*2 Before D YK P ROST , and S TOLL , Circuit Judges . Opinion for the court filed by Circuit Judge P ROST . Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge D YK . P ROST , Circuit Judge .
In September 2020, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention (“CDC”) responded to the COVID-19 pan- demic by issuing a nationwide order temporarily halting residential evictions. This eviction moratorium (or itera- tions of it) remained generally effective for nearly a year.
Owners of residential rental properties sued the gov- ernment in the U.S. Court of Federal Claims, claiming that the CDC’s order constituted a physical taking of their prop- erty for public use, thus requiring just compensation under the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause. The Court of Fed- eral Claims dismissed their complaint for failing to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. Because we con- clude that the complaint stated a claim for a physical tak- ing, we reverse and remand for further proceedings.
B ACKGROUND I
The COVID-19 pandemic prompted several legislative and executive responses.
On March 27, 2020, Congress enacted the CARES Act, which instituted a 120-day moratorium on commencing *3 eviction proceedings for nonpayment of rent as to certain properties that received federal assistance or had federally backed loans. Pub. L. No. 116-136, sec. 4024(b), 134 Stat. 281, 493–94 (2020). That moratorium expired on July 24, 2020.
On August 8, 2020, the President issued Executive Or- der 13945, titled “Fighting the Spread of COVID-19 by Providing Assistance to Renters and Homeowners.” 85 Fed. Reg. 49935 (Aug. 8, 2020). It stated: “[T]he policy of the United States [is] to minimize, to the greatest extent possible, residential evictions and foreclosures during the ongoing COVID-19 national emergency.” Id. at 49936. It also directed the Secretary of Health and Human Services and the CDC Director to “consider whether any measures temporarily halting residential evictions of any tenants for failure to pay rent are reasonably necessary to prevent the further spread of COVID-19 from one State or possession into any other State or possession.”
Less than a month later, on September 4, 2020, the CDC issued an order titled “Temporary Halt in Residential Evictions [t]o Prevent the Further Spread of COVID-19.” 85 Fed. Reg. 55292 (Sept. 4, 2020) (“Order”). The CDC rep- resented that it was issuing the Order under the authority of section 361 of the Public Health Service Act (“PHSA”) (codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 264) as well as 42 C.F.R. § 70.2. at 55292–93, 55297. The Order pro- vided that
a landlord, owner of a residential property, or other person with a legal right to pursue eviction or pos- sessory action shall not evict any covered person from any residential property in any State or U.S. territory in which there are documented cases of *4 COVID-19 that provides a level of public-health protections below the requirements listed in this Order.
Id.
at 55296. The Order did not relieve tenants of their
obligation to pay rent.
Id.
at 55294. And the government
represents that the Order also did not prevent landlords
from
commencing
eviction proceedings for nonpayment of
rent. Appellee’s Br. 7 & n.3 (citing J.A. 42). The Order did,
however, prevent any
actual
eviction for nonpayment of
rent from occurring.
See
On December 27, 2020—just days before the Order was set to expire—Congress extended it by a month, through January 31, 2021. Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, Pub. L. No. 116-260, div. N, sec. 502, 134 Stat. 1182, 2078–79. In the preceding section of that same Act, Con- gress also appropriated $25 billion in emergency rental as- sistance, including for payment of rent and rental arrears. sec. 501(a)(1), 501(c)(2), 134 Stat. at 2069–73. Such *5 payments were ultimately intended for lessors. See id. sec. 501(c)(2)(C), 134 Stat. at 2073. Less than three months later, Congress appropriated an additional $21.55 billion in emergency rental assistance. American Rescue Plan Act of 2021, Pub. L. No. 117-2, sec. 3201, 135 Stat. 4, 54–58.
As the congressional extension of the Order lapsed, the CDC itself (now under a different administration) extended it. 86 Fed. Reg. 8020 (Feb. 3, 2021) (extending through March 31, 2021). It did so again a few more times, ulti- mately through October 3, 2021. 86 Fed. Reg. 16731 (Mar. 31, 2021) (extending through June 30, 2021); 86 Fed. Reg. 34010 (June 28, 2021) (extending through July 31, 2021); 86 Fed. Reg. 43244 (Aug. 6, 2021) (extending through October 3, 2021).
II
Rental-property owners challenged the Order almost as soon as it issued. One litigation— Alabama Association of Realtors —culminated in a Supreme Court opinion rele- vant here.
In Alabama Association of Realtors , the plaintiffs con- tended that the Order exceeded the CDC’s statutory au- thority under the PHSA, thus violating the Administrative Procedure Act. Over the government’s opposition, the dis- trict court agreed with the plaintiffs and therefore vacated the Order. But, instead of letting the vacatur take effect immediately, the district court granted the government’s request to stay that result pending appeal.
In August 2021, the Supreme Court vacated the dis-
trict court’s stay, thus allowing the Order’s vacatur to take
*6
effect.
Ala. Ass’n of Realtors v. Dep’t of Health & Hum.
Servs.
,
With the stay no longer in place, the district court’s va- catur of the Order took effect, and the government volun- tarily dismissed its appeal.
III
Appellants filed this suit against the government in the Court of Federal Claims under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491. In their operative complaint, they claimed that the Order, by preventing them from evicting non-rent-paying tenants, constituted a physical taking of their rental prop- erties for public use, thus requiring just compensation un- der the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause. See J.A. 37 ¶ 31, 38 ¶¶ 36–37 (describing the Order as having deprived Appellants of their “fundamental right to exclude” and hav- ing “effected a government-authorized physical invasion, *7 occupation, or appropriation of [their] private property, for the government itself or for third parties” (cleaned up)).
The government moved under Court of Federal Claims Rule 12(b)(6) to dismiss Appellants’ complaint for failing to state a claim upon which relief could be granted. The gov- ernment made two primary arguments relevant here. First, it argued that a takings claim cannot be premised on government action that was unauthorized; and, in its view, the Supreme Court in Alabama Association of Realtors es- sentially confirmed that the Order was unauthorized. Sec- ond, it argued that, under Yee v. City of Escondido , 503 U.S. 519 (1992), the Order could not constitute a physical taking because it merely regulated the landlord-tenant relation- ship.
The Court of Federal Claims granted the government’s
motion and dismissed the complaint.
Darby Dev. Co. v.
United States
,
Appellants timely appealed. We have jurisdiction un- der 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3).
D ISCUSSION
We review de novo the Court of Federal Claims’
Rule 12(b)(6) dismissal of a complaint for failure to state a
claim.
E.g.
,
Kellogg Brown & Root Servs., Inc. v. United
States
,
The Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause provides: “[N]or shall private property be taken for public use, with- out just compensation.” U.S. C ONST . amend. V. This con- stitutional guarantee “was designed to bar government from forcing some people alone to bear public burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a whole.” Armstrong v. United States , 364 U.S. 40, 49 (1960) (cleaned up).
