CHEVRON USA, INC., a Pennsylvania Corporation, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
Margery S. BRONSTER, Attorney General of the State of Hawaii, Defendant, and
Linda Lingle, Governor of the State of Hawaii; Mark J. Bennett, Attorney General of the State of Hawaii, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 02-15867.
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted November 10, 2003.
Filed April 1, 2004.
As Amended April 15, 2004.
Robert G. Dreher, Special Deputy Attorney General, Troutman Sanders LLP, Washington, D.C., for the defendants-appellants.
Craig E. Stewart, Pillsbury Winthrop LLP, San Francisco, California, for the plaintiff-appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Hawaii Susan Oki Mollway, District Judge, Presiding. D.C. No. CV-97-00933-SOM.
Before: D.W. NELSON, BEEZER, and W. FLETCHER, Circuit Judges.
BEEZER, Circuit Judge:
Hawaii Governor Linda Lingle ("Hawaii") appeals the district court's holding on remand that Section 3(c) of Act 257 of the 1997 Hawaii State Legislature ("Act 257" or "the Act") effects a regulatory taking in violation of the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. Chevron USA, Inc. ("Chevron") challenged the Act, which, inter alia, proscribes the maximum rent that oil companies can collect from dealers who lease company-owned service stations.
We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. ยง 1331, and we affirm.
* In response to concerns about the highly concentrated wholesale gasoline market in Hawaii and the resulting high cost of gasoline to consumers, the Hawaii Legislature enacted Act 257 in 1997. Act 257, among other things, regulates the maximum rent an oil company can charge dealers who lease its service stations. More specifically, Act 257 caps the rent that Chevron and other oil companies can collect from lessee-dealers at 15% of the dealer's profit on gasoline sales and 15% of the dealer's gross sales on products other than gasoline, plus a percentage increase equal to any increase the oil company may be required to pay on its ground lease.
Chevron is one of two gasoline refiners and one of six wholesalers in Hawaii. At the retail level, Chevron sells most of its gasoline through company-owned stations, which are leased to independent dealers. Chevron leases 64 service stations to dealers in Hawaii. From 1984 through the end of 1996, Chevron relied on estimated gasoline sales to calculate the rent owed by the lessee-dealers. After determining that the amount of gross rent receipts was not satisfactory, Chevron initiated a new nationwide dealer rental program in January 1997, restructuring the manner in which it calculated lease rates. This program, which the parties agree would be in effect in Hawaii but for Act 257, requires the lessee-dealer to pay a monthly rent, consisting of an escalating percentage of the dealer's gross margin on actual, rather than estimated, gasoline sales. As noted, Act 257, in contrast, establishes a maximum regulated rent of 15% of gross margin.
Although Chevron maintains that Act 257 prevents it, through rental payments alone, from recovering its rental expenses, it concedes that over the past 20 years, Chevron has never fully recovered its expenses relating to dealer stations from rental income alone. Instead, Chevron relies on its supply contracts to earn a profit. Dealers who choose to rent a station from Chevron must as a condition of their lease agree to purchase from Chevron all the product necessary to satisfy demand at the station for Chevron gasoline. The price is unilaterally set by Chevron.
Both the lease agreement and supply contract permit the lessee-dealer to transfer his or her occupancy rights upon obtaining Chevron's written consent and paying a transfer fee set by Chevron. Act 257 does not prohibit such transfers, nor limit the price at which they can occur.
Chevron moved for partial summary judgment on its claim that Act 257 effects an unconstitutional regulatory taking because it fails to "substantially advance a legitimate state interest." Hawaii responded by filing a cross motion for summary judgment on all of Chevron's claims. The district court resolved the motions in Chevron's favor. Chevron USA, Inc. v. Cayetano,
Hawaii appealed the district court's decision, challenging the standard used to evaluate Chevron's regulatory takings claim and the court's application of that standard. Chevron USA, Inc. v. Cayetano,
In a petition for rehearing, Hawaii asserted for the first time that Chevron's challenge to Act 257 should be analyzed under the Due Process Clause, not the Takings Clause. We denied Hawaii's petition for rehearing; the Supreme Court subsequently denied Hawaii's petition for certiorari.
