767 Third Avenue Associates and Sage Realty Corporation (collectively “Sage”) appeal from a judgment of the United States Court of Federal Claims granting the government’s motion for summary judgment.
767 Third Ave. Assocs. v. United States,
BACKGROUND
Sage Realty Corporation, as agent for 767 Third Avenue Associates, entered into leases in 1981 with three organizations from the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (SFRY). The Consulate General of the Soсialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia (Consulate) and the Yugoslav Press and Cultural Center (Cultural Center) leased the 17th and 18th floors, respectively, of the premises at 767 Third Avenue, New York City, New York, beginning in February 1981. The Yugoslavia Chamber of Economy (Chamber of Economy) leased a portion of the 24th floor of the same building beginning in March 1981. Each lease was for a ten-year period.
Article 45 of each lease provided options for extensions. It read as follows:
ARTICLE 45
EXTENSIONS OF TERM
45.01 Tenant shall have the right to extend the term of this Lease for two (2) additional, consecutive terms of five (5) years each.... The options contained in this Article 45 to extend the term of this Lease shall in each instance be subject to the following terms and conditions: (i) Tenant shall give Landlord notice (hereinafter called the “Extension Notice”) of its election to extend the term of this Lease at least eighteen (18) months but nor [sic] more than twenty-four (2I¡) months prior *1577 to the commencement of the relevant Extension Term....
45.03 If Tenant does not send an Extension Notice pursuant to the provisions of Section 45.01 hereof, this Article 45 shall have no further force or effect, and the term of this Lease shall expire on the last day of the initial term thereof or on the last day of the Extension Term then in progress, as the case may be.
None of the tenants provided an Extension Notice at least eighteen months prior to the expiration of the leases. However, less than one month prior to the expiration of its lease, the Chamber, of Economy entered into a written agreement extending its lease to August 31,1996. Likewise, after the expiration of its leases, the Cultural Center on October 21, and the Consulate on October 28, 1991, entered into similar written agreements extending its leases to September 30,1994, and August 31, 1996, respectively.
At the time the tenants extended their leases, the SFRY was experiencing significant turmoil. In June 1991, two of the six Yugoslav rеpublics, Croatia and Slovenia, voted to secede from the SFRY. By July, the country was on the brink of a full-fledged civil war. Over that summer, violence erupted, which ultimately led to a bloody ethnic war. On May 24, 1992, the United States formally acknowledged that the SFRY ceased to exist.
See 767 Third Ave.,
One day later, the United States Department of the Treasury ordered the closure of the Consulate, including the Cultural Center, and directed that operations at these office's cease by May 31, 1992. Shortly thereafter, on May 30, President Bush declared that “all property and interests in property in the name of the Government of the Socialist Fеderal Republic of Yugoslavia or the Government of the Federal Republic of Yugoslavia that are in the United States ... are hereby blocked.” Exec.Order No. 12,808, 57 Fed. Reg. 23,299 (1992). This , order specifically included the Chamber of Economy. Id. at 23,300. A second Executive Order issued on June 5 in which the President expanded the sanctions, freezing Yugoslav assets in the United States. Exec.Order No. 12,810, 57 Fed.Reg. 24,347 (1992). These Executive Orders were issued pursuant to the President’s delegated authority under the International Emergency Economic Powers Act (IEEPA), 50 U.S.C. §§ 1701-1706 (1988 & Supp. V 1993), which was enacted in 1977.
In response to the United States government’s actions, the Cultural Center and the Consulate sent lease termination notices on May 27 and 28, respectively. Sage responded on May 29 by notifying them that they were in default of the leases due to arrears in rent payments. Sage sent a similar notice to the Chamber of Economy' on June 11, 1992. Because the three tenants did not cure their defaults, Sage filed suit against them in the United States District Court for the Southern District of New York On July 2, 1992, seeking past due rent. Sage, however, did not seek damages for the default by the SFRY organizations pursuant to Article 18 of the lease agreements, which provided for damages. 1
Thereafter, on July 9, 1992, as part of the implementation of President Bush’s Exеcutive Orders, Treasury agents entered and inspected the offices of the Yugoslav organizations at 767 Third Avenue. After the inspection and upon leaving, the agents posted the following notice on the doors of the three offices:
*1578 THESE PREMISES HAVE BEEN CLOSED BY ORDER OF THE UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE TREASURY.