Appellants’ position is straightforward. They claim that the Order, by imposing an eviction moratorium pre- venting them from evicting non-rent-paying tenants, con- stituted a physical taking of their rental properties for public use, thus requiring just compensation under the Fifth Amendment’s Takings Clause.
The government responds with the same two argu- ments described above: that the Order cannot support a takings claim because it was unauthorized; and that, under Yee , it could not constitute a physical taking because it merely regulated the landlord-tenant relationship. We ad- dress each issue in turn.
I
A
“A compensable taking arises only if the government
action in question is authorized.”
Del-Rio Drilling Pro-
grams Inc. v. United States
,
In the takings context, “authorized” is not synonymous
with “lawful” or “done with legal authority.” That is, an
action can be authorized for takings-claim purposes even if
it is unlawful or done without legal authority.
See, e.g.
,
Ramirez
,
Instead of asking merely whether the action was le-
gally authorized, the takings-law inquiry asks “whether
the alleged invasion of property rights is
chargeable to the
government
.”
Del-Rio
,
Certain considerations help separate authorized ac-
tions from unauthorized ones in the takings context.
See,
e.g. Ramirez
,
An action will normally be deemed authorized if it was
done by government agents “within the general scope of
their duties”—i.e., if it was “a natural consequence of con-
gressionally approved measures” or “pursuant to the good
faith implementation of a congressional act.”
Del-Rio
,
*12
Precedent bears this out. For example, in
Great Falls
,
Congress had authorized the Secretary of War to take land
embraced within a survey for purposes of constructing a
dam. The plaintiff alleged that the Secretary took land out-
side the survey. The Supreme Court held that even if some
of the land taken “happen[ed] not to be covered by the sur-
vey . . . , the United States [was] as much bound to make
just compensation therefor as if such land[] had been actu-
ally embraced in that survey.”
Great Falls Mfg. Co. v. Gar-
land
,
In
Portsmouth
, the plaintiffs alleged that the govern-
ment took their land by firing guns over it from a nearby
fort. The Court of Claims dismissed the takings claim at
the pleadings stage. In reversing the dismissal, the Su-
preme Court addressed the authorization issue, acknowl-
edging that “it very well may be that the [plaintiffs] will be
unable to establish authority on the part of those who did
the acts to bind the government by taking the land.”
In Eyherabide , the plaintiffs owned property near a military gunnery range used for testing aerial ordnance. Although the military had previously been a lessee of the property, its lease had ended in 1947. Eyherabide v. United States , 345 F.2d 565, 567 (Ct. Cl. 1965). Sometime after 1952, military personnel were dropping fuel tanks, shells, and other objects on or near the property. See id. at 568–69. Military personnel even visited the property several times and warned its caretakers that they were trespassers and that they should leave or else be arrested. Id. at 568. The plaintiffs brought a takings claim. Our predecessor court addressed the authorization issue and concluded that, because the government agents were act- ing within the “general scope of [their] duties,” their ac- tions were not “wholly unauthorized”—even though “they may have been mistaken, imprudent, or wrongful.” at 570. The court added that “[n]o statute or regulation forbade these activities.” (emphasis added).
Finally, in
Del-Rio
itself, an agency responsible for is-
suing drilling permits had denied a permit due to its mis-
interpretation of a statute. We held that, even if the
denial had been unlawful, it was still authorized for tak-
ings-claim purposes because “[i]t was part of [the agents’]
job to interpret the statutes and regulations governing fed-
eral mining leases, and there [was] no reason to suppose
that their decision reflected anything but a good faith effort
to apply the statutes and regulations as they understood
*14
them.”
Del-Rio
,
In contrast, unauthorized actions for takings-claim purposes tend to be “outside the normal scope of the gov- ernment officials’ duties” or done despite an “explicit pro- hibit[ion].” See id. ; see also Ramirez , 724 F.2d at 151 (observing that, if a taking occurs while a government agent “is acting within the normal scope of his duties,” it will typically be deemed authorized “ unless Congress has expressed a positive intent to prevent the taking or to ex- clude governmental liability” (emphasis added)).
Precedent bears this out as well. In
Hooe
, for example,
a government agency was leasing a building (except for the
basement) for $4,000 annually, yet the agency proceeded to
occupy the basement anyway.
*16
The Supreme Court also deemed action unauthorized
in
North American Transportation
. There, an army gen-
eral had taken possession of the plaintiff’s property.
* * *
To summarize: even if an action by a government agent
is unlawful, it will likely be deemed authorized for takings-
claim purposes if it was done within the normal scope of
the agent’s duties—for example, if it was done “pursuant to
the good faith implementation of a congressional act.”
Del-
Rio
, 146 F.3d at 1362 (cleaned up). If instead the action
was outside the normal scope of the government agent’s du-
ties—or, despite being within that scope, it contravened an
explicit prohibition or other positively expressed congres-
sional intent—it will likely be deemed unauthorized.
See
id.
at 1363;
Ramirez
,
implication being to the contrary in view of the express rental limit ” (emphasis added)).
B
We now consider whether the Order was “authorized” in the way takings law contemplates. We conclude that it was. [11]
To begin, we conclude that the CDC was acting within the normal scope of its duties when it issued the Order. The CDC is a national public-health agency, and its Direc- tor is authorized under section 361 of the PHSA “to make and enforce such regulations as in [its] judgment are nec- essary to prevent the introduction, transmission, or spread of communicable diseases . . . from one State or possession into any other State or possession.” 42 U.S.C. § 264(a). [12] The CDC issued the Order explicitly under that statutory authority. 85 Fed. Reg. at 55292–93, 55297. The Order explained why evictions would increase the risk of spread. at 55296 (“In short, evictions threaten to increase the spread of COVID-19 as they force people to move, often into close quarters in new shared housing settings with friends or family, or congregate settings such as homeless shel- ters.”). And it determined that the eviction moratorium “constitute[d] a reasonably necessary measure . . . to pre- vent the further spread of COVID-19 throughout the United States.” Plainly, when the CDC issued the Or- der, it was trying to “prevent the . . . spread of communica- ble diseases” across states—one of its core functions under the PHSA. See 42 U.S.C. § 264(a).
Critically, we also conclude that the CDC issued the
Order “pursuant to the good faith implementation of” the
*18
PHSA.
See Del-Rio
, 146 F.3d at 1362 (cleaned up). The
government certainly does not suggest otherwise.
See
Oral
Arg. at 29:18–29. Nor could it, really. After all, the gov-
ernment spent months in litigation defending its Order-re-
lated interpretation of the PHSA.
See, e.g.
, Mot. Summ. J.
at 8,
Ala. Ass’n of Realtors v. U.S. Dep’t of Health & Hum.
Servs.
, No. 1:20-cv-03377 (D.D.C. Dec. 21, 2020) (“[The]
CDC acted within its statutory and regulatory authority in
issuing the Order. This issue is one of straightforward
statutory analysis . . . .”), ECF No. 26. And, although the
Supreme Court eventually rejected that interpretation, it
was hardly an unfounded one; other courts (and three dis-
senting Justices) deemed it meritorious.
