Northern California Power Agency v. United States ( 2015 )


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  •         In the United States Court of Federal Claims
    No. 14-817C
    (Filed: June 29, 2015)
    *************************************
    *
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA POWER           *
    AGENCY, et al.,                     *
    *                  Rule 12(b)(1) Motion to Dismiss;
    Plaintiffs,     *                  Subject Matter Jurisdiction; Rule
    *                  12(b)(6) Motion to Dismiss; Failure
    v.                                  *                  to State a Claim Upon Which Relief
    *                  Can Be Granted; Illegal Exaction
    THE UNITED STATES,                  *                  Claim; Section 3407(d), Central
    *                  Valley Project Improvement Act.
    Defendant.      *
    *
    *************************************
    David T. Ralston, Jr., with whom were Jay N. Varon, Frank S. Murray, Jennifer M. Forde,
    and Anna S. Ross, Foley & Lardner LLP, Washington, D.C., Michael F. Dean, General
    Counsel, Northern California Power Agency, Sacramento, California, Barry E. DeWalt,
    Assistant City Attorney, City of Redding, Brita J. Bayless, City Attorney, City of Roseville,
    and Richard E. Nosky, Jr., City Attorney, City of Santa Clara, Of Counsel, for Plaintiffs.
    P. Davis Oliver, with whom were Benjamin C. Mizer, Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney
    General, Robert E. Kirschman, Jr., Director, and Franklin E. White, Jr., Assistant Director,
    Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington,
    D.C., for Defendant.
    OPINION AND ORDER ON
    DEFENDANT’S MOTION TO DISMISS
    WHEELER, Judge.
    Plaintiffs Northern California Power Agency (“NCPA”),1 and the cities of Redding,
    Roseville, and Santa Clara, California allege an illegal exaction and seek recovery of
    payments that they claim were unlawfully assessed and collected by the Bureau of
    1
    NCPA is a joint powers agency in California comprised of fifteen members including “municipalities, a
    rural electric cooperative, and other publicly-owned entities interested in the purchase, aggregation,
    scheduling, and management of electrical energy.” Pl.’s Compl. ¶ 12.
    Reclamation under Section 3407(d) of the Central Valley Project Improvement Act
    (“CVPIA”), Pub. L. 102-575, 106 Stat. 4600, 4706-4731. Plaintiffs claim that Reclamation
    ignores the proportionality mandate in Section 3407(d) of the CVPIA and instead, follows
    a revenue-maximizing payment scheme that illegally assesses disproportionate payments
    on Plaintiffs to fund fish and wildlife habitat restoration projects within the Central Valley.
    On January 20, 2015, counsel for the Government filed a motion to dismiss under Rule
    12(b)(1) and Rule 12(b)(6) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and failure to state a claim
    upon which relief can be granted. The Government contends that the Court should dismiss
    Plaintiffs’ case because Reclamation acted well within its statutory authority to assess the
    disproportionate payments on Plaintiffs and thus, there could be no illegal exaction. The
    motion was fully briefed by May 8, 2015 and the Court heard oral argument on June 17,
    2015.
    After careful review of the parties’ arguments, the Court concludes that the
    Government’s motion is without merit. A mere assertion by the Government that it acted
    legally under the statute upon which Plaintiffs base their illegal exaction claim does not
    bar Plaintiffs from their right to have their claim adjudicated by the Court. Section 3407(d)
    provides a sufficient basis for the Court’s jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ claim for an illegal
    exaction. If the Government violated the proportionality requirement in Section 3407(d),
    by necessary implication, the remedy would be a return of the illegal and disproportionate
    payments that it assessed upon Plaintiffs. Plaintiffs also adequately pled a claim for an
    illegal exaction in their complaint. According to the facts that Plaintiffs present,
    Reclamation does not consider proportionality as Section 3407(d) requires. Instead,
    Reclamation relies upon a revenue-maximizing scheme that imposes disproportionate
    burdens on Plaintiffs, who are required to pay far in excess of what Section 3407(d) allows
    them to pay to fund the restoration projects in the Central Valley. These facts, if true, give
    rise to an illegal exaction claim. Accordingly, Defendant’s motion to dismiss under Rule
    12(b)(1) for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and Rule 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim
    upon which relief can be granted is DENIED.
