Laturner v. United States , 133 Fed. Cl. 47 ( 2017 )


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  •        In the United States Court of Federal Claims
    No. 13-1011C
    (Filed: August 8, 2017)
    )    Keywords: Summary Judgment;
    JAKE LATURNER, Treasurer of the               )    Breach of Contract; U.S. Savings
    State of Kansas,                              )    Bonds; Preemption; Intergovernmental
    )    Immunity; Due Process Clause of the
    Plaintiff,             )    Fourteenth Amendment; Breach of
    )    Contract; 31 C.F.R. § 315.20(b).
    v.                                            )
    )
    THE UNITED STATES OF                          )
    AMERICA,                                      )
    )
    Defendant.             )
    )
    J. Brett Milbourn, Walters Bender Strohbehn & Vaughn, P.C., Kansas City, MO, with
    whom was David C. Frederick, Kellogg, Huber, Hansen, Todd, Figel, & Frederick,
    P.L.L.C., Washington, DC, for Plaintiff.
    Eric P. Bruskin, Senior Trial Counsel, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice,
    Washington, DC, with whom were Steven J. Gillingham, Assistant Director, Robert E.
    Kirschman, Jr., Director, and Chad A. Readler, Acting Assistant Attorney General, for
    Defendant. Theodore C. Simms, II, Senior Counsel, U.S. Department of the Treasury, and
    Albert S. Iarossi, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S.
    Department of Justice, Of Counsel.
    OPINION AND ORDER
    KAPLAN, Judge.
    In this breach-of-contract case, Plaintiff Jake LaTurner, Treasurer of the State of
    Kansas (Kansas) claims that Kansas has obtained title under the state’s Disposition of
    Unclaimed Property Act (Unclaimed Property Act) to a large but unknown number of
    matured, unredeemed United States savings bonds, and that the federal government has
    wrongfully failed to redeem those bonds. The bonds, issued by the United States
    Department of the Treasury (Treasury), carry thirty- or forty-year maturity periods.
    Although Kansas claims that it owns the bonds, it does not possess the bond certificates
    that Treasury issued when the bonds were purchased. Nevertheless, pursuant to a state
    court judgment of escheat, Kansas contends that it has obtained title to all unredeemed
    bonds whose holders’ last known addresses, as shown on Treasury’s records, are in the
    state. These bonds are known as the “absent bonds.”
    Kansas has moved for partial summary judgment as to the government’s liability
    for failing to redeem the bonds or to provide Kansas with identifying information about
    them. The government has also moved for summary judgment on all of Kansas’s claims.
    It contends that, for several reasons, Treasury did not breach the savings bond contracts
    when it refused to redeem the absent bonds. Among other things, it claims that Treasury’s
    savings bond regulations do not permit transfers of ownership under the Unclaimed
    Property Act, and that Kansas’s lack of possession of the bond certificates is fatal to its
    claims; that the Unclaimed Property Act runs afoul of principles of federal supremacy;
    and that the state court judgment of escheat was constitutionally infirm.
    For the reasons discussed below, the Court concludes that the government’s
    arguments lack merit, and that the undisputed facts entitle Kansas to summary judgment
    with respect to its ownership of the absent bonds and the government’s liability.
    Accordingly, the government’s motion for summary judgment is DENIED, and Kansas’s
    motion for partial summary judgment is GRANTED.
    BACKGROUND
    I.     The United States Savings Bond Program and Implementing Regulations
    A.      Overview
    In the exercise of its power to “borrow Money on the credit of the United States,”
    U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 2, Congress has authorized Treasury to “issue savings bonds
    and savings certificates,” the proceeds of which “shall be used for expenditures
    authorized by law,” 31 U.S.C. § 3105(a); see also Free v. Bland, 
    369 U.S. 663
    , 666–67
    (1962). Over the years, Treasury has issued such bonds in various Series, each designated
    by a letter of the alphabet. See, e.g., 31 C.F.R. Part 315 (regulations governing Series A,
    B, C, D, E, F, G, H, J, and K bonds). Treasury issued the bonds in paper form until 2012,
    when it switched to an all-electronic system. See Treasury Looks Back at 76 Years of
    Paper U.S. Savings Bonds As Move to Online Savings Bonds to Save Taxpayers $120
    Million, TreasuryDirect.gov (Dec. 27, 2011), https://www.treasurydirect.gov/news/
    pressroom/pressroom_comotcend1211.htm.
    “It is well established that savings bonds are contracts between the United States
    and the owners of the bonds . . . .” Estes v. United States, 
    123 Fed. Cl. 74
    , 81 (2015)
    (citing Treasurer of N.J. v. U.S. Dep’t of the Treasury, 
    684 F.3d 382
    , 387 (3d Cir. 2012)
    and Rotman v. United States, 
    31 Fed. Cl. 724
    , 725 (1994)). The contracts’ terms are set
    forth in Treasury’s savings bond regulations, found in Part 315 of Title 31 of the Code of
    Federal Regulations. See 
    id. As discussed
    below, the regulations prescribe (among other
    things) “the form and amount of an issue and series”; “the way in which [the savings
    bonds] will be issued”; “the conditions, including restrictions on transfer, to which they
    will be subject”; and “conditions governing their redemption.” 31 U.S.C. § 3105(c)(1)–
    (4).
    As noted, the bonds typically carry long maturity periods—often thirty or forty
    years. See The History of U.S. Savings Bonds, TreasuryDirect.gov, https://www.treasury
    2
    direct.gov/timeline.htm?src=td&med=banner&loc=consumer (last visited August 4,
    2017). Treasury issued millions of savings bonds between the 1940s and the 1970s. See
    
    id. Although most
    of the matured bonds have been redeemed, millions remain
    unredeemed. See See Savings Bonds and Notes (SBN) Tables and Downloadable Files,
    TreasuryDirect.gov, https://www.treasurydirect.gov/govt/reports/pd/pd_sbntables_
    downloadable_files.htm (last updated Apr. 27, 2012). As of March 2012, the value of
    such matured, unredeemed savings bonds was approximately $16 billion. See 
    id. B. Issuance
    and Registration
    Under Treasury’s regulations, “[s]avings bonds are issued only in registered
    form.” 31 C.F.R. § 315.5(a) (2014).1 This means that “the names of all persons named on
    the bond and the taxpayer identification number (TIN) of the owner, first-named
    coowner, or purchaser of a gift bond are maintained on [Treasury’s] records.” 
    Id. § 315.2(n).
    According to the regulations, “[r]egistration is conclusive of ownership.” 
    Id. § 315.5(a).
    Thus, registration “express[es] the actual ownership of, and interest in, the
    bond.” 
    Id. C. Restrictions
    on Transfer
    The regulations contain numerous conditions restricting the transfer of savings
    bonds and inhibiting third-party attempts to assert rights against them. First, § 315.15
    establishes that bonds “are not transferable and are payable only to the owners named on
    the bonds, except as specifically provided in these regulations and then only in the
    manner and to the extent so provided.” 
    Id. Next, subsections
    315.20–.23 set forth “limitations on judicial proceedings”
    applicable to “adverse claims affecting savings bonds.”2 
    Id. § 315.20.
    In particular,
    § 315.20(b) provides that Treasury “will recognize a claim against an owner of a savings
    bond . . . if established by valid, judicial proceedings, but only as specifically provided in
    this subpart.” In that regard, § 315.20(a) specifies that Treasury “will not recognize a
    judicial determination that gives effect to an attempted voluntary transfer inter vivos of a
    bond, or a judicial determination that impairs the rights of survivorship conferred by
    these regulations upon a coowner or beneficiary.” 
    Id. Further, §
    315.23(a) instructs that
    “[t]o establish the validity of judicial proceedings,” a claimant must submit “certified
    copies of the final judgment, decree, or court order, and of any necessary supplementary
    proceedings.”
    Before 2015, the regulations did not expressly mention state court judgments of
    escheat of the type at issue in this case. See 
    Estes, 123 Fed. Cl. at 83
    –86 (analyzing the
    regulations); see also 
    id. at 90
    n.13 (noting that Treasury had proposed revised
    1
    Unless otherwise noted, all references to Treasury’s savings bond regulations are to the
    regulations in effect on December 20, 2013, the date Kansas filed its complaint.
    2
    These four subsections form Subpart E of the regulations.
    3
    regulations expressly tailored to state court escheat judgments); Regulations Governing
    United States Savings Bonds, 80 Fed. Reg. 80,258-01 (Dec. 24, 2015) (codified at 31
    C.F.R. pts. 315, 353, 360) (final rule promulgating the revised regulations).
    D.      Redemption and Relief for Lost, Stolen, Destroyed, or Mutilated
    Bonds
    The regulations specify that, as a general matter, “[p]ayment of a savings bond
    will be made to the person or persons entitled under the provisions of these regulations.”
    31 C.F.R. § 315.35(a). Series E bonds will be paid “at any time after two months from
    issue date at the appropriate redemption value,” while Series H bonds “will be
    redeemed at face value at any time after six (6) months from issue date.” 
    Id. § 315.35(c),
    (e). Series A, B, C, D, F, and J bonds “will be paid at face value,” while Series G and K
    bonds “will be paid at face value plus the final semiannual interest due.” 
    Id. § 315.35(b),
    (d).
    Subsection 315.39, entitled “[s]urrender for payment,” provides that individual
    owners or co-owners of Series A–E bonds “may present the bond to an authorized
    payment agent for redemption.” 
    Id. § 315.39(a).
    “[F]or all other cases,” the “owner or
    coowner, or other person entitled to payment” must “appear before an officer authorized
    to certify requests for payment, establish his or her identity, sign the request for payment,
    and provide information as to the address to which the check in payment is to be mailed.”
    
    Id. § 315.39(b).
    Subsection 315.25 authorizes relief in the event of “the loss, theft, destruction,
    mutilation, or defacement of a bond after receipt by the owner.” 
    Id. Such relief
    may
    include “the issue of a substitute bond or . . . payment.” 
    Id. “As a
    condition for granting
    relief,” Treasury “may require a bond of indemnity, in the form, and with the surety, or
    security [Treasury] considers necessary to protect the interests of the United States.” 
    Id. Further, “[i]n
    all cases[,] the savings bond must be identified by serial number and the
    applicant must submit satisfactory evidence of the loss, theft, or destruction.” 
    Id. If the
    serial number of the bond is not known, “the claimant must provide sufficient
    information to enable [Treasury] to identify the bond by serial number.” 
    Id. § 315.26(b)
    (citing 
    id. § 315.29(c)).
    E.      Additional Relevant Regulations
    The savings bond regulations also contain a waiver provision. 
    Id. § 315.90.
    Under
    § 315.90, Treasury “may waive or modify any provision or provisions of [the]
    regulations . . . . [i]f such action would not be inconsistent with law or equity”; “if it does
    not impair any existing rights”; and “if [Treasury] is satisfied that such action would not
    subject the United States to any substantial expense or liability.” Further, the regulations
    empower Treasury to “require . . . [s]uch additional evidence as [it] may consider
    necessary or advisable, or [to require] [a] bond of indemnity, with or without surety, in
    any case in which [it] may consider such a bond necessary for the protection of the
    interests of the United States.” 
    Id. § 315.91.
    4
    Finally, Treasury has issued regulations to govern the disclosure of records and
    information related to outstanding securities, including savings bonds. See 
    id. § 323.2.
    Specifically, § 323.2(b) states that “[r]ecords relating to the purchase, ownership of, and
    transactions in Treasury securities . . . will ordinarily be disclosed only to the owners of
    such securities, their executors, administrators or other legal representatives or to their
    survivors.” 
    Id. The regulation
    notes that “[t]hese records are confidential because they
    relate to private financial affairs of the owners.” 
    Id. Further, according
    to Treasury, these
    records “fall[] within the category of ‘personnel and medical files and similar files the
    disclosure of which would constitute a clearly unwarranted invasion of personal privacy’
    under the Freedom of Information Act (FOIA).” 
    Id. (citing 5
    U.S.C. § 552(b)(6)). Thus,
    according to Treasury, such records are exempt from FOIA requests. See 
    id. II. Background
    on State Unclaimed Property Laws
    All fifty states have statutes governing the disposition of unclaimed or abandoned
    real and personal property. See David J. Epstein, 1-1 Unclaimed Property Law § 1.06(1)
    (2017). These laws are “rooted in the common-law doctrine of escheat, under which
    ‘[s]tates as sovereigns may take custody of or assume title to abandoned . . . property.’”
    