NO ACCESS TO THESE PREMISES IS PERMITTED WITHOUT SPECIFIC AUTHORIZATION FROM THE OFFICE OF FOREIGN ASSETS CONTROL, U.S. TREASURY DEPARTMENT.
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION CONTACT THE OFFICE OF FOREIGN ASSETS CONTROL AT 202/622-2430. Criminal Penalties for violation of this order may include up to ten years imprisonment, $500,000 in corporate, and $250,000 in individual fines. In addition, civil penalties of up to $10,000 per count may be imposed administratively.
On one occasion after these notices were posted, Sage requested access to the premises in' order to ensure the building’s safety. The government granted the request. Sage made no other such access requests. On August 28, 1992, the government sent a letter informing Sage that it was “free to take possession of the space formerly occupied by the Yugoslav Consulate General.” • The letter further provided that Sage “may disregard and remove the sign posted there.” Similar letters, on September 18 and September 23 notified Sage that it could take possession of the premises formerly occupied by the Cultural Center and the Chamber of Economy.
Prior to the posting of the notices restricting access to the premises, Sage had filed suit against the government in thе Court of Federal Claims on June 12, 1992. Sage alleged that the closure of the Consulate, Cultural Center, and Chamber of Economy constituted a regulatory taking of its property, consisting of the benefits of its leases, for which it was entitled to just compensation under the Fifth Amendment. After the government posted the notices, Sage amended its complaint to allege that the government physically seized the SFRY offices by such posting, which it believed constituted a taking for which it was entitled to just compensation. In response, the government filed a motion for summary judgment, which the Court of Federal Claims granted.
767 Third Ave.,
The court held thаt Sage had no compen-sable investment-backed expectation “to be free from government interference with [its] contract rights.” 2 Id. at 222. In so holding, the court determined that the appropriate date for analysis of Sage’s expectations was 1991, when the parties extended the leases, not 1981, when the parties initially entered into the lease agreements. Id. at 220. The court indicated, however, that even if 1981 were the appropriate year to analyze Sage’s expectations, Sage still had no investment-backed expectation to be free from government interferеnce with its interests in the leases. Therefore, the court held that Sage failed to establish that there was a taking of property within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment.
The trial court further held that the government’s actions did not constitute a per se physical taking because the government “did not take physical possession of the subject premises and Sage was never physically denied access to the property on those occasions when it asked for access.” Id. at 222. In so finding, the court held that posting signs and restricting access at the premises did not constitute a separate physical taking. Id. Pursuant to the court’s grant of summary judgment, the court issued an order to dismiss Sage’s complaint. Sage now appeals.
DISCUSSION
Whether the Court of Federal Claims properly granted summary judgment is “a question of law subject to complete and independent review” by this court.
Tabb Lakes,
*1579
Ltd. v. United States,
I. Alleged Regulatory Taking
Sage first argues that the court erred in granting summary judgment on the fact-intensive question concerning whether there was a regulatory taking, because numerous issues of fact exist as to whethеr Sage’s expectations were reasonable given the regulatory environment.
3
Sage also argues that the proper date for measuring its expectations is 1981, when its leases originally became effective, not 1991, when they were extended. In support, Sage relies on New York case law, which provides that a tenant may invoke equitable principles to require a landlord to accept the renewal of a lease even after a tenant’s failure to provide proper notice.
See J.N.A. Realty Corp. v. Cross Bay Chelsea Inc.,
Sage further argues that even if 1991 is the correct year to analyze Sage’s investment-backed expectations, the court overlooked numerous questions of material fact in connection with Sage’s expectations. In particular, Sage argues that the government did not refute the affidavit of Sage’s Executive Vice President, which stated that neither he nor any0ne else at gage was a “foreign policy expert” who could have foreseen the May 1992 and July 1992 Executive Orders. Moreover, Sage asserts that its past experience leasing office space to other foreign entities whose countries wеre involved in. domestic turmoil led it to believe that the United States government would not evict government officials of such countries.
The government counters that Sage’s subjective arguments that it had a reasonable investment-backed expectation do not raise any issues of material fact sufficient to avoid summary judgment. In support, the government argues that it makes no difference when Sage’s expectations are evaluated. Whether Sage’s expectations are evaluated in 1981 or 1991, it could not have had any reasonable investment-backed expectation to be free from government interference, given the government’s authority with respect to foreign- government presence in the United States. Moreover, the government asserts that Sage’s losses were not due to the government’s actions; rather, Sage’s losses were caused by the failure of the SFRY groups to pay rent and by Sage’s own decision not to seek damages from the SFRY organizations pursuant to the terms of the leases. We agree with the government. There is no genuine issue of material fact in this case, the only issue being one of law, resolvable in favor of the government.
