This case arises under the Takings clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution. 1 By legislation enacted in 1992, Congress required that in order to retain their unpatent-ed mining claims, claim holders must pay a per-claim annual fee of $100 for each of the years 1993 and 1994. This cash payment requirement replaced a prior requirement that the claim holders perform $100 worth of exploration and development work yearly on those claims. Appellants Charles and Marguerite Kunkes, who owned a number of these unpatented mining claims, failed to pay the amount required by the new legislation. Under the terms of the fee statute, nonpayment results in conclusive deemed abandonment of the claims and corresponding forfeiture to the Government. Appellants take the position that the new requirement has worked a taking of their property without just compensation in violation of the Fifth Amendment, and sued the United States for $575 million in compensation for their losses resulting from the forfeiture of the claims. The Court of Federal Claims held that forfeiture of appellants’ unpatented mining claims for failure to pay the statutory fee did not work a taking, and dismissed. 2 Appellants challenge that decision here. We affirm.
BACKGROUND
To encourage private development of mineral deposits, federal law permits private parties to discover, explore, and reclaim mineral deposits in federally-owned lands. 30 U.S.C. § 22 (1994) (“[A]ll valuable mineral deposits in lands belonging to the United States ... shall be free and open to exploration and purchase, and the lands in which they are found to occupation and purchase, by citizens of the United States ... under regulations prescribed by law.”);
see also
30
Thus federal law permits private parties to acquire exclusive possessory interests in federal land for mining purposes, interests which entitle claim holders to extract and sell minerals without paying royalties to the Government.
See United States v. Locke,
Under the Mining Act of 1872, unpatented mining claimholders could maintain ownership of their claims by performing $100 of assessment work or providing $100 of improvements for each claim during each year (referred to as the “assessment year”). An Act to Promote the Development of the Mining Resources of the United States, ch. 159, § 5, 17 Stat. 91, 92 (1872) (codified at 30 U.S.C. § 28). In 1976, Congress passed the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 (“FLPMA”), Pub.L. No. 94-579, 90 Stat. 2743 (codified at 43 U.S.C. §§ 1701-1782), which further required unpatented mining claimholders to file annually a notice of intention to hold the claim, an affidavit of the assessment work performed on the claim, or a BLM reporting form. 43 U.S.C. § 1744(a). Failure to comply with the filing requirement “shall be deemed conclusively to constitute an abandonment of the mining claim ... by the owner.” 43 U.S.C. § 1744(c).
In 1992, Congress passed appropriations legislation for the Interior Department, which substituted a $100 per claim “maintenance fee” for the $100 of assessment work requirement, for the 1993 and 1994 assessment years. Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act, 1993, Pub.L. No. 102-381, 106 Stat. 1374, 1378 (1992) (“Appropriations Act”). 5 Claimhold-ers were required to pay the 1993 and 1994 maintenance fees by the end of the 1993 assessment year. Failure to pay the fee “shall conclusively constitute a forfeiture of the unpatented mining claim ... by the claimant and the claim shall be deemed null and void by operation of law.” 30 U.S.C. § 28i.
Between 1969 and 1992, appellants located and filed 573 unpatented claims to minerals beneath public lands in Mohave County, Arizona. During that time, appellants provided affidavits attesting to their provision of $100 of assessment work per claim per year, and complied with all other requirements of the Mining Act and FLPMA. However, appellants did not pay the claim maintenance fee
Appellants sued the Government in the Court of Federal Claims, asserting that the forfeiture of their claims constituted an uncompensated taking. The trial court granted summary judgment for the Government.
Kunkes v. United States,
The trial court accepted appellants’ assertion that due to their limited personal income, shown to be in the neighborhood of $35,000 annually, they could not themselves pay the total fees due, but found that this did not render the fee unreasonable. The court noted that appellants could have borrowed on the value of the claims, abandoned or sold less promising claims, or obtained third party funding for the fees. Id.
