In Re Upstream Addicks and Barker (Texas) Flood-Control Reservoirs v. United States ( 2018 )


Menu:
  •            In the United States Court of Federal Claims
    No. 17-9001L
    (Filed: May 24, 2018)
    IN RE UPSTREAM ADDICKS AND                     “Upstream” Addicks and Barker Dam flooding
    BARKER (TEXAS) FLOOD-CONTROL                   cases; motion to dismiss; statute of limitations;
    RESERVOIRS                                     28 U.S.C. § 2501; accrual of claims; action
    versus inaction; property interests under Texas
    law; background principles of property law; the
    tort-takings distinction
    THIS OPINION AND ORDER APPLIES
    TO:
    ALL UPSTREAM CASES
    Ian Heath Gershengorn, Jenner & Block, LLP, Washington, D.C., for plaintiff. With him
    on the briefs and at the hearing were Benjamin M. Eidelson, Jenner & Block, LLP, Washington,
    D.C.; Larry Vincent and Daniel Charest, Burns & Charest, LLP, Dallas, Texas; Charles Irvine,
    Irvine & Conner, PLLC, Houston, Texas; Edwin Armistead Easterby, Williams Kherkher Hart
    Boundas, LLP, Houston, Texas; and Vuk S. Vujasinovic, VB Attorneys, PLLC, Houston, Texas.
    Jacqueline C. Brown, Trial Attorney, Environmental & Natural Resources Division,
    United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for defendant. With her on the briefs
    were Jeffrey H. Wood, Acting Assistant Attorney General, and William J. Shapiro, Laura W.
    Duncan, Sarah Izfar, Jessica Held, Daniel W. Dooher, and Bradley L. Levine, Trial Attorneys,
    Environmental & Natural Resources Division, United States Department of Justice, Washington,
    D.C.
    OPINION AND ORDER
    LETTOW, Judge.
    In August 2017, Tropical Storm Harvey drenched the Houston area for five days. 1
    Thousands of homes and businesses were flooded. Among those affected by the flooding were
    1
    When Harvey first made landfall on the Texas mainland on August 26, 2017, it was
    classified as a category four hurricane. See Eric S. Blake & David A. Zelinsky, Nat’l Hurricane
    Center, Tropical Cyclone Report: Hurricane Harvey 3 (May 9, 2018), available at:
    https://www.nhc.noaa.gov/data/tcr/AL092017_Harvey.pdf (last visited May 22, 2018). But
    “Harvey rapidly weakened over land to a tropical storm” within the first twelve hours and to a
    tropical depression by August 30, 2017. 
    Id. Because the
    majority of the five-day downpour that
    the Houston area experienced coincided with Tropical Storm Harvey, the opinion will use this
    designation.
    over 10,000 private properties west of Houston and upstream of the federally designed, built, and
    maintained Addicks and Barker Dams. These dams were built to limit flooding in Houston, and
    when Harvey struck, the dams did just that, collecting storm water in their reservoirs to the point
    that the impounded water flooded private properties upstream. Hundreds of owners of these
    upstream properties have brought suit against the United States, alleging an uncompensated
    taking under the Fifth Amendment. Given the large number of similar complaints, procedurally
    these cases are being handled as a group, using case management methods akin to those
    employed in multi-district litigation. In that vein, Co-Lead Counsel have been designated, they
    have filed a Master Amended Complaint for Upstream Plaintiffs (“Master Complaint” or “Mstr.
    Compl.”), ECF No. 18, and defendant (“the government”) has filed an Answer to that Master
    Complaint, ECF No. 80. In its answer, the government denies that it is legally responsible for
    damage or harm attributed to the upstream flooding, and it has separately moved to dismiss the
    complaint.
    Pending before the court at this juncture is the United States’ Motion to Dismiss for Lack
    of Jurisdiction and Failure to State a Claim Upon Which Relief Can Be Granted (“Def.’s Mot.”),
    ECF No. 59, filed pursuant to Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6) of the Rules of the Court of Federal
    Claims (“RCFC”). For the reasons stated, resolution of that motion is deferred until trial.
    BACKGROUND 2
    In 1929 and again in 1935, the Houston area experienced heavy rainfall and flooding.
    Mstr. Compl. ¶ 26. Floodwaters followed the course of Buffalo Bayou—a river west of
    Houston, Texas—and its tributaries into the downtown and port areas of the city. Mstr. Compl.
    ¶¶ 1, 26. These floods engendered congressional action—Congress passed the River and Harbor
    Act of 1938, ch. 535, § 2, 52 Stat. 802, 804 (codified in relevant part at 33 U.S.C. § 540),
    authorizing the United States Army Corps of Engineers (“Corps”) to study and install flood
    control measures along Buffalo Bayou as part of the Buffalo Bayou and Tributaries Project. See
    Mstr. Compl. ¶ 27. Two dams, Addicks and Barker, were ultimately approved and built
    seventeen miles west of Houston along Buffalo Bayou. Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 29, 32. As flood
    control measures, these dams were not designed to impede the normally existing waterways.
    Instead, the water in Buffalo Bayou and its tributaries ordinarily flows through open gates in the
    dams without encumbrance. Hr’g Tr. 13:3 to 14:1, 25:23 to 26:11 (May 16, 2018). 3 Thus, the
    impoundment areas behind the dams are usually dry, but they would, however, collect storm
    water when the gates were closed. That water would be stored in the impoundments until it
    could be slowly released downstream into Buffalo Bayou through gate-controlled outlets at the
    base of the dams. See Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 36, 38.
    The government completed the construction of the Barker Dam in 1945 and finished
    acquiring land for an impoundment area behind it by 1951, Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 33-34, and it
    2
    Although jurisdictional facts are at issue, the court has held no proceedings to find facts
    at this stage. Accordingly, the recitations in the background for the pending motion to dismiss
    are taken from the parties’ pleadings, viz., the Master Complaint and the Answer.
    3
    Further citations to the transcript of the hearing held on May 16, 2018 will omit the date.
    2
    completed the construction of the Addicks Dam and the acquisition of land for its impoundment
    area in 1948, Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 33, 37-38. The government limited its acquisition of land for the
    impoundment areas. See Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 50-51. The Addicks Dam was designed to hold a pool
    with an elevation of 108.3 feet above mean sea level, and the Barker Dam was designed to hold a
    pool with an elevation of 101.7 feet. Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 39-41. The government acquired 12,460
    acres behind Addicks and 12,060 acres behind Barker, or enough acreage to contain pools with
    elevations of 103.1 feet and 95 feet, respectively. Mstr. Compl. ¶ 50.
