Beside a stream in South Carolina stands one of the most remarkable white elephants in our American history, rich as it is in similar constructions. It is a plant which is completely useless but has absorbed, according to its owners, over $200,000,000 in their capital plus unstated amounts in public funds. The owners seek to shift their *1573 loss to the United States, making use of the consent granted in the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491, to sue the government for just compensation in instances of takings of property “for public use.” The Claims Court dismissed the suit, without prejudice, for want of “jurisdiction” because it was premature but held, in the alternative, if the court had jurisdiction, the suit must be dismissed “with prejudice” because the property allegedly taken “was generated under the existing regulatory system.” We hold that if premature at all, the suit was so as to only part of the claim, and the prematurity was not jurisdictional. Therefore, we turn to the alternative decision and hold the court had jurisdiction to make it and that the claimant had no legally protected property right to operate the plant, which could have been the subject of a fifth amendment taking, as against the fear it would injure the national security. Therefore, we affirm the dismissal with prejudice.
Background
The Claims Court decision,
Before the Atomic Energy Act (AEA) of 1954, 42 U.S.C. §§ 2011-2282, the United States Government, which had discovered how to achieve nuclear fission, and exploited it in the world’s first atom bomb, pretty much kept to itself even the development of peaceful uses. The AEA had, however, as one of its objects, the enlistment of private capital, which was supposedly better able to control its costs, in the development of electric power from nuclear fission. A number of private companies came into being which were to feed electricity into the ordinary power grid, but with such fission as the source, instead of combustion, or the fall of water. One of the problems the newborn companies faced was the disposal of their “spent fuel.” The government agreed to take care of that. The best way to do it appeared to be a recycling process. The fuel, enriched uranium dioxide, became “spent” in the course of its use, i.e., no longer able to produce power, but radioactive and dangerous still. It had, in part, been transmuted into plutonium. Disposal was difficult. The government therefore promised the power producers to recycle the spent fuel. This involved separating the plutonium from other components, and it could be used for military purposes or to make more fuel. The plant involved in this case is solely to perform this recycling operation and, except for minor structures which have been dismantled and carried away, it is nearly useless for anything else.
Under the AEA it could be constructed and operated only under separate licenses which the Nuclear Regulatory Commission (NRC) could grant or withhold, taking into account, among other things, whether issuance “would be inimical to the common defense and security or the health and safety of the public.” 42 U.S.C. §§ 2133(d), 2134(d). The parties agree that the NRC “induced” private industry to undertake the awesome reprocessing task, the motive of the NRC being, of course, its commitment to the power producers to dispose of their spent fuel. It believed that this operation, too, could be best performed by private industry with private capital. Besides jawboning, the “inducement” took the form of free land as well as technical assistance.
The appellants, being awarded a construction license in 1970, commenced construction in 1971 on the donated land at Barnwell, South Carolina, after which the plant is named. In 1974 the government commenced to process the operating license and besides, to prepare an environmental impact statement, here called GESMO. This is necessary for every government-sponsored project such as this (42 U.S.C. § 4321 and ff), and has never been completed.
While the record is replete with government “inducement,” we note an entire absence of any evidence that the government *1574 in any manner, express or implied, contracted to share whatever risks there might be in the venture, to warrant that it would succeed, or otherwise shield it against vicissitudes.
Apparently, in connection with the GES-MO study, concern began to be expressed as to the impact this plant might have on the problem of “nuclear proliferation.” While every application of nuclear fission is fearsome to many, the possibility that nations, whose slogan is “death to the United States,” having irresponsible, unprincipled, and bloody-handed dictators, might get nuclear weapons, is pretty near the top of anyone’s list of dreads. The bearing of this on the Barnwell plant was evidently not seen when its construction was licensed. Since the recycling produces plutonium, anyone who had a peaceful plant powered by nuclear fission might, if he also had a recycling plant, obtain a nuclear weapon. Thus, checking the use of the recycling process in foreign countries was vital to the control of “nuclear proliferation,” and how could the United States assume the lead in such an effort if it ran a recycling plant itself?
On April 7,1977, President Jimmy Carter announced that because of the above concerns “we,” the United States of America, will “defer indefinitely the commercial reproducing and recycling of the plutonium produced in the United States nuclear power programs.” Accordingly, a freeze took effect in the processing of the operating license for the Barnwell plant, and in the GESMO. The wisdom and propriety of this action is of course not before us.
Florida Rock Industries, Inc. v. United States,
The parties have stipulated that the United States used Barnwell’s operating license as a “bargaining chip.” This we do not understand to mean that the operating license was actually bargained away to purchase some agreed concession from some foreign country.
