Boise Cascade (“Boise”) appeals the judgment of the Court of Federal Claims dismissing its complaint for failure to state a claim. Boise Cascade Corp. v. United States, No. 99-860 L (Ct. Fed. Cl. April 10, 2001). We affirm.
I
This case involves a 65-acre tract of old-growth forested land known as the Walker Creek Unit, located in Clatsop County, Oregon. Boise owns the Walker Creek Unit, which was home to a nesting pair of northern spotted owls until late 1996. The spotted owl is listed as a threatened species under the Endangered Species Act (“ESA”), 16 U.S.C. §§ 1531-1544, and is protected by both the federal government and the State of Oregon.
In January Í997 the nesting female spotted owl was found dead, and the male spotted owl moved to a new nesting area, and a new mate, a few miles from the Walker Creek Unit. In October 1997, the Oregon Department of Forestry (“ODF”), which until that time had prevented Boise from logging in order to protect the owl pair, notified Boise that it was lifting the restriction due' to the departure of the male owl’. In the letter, however, the ODF warned Boise that the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (“Service”) might consider logging the land to be a violation of the ESA, 1 and that it therefore recommended consulting the Service before starting to log the land. The Service inspected the land — at Boise’s invitation — and determined that logging the parcel could harm spotted owls that might otherwise use the *1342 site for nesting. Thus, the Service notified Boise that either it could file an application for an Incidental Take Permit (“ITP”) 2 under section 10 of the ESA if it wished to log the land, or alternatively it could try to enter into a land swap with the State of Oregon. Boise responded by filing suit in federal district court in Oregon seeking a declaratory judgment that its proposed logging operation would not.take .any spotted owls, and requesting that the court enjoin the Service from enforcing the ESA against Boise. The United States filed a counterclaim asking the court to enjoin Boise from logging the Walker Creek Unit. Boise Cascade, slip op. at 3.
After an initial hearing, the district court dismissed Boise’s complaint on ripeness grounds 3 and granted the United States’s motion for a preliminary injunction preventing logging pending the results of the Service’s 1998 breeding season surveys. Because the United States’s counterclaim for a permanent injunction •created a ripe, controversy, the court allowed Boise leave to file a counterclaim seeking the relief it originally sought in its complaint. During the breeding season survey conducted during the pendency of the preliminary injunction, a juvenile spotted owl was discovered living on the Walker Creek Unit. On October 15, 1998, the district court issued an order dismissing Boise’s counterclaims and granting the United States’s request to permanently enjoin Boise from logging the Walker Creek Unit without an ITP. Boise did not appeal the entry of the injunction.
Boise applied for an ITP on November 6,1998. At a hearing on February 5,1999, the district court ordered the Service to act on the permit application by September 1999. On May 17, 1999, the juvenile spotted owl that had been living at the Walker Creek Unit was found dead. After subsequent surveys found no living owls in the area, on July 30,1999, the Service sent the following notice to Boise:
Based on our review of all the information concerning this site over the last three years and the new survey results, the best scientific information currently available indicates that no spotted owls would be taken by Boise Cascade’s planned harvest of the property. Therefore, an Endangered Species Act incidental take permit is no longer required.
The district court lifted the injunction on August 17,1999.
Boise filed a complaint at the Court of Federal Claims on October 6, 1999, seeking just compensation for the “temporary taking' 'of merchantable timber, which it was prevented from logging” due to the injunction entered by the district court in Oregon." Boise advanced four different theories to support its takings claim: (1) a physical taking under
Loretto v. Teleprompter Manhattan CATV Corp.,
The court denied Boise’s motion without prejudice pending disposition of the government’s motion to dismiss, which it considered to raise threshold legal issues. Boise Cascade, slip op. at 6 & n. 4: The court ultimately found both of the government’s arguments persuasive, and granted its motion to dismiss on both grounds. Boise now appeals. We exercise jurisdiction over this appeal from a final judgment of the Court of Federal Claims under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3).
