Appellants assert in this case that
    the BIA approved leases that were below market value,
    and therefore were not in their “best interests” as re-
    quired by the Fort Berthold Act. Those concerns are
    precisely the same as the ones implicated by Cobell’s land
    administration claims, which specifically included any
    alleged “[f]ailure to obtain fair market value on leases”
    and “failure to prudently negotiate leases” by the Secre-
    tary on Indian allotment land. J.A. 654. The fact that the
    named Cobell plaintiffs’ oil-and-gas interests may have
    been tied to a location other than Fort Berthold is of no
    moment—the alleged harm in both Cobell and this case is
    not significantly different. Likewise, the fact that the
    Cobell complaint did not specifically reference the Fort
    Berthold Act is also insignificant, as the “best interest”
    standard of the Fort Berthold Act adds little to the lan-
    guage already present in § 396. See 
    25 U.S.C. § 396
     (“The
    Secretary of the Interior shall have the right to reject all
    bids [for mineral leases] whenever in his judgment the
    interests of the Indians will be served by so doing, and to
    advertise such lease for sale.”). There is no standing issue
    TWO SHIELDS   v. US                                      11
    that precludes application of the Cobell release to Appel-
    lants’ Count I claims.
    For the aforementioned reasons, we reject all four of
    Appellants’ arguments as to why the Court of Federal
    Claims was wrong to construe the Cobell settlement as
    releasing their claims.
    We also reject Appellants’ contention that the Court of
    Federal Claims erred by arriving at its conclusion without
    first allowing discovery of extrinsic evidence regarding the
    facts and circumstances surrounding the negotiation and
    execution of the Cobell settlement. Appellants’ position is
    that this extrinsic context evidence must be considered in
    determining whether the Cobell release language applies
    to Appellants’ Count I claims. We disagree.
    “Outside evidence may not be brought in to create an
    ambiguity where the language is clear.” City of Tacoma v.
    United States, 
    31 F.3d 1130
    , 1134 (Fed. Cir. 1994); see
    also R.B. Wright Constr. Co. v. United States, 
    919 F.2d 1569
    , 1572 (Fed. Cir. 1990). Although we have noted that
    evidence of “trade practice and custom” should be consid-
    ered when interpreting contracts, that is not the type of
    evidence Appellants seek to rely on here and, in any
    event, even that type of evidence cannot be used “to create
    an ambiguity where a contract was not reasonably sus-
    ceptible of different interpretations at the time of con-
    tracting.” Metric Constructors, Inc. v. Nat’l Aeronautics &
    Space Admin., 
    169 F.3d 747
    , 751 (Fed. Cir. 1999); see also
    
    id.
     (warning against “according undue weight to [a]
    party’s purely post hoc explanations for its conduct”).
    Likewise, this is not a case where the court below errone-
    ously relied on a general dictionary definition to ascertain
    the meaning of a contract, divorced from the context of the
    agreement. See Rockies Exp. Pipeline LLC v. Salazar, 
    730 F.3d 1330
    , 1340–41 (Fed. Cir. 2013). Here, the language
    of the Cobell settlement is clear. As explained above,
    Appellants have failed to show any reason why Count I is
    12                                        TWO SHIELDS   v. US
    not barred by its terms. We therefore affirm the Court of
    Federal Claims’ grant of summary judgment.
    B
    Appellants’ Count II alleges that, even if Count I is
    barred by Cobell, the government breached a wholly
    separate fiduciary duty—a duty to have disclosed to
    Appellants, during the Cobell settlement proceedings,
    information relating to the Fort Berthold claims Appel-
    lants assert in this case. Appellants rely on 
    25 U.S.C. § 396
     and its regulations as supplying the requisite statu-
    tory authority for this fiduciary duty. The Court of Fed-
    eral Claims dismissed Count II for lack of jurisdiction,
    finding that § 396 does not supply the fiduciary duty
    alleged to be breached. We agree.