    Estes, 123 Fed. Cl. at 77
    (citation omitted) (quoting Delaware v. New York, 
    507 U.S. 490
    , 497 (1993)) (alterations in original).
    For the most part, state unclaimed property laws are custodial in nature. See
    Epstein, supra, § 1.06(2). When a state with a custody-based unclaimed property law
    acquires unclaimed property, it “does not take title to [the] unclaimed property, but takes
    custody only, and holds the property in perpetuity for the owner.” 
    Estes, 123 Fed. Cl. at 77
    (quoting Unif. Unclaimed Prop. Act, prefatory note (1995), http://www.uniform
    laws.org/shared/docs/unclaimed%20property/uupa95.pdf). Indeed, Kansas’s Unclaimed
    Property Act is custodial in nearly every respect. See Kan. Stat. Ann. § 58-3936 (“Except
    as otherwise provided in this act or by other statute of this state, property that is presumed
    abandoned, whether located in this or another state, is subject to the custody of this
    state . . . .”).
    In 2000, however, the Kansas legislature amended its Unclaimed Property Act
    with respect to U.S. savings bonds to allow Kansas to take title (rather than assert custody
    over) bonds deemed to be abandoned under the Act. See 
    id. § 58-3979.
    Specifically, the
    relevant provision provides that “United States savings bonds which are unclaimed
    property [as defined by the Act] . . . shall escheat to the state of Kansas three years after
    becoming unclaimed property . . . and all property rights to such United States savings
    bonds or proceeds from such bonds shall vest solely in the state of Kansas.”3 
    Id. § 58-3979(a).
    Then, “[w]ithin 180 days . . . the administrator [of the unclaimed property
    scheme, i.e., the state treasurer] shall commence a civil action in the district court of
    3
    A number of other states have since enacted similar amendments to their unclaimed
    property laws. See Ark. Code Ann. § 18-28-231; Fla. Stat. §§ 717.1382–.83; Ind. Code
    § 32-34-1-20.5; Ky. Rev. Stat. Ann. § 393.022; La. Stat. Ann. § 9:182; Miss. Code Ann.
    § 89-12-59; S.C. Code Ann. §§ 27-18-75 to -76; S.D. Codified Laws § 43-41B-44.
    5
    Shawnee county for a determination that such United States savings bonds shall escheat
    to the state.” 
    Id. § 58-3979(b).
    III.   Treasury’s Historical Treatment of States’ Attempts to Redeem Bonds
    Obtained Via Their Unclaimed Property Laws
    As discussed below, the government argues that the Court owes deference to the
    interpretation of Treasury’s regulations that it has proffered in this case. Because
    Treasury’s historical application of its regulations is relevant to whether the Court owes
    deference to Treasury’s proffered interpretation, the Court sets forth below Treasury’s
    historical treatment of states’ attempts to redeem U.S. savings bonds in some detail.
    A.      The 1952 Escheat Decision Regarding Bonds in Possession and New
    York’s Custodial Unclaimed Property Law
    Treasury first confronted a state’s attempt to redeem bonds obtained under an
    unclaimed property law in 1952, when it refused the State of New York’s request to
    redeem four bonds in its possession. See Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. (Def.’s Mot.) App. at
    A1, ECF No. 86-1 (Bureau of the Public Debt, Public Debt Bulletin No. 111 (Feb. 27,
    1952)) (hereinafter “the 1952 Escheat Decision”). New York obtained the bonds pursuant
    to its unclaimed property law after their owner died intestate in a state institution. 
    Id. Treasury noted
    that under New York’s law, the state took custody of, but not title to,
    abandoned property. 
    Id. at A3–4.
    According to Treasury, under those circumstances,
    payment of the bond’s proceeds into New York’s custody would violate the bond’s terms
    (as set forth in Treasury’s regulations). 
    Id. at A2–3.
    Treasury explained that such a
    payment would alter the rights of the parties to the bond contract by “substitut[ing]” the
    bondholder’s right to claim redemption from the United States for a right to “prosecute a
    claim against the State Comptroller of New York”; or, alternatively, by exposing the
    United States to “the necessity of making double payment” and then pursuing “a right to
    claim relief from the Comptroller” itself. See 
    id. at A2.
    In Treasury’s view, “[n]either of th[ose] possible alterations of contract is
    contemplated in the agreement by which the United States pledges its faith on its
    securities.” 
    Id. And, citing
    Clearfield Trust Company v. United States, 
    318 U.S. 363
    , 366
    (1943), Treasury asserted the supremacy of the rights created by federal law over the
    operation of New York’s unclaimed property law. See 
    id. at A2–3.
    Treasury then contrasted New York’s request with a hypothetical request for
    payment made by “one who succeeds to the title of the bondholder” pursuant to the
    regulations, such as “the duly qualified representative of the estate of a decedent
    bondholder.” 
    Id. at A3
    (internal quotation and emphasis omitted). In that case, Treasury
    stated, payment “is not regarded as a violation of the agreement, but, on the contrary, as
    payment to the bondholder in the person of his successor or representative.” 
    Id. (emphasis omitted).
    “Thus,” Treasury continued, “although the regulations do not
    mention such a case, [Treasury] recognizes the title of the state when it makes a claim
    based upon a judgment of escheat.” 
    Id. 6 B.
         Subsequent Decisions Where States Were In Possession of U.S.
    Savings Bonds
    Treasury reiterated its position on custodial unclaimed property laws in 1970,
    when the State of Oklahoma tried to redeem bonds it had obtained from unclaimed safe
    deposit boxes. See 
    id. at A5–7.
    According to Treasury, one of “the problems involved in
    recognizing a State’s right to receive payment of unclaimed or abandoned Government
    securities . . . . relate[d] to the issue as to whether the State has actually succeeded to title
    and ownership of the securities, or whether it is acting as a repository.” 
    Id. at A6.
    “This is
    a critical distinction,” Treasury stated, because “the discharging of the obligation
    represented by the securities must have validity for all jurisdictions.” 
    Id. “Ordinarily,” Treasury
    continued, “such a discharge results only where a valid escheat has occurred.”
    
    Id. Oklahoma’s unclaimed
    property law, however, “d[id] not purport to vest title to the
    abandoned property in the State,” but “[was] quite clear that the State’s role [wa]s
    essentially custodial.” 
    Id. at A7.
    Over the next thirty years, Treasury repeatedly denied claims from states with
    custodial unclaimed property laws and bonds in their possession. See 
    id. at A8
    (Indiana,
    Nov. 19, 1971); 
    id. at A10
    (New Hampshire, May 12, 1976); 
    id. at A12
    (South Carolina,
    May 26, 1976); 
    id. at A15
    (Hawaii, July 14, 1976); 
    id. at A17
    (Indiana, Jan. 18, 1977); 
    id. at A19
    (North Dakota, June 24, 1977); 
    id. at A22
    (Illinois, Oct. 27, 1980); 
    id. at A39
    (Kentucky, Sept. 6, 1983); 
    id. at A40
    (Alaska, Oct. 25, 1983); 
    id. at A10
    9 (Alaska, Feb.
    6, 1992); 
    id. at A112
    (Oklahoma, Aug. 5, 1999). As early as 1976, Treasury described as
    “long-standing” its position that it would “recognize claims by States for payment of
    United States securities where the States have actually succeeded to the title and
    ownership of the securities pursuant to valid escheat proceedings.” 
    Id. at A10.
    Treasury apparently first considered a state’s claim based on a title-based
    unclaimed property law in 1982, in response to a request for information from the
    Commonwealth of Massachusetts. See 
    id. at A24–38.
    The request concerned
    approximately $250,000 in savings bonds that Massachusetts obtained via its unclaimed
    property law. 
    Id. at A24.
    At the time, Massachusetts’s unclaimed property law provided
    that “[p]roperty which has been surrendered to the state treasurer under [the unclaimed
    property law] shall vest in the commonwealth.” 
    Id. at A3
    1. In its request, Massachusetts
    asked Treasury whether it “would . . . be able to either escheat to [the Commonwealth]
    the approximately $250,000 [in] bonds now accumulated . . . or some how [sic] through
    your regulation or ruling be able to return them to their rightful heirs.” 
    Id. at A24.
    In its response, Treasury informed Massachusetts that it would recognize a state’s
    claim pursuant to a title-based unclaimed property law if the law included sufficient due
    process protections for the named bondholders. 
    Id. at A3
    7. Specifically, Treasury stated
    that:
    In accordance with the bond contract, we will recognize a request
    for payment on behalf of the state pursuant to a statute which
    provides for the administrative escheat, i.e., vesting of title, of
    abandoned property, where the application of the statute is
    7
    conditioned upon the furnishing of adequate notice and reasonable
    opportunities for interested parties to be heard.
    
    Id. Further, Treasury
    elaborated, “[u]nder the terms of the bond contract, we could make
    payment to the Treasurer of the Commonwealth where the Commonwealth, through
    appropriate court proceedings, takes the owner’s title to itself.” 
    Id. at A3
    8. “In that event,
    [Treasury] would pay the owner in the person of its successor, the Commonwealth.” 
    Id. C. Treasury’s
    Treatment of States’ Requests to Obtain the Proceeds of
    Bonds They Did Not Possess
    1.      Decisions and Guidance
    By the early 2000s, the number of matured, unredeemed savings bonds ballooned
    as bonds purchased in the 1960s and 1970s finally reached maturity. In 2004, several
    states requested that Treasury redeem these bonds in bulk (the “2004 requests”). The
    states did not possess the vast majority of these bonds, but, according to the states, the
    bonds were statistically likely to be in the hands of their citizens. See, e.g., 
    id. at A12
    7
    (March 30, 2004 letter from the treasurer of Kentucky “estimat[ing] that over $150
    million” in unredeemed savings bonds “rightfully belong[] to Kentuckians” and
    “requesting . . . that [Treasury] return these funds to . . . Kentucky so that [the]
    Unclaimed Property Division . . . can begin the work of returning this money to its
    rightful owner[s]”); 
    id. at A12
    9 (April 2, 2004 letter from the treasurer of the District of
    Columbia estimating that “between $50 and $75 million” in unredeemed savings bonds
    belonged to District of Columbia citizens and “seeking to have th[o]se assets and records
    transferred to the District of Columbia so that we can begin to find the rightful owners”);
    
    id. at A130
    (April 21, 2004 letter from the treasurer of New Hampshire positing that
    “somewhere between $35 million and $45 million” in unredeemed savings bonds “would
    likely belong to New Hampshire residents” and requesting that Treasury “provide owner
    information and deliver funds due” for those bonds).
    Treasury denied the 2004 requests. E.g., 
    id. at A140–41
    (Kentucky); 
    id. at A138–
    39 (District of Columbia); 
    id. at A142–43
    (New Hampshire). In its denials, Treasury
    explained that it “d[id] not have the legal authority” to grant the states’ requests because
    “[a] U.S. Savings Bond is a federal contract between the United States and the registered
    owner on the bonds, and under federal regulations payment may only be made to the
    registered owner.” E.g., 
    id. at A140.
    “In order for the bonds to be paid,” Treasury
    continued, the state “must have possession of the bonds, statutory authority to obtain title
    to the individual bonds, obtain an order of escheat from a court of competent jurisdiction
    vesting title in the [state] to the individual bonds, and apply to [Treasury] for payment.”
    E.g., 
    id. In 2006,
    Florida submitted a similar request to redeem or obtain custody over the
    proceeds of bonds that it did not possess. See 
    id. at A148.
    As with the 2004 requests,
    Treasury denied Florida’s request. 
    Id. Unlike with
    the denials of the 2004 requests,
    however, Treasury did not mention any possession requirement. See 
    id. Rather, Treasury
    stated that:
    8
    The applicable regulations would permit the state of Florida
    to be paid for the bonds, pursuant to an appropriate state
    statute and after due process, by obtaining an order of
    escheat from a court of competent jurisdiction vesting title
    in the state, and then applying for payment to the Department
    of the Treasury pursuant to the procedures established by the
    regulations that all bond owners must utilize.
    
    Id. 2. Subsequent
    Litigation
    In September 2004, the State of New Jersey filed an action in federal district court
    challenging Treasury’s denial of its 2004 request to pay over the proceeds of matured but
    unredeemed bonds whose owners’ last known addresses were in the state. See Treasurer
    of 
    N.J., 684 F.3d at 392
    . Several more states eventually joined that litigation. See 
    id. at 392–93.
    The district court dismissed the case for failure to state a claim, reasoning that
    the states’ custodial unclaimed property laws conflicted with Treasury’s regulations. 
    Id. at 394–95.
    Further, the district court found that applying those laws to unredeemed bonds
    that the states did not possess would violate the principle of intergovernmental immunity.
    