II
We review
de novo
the legal question whether the Court of Federal Claims properly dismissed Boise’s complaint for failure to state a claim.
Dehne v. United States,
The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment prohibits the government from taking property for public use without “just compensation.” U.S. Const, amend. V. This court has developed a two-step approach to takings claims. “First, a court determines whether the plaintiff possesses a valid interest in the property affected by the governmental action, i.e., whether the plaintiff possessed a ‘stick in the bundle of property rights.’”
Karuk Tribe of Cal. v. Ammon,
A
Before reaching the substantive issue • in this case, however, we must -address
&
threshold challenge to the trial court’s and hence our jurisdiction. The government argues that Boise has asked
*1344
the trial court to review the merits of a decision made by a United States district court, and that the Court of Federal Claims does not have jurisdiction to hear such a case. It is true that Article III forbids the Court of Federal Claims, an Article I tribunal, from reviewing the actions of an Article III court such as the Oregon district court.
See Plaut v. Spendthrift Farm, Inc.,
However, resolution of this case did not require the Court of Federal Claims to review the merits of the district court’s order enjoining Boise from logging without a permit. Boise has accepted the validity of the injunction, and only filed suit in the Court of Federal Claims to determine whether the Service’s assertion of jurisdiction over it by seeking and obtaining the injunction worked a taking of its property that requires compensation under the Takings Clause. Whether or not the government action took Boise’s property was not before the district court, nor could it have been. Because Boise seeks over $10,000 in compensation for this alleged taking, 4 the Court of Federal Claims is the sole forum available to hear Boise’s claim. See 28 U.S.C. § 1346(a)(2) (2000). Because the takings claim does not require the trial court to review the district court’s actions, there is no constitutional defect in the Court of Federal Claims’ assertion of jurisdiction over this case.
The government argues that this case is indistinguishable from
AUustiaHe
and
Vereda,
and that those cases therefore mandate dismissal here. We disagree. In
AUustiaHe,
the plaintiffs claimed that the court-appointed bankruptcy trustee committed various errors in his management of the ' bankruptcy estate, and that the bankruptcy court improperly approved the errors.
Allustiarte,
Boise’s situation differs in several important respects from that of the parties in Allustiarte and Vereda., First, unlike in Allustiarte, the government here is not merely an impartial judicial arbiter whose actions have been improperly appealed to the Court of Federal Claims instead of to the appropriate district court or regional circuit court of appeals. The Service, a government agency, filed a claim against Boise seeking to enjoin its logging activities. That the Service chose to effectuate its mandate to enforce the ESA through a court action rather than'through an agency cease and desist order, for instance, cannot insulate the United States from its duty to pay compensation that may be required by the Fifth Amendment. Second, unlike in Vereda, Congress has not instituted a comprehensive scheme of administrative and judicial review of possible takings of property- occasioned by the Service’s enforcement of the ESA. As noted above, the Court of Federal Claims is the only forum in which Boise’s takings claims could have been brought. Finally, unlike in Vereda and Allustiarte, Boise’s takings claim is not based on the propriety of the district court’s decision, and the trial court therefore would not be called upon to review the merits of the district' court’s decision in order to decide the merits of Boise’s claim. Thus, we hold that the trial court properly assumed jurisdiction of the merits of Boise’s Tucker Act claim.
B
The government asserts that no taking could occur in this case because the injunction, which forms the basis for all of Boise’s regulatory takings claims,
5
did no more than require that no logging take place without a permit. The government’s argument is based largely on the Supreme Court’s decision in
Riverside Bayview.
In that case, the Supreme Court analyzed whether the Clean Water Act authorizes the Army Corps of Engineers (“Corps”) to require landowners to obtain permits before filling wetlands adjacent to navigable bodies of water.