    Factual Background
    In 1935, Congress created the Central Valley Project to supply water to California
    farms and communities for agricultural, municipal and industrial uses due to California’s
    scarce water resources. Pl.’s Compl. ¶¶ 2, 4. The Central Valley’s need for water is
    significant – it supplies eight percent of the United States’ total agricultural output and one-
    quarter of the nation’s food – but annual rainfall does not provide a reliable source of water
    for Central Valley farmers. Id.¶ 3. Today, the Central Valley Project is a “network of
    dams, reservoirs, canals and aqueducts” and is one of the nation’s largest federal
    2
    reclamation projects, stretching the length of California’s Central Valley, from the Cascade
    Range in the north, to the Kern River in the south. 
    Id. ¶ 1.
    The Central Valley Project is managed by the Bureau of Reclamation
    (“Reclamation”) of the United States Department of Interior who oversees approximately
    nine million acre-feet of water annually. 
    Id. ¶ 4.
    “An acre-foot of water is approximately
    326,000 gallons” of water. 
    Id. Each year,
    five million acre-feet of water are delivered by
    the Central Valley Project for agricultural purposes. Another 600,000 acre-feet of water
    are furnished for municipal and industrial purposes and another 1.2 million acre-feet of
    water are dedicated to mitigation and restoration purposes such as fish, wildlife, refuges
    and wetlands. Central Valley water districts and farmers, California municipalities, and
    other water users (“CVP Water Customers”) pay Reclamation for the water they receive.
    
    Id. ¶ 5.
    The delivery of much needed water to farms, businesses and residents is not the only
    benefit from the Central Valley Project. The dams built as part of the Central Valley
    Project allow the production of hydroelectric power. 
    Id. ¶ 6.
    Reclamation, acting through
    the Department of Energy Western Area Power Administration (“Western”), sells the
    hydroelectric power created from the Central Valley Project. 
    Id. Plaintiffs, among
    others
    (“CVP Power Customers”), contract with Western to receive the electric power and pay
    Western for the power they purchase. 
    Id. ¶ 7.
    In addition to paying for the water and power
    they receive, CVP Water Customers and CVP Power Customers also pay the Government
    for the “allocated proportional reimbursable costs of building, operating and maintaining
    the [Central Valley Project] (‘CVP Repayment Costs’).” 
    Id. CVP Water
    Customers pay
    more than three-fourths of the CVP Repayment Costs while CVP Power Customers pay
    for less than one quarter. 
    Id. ¶¶ 7,
    9-10 (approximately 22-24 percent each fiscal year for
    CVP Power Customers and more than 75 percent for CVP Water Customers).
    In 1992, to offset the environmental impacts from the Central Valley Project,
    Congress passed the CVPIA. As part of the CVPIA, Congress created a fund designated
    as the “Restoration Fund” to restore the fish and wildlife habitats within the Central Valley
    Project. In order to raise money for the Restoration Fund projects, the CVPIA requires
    CVP Water Customers and CVP Power Customers to contribute payments assessed by
    Reclamation. 
    Id. ¶¶ 1,
    8. The contributions from CVP Water Customers and CVP Power
    Customers include the additional annual mitigation and restoration payments that are at
    issue in this case. 
    Id. ¶ 35.
    Besides the additional annual mitigation and restoration
    payments, Congress also contemplated four other sources of revenue streams to be
    deposited into the Restoration Fund: (1) “additional mitigation and restoration charges in
    connection with renewal of certain long-term water contracts”; (2) revenues realized by
    Reclamation “as a result of water transfers and the water pricing reforms included in the
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    CVPIA”; (3) “per acre-foot surcharges on [Central Valley Project] water delivered to
    entities receiving water from the Friant Division of the [Central Valley Project]”; and (4)
    money donated to the Restoration Fund by non-federal entities. 
    Id. ¶¶ 29-34.
    From the five possible sources of revenue streams, Reclamation can collect up to
    $50 million for the Restoration Fund as appropriated by Congress each year. 
    Id. ¶ 29.
    However, Reclamation is subject to five limitations when collecting funds. First, the
    CVPIA mandates that the additional annual mitigation and restoration payments cannot
    exceed $30 million measured on a three-year rolling average. Second, payments assessed
    against the CVP Water Customers cannot exceed $6.00 per acre-foot, adjusted for inflation,
    for agricultural water sold and delivered by the Central Valley Project and $12.00 per acre-
    foot, adjusted for inflation, for municipal and industrial water sold and delivered by the
    Central Valley Project. 