    The Corps periodically reevaluated the functionality of the dams, and, relevant here, it
    did so in the 1980s. Mstr. Compl. ¶ 42. In light of new data on rainfall in the area, the Corps
    decided that the Addicks and Barker Dams needed to be redesigned for more adequate flood
    protection. Mstr. Compl. ¶ 42. The tops of both dams were raised and spillways were
    strengthened. Mstr. Compl. ¶ 43; Hr’g Tr. 12:17-22. After this redesign, the new maximum
    pool elevations were 118.14 feet for Addicks and 110.26 feet for Barker. Mstr. Compl. ¶ 47.
    The government did not acquire any additional land or pursue flowage easements for the newly
    expanded potential impoundment areas. Thus, the new maximum pool elevations meant that the
    dams could impound water to flood thousands of additional acres of private property. See Mstr.
    Compl. ¶¶ 54-55.
    Over the years, the Corps prepared and used Water Control Manuals to govern the
    operation of the dams. The Corps’ updated 2012 Water Control Manual describes the primary
    objective of the Addicks and Barker Dams as the prevention of downstream flooding. See Mstr.
    Compl. ¶¶ 56, 64. When rain falls, the Corps’ normal operating procedure is to close the outlet
    gates, preventing any additional storm water from flowing downstream to Houston until the rain
    has passed. Mstr. Compl. ¶ 65. This is true even when the impounded water exceeds the
    government-owned land and floods private property. Mstr. Compl. ¶ 65. If the impounded
    water level rises to the point at which it threatens the integrity of the dams, the Corps will open
    the outlet gates to release water downstream. Mstr. Compl. ¶ 66. Nothing in the 2012 Water
    Control Manual indicates that the Corps will open the outlet gates to prevent or reduce upstream
    flooding. Mstr. Compl. ¶ 66.
    The Corps appears to have been long aware that its management plans could result in the
    flooding of private property. See Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 56-63. In 1986, the Corps noted that “[t]he
    maximum pool elevation for both reservoirs extends beyond each project boundary” and
    conceded that “[a]s the surrounding areas are developed, this may mean that homes in adjacent
    subdivisions may be flooded. This could result in lawsuits against the Corps of Engineers for
    flooding private lands.” Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 56-57 (emphasis omitted). The Corps again
    acknowledged this problem in 1995 and suggested nine possible approaches to address it; the
    government opted for a tenth approach: “No Action.” See Mstr. Compl. ¶ 60. In 2009, the
    Corps stated that despite numerous flood events in the Houston area throughout the history of the
    dams, neither of the reservoirs “ha[d] . . . exceeded the limits of government owned land in any
    flood event.” But this good news came with a qualification: “[H]ad some of these events
    centered over Addicks and Barker . . . the combined rainfall and runoff could have resulted in
    flood pools exceeding the limits of government[-]owned land and possibly exceeding the
    capacity of [the d]ams.” Mstr. Compl. ¶ 61 (emphasis omitted).
    3
    The Addicks and Barker Reservoirs first exceeded the limits of the government-owned
    impoundment areas in April 2016. See Mstr. Compl. ¶ 78. The so-called Tax Day Flood
    resulted in inundated streets and grassy areas in subdivisions adjacent to the dams. See Mstr.
    Compl. ¶ 78; Pls.’ Opp’n to [Def.’s] Mot. to Dismiss (“Pls.’ Opp’n”) at 40, ECF No. 99; Hr’g Tr.
    35:24 to 36:11, 69:1 to 70:6. A year later, when Tropical Storm Harvey hit Houston in August
    2017, the reservoirs spilled over onto private land much more extensively than in the prior year.
    Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 1, 70. Over the course of five days, Harvey dropped more than 30 inches of
    rain on the Houston area. See Mstr. Compl. ¶ 1. At first, consistent with the Corps’ procedure,
    the gates of both dams were closed to forestall downstream flooding. Mstr. Compl. ¶ 67. But as
    the reservoirs filled, the gates were opened despite already serious flooding downstream in
    Houston. See Mstr. Compl. ¶ 67. Due to Harvey, the Addicks and Barker Reservoirs reached a
    maximum elevation of 109.1 feet and 101.5 feet, respectively, each approximately six feet higher
    than could be held on federal land. See Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 70-71. Put another way, during the
    event, the Addicks and Barker Reservoirs flooded 3,973 acres and 3,081 acres of private
    property, respectively. Mstr. Compl. ¶ 76. Those properties allegedly remained flooded for at
    least a week. Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 70-71.
    PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    On September 5, 2017, the first complaint relating to Tropical Storm Harvey and the
    Addicks and Barker Dams was filed. See Y and J Properties, Ltd. v. United States, No. 17-
    1189L. Hundreds of such cases have since been filed and are currently pending in this court. On
    October 31, 2017, the Chief Judge of the court issued Management Order No. 1, consolidating
    extant and any later-filed related cases within a master docket, In re Addicks and Barker (Texas)
    Flood Control Reservoirs, Case No. 17-3000L. See Y & J Props., Ltd. v. United States, 134 Fed.
    Cl. 534 (2017). In December of the same year, the Chief Judge of the court split the Master
    Docket into two sub-master dockets, one for upstream cases, In re Upstream Addicks and Barker
    (Texas) Flood-Control Reservoirs, Sub-Master Docket No. 17-9001L, and the other for
    downstream cases, In re Downstream Addicks and Barker (Texas) Flood-Control Reservoirs,
    Sub-Master Docket No. 17-9002L. See In re Addicks and Barker (Texas) Flood-Control
    Reservoirs v. United States, No. 17-3000L (Fed. Cl. Dec. 5, 2017), ECF No. 102, 
    2017 WL 6334791
    . This division put the two sub-master dockets on separate tracks, each following its
    own timeline and structuring its own proceedings.
    The proceedings in both of these sub-master dockets have followed the pattern used for
    multi-district litigation. In the upstream cases, Co-Lead Counsel was designated for
    jurisdictional discovery (Mr. Ian Gershengorn and Mr. Larry Vincent) and for pretrial discovery
    and dispositive motions (Mr. Daniel Charest, Mr. Charles Irvine, Mr. Larry Vincent, and Mr. E.
    Armistead Easterby). See In re Addicks and Barker (Texas) Flood-Control Reservoirs v. United
    States, No. 17-3000L (Fed. Cl. Dec. 5, 2017), ECF No. 103. Then, in January 2018, Co-Lead
    Counsel filed both the Master Complaint and an Amended Individual Master Complaint. See In
    re Upstream Addicks and Barker (Texas) Flood-Control Reservoirs, Sub-Master Docket No. 17-
    9001L (Jan. 16, 2018), ECF Nos. 17, 18. The court subsequently stayed all complaints, extant or
    not-yet-filed, other than the Master Complaint, which alleged both temporary and permanent
    takings. See Case Management Order (Feb. 1, 2018) at 1-2, Sub-Master Docket No. 17-9001L,
    ECF No. 37; see also Mstr. Comp. ¶¶ 105-140. The court also permitted “present- and
    4
    subsequently-filed cases [to] adopt” the Master Complaint by filing a short-form complaint. See
    Case Management Order at 3.