Riverside Bayview,
The Supreme Court reversed, holding that the Sixth Circuit interpreted the statute too narrowly. In the portion of its opinion relevant to this case, the Court addressed the Sixth Circuit’s concern that a broad interpretation of the statute would violate the- Takings Clause. The Court first set forth the general rule with respect to when land use regulations may constitute a taking: “if the ordinance does not substantially advance legitimate state interests ... or denies an owner economically viable use of his land.”
Id.
at 126,
we have made it quité clear that the mere assertion of regulatory jurisdiction by a governmental body does not constitute a regulatory taking. The reasons are obvious. A requirement that a person obtain a permit before engaging in a certain use of his or her property does not itself “take” the property in any sense: after all, the very existence of a permit system' implies that permission may be granted, leaving the landowner free to use his property as desired. Moreover, even if the permit is denied, there may be other viable uses available to the owner. Only when a permit is denied and the effect of the denial is to prevent “economically viable” use of the land in question can it be said that a taking has. occurred.
Id.
at 126-27,
However, Boise argues that far from foreclosing its claim,
Riverside Bay-view
actually supports its theory that a taking occurred. Boise’s argument rests on the
Riverside Bayview
Court’s statement that even though the Corps’ denial of a permit could under certain circumstances be a taking, because an aggrieved landowner can seek compensation under the Tucker Act, “fears that application of the Corps’ permit program might result in a taking did not justify the court in adopting a more limited view of the’ Corps’ authority than the terms of the relevant regulation might otherwise support.”
Id.
at 128-29,
Because the Corps has now denied respondent a permit to fill its property, respondent may well have a ripe claim that a taking has occurred. On the record before us, however, we have no basis for evaluating this claim.... In any event, this lawsuit is not the proper *1347 forum for resolving such a dispute: if the Corps has indeed effectively taken respondent’s property, respondent’s proper course is not to resist the Corps’ suit for enforcement by denying that the regulation covers the property,. but to initiate a suit for compensation in the Claims Court. In so stating, of cburse,-we do not rule that respondent• will be entitled to compensation for any temporary denial of use of its property should the Corps ultimately relent and allow it to be filled. We have not yet resolved the question whether compensation is a constitutionally mandated remedy for “temporary regulatory takings, ” and this ease provides no occasion for deciding the issue.
Id.
at 129 n. 6,
Boise’s interpretation of footnote six is untenable in light of the Riverside Bayview Court’s earlier explanation regarding when a taking occurs, i.e., after a permit has been denied. Read together with the rest of its opinion, the Court’s statement in footnote six regarding compensation for a temporary regulatory taking clearly refers not to normal delays pending a permitting decision, but rather to a situation in which the government first denies a permit but then later relents and lifts the restriction. In other words, the initial denial of a permit is still a necessary trigger for a ripe takings claim. 6 If the government denies a permit, then the aggrieved party can seek compensation. If at some point the government reconsiders the earlier denial and grants a permit (or revokes the permitting requirement), then the aggrieved party can seek compensation for a “temporary regulatory taking.” In either case, Penn Central will govern whether the initial denial of the permit actually took the property in question. Thus, Riverside Bayview supports the proposition that Boise cannot bring a takings claim because the Service never denied Boise’s permit.
As the government notes, in
Tabb Lakes, Ltd. v. United States,
The Court of Federal Claims rejected the takings claim, and we affirmed. We noted that while the cease and desist order did halt all development of the property, it was not necessarily a taking because “[a] taking by-regulatory action is recognized only if such action goes 'too far.’ ”
Id.
at 800 (quoting
Lucas v. S. Carolina Coastal Council, 505
U.S. 1003, 1015,
Boise’s situation is indistinguishable from that of the landowner in Tabb Lakes. The sole difference between the two is that instead of an agency cease and desist order, Boise was subject to a court-ordered injunction. But this is a distinction without a difference. Like the Tabb Lakes plaintiffs, Boise was enjoined from a particular use of its property but was given an escape hatch: it could apply for a permit. We see no reason why the result in this case should differ from that in Tabb Lakes — no taking occurred because the government never denied the permit.