Appellants appealed to this court. We have jurisdiction over the appeal under 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3).
DISCUSSION
The trial court correctly found that the principles enunciated in Texaco and Locke govern this case, and properly applied them to find no taking in these circumstances. In Texaco, the State of Indiana had enacted legislation providing that mineral interests that were unused for 20 years would be extinguished automatically and revert to the surface land owner, unless the mineral interest owner filed a statement of claim with the county recorder of deeds within 2 years of the statute’s passage. The statute did not require any specific notice to the mineral owners before a statutory extinguishment of their interests. 6
Owners of severed mineral interests alleged,
inter alia,
that the statute deprived them of property without due process and effected a taking without just compensation.
Id.
at 522-23,
The Court found that extinguishment of the mineral interests did not effect a taking because the Fifth Amendment did not require the government to compensate property owners who failed to preserve their property interests by “tak[ing] reasonable actions imposed by law.”
Id.
at 530,
In Locke, the Supreme Court applied the principles of Texaco to uphold the constitutionality of section 314(e) of the FLPMA, which provided that any unpatented mining claim for which annual filing requirements were not met would be conclusively deemed abandoned. The Lockes had made the required filings one day late, and the Government had deemed their claims forfeited. The Lockes argued, inter alia, that such forfeiture constituted an uncompensated taking in violation of the Fifth Amendment.
The Court disagreed. The Court observed that Congress’ power to condition the retention of unpatented mining claims, a “unique form of property,”
Locke,
In Locke, the Court found that requiring existing claim holders to make annual filings served Congress’ legitimate goal of ridding federal lands of stale claims and compiling updated information on the status of outstanding claims. Id. The Court stated:
Even with respect to vested property rights, a legislature generally has the power to impose new regulatory constraints on the way in which those rights are used, or to condition their continued retention on performance of certain affirmative duties. As long as the constraint or duty imposed is a reasonable restriction designed to further legitimate legislative objectives, the legislature acts within its powers in imposing such new constraints or duties.
Id.
at 104,
Appellants argue that neither
Texaco
nor
Locke
controls this case because those cases
The parties correctly treat this case as a regulatory taking claim. It is the failure by appellants to comply with the otherwise valid regulatory requirements of the law that causes the forfeiture, and the vesting in the United States, the holder of the underlying fee estate, of their previously-owned interests including the right to possession of the surface. Even the Government’s physical occupation of property as an incident to enforcement of the law does not ordinarily convert a regulatory taking case into one of. physical occupation.
See California Housing Securities, Inc. v. United States,
Appellants’ regulatory takings approach- is consistent, moreover, with the Supreme Court’s analysis, particularly in
Locke,
which invoked familiar regulatory takings concepts such as “reasonable investment-backed expectations” and the reasonableness of the measure causing the deprivation.
Locke,
Recent cases have demonstrated the need to tailor the test for regulatory takings to the specific context of the case.
Compare, e.g., Penn Central Transp. Co. v. City of New York,
In this case, there is little question that the regulatory imposition, including the annual $100 fee, serves the legitimate governmental purpose of ridding federal lands of stale mining claims and providing for centralized collection by federal land managers of comprehensive and up-to-date information on the status and worth of these claims.
See Locke,
Although appellants emphasize that, unlike in
Locke
and
Texaco,
their noncompliance did not result from neglect, the gravamen of
Locke
and
Texaco
is that no taking occurs through automatic forfeiture of unpatented mining claims when the claim holder fails to comply, through neglect or otherwise, with a reasonable condition on the retention
In this case, the trial court found that the claim maintenance fee was reasonable essentially because (1) it differed only in nature, not in value, from the prior assessment work requirement; and (2) compared with valuable mineral claims, the fee amount was not disproportionate and was in fact “inherently reasonable.”