    Concurrently, the court ordered the parties to come to an agreement on ten test properties.
    Case Management Order at 2-3. That number was later increased to fourteen, see Hr’g Tr. at
    14:19 to 15:1 (March 9, 2018), and, after addressing various proposals, the court subsequently
    approved the parties’ agreed test properties on March 13, 2018, see Order Approving Test
    Property Selection (Mar. 13, 2018), ECF No. 91. Meanwhile, a schedule for discovery and
    further motions was entered, with discovery opening March 1, 2018 and closing May 31, 2018,
    see Order Reaffirming Schedule (Feb. 21, 2018), ECF No. 69, later revised to June 13, 2018, see
    Order of March 13, 2018. 4
    The government’s motion to dismiss the Master Complaint, both for lack of jurisdiction
    and for failure to state a claim, has been fully briefed and was argued at the hearing held in
    Houston on May 16, 2018.
    STANDARDS FOR DECISION
    A. Motion to Dismiss – RCFC 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6)
    When ruling on a motion to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction, the court “accept[s] as true
    all undisputed facts asserted in the plaintiff’s complaint and draw[s] all reasonable inferences in
    favor of the plaintiff.” Trusted Integration, Inc. v. United States, 
    659 F.3d 1159
    , 1163 (Fed. Cir.
    2011). Through the Tucker Act, Congress waived the sovereign immunity of the United States
    and provided this court with jurisdiction over a plaintiff’s claims “founded . . . upon the
    Constitution . . . for liquidated or unliquidated damages.” 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1); see also
    United States v. Mitchell, 
    463 U.S. 206
    , 212 (1983). But the Tucker Act does not provide a
    plaintiff with substantive rights. United States v. Testan, 
    424 U.S. 392
    , 398 (1976). Rather, a
    plaintiff establishes jurisdiction by “identify[ing] a separate source of substantive law that creates
    the right to money damages.” Fisher v. United States, 
    402 F.3d 1167
    , 1172 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (en
    banc in relevant part) (citing 
    Mitchell, 463 U.S. at 216
    ; 
    Testan, 424 U.S. at 398
    ). The Takings
    Clause of the Fifth Amendment is one such source of substantive law. Starr Int’l Co. v. United
    States, 
    856 F.3d 953
    , 977 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (“The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment
    inherently is money-mandating.”) (citing Jan’s Helicopter Serv., Inc. v. Federal Aviation Admin.,
    
    525 F.3d 1299
    , 1309 (Fed. Cir. 2008)).
    A complaint will not survive a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim if it does not
    “contain . . . sufficient factual matter . . . to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’”
    Ashcroft v. Iqbal, 
    556 U.S. 662
    , 678 (2009) (quoting Bell Atl. Corp. v. Twombly, 
    550 U.S. 544
    ,
    570 (2007)). The factual matter alleged “must be enough to raise a right to relief above the
    speculative level on the assumption that all the allegations in the complaint are true (even if
    doubtful in fact).” 
    Twombly, 550 U.S. at 555
    (internal citation omitted).
    4
    Subsequently, the parties requested, and the court agreed, that the period for discovery
    be extended, and that extension will run at least to a date in December 2018. See Hr’g Tr.
    114:13-21.
    5
    B. Elements of a Takings Claim
    The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment states that “private property [shall not] be
    taken for public use, without just compensation.” U.S. Const. amend. V. “The Takings Clause
    is ‘designed to bar [g]overnment from forcing some people alone to bear public burdens which,
    in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a whole.’” Arkansas Game & Fish
    Comm’n v. United States, 
    568 U.S. 23
    , 31 (2012) (“Arkansas Game I”) (quoting Armstrong v.
    United States, 
    364 U.S. 40
    , 49 (1960)). “And ‘when the government physically takes possession
    of an interest in property for some public purpose, it has a categorical duty to compensate the
    former owner.’” 
    Id. (quoting Tahoe-Sierra
    Pres. Council, Inc. v. Tahoe Regl. Planning Agency,
    
    535 U.S. 302
    , 322 (2002)) (alterations omitted).
    “[M]ost takings claims turn on situation-specific factual inquiries.” Arkansas Game 
    I, 568 U.S. at 31
    (citing Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York City, 
    438 U.S. 104
    , 124 (1978)).
    “[D]ue to the fact-intensive nature of takings cases,” Moden v. United States, 
    404 F.3d 1335
    ,
    1342 (2005), trial courts tend to be slow to dismiss them, see 
    Moden, 404 F.3d at 1342
    (noting
    that “summary judgment should not be granted precipitously” in takings cases due to their fact-
    intensive natures, even when, as there, the parties have engaged in discovery), and to create a
    record with “detailed findings of fact,” Arkansas Game 
    I, 568 U.S. at 29
    . More specifically,
    “[f]looding cases, like other takings cases, should be assessed with reference to the ‘particular
    circumstances of each case,’ and not by resorting to blanket exclusionary rules.” Arkansas Game
    
    I, 568 U.S. at 37
    (quoting United States v. Central Eureka Mining Co., 
    357 U.S. 155
    , 168
    (1958)). And, concerns about the fact-intensive nature of takings claims are heightened when a
    plaintiff pleads a takings claim based on a temporary physical invasion because, “[u]nlike
    permanent physical takings, . . . temporary invasions ‘are subject to a more complex balancing
    process to determine whether they are a taking.’” Arkansas Game & Fish Com’n v. United
    States (“Arkansas Game II”), 
    736 F.3d 1364
    , 1369 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (quoting Arkansas Game 
    I, 568 U.S. at 36
    ).
    To establish a viable takings claim, a plaintiff must prove two things. First, he or she
    must show that he or she has “a property interest for purposes of the Fifth Amendment.”
    Members of the Peanut Quota Holders Ass’n v. United States, 
    421 F.3d 1323
    , 1330 (Fed. Cir.
    2005) (citing Conti v. United States, 
    291 F.3d 1334
    , 1339 (Fed. Cir. 2002)); Wyatt v. United
    States, 
    271 F.3d 1090
    , 1096 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (“[O]nly persons with a valid property interest at
    the time of the taking are entitled to compensation.”) (internal citations omitted). Second, he or
    she must establish that the government’s actions “amounted to a compensable taking of that
    property interest.” American Pelagic Fishing Co. v. United States, 
    379 F.3d 1363
    , 1372 (Fed.