Boise attempts to distinguish
Tabb Lakes
by arguing that unlike the Clean Water Act, the ESA does not require permitting. Thus, it argues, absent the injunction, it could choose to log without an ITP. This distinguishes
Tabb Lakes,
says Boise, because “once the government obtained the injunction, obtaining an ITP became (even if feasible) a condition subsequent that could end the period during which Boise’s private land was, by government compulsion, already being devoted .to public use.” This argument does not dis
*1349
tinguish
Tabb Lakes, for
absent the cease and desist order, the
Tabb Lakes
landowner also could have gone forward with filling its land without a permit. The cease and desist order (or, in this case, the injunction) was the point at which the agency first asserted regulatory jurisdiction over the landowner. Up to that point, no permit was required either in
Tabb Lakes
or here. To the extent Boise argues that the ESA did hot give the district court the power to enjoin logging without a permit, its argument is not well taken. First, as discussed above, a takings claim before'the Court of Federal Claims cannot ask that court to review the propriety of a district court’s handling of a case. Second, as the Ninth Circuit has repeatedly held, the district court did have the authority to enjoin Boise from logging.
Marbled Murrelet v. Babbitt,
As the government notes, we recently reaffirmed the vitality of
Tabb Lakes
in
Wyatt v. United States, 271
F.3d 1090 (Fed.Cir.2001), and held that absent denial of the permit, only an.extraordinary delay in the permitting process can give rise to a compensable taking. In
Wyatt,
a mining company sued to recover compensation for a temporary taking of its mineral interests while its permit application was pending before the Office of Surface Mining Regulation and Enforcement (“OSM”).
Id.
at 1095. We began our analysis by reiterating the rule of
Riverside Bayview
that the mere imposition of a permit requirement does not take property under the Fifth Amendment.
Id.
at 1097-98. Furthermore, we noted that “mere ‘fluctuations in value during the process of governmental decisionmaking, absent extraordinary delay, are incidents of ownership.’ ”
Id.
at 1098 (quoting
First English Evangelical Lutheran Church v. L.A. County, Calif.,
As noted above, Boise does not allege that the Service engaged in extraor *1350 dinary delay in processing its permit. Therefore, under Riverside Bayview, Tabb Lakes, and Wyatt, we must reject Boise’s regulatory takings claims because they are based on the mere imposition of a permitting requirement. Those cases make it perfectly clear that the imposition of such a requirement, without more, simply cannot give rise to a compensable taking. However, Boise contends that the Supreme Court’s most recent statement on regulatory takings jurisprudence, Tahoe, which unambiguously rejects the application of per se rules in the regulatory takings context, has undercut the Riverside Bayview line of cases and precludes the dismissal of its claims here. We disagree with Boise’s reading of Tahoe.
In
Tahoe,
the Court rejected application of the per se rule articulated in Lucas
8
to temporary development moratoria. The
Tahoe
Court emphasized that, except in the rare situation before the Court in
Lucas
in which a plaintiff had been permanently deprived of all economic value associated with the property, whether a taking has occurred is governed by the ad hoc factual inquiry of
Penn Central.
The landowners in
Tahoe
advocated for a per se rule to compensate them for temporary development moratoria imposed on their land. In rejecting the landowners’ proposed per se rules for temporary regulatory takings, the Court noted that it did “not hold that the temporary nature of a land-use restriction precludes finding that it effects a taking; we simply recognize that it should not be given exclusive significance one way or another.”
Tahoe,
Petitioners fail to offer a persuasive explanation for why moratoria should be treated differently from ordinary permit delays. They contend that a permit applicant need only comply with certain specific requirements in order to receive one and can expect to develop at the end of the process, whereas there is nothing the landowner subject to a moratorium can do but wait, with no guarantee that a permit will, be, granted at the end of the process. Setting aside the obvious problem with basing the distinction on a course of events we can only know after the fact — in the context of a facial challenge — petitioners’ argument breaks down under close examination because there is no guarantee that a permit will be granted, or that a decision will be made within a year.