Cf. Gray v. United States,
On October 8, 1981, President Reagan announced he was “lifting the indefinite ban which previous administrations placed on commercial reprocessing activities in the United States.” However, there has been no action by the NRC or the Department of Energy to revive consideration of the operating license or the GESMO. The government used the plant for R & D from 1977 to 1983, but without profit to Allied-General. Counsel stated that some salvageable portions of the plant have been removed and carried off, but most of it stands there, empty and forlorn. Allied-General has not made any use of what the trial court calls “statutory procedures” to reactivate the license, and that court thinks that if no more, Allied-General should insist on and obtain a final executive decision on its license application. The court cites Supreme Court authority that a taking claim for a regulatory action is premature until one knows “the nature and extent of permitted development.”
Among various lawsuits in which Allied-General has been embroiled, respecting Barnwell, one is particularly important. The others can be left to the trial court’s summary. Allied-General was a party to the case reported as
Westinghouse Electric Corp. v. United States,
Discussion
I
The trial court’s analysis is for the most part sound and its consideration of the precedents exhaustive. We refer the reader to it, but do not adopt it as our own opinion. We agree with the trial court that it is not reasonable to ask the court to assess damages for a taking when it is not known just what interest is taken, or when, or for how long, and these are matters best left to be stated by the alleged taker itself. If it refuses to say, inferences can be drawn, as the Third Circuit stated. It may, however, not be at all reasonable to ask the claimant to delay in filing his suit. If, as here, a taking claim is stated, the court has jurisdiction of the subject matter and it may do a great injustice if it dismisses, even without prejudice, a claim brought almost 6 years (the statutory period of limitations) after it first arguably accrued. As we did in
Aulston v. United States,
Subject-matter jurisdiction of the federal courts is initially determined according to the “well-pleaded complaint.”
Gronholz v. Sears, Roebuck and Co.,
Accordingly, we hold that the Claims Court had jurisdiction. In view of this, the trial court properly passed beyond the threshold exhaustion issue to examine whether the expectation of being awarded *1576 an operating license was a property right protected by the fifth amendment.
II
We think the basic rule that is dispositive here is that as against reasonable state regulation, no one has a legally protected right to use property in a manner that is injurious to the safety of the general public.
Mugler v. Kansas,
Now in
Keystone Bituminous Coal Ass’n v. DeBenedictis,
— U.S. —,
A later case, also rehabilitated as prece-dential, is
Hadacheck v. Sebastian,
The Third Circuit holding in Westinghouse Electric Corp. would constitute a collateral estoppel on the parties to that case, if one is needed, as to that issue. This provision in our view stands, with respect to the just compensation clause, the same as state action to protect public “health, morals, and safety” stood a century ago, or “health, safety, and welfare” today. One who proposes use of property injurious to common defense stands vis-a- *1577 vis the Federal Government the same as one whose use of property would be injurious to the interests the state protects under its police power.
III
If, however, despite its absence in Mu-gler, some antecedent acceptance of the regulatory scheme by appellants here is requisite if the government is not to be liable for a taking, such acceptance occurred. Appellants do not deny they accepted the regulatory scheme so far as it might have resulted in denial of construction or operating licenses on the ground the plant, as appellants would operate it, was unsafe. They deny that nuclear proliferation grounds were within the contemplation of the parties. However, the statute required the agency to take into account the common defense and security of the nation in passing on the licenses. We cannot believe that this did not include the unforeseen as well as the predictable. The attendant circumstances: the novelty of nuclear fission, the fearsome effect of its use in war, the public fears, all forbid us to suppose that the government had committed itself to use of its licensing power not to respond to some new ground of hesitation just because it was not originally foreseen.
Use of the licensing power is invalid if it is used to accomplish some object not within the purpose of that power,
Nollan v. California Coastal Commission,
— U.S. —,
IV
Appellants have much to say about the “inducement” extended to them on the government’s behalf to obtain the commitment of private capital that occurred. There was extended negotiation, with much “jawboning” on the government’s part, with tender of technical assistance, and the government also furnished the land. This history of direct negotiation is unusual in regulatory taking cases, and we have not much guidance in the precedents to aid our deliberations.
We find the absence of a contract count in the complaint to be dispositive. One undoubtedly would be there if the existence of a contract right would be arguable, and one is present in the companion case,
NL Industries v. United States,
Conclusion
The judgment of the Claims Court is reversed respecting the unripeness of the complaint and dismissing without prejudice. It is affirmed respecting its fifth amendment holding, and the cause is remanded with directions to dismiss the complaint with prejudice.
AFFIRMED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