    Cir. 2004). For flooding cases, the Supreme Court has identified at least five factors relevant to,
    but not necessarily dispositive of, this latter inquiry. See Arkansas Game 
    I, 568 U.S. at 38-39
    .
    They include (1) time—the duration of the physical invasion; (2) causation; (3) intent or
    foreseeability, that is, “the degree to which the invasion is intended or is the foreseeable result of
    authorized government action;” (4) “the owner’s reasonable investment-backed expectations
    regarding the land’s use,” including “the character of the land;” and (5) the “[s]everity of the
    interference.” 
    Id. (internal quotations
    omitted); see also Arkansas Game 
    II, 736 F.3d at 1369-75
    (considering each of these factors).
    6
    Plaintiffs who bring inverse-condemnation takings claims based on government-induced
    flooding must meet an additional requirement particular to this court. See Ridge Line, Inc. v.
    United States, 
    346 F.3d 1346
    , 1355 (Fed. Cir. 2003). They must establish that “treatment under
    takings law, as opposed to tort law, is appropriate under the circumstances.” 
    Id. Although the
    Tucker Act precludes claims “sounding in tort” from this court’s jurisdiction, “to the extent [a
    plaintiff raises] a nonfrivolous takings claim founded upon the Fifth Amendment, jurisdiction
    under the Tucker Act is proper.” 
    Moden, 404 F.3d at 1341
    ; see also 
    id. at 1339,
    1341-42
    (treating as improper a dismissal for lack of jurisdiction on grounds of the tort-takings
    distinction, but considering the trial court’s disposition in that case as a grant of summary
    judgment because the trial court considered facts outside the pleadings). 5
    ANALYSIS
    In seeking dismissal of plaintiffs’ upstream Master Complaint, the government raises five
    distinct arguments. The government contends first, that the statute of limitations has run;
    second, that the plaintiffs allege a taking arising out of government inaction instead of
    government action; third, that plaintiffs lack the necessary underlying property interest under
    either state or federal law to bring a viable takings claim; fourth, that plaintiffs have no
    reasonable investment-backed expectations because they acquired the properties at issue after the
    construction of the dams; and, fifth, that plaintiffs have only plausibly alleged a tort, not a taking.
    Plaintiffs counter that the Corps took actions first to build and then to modify the dams in the
    1940s and 1980s, respectively, that the dams were designed and built to impound water behind
    them in a way that foreseeably exceeded the land required and acquired for the impoundment
    pools, and that the resulting flooding effectuated a taking of their property.
    I. STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
    The Addicks and Barker Dams were originally built 70 years ago and were modified in
    the 1980s. See Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 33-42. The government relies on 28 U.S.C. § 2501 to argue that
    this court lacks jurisdiction because the six-year limitations period specified by that statute has
    long since run. See Def.’s Mot. at 4, 24; [Def.’s] Reply in Support of its Mot. to Dismiss for
    Lack of Jurisdiction and for Failure to State a Claim upon Which Relief can be Granted (“Def.’s
    Reply”) at 4, 23-24, ECF No. 105. Although the government is correct that Section 2501
    imposes a six-year limitation period on takings claims and that “the design of the reservoirs, the
    acquisition of land, [and] the calculation of design pools . . . [did not] occur[] within the last six
    years,” it is incorrect that these are the “key actions identified in the [c]omplaint” for purposes of
    evaluating the limitations period. See Def.’s Mot. at 24. The point at hand is when plaintiffs’
    5
    The extent of the nonfrivolous pleading requirement for jurisdiction has been debated.
    Compare Jan’s Helicopter 
    Serv., 525 F.3d at 1309
    (“[A]ll that is required [for jurisdiction] is a
    determination that the claim is founded upon a money-mandating source and the plaintiff has
    made a nonfrivolous allegation that it is within class of plaintiffs entitled to recover under the
    money-mandating source. There is no further jurisdictional requirement that the court determine
    whether the additional allegations of the complaint state a nonfrivolous claim on the merits.”),
    with 
    id. at 1310,
    1312 (Prost, J., dissenting in part) (“[Moden] does not confine the nonfrivolous
    claim requirement to a ‘class of plaintiffs’ analysis.”).
    7
    claims actually accrued. 28 U.S.C. § 2501. Claims accrue “when . . . plaintiff[s] can file suit
    and obtain relief.” Heimeshoff v. Hartford Life & Acc. Ins. Co., 
    571 U.S. 99
    , 105 (2013)
    (internal quotations omitted). Plaintiffs can sue and obtain relief for a taking once they “actually
    experience[]” that taking. Stueve Bros. Farms, LLC, v. United States, 
    737 F.3d 750
    , 753-54
    (Fed. Cir. 2013). Thus, accepting the facts as alleged, plaintiffs’ claims accrued no earlier than
    2016, see Mstr. Compl. ¶ 78, and more likely in 2017, rendering the filing of these suits well
    within the six-year limitation period of Section 2501.
    The government’s implied argument that Section 2501 should be treated differently in
    this case because it is “a limitation on the waiver of sovereign immunity” is unavailing. See
    Def.’s Mot. at 24. The Supreme Court has declined to hold that Section 2501 merits a “special
    accrual rule,” calling its text “unexceptional.” Franconia Assocs. v. United States, 
    536 U.S. 129
    ,
    145 (2002). The Court has since reasserted this view, describing Franconia as “rejecting [the]
    argument by the [g]overnment that [Section 2501] embodies a special, earlier-than-normal, rule
    as to when a claim first accrues.” John R. Sand & Gravel Co. v. United States, 
    552 U.S. 130
    ,
    138 (2008).
    Statutes of limitation must also be distinguished from statutes of repose. Unlike statutes
    of limitation that begin to run when a claim accrues, statutes of repose are “measured . . . from
    the date of the last culpable act or omission of the defendant.” CTS Corp. v. Waldburger,
    __U.S.__, ___, 
    134 S. Ct. 2175
    , 2182 (2014). Thus, “the injury [to the plaintiff] need not have
    occurred, much less have been discovered” before the repose period begins to run. 
    Id. (internal quotations
    omitted). A statute of repose would perfectly suit the government’s arguments, but
    unfortunately for the government, Section 2501 is not that kind of limitation.
    II. GOVERNMENT ACTION OR INACTION
    The government contends that plaintiffs have failed to state a claim because they base
    their takings claims on government inaction as opposed to government action. See Def.’s Mot.
    at 22 (“It is well-settled law that the government’s failure to act or to perform its duties, or the
    government’s delay in acting, cannot constitute a taking.”) (citing Georgia Power Co. v. United
    States, 
    633 F.2d 554
    , 557 (Ct. Cl. 1980); Nicholson v. United States, 
    77 Fed. Cl. 605
    , 620
    (2007)). Specifically, the government asserts that “[p]laintiffs cannot state a [viable] taking[s]
    claim merely by alleging that the United States should have bought some unspecified amount of
    land decades ago to contain” the storm water from Tropical Storm Harvey. Def.’s Reply at 1.