Tahoe,
The Court in Tahoe did not confront a situation in which the delay alleged to be a *1351 taking arose only from a reasonable time taken to consider a permit application. Nor did the Court have to consider a case in which a takings claim is brought despite the fact that the permit was never denied or was actually granted. 9 The moratoria in Tahoe admitted of no exceptions; no permits or variances could be granted, and therefore the purported taking ripened immediately upon application of the morato-ria to the property at issue. In contrast, in this case (as in Tabb Lakes, Wyatt, and Riverside Bayview), the permitting agency had not yet decided whether to grant the permit, and in fact in this case the Service actually lifted the permit requirement without ever having denied Boise’s permit application. Thus, the situation before the Court in Tahoe is very different from both the Riverside Bayview line of cases and the case we decide today.
The
Tahoe
Court did not explicitly overrule, or even discuss, the ripeness rule articulated in
Riverside Bayview.,
Thus Boise argues, in essence, that the Court overruled
Riverside Bayview
sub silentio in footnote 31 of its opinion in
Tahoe.
Despite the narrowness of its holding, the Court in
Tahoe
provided an exceptionally thorough analysis of the landscape of takings law. It is worth noting that in its painstaking treatment of takings jurisprudence, the Court'did not discuss ripeness at all, and did not explicitly overrule, limit, distinguish, or even, mention
Riverside Bayview.
The rule that a taking does not ripen unless a permit is applied for and denied actually predates
Riverside Bayview. See Williamson County Reg'l Planning Comm’n,
Furthermore, we disagree with Boise’s characterization of the meaning of footnote 31. In that footnote, the Court simply .noted that for. purposes of determining whether a taking has occurred, temporary moratoria should be treated like permitting delay cases. Thus, whether a taking occurred should be analyzed under Penn Central. This does not affect the longstanding rule that, absent denial of a permit, only extraordinary delays in the permitting process ripen into a compensable taking. Whether a particular extraordinary delay constitutes a taking is governed by Penn Central,. just as are temporary moratoria.
Under this reading,' of course, the Court’s holding in Tahoe does not overrule Riverside Bayview and the cases that rely upon it — including ' Tabb Lakes and Wyatt — implicitly or otherwise. These authorities support, and indeed compel, dismissal of Boise’s regulatory takings claims because they are based on nothing more than the bare assertion of regulatory jurisdiction by imposition of a permitting requirement. Boise makes no claim of delay in the permitting process. Thus, we affirm the trial court’s dismissal of the regulatory takings claims.
C
Boise also argues that the district court’s injunction worked a per se taking under the Supreme Court’s, decision in Loretto because (1) it was prevented from excluding spotted owls from its property; and (2) it was required to allow government agents to enter its property to conduct owl surveys. The trial court disagreed because it found that these two conditions “were incidents of the permitting process that were transitory in character, involved no continuous governmental presence at the site and imposed no additional burdens on the property beyond the temporary curtailment of logging inherent in the permitting process itself.” Boise, slip op. at 8. We agree with the trial court that the nature of the intrusion complained of in this case does not make out a per se takings claim under Loretto.
The Court in
Loretto
held that a permanent physical occupation of property, no matter how slight, is a per se taking.
Loretto,
The holding of
Loretto
is quite narrow. It applies only to permanent physical occupations either by the government or by a third party acting under government authority. The Court distinguished permanent physical occupations, in which it had always found a taking, from “cases involving a more temporary invasion, or government action outside the owner’s property that causes consequential damages within,” which were not always takings.