    Id. The states
    appealed the decision to the United States Court of Appeals for the
    Third Circuit. See 
    id. at 395.
    In its brief before the Third Circuit, the government
    acknowledged that although Treasury’s regulations “generally provide that payment on a
    U.S. savings bond will be made only to the registered owner,” they also set forth
    “exceptions to this rule, including cases in which a third party obtains ownership of the
    bond through valid judicial proceedings.” Br. for Appellees at 6, Treasurer of N.J., 
    684 F.3d 382
    (No. 10-1963) (citing 31 C.F.R. §§ 315.20(b) and 315.23). Further, Treasury
    advised that “[a] State may satisfy this ownership requirement ‘through escheat, a
    procedure with ancient origins whereby a sovereign may acquire title to abandoned
    property if after a number of years no rightful owner appears.’” 
    Id. (quoting Texas
    v.
    New Jersey, 
    379 U.S. 674
    , 675 (1965)). “Accordingly,” the government continued, it had
    “long advised state governments that, to receive payment on a U.S. savings bond, [the]
    State must go through an escheat process that satisfies due process and awards title to the
    bond to the State, making the State the rightful owner of the bond.” 
    Id. According to
    the government’s brief, however, the states involved in the litigation
    “d[id] not claim to have obtained title to any of the U.S. savings bonds at issue,” and thus
    “d[id] not assert a right to receive payment under the federal regulation that authorizes
    payment to a third party that obtains ownership of a bond through valid judicial
    proceedings.” 
    Id. at 8.
    Nowhere in its brief did the government assert the states’ lack of
    possession as a factor affecting their claims. See 
    id. The Third
    Circuit affirmed. Treasurer of 
    N.J., 684 F.3d at 413
    . With respect to
    preemption, it concluded that Treasury’s regulations “preempt[ed] the States’ unclaimed
    property acts insofar as the States s[ought] to apply their acts to take custody of the
    9
    proceeds of the matured but unredeemed savings bonds” because the acts “conflict[ed]
    with federal law regarding [the] bonds in multiple ways.” 
    Id. at 407.
    First, paying over
    the proceeds of the bonds would inhibit Treasury’s “goal of making the bonds ‘attractive
    to savers and investors.’” 
    Id. at 407–08
    (quoting 
    Free, 369 U.S. at 669
    ). Congress, the
    court noted, had authorized Treasury to “implement regulations specifying that ‘owners
    of savings bonds may keep the bonds after maturity’”; the states’ unclaimed property
    laws, “by contrast, specify that matured bonds are abandoned and their proceeds are
    subject to the acts if not redeemed within a time period as short as one year after
    maturity.” 
    Id. (quoting 31
    U.S.C. § 3105(b)(2)(A)).
    Second, by “effectively . . . substitut[ing] the respective States for the United
    States as the obligor on the affected savings bonds,” the operation of the unclaimed
    property laws “would interfere with the terms of the contracts.” 
    Id. at 408.
    Instead of the
    “federal redemption process . . . set forth . . . in the relevant statutes and regulations,”
    bondholders “would have to comply with [the] procedures set forth in the various States’
    unclaimed property acts.” 
    Id. The “application
    of the States’ acts in the redemption
    process” would thus impermissibly “alter [the redemption] process as contemplated in the
    relevant federal regulations.” 
    Id. at 409.
    On the principle of intergovernmental immunity, the Third Circuit determined
    that the operation of the states’ unclaimed property laws would “interfere with
    Congress’s ‘[p]ower to dispose of and make all needful Rules Acts and Regulations
    respecting the . . . Property belonging to the United States.’” 
    Id. at 410
    (quoting U.S.
    Const. art. IV, § 3, cl. 2) (alterations in original). “Although the United States must pay
    holders of matured bonds the sums due on the bonds when the owners present them for
    payment,” the court reasoned, “until it does so the funds remain federal property.” 
    Id. at 411.
    Further, the Third Circuit determined that the states’ unclaimed property laws would
    unlawfully regulate the federal government by requiring it to comply with state
    accounting, record-keeping, and reporting requirements. 
    Id. In the
    court’s view, “forcing
    the Federal Government to account to the plaintiff States for unredeemed savings bonds
    or their proceeds . . . would result in a direct regulation of the Federal Government in
    contravention of the Supremacy Clause.” 
    Id. at 412.
    In the wake of the Third Circuit’s ruling, Montana and four other states filed a
    petition for a writ of certiorari to the United States Supreme Court. See Dir. of the Dep’t
    of Revenue of Mont. v. Dep’t of Treasury, 
    133 S. Ct. 2735
    (2013) (mem.). The Solicitor
    General opposed certiorari. See Pl.’s Cross-Mot. for Partial Summ. J. & Br. in Opp’n to
    Def.’s Mot. for Summ. J. (Pl.’s Mot.) App. at A304–37, ECF No. 87-1 [hereinafter “SG’s
    Brief”]. As in the briefing before the Third Circuit, the Solicitor General acknowledged
    that under 31 C.F.R. § 315.20(b), third parties may “obtain[] ownership of . . . bond[s]
    through valid judicial proceedings.” 
    Id. at A3
    11. “Accordingly,” the Solicitor General
    continued, Treasury had “long advised the States that to receive payment on a U.S.
    savings bond a State must complete an escheat proceeding that satisfies due process and
    that awards title to the bond to the State, substituting the State for the original bondholder
    as the lawful owner.” 
    Id. at A3
    12. Further, as with the government’s brief before the
    Third Circuit, the states’ lack of possession of the bonds was not presented as pertinent to
    10
    the issue before the Court. See 
    id. at A320–36.
    The Supreme Court ultimately denied the
    petition. Dir. of the Dep’t of Revenue of 
    Mont., 133 S. Ct. at 2735
    .
    IV.    Other Guidance Provided by Treasury
    From time to time, Treasury has also provided public guidance on its savings
    bond redemption policies. As most relevant to this case, Treasury has posted information
    about purchasing and redeeming U.S. savings bonds on its website, TreasuryDirect.gov.
    From 2000 through the initiation of this litigation, an FAQ page on that website included
    the following question regarding states with permanent escheat laws:
    In a state that has a permanent escheat law, can the state claim the
    money represented by securities that the state has in its
    possession[?] For example, can a state cash savings bonds that it’s
    gotten from abandoned safe deposit boxes?
    See Def.’s Mot. App. at A115; see also 
    Estes, 123 Fed. Cl. at 87
    n.11. In its answer,
    Treasury confirmed that it “recognize[s] claims by States for payment of United States
    securities where the States have succeeded to the title and ownership of the securities
    pursuant to valid escheat proceedings.” Def.’s Mot. App. at A115. “[I]n such [a] case,”
    Treasury continued, “payment of the securities results in full discharge of . . . Treasury’s
    obligation and the discharge is valid in all jurisdictions.” 
    Id. V. Kansas’s
    Claim to Ownership Over the Bonds at Issue in This Case
    A.      Kansas’s Initial Requests for Information Regarding Bonds It Did
    Not Possess
    On June 19, 2000, Kansas’s state treasurer sent Treasury a letter informing
    Treasury that Kansas intended to appoint an agent to conduct “an examination of
    [Treasury’s] books and records” related to “unredeemed US Savings Bonds subject to
    escheat” under its Unclaimed Property Act. 
    Id. at A116.
    Kansas’s letter also purported to
    grant the agent the authority to “instruct [Treasury] to deliver all unredeemed US Savings
    Bonds found due and owing to a custodian on behalf of, and in trust for, the State.” 
    Id. Treasury responded
    on August 11, 2000. 
    Id. at A118.
    In line with its prior
    guidance, it explained that it would “recognize claims by States for payment of United
    States securities where the States have actually succeeded to the title and ownership of
    the securities pursuant to valid escheat proceedings.” 
    Id. Treasury acknowledged
    that
    Kansas claimed to have recently “changed its custodial statutes to provide for the escheat
    of savings bonds” and suggested that Kansas’s Attorney General provide Treasury with
    “[an] analysis and opinion regarding these statutes.” 
    Id. Kansas provided
    the analysis and opinion on October 30, 2000. 
    Id. at A120.
    In the
    analysis, Kansas’s Attorney General stated that “[c]learly, once applicable court
    proceedings have been favorably concluded, Kansas law provides that unclaimed United
    States savings bonds escheat to the State of Kansas, and all property rights to such United
    States savings bonds or their proceeds vest solely in the State of Kansas.” 
    Id. at A122.
    11
    Treasury responded on December 27, 2000. 
    Id. at A124.
    It observed that under
    the Kansas Attorney General’s analysis, “it would appear that . . . title is not vested in the
    state of Kansas unless and until the judgment of the court has been rendered that the
    savings bonds have escheated to the state.” 
    Id. Treasury noted
    , however, that it had “not
    received a court order or similar evidence supporting [Kansas’s] request to redeem the
    bonds on behalf of the state.” 
    Id. Treasury then
    asked Kansas a number of additional
    questions about the application of its unclaimed property law to U.S. savings bonds, and
    concluded that it would “consider this matter further” after it received Kansas’s response.
    
    Id. at A124–25.
    Kansas apparently never responded to the letter.
    More than a decade later, on June 4, 2012, Kansas sent Treasury a FOIA request
    “seeking records, or access to records, concerning unclaimed U.S. savings bonds that
    were issued before December 31, 1974[,] to bondholders with last known addresses in the
    state of Kansas.” Pl.’s Mot. App. at A201. Treasury responded on July 17, 2012. 
    Id. at A208.
    Treasury explained that, in its view, “[r]ecords of an individual’s securities” were
    exempt from FOIA as “files the disclosure of which would constitute a clearly
    unwarranted invasion of personal privacy.” 
    Id. (citing 5
    U.S.C. § 552(b)(6)). Further,
    Treasury pointed to its own regulation, 31 C.F.R. § 323.2, which (as noted above) states
    that “[r]ecords relating to the purchase, ownership of, and transactions in Treasury
    securities or other securities handled by the Bureau of the Public Debt . . . will ordinarily
    be disclosed only to the owners of such securities, their executors, administrators or other
    legal representatives.” 
    Id. Based on
    these provisions, Treasury denied Kansas’s request.
    