*1580
The Fifth Amendment provides, in pertinent part: “nor shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” U.S. CONST, amend. V. The purpose of the Fifth Amendment is to prevent the “[government from forcing some people alone to bear public burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a whole.”
Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York City,
A taking may occur as a result of a regulatory action that is neither a physical invasion nor a physical restraint. This proposition is based on the oft-cited maxim of Justice Holmes in
Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
To analyze whether a regulation goes so far as to constitute a taking, the Supreme Court has indicated that there is no set formula; the determination depends upon the particular circumstances of the case.
Penn Central,
Even though a regulatory taking analysis is normally ad hoc and fact-intensive, the United States may still be entitled to judgment as a matter of law.
See Chang v. United States,
Prior to 1981, statutory and constitutional authority existed that permitted the government to take various actions against other countries, including the blocking of assets and closure of foreign government offices.
See Dames & Moore v. Regan,
In light of this precedent, Sagе could not have had a reasonable investment-backed expectation in either 1981 or 1991 that its leases to the SFRY organizations would proceed totally without interference by the government. A landlord leasing office space to organizations of the SFRY in 1981 did so against the backdrop of the government’s foreign policy power. Such a power may rarely be used in the way it was here, but it is part of our- legal framework and its éxis-tence must be considered in any reasonable expectations analysis.
Sage, as a member of the public, was on notice that the government, pursuant to its statutоry and constitutional authority, could close a foreign government’s offices and freeze its assets. The government never guaranteed Sage that it would not exercise its power to close the SFRY government offices. Nor did the government give assurance that the SFRY organizations would perform their obligations under the leases. The government is not an insurer that foreign governments will meet their obligations under lease agreements that are broken as a result of valid United States government actions. Moreover, if the government were to be hable to a lessor under a takings theory, it might logically follow that it wоuld also be hable to the lessee, who was actually the party the government proceeded against. Such is not the law, for it would encumber the sovereign power of the government to expel foreign government agencies and to block assets when, in the exercise of its foreign pohcy powers, it decides it is necessary to do so.
See Dames,
As this court has stated, “[w]hen deahng in foreign commerce, the possibility of changing world circumstances and a corresponding response by the United States government can never be completely discounted.”
Chang,
An additional reason for affirming the trial court’s decision is that the Supreme Court has held that no taking occurs when, as occurred in this case, expectations under a contract are merely frustrated by lawful government action not directed against the takings claimant.
Omnia Commercial Co. v. United States,
[T]he contract consists in the agreement and obligation to perform. If one makes a contract for the personal services of another or for the sale and delivery of property, the Government, by drafting one of the parties into the army, or by requisitioning the subject-matter, does not thereby take the contract.
Omnia,
In
NL Industries, Inc. v. United States,
Sage argues that the decisions in
Omnia
and
NL Industries
are contrary to. more recent ease authority. In particular, Sage points to
Penn Central
and
United Nuclear Corp. v. United States,
The cases relied on by Sage all involve government actions which regulated both the plaintiff and the plaintiffs property interest.
Penn Central,
The government, by closing the consulаte and blocking the SFRY’s assets, did not take any property interest of Sage. Sage merely had an expectation of future income from rent payments by the SFRY organizations. The SFRY organizations still had a legal obligation to pay rent, which they disavowed *1583 when the government blocked the SFRY’s assets and closed the SFRY government offices. The government neither acquired from Sage the SFRY organizations’ obligations to pay rent nor deprived Sage of any right to enforce its agreements. Sage’s remedy, if any, lay against the SFRY organizations, which defaulted on their lease obligations. Article 18 of the leases spеcifically provided damage remedies that Sage could have attempted to enforce in its district court suit. The government’s actions in this case thus did not take Sage’s interests in the leases.
II. Alleged Per Se Taking
Sage further argues that the court erred in failing to find that a
per se
taking occurred when the government denied Sage access to the premises at 767 Third Avenue. Sage bases its argument on the terms of the notice posted by the Treasury Department-at the premises. Analogizing the present ease to
Loretto,
The Supreme Court has described two categories of regulatory action that constitute
per se
takings requiring compensation “without case-specific inquiry into the public interest advanced in support of the restraint.”