Id.
at 428,
Physical invasions (as distinct from physical occupations) thus fall outside the
Loretto
rule. A physical occupation, as defined by the Court, is a permanent and exclusive occupation by the government that destroys the owner’s right to possession, use, and disposal of the property. The Court defined the destruction of these interests as follows: (1) possession, “the owner has no right to possess the occupied space himself, and also has no power to exclude the occupier from possession and use of the space,”
id.
at 435,
The permanence and absolute exclusivity of a physical occupation distinguish it from temporary limitations on the right to exclude. Not every physical invasion is a taking. As PruneYard Shopping Center v. Robins [447 U.S. 74 ,100 S.Ct. 2035 ,64 L.Ed.2d 741 (1980)]; Kaiser Aetna v. United States [444 U.S. 164,100 S.Ct. 383 ,62 L.Ed.2d 332 (1979)], and the intermittent flooding cases reveal, such temporary limitations are subject to a more complex balancing process to determine whether they are a taking. The rationale' is evident: they do not absolutely dispossess the owner of his rights to use, and exclude others from, his property.
Id.
at 435 n. 12,
As noted above, Boise contends that the district court’s injunction worked a per se taking under Loretto based on the taking of its so-called right to exclude owls by logging, and based on the requirement that it allow, the Service to conduct owl surveys during the pendency of the preliminary injunction. -We turn - first to the alleged taking of an “owl easement” across Boise’s property.
As an initial matter, Boise is incorrect to suppose that the district court’s injunction *1354 was responsible for taking its right to exclude spotted owls. The ESA itself precludes Boise from harassing, harming, pursuing, wounding, or killing spotted owls, 16 U.S.C. §§ 1532(19), 1538(a)(1) (2000). Boise lost whatever right it had to “exclude” the owls nesting on its land when they were listed as a threatened species under the ESA The injunction, therefore, did not take whatever remained of this putative property interest; it merely prevented Boise from logging its land without a permit, which — as a regulation imposed upon Boise’s use of the property- — is a restriction on private use of the land and not a per se taking by the government.
We are not the first court to analyze the merits of this argument. Boise also sued the State of Oregon in state court for compensation based on the' logging ban imposed by ODF while the mating pair of owls occupied the Walker Creek Unit. In its complaint, Boise “alleged. that the administrative rules ... required plaintiffs to maintain spotted owl nests and prevent their abandonment so the nests could be occupied annually by a pair of breeding owls and that the state’s denial of plaintiffs plan to harvest the timber constituted a
per se
taking.”
Boise Cascade Corp. v. State ex rel Oregon State Bd. of Forestry,
[Tjhere are significant differences between a government authorizing or conducting a physical invasion of the property of another and a government regulating what one may do with property due to the random or incidental location of a natural resource or wild animal on the property. The state has no control over where spotted owls choose to nest. The natural occurrence of a páir of breeding spotted owls on a piece of property is more akin to the naturally occurring flood ... than to a flood caused by the government’s construction of a dam, as was the case in Pumpelly [v. Green Bay Co., 80 U.S. (13 Wall) 166,20 L.Ed. 557 (1871) ], or to the installation of an artificial structure such as a cable television box, as was the case in Loretto.
The-state did not cause or induce the spotted owls to breed on plaintiffs property. The state simply regulated plaintiffs use of the property based on the ' presence of the spotted owls there. Although plaintiffs have stated a claim for a regulatory taking, they have not stated a claim for a “physical occupation” taking under Loretto.
Id. at 570.
We' agree with the Oregon Court of Appeals that Boise’s argument is merely an attempt to convert a regulatory takings claim, governed by Penn Central (and in this case barred by the ripeness doctrine of Riverside Bdyview and Tabb Lakes) into a per se taking governed by the more generous rule of Loretto. Boise claims that application of Loretto is appropriate here because it views occupation by wild spotted owls as indistinguishable from a forced government intrusion upon its land. These two situations are, however, very different. The government has no control over where the spotted owls nest, and it did not force the owls to occupy Boise’s *1355 land. The government simply imposed a temporary restriction on Boise’s exploitation of certain natural resources located on its, land unless Boise obtained a permit. As explained above, that the Service never denied Boise’s permit — and in fact lifted the permit requirement — is fatal to Boise’s regulatory takings claims, and it remains fatal notwithstanding Boise’s attempt to recharacterize those claims as a forced physical occupation by owls.
