NORMA E. CAQUELIN, Plaintiff-Appellee v. UNITED STATES, Defendant-Appellant
2019-1385
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
Decided: May 29, 2020
Appeal from the United States Court of Federal Claims in No. 1:14-cv-00037-CFL, Senior Judge Charles F. Lettow.
THOMAS SCOTT STEWART, Stewart Wald & McCulley, LLC, Kansas City, MO, argued for plaintiff-appellee. Also
ERIKA KRANZ, Environment and Natural Resources Division, United States Department of Justice, Washington, DC, argued
ANDREA CAROL FERSTER, Rails-To-Trails Conservancy, Washington, DC, for amicus curiae Rails-To-Trails Conservancy.
MEGHAN SUE LARGENT, LewisRice LLC, St. Louis, MO, for amici curiae Iowa Farm Bureau Federation, Illinois Agricultural Association, Kansas Farm Bureau, Missouri Farm Bureau Federation. Also represented by LINDSAY BRINTON.
MARK F. HEARNE, II, True North Law Group, LLC, St. Louis, MO, for amici curiae National Association for Reversionary Property Owners, Cato Institute, Southeastern Legal Foundation, Reason Foundation, Inversecondemnation.com, James W. Ely, Jr. Also represented by STEPHEN S. DAVIS.
Before PROST, Chief Judge, LINN and TARANTO, Circuit Judges.
TARANTO, Circuit Judge.
Norma Caquelin owns land that was subject to a railroad-held easement limited to railroad use. The railroad applied to the federal Surface Transportation Board for permission to abandon its rail line, noting that it had run no traffic over the line for two years. Shortly thereafter, the Board granted the permission to abandon, to take effect a month later, unless, as relevant here, the federal-law process for considering use of the easement land for a public recreational trail was duly invoked. That process was invoked, and two days before the abandonment permission was otherwise to take effect, the Board issued a Notice of Interim Trail Use or Abandonment (NITU). The NITU prevented effectuation of the abandonment-authority approval and thus blocked abandonment—and, as a result, blocked the ending of the railroad‘s easement, for which abandonment was a necessary condition—for 180 days, during which the railroad could negotiate to try to reach an agreement with two entities that expressed interest in a transfer of the easement for trail use. The NITU expired on the 180th day when no such agreement was reached. The railroad completed its abandonment three months later.
Ms. Caquelin sued the United States in the Court of Federal Claims, alleging that a taking in violation of the Fifth Amendment‘s Takings Clause occurred when the government, by issuing the NITU that blocked abandonment, prevented termination of the easement during the 180-day period of the NITU. The trial court granted Ms. Caquelin‘s motion for summary judgment of liability. Caquelin v. United States, 121 Fed. Cl. 658 (2015) (Caquelin I). The court relied on our decisions in Ladd v. United States, 630 F.3d 1015 (Fed. Cir. 2010) (Ladd I), Caldwell v. United States, 391 F.3d 1226 (Fed. Cir. 2004), and Barclay v. United States, 443 F.3d 1368 (Fed. Cir. 2006). The parties stipulated to compensation of $900. Deferring the issue of attorneys’ fees, the court entered judgment under Court of Federal Claims Rule 54(b).
The government appealed. It argued that this court should overrule at least Ladd I, and perhaps also Caldwell and Barclay. And it argued that a NITU, when not followed by a trail agreement, should not be treated as a categorical taking; instead, either it should be subject to a general regulatory-taking analysis under Penn Central Transportation Co. v. City of New York, 438 U.S. 104, 124 (1978), and Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council, Inc. v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency, 535 U.S. 302, 321–24 (2002), or it should be analyzed using the multi-factor approach adopted for government-created flooding in Arkansas Game & Fish Commission v. United States, 568 U.S. 23, 38–40 (2012).
Without ruling on the merits of the government‘s arguments, we remanded for the trial court to receive additional evidence, as needed, and to make findings under an Arkansas Game approach, so that consideration of the legal challenges could proceed on a fuller record. Caquelin v. United States, 697 F. App‘x 1016, 1019–20 (Fed. Cir. 2017) (Caquelin II). On remand, the trial court again held that a taking had occurred. Caquelin v. United States, 140 Fed. Cl. 564 (2018) (Caquelin III).