See, e.g.
,
Ala.
Ass’n of Realtors v. U.S. Dep’t of Health & Hum. Servs.
,
No. 21-5093,
Having concluded that the CDC issued the Order
within the normal scope of its duties, we next consider
whether it contravened some explicit prohibition or posi-
tively expressed congressional intent in so doing.
See id.
at 1363,
Ramirez
,
Accordingly, because the CDC issued the Order within
the normal scope of its duties, and because it did not con-
travene any explicit prohibition or positively expressed
congressional intent in so doing (far from it, as just dis-
cussed), we conclude that the Order was “authorized” for
takings-claim purposes.
See Del-Rio
,
That the Order was “authorized,” or chargeable to the
government, not only accords with doctrine; it also accords
with common sense. The CDC issued the Order only after
receiving a directive—from the President himself—to “con-
sider whether any measures temporarily halting residen-
tial evictions of any tenants for failure to pay rent are
reasonably necessary to prevent” further interstate spread
*21
21
of COVID-19.
Ultimately, requiring that a government agent’s action
be “authorized” in order to support takings liability reflects
solicitude for Congress’s “power of the purse.”
See, e.g.
,
NBH Land Co. v. United States
,
C
The dissent and government take a contrary view of the authorization issue. They insist that, because the Or- der exceeded the CDC’s statutory authority under the PHSA, it was unauthorized for takings-claim purposes—no further analysis needed. While they acknowledge that an authorized action can be unlawful in some respects, they say there exists a bright-line rule: if the government agent’s action exceeds the authority of the statute under which the agent was acting , it cannot be authorized in the takings sense. Rather, they maintain, actions of the “un- lawful yet authorized” sort contemplate only violations of *22 some other statute, or some (arguably) other miscellaneous type of error (for the dissent, it is a mistake of fact; for the government, it is a mere “procedural[]” error, or perhaps the way in which the action was carried out, or maybe even a constitutional violation, like violating the Eighth Amend- ment). See, e.g. , Dissent 1–2; Appellee’s Br. 17, 25–27. This type of line-drawing is both unsupported and unper- suasive.
Initially, the dissent marshals several cases that it
says support its bright-line rule. The cases it relies on,
however, are distinguishable—at least because in those
cases, unlike here, the alleged taking contravened an ex-
plicit prohibition or other positively expressed congres-
sional intent. For example, in addition to
Hooe
and
North
American Transportation
(discussed
supra
Discussion
Part I.A), the dissent relies on this court’s predecessor’s de-
cisions in
NBH
and
Southern California Financial
. Dis-
sent 15–16, 24. In
NBH
, the alleged taking related to a
proposed expansion of a military base—a proposal Con-
gress had twice explicitly
rejected
.
NBH
,
Likewise, in
Southern California Financial
, the mili-
tary appropriated what amounted to a fee or permanent
easement. Our predecessor court determined that, under
the Military Construction Authorization Act, such an ap-
propriation “would have required the specific consent of
Congress,” which the military neither sought nor obtained.
S. Cal. Fin. Corp. v. United States
,
Other cases the dissent relies on are to similar effect.
See Coast Indian Cmty. v. United States
, 550 F.2d 639,
650–52, 650 nn.23 & 25 (Ct. Cl. 1977) (one section of the
congressional Act appeared to authorize the alleged taking,
but a neighboring section of the same Act “expressly
forb[ade]” such an action without tribal consent; the al-
leged taking “in the absence of the required consents was
an act beyond the authority of the government agents in-
volved” (cleaned up));
Sun Oil Co. v. United States
,
*24
In each of these cases, Congress had provided some ex-
plicit indication that the alleged taking was
not
authorized.
As we have explained, those circumstances are not present
in this case; if anything, the circumstances here are the op-
posite. This distinction “makes all the difference.”
See S.
Cal. Fin.
,
The dissent also reads
Del-Rio
, and the principles it ar-
ticulated, as being limited to the dissent’s bright-line rule.
See, e.g.
, Dissent 18–19 (maintaining that
Del-Rio
recog-
nized only that a government agent’s action, “though un-
lawful because violative of
another statute
or
mistaken on
the facts
,” can be authorized in the takings sense (emphasis
added)). We disagree with the dissent’s narrow reading of
Del-Rio
. Nowhere does
Del-Rio
itself ascribe significance
to such a distinction—e.g., between acts contrary to the
takings liability); and (2) there was no finding that the gov-
ernment even took the business. at 345. Only after
providing these additional reasons did the Court add that,
“[m]oreover,” because the Act in question did not confer au-
thority to take a business, there could be no takings liabil-
ity. (citing
N. Am. Transp.
,
statute under which the agent was acting and acts contrary
to some
other
statute—let alone indicate that only the lat-
ter (and not the former) could support takings liability.
Nor do we think such a distinction is dispositive of whether
the action should be deemed chargeable to the government.
In either scenario, the agent has exceeded its authority in
some sense.
See Ramirez
,
Finer legal points aside, the implications of the dissent
and government’s position illustrate its weakness. Taken
to its logical conclusion, their position is that government
agents can physically occupy private property for public
use, resist for months the owner’s legal attempts to make
them leave, and then, when finally made to leave, say they
need not pay for their stay because they had no business
being there in the first place. It would be one thing for this
to be the result when government agents are clearly acting
apart from Congress’s will; in such a case, requiring just
compensation would encroach too much on Congress’s
power of the purse. But there is no sound reason for such
a result in a case like this, where (1) the government agent,
after receiving a directive from the President, acted in good
faith pursuant to a good-faith understanding of its congres-
sionally conferred authority, (2) there was no explicit con-
gressional prohibition foreclosing that understanding
(indeed, Congress at the time did nothing but lend support
*26
26
, to that understanding), and (3) the government vehe-
mently pressed that understanding in litigation so as to se-
riously impede the property owners’ efforts to end the
alleged occupation. Depriving property owners of a poten-
tial Fifth Amendment remedy in this case would deprive
them of any meaningful remedy at all. It would vitiate the
Takings Clause by “forcing some people alone to bear pub-
lic burdens which, in all fairness and justice, should be
borne by the public as a whole.”
Armstrong
,
The dissent and government further argue that, even
if the CDC’s lack of PHSA authority for the Order does not
by itself
foreclose a takings claim, the CDC
also
was not
acting within the normal scope of its duties when it issued
the Order.
See
Dissent 25–31;
see also
Appellee’s Br. 27,
35. Both rely heavily on the Supreme Court’s ruling in
Al-
abama Association of Realtors
in advancing this argument.
See, e.g.