Boise also claims a per se taking based on the requirement that it allow government officials to enter its land to conduct owl surveys. This particular requirement was only part of the preliminary injunction and was therefore in effect from April 1, 1998, until August 31, 1998 — five months. Specifically, the court granted the government’s motion for a preliminary injunction prohibiting logging “until this litigation concludes and for permission to survey for spotted owls until August 31, 1998.” The permanent injunction did not authorize the government to enter Boise’s land without Boise’s permission.
Under a plain reading of Loretto, Boise cannot claim that the government’s brief intrusions onto its land to conduct owl surveys constitute a per se taking. Transient, nonexclusive entries by the Service to conduct owl surveys do not permanently usurp Boise’s exclusive right to possess, use, and dispose of its property. The government’s incursion into Boise’s property is more in the nature of a temporary trespass — though, obviously, sanctioned by the district court and therefore not unlawful— rather than a permanent physical occupation or an easement of some kind.
However, Boise contends that in
Hendler v. United States,
[t]here is nothing “temporary” about the wells the Government installed on plaintiffs’ property.... Years have passed since the government installed the first wells. The wells are some 100 feet deep, lined with plastic and stainless steel, and surrounded by gravel and cement. Each well was capped with a cement casing lined with reinforcing steel bars, and enclosed - by a railing of steel pipe set in cement. These surveillance wells are at least as “permanent” in this sense as the CATV equipment in Loretto.
Id. at 1376. The permanency of the wells and the quasi-permanent right of entry provided to the government workers who monitored and maintained them led us to apply the per se takings theory of Loretto.
The government intrusion complained of in this case was of far lesser duration than *1356 that in Hendler, and it did not involve the placement of a permanent or even a quasi-permanent installation on Boise’s property. In Hendler, the government entered the land and placed upon it what were essentially permanent wells — -wells that it intended to actively monitor over the years. Here, in contrast, the Service briefly entered the land over a period of five months in order to conduct owl surveys needed for the resolution of a lawsuit initiated by Boise. The Service was not authorized to make, and did not make, any permanent incursion on Boise’s land. Boise does not argue that the surveyors added any kind of permanent (or even temporary) addition 'to the landscape of the Walker Creek Unit. Boise nevertheless contends that the Service’s intrusion satisfies the definition of “permanent” given in Hendler, and that the Loretto per se rule therefore applies.
Boise’s argument rests on a portion of Hendler in' which the court, discussing Loretto’s permanency requirement, noted that “[i]n this context, ‘permanent’ does not mean forever, or anything like it. A taking can be for a limited term — what is ‘taken’ is, in the language of’real property law, an estate for yeárs, that'is, a term of finite duration as distinct from the infinite term of an estate in fee' simple absolute.” Id. Boise’s argument based on'this dicta in Hendler is not novel. The language quoted above has been widely misunderstood and criticized as abrogating the permanency requirement established by the Supreme Court in Loretto. 12
Obviously this court is without power to abrogate the law established by the Supreme Court, and
Hendler
does not purport to do so. Language such as this must be read in context. And in context, it is clear that the court merely meant to focus attention on the
character
of the government intrusion necessary to find a permanent occupation, rather than solely focusing on temporal duration. Thus, Hendler’s statement regarding permanency was followed by three illustrative examples, drawn from prior Supreme Court cases, of per se takings due to complete physical occupations of estates of lesser temporal duration than a fee simple absolute. In two of those cases,
United States v. General Motors Corp.,
Putting its dicta to one side, Hendler’s holding was unremarkable and quite narrow: it merely held that when the government enters private land, sinks 100-foot deep steel reinforced wells surrounded by gravel and concrete, and thereafter proceeds to regularly enter the land to maintain and monitor the wells over a period of years, a per se taking under
Loretto
has occurred. The facts of
Hendler
were well within the limited parameters of the per se rule delineated by the
Loretto
Court for, as we stated in
Hendler,
the “wells are at least as ‘permanent’ ... as the CATV equipment in
Loretto.” Hendler,
Ill
For the reasons given above, we conclude that Boise cannot make out a ripe takings claim based on the mere imposition of a permitting requirement, and that it has not alleged facts sufficient to support a per se takings claim under Loretto as a matter of law. We therefore affirm the judgment of the Court of Federal Claims in its entirety.