    Id. ¶¶ 38-40.
    Third, Reclamation is required to reduce the
    additional annual mitigation and restoration payments imposed on Central Valley Project
    customers who use the water for agricultural purposes by taking into account their ability
    to pay for such charges. Fourth, Reclamation is required to reduce the annual ceiling for
    additional annual mitigation and restoration payments to $15 million once it completes the
    fish, wildlife, and habitation mitigation and restoration actions specified in Section 3406
    of the Act. Finally, Reclamation is required to consider proportionality under Section
    3407(d): “[t]he amount of the mitigation and restoration payment made by Central Valley
    Project water and power users, taking into account all funds collected under this title, shall,
    to the greatest degree practicable, be assessed in the same proportion, measured over a ten-
    year rolling average, as water and power users’ respective allocations for repayment of the
    Central Valley Project.” 
    Id. ¶¶ 41-43
    (emphasis in original).
    Since the inception of the Restoration Fund in 1992, Reclamation has sought to
    maximize revenue from the additional annual mitigation and restoration payments by
    seeking to collect the statutory cap of $30 million, adjusted for inflation, from both water
    and power users. Reclamation does not consider proportionality. See Pl.’s Compl., Ex. 4.
    (chart). Instead, Reclamation calculates the difference between what it expects to receive
    from CVP Water Customers and $30 million, and then assesses that difference to Plaintiffs.
    Since water payments are capped at $6.00 per acre-foot and $12.00 per acre-foot, when
    water deliveries are low, Reclamation’s disregard of the proportionality requirement in the
    statute leads to a disproportionate burden on Plaintiffs because they are required to make
    up the difference even if it would exceed their proportion of the CVP Repayment Costs.
    
    Id. ¶ 52.
    Recently, with California in a severe drought and with water deliveries dwindling,
    Reclamation has required Plaintiffs to pay approximately 40.5 percent of the $30 million
    Reclamation is allowed to collect from the additional annual mitigation and restoration
    payments, an increase of approximately 16-20 percent from Plaintiffs’ proportion of the
    CVP Repayment Costs. In 2014, it is estimated that CVP Power Customers will pay up to
    4
    60 percent of the total additional annual mitigation and restoration payments, and in 2015,
    it is estimated they could pay as much as 75 percent of the total. According to Plaintiffs,
    the disproportional assessment of the Restoration Fund payments has caused CVP Power
    Customers to pay more than $120 million in excess charges. 
    Id. ¶¶ 10-11.
    Plaintiffs now
    seek reimbursement of the $120 million in Restoration Fund payments that they claim were
    assessed by Reclamation in violation of Section 3407(d)’s proportionality provision.
    Analysis
    I. Standards for Decision
    When deciding a motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction under Rule
    12(b)(1), the Court “accepts as true all uncontroverted factual allegations in the complaint,
    and construes them in the light most favorable to the plaintiff.” Estes Exp. Lines v. United
    States, 
    739 F.3d 689
    , 692 (Fed. Cir. 2014). The Court’s task in considering a jurisdictional
    challenge is a limited one, and considers not whether the plaintiff will ultimately prevail,
    but “whether the claimant is entitled to offer evidence to support the claims.” Forest Prods.
    Nw., Inc. v. United States, 
    62 Fed. Cl. 109
    , 120 (2004). The plaintiff has the burden of
    proof to establish subject matter jurisdiction by a preponderance of the evidence. Estes
    Exp. 
    Lines, 739 F.3d at 692
    .
    For a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, plaintiffs need only assert “sufficient factual matter,
    accepted as true, to ‘state a claim to relief that is plausible on its face.’” Ashcroft v. Iqbal,
    
    556 U.S. 662
    , 678 (2009). A claim is plausible on its face when “the plaintiff pleads factual
    content that allows the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable
    for the misconduct alleged.” 
    Id. Granting a
    motion under Rule 12(b)(6) is “appropriate
    only when it is beyond doubt that the plaintiff can prove no set of facts in support of his
    claim [that] would entitle[] him to relief.” Fireman v. United States, 
    44 Fed. Cl. 528
    , 537
    (1999) (quoting Ponder v. United States, 
    117 F.3d 549
    , 552-53 (Fed. Cir. 1997)).