    This assertion misconstrues the plaintiffs’ allegations, which are focused on government action.
    See Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 69-77; see also Pls.’ Opp’n at 17-19. The government acted when it built
    and then modified the dams in such a way that they could and did impound storm water behind
    the dams on both government and private property. That the government’s action bore fruit or
    had consequences only some years later does not obviate the reality that action, not inaction, is at
    issue. See St. Bernard Par. Gov’t v. United States, 
    887 F.3d 1359
    , 1362 (Fed. Cir. 2018) (“In
    order to establish causation, a plaintiff must show that in the ordinary course of events, absent
    8
    government action, plaintiffs would not have suffered the injury.”). The accrual analysis set 
    out supra
    signifies as much. 6
    Moreover, plaintiffs’ allegations that the government was aware of the risk the dams’
    designs posed to private property and could have mitigated those risks by procuring flowage
    easements on, or purchasing additional land within, the designed and redesigned impoundment
    areas are inapposite to the action-inaction inquiry. Those allegations speak to the government’s
    intent and the foreseeability of the alleged takings. Plaintiffs therefore adequately allege
    government action as the basis for their taking claims.
    III.    PROPERTY INTERESTS
    Plaintiffs allege they own real and personal property that was destroyed or severely
    impaired by the flooding caused by the Addicks and Barker Dams. See Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 8-21.
    The government does not now—in its motion to dismiss—contest ownership. Rather, it asserts
    (1) that plaintiffs do not have a relevant property interest under state or federal law; (2) that the
    existence of the dams before plaintiffs acquired their property undermines their reasonable
    investment-backed expectations; (3) that any property interest that plaintiffs do have is inherently
    limited by the government’s police power; and (4) that they have failed to plead their personal
    property interests with sufficient particularity. See Def.’s Mot. at 11-21, 25-26.
    6
    As the government’s counsel advised, “a causation question . . . is not at play in our
    motion to dismiss.” Hr’g Tr. 28:3-4. Counsel for the government elaborated:
    [Counsel]: [Y]our question is whether the flooding would have taken place without the
    dams.
    The Court: Y[es].
    [Counsel]: No.
    The Court: Well, I take it everybody concedes that it would not have taken place in the
    way it did without the dams.
    [Counsel]: In the way it did, yes. Where exactly the water is, yes, but as to specific
    properties and where they are and whether flooding would not have taken place, that is
    not a question we concede.
    Hr’g Tr. 28:10-21; see also Hr’g Tr. 30:14-19 (“[W]e are accepting as true[] all of the allegations
    in [p]laintiffs’ complaint, which includes causation for the purposes of this motion. . . . [W]e are
    agreeing that the flooding would not have happened but for the dams.”).
    9
    A. Texas Property Law and Federal Annotations on that Law
    The government makes three broad arguments in an attempt to undermine plaintiffs’
    alleged property interests under state and federal law: (1) Texas law recognizes no property right
    in keeping property free from diversions of water from dams, (2) Texas law recognizes no
    property right vis-à-vis a preexisting flood control structure, and (3) the federal Flood Control
    Act is a longstanding background principle that limits plaintiffs’ property rights. See Def.’s Mot.
    at 16-21. The government buttresses these arguments with citations to the Texas Water Code,
    Texas Civil Statutes, and selective citations to Texas case law. See Def.’s Mot. at 16-19. As to
    Texas statutory law, the government relies on Section 11.086 of the Texas Water Code, which
    generally prohibits private landowners from diverting the natural flows of water onto private
    property, and which entitles property owners to recover damages from “an overflow of water
    caused by unlawful diversion or impounding.” Tex. Water Code Ann. § 11.086(a), (b). The
    government emphasizes that the statute expressly exempts diversions of water caused by the
    “construction and maintenance of levees and other impoundments to control floods.” 
    Id. § 11.086(c).
    As to Texas judicial precedents, the government cites City of Tyler v. Likes, 
    962 S.W.2d 489
    , 505 (Tex. 1997), where the Texas Supreme Court rejected takings and nuisance
    claims upon a finding that there was no governmental activity that had increased the amount of
    water in a watershed after a system was installed more than ten years before the plaintiffs had
    acquired their home.
    The government has misstated Texas property law, particularly as it relates to flood-
    control measures. Almost as if he were addressing this case directly, then-Justice Willett,
    writing for the Texas Supreme Court, explained: “[W]here the government made a conscious
    decision to subject particular properties to inundation so that other properties would be spared, as
    happens when a government builds a flood-control dam knowing that certain properties will be
    flooded by the resulting reservoir[,] . . . of course the government must compensate the owners
    who lose their land to the reservoir.” Harris Cty. Flood Control Dist. v. Kerr, 
    499 S.W.3d 793
    ,
    807 (Tex. 2016) (emphasis added); see also Tarrant Reg’l Water Dist. v. Gragg, 
    151 S.W.3d 546
    , 555 (Tex. 2004). Although the court’s statement in Harris County is dicta—the Texas
    Supreme Court held that no compensable taking had occurred in that case—the deficiency in the
    plaintiffs’ claim was that “the [c]ounty never intended, as part of a flood-control plan, to use the
    [plaintiffs’] particular properties for detention ponds, drainage easements, or the like,” and the
    plaintiffs had offered no proof that the county was “substantially certain its approval of
    development would result in the flooding of the [plaintiffs’] particular lots.” 
    Kerr, 499 S.W.2d at 807
    . Neither of these shortcomings are present in facts alleged in this case. See Mstr. Compl.
    ¶¶ 50-77.
    Notably also, the Texas Water Code provisions cited by the government are inapposite to
    the facts alleged here. Texas Water Code Ann. § 11.086 relates to unlawful diversions of diffuse
    surface water, i.e., sheet flows which have not yet “reache[d] some bed or channel in which
    water is accustomed to flow.” Dietrich v. Goodman, 
    123 S.W.3d 413
    , 419 (Tex. App. 2003)
    (internal quotations omitted). The dams at issue here function to control the flow of natural
    water courses on their way to Buffalo Bayou. See Bass v. Taylor, 
    90 S.W.2d 811
    , 815 (Tex.
    10
    1936) (explaining that “the flood waters of a river cannot be likened to [diffuse] surface water”). 7
    Plaintiffs have more than plausibly alleged a valid property interest under state law.