Dissent 31 (“[T]he Supreme Court’s decision spe-
cifically held that the [Order] was outside the agency’s nor-
mal scope of duties or any reasonable interpretation of its
powers.”); Appellee’s Br. 27 (observing that the Court
deemed it “virtually certain” that the CDC lacked statutory
authority for the Order (quoting
Ala. Ass’n of Realtors
,
We are unconvinced. As we have explained, the ques- tion of statutory authority is distinct from the question of authority for takings-claim purposes. Only the former was at all implicated in Alabama Association of Realtors . And we are unwilling to assume that the Supreme Court, in as- sessing the merits of the PHSA statutory-authority ques- tion, also implicitly decided (or even suggested) that the Order was unauthorized in the takings sense—so as to re- lieve the government of a Fifth Amendment obligation to compensate for any taking that resulted from the Order. *27 ,
The dissent nonetheless maintains that, because the Order was so abnormal, it could not have possibly been within the “normal scope” of the CDC’s duties. See Dis- sent 28 (“[T]he [PHSA] had been in existence for 76 years, but the CDC’s [Order] was unlike any previous action taken under the PHSA before the COVID-19 pandemic.”); id. at 27–30. Of course, when we say that the CDC issued the Order within the “normal scope” of its duties, we do not mean to suggest that the Order itself was normal. We read- ily agree it was not. But then again, neither was a bur- geoning pandemic on the scale of COVID-19 (certainly not in the 76 years of the PHSA’s existence). See, e.g. , 85 Fed. Reg. at 55292 (observing that COVID-19 presented “a his- toric threat to public health” prompting “unprecedented or exceedingly rare [governmental] actions”). The Order’s ab- normality flowed naturally from the abnormal circum- stances the CDC was confronting—and from the CDC’s reasonable (if ultimately incorrect) interpretation and ap- plication of its PHSA authority to those circumstances. In this case, simply because the Order was abnormal does not mean that the CDC—the agency charged with issuing reg- ulations “as in [its] judgment” are necessary to prevent the interstate spread of communicable diseases , 42 U.S.C. § 264(a)—was acting outside the “normal scope” of its du- ties for takings-claim purposes when issuing it.
Accordingly, for the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the Order was “authorized” in the way takings law contemplates.
II
Having concluded that there is no “lack of authoriza- tion” impediment to Appellants’ takings claim, we turn now to whether their complaint stated a claim for a physi- cal taking by the government. We conclude that it did.
The law recognizes two main categories of takings—
physical takings and regulatory takings—each analyzed
differently.
See, e.g. Tahoe-Sierra Pres. Council, Inc. v.
*28
Tahoe Reg’l Plan. Agency
, 535 U.S. 302, 321–23 (2002).
Generally speaking, physical takings (which concern phys-
ical occupation or appropriation of property) involve per se
rules, whereas regulatory takings (which concern re-
strictions on how a property owner
uses
its property) in-
volve a flexible, multifactor balancing inquiry.
See Cedar
Point Nursery v. Hassid
,
The parties’ dispute over whether the complaint stated a physical-taking claim centers largely on two Supreme Court cases. Appellants rely on Cedar Point , and the gov- ernment relies on Yee . We therefore recount these two cases before analyzing the physical-taking issue here.
A
In
Cedar Point
, a state regulation granted labor organ-
izations a right to take access to an employer’s property.
The regulation required employers to allow union organiz-
ers onto their property for up to three hours a day, 120 days
a year.
Yee
involved park owners renting space to mobile-home
owners for their mobile homes. As a practical matter, these
“mobile” homes stayed put. So, when a mobile-home owner
wished to move, the home would be sold in place, and the
buyer would continue to rent the space from the park
owner.
Yee
,
The Supreme Court concluded in Yee that no physical taking occurred. It observed that “[t]he government effects a physical taking only where it requires the landowner to submit to the physical occupation of his land.” at 527 (emphasis in original). That element of required acquies- cence was missing, however, because the park owners “vol- untarily rented their land to mobile home owners.” The Court reasoned that “no government ha[d] required any physical invasion of [the park owners’] property”; rather, “[their] tenants were invited by [them], not forced upon *30 them by the government.” at 528. Ultimately, the Court concluded that the laws at issue “merely regulate[d] [the park owners’] use of their land by regulating the rela- tionship between landlord and tenant,” id. (emphasis in original), and it confirmed that “[w]hen a landowner de- cides to rent his land to tenants, the government may place ceilings on the rents the landowner can charge” without ef- fecting a physical taking, see id. at 529. In so concluding, however, the Court was careful to note that (1) nothing compelled the park owners, once they had rented their property to tenants, to continue doing so, id. at 527–28; (2) in fact, a park owner wishing to change use of its prop- erty could evict its tenants (albeit with six- or twelve- months’ notice), id. at 528; and (3) “[a] different case would be presented” if a landowner were “compel[led] . . . over ob- jection to rent his property or to refrain in perpetuity from terminating a tenancy,” id.
B
Cedar Point ’s reasoning indicates that the complaint stated a physical-taking claim. And, as explained below, we consider Yee distinguishable. We therefore conclude that the complaint stated a physical-taking claim.
We begin with
Cedar Point
. Just as in that case—
where, absent the regulation, the employers could have ex-
cluded the union organizers from their property,
Cedar
Point
,
Yee , meanwhile, is distinguishable and does not control here. Unlike here, the laws at issue in Yee expressly per- mitted eviction for nonpayment of rent. See 503 U.S. at 524; see also id. at 531 n.* (noting that the ordinance “only limits rents”). Indeed, Yee was fundamentally a rent- control case. See id. at 529–30 (observing that “[o]rdinary rent control often transfers wealth from landlords to ten- ants,” and that although a mobile-home owner’s “ability to sell the mobile home at a premium may make this wealth transfer more visible than in the ordinary case,” “the exist- ence of the transfer in itself d[id] not convert regulation into physical invasion” (emphasis in original)). The grava- men of the park owners’ challenge in Yee concerned an al- leged transfer of value that was occasioned by the rent- control ordinance—a theory that was “predicated on the unusual economic relationship” between park owners and mobile-home owners. See id. at 526. The Court simply was not presented with something akin to what has been chal- lenged here: an outright prohibition on evictions for non- payment of rent.
Although the government advances several Yee -based arguments for why Appellants’ complaint did not state a physical-taking claim, none is persuasive.
First, the government seems to suggest that
Yee
broadly established that government actions implicating
*32
, the landlord-tenant relationship can never be physical tak-
ings.
See, e.g.
Appellee’s Br. 17–18. We disagree. To be
sure,
Yee
confirmed that states “have broad power to regu-
late housing conditions in general and the landlord-tenant
relationship in particular without paying compensation for
all economic injuries that such regulation entails.”
Second, the government argues that here, like
Yee
(and
unlike
Cedar Point
), Appellants’ tenants had been volun-
tarily
“invited” onto Appellants’ property—which,
*33
according to the government, means that there was no
physical taking.