    Id. at A209.
    B.      Escheat Proceedings in Kansas State Court
    After receiving this denial, on January 3, 2013, Kansas’s state treasurer filed an
    escheatment action in the District Court of Shawnee County “seeking a determination
    that all right and legal title in, and ownership of, certain matured, unredeemed United
    States savings bonds, which are unclaimed property under the Kansas Disposition of
    Unclaimed Property Act . . . shall escheat to the State of Kansas.” See 
    id. at A17
    8. Along
    with its petition, Kansas filed a motion seeking leave to effect service by publication on
    the “purchasers or owners” of certain U.S. savings bonds who had “last known addresses
    in the state of Kansas according to the records of the U.S. Treasury Department.”4 
    Id. In the
    motion, Kansas noted that it had in its possession 1,481 bonds “originally
    owned by 213 individual apparent owners.” 
    Id. at A181.
    It had obtained these bonds “[i]n
    most cases” when they were “turned over to the Treasurer’s office because they had
    remained unclaimed in bank safe deposit boxes for a period of at least five years.” 
    Id. at A180.
    Kansas believed that it had obtained current addresses for twelve of these 213
    4
    The specific bonds at issue included “40-year Series E bonds issued between 1941 and
    December 31, 1964”; “30-year Series E bonds issued between 1965 and December 31,
    1974”; “Series A, B, C, D, F, G, J and K bonds (all of which were issued prior to 1958)”;
    and “Series H bonds issued before December 31, 1974.” Pl.’s Mot. App. at A178.
    12
    individuals. 
    Id. at A181.
    On the other hand, Kansas had been “unable to locate” the other
    201 individuals. 
    Id. at A182.
    “Separate and apart” from the bonds in its possession, Kansas stated that “most of
    the Kansas Unclaimed U.S. Savings Bonds at issue in the . . . case” were “not in the
    physical possession of the Kansas Treasurer.” 
    Id. Rather, according
    to Kansas, those
    bonds “h[ad] been lost, stolen, destroyed, or otherwise made unavailable.” 
    Id. Kansas described
    these as “the absent bonds.” 
    Id. (quotation omitted).
    Kansas noted that, as to
    the absent bonds, it had no information “concerning the identity or location of [the]
    apparent owners.” 
    Id. It further
    advised the Court that Treasury had “refused to provide
    such information to [Kansas]” because of its policy against “provid[ing] such information
    to anyone other than the title owner of the bonds.” 
    Id. Thus, according
    to Kansas, there
    was “no way for [it] to search for the names and addresses of the unknown owners” of
    the absent bonds “until [Kansas] obtains title by way of this escheat proceeding.” 
    Id. at A183.
    “Under these circumstances,” Kansas contended, “it is appropriate for this escheat
    proceeding to be initiated by service of process by publication.” 
    Id. at A185.
    The court granted Kansas’s motion on January 4, 2013. 
    Id. at A214.
    Pursuant to
    Kansas’s Unclaimed Property Act, Kansas then published notice of the escheatment
    action in newspapers across the state for three consecutive weeks. 
    Id. at A219.
    It also
    published notice on the Kansas state treasurer’s website. 
    Id. Soon after,
    on March 29,
    2013, the state court issued a judgment of escheat. 
    Id. at A213–21.
    The court found that
    at the time Kansas filed its petition, it had “physical custody of approximately 1,481
    Kansas Unclaimed U.S. Savings Bonds.” 
    Id. at A214.
    Further, it found that “it is
    estimated, upon information and belief, that there are approximately $151.8 million in
    absent Kansas Unclaimed U.S. Savings Bonds that have been lost, stolen, or destroyed,
    and are thus[] not currently in the possession of [Kansas].” 
    Id. at A215.
    The court also
    found that “those unredeemed bonds belonging to Kansas citizens confer a right to collect
    matured principal and interest from the U.S. Treasury,” and that “[t]his right is intangible
    property subject to” Kansas’s Unclaimed Property Act. 
    Id. at A216–17.
    Based on these findings, the court determined that Kansas was “seeking to take
    ownership of and title to the subject bonds and the right to proceeds thereof through this
    state’s valid judicial escheat proceedings as the sole owner of and ultimate heir to such
    bonds and proceeds.” 
    Id. at A217–18.
    Further, the court concluded that “all of the above-
    described Kansas Unclaimed U.S. Savings Bonds . . . have been unclaimed and
    abandoned property pursuant to the provisions of” Kansas’s Unclaimed Property Act. 
    Id. at A218.
    Finally, the court found that “exceptional efforts ha[d] been undertaken to locate
    the owners of [the] bonds and [to] provide notice of these proceedings far in excess of the
    due diligence and notice requirements” set forth in Kansas law. 
    Id. at A219.
    For these reasons, the court issued a declaratory judgment stating that the bonds at
    issue “constitute abandoned and unclaimed property pursuant to the laws of the State of
    Kansas and are therefore subject to escheatment.” 
    Id. at A220.
    It further declared that
    “such unclaimed and abandoned Bonds . . . include the Absent Kansas Unclaimed U.S.
    Savings Bonds, which have been lost, stolen, or destroyed, and which have registered
    owners with last known addresses in the State of Kansas.” 
    Id. at A220–21.
    “[P]ursuant to
    13
    [its] powers of escheatment,” the court then decreed that “all rights and legal title to, and
    ownership of the above described Kansas Unclaimed U.S. Savings Bonds and the
    proceeds thereof . . . shall escheat to the State of Kansas.” 
    Id. at A221.
    C.     Kansas’s Request to Redeem the Purportedly Escheated Bonds
    On May 13, 2013, Kansas sent Treasury a “two-fold” redemption request for the
    bonds that were the subject of the state court proceedings. 
    Id. at A3
    41. First, it requested
    redemption of the bonds in its possession.5 
    Id. Second, it
    requested “payment of the
    proceeds of those Absent Kansas Unclaimed U.S. Savings Bonds which the Kansas
    District Court, in its Judgment of Escheatment, declared lost, stolen, or destroyed, and
    which had registered owners with last known addresses in Kansas.” 
    Id. at A3
    41–42.
    According to Kansas, “[t]he state of Kansas . . . gained title to and ownership of the
    Absent Bonds and their proceeds by valid judicial escheatment proceedings.” 
    Id. at A3
    42.
    “Therefore,” it continued, “Kansas, as owner of the Absent Bonds, can now redeem these
    bonds and collect their proceeds.” 
    Id. Further, “[w]ith
    respect to [its] claim for redemption of the proceeds of the Absent
    Bonds,” Kansas “request[ed] that [Treasury] either re-issue the bonds to the state of
    Kansas as owner or provide the records, including serial numbers, regarding the Absent
    Bonds that U.S. Treasury will require for redemption of each Absent Bond.” 
    Id. at A3
    43
    (emphasis in original). Noting that under 31 C.F.R. § 323.2(b) records regarding U.S.
    Savings Bonds will “ordinarily be disclosed only to the owners of such securities,”
    Kansas claimed that “[t]he information regarding the securities that have escheated to the
    state of Kansas must be made available to the owner of those securities, Kansas.” 
    Id. (emphasis in
    original).
    On October 9, 2013, Treasury responded to the first portion of Kansas’s
    redemption request (regarding the bonds in its possession). 
    Id. at A3
    58. Treasury
    requested that Kansas provide it with a certified copy of the judgment of escheat, certain
    information about the state treasurer, and the bonds themselves, signed by the state
    treasurer. 
    Id. “Assuming the
    savings bonds you surrender are legitimate and have not
    previously been redeemed,” Treasury stated, it “anticpate[d] redeeming them in the
    normal course after receiving” the requested information.6 
    Id. at A3
    59.
    About a week later, on October 16, 2013, Treasury responded to the second
    portion of Kansas’s redemption request (regarding the absent bonds). 
    Id. at A3
    60–61.
    Treasury stated that it was “unable to grant [Kansas’s] request to redeem” the absent
    bonds. 
    Id. at A3
    60. Under its regulations, Treasury claimed, registration was “conclusive
    of ownership,” and Treasury was “only authorized to redeem a savings bond to the
    5
    Although the state court proceedings involved 1,481 bonds in Kansas’s possession, the
    state requested that Treasury redeem just 1,445 of those bonds. See Pl.’s Mot. App. at
    A341.
    6
    Treasury in fact redeemed the bonds a short time later. See Pl.’s Mot. App. at A362.
    14
    registered owner.” 
    Id. According to
    Treasury, however, “[e]scheatment claims by states
    are not an explicit exception to the conclusive ownership requirements.” 
    Id. (citation omitted).
    “In the past,” Treasury acknowledged, it had “interpreted its regulations to
    allow some state escheatment claims, but only when the state possesse[d] the savings
    bonds in its claim.” 
    Id. at A3
    60–61. Kansas, however, was neither “the registered owner
    of the savings bonds, nor d[id] it possess them.” 
    Id. at A3
    61.
    Treasury also noted that because Kansas did not possess the bonds, it could not
    “comply with requirements in the savings bond contract concerning surrender of the
    Absent Bonds.” 
    Id. “As provided
    in [Treasury’s] regulations,” Treasury stated, “an owner
    seeking to redeem a savings bond must surrender it to the Treasury
    Department . . . unless the owner can show that the savings bond was lost, stolen, or
    destroyed.” 
    Id. (footnote omitted).
    But “Kansas [could not] present the Absent Bonds for
    payment, presumably because the savings bonds are in the possession of the registered
    owners or their heirs.” 
    Id. And, according
    to Treasury, its “regulations do not provide that
    owners abandon their right to payment simply because they have not redeemed a matured
    savings bond.” 
    Id. Rather, the
    owners’ “contract[s] with the United States allow[] them to
    redeem their savings bonds at any time, even after maturity.” 
    Id. (footnote omitted).
    Finally, Treasury rejected Kansas’s request for information about the absent
    bonds. 
    Id. In its
    view, “turn[ing] over the Absent Bond records would violate the rights of
    the registered owners” under the Privacy Act. 
    Id. Further, Treasury
    noted that it “does not
    index its registration records according to the state of the registered owner.” 
    Id. Treasury thus
    “would have to search millions of records by hand to fulfill Kansas’[s] request,”
    which “would be prohibitively expensive.” 
    Id. VI. Commencement
    of This Action and the Government’s Motion to Dismiss
    After receiving these responses, Kansas filed this action on December 20, 2013.
    Compl., ECF No. 1. It alleges that as a result of the state court judgment of escheat, it is
    in privity of contract with the United States with respect to the absent bonds. 
    Id. ¶¶ 1,
    84.
    It also alleges that it “made proper presentment under applicable federal regulations of
    the U.S. savings bond contracts” for both sets of bonds. 
    Id. ¶ 90.
    Kansas’s complaint incorporates several theories of liability. First, in Count I,
    Kansas claims that Treasury’s “refusal to provide necessary and required information
    regarding the Absent Bonds, and its further refusal to accept presentment and redeem the
    Absent Bonds” constituted a breach of express contracts between it and the United
    States—i.e., the savings bonds to which it claims title. 
    Id. ¶¶ 93,
    95. It requests damages
    “believed to be in excess of $151,800,000” based on “the matured value . . . of all lost,
    stolen, destroyed or otherwise abandoned U.S. savings bonds . . . now owned by [Kansas]
    which are registered with [Treasury] and having last known addresses in the State of
    Kansas.”7 
    Id. at 24.
    Relatedly, in Count III, Kansas claims that the government has
    7
    In Count II of its complaint, Kansas alternatively claims that the bonds constitute
    implied-in-fact contracts between it and the United States, and that the government has
    breached those contracts. See Compl. ¶¶ 96–108. And in Count V of its complaint, it
    15
    breached fiduciary duties in connection with the express contracts, and that it is entitled
    to damages as a result. 
    Id. ¶¶ 109–115.
    And in Count VII, Kansas claims that the
    government’s refusal to redeem the bonds constitutes a taking of private property without
    just compensation in violation of the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause.8 
    Id. ¶¶ 141–43.
    Finally, in Count VI, Kansas also seeks a declaratory judgment that the
    government has breached its obligations on the savings bond contracts. 
    Id. ¶¶ 133–40.
    In
    particular, it asks the Court to enter an order declaring (among other things) that the
    government has “no right, title, or interest to the Absent Bonds”; that the government has
    “wrongfully asserted custody and/or ownership over [Kansas’s] Absent Bonds”; and that
    the government has “failed to turn over to [Kansas] required and necessary information
    regarding the Absent Bonds, namely serial numbers, addresses, and other information
    which would identify those bonds with last known addresses in the State of Kansas.” 
    Id. at 35.
    Kansas also asks the Court to order the government to “provide [Kansas with] the
    information necessary to identify those Absent Bonds registered with last known
    addresses in the State of Kansas” and to “accept [Kansas’s] presentment and redemption
    of the subject Absent Bonds.” 
    Id. As discussed
    in Estes, the government moved to dismiss Kansas’s claims other
    than its takings claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, and to dismiss its takings
    claim for failure to state a 
    claim. 123 Fed. Cl. at 80
    . The Court determined, however, that
    it had subject matter jurisdiction over Kansas’s contract, estoppel, and declaratory
    judgment claims because “the government’s argument—that Kansas was not a party to
    the contract[s] because under Treasury’s [r]egulations it was not the owner of the Absent
    Bonds—[went] to the merits of Kansas’s . . . claims, not th[e] Court’s jurisdiction over
    them.” 
    Id. at 82–83.
    Therefore, the Court treated the government’s entire motion as a
    motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim, and concluded that Kansas had stated a
    plausible claim for relief with respect to its contract, estoppel, declaratory judgment, and
    takings claims. 
    Id. at 85,
    90–91. On the other hand, it dismissed Kansas’s third-party
    beneficiary claim. 
    Id. at 90.
    The Court’s ruling on Kansas’s contract and declaratory judgment claims turned
    on a narrow issue of regulatory interpretation around which the parties framed their
    alternatively claims that it is a third-party beneficiary of the savings bond contracts, and
    that the government’s breach of those contracts entitles it to damages. See 
    id. ¶¶ 125–32.
    8
    As a corollary to these claims, Kansas also asserts, in Count IV, that the government
    “should be equitably estopped from asserting that [its] claims for relief are wrongful.” 
    Id. ¶ 117;
    see also 
    id. ¶ 118
    (contending that the government “misled” Kansas by “making
    statements and taking action indicating that it would redeem Kansas’s absent Bonds,”
    including the government’s “recognition of Kansas’s ownership of the Bonds in
    Possession and redeeming the proceeds thereof upon request”); 
    id. ¶ 120
    (asserting that
    the government “concealed material facts” by “engag[ing] in self-serving refusals to
    honor FOIA and other requests that would reveal necessary and requested information
    about . . . Kansas[’s] Absent Bonds”).
    16
    briefs. See 
    id. at 81–85;
    see also Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss at 10–16, ECF No. 9; Pl.’s Resp.
    to Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss at 22–29, ECF No. 15. In particular, the government centered
    its arguments on Subpart E of Treasury’s regulations, 31 C.F.R. §§ 315.20–.23, which (as
    discussed above) sets forth “[l]imitations on [j]udicial [p]roceedings” with respect to U.S.
    savings bonds. See Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss at 11–12.
    Advancing a restrictive interpretation of 31 C.F.R. § 315.20(b)—which states that
    Treasury “will recognize a claim against an owner of a savings bond . . . if established by
    valid, judicial proceedings, but only as specifically provided in this subpart”—the
    government contended that escheat judgments could never form the basis of claims of
    ownership under the regulations because such judgments were not specifically provided
    for elsewhere in Subpart E. 
    Id. at 11–13.
    Rather, according to the government, Subpart E
    only specifically provided for two types of claims: “claims under a divorce decree
    (§ 315.22(a)) and gift causa mortis claims (§ 315.22(b)).”9 
    Id. at 12.
    Thus, the
    government contended, “[e]scheatment actions are not one of the ‘valid judicial
    proceedings’ recognized in the regulations.” 
    Id. And because
    “the only ‘valid judicial
    proceedings’ are the ones set forth in the regulations,” the government reasoned, “[i]t
    makes no difference whether the states’ escheatment statute purports to take title to or
    custody of the bonds.” 
    Id. at 13;
    see also Def.’s Suppl. Br. in Supp. of Its Mot. to Dismiss
    at 4 (“Only certain judicial proceedings are covered by 31 CFR 315.20, and escheat
    proceedings are not among them.”).
    The government then sought to explain away Treasury’s past statements regarding
    state claims to bonds obtained by escheatment proceedings by contending that those
    statements “were made in the context of states claiming title for bonds in their
    possession.” Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss at 13 (emphasis in original). The government
    maintained that position even after Kansas pointed out that the Treasurer of New Jersey
    litigation involved state claims for redemption of absent bonds. See Def.’s Reply Br. in
    Supp. of Its Mot. to Dismiss at 5–7, ECF No. 20. Further, in supplemental briefing, the
    government argued that its prior statements did not reflect its “considered judgment” on
    the meaning of its regulations; that its current litigating position did, in fact, reflect its
    considered judgment; and that the Court was thus required to defer to its litigating
    position under Auer v. Robbins, 
    519 U.S. 452
    (1997). See Def.’s Suppl. Brief at 10–11,
    15.
    The Court was not persuaded by the government’s arguments. See Estes, 123 Fed.
    Cl. at 85–90. First, it rejected the government’s reading of § 315.20(b) as incompatible
    with the text of Subpart E as a whole. 
    Id. at 85–86.
    The Court noted that in § 315.20(a),
    Treasury expressly disavowed recognition of two types of judicial determinations. See 31
    C.F.R. § 315.20(a) (stating that Treasury “will not recognize a judicial determination that
    9
    In supplemental briefing ordered by the Court, the government expanded its argument
    to include the additional types of judicial proceedings listed in 31 C.F.R. § 315.21, which
    concern payments to judgment creditors and the treatment of U.S. savings bonds in
    bankruptcy proceedings. See Def.’s Suppl. Br. in Supp. of Its Mot. to Dismiss at 5, ECF
    No. 28.
    17
    gives effect to an attempted voluntary transfer inter vivos of a bond, or a judicial
    determination that impairs the rights of survivorship conferred by these regulations upon
    a coowner or beneficiary”); see also 
    Estes, 123 Fed. Cl. at 85
    . Accepting the
    government’s reading of § 315.20(b), however, would render superfluous this express
    disavowal. 
    Estes, 123 Fed. Cl. at 85
    . Further, the Court found that the government’s
    reading “ignore[d] what appear[ed] to be [the] actual purpose” of the restrictions found in
    §§ 315.21 and 315.22: “to address specific considerations and concerns attendant to the
    types of judgments referenced” in those subsections. 
    Id. at 86.
    In an extended discussion, the Court also rejected the government’s position
    regarding the import of its prior statements and the deference owed to its litigating
    position. See 
    id. at 86–90.
    First, it found that the government’s litigating position actively
    conflicted with Treasury’s prior statements regarding escheat, especially statements made
    in connection with the Treasurer of New Jersey litigation. See 
    id. at 87–88.
    That
    litigation, the Court noted, involved claims for custody over the proceeds of absent
    bonds, undercutting the government’s contention that all of its prior statements were
    made in the context of bonds-in-possession. 
    Id. at 88.
    Further, in the Court’s view,
    possession had never served as an essential characteristic in Treasury’s prior statements
    regarding title-based escheat, without which an escheat judgment would not have been
    “valid” under the regulations. See 
    id. at 88–89.
    And the government’s litigating position
    was internally inconsistent: it claimed (without any apparent factual basis) that it had
    exercised its waiver authority under 31 C.F.R. § 315.90 when it redeemed the bonds in
    Kansas’s possession; and it argued in supplemental briefing that escheat judgments were
    invalid under the regulations because they were proceedings in rem. See 
    id. at 88–90.
    The
    Court thus concluded that the government’s ever-evolving litigating position did not
    reflect its considered judgment, and thus was not entitled to Auer deference. See 
    id. at 90
    (“If anything, deference is due to the interpretation that Treasury expressed for over sixty
    years until the instant controversy arose.”).
    Accordingly, the Court rejected the government’s contention that all escheat
    judgments—whether under a title-based or custody-based state law scheme—fell outside
    the category of “valid, judicial proceedings” under § 315.20(b). See 
    id. With respect
    to Kansas’s takings claim, the Court, following the Federal Circuit’s
    lead, observed that a party may properly “alleg[e] in the same complaint two alternative
    theories for recovery against the Government . . . one for breach of contract and one for a
    taking under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution.” 
    Id. at 91
    (quoting Stockton E.
    Water Dist. v. United States, 
    583 F.3d 1344
    , 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2009)). It therefore denied
    the government’s motion to dismiss Kansas’s claims under the Takings Clause. See 
    id. VII. Treasury’s
    Revision of the Regulations and Kansas’s APA Challenge
    In the meantime, on July 1, 2015 (while the government’s motion to dismiss was
    pending), Treasury issued a Notice of Proposed Rulemaking in which it proposed
    revising its savings bond regulations to expressly address state court judgments of escheat
    pursuant to title-based unclaimed property laws. See Regulations Governing United
    States Savings Bonds, 80 Fed. Reg. 37,559-01 (July 1, 2015). After a period of notice and
    18
    comment, Treasury issued the final revised regulations on December 24, 2015.
    Regulations Governing United States Savings Bonds, 80 Fed. Reg. at 80,258-01. In the
    preamble to the revised regulations, Treasury stated that it intended for the revisions to
    “clarify its prior statements on escheat and to describe more formally the criteria
    Treasury will use to evaluate escheat claims.” 
    Id. at 80,259.
    Further, by promulgating a
    “uniform federal rule governing title escheat claims,” Treasury would “provide formal
    notice to all states about the escheat claims it will recognize and how it will protect the
    rights of bond owners still in possession of their savings bonds.” 
    Id. As relevant
    to the issue presented in this case, the revised rule amended 31 C.F.R.
    § 315.20(b) to add a sentence stating that “[e]scheat proceedings will not be recognized
    under this subpart.”10 
    Id. at 80,264.
    Treasury also added a new provision, § 315.88, to
    govern “[p]ayment to a State claiming title to abandoned bonds.” 
    Id. Under the
    new
    provision, Treasury “may, in its discretion, recognize an escheat judgment that purports
    to vest a State with title to a definitive savings bond that has reached the final extended
    maturity date and is in the State’s possession.” 
    Id. But Treasury
    “will not recognize an
    escheat judgment that purports to vest a State with title to a bond that the State does not
    possess.” 
    Id. Kansas and
    four other states challenged the rule under the Administrative
    Procedure Act (APA), 5 U.S.C. § 706. Estes v. U.S. Dep’t of Treasury, 
    219 F. Supp. 3d 17
    , 22, 27 (D.D.C. 2016). They argued (among many other things) that the rulemaking
    was arbitrary and capricious because the new provisions “marked a change of agency
    policy, without any acknowledgment of that change.” 
    Id. at 27.
    The District Court for the District of Columbia disagreed. 
    Id. at 28–33.
    After
    noting that the questions it faced and the issues before this Court were “distinct in
    numerous respects,” it concluded that the possession requirement expressed in the revised
    rule was not inconsistent with any clearly established prior policy.11 
    Id. at 28
    n.4, 31.
    Alternatively, the District Court concluded that even if the new rule did work a policy
    change, Treasury had not violated the APA in promulgating it because Treasury did not
    “depart from [its] prior policy sub silentio or simply disregard rules that are still on the
    books.” 
    Id. at 33
    (quoting FCC v. Fox Television Stations, Inc., 
    556 U.S. 502
    , 514
    (2009)). Rather, it “extensively explained its Rule and its view as to why that Rule did
    not contradict prior statements.” 
    Id. There was
    thus “no basis for concluding that
    [Treasury] casually ignored prior policies and interpretations or otherwise failed to
    10
    Thus, the revised § 315.20(b) expressly conformed to the arguments the government
    made in its motion to dismiss.
    11
    Thus, the District Court found that although Treasury’s prior statements reflected a
    “longstanding policy that payment requests for escheated bonds will not be honored
    unless a state has title ownership over those bonds,” they “d[id] not express a policy that
    a state may redeem bonds without possessing them.” Estes v. U.S. Dep’t. of 
    Treasury, 219 F. Supp. 3d at 29
    (emphasis in original).
    19
    provide a reasoned explanation for its [Rule].” 
    Id. (quoting Cablevision
    Sys. Corp. v.
    FCC, 
    649 F.3d 695
    , 710 (D.C. Cir. 2011)) (second alteration in original).12
    VIII. The Pending Cross-Motions
    After the Court denied the government’s motion to dismiss, the parties engaged in
    targeted discovery regarding “the history of the Department of Treasury’s recordkeeping,
    registration, and redemption practices regarding the types of U.S. savings bonds involved
    in this case, as well as information regarding the nature of how the Department’s relevant
    savings bond records are catalogued and may best be searched.” See Order (Dec. 18,
    2015), ECF No. 51. Once discovery concluded, the government moved for summary
    judgment. ECF No. 86. Kansas then filed a cross-motion for partial summary judgment
    on liability, “which it asserted would fully resolve Count VI of Kansas’s Complaint and
    partially resolve Counts I, II, III, and VII.” Pl.’s Mot. at 3. The Court heard oral argument
    on June 22, 2017.13
    DISCUSSION
    I.     Standard For Summary Judgment
    In accordance with RCFC 56(a), summary judgment may be granted “if the
    movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is
    entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” See Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 
    477 U.S. 317
    , 322
    (1986). A fact is material if it “might affect the outcome of the suit under the governing
    law.” Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 
    477 U.S. 242
    , 248 (1986). A dispute is genuine if
    it “may reasonably be resolved in favor of either party.” 
    Id. at 250.
    The material facts in this case are not in dispute. Further, Kansas’s breach of
    contract claim depends upon the resolution of questions of law—namely, the
    interpretation of Treasury’s regulations, the interplay between those regulations and
    Kansas’s Unclaimed Property Act, and the constitutional principles raised by the
    government in opposition to Kansas’s claims. Therefore, Kansas’s breach of contract and
    other claims are appropriate for resolution by summary judgment.
    12
    Kansas has appealed the District Court’s ruling. See Docketing Statement, LaTurner v.
    U.S. Dep’t of Treasury, No. 17-5015 (D.C. Cir. Mar. 2, 2017).
    13
    Since Kansas filed its complaint, eight other states with title-based escheat regimes
    have filed similar lawsuits seeking redemption of bonds they do not possess. See Sattgast
    v. United States, No. 15-1364 (South Dakota); Kennedy v. United States, No. 15-1365
    (Louisiana); Lea v. United States, No. 16-43 (Arkansas); Ball v. United States, No. 16-
    221 (Kentucky); Fitch v. United States, No. 16-231 (Mississippi); Loftis v. United States,
    No. 16-451 (South Carolina); Zoeller v. United States, No. 16-699 (Indiana); Atwater v.
    United States, No. 16-1482 (Florida). With the exception of Lea, the Court has stayed
    these cases pending this decision. The Court is issuing a separate Opinion and Order on
    cross-motions for summary judgment in Lea.
    20
    II.    Merits
    In its motion for partial summary judgment, Kansas seeks a ruling that the
    government is liable for breach of contract. To succeed on this claim, Kansas must first
    demonstrate that it is in privity of contract with the government with respect to the absent
    bonds—i.e., it must establish that it owns the absent bonds. See Cienega Gardens v.
    United States, 
    194 F.3d 1231
    , 1239 (Fed. Cir. 1998); 
    Rotman, 31 Fed. Cl. at 725
    . Further,
    it must also show that in refusing to recognize its ownership of the bonds and in declining
    to redeem the proceeds of the bonds, the government materially breached the terms of the
    bond contracts. See Bell/Heery v. United States, 
    739 F.3d 1324
    , 1330 (Fed. Cir. 2014);
    San Carlos Irrigation & Drainage Dist. v. United States, 
    877 F.2d 957
    , 959 (Fed. Cir.
    1989).
    Kansas’s contention that it is the owner of the absent bonds is predicated on 31
    C.F.R. § 315.20(b), which it argues obligates the United States to recognize the state-law
    judgment of escheat that purported to vest it with title to the bonds. Kansas asks the Court
    to direct the Department of Treasury to provide it with the information it is entitled to
    receive pursuant to 31 C.F.R. §§ 1.5 and 323.2 as the owner of the bonds. It further
    requests a ruling that—notwithstanding that it currently lacks information about the
    whereabouts of the bond certificates—Treasury was required to redeem the bonds upon
    presentation of a certified copy of the state court judgment under 31 C.F.R. §§ 315.20
    and 315.23, or pursuant to 31 C.F.R. § 315.25, which provides a method for owners to
    redeem bonds where the certificates have been lost. Kansas contends that Treasury’s
    refusal to redeem the bonds constitutes both a breach of contract and a compensable
    taking of its property under the Fifth Amendment.
    The government asserts, on the other hand, that Kansas has not obtained
    ownership of the absent bonds and that, as a result, the United States is entitled to an
    entry of summary judgment. It briefly reprises its contention that 31 C.F.R. § 315.20(b)
    does not require Treasury to recognize ownership claims arising out of state court
    judgments under title-based escheat statutes. Further, it argues that even if Kansas
    Treasury’s regulations permit transfers of ownership pursuant to title-based escheat
    statutes, the government was not required to redeem the absent bonds because Kansas has
    not and cannot submit the paper bond certificates, which the government argues is a pre-
    requisite to its obligation to pay Kansas their proceeds. Finally, it contends that, in any
    event, ownership of the bonds cannot be transferred to Kansas under the circumstances of
    this case because: (1) the state law on which the judgment rests is preempted by federal
    law; (2) the underlying state law violates the principle of intergovernmental immunity;
    and (3) the state court proceedings did not comport with the due process clause of the
    Fourteenth Amendment.
    For the reasons set forth below, the Court agrees that Kansas is the owner of the
    absent bonds pursuant to Treasury’s regulations and that Treasury’s refusal to recognize
    Kansas’s ownership of the bonds is a breach of contract. It further finds that Treasury
    breached the contract when it refused to provide Kansas with information about the
    bonds and demanded that Kansas produce the bond certificates as a condition of
    21
    redeeming their proceeds. Accordingly, the Court grants Kansas’s motion for partial
    summary judgment as to liability for breach of contract.
    A.      Whether Treasury is Required to Redeem the Absent Bonds Under
    Treasury’s Regulations
    As discussed, 31 C.F.R. § 315.20(b) provides that Treasury “will recognize a
    claim against an owner of a savings bond . . . if established by valid, judicial proceedings,
    but only as specifically provided in this subpart.” And 31 C.F.R. § 315.23(a) states that
    “[t]o establish the validity of judicial proceedings,” a claimant must submit to Treasury
    “certified copies of the final judgment, decree, or court order, and of any necessary
    supplementary proceedings.”
    The facts material to the application of these regulations with respect to the absent
    bonds are not disputed. Thus, the parties do not dispute that Kansas obtained the state
    court escheat judgment, Pl.’s Mot. App. at A213–22; that the judgment concerned
    ownership of the absent bonds, 
    id. at A215;
    and that, when it attempted to redeem the
    absent bonds, Kansas supplied certified copies of the judgment to Treasury in accordance
    with § 315.23(a), 
    id. at A342.
    In its motion for summary judgment, the government revives (albeit briefly) the
    arguments which this Court rejected in Estes regarding the proper interpretation of
    § 315.20(b). Thus, it contends that the ownership recognition requirements of § 315.20(b)
    do not under any circumstances apply to judgments entered pursuant to state escheatment
    laws. See Def.’s Mot. at 19–20 & n.3; Def.’s Reply at 30–32. It also appears to argue
    that—even if title to the absent bonds has passed to Kansas—the state may not redeem
    the proceeds of the bonds because it has not presented the bond certificates to Treasury.
    Both of these arguments lack merit.
    1.      Whether Treasury is Required to Recognize Kansas’s Ownership
    Claims Based on the State Escheat Judgment
    As discussed briefly above, and in greater detail in Estes, the government’s
    argument in support of its initial motion to dismiss was that under § 315.20(b), Treasury
    would recognize only those claims of ownership that arise out of the specific types of
    judgments referenced elsewhere in Subpart E of Part 315. Because state court escheat
    judgments were not referenced in the regulations, Treasury argued, they were not subject
    to § 315.20(b) at all. Treasury reprises this argument in its motion for summary
    judgment, observing once again that “Treasury’s regulations do not recognize the transfer
    of savings bonds via escheat judgment.” Def.’s Mot. at 19.
    In Estes, this Court found Treasury’s interpretation inconsistent with the language
    and structure of the regulation. 
    See 123 Fed. Cl. at 85
    –86 (concluding that the
    government’s “construction of the regulations . . . collides with the well-established
    canon of interpretation that holds that regulatory text should not be read in such a way as
    to render any portion of the language superfluous” and “ignores [the] actual purpose” of
    the provisions of Subpart E). The government’s summary judgment briefs do not address
    22
    the Court’s textual analysis or provide any basis for it to depart from its conclusion in
    Estes that a textual analysis of the language of § 315.20(b) establishes that Treasury is
    required to recognize claims of bond ownership that are based on state court judgments of
    escheat pursuant to valid judicial proceedings.
    Nor is there anything in the government’s summary judgment briefs that would
    alter this Court’s conclusion in Estes that Treasury’s position in this litigation conflicts
    directly with Treasury’s prior explicit statements interpreting § 315.20(b). These
    statements, which go back more than sixty years, clearly reflect that before this litigation,
    Treasury took the position that states could secure ownership of savings bonds on the
    basis of title-based escheatment statutes like Kansas’s.
    Thus, as the Court explained in Estes, in its brief filed with the Third Circuit in
    the Treasurer of New Jersey litigation, the federal government represented that “Treasury
    regulations generally provide that payment on a U.S. savings bond will be made only to
    the registered owner,” but that “[t]he regulations specify limited exceptions to this rule,
    including cases in which a third party obtains ownership of the bond through valid
    judicial proceedings.” See Br. for Appellees at 6, Treasurer of N.J., 
    684 F.3d 382
    (No.
    10-1963). In particular, the government explained, “[a] State may satisfy this ownership
    requirement ‘through escheat, a procedure with ancient origins whereby a sovereign may
    acquire title to abandoned property if after a number of years no rightful owner appears.’”
    