The government appeals. We affirm. We reject the contention that Arkansas Game calls for displacing the categorical-taking analysis adopted in our precedents for a NITU that blocks termination of an easement, an analysis applicable even when that NITU expires without a trail-use agreement that would indefinitely extend the federal-law blocking of the easement‘s termination. We clarify, however, that a NITU does not effect a taking if, even in the absence of a NITU, the railroad would not have abandoned its line (a necessary prerequisite for termination of the easement under state law) during the period of the NITU: in such a case, the NITU takes nothing from the landowner that the landowner would have had in the absence of the NITU. We leave to future cases further questions about that issue. Here, the government has not sought a remand for findings on when the railroad would have abandoned the line in the absence of a NITU, and the evidence permits a finding that abandonment would have occurred during the NITU period if the NITU had not issued.
I
A
The
When a rail carrier applies for permission to abandon, as relevant here, the Board‘s regulations provide that any prospective trail sponsor may file a comment indicating an interest “in acquiring or using a right-of-way of a rail line . . . for interim trail use and rail banking.”
In Preseault I, the Supreme Court held that, to the extent that the application of the Trails Act results in a Fifth Amendment taking by preventing a property owner from regaining an unencumbered interest in the land subject to a right-of-way, the
In Caldwell, we addressed a statute-of-limitations question, and we “h[e]ld that the Fifth Amendment taking, if any, under the Trails Act is accomplished when an NITU is issued and state law reversionary interests that would otherwise take effect pursuant to normal abandonment proceedings are forestalled.” 391 F.3d at 1236; id. at 1233 (“The taking, if any, when a railroad right-of-way is converted to interim trail use under the Trails Act occurs when state law reversionary property interests that would otherwise vest in the adjacent landowners are blocked from so vesting.“). We followed that rule in Barclay, 443 F.3d at 1373–74. Later, in Ladd I, we applied Caldwell and Barclay, along with the principle that “physical takings are compensable, even when temporary,” 630 F.3d at 1025 (citing Hendler v. United States, 952 F.2d 1364, 1376 (Fed. Cir. 1991)), and held that the Board‘s issuance of a NITU effects a taking—“when state law reversionary property interests are blocked,” id. at 1023—even if the rail carrier and potential trail sponsor never reached an agreement, so that no conversion to trail use occurred. Id. at 1022–25.
B
This appeal is the second in this rails-to-trails case, see Caquelin II, 697 F. App‘x 1016, which involves land now owned by Norma Caquelin in Franklin County, Iowa. The North Central Railway Association, Inc. and its predecessors had held an easement over the land since acquiring the easement by condemnation in 1870. J.A. 201–04; Caquelin III, 140 Fed. Cl. at 569. It is undisputed that the railroad‘s interest was an easement. United States’ Pretrial Memorandum of Contentions of Fact and Law at 21, Caquelin III, 140 Fed. Cl. 564 (2018) (No. 1:14-cv-00037), ECF No. 50 (“Under Iowa law, the interest acquired in this segment was an easement.“); United States’ Cross-Motion for Summary Judgment and Memorandum in Support at 1, Caquelin I, 121 Fed. Cl. 658 (2015) (No. 1:14-cv-00037), ECF No. 18. It is also undisputed
In May 2013, the railroad applied to the Board for authority to abandon the line. J.A. 1332–35. Invoking a provision that exempts qualifying applicants from some requirements for such authority,
On June 5, 2013, the Board sent a notice to the railroad indicating that, if the Board did not receive a trail-use/rail-banking request under
The negotiating parties did not reach agreement during the 180-day negotiation period, and when the organization interested in operating a trail sought an extension of the NITU, the railroad declined to consent. Id. at 570. The NITU expired on December 30, 2013, and the railroad was authorized to abandon the line. See id. The railroad later notified the Board that, as of March 31, 2014, it had “exercised the authority granted [to it by the Board] . . . and fully abandoned the . . . rail line.” J.A. 1409; see Caquelin III, 140 Fed. Cl. at 570–71.