See
Appellee’s Br. 41, 46–47;
see also Yee
,
Third, the government downplays the significance of
Yee
’s express caveat that “[a] different case would be pre-
sented” if a landowner were “compel[led] . . . over objection
to rent his property or to refrain
in perpetuity
from termi-
nating a tenancy,”
In sum, the complaint states a claim sharing signifi-
cant similarities with what was described and held in
Ce-
dar Point
to constitute a physical taking. And, although
*34
Yee
was concerned with a landlord-tenant relationship, for
the foregoing reasons, we find it distinguishable from the
circumstances presented in this case. We therefore con-
clude that Appellants’ complaint stated a physical-taking
claim requiring just compensation. Our conclusion in this
regard is only bolstered by the Supreme Court’s observa-
tion in
Alabama Association of Realtors
that the Order, by
“preventing [landlords] from evicting tenants who breach
their leases[,] intrudes on one of the most fundamental el-
ements of property ownership—the right to exclude.”
Before completing our discussion, however, one final point bears mentioning. The government envisions “strik- ing” implications of concluding that Appellants’ complaint stated a physical-taking claim. See Appellee’s Br. 43. It argues that, if Appellants’ claim can proceed, any law that prevents a property owner from immediately effecting an eviction will constitute a physical taking, since it will have “temporarily interfer[ed] with the purported ‘right to ex- clude.’” See id. at 43–44.
We take the government’s point, but its concern is ulti-
mately misplaced. Initially, what we have here is hardly a
run-of-the-mill law implicating the landlord-tenant rela-
tionship. Instead, it is a highly unusual—and, so far as the
parties have shown, unprecedented—Order that outright
prevented evictions for nonpayment of rent.
Cf. Cmty.
Hous. Improvement Program v. City of New York
, 59 F.4th
540, 552 (2d Cir. 2023) (“It is well settled that limitations
on the termination of a tenancy do not effect a [physical]
taking
so long as there is a possible route to an eviction
.”
(emphasis added)),
cert. denied
,
Further, just because other means might have had a similar economic impact on Appellants—e.g., government action making it more onerous or time-consuming to real- ize an eviction—it does not follow that such means would give rise to a physical taking. The Supreme Court *35 considered a similar situation in Horne v. Department of Agriculture , 576 U.S. 350 (2015). There, a federal order required raisin growers to give a percentage of their crop to the government. Id. at 355. The Court held that this requirement was a physical taking. Id. at 361. Although it acknowledged that the government could have simply prohibited the sale of raisins (or limited their production) without effecting a physical taking, the Court concluded that this distinction “flow[ed] naturally” from the “settled difference in [its] takings jurisprudence between appropri- ation and regulation.” at 362. It explained:
A physical taking of raisins and a regulatory limit on production may have the same economic impact on a grower. The Constitution, however, is con- cerned with means as well as ends. . . . As Justice Holmes noted, “a strong public desire to improve the public condition is not enough to warrant achieving the desire by a shorter cut than the con- stitutional way.” (quoting Pa. Coal Co. v. Mahon , 260 U.S. 393, 416
(1922)). A similar explanation suffices here. Whatever might be said of other means to achieving the same or a similar end as the Order—and to be clear, we do not pass on any such means—we conclude that Appellants’ com- plaint stated a claim that fits within the Court’s conception of a physical taking.
C ONCLUSION
We have considered the government’s remaining argu- ments and find them unpersuasive. For the foregoing rea- sons, we reverse the Court of Federal Claims’ dismissal and remand for further proceedings.
REVERSED AND REMANDED
C OSTS
Costs to Appellants.
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit ______________________ DARBY DEVELOPMENT COMPANY, INC., ET AL.,
Plaintiffs-Appellants
v.
UNITED STATES, Defendant-Appellee ______________________ 2022-1929 ______________________ Appeal from the United States Court of Federal Claims in No. 1:21-cv-01621-AOB, Judge Armando O. Bonilla.
______________________
D YK , Circuit Judge , dissenting.
For well over 100 years the Supreme Court has recog- nized that unauthorized actions of a federal agency or fed- eral official cannot create takings liability. If a government agent exceeds the authority conferred by the statute which grants it the power to act, then that action is unauthorized. Unauthorized actions are distinct from unlawful actions. The pertinent difference is that a government action which is unlawful because it violates some other statute or misin- terprets the facts can still be authorized. The majority fails to recognize this critical distinction.
1. Until now our court and our predecessor court have
faithfully followed that Supreme Court authority. How-
ever, the panel majority here, relying on a misreading of
our decision in
Del-Rio Drilling Programs, Inc. v. United
*37
States
,
2. The Supreme Court cases on which the majority re- lies— Great Falls Manufacturing Co. v. Garland , 124 U.S. 581 (1888) and Portsmouth Harbor Land & Hotel Co. v. United States , 260 U.S. 327 (1922)—either specifically found authorization ( Great Falls ) or ordered the very in- quiry into authorization that the governing cases clearly require ( Portsmouth ). There is not a single Supreme Court case that applies the majority’s “normal scope of duties” standard. Whatever interpretation is given to the lan- guage of Del-Rio , the fact remains that not a single case from the Supreme Court or our court has ever imposed tak- ings liability where the agency acted beyond the scope of statutory authorization.
3. Even if the majority’s reading of
Del-Rio
were cor-
rect, the majority’s conclusion that the Centers for Disease
*38
Control and Prevention’s (“CDC”) eviction moratorium was
within the “normal scope” of the duties of the CDC acting
under section 361 of the Public Health Service Act
(“PHSA”), Maj. Op. 17, is unsupported and inconsistent
with the Supreme Court’s decision in
Alabama Association
of Realtors v. Department of Health & Human Services
, 594
U.S. 758 (2021) (hereinafter “
Alabama Realtors
”). There,
the Supreme Court held that the eviction moratorium at
issue here was well outside the CDC’s normal scope of du-
ties. “This claim of expansive authority under § 361(a) is
unprecedented.”
Alabama Realtors
,
4. The majority’s holding here would have significant
consequences. It would effectively make even clearly un-
authorized agency action authorized for purposes of tak-
ings liability unless that action was contrary to a specific
prohibition of the authorizing statute or taken in bad faith.
That cannot be correct. The majority’s decision would work
a sea change in our takings jurisprudence and impose sig-
nificant takings liability on agencies for unauthorized acts,
directly discouraging adoption of legitimate government
programs because of the risk of takings liability in addition
to injunctive and declaratory relief. Historically, unau-
thorized programs were enjoined. Now, in addition there
is the specter of takings liability. In this case alone, the
Supreme Court found that Congress’ “nearly $50 billion in
emergency rental assistance” was “a reasonable proxy of
*39
the moratorium’s economic impact.”
Alabama Realtors
,
5. The majority contends that “[d]epriving property
owners of a potential Fifth Amendment remedy in this case
would deprive them of any meaningful remedy at all.” Maj.
Op. 26. This is simply incorrect. The appellants here did
have a meaningful remedy, which has been repeatedly rec-
ognized by the Supreme Court and this court and led to the
invalidation of the eviction moratorium order. “Ordinarily,
whenever there is no authority for a taking or intrusion,
the claimant, although unable to obtain compensation, can
seek an injunction or a declaratory judgment against the
unauthorized governmental activities.”