On remand, the district court considered the parties' stipulations of fact and the testimony of expert witnesses. The district court held that Act 257 was unconstitutional and issued written findings of fact and conclusions of law. Chevron USA, Inc. v. Cayetano,
On appeal, Hawaii argues that: (1) the district court should have analyzed Chevron's claim under the Due Process Clause rather than the Takings Clause; (2) the court misapplied the requirement that Act 257 "substantially advance a legitimate state interest"; and (3) even if the district court's application of the law was correct, it clearly erred in finding that Act 257 does not, in fact, substantially advance Hawaii's interest in reducing retail gasoline prices.
II
The first two of Hawaii's arguments are barred as law of the case. The law of the case doctrine provides that "the decision of an appellate court on a legal issue must be followed in all subsequent proceedings in the same case." Bernhardt v. Los Angeles County,
A. Chevron I Bars Hawaii's Argument that Chevron Must Challenge Act 257 Under the Due Process Clause
Hawaii first argues that Chevron's challenge to Hawaii's rent control ordinance properly lies under the Due Process Clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution, not the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment. Hawaii maintains that claims challenging the validity of a government action based on its failure to "substantially advance a legitimate government interest" must be resolved using due process principles.
We explicitly addressed and rejected this argument when it was raised for the first time in Hawaii's petition for rehearing, and implicitly did so in Chevron I when we endorsed the "substantially advances" test over the more deferential test urged by Hawaii. See
The law of the case doctrine therefore bars Hawaii's argument unless one of the recognized exceptions applies.
Hawaii relies primarily on the Supreme Court's opinion in Eastern Enterprises v. Apfel,
As an initial matter, Eastern Enterprises does not involve the type of regulatory takings claim at issue here. The Supreme Court applies the test set forth in Penn Central Transportation Co. v. City of New York,
Largely ignoring this issue, Hawaii relies in part on the following statement in Justice Kennedy's opinion to support its argument that a majority of the Supreme Court has repudiated "substantially advances" takings claims:
The imprecision of our regulatory takings doctrine does open the door to normative considerations about the wisdom of government decisions. See, e.g., Agins v. City of Tiburon [cite omitted] (zoning constitutes a taking if it does not "substantially advance legitimate state interests"). This sort of analysis is in uneasy tension with our basic understanding of the Takings Clause, which has not been understood to be a substantive or absolute limit on the government's power to act.
"If the plurality is adopting its novel and expansive concept of a taking in order to avoid making a normative judgment about the Coal Act, it fails in the attempt; for it must make the normative judgment in all events." Id. (citations omitted). Justice Kennedy is merely highlighting the already expansive and inconsistent nature of the Court's precedent. See id. at 545,
The varying opinions in Eastern Enterprises suggest confusion over the relationship between due process and takings claims. They do not require us to abandon our holding in Chevron I, let alone render it clearly erroneous. See, e.g., Assoc. of Bituminous Contractors, Inc. v. Apfel,
Supreme Court opinions filed after Eastern Enterprises do not stand as a repudiation of regulatory takings claims based on the "substantially advances" theory. See Tahoe-Sierra Preservation Council, Inc. v. Tahoe Regional Planning Agency,
Our opinions are consistent with Supreme Court teaching. The Takings Clause supercedes any substantive due process challenges when a law is challenged as a regulatory taking. See Armendariz v. Penman,
Hawaii cites no case post-dating Chevron I that brings our use of the Takings Clause in that case into doubt. See Rainbow Magazine, Inc.,
Hawaii's reliance on Brown v. Legal Foundation of Washington,
The law of the case doctrine now bars Hawaii's argument that Chevron's challenge properly lies under the Due Process Clause. We previously addressed Hawaii's argument in Chevron I and none of the exceptions to the doctrine are available to Hawaii.