COSTS
No costs.
AFFIRMED
Notes
. The ESA prohibits the take of a listed species. 16 U.S.C. § 1538(a)(1) (2000). Taking includes harassing, harming, pursuing, wounding, and killing the animal, id. § 1532(19), and the Environmental Protection Agency ("EPA”) has interpreted ''harm” to include ''significant habitat modification or degradation where it actually kills or injures wildlife by significantly impairing essential behavioral patterns, including breeding, feeding or sheltering.” 50 C.F.R. § 17.3 (2000). Thus, deforestation of breeding habitat constitutes harm under the statute.
. The Secretary has discretion to issue an ITP to permit "any taking otherwise prohibited by section 1538(a)(1)(B) of this title if such taking is incidental to, and not the purpose of, the carrying out of an otherwise lawful activity.” 16 U.S.C. § 1539(a)(1)(B) (2000).
. At the time Boise filed its complaint seeking declaratory relief, the Service had not yet taken any final action with respect to logging the Walker Creek Unit, but rather had simply opined that such logging could violate the ESA by taking owls and suggested that Boise apply for an ITP. Thus, the district court held that Boise's claim for á declaratory judgment was not ripe.
. Boise seeks $295,012 in compensation for the alleged taking.
. Although the government also urges us to affirm the dismissal of Boise’s Loretto claim on the basis of Riverside Bayview, Riverside Bayview does not control where the government allegedly takes an easement in or physically occupies the Walker Creek Unit. The Loretto claim is independent of the regulatory takings claims flowing from the permitting requirement imposed by the district court. It is only the claims based on the imposition of the permitting requirement that fall under the rule articulated by the Court in Riverside Bay-view.
. An extraordinary delay in permit processing or bad faith on the part of the agency can give rise to a ripe takings claim notwithstanding the failure.to deny the permit.
See Wyatt v. United States,
. The Supreme Court has rejected the interpretation of the Clean Water Act embodied in the migratory bird rule.
See Solid Waste Agency v. United States Army Corps of Eng'rs,
. In
Lucas,
the Court held that a per se regulatory taking occurs when a regulation permanently destroys all economic value in the property.
Lucas,
. The practical effect of the Service’s decision to lift the permit requirement for logging the Walker Creek Unit was the same, of course, as if it had simply decided to grant Boise's permit.
. The ODF had actually rejected Boise’s proposed timber harvest plan — its permit application — which gave rise to a ripe regulatory takings claim against the state.
. The Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 9601-57 (1994).
.
In Juliano v. Montgomery-Otsego-Schoharie Solid Waste Management Authority,
"When I use a word,” Humpty Dumpty said in a rather scornful tone, "it means just what I choose it to mean — neither more nor less.”
"The question is,” said Alice, "whether you can make words mean so many different tilings.”
Id. at 327 n. 7 (quoting Lewis Carroll, Through the Looking Glass 163). See also David F. Coursen, The Takings Jurispmdence of the Court of Federal Claims and the Federal Circuit, 29 Envtl. L. 821, 832 (1999) (describing Hendler as "seriously flawed” and "problematic substantively, in part at least for the mechanistic way it extends categorical analysis to conclude that a permanent physical occupation, and therefore a taking, had occurred, without really requiring that the taking be permanent").