C
In January 2014, Ms. Caquelin sued the United States in the Court of Federal Claims. We have already described the trial court‘s initial ruling, our remand for further development, and the trial court‘s ruling on remand, namely, Caquelin III. See supra, pp. 3–4. In that remand ruling, rendered after a trial and now before us, the court summarized how takings doctrine should be applied in various circumstances, Caquelin III, 140 Fed. Cl. at 573–78, and, based on that analysis, concluded that the Arkansas Game approach is “inapplicable,” id. at 578. It reiterated its earlier conclusion, which reflected this court‘s holding in Ladd I, that the Board in this case effected a categorical taking, for the period of the NITU, because the NITU prevented the end of the easement by denying abandonment authority during that time—under governing state law, abandonment is a precondition to extinguishment of rail road easement rights and reversion of easement-free rights to the relevant fee owner. See
The court went on to apply the Arkansas Game approach on the assumption that it legally governed, an assumption we had
The government appeals. We have jurisdiction under
II
We review the Court of Federal Claims’ legal conclusions de novo and its factual findings for clear error. Love Terminal Partners, L.P. v. United States, 889 F.3d 1331, 1340 (Fed. Cir. 2018). Whether a taking has occurred is a question of law based on factual underpinnings. Wyatt v. United States, 271 F.3d 1090, 1096 (Fed. Cir. 2001). The property rights of the parties in a rails-to-trails case are analyzed under the relevant state‘s law, which in this case is Iowa law. Rogers v. United States, 814 F.3d 1299, 1305 (Fed. Cir. 2015).
A
The government accepts that the trial court‘s judgment is supported by Ladd I, but it renews its two arguments that this court should no longer adhere to Ladd I. First, it contends, the Supreme Court‘s decision in Tahoe-Sierra requires that the general regulatory-takings analysis of Penn Central be applied to assess whether a NITU is a taking when no trail-use agreement has been reached before it expires, and that such a NITU should not be treated as a categorical taking. Second, it contends, at a minimum we should replace the categorical approach with the multi-factor approach of Arkansas Game—which shares certain features of the Penn Central analysis.
Ladd I governs this panel‘s decision unless we conclude that it has been superseded by an intervening Supreme Court decision. See, e.g., Lone Star Silicon Innovations LLC v. Nanya Technology Corp., 925 F.3d 1225, 1235 (Fed. Cir. 2019); Troy v. Samson Mfg. Corp., 758 F.3d 1322, 1326 (Fed. Cir. 2014); Doe v. United States, 372 F.3d 1347, 1354 (Fed. Cir. 2004). The only post-Ladd I decision of the Supreme Court invoked by the government is Arkansas Game. We do not think, however, that Ladd I is inconsistent with the decisions on which the government relies, including Arkansas Game. In this section, we explain this conclusion. (In the next section of this opinion, we clarify a point not previously litigated or decided in our cases about when a taking occurs as a result of a NITU.)
1
It is important to identify the nature of the government action at issue. The NITU in this case, as in similar cases, was a government action that compelled continuation of an easement for a time; it did so intentionally and with specific identification of the land at issue; and it did so solely for the purpose of seeking to arrange, without the landowner‘s consent, to continue the easement for still longer, indeed indefinitely, by an actual trail conversion. The government seems to accept, and in any event has not meaningfully contradicted, the foregoing characterization of the NITU as allowing occupation by someone other than the landowner.1
It is likewise not meaningfully disputed before us that, if the negotiations for a trail conversion had succeeded, the resulting indefinite federal-law continuation of the easement would have been a categorical taking, not an action whose evaluation under the Takings Clause requires a multi-factor analysis. See Ladd I, 630 F.3d at 1019 (“It is settled law that a Fifth Amendment taking occurs in Rails-to-Trails cases when government action destroys state-defined property rights by converting a railway easement to a recreational trail, if trail use is outside the scope of the original railway easement.“). The NITU, which expired without a trail agreement in this case, mandated continuation of the easement for a shorter period, providing a right of occupation by someone other than the landowner and, the trial court found, barring the landowner from using the ground burdened by the easement. Caquelin III, 140 Fed. Cl. at 580. Ladd I, following Caldwell and Barclay, along with Hendler concerning temporary takings, held that this federal-law maintenance of an easement is a categorical, though temporary, taking, because, for takings-law purposes, it is relevantly the same in character as the longer-duration coerced continuation of an easement that a NITU effects when a trail conversion takes place.