    II. The Court Has Jurisdiction Over Plaintiffs’ Illegal Exaction Claim.
    Under the Tucker Act, the Court can hear any claim that is “founded either upon the
    Constitution, or any Act of Congress or any regulation of an executive department, or upon
    any express or implied contract with the United States, or for liquidated or unliquidated
    damages in cases not sounding in tort.” 28 U.S.C. § 1491. It is well established that under
    the Tucker Act, the Court can hear claims “made for recovery of monies that the
    government has required to be paid contrary to law.” Areolineas Argentinas v. United
    States, 
    77 F.3d 1564
    , 1572 (Fed. Cir. 1996) (defining an illegal exaction claim). An illegal
    exaction claim may be maintained where “the plaintiff has paid money over to the
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    Government, directly or in effect, and seeks return of all or part of that sum that was
    improperly paid, exacted, or taken from the claimant in contravention of the Constitution,
    a statute, or a regulation.” 
    Id. at 1572-73
    (internal quotations omitted). Jurisdiction to
    recover the exaction is provided when “the exaction is based on an asserted statutory
    power,” 
    id. at 1573,
    and the statute invoked by the plaintiff must provide “either expressly
    or by ‘necessary implication,’ that ‘the remedy for its violation entails a return of money
    unlawfully exacted,’” Norman v. United States, 
    429 F.3d 1081
    , 1095 (Fed. Cir. 2005).
    The Government contends that because Reclamation could legally assess
    disproportionate additional annual mitigation and restoration payments on Plaintiffs under
    Section 3407(d), the Court does not have jurisdiction over Plaintiffs’ case. See Def.’s Mot.
    to Dismiss at 13, 19-20 (“[P]laintiffs do not have a right to a proportional assessment;
    therefore, the statute does not afford them a remedy for the return of monies they were
    assessed in excess of their proportional share of the CVP repayment.”). The Government’s
    contention is incorrect. If all the Government had to do to defeat jurisdiction over an illegal
    exaction claim was to simply assert that the exaction was legal, this Court’s illegal exaction
    jurisdiction would be nullified. The Court’s jurisdiction does not rest on whether the
    purported exaction was legal. Instead, the Court assumes for the purposes of the motion to
    dismiss that Reclamation’s assessment of the additional annual mitigation and restoration
    payments was illegal, see Clapp v. United States, 
    127 Ct. Cl. 505
    , 509, 
    117 F. Supp. 576
    ,
    578 (1954) (“In the discussion of the question of jurisdiction, we assume that there was no
    legal authority in the Maritime Administration to demand or receive the $7,500.”), and asks
    what would be the explicit or implicit remedy for the Government’s violation of the statute,
    see 
    Norman, 429 F.3d at 1095
    . Here, by necessary implication, the remedy would be a
    return of the payments that were assessed to CVP Power Customers in violation of Section
    3407(d)’s proportionality provision.
    Even though Section 3407(d) does not contain an express statement that the remedy
    for violating the statute’s proportionality provision is a return of the money paid over to
    the Government, the lack of express money-mandating language in the statute does not
    defeat Plaintiffs’ illegal exaction claim. See, e.g., Cyprus Amax Coal Co. v. United States,
    
    205 F.3d 1369
    , 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2000) (Court had jurisdiction over an illegal exaction claim
    based upon the Export Clause of the Constitution because the language of the clause led
    “to the ineluctable conclusion that the clause provides a cause of action with a monetary
    remedy.”). Otherwise, the Government could assess any fee or payment it wants from a
    plaintiff acting under the color of a statute that does not expressly require compensation to
    the plaintiff for wrongful or illegal action by the Government, and the plaintiff would have
    no recourse for recouping the money overpaid. Overpayment claims are one of the
    quintessential illegal exaction claims, see, e.g., Suwannee S. S. Co. v. United States, 
    150 Ct. Cl. 331
    , 335-37, 
    279 F.2d 874
    , 876-77 (1960) (the court held that requiring plaintiff to
    6
    pay $20,000 to the Maritime Administration as a condition to be able to transfer two ships
    to a foreign registry was an illegal exaction), and the Court has always had jurisdiction
    under the Tucker Act to hear such claims, see 
    Clapp, 127 Ct. Cl. at 513-14
    , 117 F. Supp.
    at 580-81 (finding jurisdiction over plaintiff’s illegal exaction claim to recover $7,500 paid
    to the Maritime Administration as a condition for approving the sale of plaintiff’s vessel).