Appellants cite no authority, and we have found none, to support their subjective approach to measuring the reasonableness of a condition imposed by Congress on the retention of unpatented mining claims. Certainly no such standard emerges from
Texaco
or
Locke.
In
Locke,
for example, the Court stated that regulatory burdens imposed on mining claimholders are reasonable if they are “not so wholly disproportionate to the burdens other individuals face in a highly regulated society.”
Appellants’ subjective standard is unworkable as well as unprecedented. It would be difficult to argue that all persons who had the money to pay the fees at some time during the 1993 assessment year, or even earlier, but then spent it on a car or a child’s college tuition or lost it gambling, and therefore could not pay the fee at the appointed hour, suffered a taking upon forfeiture of their claims. Otherwise, claimholders could readily escape the fee requirement. Appellants’ test therefore would require the trial court to sort out meritorious from meritless takings claims by inquiring as to the nature of each claimant’s financial circumstances and why that claimant could not afford the fee. Nothing in takings law justifies imposing such a standard.
Appellants’ reliance on
Whitney Benefits, Inc. v. United States,
As the trial court found, Whitney differs from this case in a critical respect — there, the coal owner was absolutely precluded from mining. The effect was to deny Whitney all use of the property. In this case, appellants could have retained their use rights through the payment of a reasonable fee. Again, the fact that appellants could not have paid the fee without outside financing or some other means beyond their present personal cash savings and income, is not disposi-tive. The issue is whether the fee is objectively reasonable, as we have found it to be.
Contrary to appellants’ assertions, the Court of Federal Claims did not base its conclusion that the fee was reasonable on unsupported fact findings concerning whether appellants could have taken various steps
It is important to remember the type of property at issue here. Congress created unpatented mining claims expressly to encourage development and extraction of minerals, i.e., to exploit valuable mineral deposits. It is entirely reasonable for Congress to require a $100 per claim fee in order to assess whether the claim holders believe that the value of the minerals in their claims is sufficiently great to warrant such a payment; and whether claim holders have the resources and desire to develop these claims. If the claims are not valued by the claim holders sufficiently to warrant a $100 fee payment, then the claim holders’ decision not to pay the fee eliminates an unnecessary encumbrance on public lands and frees the land for a more valued use. If the claim holder cannot pay a $100 per claim fee, it is unlikely that she would be able solely through her own labor to develop the deposits, thereby frustrating the fundamental purpose in creating rights to unpatented mining claims.
Appellants assert that the fee is not designed to put claim holders to these choices, but instead to raise money for the general Treasury and to wipe out small claim holders. We are not persuaded, particularly in light of Congress’ exemption for holders of 10 or fewer claims, see 30 U.S.C. § 28k, and the due minimis amount of the fee. We conclude, therefore, that the fee was imposed for a legitimate public purpose and that the fee is objectively reasonable.
CONCLUSION
Under the applicable standards appellants have not suffered an unconstitutional taking without just compensation. The decision of the Court of Federal Claims is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. "[N]or shall private property be taken for public use, without just compensation.” U.S. Const. amend. V.
.
Kunkes
v.
United States,
. Unless otherwise stated, all citations are to the 1994 edition of the United States Code.
. The current statutory purchase price for fee title to the land is $5.00 per acre. 30 U.S.C. § 29. Congress has made some effort recently to raise the price to fair market value. See David Rogers, "Miners Win Senate Victory on Land Claims,” Wall St. /., Aug. 9, 1995, at A10.
. Congress has extended the fee requirement through 1998. Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1993, Pub.L. No. 103-66, Tide X, Subtide B, § 10101, 107 Stat. 312, 405 (codified at 30 U.S.C. § 28f(a) (1988 & Supp.1993)). Holders of 10 or fewer claims may continue to provide assessment work in lieu of the fee. 30 U.S.C. § 28f(d) (1988 & Supp.1993).
. The mineral interests at issue in
Texaco
were created from privately owned, rather than federally owned, land.
See Texaco,