B. Chevron I Bars Hawaii's Argument That Act 257 Should Be Reviewed Under a More Deferential Standard
Hawaii next argues that we erred in Chevron I by concluding that a given regulation "substantially advances" a legitimate state interest if it bears a "reasonable relationship" to that interest and by instructing that Chevron can establish the lack of such a relationship by showing, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the regulation will not in fact accomplish its stated purpose. Hawaii maintains that even if Chevron's challenge to Act 257 is viewed as a claim under the Takings Clause, the more deferential, rational basis test applied in due process cases is appropriate โ i.e., whether Hawaii rationally could have believed that Act 257 could have substantially advanced a legitimate government purpose. We explicitly rejected these arguments as part of Hawaii's prior appeal,
In Chevron I we hold that the "substantially advances" test requires a "reasonable relationship" between a legitimate public purpose and the means used to effectuate that purpose. Id. at 1041(citing and quoting from Del Monte Dunes,
The Supreme Court specifically rejects the standard proposed by Hawaii. Nollan v. California Coastal Comm'n,
We explain in Chevron I that Hawaii's reliance on Hawaii Housing Authority v. Midkiff,
Hawaii's argument that we apply a more deferential standard in Commercial Builders of Northern California v. City of Sacramento,
Hawaii also fails to point to any intervening authority that prohibits Chevron I's use of the "reasonable relationship" test or preponderance of the evidence standard. The law of the case doctrine bars Hawaii's arguments.3
III
Hawaii argues that even if the district court applied the correct legal standard, it erred in concluding that Act 257 does not in fact substantially advance a legitimate state interest. The district court on remand heard testimony from Dr. John R. Umbeck, on behalf of Chevron, and Dr. Keith Leffler, on behalf of Hawaii. Based on their testimony, the court made the following relevant findings of fact: (1) oil companies will raise wholesale prices to offset any decrease in rent imposed by Act 257, thereby causing an increase in retail prices, Chevron USA, Inc.,
We review the district court's findings of fact for clear error. Stratosphere Litigation LLC v. Grand Casinos, Inc.,
Hawaii does not challenge the district court's conclusion of law that Act 257 fails to advance Hawaii's goal of lowering retail gas prices, see Chevron USA, Inc.,
Because Hawaii is physically small and a geographically remote economy, certain of its markets tend to be concentrated.... In a highly competitive market, market prices tend to rise above competitive levels. Market prices persistently above competitive levels are harmful to consumers and the public. (Emphasis added.) Act 257 failed to include a similar statement of legislative intent expressing a concern for lessee-dealers. Hawaii's current argument is also inconsistent with its position throughout this litigation and the testimony of its expert. The district court found that "while the legislature was mindful of the need to protect lessee dealers, this consideration was essentially a step toward the ultimate goal of reducing gasoline prices for Hawaii consumers." Chevron USA, Inc.,
The district court analyzed the efficacy of maintaining independent lessee-dealers in the context of Hawaii's purpose for enacting the Act and found that Act 257 did not substantially advance Hawaii's interest in lower retail gas prices. Relying on the declaration and trial testimony of Dr. Leffler, the court found that Act 257 actually penalizes oil companies for maintaining lessee-dealer stations, stating that in the long term "there will ultimately be fewer lessee-dealer stations than there would be without Act 257" as oil companies decide where and what type of distribution avenues in which to invest. Chevron USA, Inc.,
Although the court observed that Act 257 does "preclude[] oil companies from raising rents to levels designed to drive lessee-dealers out of business," id. at 1191, it found that "there is no evidence that, but for Act 257, Chevron or any other oil company would try to drive its lessee-dealers out of business in Hawaii by charging excessive rent." Id. (citing the trial testimony of Dr. Leffler that at the time Act 257 went into effect, Chevron charged relatively low rental prices). Hawaii maintains that this statement indicates that the district court improperly substituted its judgment for that of the legislature on the question whether the legislature's goal in enacting Act 257 was legitimate. Hawaii is correct that the "substantially advances" test reserves its heightened scrutiny for the state's purported means, not its goal. Clearly, the preservation of lessee-dealers was not the legislature's ultimate goal. The court's scrutiny was appropriate.
Based on the testimony of the parties' experts, the district court also made findings with respect to two factual questions we directed be resolved on remand โ the effect of Act 257 on wholesale prices and the possibility that lessee-dealers will capture a premium. Chevron I,
Regarding premiums, the court found that Chevron established by a preponderance of the evidence that the reduced rent mandated by the Act will not flow to consumers in the form of reduced retail prices but instead will allow lessee-dealers to capture a premium on their leaseholds. Id. at 1189-90. The parties stipulated that all other factors remaining constant, Act 257 would likely cause the market value of lessee-dealer leaseholds to increase. At trial, moreover, the parties' experts agreed that the lessee-dealers alone would realize any such increase; it would not be passed on to consumers in the form of lower retail prices. Because the court credited Dr. Umbeck's testimony that Chevron's increase in wholesale prices as a result of Act 257 would only partially offset the decrease in its rental income, the court concluded that the remaining amount will inure to lessee-dealers as a premium on the value of their leaseholds. Id. at 1189-90. In so finding, the court adopted Dr. Umbeck's view of the relevant economic market over the view of Dr. Leffler. Id.