S. Cal. Fin. Corp.
v. United States
,
Here, however, the plaintiffs never even bothered to seek an injunction. The CDC’s eviction moratorium was first implemented on September 4, 2020, and the plaintiffs could have immediately sought an injunction or declara- tory relief. Instead, the plaintiffs did not seek an injunc- tion or declaratory relief and waited nearly a year, until July 27, 2021, to file suit in the Court of Federal Claims alleging a takings claim. Plaintiffs cannot fail to seek an injunction or declaratory relief, wait for damages to accrue, *40 and then contend that only a takings claim is a meaningful remedy.
I
I now explain how fundamentally the majority has gone astray. The length of this dissent is testament to the large number of cases in the Supreme Court, our court, and our predecessor court that directly contradict the major- ity’s approach.
A
The requirement that there can be no taking in the ab- sence of authority (and the reason for that requirement) has been recognized repeatedly by the Supreme Court. There can be no takings liability for unauthorized acts be- cause they are not chargeable to the United States.
In 1910 in the seminal Hooe case, the Court explained: It is the Constitution which places these matters under the control of Congress. If an officer of the United States assumes, by virtue alone of his office, and without the authority of Congress, to take such matters under his control, he will not, in any legal or constitutional sense, represent the United States, and what he does or omits to do, without the authority of the Congress, cannot create a claim against the government . . . . The constitutional prohibition against taking private property for public use without just compensation is directed against the government, and not against individual or public officers proceeding without the authority of legislative enactment. The taking of private property by an officer of the United States for pub- lic use, without being authorized, expressly or by necessary implication, to do so by some act of Con- gress, is not the act of the government.
Hooe
,
“The taking of private property by an officer of the United States for public use, without being author- ized, expressly or by necessary implication, to do so by some act of Congress, is not the act of the gov- ernment,” and hence recovery is not available in the Court of Claims.
419 U.S. 102, 127 n.16 (1974) (quoting Hooe , 218 U.S. at 336).
The Supreme Court decisions applying these principles
are legion. The first mention of the authorization require-
ment appears in
United States v. Great Falls Manufactur-
ing Co.
,
In Hooe , the Court for the first time found that a lack of authorization defeated a takings claim. The Secretary of the Interior rented a building for an amount in excess of the amount appropriated by Congress. 218 U.S. at 328. The Court held that “[t]he statutes . . . make it plain that the Secretary was without power to make any express con- tract for rent in excess of the appropriation made by Con- gress,” and thus there was no takings liability. at 333.
In North American Transportation & Trading Co. v. United States , 253 U.S. 330, 334 (1920), a decade after Hooe , the Supreme Court held there was no taking when an Army General appropriated land as a site for an army post. The General took the land pursuant to a statute which provided:
[T]he Secretary of War may cause proceedings to be instituted, in the name of the United States . . . for the acquirement, by condemnation, of any land, or right pertaining thereto, needed for the site, lo- cation, construction, or prosecution of works for for- tifications and coast defenses . . . .
Act of Aug. 18, 1890, ch. 797, 26 Stat. 315, 316. The Su- preme Court construed the statute to mean that only the Secretary of War had that authority. N. Am. Transp. , 253 U.S. at 333. Because the General exceeded the scope of statutory authority, his action was “without authority” for takings purposes. Id. at 334. The Supreme Court found that “although Congress may have conferred upon the Ex- ecutive Department power to take land for a given purpose, the [g]overnment will not be deemed to have so appropri- ated private property, merely because some officer thereaf- ter takes possession of it with a view to effectuating the general purpose of Congress.” Id. at 333.
Two years later in
Portsmouth Harbor Land & Hotel
Co. v. United States
, a taking was alleged to have occurred
when a military base fired gun projectiles over the plain-
tiff’s property.
In
Mitchell v. United States
,
In Yearsley v. W.A. Ross Constr. Co. , 309 U.S. 18, 19 (1940), a taking was alleged when the government con- structed dikes which caused part of the plaintiff’s land to wash away. The Supreme Court held that the construction of the dikes was authorized, and the government would in- cur takings liability “if this authority to carry out the pro- ject was validly conferred, that is, if what was done was within the constitutional power of Congress.” at 20–21.
In
Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer
, the Court
reasoned that Congress had not authorized the President’s
action in seizing steel mills. An injunction was appropriate
because of prospective irreparable injury. The injury was
irreparable in part because a right to after-the-fact takings
liability had not been established. “Prior cases in this
Court have cast doubt on the right to recover in the Court
of Claims on account of properties unlawfully taken by gov-
ernment officials for public use.”
*44 In Malone v. Bowdoin , the plaintiff alleged that a For- est Service officer’s occupation of land was unauthorized because the plaintiff was the rightful owner of the land. 369 U.S. 643, 644 (1962). The Supreme Court explained that a takings claim could lie because the Forest Service officer was authorized in occupying land; “it [had not] been asserted that the [officer] was exceeding his delegated pow- ers as an officer of the United States in occupying the land in question, or that he was in possession of the land in an- ything other than his official capacity.” Id. at 648 (footnote omitted).
Similarly in the
Regional Rail Reorganization Act
Cases
, the Court found takings liability because the gov-
ernment’s actions were authorized. The government re-
quired the transfer of the property of eight major railroads
into a single for-profit corporation. 419 U.S. at 108–09.
The Court noted that “‘[t]he taking of private property by
an officer of the United States for public use, without being
authorized, expressly or by necessary implication, to do so
by some act of Congress, is not the act of the [g]overnment,’
and hence recovery is not available in the Court of Claims.”
at 127 n.16 (quoting
Hooe
,
claimed that the tortious actions of public officers, within the scope of their delegated powers, are the actions of the United States . . . Portsmouth . . . demonstrates that such suits cannot be defeated by arguing that the officers’ ac- tions, because tortious, are outside of their authority and hence not actions of the United States.”) (citation omitted); id. at 702 (government action is unauthorized when “it is not within the officer’s statutory powers or, if within those powers, only if the powers, or their exercise in the particu- lar case, are constitutionally void”).
Thus, the Supreme Court has repeatedly recognized that for a taking to lie, the government agent must have statutory authority. If a government agent violates or ex- ceeds the very statute which grants him power to act, then that action is unauthorized. The majority cannot distin- guish these cases or explain why they are not contrary to the approach that it adopts.
These cases leave no room for a normal or general scope
of duties exception to statutory authorization. They explic-
itly require authorization, and if “the [a]ct did not confer
authority to take . . . [it] cannot support an action for com-
pensation under the Tucker Act.”
