This is a takings case in which Bayou des Families Development Corp. (“BDF”) alleges that the denial by the United States (“the Government”) of a permit to build a levee effected a taking of its property without just compensation, thereby violating the Fifth Amendment of the U.S. Constitution.
BACKGROUND
This takings case has been twenty-five years in the making. BDF is a real estate investment venture by a group of landowners who planned to develop some two thousand acres of land located on the west bank of the Mississippi River in Jefferson Parish. They acquired the property in 1972. Much of it is eypress-tupelo gum swamp and marsh. Their development plan called for extensive canalization, construction of a major levee, and involved blocking of certain existing waterways running through the property. The property is situated in an area where, as early as 1969, the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers (“the Corps”) had been involved in discussions concerning the possible construction of a hurricane protection levee.
Within a year after acquiring the property, BDF, having obtained the necessary permissions from Jefferson Parish, began construction of the levee and canal system. Meanwhile, in October 1972, the Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments (“the Act”) were enacted. See 33 U.S.C. § 1251 et seq. (1994) (renamed the Clean Water Act in 1977). In 1974, the Corps, having learned of the levee construction by BDF, issued a cease and desist order to BDF, and informed BDF that federal permits as provided by § 404 of the Act were required for construction of the levee and canal. The levee at that time was approximately 90% complete.
When BDF did not respond as the Government wished, the United States brought an enforcement action against BDF. See United States v. Bayou Des Families Dev. Corp., No. 75-536 (E.D.La.1975). Thereafter, in 1975 BDF applied for an after-the-fact permit. The Corps waited almost four years before issuing a denial of BDF’s application for the permit on September 17, 1979. Several factors contributed to the Corps’ indecision during the intervening years. One was the continuing uncertainty about the placement of the west bank flood control and hurricane protection levee. For example, in 1978 the Corps had presented a number of proposals for the hurricane levee placement to the Jefferson Parish Council. One of these proposals followed the alignment of the BDF levee.
Another consideration was the potential creation of the Jean Lafitte National Historical Park (“the park”) in the vicinity of BDF’s property. In 1972, Congress appropriated funds to study the creation of the park and subsequently established the park by congressional enactment in 1978. See 16 U.S.C. § 230 (1994). The park consists of a “core area,” essentially land which the Government would acquire, and a “park protection zone” of land which would remain in private hands but the uses of which would be regulated by local authorities pursuant to the federal plan. Over 1000 of BDF’s 2000 acres he in the park protection zone.
Following the 1979 denial of its after-the-fact permit, BDF brought suit against the Corps in the federal district court for the Eastern District of Louisiana. In its suit, BDF challenged the authority of the Corps to exercise jurisdiction over its property. It sought to enjoin the Corps’ denial of its permit, and to enjoin the Corps’ recommendation of a levee alignment that differed from its own levee. BDF raised both constitutional and statutory challenges to the Government’s actions. In 1982, the district court upheld the permit denial, rejecting all of BDF’s arguments. With regard to plaintiff BDF’s allegations of a Fifth Amendment taking, the district court concluded its extensive analysis of the issues by saying, “Plaintiffs exclusive remedy for claims of uncompensated takings, through delay or otherwise, if any are present in this case, rests with the Court of Claims under the Tucker Act____ Because plaintiff has an adequate remedy at law for money damages if, indeed, any taking of plaintiffs property has occurred, injunc-tive relief is not appropriate in this case.” Bayou Des Families Dev. Corp. v. United States Corps of Eng’rs,
While the Louisiana litigation was in progress, BDF filed its suit against the United States in the Court of Federal Claims on July 25, 1991, alleging a taking and demanding just compensation under the Fifth Amendment. The Court of Federal Claims found that the alleged taking first accrued on September 21,1979, the date when the Corps denied BDF’s levee permit. The court dismissed BDF’s complaint as untimely under 28 U.S.C. § 2501 since eleven years had transpired between the accrual of the cause of action and the filing of the suit. See 28 U.S.C. § 2501 (1994) (“Every claim of which the United States Court of Federal Claims has jurisdiction shall be barred unless the petition thereon is filed within six years after such claim first accrues.”).
DISCUSSION
“Ripeness” in takings jurisprudence, and in particular in cases such as this, is a blend of prudential and constitutional concepts. See, e.g., Suitum v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, — U.S.-,-& n. 7,
The Government, as a defendant, uses the ripeness doctrine as both a sword and a shield. As a shield against suit, the Government will argue that the case is not yet ripe for judicial decision. It will explain that the disputed development proposal has not yet been fully explored; the property owner may
As a sword against recovery, the Government will argue that the case is over-ripe. The governmental decision had been made definitively, and the property owner waited too long to bring suit. Because the cause of action against the Government accrued more years ago than the relevant statute of limitations provides, the property owner is barred from a recovery on the claim. The result of a successful over-ripe defense is that the taking goes forever unrecompensed.
This case is of the latter kind. The Government in effect concedes that all elements of a cause of action accrued in the plaintiff’s hands, but accrued more than six years before the suit was filed — six years being the relevant period under the applicable statute of limitations. See 28 U.S.C. § 2501 (1994). The trial court ruled as a matter of law that the Government was correct. We, however, review decisions on matters of law independently and anew. See Applegate v. United States,
The determination of when in the permit application process the point of sufficient finality is reached so as to effect a taking can be problematic.