Based on all the evidence adduced at trial, the district court concluded that Act 257 will not substantially advance a reduction in the retail price of gasoline. The court's factual findings and conclusions of law are consistent with the views of the parties' experts and are not clearly erroneous.
IV
It is argued that our application of the "substantially advances" test to the facts of this case improperly interprets the Supreme Court's decision in Yee v. City of Escondido,
The argument relies on excerpts from the following colloquy between the court and Chevron's expert, Dr. Umbert, as support for the proposition that there is "probably no premium" created by Act 257:
THE WITNESS: [Chevron] would try to raise the wholesale price to recoup as much of the lost rent as they could.... [A]t the stations where they raise the price those stations will have a reduction in volume of gasoline they sell if the dealer raises his retail prices....
THE COURT: Then, if the offset is not total, mightn't consumers in deed [sic] benefit from Act 257 because, if the increase in the wholesale price is less than the decrease in rent, then the lessee dealer's overall cost would go down.
THE WITNESS: No, no. The dealers overall revenues are going to fall because he's going to be selling gasoline.... [E]ven if the oil company doesn't recover all of the rent reduction, that does not mean the dealer is going to benefit because the whole revenue stream is smaller. In fact, in all likelihood both the dealer would lose and the oil company would lose.
. . .
The reduction in rent by itself โ let's suppose the oil companies do not raise their DTW for a second and they just lower rent to the dealer. There is no reason in our economic theory to believe that the retail prices would fall. That is, the dealer would just pocket the difference.
THE COURT: Why is that?
. . .
THE WITNESS: It's actually an opinion shared by Dr. Leffler and myself and all economics text books. And that is that a fixed commitment to pay dollars each month in the form of rent does not affect the decision on how much gasoline to sell or what price to charge at the retail pump. But, when wholesale price goes up, then the incentive for the dealer to reduce his volume in order to save some of these variable costs will lead him to raise prices.
The opinion shared by the experts was not that lessee-dealers will fail to benefit as a result of Act 257; rather, Dr. Umbreck was explaining the widely-held belief that, all things remaining equal, any reduction in rental (fixed) costs realized by the dealers would not be passed on to consumers in the form of reduced retail prices. Hawaii's counsel made this clear during closing argument when he did not deny that lessee-dealers may capture a premium: "While it is true that incumbent dealers could try to charge a premium and a prospective purchaser could agree to pay that premium, ... we do not believe that it will have any impact on the retail price of gasoline simply because the rent gap permits lessee-dealers to stay in business longer, increasing competition and lowering prices."
Furthermore, Dr. Umbreck's testimony that "in all likelihood" lessee-dealers will not benefit under Act 257 was based on an uncertain assumption about market behavior. Specifically, that Chevron's increase in wholesale prices and the resulting drop in sales would combine for a loss to lessee-dealers that is greater than the benefit realized by the reduced rent. Neither expert testified that this would necessarily occur. Indeed, in its opinion, the district court stated that "[i]mplicit in Prof. Umbreck's opinion [that Chevron would raise wholesale gasoline prices] is the assumption that Chevron will risk a drop in sales volume in the hope that it will be outweighed by the increase in wholesale price." Chevron U.S.A. Inc.,
AFFIRMED
Notes:
Notes
We have on separate occasions recognized two distinct formulations of this first exception. InJeffries v. Wood, we stated that a panel may depart from law of the case if the previous decision "is clearly erroneous and its enforcement would work a manifest injustice."