Mitchell
,
B
The Supreme Court cases relied on by the majority do
not support its contention that an action beyond statutory
authority can result in takings liability “if it was done by
government agents ‘within the general scope of their du-
ties.’” Maj. Op. 11 (quoting
Del-Rio
,
The majority points to the second
Great Falls
decision,
Great Falls Manufacturing Co., v. Garland
,
In Great Falls , the statute provided that: The Secretary of War shall cause to be made . . . a like survey and map of the land necessary for a dam . . . and when surveys and maps shall have been made the Secretary of War and the Attorney General of the United States shall proceed to ac- quire to and for the United States the outstanding title, if any, to said land and water rights . . . by condemnation.
The government never argued that takings liability
could not lie because the Secretary of War’s acts were un-
authorized. Instead, the government contended that it
complied with the statute and that the condemnation was
authorized. Br. of Argument for Appellees at 7,
Great
Falls
, 124 U.S. 581. The Supreme Court found that the
*47
Secretary of War’s authorization was not limited by the
survey, but extended explicitly to “said land,” that is, “the
land necessary” for a dam.
Great Falls
,
Great Falls therefore held that the government properly followed condemnation proceedings, not that the *48 , government was liable for a taking even though the acts were unauthorized. [5]
So too in Portsmouth (also relied on by the majority, Maj. Op. 12), the Supreme Court explicitly reaffirmed that a lack of authorization would defeat takings liability, see supra p. 7.
C
The cases of this court and our predecessor court have never departed from the Supreme Court’s authority until now. [6] We have consistently held that if a government *49 agent exceeds its statutory authority to act, then that act is unauthorized and there is no takings liability. A detailed analysis of the cases shows that this was established long before Del-Rio by authority binding on and cited by the Del- Rio court.
In
Eyherabide v. United States
, the plaintiffs owned a
ranch surrounded by an aerial gunnery range for the U.S.
Navy.
In Coast Indian Community v. United States , 550 F.2d 639, 641 (Ct. Cl. 1977), the Bureau of Indian Affairs (“BIA”) was alleged to have taken tribal property when it conveyed “a right-of-way across [the plaintiff’s tribal] reservation” to a state entity. As to authority, the plaintiff “claimed that the BIA conveyed the right-of-way pursuant to the author- ity vested in the Secretary of the Interior by 25 U.S.C. § 323 (1970).” at 650. The court found that “[s]ection 323, it is true, conferred broad powers on the Secretary ‘to grant rights-of-way for all purposes’ across Indian lands . . . [b]ut section 324 of the same title . . . restricted those powers by Act suit does not lie for an executive taking not authorized by Congress, expressly or by implication.”).
requiring that consents of Indian occupants be obtained in certain circumstances before making a conveyance pursu- ant to section 323.” Id. The court held that “[t]he BIA vio- lated the restrictions contained in the statute and regulations, for although it was required by them to obtain the consents of a majority of the adult members of the Coast Indian Community before conveying the right-of- way, it failed to do so.” Id. “In order for a taking to occur by virtue of the act of an agent of the [g]overnment, the agent’s act must be accomplished within the scope of his statutory or delegated authority.” Id. at 649. “The court must therefore conclude that the BIA’s conveyance of the right-of-way in the absence of the required consents was an act beyond the authority of the [g]overnment agents in- volved” and that there was no takings liability. Id. at 652.
The next year in Sun Oil Co. v. United States , 572 F.2d 786, 793 (Ct. Cl. 1978), the plaintiffs, having leased oil properties from the United States, alleged that the govern- ment’s “refusal to approve their application to install [a platform]” for oil drilling amounted to a taking of their leasehold rights. The government “granted the lease on the authority of the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act [“OCSL Act”].” Id. at 792. Our predecessor court found that “[t]he only language in the OCSL Act which expressly authorizes the Secretary to take plaintiff’s lease rights is to be found . . . in special national emergency or state of war situa- tions.” Id. at 819. “No such situations are present in this case.” Id. Thus, the court held “that the Secretary was without authority to take an OCSL Act lessee’s leasehold rights” and there was no takings liability.
In
NBH Land Co. v. United States
, military officers dis-
seminated a plan to expand a military reservation onto
nearby land, decreasing the land value.
In
Southern California Financial Corp. v. United
States
, a taking was alleged when the Air Force took an
indefinite easement of the plaintiff’s land.
In
Yuba Goldfields, Inc. v. United States
, a property
owner sold the United States land but reserved the right to
extract metals from the land and sold that right to the
plaintiff.
In
Florida Rock Industries, Inc. v. United States
, a tak-
ing was alleged when the Army engineers denied a permit
*52
to mine limestone.
These cases, all decided before Del-Rio , demonstrate that when a government agent, by some act, exceeds the authority of the very statute which the government claims grants it authority, there is no takings liability. At the same time, consistent with Supreme Court authority, we have found takings liability when the government act rests on a mistaken factual assumption (e.g., property owner- ship) or is illegal or wrongful based on violation of some other statute or regulation.
Del-Rio
itself was about property ownership rather
than the scope of legislative authorization. We held that
the Claims Court in takings cases could determine the ex-
tent of the claimant’s property interest and that the gov-
ernment did not lack authority to deny the permit simply
because the government was mistaken as to the extent of
the plaintiff’s property rights.
Del-Rio
,
The majority fundamentally misunderstands our deci-
sion in
Del-Rio
, contending that “even if an action by a gov-
ernment agent is unlawful, it will likely be deemed
authorized for takings-claim purposes if it was done within
the normal scope of the agent’s duties—for example, if it
was done ‘pursuant to the good faith implementation of a
congressional act.’” Maj. Op. 16 (quoting
Del-Rio
, 146 F.3d
*53
at 1362 (cleaned up)). In
Del-Rio
, the plaintiff claimed that
the United States had taken its property when the Bureau
of Land Management (“BLM”) denied the plaintiff a permit
to mine minerals because it lacked a right to access the
property for drilling purposes.
Del-Rio
,
In that connection, we held that the Court of Federal
Claims could resolve the question of property ownership in
adjudicating the takings claim.
Del-Rio
,
We distinguished cases such as
Florida Rock
where it
was alleged that there was a lack of statutory authority.
We quoted approvingly
Florida Rock
’s statement that “[i]n
defending, the government may deny the authority and in
that way authority could become an issue in a Tucker Act
taking case.”
Del-Rio
,
We explained that “government agents have the requi-
site authorization if they act within the general scope of
their duties,
i.e.
, if their actions are a ‘natural consequence
of Congressionally approved measures,’ or are pursuant to
‘the good faith implementation of a Congressional Act.’”
The reference to “normal scope of duties” does not sug- gest that statutory authorization is unnecessary but simply responds to the Claims Court’s holding that “[o]nly if the action is ‘valid,’ i.e., unassailable on some independ- ent constitutional, statutory, or procedural ground, should the Takings Clause be implicated,” Del-Rio 37 Fed. Cl. 157, 161 (1997), rev’d , 146 F.3d 1358, and to make clear that issues of fact as to property ownership do not equate to a lack of authorization.