    Both the Tucker Act, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1491
    , and the Indian
    Tucker Act, 
    28 U.S.C. § 1505
    , create subject matter juris-
    diction for the Court of Federal Claims over certain claims
    brought against the United States. There are “two hur-
    dles that must be cleared” before jurisdiction can be
    invoked pursuant to these statutes. United States v.
    Navajo Nation, 
    556 U.S. 287
    , 291 (2009). “First, the tribe
    ‘must identify a substantive source of law that establishes
    specific fiduciary or other duties, and allege that the
    Government has failed faithfully to perform those du-
    ties.’” 
    Id.
     (quoting United States v. Navajo Nation, 
    537 U.S. 488
    , 490 (2003) (Navajo Nation I)). If that threshold
    is passed, the court must then determine whether the
    relevant source of substantive law can be fairly interpret-
    ed as a money-mandating. 
    Id.
    Appellants’ Count II fails at the first hurdle. When
    determining whether the government owes a particular
    fiduciary duty, “the analysis must train on specific rights-
    creating or duty-imposing statutory or regulatory pre-
    scriptions.” Navajo Nation I, 
    537 U.S. at 506
    . Although
    common-law principles can be used to inform the scope of
    liability that Congress has imposed, United States v.
    TWO SHIELDS   v. US                                       13
    White Mountain Apache Tribe, 
    537 U.S. 465
    , 475–76
    (2003), “‘a general trust relationship between the United
    States and the Indian People’ . . . alone is insufficient to
    support jurisdiction under the Indian Tucker Act.” Nava-
    jo Nation I, 537 U.S. at 506 (quoting United States v.
    Mitchell, 
    463 U.S. 206
    , 225 (1983)). Rather, “the United
    States is only subject to those fiduciary duties that it
    specifically accepts by statute or regulation.” Hopi Tribe
    v. United States, 
    782 F.3d 662
    , 667 (Fed. Cir. 2015).
    The Supreme Court has found that some “statutes
    and regulations . . . clearly establish fiduciary obligations
    of the Government.” Mitchell, 
    463 U.S. at 226
    ; 
    id. at 220
    (finding specific fiduciary duties of timber management in
    light of a statutory and regulatory scheme creating obli-
    gations on “virtually every aspect of forest management”);
    see also White Mountain Apache Tribe, 
    537 U.S. at 475
    (finding specific fiduciary duties to maintain and preserve
    property that is “actually administer[ed]” in trust). But
    where the relevant statute cannot be fairly read as impos-
    ing the specific fiduciary duty alleged to be breached, the
    Court has refused to impose the obligation on the gov-
    ernment. See Navajo Nation I, 537 U.S. at 507–13 (find-
    ing no specific fiduciary duties to ensure a specific rate of
    return on coal leases or to proscribe ex parte communica-
    tions in an administrative appeal process); United States
    v. Jicarilla Apache Nation, 
    131 S. Ct. 2313
    , 2329–30
    (2011) (finding no specific fiduciary duty to disclose all
    information related to the administration of Indian
    trusts); see also Hopi Tribe, 782 F.3d at 668–71 (finding
    no specific fiduciary duty to ensure adequate water quali-
    ty on the Hopi reservation).
    Appellants here rely on 
    25 U.S.C. § 396
     as creating a
    very specific fiduciary duty of the government—a duty to
    have “disclose[d] ‘full information’ to Two Shields or their
    counsel about their § 396 claims before securing their
    release.” Reply Br. 23. But nothing in § 396 imposes such
    an obligation. Section 396 is directed to the lease of
    14                                        TWO SHIELDS   v. US
    Indian allotment land for mining purposes; it states that
    the Secretary “is authorized to perform any and all acts
    and make such rules and regulations as may be neces-
    sary” and gives to the Secretary “the right to reject all
    bids whenever in his judgment the interests of the Indi-
    ans will be served by so doing.” 