Hawaii cites to opinions of our sister circuits for the proposition that conclusions of the five-Justice majority inEastern Enterprises are binding statements of law. Although this is true, the conclusion those courts are referring to is that a regulatory takings claim must involve a specific property interest. They do not purport to comment on the continued viability of "substantially advances" takings claims. See, e.g., Commonwealth Edison Co. v. United States,
Because Hawaii's arguments are barred by the law of the case doctrine, we need not address whether the State is also barred by the law of the circuit doctrine and whether, if they are, the latter should supplant the formerSee Jeffries,
A concurrence inChevron I argues that our holding that the substantially advances test applies when there exists only the possibility of a premium goes beyond our opinion in Richardson, which relies on Yee. Compare
Implicit in this argument is the notion that the level of scrutiny we apply to rent control ordinances should be fluid throughout the course of the proceedings. That is, on a motion to dismiss or a motion for summary judgment where factual questions remain regarding the existence of a premium, we should apply the substantially advances test. But the standard we apply after experts have testified on the premium issue should depend upon the substance of that testimony โ if there is the possibility of a premium, we should apply the substantially advances test; if not, we should apply the rational basis test. There is not precedent for such an approach
W. FLETCHER, Circuit Judge, dissenting:
At issue in this case is the constitutionality of Hawai'i's Act 257, which controls the rent an oil company can charge its dealer/lessees. There are two different constitutional tests that could conceivably apply to Act 257. The first is the "reasonableness" test ordinarily applied to rent and price control statutes. See, e.g., Pennell v. City of San Jose,
In Richardson v. City and County of Honolulu,
In Chevron I, we remanded to the district court to apply the "substantially related" test to Act 257. After a hearing on remand, at which the only evidence presented was the opinion of one expert per side, the district court held that Act 257 did not satisfy the "substantially related" test. It concluded, "Act 257 effects an unconstitutional regulatory taking given its failure to substantially advance any legitimate state interest." Chevron USA, Inc. v. Cayetano,
If "substantially advances a legitimate state interest" were the proper test to apply to Act 257, I would vote to affirm the district court. The evidence put on by the State's expert in support of Act 257 was sufficiently weak, and the countervailing evidence put on by Chevron's expert was sufficiently strong, that the district court did not err in concluding that this test was not satisfied. My problem is thus not with the manner in which the "substantially advances" test has been applied in this case. Rather, it is with the application of the test in the first place.
As I discussed in my concurrence in Chevron I, the only possible basis for the application of the "substantially advances" test to a rent control statute is dictum in Yee v. City of Escondido,
[T]he effect of the rent control ordinance, coupled with the restrictions on the park owner's freedom to reject new tenants, is to increase significantly the value of the mobile home. This increased value normally benefits only the tenant in possession at the time the rent control is imposed.... Petitioners are correct in citing the existence of this premium as a difference between the alleged effect of the Escondido ordinance and that of an ordinary apartment rent control statute.... [P]etitioners contend that the Escondido ordinance transfers wealth only to the incumbent mobile home owner. This effect might have some bearing on whether the ordinance causes a regulatory taking, as it may shed some light on whether there is a sufficient nexus between the effect of the ordinance and the objectives it is supposed to advance. See Nollan v. California Coastal Comm'n [,
Id. at 530,
It is undisputed that Chevron has the capacity to increase the wholesale price of gasoline to its dealer/lessees who benefit from rent control under Act 257. Chevron's expert testified that "in all likelihood" the combined consequences of Act 257 would be an economic loss for the dealer/lessees and an increase in wholesale gasoline prices:
Question [by the court]: Then why wouldn't Chevron raise the wholesale price for those stations to completely offset the rent reductions?
Answer [by Dr. Umbeck]: Well, they would certainly try.... [T]hey would try to raise the wholesale price to recoup as much of the lost rent as they could, and the law of demand operating at each of those individual stations, however, is going to limit the total amount they're able to recoup. In other words, at the stations where they raise the price those stations will have a reduction in the volume of gasoline they sell if the dealer raises his retail prices, which logically he would.... At the individual stations that are affected there's going to be less revenue generated in total from gasoline sales because they're going to lose some customers. And so, even if the oil company doesn't recover all of the rent reduction, that does not mean the dealer is going to benefit because the whole revenue stream is smaller. In fact, in all likelihood both the dealer would lose and the oil company would lose.
(Emphasis added.)
As the challenger of Act 257, Chevron had an obvious interest in establishing that Act 257 would create a premium for its dealer/lessees since this would suggest that the statute is unconstitutional. Yet Chevron's own expert testified that "in all likelihood" a dealer would lose money. In other words, according to Chevron's own expert, there is probably no premium created by Act 257. Far from gaining a premium,"in all likelihood" the dealer/lessees will lose money as a result of Act 257.
It is a long way from the quoted passage in Yee to the panel's holding in this case. The Court in Yee did not say, even in a case where there was an actual premium, that the Nollan "substantially advances" test would apply. Nor did the Court say that the "substantially advances" test would apply in a case where there was only the probability of a premium, instead of an actual premium. But even if the Court meant in Yee what it did not say, this case is a far cry from Yee. Here, the premium is not actual, nor even a mere probability. Rather, "[i]n all likelihood," the premium does not exist.
We took a wrong turn in Richardson, we continued on the wrong path in Chevron I, and we are now in the wrong place. Under the panel's holding, "virtually all rent control laws in the Ninth Circuit are now subject to the `substantially advances a legitimate state interest' test[,]"
I respectfully dissent.