    Id. (emphasis added)
    (quoting 
    Texas, 379 U.S. at 675
    ). In its decision, the Third Circuit
    went on to endorse Treasury’s reading of its own regulations. See Treasurer of 
    N.J., 684 F.3d at 412
    –13 (observing that “the States[] may obtain ownership of . . . bonds—and
    consequently the right to redemption—through ‘valid[] judicial proceedings’” as
    provided in 31 C.F.R. § 315.20(b) (second alteration in original)).
    The Solicitor General made a similar representation regarding Treasury’s
    interpretation of its regulations to the Supreme Court in 2013, in opposing a petition for
    certiorari filed by some of the states that were parties to the Third Circuit case. See Pl.’s
    Mot. App. at A304–37. In that brief, the Solicitor General, citing 31 C.F.R. §§ 315.20(b),
    315.23, and 353.23, observed that Treasury “has long advised the States that to receive
    payment on a U.S. savings bond a State must complete an escheat proceeding that
    satisfies due process and that awards title to the bond to the State,” and that this
    “represents the Department’s considered interpretation of federal law.” 
    Id. at A3
    11–12.
    As the Court also explained in Estes, Treasury has long assured inquiring states
    that it would recognize state claims of ownership based on title-based escheat statutes.
    Thus, Treasury explained in the 1952 Escheat Decision that it would “recognize[] the title
    of the state when it makes claim based upon a judgment of escheat,” because, in that
    case, the state has “succeed[ed] to the title of the bondholder.” Def.’s Mot. App. at A3
    (emphasis omitted). And Treasury continued to emphasize this position throughout the
    1970s, 1980s, and 1990s in its responses to states’ requests to redeem or obtain custody
    over the proceeds of bonds in their possession under custody-based escheat regimes. See
    