2
This categorical treatment of a coerced easement that impairs the landowner‘s right to exclude by allowing others’ occupation finds support in Supreme Court precedent. See Preseault I, 494 U.S. at 24 (O‘Connor, J., concurring) (“We recently concluded . . . that a taking would occur if the Government appropriated a public easement.” (citing Nollan v. Cal. Coastal Comm‘n, 483 U.S. 825, 831–32 (1987))); Nollan, 483 U.S. at 832 (a “permanent physical occupation” occurs “where individuals are given a permanent and continuous right to pass to and fro, so that the real property may continuously be traversed, even though no particular individual is permitted to station himself permanently upon the premises“); Yee v. City of Escondido, 503 U.S. 519, 522, 523 (1992) (explaining
3
Tahoe-Sierra did not depart from that treatment of a coerced easement allowing physical occupation. The Court in Tahoe-Sierra held that the ordinary regulatory process subject to the Penn Central standard includes, as a necessary tool, a temporary moratorium on landowners’ development on their own land while the consideration of use regulation possibilities is underway, and such a moratorium should therefore be subject to a Penn Central analysis. 535 U.S. at 321–44. Tahoe-Sierra involved neither a government creation or continuation of an easement nor any taking of a comparable recognized land interest to force the landowner to allow others on the land. Indeed, the court introduced its analysis by stressing the “distinction between physical takings and regulatory takings,” id. at 321, and made clear that its ruling was addressing the latter only—namely, government “regulations that prohibit a property owner from making certain uses of her private property,” id. at 321–22. The Court reiterated that “[w]hen the government physically takes possession of an interest in property for some public purpose, it has a categorical duty to compensate the former owner,” including when the government takes a leasehold and occupies it even temporarily. Id. at 322. The question in Tahoe-Sierra, the Court stressed, was not about that, but about government regulations of landowners’ own uses of their property. Id. at 322–24.
As we ruled in Casitas Municipal Water District v. United States, the Tahoe-Sierra analysis applies only in a regulatory-taking case. 543 F.3d 1276, 1296 (Fed. Cir. 2008). And as Ladd I holds, a NITU like this one does not present a regulatory-takings case. 630 F.3d at 1022–25. Indeed, in the present context, “unless the [Board] attaches postabandonment conditions to a certificate of abandonment, the [Board‘s] authorization of an abandonment brings its regulatory mission to an end.” Hayfield N. R.R. Co. v. Chicago & N. W. Transp. Co., 467 U.S. 622, 633 (1984); see Preseault I, 494 U.S. at 21–22 (O‘Connor, J., concurring). In the Board‘s June 5, 2013 notice authorizing abandonment as of July 5, 2013, and in the NITU itself (the Notice of Interim Trail Use or Abandonment), the Board confirmed the absence of any federal regulatory interest except, as relevant here, the Trails Act interest in seeking to arrange an indefinite continuation of the easement,
In short, the purpose of the compelled maintenance of an easement in this NITU situation was simply to try to arrange for a longer-term taking. Tahoe-Sierra does not address such a situation. And such a situation does not fall within Tahoe-Sierra‘s rationale that a moratorium on certain uses of land by the landowner can be a necessary part of the process of making decisions about regulations of landowners’ own uses. For those reasons, Tahoe-Sierra does not show that Ladd I is incorrect.
4
Nor does Arkansas Game show that Tahoe-Sierra now must be held to provide the governing standard or otherwise show that Ladd I is incorrect. In Arkansas Game, the Court reversed a ruling of this court that temporary government-induced flooding could not be a taking. 568 U.S. at 31–40. Reiterating its rejection of “the argument that government action must be permanent to qualify as a taking,” id. at 33, the Court concluded that government-induced flooding was not immune from that principle. The Court explained that a number of facts could bear on whether particular government-induced flooding activities would constitute a taking, id. at 36–39, but the Court stated its holding in terms of rejecting a categorical exemption from Takings Clause liability: “We rule today, simply and only, that government-induced flooding temporary in duration gains no automatic exemption from Takings Clause inspection.” Id. at 38.
We do not think that Arkansas Game implies that a non-categorical approach to finding a taking applies to the NITU situation at issue here—a mandated continuation of an easement, not to regulate the landowner‘s conduct on her land, but only to buy time to arrange a permanent taking by indefinite coerced maintenance of an easement. No such situation was involved in Arkansas Game and the Court did not call for a non-categorical approach to such a narrowly defined situation. Indeed, the Court reaffirmed the recognition of Tahoe-Sierra that “‘[w]hen the government physically takes possession of an interest in property for some public purpose, it has a categorical duty to compensate the former owner.‘” Arkansas Game, 568 U.S. at 31 (quoting Tahoe-Sierra, 535 U.S. at 322) (emphasis added). In addition, the Court, pointing to several categorical-takings cases, stated that “the takings claims approved in these cases were not confined to instances in which the Government took outright physical possession of the property involved.” Id. at 33.