    The government further argues that the federal Flood Control Act of 1928, ch. 569, § 3,
    45 Stat. 534 (codified as amended in relevant part at 33 U.S.C. § 702c), is a background principle
    that “[s]hapes [p]laintiffs’ [p]roperty [r]ights,” in a way that forecloses their takings claims.
    Def.’s Mot. at 19-20 (section heading). Plaintiffs counter that no act of Congress can
    “eliminate[] liability for takings claims.” See Pls.’ Opp’n at 28 (citing, inter alia, Scranton v.
    Wheeler, 
    179 U.S. 141
    , 153 (1900) (“Congress may not override the provision that just
    compensation must be made when private property is taken for public use.”)). The government
    responds, “Congress can retract the waiver of sovereign immunity from takings claims[] without
    extinguishing substantive liability, as an aggrieved party could still seek a private bill from
    Congress.” Def.’s Reply at 20 & n.14. In sum, the parties’ briefs speak past each other. Perhaps
    Congress might withdraw its waiver of sovereign immunity in takings cases, remitting claimants
    to the pursuit of a private bill in Congress, but neither contends that such a withdrawal has
    occurred here. Compare Def.’s Mot at 19-20 & n.20, with Pls.’ Opp’n at 27.
    The disagreement between the parties on this point is, accordingly, a hypothetical one,
    centered on the question of whether a statute, if passed prior to the government action that gave
    rise to the taking, could become a background principle of property law that extinguishes a
    property owner’s judicial remedy to compensation for a taking without violating the principle the
    Supreme Court expressed in Scranton. The court agrees with plaintiffs that it cannot. See Pls.’
    Opp’n at 28. The Flood Control Act does not supersede or bar this court’s jurisdiction over
    takings claims for flooding, and it does not extinguish plaintiffs’ substantive right to just
    compensation.
    B. Preexistence of the Dams and Investment-Backed Expectations
    The government also claims that plaintiffs’ acquisition of their property after the
    construction of the dams is fatal to their takings claim under federal law. See Def.’s Reply at 18-
    19. In context, the government’s arguments appear to relate to plaintiffs’ reasonable investment-
    backed expectations. See Def.’s Mot. at 18 & n.19. The government asserts that plaintiffs have
    no such reasonable expectations because they have “not allege[d] any facts showing [that] they
    expected [that] the dams would operate in any manner other than ‘precisely as intended[]’ since .
    . . 1962.” 
    Id. Plaintiffs respond
    by citing two decisions by the Supreme Court: Palazzolo v. Rhode
    Island, 
    533 U.S. 606
    (2001), and Dickinson v. United States, 
    331 U.S. 745
    (1947). Pls.’ Opp’n
    at 22-25. They argue that these cases “make[] clear that . . . a title transfer postdating a
    government action . . . is no bar to a takings claim.” See Pls.’ Opp’n at 22-23. The government
    attempts to distinguish both cases, asserting that Palazzolo “should apply only in the context of a
    regulation that applies to all citizens,” Def.’s Reply at 19, and that Dickinson is “a case
    7
    Dietrich stated in pithy terms that “a landowner might divert the entire Brazos River
    across his neighbor’s property without subjecting himself to liability under Section 
    11.086.” 123 S.W.3d at 419
    .
    11
    concerning [only] when a cause of action for flooding accrues,” 
    id. at 18
    (“In Dickinson, the sole
    question before the Court was when a suit must be brought on a claim in respect to land taken by
    the United States.”) (citation and internal quotation marks omitted).
    The government’s argument based on preexistence fails. Palazzolo explicitly rejects the
    “sweeping[] rule” that “[a] purchaser or a successive title holder . . . is deemed to have notice of
    an earlier-enacted restriction and is barred from claiming that it effects a taking.” 
    Palazzolo, 533 U.S. at 626
    . The Court explained that “[t]he State may not put so potent a Hobbesian stick into
    the Lockean bundle,” thereby “put[ting] an expiration date on the Takings Clause,” “strip[ping
    landowners] of the ability to transfer the interest which [they] possessed prior to the regulation,”
    and “secur[ing] a windfall [to the State].” 
    Id. at 627.
    There is nothing in this broad language
    that counsels lower courts to read Palazzolo narrowly, applying only to regulatory takings. As to
    Dickinson, the government is correct that the question before the Court was one of the timing of
    accrual. 
    See 331 U.S. at 750
    . But Dickinson is also an example of a takings claim that was
    upheld despite land being transferred after the flooding that culminated in the taking had already
    begun. See 
    id. at 747-49;
    see also Cooper v. United States, 
    827 F.2d 762
    , 764-65 (Fed. Cir.
    1987). Dickinson and Cooper are examples of courts awarding compensation to plaintiffs who
    acquired their land while on notice that a taking was occurring or had the potential to occur. As
    such, they erase any doubt of the plausibility of plaintiffs’ reasonable investment-backed
    expectations in the face of the takings threat posed by the proximity of the Addicks and Barker
    Dams.
    C.      Property Rights Limited by Police Power
    The government claims that its police power to “protect[] . . . life or property . . . during
    an emergency” limits any rights in property plaintiffs may have had and that Tropical Storm
    Harvey posed such an emergency. See Def.’s Reply at 5, 7-11 (citing, inter alia, Miller v.
    Schoene, 
    276 U.S. 272
    (1928); Bowditch v. City of Boston, 
    101 U.S. 16
    (1879)). But the actions
    available to the government for dealing with the relevant emergency were constrained by the
    design of the dams and impoundments, the Corps’ 2012 Water Control Manual, and the Corps’
    normal operating procedures. See Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 64-66. Key to those constraints was the
    design of the dams that contemplated flooding land outside government ownership or control.
    The design pools extended well beyond land owned or controlled by the government, to include
    thousands of homes and businesses. Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 47, 54-55. Thus, it was not that the
    government had to respond to Tropical Storm Harvey as an emergency that necessitated the
    flooding of private land, but rather it was the design of the dams and the government’s
    procedures for operating them, all put in place well before Harvey arrived. The government
    cannot, therefore, invoke its police power to limit plaintiffs’ property rights and obtain dismissal
    of their complaint.
    D. Sufficiency of Plaintiffs’ Claims Regarding Personal Property
    The government contends that the Master Complaint should be dismissed as insufficient
    because, for inverse-condemnation claims, plaintiffs must plead with particularity the “specific
    property interest” allegedly taken. Def.’s Mot. at 25 (quoting RCFC 9(i)). The government
    claims that plaintiffs have neither sufficiently identified the personal property allegedly
    12
    destroyed, as required by RCFC 9(i), nor plausibly alleged its destruction to the satisfaction of
    Twombly. Def.’s Mot. at 25-26 (citing 
    Twombly, 550 U.S. at 570
    ). The court previously rejected
    this argument in acting on the several proffered versions of the master complaint. See Hr’g Tr. at
    25: 6-12 (Feb. 14, 2018) (“It is necessary to identify and differentiate between real and personal
    property, . . . [but] I just don’t think that [a more] detailed listing [of personal property] is going
    to help at this point.”); see also Order of Feb. 1, 2018, ECF No. 36 (denying the government’s
    motion for a more definite statement). At the pleadings stage of these cases, there is no need for
    a plaintiff to separately identify each type or item of personal property destroyed or severely
    harmed by flood water. The listing of chairs, couches, rugs, books, air conditioners, and
    computers, etc., is all implied by referring to household furnishings.