    id. at A6
    (Oklahoma, June 26, 1970); 
    id. at A8
    (Indiana, Nov. 19, 1971); 
    id. at A10
    (New
    Hampshire, May 12, 1976); 
    id. at A12
    (South Carolina, May 26, 1976); 
    id. at A15
    (Hawaii, July 14, 1976); 
    id. at A17
    (Indiana, Jan. 18, 1977); 
    id. at A19
    (North Dakota,
    23
    June 24, 1977); 
    id. at A22
    (Illinois, Oct. 27, 1980); 
    id. at A39
    (Kentucky, Sept. 6, 1983);
    
    id. at A40
    (Alaska, Oct. 25, 1983); 
    id. at A10
    9 (Alaska, Feb. 6, 1992); 
    id. at A112
    (Oklahoma, Aug. 5, 1999).
    In addition, in 1982, Treasury informed Massachusetts that under the state’s title-
    based escheat regime, Treasury would “make payment to the Treasurer of the
    Commonwealth where the Commonwealth, through appropriate court proceedings, takes
    the owner’s title to itself.” 
    Id. at A3
    8 (observing that “[i]n that event, [Treasury] would
    pay the owner in the person of its successor, the Commonwealth”). Further, Treasury
    referred Massachusetts to 31 C.F.R. §§ 315.23(a) and 353.23(a) as the sources of “the
    proper evidence to be submitted if this approach is followed.” 
    Id. Notwithstanding the
    foregoing, the government contends now, as it did in the
    context of its motion to dismiss, that the Court should discount Treasury’s pre-2000
    statements because they “did not address the applicability of section 315.20(b) to title-
    based escheat judgments for bonds a state did not possess.” Def.’s Mot. at 20 (emphasis
    added). But there is nothing in § 315.20(b) that purports to make possession of bond
    certificates a condition for Treasury’s recognition of ownership claims based on valid
    judicial proceedings. More to the point, under Treasury’s interpretation, state judgments
    of escheat can never confer ownership, regardless of whether the state has possession of
    the bond certificates. That is, under Treasury’s interpretation, even a state that: (1) has
    obtained title to the bonds through state escheatment proceedings; (2) possesses the bond
    certificates; and (3) presents those certificates to Treasury for redemption cannot claim an
    entitlement to the proceeds of the bonds. The factual distinction Treasury asks the Court
    to draw thus is not relevant to the legal position it advances—i.e., that the Court ought to
    accept its assertion that it does not recognize claims against bond holders based on state-
    court escheat judgments under § 315.20(b).
    Indeed, Treasury’s litigating position here is that to redeem even the bonds in
    possession to which it holds title pursuant to valid judicial proceedings, the state must
    persuade Treasury to waive its regulations. See Def.’s Mot. to Dismiss at 15 (contending
    that “[p]ursuant to [its] discretionary authority, Treasury elected to waive its regulations
    for the bonds in Kansas’ possession” but “found no basis to waive its regulations for the
    Absent Bonds”). But until this litigation, Treasury never mentioned its waiver authority
    in any of its many pronouncements concerning states’ rights to redeem bond proceeds
    under title-based escheat regimes; instead, it cited § 315.20. Thus, Treasury’s ever-
    shifting explanations for denying states’ requests to redeem absent bonds resemble
    nothing so much as a game of “whack-a-mole” in which the federal government’s
    rationale for denying such requests changes each time the states satisfy the most recently
    articulated condition for doing so.
    In that regard, the government also draws the Court’s attention to certain 2004
    correspondence between Treasury and several states that were then seeking information
    about the redemption of absent bonds under their custody-based escheat statutes. See
    Def.’s Mot. at 19–20. That correspondence, which was not before the Court when it ruled
    in Estes, contained a passage advising the inquiring states that “[i]n order for the bonds to
    be paid to [the state], [it] must have possession of the bonds, . . . obtain an order of
    24
    escheat from a court of competent jurisdiction vesting title in the state to the individual
    bonds, and apply to the Department of the Treasury for payment.” E.g., Def.’s Mot. App.
    at A134.
    The passing mention of a possession requirement in the 2004 correspondence
    does not persuade the Court to depart from its prior interpretation of the plain text of the
    applicable Treasury regulations. For one thing, that correspondence did not purport to
    interpret § 315.20(b). Nor did it address Treasury’s treatment of claims brought under
    title-based escheat judgments for bonds that a state did not possess, as the correspondence
    arose in the context of state claims for bond proceeds under custody-based escheat
    regimes. The correspondence thus did not identify possession of the bonds as a condition
    of recognizing the state’s claim of ownership under a title-based escheat regime, as
    Treasury appears to argue.
    Further, the Court notes that in Treasury’s subsequent 2006 correspondence with
    the state of Florida, there is no mention of a possession requirement. Instead, Treasury
    advised the State that “[t]he applicable regulations would permit the State of Florida to be
    paid for the bonds, pursuant to an appropriate state statute and after due process, by
    obtaining an order of escheat from a court of competent jurisdiction vesting title in the
    state, and then applying for payment to the Department of the Treasury pursuant to the
    procedures established by the regulations that all bond holders must utilize.” 
    Id. at A148.
    Accordingly, Treasury’s mention of a possession requirement in the 2004 correspondence
    does not cast doubt upon its assurances over the more than sixty preceding years, or the
    representations that it made to the Supreme Court almost ten years later, all of which
    clearly confirmed that Treasury would recognize claims of ownership based on valid state
    court escheatment proceedings.14
    14
    In support of its argument that § 315.20(b) is inapplicable to escheat judgments, the
    government cites the recent decision of the U.S. District Court for the District of
    Columbia in the litigation brought by Kansas and several other states to challenge
    Treasury’s new rule. See Def.’s Mot. at 4, 20–21 n.3 & 5 (citing Estes v. U.S. Dep’t of
    
    Treasury, 219 F. Supp. 3d at 32
    . As noted, the new rule, among other things, explicitly
    requires a state to possess the escheated bond in order to redeem it. See Estes v. U.S.
    Dep’t of 
    Treasury, 219 F. Supp. 3d at 27
    –28. As the district court itself acknowledged,
    however, the issues in that case are “distinct in numerous respects” from the issues in this
    one. See 
    id. at 28
    n.4. Thus, in that case, the plaintiffs argued (among other things) that
    the new rule violated the APA “because it capriciously abandon[ed] prior Treasury
    policy.” 
    Id. at 22.
    The issue before the district court was therefore whether the new rule
    “altered a clearly established policy without sufficient explanation.” 
    Id. at 28
    n.4
    (emphasis omitted). As noted above, the district court concluded only that there was no
    clearly established prior policy recognizing state claims of ownership pursuant to
    escheatment proceedings where the bonds were not in the state’s possession, and that, in
    any event, if there was such a policy, Treasury had adequately explained its reasons for
    changing it. See 
    id. at 28
    –30, 33. To the extent that the district court’s decision, while
    25
    For the reasons set forth above and in its opinion in Estes, the Court is of the view
    that, under § 315.20(b), title and ownership of the absent bonds was transferred to Kansas
    pursuant to the state court escheat judgment. It turns now to the government’s alternative
    argument that, even if Kansas has succeeded to ownership of the absent bonds,
    presentation of the escheated bonds is a prerequisite to their redemption. Def.’s Mot. at
    20–26; Def.’s Reply at 25–30.
    2.      Whether Kansas Must Present the Certificates for the Bonds it Owns
    as a Condition to Securing their Redemption
    As noted, the government contends that even assuming that Kansas secured
    ownership of the absent bonds through the state escheatment proceedings, it cannot
    redeem the bonds because it does not possess them. This argument—whose premise is
    that the Treasury’s regulations allow it to keep the proceeds of bonds indefinitely even if
    Kansas’s ownership of the bonds has been established by valid judicial proceedings—
    does not withstand scrutiny.
    Treasury’s regulations make its payment obligation clear: under 31 C.F.R.
    § 315.35(a), “[p]ayment . . . will be made to the person or persons entitled under the
    provisions of these regulations.” 
    Id. Generally, in
    order to redeem the proceeds of a bond,
    the bond owner must surrender the bond certificate to Treasury. See 
    id. § 315.35.
    But (as
    noted) Treasury has the authority to waive any portion of its regulations. See 
    id. § 315.90.
    And in any event, as the Court already explained in Estes, presentation of the bond
    certificate is not the exclusive means for an individual to establish his or her ownership of
    the bond and consequent entitlement to redeem its proceeds. 
    See 123 Fed. Cl. at 88
    –89.
    Thus, the regulations provide procedures by which a bond owner can secure redemption
    of bonds whose certificates have been “lost,” or subject to “theft, destruction, mutilation,
    or defacement.” 31 C.F.R. § 315.25 (authorizing “[r]elief, by the issue of a substitute
    bond or by payment” for lost, stolen, destroyed, or mutilated bonds). In such
    circumstances, the owner is required to provide either the serial number of the bond or
    other information that will allow Treasury to identify it by serial number. 
    Id. § 315.26.
    Presumably, the purpose of these requirements is to enable Treasury to confirm through
    its records that the claimant is the bond owner, notwithstanding that he or she cannot
    produce the physical bond certificate.15
    Counsel for the government in this case has taken the position that the certificates
    for the absent bonds cannot be deemed “lost” within the meaning of the regulations
    because Kansas never physically possessed them. But it is not apparent to the Court why
    an item is not “lost” where its owner is unaware of its location, whether or not the owner
    addressing a different issue, can be read to endorse an interpretation of the former §
    315.20(b) that is at odds with this Court’s interpretation, the Court respectfully disagrees.
    15
    It bears noting that under the regulations, where Treasury redeems bonds that are lost,
    it may protect itself against duplicate claims by “requir[ing] a bond of indemnity” as
    “necessary to protect the interests of the United States.” 31 C.F.R. § 315.25.
    26
    ever had the item in his possession. Moreover, the government has not supplied the Court
    with any basis for determining whether Treasury’s official interpretation of the scope of
    31 C.F.R. § 315.25 is as narrow as the one counsel proposes, or how Treasury has applied
    the regulation in the past.
    In fact, counsel’s narrow interpretation of § 315.25 appears to conflict with the
    requirement in § 315.20(b) that Treasury “recognize” claims against registered owners of
    savings bonds if established by valid, judicial proceedings, as well as 31 C.F.R.
    § 315.23(a), which provides that the validity of the judicial proceedings is established by
    presentation of certified copies of the final judgment. For if prior possession of the paper
    certificate is invariably required in order for an owner to claim them “lost,” then Treasury
    in fact would be unable to “recognize” claims of ownership based on valid judicial
    proceedings, as § 315.20(b) requires, where, for example, the prior owner of a bond had
    lost the physical certificates. It could also not recognize ownership claims where the prior
    owner refused to turn over the physical certificates, such as, for example, in the wake of a
    contentious divorce.16
    It is certainly clear that 31 C.F.R. § 315.25 was intended to afford relief to bond
    owners in circumstances in which, for reasons beyond their control, they are unable to
    prove their ownership by presenting the bond certificate. And where ownership is
    conferred by a judicial determination, it would seem that submission of the certified
    judgment would suffice to prove such ownership. See 
    id. § 315.23.
    But even leaving that
    aside, in light of the remedial purposes of § 315.25, and the anomalous results that would
    ensue if counsel’s position were adopted, the Court finds unpersuasive Treasury’s
    argument that bond certificates can never be considered “lost” unless they were once in
    the current bond owner’s possession.
    Finally, in any case, it is neither necessary nor appropriate for the Court to
    determine at this stage in the proceedings whether Kansas is entitled to redeem the bonds
    under the provisions of 31 C.F.R. § 315.25. For one thing, Kansas has not yet been
    afforded its rights as an owner of the bonds to make a claim for their proceeds based on
    the theory that they are “lost.” It also has not been given access to the information that it
    needs to make such a claim, including the serial numbers of the absent bonds, or the
    names of their original owners. Presumably, with additional identifying information in
    hand, Kansas may be able to determine whether or not the certificates can be located or
    whether instead they have been “lost” or destroyed.
    *       *       *      *       *       *
    16
    In that vein, the Court notes that the regulation specific to divorce proceedings does not
    mention surrendering the physical bond; rather, it states (1) that Treasury will “recognize
    a divorce decree that ratifies or confirms a property settlement agreement disposing of
    bonds or that otherwise settles the interests of the parties in a bond”; (2) that “[t]he
    evidence required under § 315.23 must be submitted in every case”; and (3) that
    “[p]ayment, rather than reissue, will be made if requested.” See 31 C.F.R. § 315.22(a).
    27
    On the basis of the foregoing, and for the reasons set forth more fully in Estes, the
    Court stands by its ruling that state court proceedings leading to judgments of escheat are
    among the valid judicial proceedings referenced in Treasury’s regulations at 31 C.F.R.
    § 315.20(b). It also continues to find unpersuasive Treasury’s argument that possession of
    the bond certificates is a pre-requisite to the recognition of a state’s ownership rights
    under Treasury’s regulations, where such ownership is conferred through valid judicial
    proceedings. Finally, it rejects as unpersuasive and premature Treasury’s argument that
    its regulations preclude Kansas from redeeming the bonds that it owns unless it supplies
    Treasury with the bond certificates. The Court turns now to the government’s additional
    bases for refusing to recognize Kansas’s ownership of the absent bonds.
    B.      Whether Kansas’s Escheatment Law is Preempted
    In addition to its argument that § 315.20(b) does not by its terms apply to claims
    of ownership based on state court escheat judgments, the government contends that
    Kansas cannot be the “rightful owner of the Absent Bonds because its ownership claim is
    based on a state court escheat judgment that rests on a state statute that is preempted by
    Federal law.” Def.’s Mot. at 10. Treasury’s preemption argument is without merit.
    1.      Preemption Standards
    It is well established that where a state law comes into conflict with a federal law,
    the state law must give way. E.g., Hillsborough Cty. v. Automated Med. Labs., Inc., 
    471 U.S. 707
    , 712 (1985); see also 
    Free, 369 U.S. at 669
    . This principle applies not only
    when the state law “actually conflicts” with federal law, but also if the state law “stands
    as an obstacle to the accomplishment and execution of the full purposes and objectives”
    of the federal government. Fidelity Fed. Sav. & Loan Ass’n v. de la Cuesta, 
    458 U.S. 141
    , 153 (1982) (quoting Hines v. Davidowitz, 
    312 U.S. 52
    , 67 (1941)); see also Wyeth
    v. Levine, 
    555 U.S. 555
    , 565 (2009); Allergan Inc. v. Athena Cosmetics, Inc., 
    738 F.3d 1350
    , 1355 (Fed. Cir. 2013).
    “In all pre-emption cases,” the court “start[s] with the assumption that the historic
    police powers of the States were not to be superseded by the Federal Act unless that was
    the clear and manifest purpose of Congress.’” 
    Wyeth, 555 U.S. at 565
    (quoting
    Medtronic, Inc. v. Lohr, 
    518 U.S. 470
    , 485 (1996)). “[T]he purpose of Congress,”
    therefore, “is the ultimate touchstone in every pre-emption case.” 
    Id. (quoting Medtronic,
    Inc., 518 U.S. at 485
    ); see also Retail Clerks Int’l Ass’n v. Schermerhorn, 
    375 U.S. 96
    ,
    103 (1963). Where Congress leaves the implementation of a statute to an agency, a
    “regulation with the force of law [may] pre-empt conflicting state requirements.” 
    Wyeth, 555 U.S. at 576
    ; see also Hillsborough 
    Cty., 471 U.S. at 713
    (“[S]tate laws can be pre-
    empted by federal regulations as well as by federal statutes.”); 
    Free, 369 U.S. at 666
    –69
    (operation of state community property law displaced by right of survivorship embedded
    in Treasury’s savings bond regulations).
    Unless Congress has specified otherwise, agencies have no special authority to
    pronounce on preemption. See 
    Wyeth, 555 U.S. at 576
    –77. Nevertheless, agencies are
    “likely to have a thorough understanding of [their] own regulation[s] and [their]
    28
    objectives,” Geier v. Am. Honda Motor Co., 
    529 U.S. 861
    , 883 (2000), and thus may
    have “an attendant ability to make informed determinations about how state requirements
    may pose an obstacle” to federal law, 
    Wyeth, 555 U.S. at 577
    (quotation omitted); see
    also 
    Geier, 529 U.S. at 883
    . The weight accorded to the agency’s explanation “depends
    on its thoroughness, consistency, and persuasiveness.” 
    Wyeth, 555 U.S. at 577
    (citing
    United States v. Mead Corp., 
    533 U.S. 218
    , 234–35 (2001) and Skidmore v. Swift & Co.,
    