Arkansas Game did not involve government action to maintain a recognized formal legal interest in land (an easement) that limited the landowner‘s interests, much less an action taken only to buy time to try to arrange a categorical taking. Nor did it involve government authorization of intrusions by persons other than a landowner. Rather, it involved intrusions by water, which the Court made clear form a
Finally, as the government has observed in this case, the trial court, in applying the Arkansas Game factors pursuant to our remand, relied in large part on the aspects of the NITU that are built into the Ladd I treatment of the NITU as a categorical taking. The additional findings focus on whether the particular portion of land burdened by the easement was capable of being productively used by Ms. Caquelin and when such use would have begun. See Caquelin, 140 Fed. Cl. at 581–84. As far as we have been shown, the only identified difference between applying Arkansas Game and the categorical-takings analysis is that the former might permit the government to mandate an easement, without giving rise to takings liability, as long as, during the time of the easement, the landowner could or would not have made productive use of the land on which the easement ran. We see nothing in Arkansas Game, or in other takings law to which we have been pointed, to support such a result.
We conclude that Ladd I remains governing precedent and has not been undermined by Arkansas Game in favor of a non-categorical approach.
B
In the course of arguing for a multi-factor approach to the takings question here—an argument we reject for the reasons we have set forth—the government makes one much more limited contention. It suggests that a taking should not be found to have occurred during the period a NITU is in effect if, even in the absence of the NITU, the railroad would not have abandoned its rail line during that period. This causation-based suggestion amounts to a request for a clarification of our case law on the timing of a NITU-based taking, to address a situation not presented or therefore ruled on in the Caldwell–Barclay–Ladd I line of cases.
Our discussion of this contention here is appropriately limited. The government does not seek a remand for findings on when the railroad would have abandoned its line had there been no NITU from July 3, 2013 to December 30, 2013. Instead, it makes the legal suggestion just noted and simply asserts that there was no evidence that the railroad would have abandoned its line during that 180-day period had there been no NITU. At most, then, the government has presented only a request for a clarification of the legal standard—to incorporate an inquiry into when abandonment would have occurred in the absence of the challenged government action—together with an assertion of evidentiary insufficiency as to whether the railroad would have abandoned its line during the 180-day period. The precise timing is immaterial to liability if abandonment would have occurred during the NITU period,
1
It is a fundamental principle of takings law that a government action is not a taking of property if, even in the absence of the challenged government action, the plaintiff would not have possessed the allegedly taken property interest. St. Bernard Parish Gov‘t v. United States, 887 F.3d 1354, 1359–60, 1362 (Fed. Cir. 2018); see United States v. Archer, 241 U.S. 119, 132 (1916). That causation principle focuses on comparing the plaintiff‘s property interest in the presence of the challenged government action and the property interest the plaintiff would have had in its absence. See Preseault I, 494 U.S. at 24 (O‘Connor, J., concurring) (endorsing the proposition, acknowledged by the government, that “the existence of a taking will rest upon the nature of the state-created property interest that [the landowners] would have enjoyed absent the federal action and upon the extent that the federal action burdened that interest“). It reflects a causation principle hardly unique to takings law. See, e.g., Babb v. Wilkie, 140 S. Ct. 1168, 1178 (2020) (explaining general but-for rule governing damages and certain other result-altering relief).
The application of that causation principle to the NITU situation at issue is straightforward. The challenged government action is the legally mandated maintenance of the easement through denying abandonment authority to the railroad. It is undisputed that, without abandonment by the railroad, the easement would remain. It follows that the NITU would not have altered the continuation of the easement during the NITU period—i.e., would not have caused the only alleged taking of property—if the railroad would not have abandoned the rail line during that period even in the absence of the NITU.