    25 U.S.C. § 396
    . The Fort
    Berthold Act further obliges the Secretary to approve only
    those leases that it has determined to be “in the best
    interest of the Indian owners of the Indian land.” Fort
    Berthold Act, § 1(a)(2)(A)(ii). The obligations imposed on
    the Secretary relate solely to the approval of mineral
    leases on allotted land; nothing in the statute creates
    litigation-related disclosure obligations, and certainly not
    the specific Cobell settlement disclosure obligations
    sought by Appellants in this case. Like the Supreme
    Court in Jicarilla, we conclude that the relied-upon
    statute here does not include a general duty “to disclose
    all information related to the administration of Indian
    trusts.” Jicarilla, 
    564 U.S. at 2330
    . Because Appellants
    point to no other source of law providing the fiduciary
    duty alleged to be breached, we affirm the Court of Feder-
    al Claims’ dismissal of Count II.
    C
    Finally, in Count III, Appellants allege that if their
    Counts I and II fail, the Claims Resolution Act of 2010
    was a legislative taking of Counts I and II without just
    compensation, in violation of the Takings Clause of the
    Fifth Amendment. The Court of Federal Claims dis-
    missed Count III for failure to state a claim. We agree
    with the dismissal, but not for the reasons relied on by
    the court.
    We assume here, contrary to the Court of Federal
    Claims, J.A. 28, that Counts I and II constitute property
    protected by the Takings Clause. And we apply the
    requirements of the Takings Clause—the only Clause
    invoked by Count III and invoked by Appellants here—
    TWO SHIELDS   v. US                                      15
    without re-characterizing the claim as a due process
    claim. Cf. J.A. 28–29. We conclude that no taking oc-
    curred here.
    The Claims Resolution Act of 2010 ratified the Cobell
    settlement agreement. That settlement gave Appellants
    and other Cobell class members two options: accept the
    settlement terms and agree to releasing all covered claims
    against the government, or opt out of the settlement and
    retain the ability to pursue covered claims against the
    government. The choice was up to Appellants—they could
    give up their claims against the government, or they could
    retain them. By failing to exercise their opt-out right,
    Appellants voluntarily chose to forfeit their claims against
    the government—including Counts II and III. In these
    circumstances, no unjust taking occurred.
    Our sister circuit has reached the same conclusion in
    similar circumstances. See Littlewolf v. Lugan, 
    877 F.2d 1058
     (D.C. Cir. 1989). In Littlewolf, the D.C. Circuit
    rejected an argument by tribe members that the White
    Earth Reservation Land Settlement Act of 1985 was an
    unconstitutional taking in violation of the Fifth Amend-
    ment. 
    Id. at 1059
    . That Act extinguished the Indians’
    claims to land illegally transferred earlier in the century
    in return for payment of compensation based on the fair
    market value at the time of transfer plus five percent
    interest. 
    Id.
     As an alternative to the statutory compen-
    sation, the Act also gave claimants the option of filing an
    action for judicially-determined compensation within six
    months of the issuance of the notice of the payment due
    them, in which case they would forgo their statutory
    compensation. 
    Id.
     The D.C. Circuit affirmed the district
    court’s determination that no unjust taking occurred in
    those circumstances because “a Tucker Act ‘safety net’
    suffices when ‘a statute’s “basic compensation scheme . . .
    is valid but could result in payment of less than the
    constitutional minimum.”’” 
    Id. at 1065
     (quoting Littlewolf
    v. Hodel, 
    681 F. Supp. 929
    , 946 (D.D.C. 1988) (quoting
    16                                        TWO SHIELDS   v. US
    Regional Rail Reorganization Act Cases, 
    419 U.S. 102
    , 150
    (1974))). In other words, as the district court in that case
    put it, “[t]here is not taking” when “those affected are
    afforded a reasonable opportunity to bring suit.” Little-
    wolf v. Hodel, 
    681 F. Supp. at
    944 (citing Texaco v. Short,
    
    454 U.S. 516
    , 531–32 (1982), Block v. N. Dakota, 
    461 U.S. 273
    , 286 n.23 (1983), and Keller v. Dravo Corp., 
    441 F.2d 1239
    , 1242 (5th Cir. 1971), cert denied, 
    404 U.S. 1017
    (1972)). The same rationale applies here.
    The decision of the Court of Federal Claims is af-
    firmed.
    AFFIRMED