    323 U.S. 134
    , 140 (1944)).
    2.      Application of Standards
    Treasury urges the Court to find that the Kansas law, which presumes bonds
    abandoned five years after their maturity date if the owner has not communicated with
    Treasury, conflicts with federal law, which it contends “allows savings bond owners to
    hold their bonds after maturity and has no deadline for owners to redeem their bonds.”17
    Def.’s Mot. at 10–12; Def.’s Reply at 3–15. Further, the federal government argues, the
    Kansas law creates an obstacle to the accomplishment of the objectives of the federal
    savings bond program. It reasons that “[f]ederal savings bonds are attractive to
    purchasers in part because they have no expiration date,” and that “confidence in the U.S.
    savings bond program would be undermined” if a state were permitted “to impair [the
    bond owner’s] contract rights.” Def.’s Mot. at 12.
    Treasury’s arguments that the Kansas law and federal law are in conflict lack
    merit. First and foremost, for the reasons set forth above, and in Estes, this Court has
    concluded that federal law itself (i.e., 31 C.F.R. § 315.20(b)) requires Treasury to
    recognize claims of ownership based on title-based escheatment statutes. In fact,
    Treasury has not only represented to both the Third Circuit and the Supreme Court that it
    so interprets its regulations, it redeemed the bonds in Kansas’s possession that Kansas
    obtained via the very unclaimed property law that Treasury now argues is preempted.
    Pl.’s Mot. App. at A358–59, 362.
    Further, Kansas’s law determines the identity of the bond owner, and not the time
    period within which the bond owner may redeem it. If Kansas lawfully becomes the
    owner of bonds pursuant to Treasury’s regulations via a judgment of escheat (as the
    Court has already concluded), then the former bond holders no longer have a right under
    federal law to redeem the bonds because they no longer own them. As Treasury expressly
    observed in its 1952 Escheat Decision, in such circumstances payment of the proceeds to
    the State is “not regarded as a violation of the agreement, but, on the contrary, as
    payment to the bondholder in the person of his successor or representative.”18 Def.’s Mot.
    App. at A3 (emphasis omitted).
    17
    As noted above, under its Unclaimed Property Act, bonds that have been presumed
    abandoned do not escheat to Kansas until three years after the end of this five-year
    period. See Kan. Stat. Ann. § 58-3979(a).
    18
    Treasury’s argument based on 31 U.S.C. § 3105(b)(2)(A) fails for similar reasons. That
    provision authorizes Treasury to “prescribe regulations providing that . . . owners of
    29
    For similar reasons, the Court is not persuaded by the government’s argument that
    the Kansas law makes ownership of federal bonds less attractive, thereby impairing the
    objectives of the federal savings bond program. The Court does not agree with Kansas
    that there is no value at all to a right to hold onto a bond over an extended period of time
    after it has stopped earning interest. But even under Treasury’s own interpretation of its
    regulations, that right is subject to another party’s claim of ownership based on “valid,
    judicial proceedings” for at least some categories of judgments. See 31 C.F.R.
    § 315.20(b).
    Put another way, Treasury’s regulations themselves expressly contemplate that
    the original bond owner may be deprived of his ownership interest in the bond, and
    thereby lose the right he once held as the owner to redeem the bond at any time after
    maturity. Thus, anyone who chooses to purchase a savings bond is already aware (at least
    constructively) that his right to hold onto the bond after it matures (and even while it is
    still earning interest) is not unlimited and may be affected by rulings issued in the course
    of valid judicial proceedings.
    Finally, Treasury’s reliance upon the Third Circuit’s decision in Treasurer of New
    Jersey, which found certain custody-based state escheatment laws preempted by federal
    law, is unavailing. In that case, the Third Circuit held that “the federal statutes and
    regulations pertaining to United States savings bonds preempt the States’ unclaimed
    property acts insofar as the States seek to apply their acts to take custody of the proceeds
    of the matured but unredeemed savings 
    bonds.” 684 F.3d at 407
    . “Most critically,” it
    stated, “application of the States’ unclaimed property acts would interfere with the terms
    of the contracts between the United States and the owners of the bonds because,
    according to the States’ complaint, they effectively would substitute the respective States
    for the United States as the obligor on affected savings bonds.” 
    Id. at 408.
    Therefore,
    once the states took custody of the bonds’ proceeds, the bonds’ owners would have to
    follow the “procedures set forth in the various States’ unclaimed property acts” rather
    than the federal redemption process, in order to secure their proceeds. See 
    id. Further, the
    Third Circuit observed, the original bondholders (who remained the bond’s owners) “still
    would have a contractual right to payment from the United States based on the terms of
    the bonds,” exposing the federal government to the risk of double liability on the bonds.
    
    Id. at 409.
    Title-based escheatment statutes do not raise the concerns identified by the Third
    Circuit in Treasurer of New Jersey because once ownership transfers to a state, the state
    savings bonds may keep the bonds after maturity or after a period beyond maturity during
    which the bonds have earned interest and continue to earn interest.” 
    Id. Section 3105(b)(2)(A)
    thus concerns the rights that Treasury may choose to confer upon
    “owners”; it is agnostic as to who the owner is. Further, Treasury’s argument is purely
    academic, as Treasury has not, in fact, prescribed regulations allowing the absent bonds
    at issue in this case to continue to earn interest. The Court therefore is not confronted
    with a situation where a state seeks recognition of its ownership of bonds that are still
    earning interest.
    30
    is not the obligor on the bonds; it is their owner. And when the state takes title, the former
    owners’ rights to payment from the federal government are extinguished. The
    government therefore cannot be liable for double payment. Further, the state must follow
    existing federal regulations to redeem the bonds. Thus, as the Third Circuit recognized,
    its holding “does not nullify state escheat laws for, as provided in the federal regulations
    and as recognized by the Treasury, third parties, including the States, may obtain
    ownership of the bonds—and consequently the right to redemption—through ‘valid[]
    judicial proceedings.’”19 
    Id. at 412–13
    (quoting 31 C.F.R. § 315.20(b) (alteration in
    original)).
    In short, the federal government’s argument that the Kansas law is preempted
    because it conflicts with or presents an obstacle to federal law is without merit. The Court
    now turns to its related argument that the Kansas law is inconsistent with principles of
    intergovernmental immunity.
    C.      Whether the State Statute Violates Principles of Intergovernmental
    Immunity
    Under the principle of intergovernmental immunity, states may not “directly
    regulate the federal government’s operations or property.” 
    Id. at 410
    (citing Arizona v.
    Bowsher, 
    935 F.2d 332
    , 334 (D.C. Cir. 1991)); see also Hancock v. Train, 
    426 U.S. 167
    ,
    178–80 (1976); McCulloch v. Maryland, 17 U.S. (4 Wheat.) 316, 426–27 (1819). In other
    words, states may not “regulate the [federal] [g]overnment directly.” North Dakota v.
    United States, 
    495 U.S. 423
    , 434 (1990) (plurality opinion); see also United States v. City
    of Arcata, 
    629 F.3d 986
    , 991 (9th Cir. 2010) (invalidating local ordinances prohibiting
    military recruiters from contacting teenagers because the ordinances “s[ought] to directly
    regulate the conduct of agents of the federal government”).
    Treasury argues that Kansas’s unclaimed property law directly regulates the
    federal government because that law seeks to “compel payment of unredeemed bond
    proceeds from the Federal Treasury based on [a] state imposed deadline[] for registered
    owners to redeem their bonds.” Def.’s Mot. at 15. According to the government, “Kansas
    19
    In Treasurer of New Jersey, the Third Circuit explicitly observed that “in concluding
    that the State custody-based unclaimed property acts are preempted we are
    distinguishing, as does the Government itself, those acts from title-based 
    acts.” 684 F.3d at 413
    n.28. It stated, however, that it did not wish to “imply that our result would be
    different” in the event that (1) the government was “confronted with a judgment of
    escheat under a title-based escheat act,” and (2) Treasury “abandoned its long held
    position as reflected in the Escheat Decision and refused to recognize the enforceability
    of the judgment with respect to savings bonds or their proceeds.” 
    Id. Thus, the
    Third
    Circuit recognized that so long as Treasury’s regulations require Treasury to recognize
    state claims of ownership based on title-based escheatment statutes (which the Court has
    concluded the former regulations did), such statutes are not pre-empted by federal law.
    31
    would then be able to use money now in the Federal Treasury to fund its own state
    programs and operations.” 
    Id. This argument
    lacks merit for many of the reasons articulated above. First, it is
    incompatible with Treasury’s decision to redeem the bonds in Kansas’s possession,
    which Kansas obtained via the same unclaimed property law Treasury now contests.
    Second, nothing in Kansas’s law requires the government to pay funds to Kansas on
    terms set by Kansas. Rather, Kansas seeks payment pursuant to Treasury’s own
    regulations—i.e., by obtaining title to the bonds via judicial proceedings under 31 C.F.R.
    § 315.20(b) and then seeking redemption as the owner of the bonds.
    Treasury’s reliance on Treasurer of New Jersey and Bowsher is thus unavailing.
    In the Treasurer of New Jersey litigation, the states acknowledged that they did not own
    the bonds they wanted to redeem and framed their claim as an APA claim seeking relief
    other than monetary damages. See McCormac v. U.S. Dep’t of Treasury, 185 F. App’x
    954, 956 (Fed. Cir. 2006) (concluding that it would be improper to transfer the Treasurer
    of New Jersey litigation to the Court of Federal Claims and observing that “the States
    neither assert[ed] that they currently ha[d] title to the bonds, nor s[ought] transfer of title
    to the bonds”). Bowsher similarly involved states seeking only custody over funds in the
    government’s hands. 
    See 935 F.2d at 334
    (observing that states seeking custody over
    funds in a federal unclaimed property fund “claim[ed] no escheat,” but rather “s[ought]
    only temporary custody over the money until the rightful owners appear with valid
    claims”).
    Indeed, the court in Bowsher seemingly anticipated a situation like this one,
    noting that “escheat of the claimant’s right might well substitute the state for the claimant
    and entitle it to payment.” See 
    id. at 335.
    In such a case, the court cautioned, the
    substitution would need to occur in a manner “consistent” with the relevant statutes. See
    