The government stated at oral argument that our line of cases on NITUs and takings, growing out of Caldwell, does not foreclose applying the general causation principle in just this way. We agree. To begin with, this line of cases grows out of and seeks to follow Caldwell, and the concluding statement of the holding in Caldwell by its terms incorporates this causation inquiry: “We hold that the Fifth Amendment taking, if any, under the Trails Act is accomplished when an NITU is issued and state law reversionary interests that would otherwise take effect pursuant to normal abandonment proceedings are forestalled.” Caldwell, 391 F.3d at 1236 (emphasis added). The court used similar language at the outset of its analysis, stating that “when a railroad right-of-way is converted to interim trail use,” the taking, if any, occurs “when state law reversionary property interests that would otherwise vest in the adjacent landowners are blocked from so vesting.” Id. at 1233 (emphases added). This language incorporates the causation inquiry we have described. In Barclay, this court repeated the “would otherwise vest” language from Caldwell, see Barclay, 443 F.3d at 1373, and it subsequently explained that one of the plaintiffs admitted that, “after issuance of the NITU, ‘the easement continued in existence beyond the time when it otherwise would have been abandoned,‘” concluding:
It is true that other language in Caldwell, Barclay, and Ladd I uses a shorter formulation referring simply to the NITU date as the date of taking. See, e.g., Caldwell, 391 F.3d at 1235 (“We therefore hold that the appropriate triggering event for any takings claim under the Trails Act occurs when the NITU is issued.“); Barclay, 443 F.3d at 1378; Ladd I, 630 F.3d at 1020. But that language is better read so as not to run counter both to the fuller formulation and to basic causation principles. It can be read as a shorthand that applies where no party has pointed to any legally material difference between the NITU date of issuance (or expiration) and a date of abandonment in the but-for world in which there was no NITU. That was true in Caldwell, and it was also true in the follow-on cases of Barclay and Ladd I: nothing in those opinions suggests that a party in those cases argued to this court that, even in the absence of the NITU, the railroad would not have abandoned the rail line until some date that would make a difference to the outcome of the issue on appeal—whether timeliness, in Caldwell and Barclay, or liability for a taking, in Ladd I. In that situation, the shorthand formulation simply reflects the lack of any difference in the case between the shorter formulation and the fuller formulation. Its presence in the cases should not erase the fuller formulation where the difference matters.
These are circumstances calling for application of the principle that prior decisions do not establish controlling precedent on an issue “never squarely addressed.” Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 631 (1993); see, e.g., Arthrex, Inc. v. Smith & Nephew, Inc., 880 F.3d 1345, 1349 (Fed. Cir. 2018). We recognized and applied that principle in Ladd v. United States (Ladd II), where we held that the statement of the accrual rule in Caldwell and Barclay does not control where the facts give rise to an issue of suspending the accrual, because “[n]either case addressed whether and under what circumstances the claim accrual suspension doctrine should apply in Trails Act cases” and “there is no indication that the landowners in those cases” met the conditions for suspension. 713 F.3d 648, 654 (Fed. Cir. 2013). The principle is especially applicable where the foundational case prominently states its holding in terms that already do account for the causation inquiry that is part of takings law. We conclude, therefore, that there is no taking until the time as of which, had there been no NITU, the railroad would have abandoned the rail line, causing termination of the easement that the NITU continued by law.
We decide no more on the doctrinal issue. Other questions could well arise in the future, such as questions about whether the plaintiff or the government has the burden of production or persuasion on what the railroad would have done if there had been no NITU. With no request from the government for a remand for further proceedings on the but-for-NITU issue in this case, we do not address such questions here.
2
The government suggests that there is insufficient evidence to support a finding that the railroad would not have abandoned the line at issue between July 3, 2013 and December 30, 2013, even if no
The railroad filed an application to abandon, indicating an affirmative intent to abandon. When it was asked for consent to an extension of the December 30 expiration date, it refused, confirming an interest in abandoning sooner rather than later (in the absence of a promising negotiation for a trail agreement). It completed the abandonment just three months after December 31, 2013, the date on which it became legally authorized to abandon the line, suggesting a comparable time period had authority been granted as of July 5, 2013. The statute itself provides generally for authorization to remove track during the NITU, an authorization that was included in the NITU here, suggesting an expectation of comparatively prompt completion of abandonment. And there was evidence that the railroad in this case did remove track in 2012 or 2013, see J.A. 282, a precondition to abandonment-based easement termination under Iowa law,
III
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the judgment of the Court of Federal Claims.
The parties shall bear their own costs.
AFFIRMED