    Plaintiffs clearly meet the Norman standard to have their claims adjudicated by this Court.
    III. Plaintiffs Properly Stated a Claim for an Illegal Exaction.
    Plaintiffs also properly stated a claim for an illegal exaction to survive a motion to
    dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6). The facts presented in the complaint allege that Plaintiffs
    paid money over to Reclamation who acted under the guise of its Section 3407(d) authority
    to illegally assess disproportionate additional annual mitigation and restoration payments
    on Plaintiffs. See Pl.’s Compl., Ex. 3 (invoice from Western to NCPA). Instead of paying
    approximately 22-24 percent for the Restoration Fund as is their proportion of the CVP
    Repayment Costs, Plaintiffs have been charged, on average, approximately 40 percent. 
    Id. ¶ 55.
    The Government argues that it is not required to maintain proportionality when it
    imposes the additional annual mitigation and restoration payments on CVP Power
    Customers. According to the Government, the language in Section 3407(d)(2)(A) “to the
    greatest degree practicable” gives Reclamation complete discretion to ignore the
    proportionality language in the statute when necessary to collect the full $30 million for
    the additional annual mitigation and restoration payments as appropriated by Congress
    each year. Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss at 7-8. The appropriations acts do not give Reclamation
    the discretion to deviate from Congress’s mandate that Reclamation collect the full $30
    million from both water and power users for the additional annual mitigation and
    restoration payments. 
    Id. at 18-19
    (“Congress directs Reclamation ‘to assess and collect
    the full amount of the additional and restoration payments authorized by section 3407(d).’”)
    (emphasis added). Accordingly, because payments are capped for water users at $6.00 and
    $12.00 per acre-foot, Plaintiffs must make up the difference in order for Reclamation to
    comply with the annual appropriations acts. 
    Id. Here, whether
    Reclamation disregarded the proportionality provision in Section
    3407(d) for the additional annual mitigation and restoration payments is an issue of fact.
    It is entirely plausible under the facts Plaintiffs presented in their complaint that
    Reclamation violated Section 3407(d) by imposing a revenue-maximizing scheme on
    Plaintiffs, while ignoring proportionality altogether. Though the proportionality provision
    in Section 3407(d) appears to give some flexibility to Reclamation in assessing the payment
    allocations for water and power users by stating that “all funds collected under this title,
    7
    shall, to the greatest degree practicable, be assessed in the same proportion, measured over
    a ten-year rolling average, as water and power users’ respective allocations for repayment
    of the Central Valley Project,” this language does not necessarily give a carte blanche to
    the Government to ignore proportionality altogether. Such a reading of Section 3407(d)
    would ignore the word “shall” in the provision and render the proportionality limitation a
    nullity. Sharp Elecs. Corp. v. McHugh, 
    707 F.3d 1367
    , 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2013) (“‘Shall’ is
    ‘mandatory’ language.”); Sharp v. United States, 
    580 F.3d 1234
    , 1238 (Fed. Cir. 2009)
    (“We therefore reject its interpretation, which would violate the canon that we must ‘give
    effect, if possible, to every clause and word of a statute’ and should avoid rendering any of
    the statutory text meaningless or as mere surplusage.”).
    The Court notes that it does not make a decision on whether Reclamation’s
    assessment of the additional annual mitigation and restoration payments constituted an
    illegal exaction under Section 3407(d). All the Court has decided for the purposes of the
    motion to dismiss is that the facts and Plaintiffs’ interpretation of the statute in the
    complaint are plausible to support their illegal exaction claim. Accordingly, Plaintiffs have
    properly stated a claim for an illegal exaction in their complaint.
    Conclusion
    For the foregoing reasons, the Government’s motion to dismiss Plaintiffs’ complaint
    for lack of subject matter jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim upon which relief can
    be granted is DENIED. Pursuant to Rule 12(a)(4)(A), Defendant shall file its answer to
    the complaint within 14 days, on or before July 13, 2015.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    s/ Thomas C. Wheeler
    THOMAS C. WHEELER
    Judge
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