Lucas v. South Carolina Coastal Council,
— U.S. -, -,
Neither has occurred here and Sage’s reliance on
Loretto
and
Skip Kirchdorfer
is misplaced. In
Loretto,
the Supreme Court held that a New York statute rеquiring a landlord to permit installation of cable television facilities on the landlord’s property constituted a permanent physical occupation of property. The installation “involved a direct physical attachment of plates, boxes, wires, bolts, and screws to the building, completely occupying space [on] the roof and along the building’s exterior wall.”
Loretto,
The government’s actions in this case, however, are not comparable. The government did not physically occupy the premises at 767 Third Avenue. Putting aside the fact that the notices were in effect for less than three months, the locks were not changed, the doors were not broken down, a guard was not placed at the door. No plates, boxes, wires, or bolts were attached to the premises. Sage was granted access to the building the only time it requested access. We do not agree that the placing of a notice on the door of the premises was “the functional equivalent of placing armed troops at the doors.” Although the notice was backed by the force of law, it did not physically prevent *1584 Sage from entering the premises, and access was available when requested. Because the government did not physically occupy the premises at 767 Third Avenue, the government’s actions did not rise to the level of a per se Loreiio-type physical taking.
Further, wе agree with the government that, if anything, the posting of the notice imposed only a non-compensable regulatory scheme that blocked access to the premises without authorization.
6
The Supreme Court has stated that “the mere assertion of a regulatory jurisdiction by a governmental body does not constitute a regulatory taking.”
United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes, Inc.,
We have considered all the other arguments raised by Sage, but find them not persuasive.
CONCLUSION
The government’s actions in closing the SFRY government offices and posting notiсes at the premises of 767 Third Avenue did not effect takings of private property for purposes of the Fifth Amendment. Accordingly, we affirm the Court of Federal Claims’s grant of the government’s motion for summary judgment.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Article 18 read as follows:
DAMAGES
18.01 If this Lease is terminated ... by reason of default hereunder on the part of Tenant, Tenant shall pay to Landlord as damages, at the election of Landlord, either
(a) a sum which at the time of such termination of this Lease ... represents the then value of the excess, if any. of
(1) the aggregate of the fixed annual rent and the additional rent payable hereunder which would have been payable by Tenаnt ... had this Lease not so terminated ... over
(2) the aggregate rental value of the demised premises for the same period, or
(b) sums equal to the fixed annual rent and the additional rent ... payable hereunder which would have heen payable by Tenant had this Lease not so terminated ..., provided, however, that if Landlord shall re-let ... Landlord shall credit Tenant with the net rents received by Landlord from such re-letting....
. The parties do not dispute that Sage's right to income under the leases is “property” within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment. Intangible interests, including those created by contracts, have been found to be proрerty for purposes of the Fifth Amendment Takings Clause.
See Connolly v. Pension Benefit Guar. Corp.,
. Sage does not otherwise challenge the validity of the government's actions in this case. When analyzing takings cases under the Tucker Act, the Court of Federal Claims must assume that the government’s actions are a proper exercise of statutory or regulatory authority.
See Florida Rock Indus., Inc. v. United States,
. Sage also argues that the Chamber of Economy was not a consular office of the former SFRY and that therefore this court should perform a different takings analysis with regard to the Chamber of Economy because it was “not evеn linked to a foreign government.” We disagree. Although the Chamber of Economy is not a consular office, we do not find any evidence in the record that indicates the Chamber of Economy was not linked to the SFRY government. To the contrary, Executive Orders 12,808 and 12,810 specifically define the "Government of the Socialist Federal Republic of Yugoslavia" to include the Chamber of Economy.
. For a discussion of the political, social, and economic background of the SFRY and the Balkan region in the late 1970s and early 1980s, see BARBARA JELAVICH, HISTORY OF THE BALKANS — TWENTIETH CENTURY (1983). A more in-depth analysis of the SFRY through 1990 is available in YUGOSLAVIA: A COUNTRY STUDY (Glenn E. Curtis ed., 3d ed. 1992).
. We note that Sage has neither argued nor presented evidence that the posting of the notices met the various factors set forth in Penn Central for proving a regulatory taking.