    id. As described
    above, Treasury has long acknowledged that transfers pursuant to title-
    based escheat proceedings are consistent with its regulations, leaving open the possibility
    that Kansas might be substituted for the original owners of the absent bonds pursuant to
    such proceedings. Bowsher thus does not support Treasury’s intergovernmental immunity
    argument.
    In sum, because under Treasury’s regulations, the operation of Kansas’s
    Unclaimed Property Act grants Kansas title over the savings bonds at issue, the Act does
    not directly regulate the federal government’s operations or property. The principle of
    intergovernmental immunity therefore does not invalidate Kansas’s unclaimed property
    law.
    D.      Whether the State Proceedings Were Invalid Because They Did Not
    Comport with the Due Process Clause
    The government’s final contention is that the state court proceedings did not
    effect a valid transfer of ownership because those proceedings did not comport with the
    32
    due process requirements of the Fourteenth Amendment.20 Def.’s Mot. at 17–18; Def.’s
    Reply at 20–25. First, it argues that the judgment was defective because the “state court
    did not identify a constitutional basis for exercising in rem jurisdiction over the Absent
    Bonds.” Def.’s Mot. at 17; see also Def.’s Reply at 24–25. Second, it claims that “the
    state court failed to give the owners of the Absent Bonds constitutionally adequate notice
    of the escheat proceeding.” Def.’s Mot. at 18; see also Def.’s Reply at 23. Both
    arguments lack merit.
    Regarding the first issue, as Kansas correctly observes, savings bonds are a form
    of intangible property. See Pl.’s Mot. at 46–47 (citing Blodgett v. Silberman, 
    277 U.S. 1
    ,
    10 (1928)). As the Supreme Court has observed, “intangible property, such as a debt
    which a person is entitled to collect, is not physical matter which can be located on a
    map.” 
    Texas, 379 U.S. at 677
    ; see also Hanson v. Denckla, 
    357 U.S. 235
    , 246–47 (1958)
    (noting, with respect to in rem jurisdiction, that “the situs of intangibles is often a matter
    of controversy” and that “[i]n considering restrictions on the power to tax, th[e] Court has
    concluded that jurisdiction over intangible property is not limited to a single State”
    (quotation, citations, and footnote omitted)); Mullane v. Cent. Hanover Bank & Trust
    Co., 
    339 U.S. 306
    , 312 (1950) (observing that “[t]he legal recognition and rise in
    economic importance of incorporeal or intangible forms of property have upset the
    ancient simplicity of property law and the clarity of its distinctions” between in rem and
    in personam proceedings).
    Further, in Texas, the Supreme Court held in a similar context that when in rem
    escheat proceedings involve intangible property that may be subject to several states’
    unclaimed property regimes, “the right and power to escheat the debt should be accorded
    to the State of the creditor’s last known address as shown by the debtor’s books and
    
    records.” 379 U.S. at 680
    –81. According to the Court, this “clear rule” would “govern all
    types of intangible obligations.” 
    Id. at 678.
    The Court stated that the virtues of this rule
    include that it involves only “a factual issue [that is] simple and easy to resolve”; that it
    “recognizes that the debt was an asset of the creditor”; and that it “tend[s] to distribute
    escheats among the States in the proportion of the commercial activities of their
    residents.” 
    Id. at 681.
    “It may well be that some addresses left by vanished creditors will
    be in States other than those in which they lived at the time the obligation arose or at the
    time of the escheat,” the Court continued, “[b]ut such situations probably will be the
    exception, and any errors thus created, if indeed they could be called errors, probably will
    tend to a large extent to cancel each other out.” 
    Id. 20 Kansas
    asserts that the government lacks standing to raise the due process issue “on
    behalf of the bond owners.” See Pl.’s Mot. at 43. But the government is not raising the
    due process issue on behalf of the owners; rather, it asserts the issue as a basis for finding
    that the state’s claims of ownership are not based on valid judicial proceedings, so that
    Treasury is not contractually obligated to honor them. The Court therefore rejects
    Kansas’s suggestion that the government somehow lacks standing to raise this defense to
    Kansas’s breach of contract action.
    33
    Treasury offers no persuasive reason why the Texas rule ought not apply here. Its
    observation that “the state court did not find that the Absent Bonds are in Kansas” is of
    no moment: because the bonds are intangible property, the inquiry turns on what the facts
    reveal about the bondholders’ last known addresses. See Def.’s Mot. at 17. Treasury’s
    concern that addresses in its records may “reveal[] nothing about the present location of
    the bonds or their current owners” was addressed in Texas, as just described. See 
    id. And its
    protest that bonds may “pass by inheritance to persons other than the purchaser” who
    live elsewhere is unavailing: under 31 C.F.R. § 315.70, surviving heirs may request
    reissue or payment upon the bondholder’s death, obviating Treasury’s concern. See 
    id. at 18.
    There is also no merit to Treasury’s argument that Texas is distinguishable
    because, unlike the property at issue in that case, U.S. savings bonds are “a form of
    property created under Federal laws that establish the registered owners’ right to redeem
    them at any time and the United States’ expectation that the physical bond be presented
    for payment in all but exceptional cases.” Def.’s Reply at 24. This contention, like
    Treasury’s preemption argument, cannot be reconciled with the governing regulations,
    which provide for transfers of ownership that displace the original registered owners’
    expectations regarding redemption.
    Treasury’s argument as to the constitutional adequacy of the notice Kansas
    provided to the absent bondholders is also inconsistent with Supreme Court precedent. In
    Mullane, the Court held that to comport with the Due Process clause, notice must be
    “reasonably calculated, under all the circumstances, to apprise interested parties of the
    pendency of the action and afford them an opportunity to present their 
    objections.” 339 U.S. at 314
    . Whether this standard has been met depends on “the practicalities and
    peculiarities” of the individual case. 
    Id. And, as
    Mullane shows, the Due Process Clause
    allows for the disposition of property interests where, as here, notice by publication is the
    only practical option.
    Thus, in Mullane, a state law allowing for common administration of small trusts
    permitted the administrator from time to time to seek judicial settlement of claims arising
    against the trustee. 
    Id. at 307–09.
    Regarding notice, the law required only that the
    administrator publish notice of the settlement proceedings in a local newspaper for four
    consecutive weeks. 
    Id. at 309–10.
    In assessing the adequacy of this procedure under the Due Process Clause, the
    Court divided the trust’s beneficiaries into two categories: beneficiaries “whose interests
    or whereabouts could not with due diligence be ascertained,” and “known present
    beneficiaries of known place of residence.” 
    Id. at 317–18.
    The Court held that notice by
    publication satisfied the Due Process Clause with respect to the first category of
    beneficiaries. 
    Id. Acknowledging that
    “publication alone” was hardly a “reliable means
    of acquainting interested parties of the fact that their rights are before the courts,” 
    id. at 315,
    the Court nevertheless concluded that it was “not in the typical case much more
    likely to fail than any of the choices open to legislators endeavoring to prescribe the best
    notice practicable,” 
    id. at 317.
    34
    In contrast, “[a]s to [the] known present beneficiaries of known place of
    residence,” notice by publication did not suffice. 
    Id. at 318
    (observing that “[e]xceptions
    in the name of necessity do not sweep away the rule that within the limits of practicability
    notice must be such as is reasonably calculated to reach interested parties” and that
    “[w]here the names and . . . addresses of those affected by a proceeding are at hand, the
    reasons disappear for resort to means less likely than the mails to apprise them of its
    pendency.”).
    According to the Court, “[i]t [was] not an accident that the greater number of
    cases reaching th[e] Court on the question of adequacy of notice have been concerned
    with actions founded on process constructively served through local newspapers.” 
    Id. at 315.
    Among these were several cases involving state unclaimed property regimes and
    their treatment of languishing bank deposits. See Anderson Nat’l Bank v. Luckett, 
    321 U.S. 233
    (1944); Sec. Sav. Bank v. California, 
    263 U.S. 282
    (1923). As most relevant
    here, the Court in Luckett held that, in addition to the notice afforded by publication,
    “[t]he [unclaimed property] statute itself is notice to all depositors of banks within the
    state[] of the conditions on which the balances of inactive accounts will be deemed
    presumptively abandoned, and their surrender to the state 
    compelled.” 321 U.S. at 243
    .
    Further, the Court cautioned, “[a]ll persons having property located within a state and
    subject to its dominion must take note of its statutes affecting the control or disposition of
    such property and of the procedure which they set up for those purposes.” 
    Id. Here, as
    in Mullane, the necessary notice had to be provided to two categories of
    property owners: the individuals whose bonds were in Kansas’s possession and the
    original owners of the absent bonds. Regarding the bonds-in-possession, Kansas
    attempted to locate bond owners “us[ing] both internet search sites and LexisNexis record
    searches . . . . as well as searching obituaries[] and records of probate proceedings.” Pl.’s
    Mot. App. at A189. Upon locating potential owners, Kansas sent them “claim
    packets . . . informing them of the existence” of the bonds. 
    Id. With respect
    to the absent bonds, Kansas attempted to obtain information about
    the original owners’ names and last known addresses from Treasury, but Treasury
    refused to provide it. See 
    id. at A208–09
    (denying FOIA request); 
    id. at A345–47
    (same);
    
    id. at A355
    (denying FOIA appeal). Notably, Treasury did not deny that such
    bondholders existed; instead, it stated that it withheld the requested records because, in
    Treasury’s view, they were FOIA-exempt. See 
    id. at A347.
    Thus, as in Mullane, Kansas could not discover individualized information about
    the absent bondholders through the exercise of reasonable diligence. Further, as in
    Luckett, the 2000 amendment to Kansas’s unclaimed property law (as well as Treasury’s
    regulations and its decades-long position regarding states’ rights to secure title to federal
    savings bonds pursuant to valid judicial proceedings) provided some notice of the
    possibility that bonds might escheat in the future. Accordingly, considering the
    “practicalities and peculiarities” of this case, the Court concludes that Kansas supplied
    constitutionally adequate notice of the state court proceedings to the absent bondholders.
    35
    In summary, the Court concludes that the state court did not violate the Due
    Process Clause when it asserted in rem jurisdiction over the absent bonds, and that
    Kansas’s efforts to notify the absent bondholders of the proceeding via publication passed
    constitutional muster. Accordingly, for the reasons discussed above, the Court rejects the
    government’s argument that the state court escheatment proceedings were not valid
    judicial proceedings within the meaning of 31 C.F.R. § 315.20(b).21
    E.      Kansas’s Fifth Amendment Takings Claim
    As noted above, in Count VII of its complaint, Kansas alleged that Treasury’s
    failure to redeem the absent bonds amounted to a taking of its property without just
    compensation. See Compl. ¶¶ 141–43. In its ruling on the government’s motion to
    dismiss, the Court denied the government’s motion with respect to the takings claim
    because, under Federal Circuit precedent, a plaintiff may “alleg[e] in the same complaint
    two alternative theories for recovery against the Government . . . one for breach of
    contract and one for a taking under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution.” See 
    Estes, 123 Fed. Cl. at 91
    (quoting Stockton E. Water Dist. v. United States, 
    583 F.3d 1344
    , 1368
    (Fed. Cir. 2009)). In Stockton East, the Federal Circuit also observed that “[i]t has long
    been the policy of the courts to decide cases on non-constitutional grounds when that is
    available, rather than reach out for the constitutional 
    issue.” 583 F.3d at 1368
    . For that
    reason, “when a case arises in which both a contract and a taking cause of action are pled,
    the trial court may properly defer the taking issue . . . in favor of first addressing the
    contract issue.” 
    Id. “[O]f course,”
    the Federal Circuit continued, “when a plaintiff is
    awarded recovery for the alleged wrong under one theory, there is no reason to address
    the other theories.” 
    Id. Here, the
    Court has determined that Kansas has succeeded to title over the bonds
    but it has not yet “awarded recovery” to Kansas on its breach-of-contract claims.
    Accordingly, the Court will defer ruling on the parties’ cross-motions for summary
    judgment as to Kansas’s takings claim pending further proceedings in the case.
    CONCLUSION
    For the reasons discussed above, the Court concludes that Kansas is the lawful
    owner of the absent bonds pursuant to 31 C.F.R. § 315.20(b). As such, it is entitled to
    21
    In Count IV of its complaint, Kansas argues that the government should be equitably
    estopped from denying its requests to redeem the absent bonds based on its recognition of
    Kansas’s ownership of the bonds in possession, and upon the 1952 Escheat Decision as
    well as “other, similar statements made over the past sixty years that Treasury would
    recognize title-based state escheat statutes.” Compl. ¶ 118. As the government points out,
    however, equitable estoppel may not be used as a basis to impose liability on the United
    States. See Office of Pers. Mgmt. v. Richmond, 
    496 U.S. 414
    , 426–30 (1990); Doe v.
    United States, 
    372 F.3d 1347
    , 1356–57 (Fed. Cir. 2004) (citing Schweiker v. Hansen, 
    450 U.S. 785
    (1981)). Accordingly, the government is entitled to judgment as a matter of law
    with respect to Count IV.
    36
    receive from the government the information necessary to allow it to make a request to
    redeem the bonds. Accordingly, Plaintiff’s motion for partial summary judgment as to
    liability is GRANTED as to Counts I, II, III, and VI of its complaint. The government’s
    motion for summary judgment is GRANTED as to Count IV of Plaintiff’s complaint;
    otherwise it is DENIED.
    The parties shall file a joint status report by August 21, 2017, suggesting further
    proceedings in this case.
    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    s/ Elaine D. Kaplan
    ELAINE D. KAPLAN
    Judge
    37
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 13-1011

Citation Numbers: 133 Fed. Cl. 47

Judges: Elaine D. Kaplan

Filed Date: 8/8/2017

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 1/13/2023

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