The Supreme Court has stated the general rule to be that a case is ripe when there has been a “final decision regarding the application of the [challenged] regulations to the property at issue” from “the government entity charged with implementing the regulations.” Williamson County Reg’l Planning Comm’n,
Following the Corps’ permit denial in 1979, BDF did not submit further permit applications. Instead, it exhaustively litigated the validity of the Corps’ denial. See Bayou Des Families Dev. Corp.,
BDF argues that its takings claim did not ripen until 1986, when the Corps granted Jefferson Parish a permit for a hurricane levee on an alignment other than that of BDF’s original plan. BDF claims that because throughout the period of continued negotiations between Jefferson Parish and the Corps there was a possibility that a hurricane levee would be built on BDF’s original alignment, its land was not rendered worthless until the matter was finally resolved. This argument mixes two separate issues. It is true that the cast of characters — BDF, Jefferson Parish, the Corps of Engineers— was largely the same in both the BDF permit denial matter and the hurricane levee project. And it is true that the two issues had many overlapping considerations. Nevertheless, as the Louisiana Supreme Court noted, the motivating forces behind the two issues were different. In the case of the BDF permit, rightly or wrongly, the inclusion of BDF’s land in the Jean Lafitte Park protection zone played a major role. See West Jefferson Levee Dist.,
Even if the 1979 permit denial did not suffice for finality purposes, the Louisiana federal district court’s 1982 decision, made in response to BDF’s challenge to the permit denial, left no doubt about the legally binding nature of the Government’s action. As previously mentioned, after concluding that the Corps action in denying the permit was legally valid, the trial judge instructed BDF to seek its takings remedy in the Court of Federal Claims under the Tucker Act. See Bayou Des Families Dev. Corp.,
This is not to say that BDF was necessarily wrong in choosing to seek a solution to its problem by negotiation over the placement of the proposed hurricane levee, rather than through further litigation with the Government over the denial of the permit for the original levee. It is only to say that these were two different strategies open to BDF. The choice of one did not preclude the other, but neither did it somehow postpone BDF’s obligation under the law to bring its takings claim, if one were to be brought, in a timely manner.
This decision should not be read to require the filing by property owners of premature claims, nor should it be seen to discourage a property' owner’s taking the time to explore with a permitting agency mutually agreeable alternatives. The permit application process often involves extensive negotiations between developers and the permitting agency. When wetlands are involved, the issues can be particularly difficult to resolve amicably.
CONCLUSION
We affirm the judgment of the Court of Federal Claims.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. ”[N]or shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” U.S. Const. amend. V, cl. 4.
. In 1985, the Supreme Court affirmed the Corps’ authority under the Act over wetlands,
. The record indicates that the initial purchase price paid by BDF for the 2000 acres was $7,161,200, and that BDF had previously sold several parcels of the land, with total gross proceeds from the sales in excess of $9,000,000. See West Jefferson Levee Dist. v. Coast Quality Constr. Corp.,
. For a discussion of the history and current status of the ripeness doctrine in takings law, see Thomas E. Roberts, Ripeness after Lucas, in After Lucas: Land Use Regulation and the Taking of Property Without Compensation 11-28 (David L. Callies ed., 1993).
. See, e.g., Thomas E. Roberts, Ripeness and Forum Selection in Fifth Amendment Takings Litigation, 11 J. Land Use & Envtl. L. 37, 47-56 (1995) (explaining the difference between the need for finality apart from exhausting administrative remedies, and noting the need for reapplication when it is not futile); Gregory M. Stein, Regulatory Takings and Ripeness in the Federal Courts, 48 Vand. L.Rev. 1, 11-13, 26-32 (1995) (describing four critical moments in a federal regulatory takings claim, including both the "effective moment,” defined as the point when the landowner's last required application is finally denied by the highest administrative body with power to consent, as well as the "ripeness moment,” when the takings claim actually ripens).
. Numerous articles discuss the difficulties in finding the proper balance between federal regulations to preserve wetlands and private landowners’ property rights. See, e.g., Virginia S. Albrecht & Paul E. Hagen, Regulatory Takings Issues in the Context of Federal Environmental/Land Use Regulation, 445 Practising Law Institute, Litigation and Administrative Practice Course Handbook Series 951, 967-81 (1992) (reviewing federal regulatory takings case law in the context of federal wetlands regulation). But see Michael K. Braswell & Stephen L. Poe, Private Property vs. Federal Wetlands Regulation: Should Private Landowners Bear the Cost of Wetlands Protection?, 33 Am. Bus. L.J. 179, 206-23 (1995) (suggesting that landowners whose initial permit applications have been denied should file immediately for a taking rather than negotiating or contesting the denial).
. Plaintiff contends that the trial court erred in treating the question before it as a motion to dismiss under RCFC 12(b), rather than a motion for summary judgment under Rule 56. The Government in its motion papers styled its motion as one for summary judgment, alleging that the claims are time-barred and therefore the court lacks subject matter jurisdiction to entertain the suit. The trial court understood this as a challenge to its jurisdiction, and treated it as a motion to dismiss, apparently under Rule 12(b)(1). Ordinarily, a statute of limitations defense is an affirmative defense raised by the defendant, either initially as a Rule 12(b)(6) motion to dismiss for failure of the pleading to state a claim upon which relief can be granted (z.e., the pleading shows on its face that the claim is time-barred), or later as a Rule 56 motion for summary judgment based on uncontroverted facts. Here the trial court decided the matter on the basis of facts derived from the pleadings and prior litigation of record. Defendant does not contest the fact finding as such, but rather the conclusions that were drawn from the facts of record. We conclude that the trial court could properly treat the Government’s motion as a motion to dismiss under RCFC 12(b) — whether viewed as a bar to the grant of a remedy or as a bar to the court’s exercise of jurisdiction over the cause, the result is the same.