    IV.     THE TORT-TAKINGS DISTINCTION
    The tort-takings distinction, like most of takings law, “turns on situation-specific factual
    inquiries.” See Arkansas Game 
    I, 568 U.S. at 32
    . As explained previously, when plaintiffs have
    alleged a “nonfrivolous takings claim founded upon the Fifth Amendment, jurisdiction under the
    Tucker Act is proper.” 
    Moden, 404 F.3d at 1341
    . The remaining question, then, is whether
    plaintiffs’ complaint “contain[s] sufficient factual matter . . . to ‘state a claim to relief that is
    plausible on its face.’” 
    Iqbal, 556 U.S. at 678
    (quoting 
    Twombly, 550 U.S. at 570
    ). The
    government argues that plaintiffs have failed to plausibly allege a temporary taking instead of a
    tort based on the “two-part inquiry” expressed in Ridge Line. See Def.’s Reply at 26-28 (citing
    Ridge 
    Line, 346 F.3d at 1355-57
    (requiring plaintiffs to show that “the government intend[ed] to
    invade a protected property interest or the asserted invasion [was] the . . . probable result of an
    authorized activity” and that “the government's interference with any property rights of [the
    plaintiffs] was substantial and frequent” to establish a taking claim based on inverse
    condemnation)). The government asserts that plaintiffs’ takings claims cannot plausibly satisfy
    the Ridge Line inquiry because “[n]othing in [p]laintiffs’ [c]omplaint suggests that flooding has
    been . . . frequent,” Def.’s Reply at 28, as “one or two floods are unlikely to meet th[at]
    standard.” Def.’s Mot. at 31 (internal quotation marks omitted).
    But the government is mistaken. In Stockton v. United States, 
    214 Ct. Cl. 506
    , 518-19
    (1977), the court stated that “only one actual flooding is enough when the property is upstream
    of the dam and below the contour line to which the dam is designed to impound water.” The
    government attempts to distinguish Stockton. First, the government notes that Stockton is a pre-
    Ridge Line case. Def.’s Reply at 27. Although the relative timing of the decisions is worth
    noting, there is nothing in Ridge Line that requires the abrogation of Stockton. The Federal
    Circuit’s disclaimer in Ridge Line of “isolated invasions, such as one or two floodings” cited to a
    pre-Stockton decision by the Court of Claims, Eyherabide v. United States, 
    170 Ct. Cl. 598
    , 604,
    
    345 F.2d 565
    , 569 (1965), but made no reference to Stockton itself. See Ridge 
    Line, 346 F.3d at 1357
    (brackets omitted). 8
    8
    In Eyherabide, the Court of Claims held that the Navy had effectuated a temporary
    taking by periodically using the plaintiff’s ranch as part of its “gunnery 
    range.” 345 F.2d at 568
    -
    70. There, the court distinguished “[i]solated invasions” from the Navy’s “repeated invasions of
    the same type.” 
    Id. at 569.
    13
    Further, the government’s argument about “frequency” is similar to the contention that
    the Supreme Court rejected in Arkansas Game I. The thrust of the Supreme Court’s opinion,
    indeed, its explicit language, foreclosed “resorting to blanket exclusionary rules . . . [in f]looding
    cases, [as in] other takings 
    cases.” 568 U.S. at 37
    . Rather, courts are to assess flooding claims
    “with reference to the particular circumstances of each case.” 
    Id. (citations and
    internal
    quotation marks omitted). The government is correct that Arkansas Game I did not explicitly
    overrule Ridge Line, see Def.’s Reply at 26-27, but the Ridge Line test must now accommodate
    the Supreme Court’s ruling in Arkansas Game I. The frequency inquiry that the government
    would have this court apply is, in essence, a blanket exclusionary rule for all single or isolated
    instances of flooding. See Def.’s Reply at 27-28 (implying that all takings claims based on two
    or fewer flooding events are categorically deficient under Ridge Line). The government seeks to
    buttress this problematic argument by noting that the Supreme Court cited Ridge Line
    approvingly in Arkansas Game I and also stated that “while a single act [of flooding] may not be
    enough, a continuance of them in sufficient number and for a sufficient time may prove a
    taking.” Arkansas Game 
    I, 568 U.S. at 39
    (quoting Portsmouth Harbor Land & Hotel Co. v.
    United States, 
    260 U.S. 327
    , 329-30 (1922)) (internal alterations omitted) (emphasis added). But
    the Supreme Court did not quote this language with reference to Ridge Line’s hard-and-fast
    rule—it did not cite Ridge Line in that context. Rather, the Court used the quoted language to
    highlight that the “[s]everity of the interference figures in the calculus” as one factor among
    many. 
    Id. at 39.
    The Court’s commitment to an open, fact-driven, case-specific inquiry is
    supported by the quotation of qualified and not categorical language: a single act of flooding
    “may” not be enough. Consistent with the overall thrust of the opinion, the Court left open the
    possibility that although a single flooding may not be enough, it also might be.
    Next, the government argues that Stockton is distinct from those cases because in
    Stockton, “flooding occurred . . . at least twice.” Def.’s Reply at 27. The facts recounted in
    Stockton, however, do not support that reading. The court in Stockton had noted that previously,
    “[f]luctuating levels of the reservoir at times temporarily submerged grass and trees on the slope,
    but with no ill 
    effects,” 214 Ct. Cl. at 511
    . Those “fluctuating levels” were not flooding and
    certainly were not like the flooding upon which plaintiffs based their takings claim. See 
    id. at 513-14
    (“Heavy rains in April 1973 consistently brought reservoir elevations to over 592 feet
    throughout the month, peaking at 596.91 feet. These unprecedented levels, coupled with strong
    northerly winds, sent 3 to 4-foot waves against plaintiffs' shoreline, eroded the soil[,] . . . and
    toppled trees into the lake.”) (emphasis added).
    Moreover, the plaintiffs here have alleged two flooding events: the Tax Day Flood of
    2016, when the impoundments allegedly filled to the point that streets and some grassy areas of
    adjacent subdivisions were covered with water, and the Harvey event in 2017. See Mstr. Compl.
    ¶¶ 1, 78.
    Finally, the government represents that “in Stockton, the Corps had explicitly attempted
    to acquire a flowage easement for [the] land . . . , but the Court of Claims found that that
    easement had been improperly acquired[;]” “a factual scenario not at issue here.” Def.’s Reply
    at 27. The government is correct that the cases are factually distinct, but the government makes
    no attempt to explain the materiality of the divergence. See 
    id. (noting only
    that the Stockton’s
    factual context was “unusual”). Takings cases often turn on factual questions, but the differing
    14
    facts must bear on the relevant inquiry: here, frequency. It is not apparent how an improperly
    acquired flowage easement bears on the frequency of the flooding. But insofar as the acquisition
    of easements goes to intent, see 
    id. (describing the
    Stockton court’s statement as a “finding about
    the government’s intent”), it appears that such a distinction cuts against the government. In
    Stockton, the Corps attempted to acquire a flowage easement but bungled it by making
    “misrepresentations to an unsophisticated plaintiff.” 
    Id. (citing Stockton,
    214 Ct. Cl. at 515-16).
    That seems a sight better than here, where the Corps appeared indifferent to the risk to nearby
    private property owners, taking no action to reduce that risk or to obtain authorization from those
    owners to impound water on their land. See Mstr. Compl. ¶¶ 56-60. In sum, the two alleged
    floods in successive years and the teachings of Stockton coupled with of the Supreme Court’s
    opinion in Arkansas Game I, suffice to render the plaintiffs’ takings claims plausible.
    Plaintiffs have also alleged a permanent taking of both “damaged or destroyed” personal
    property and a “flowage and drainage easement.” See Mstr. Compl. at ¶¶ 122-140. A permanent
    takings claim based on flooding allegations need not result from a “permanent condition of
    continual overflow;” the flooding can be “intermittent” if it is “inevitably recurring.” United
    States v. Cress, 
    243 U.S. 316
    , 328 (1917). The flooding of plaintiffs land is inevitably recurring,
    plaintiffs argue, because “storms of similar size have happened over the years and [have
    narrowly] missed Houston,” and the “permanent structure[s]” that caused the upstream flooding
    here and would cause any future flooding “remain in place.” Hr’g Tr. 70:6-16. The government
    responds by endeavoring to distinguish Cress: “[T]he intermittent and inevitably recurring
    flooding had already taken place in [Cress,] . . . so the Court had facts to rely on there about
    when [flooding] was likely to occur in the future.” Hr’g Tr. 74:6-15.
    This court has previously rejected arguments like those made by the government here. In
    Quebedeaux v. United States, 
    112 Fed. Cl. 317
    , 319-20 (2013), the government opened a dam’s
    spillway on two occasions; the second resulted in flooding downstream. The government’s
    motion to dismiss argued that a single flooding event could not give rise to a taking; the court
    denied that motion, noting that the plaintiffs’ claims of inevitable recurrence were plausible: “[I]t
    is conceivable that a takings [claim] might lie where defendant, using a permanent structure,
    purposely floods a property once and expressly reserves the right to do so in the future. In this
    instance, it is conceivable that defendant's actions may be viewed not as an “isolated invasion,”
    but rather as reserving a flowage easement over the affected property.” 
    Id. at 323
    (internal
    citations omitted). As 
    explained supra
    , the facts alleged include multiple flood events since the
    dams were built (the Tax Day Flood and Harvey); a history of heavy rainfall in the area,
    consistent with similar flooding (the 1929 and 1935 storms that led to the construction of the
    dams and storms that, if they had been “centered over Addicks and Barker,” would have resulted
    in the flooding of private property); and two permanent structures that were designed and are
    operated in a way that will guarantee future flooding in the absence of change. Again, at this
    pleadings stage, plaintiffs need not prove that the intermittent flooding of their land is inevitably
    recurring, but only need allege facts that show that such inevitable recurrence is plausible. They
    have alleged facts that have more than done so.
    But, due to the “fact-intensive nature of takings cases,” 
    Moden, 404 F.3d at 1342
    , and
    because “temporary invasion[ cases] ‘are subject to a more complex balancing process,’”
    Arkansas Game 
    II, 736 F.3d at 1369
    (quoting Arkansas Game 
    I, 568 U.S. at 36
    ), the court will
    15
    not resolve these issues on a motion to dismiss. Instead, the court elects to exercise its discretion
    under RCFC 12(i) and defer the resolution of this motion until trial, where it can make more
    “detailed findings of fact.” Arkansas Game 
    I, 568 U.S. at 29
    . 9
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons stated, resolution of the government’s motion to dismiss is DEFERRED
    until trial pursuant to RCFC 12(i).
    It is so ORDERED.
    s/ Charles F. Lettow
    Charles F. Lettow
    Judge
    9
    RCFC 12(i) provides in pertinent part that “any defense listed in RCFC 12(b)(1)-(7)—
    whether made in a pleading or by motion— . . . must be heard and decided before trial unless the
    court orders a deferral until trial.” RCFC 12(i) (emphasis added).
    When “the defenses in Rule 12(b) . . . can[not] be addressed by a preliminary hearing”
    because “ruling on th[ose] defense[s] entails substantial consideration of the merits,” such
    defenses “can most effectively be addressed during trial.” James Wm. Moore, Moore’s Federal
    Practice § 12.50 (3d ed. 2012) (discussing Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(i)). “Deferring matters until trial”
    in this way “allows a court to give [due] consideration to matters with such grave consequences
    as motions for dismissal under Rule 12(b)(1)–(7).” Id.; see also 5B Charles A. Wright & Arthur
    R. Miller, Federal Practice & Procedure § 1350 (3d ed. 2004) (“[T]he court may postpone a
    decision until evidence is submitted at trial if the jurisdictional issue is intertwined with the
    merits of the case.”). In reviewing a trial court’s decision to defer a ruling, a federal appellate
    court “observed that the method and timetable for deciding a Rule 12(b) motion is left to the sole
    discretion of the trial judge,” including the discretion to defer any ruling on the motion until after
    the trial. See In re School Asbestos Litigation, 
    921 F.2d 1310
    , 1316 (3d Cir. 1990) (internal
    quotation marks omitted) (emphasis in original) (citing Sterling v. Velsicol Chemical Corp., 
    855 F.2d 1188
    , 1195 (6th Cir. 1988) (interpreting Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(d), the predecessor of Rule
    12(i)).
    The intensely factual nature of takings cases in flooding situations necessarily intertwines
    questions of jurisdiction and the merits. Thus the court has decided to exercise its discretion
    under RCFC 12(i) to defer ruling on the government’s motion to dismiss until trial.
    16