The majority in
Del-Rio
relied on the D.C. Circuit’s va-
cated opinion in
Ramirez
, another case involving a dispute
as to property ownership. There, the Department of De-
fense occupied land, allegedly owned by plaintiff, for use as
a training facility for Salvadoran soldiers, apparently una-
ware of the plaintiff’s ownership.
Ramirez
,
5. “[T]he plaintiff in a takings action cannot assert that the government conduct was unauthorized, since conduct by a government official who is acting ultra vires cannot effect a governmental taking for public purposes within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment.” at 1365. “The cases cited by the government do not stand for
the proposition that the Court of Federal Claims loses ju-
risdiction to decide a takings claim whenever the govern-
ment seeks to defend the agency action on the ground that
the plaintiff lacks the property right on which its takings
claim is based.”
Del-Rio
,
government appropriated land belonging to the plaintiff
without compensation.
Id.
at 146. The government did not
violate the statute under which it was operating, a statute
that granted it authority to set up military training facili-
ties.
Id.
at 153. Instead, the government made a simple
mistake as to who owned the land. The occupation of the
land was nonetheless held to be authorized for purposes of
takings liability.
Id.
The court made it clear that “the mere
fact that a government officer has acted illegally does not
mean he has exceeded his authority for Tucker Act pur-
poses,” and precluding takings liability based solely on the
government action turning out to be illegal would be “an
extreme position.” at 151. The court found authoriza-
tion specifically because “the officials of the Defense De-
partment in the present case were performing their
ordinary responsibilities of deploying United States mili-
tary forces and of planning and operating a training facility
for the military forces of a friendly country.” at 153.
Nothing in
Ramirez
says a takings claim can be based on
government acts which lack statutory authority.
*58
Our cases after
Del-Rio
confirm that statutory author-
ization is required. In
Rith Energy, Inc. v. United States
,
an office of the Department of the Interior (“OSM”) leased
mining rights to the plaintiff.
Later cases are to the same effect. In
Taylor v. United
States
,
1253, 1264 (Fed. Cir. 2022). Our post- Del-Rio cases thus have consistently held that authority is essential to a tak- ings claim and takings liability cannot be founded upon a lack of authorization.
The majority’s decision is inconsistent with cases such as Hooe , North American Transportation , Mitchell , South- ern California Financial , Coast Indian Community , Sun Oil Co. , and NBH Land Co. , where takings liability was *60 rejected because of a lack of authorization, and inconsistent with cases finding takings liability only because there was statutory authorization for the government’s action.
Finally, to the extent that the majority suggests that a
directive from the President could make the CDC’s action
authorized,
see
Maj. Op. 20, it is inconsistent with Supreme
Court precedent. “In order that the [g]overnment shall be
liable it must appear that the officer who has physically
taken possession of the property was duly authorized so to
do, either directly by Congress or by the official upon whom
Congress conferred the power.”
N. Am. Transp.
, 253 U.S.
at 333. Presidential action is not a substitute for Congres-
sional authorization. Congress “can authorize the taking
of private property for public use” and “[t]he Constitution
does not subject this law-making power of Congress to
presidential . . . control.”
Youngstown
, 343 U.S. at 588.
“[T]he President may not exercise the legislative power to
authorize the seizure of private property for public use.”
Clinton v. Jones
,
II
The Supreme Court and circuit authority is clear. But let us assume for the moment that the majority, contrary to all authority, is correct as to the legal standard. Even if the majority’s statement of the law were correct, and that a government official’s action could be authorized if it fell within that official’s “normal scope of duties,” even though beyond the official’s authority under the statute, the CDC issuing an eviction moratorium cannot plausibly be said to be within the CDC’s normal scope of duties.
First, the history and language of the statute (section 361 of the PHSA) demonstrates that the primary concern was with quarantine and inspection and that Congress did not contemplate measures such as eviction moratoriums. Section 361, first enacted in 1944, was designed to accumu- late past legislative authorities. That authority was lim- ited.
Health regulation designed to avoid the spread of pan- demics began in the 17th century with local and state reg- ulation of vessels arriving from foreign ports. The federal government became involved at the end of the 18th cen- tury, and in 1796 Congress for the first time passed a law which authorized the President to assist states in quaran- tine measures. An Act Relative to Quarantine, ch. 31, 1 Stat. 474 (1796) (repealed 1799). In 1878 Congress passed a law which empowered the Surgeon General to implement quarantine regulations to prevent the introduction of con- tagious or infectious diseases into the United States, which included requiring vessels to report infections onboard. Act of Apr. 29, 1878, ch. 66, §§ 2, 5, 20 Stat. 37–38. In 1893, Congress expanded federal quarantine powers by enacting a law which regulated how and when foreign vessels could unload cargo and passengers, including enabling the Sec- retary of the Treasury to place infected vessels in federal quarantine stations. Act of Feb. 15, 1893, ch. 114, § 6, 27 Stat. 449, 452. The new law also authorized the President to halt immigration from specific countries which posed a “serious danger of the introduction of [cholera or other in- fectious or contagious diseases] into the United States.” § 7.
The PHSA was enacted “to bring together into a single and consistent enactment virtually all of the statutes relat- ing to the [Public Health] Service—a body of law which had accumulated over a century and a half.” Alanson W. Will- cox, The Public Health Service Act, 1944 , 7 S OC . S EC . B ULL . 15, 15 (1944).
*62 Section 361 of the PHSA was evidently primarily in- tended to allow the federal government to inspect and quarantine articles, animals, or individuals that were in- fected or diseased. The legislative history describes the purpose of section 361 of the PHSA only in terms of quar- antine and inspections. See Hearing Before a Subcomm. on Interstate & Foreign Commerce on H.R. 3379: A Bill to Codify the Laws Relating to the Public Health Service, and for Other Purposes, 78th Cong. 138–39 (1944) (statement of Mr. Wilcox).
The text of the statute confirms this primary purpose. Section 361(a) provides for the adoption of “regulations . . . for such inspection, fumigation, disinfection, sanitation, pest extermination, destruction of animals or articles found to be so infected or contaminated as to be sources of dan- gerous infection to human beings.” 42 U.S.C. § 264(a). Section (b) provides for the limited regulation of “apprehen- sion, detention, or conditional release of individuals . . . for the purpose of preventing the introduction, transmission, or spread of [] communicable diseases.” § 264(b). On its face, though the statute provides for such “other measures, as in [the Surgeon General’s] judgment may be by eliminating a provision that only allowed the Secretary to issue quarantine rules if they were recommended by the National Advisory Health Council and to allow interstate quarantine of individuals who were reasonably believed to be in the pre-communicable stage of an infectious disease if the disease “would be likely to cause a public health emergency if transmitted to other individuals.” Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Preparedness and Re- sponse Act of 2002, Pub. L. No. 107-188, § 142(b)(2)(B), 116 Stat. 626–27. As the majority recognizes, the PHSA names the
Surgeon General, but this authority has been transferred to the CDC. See Maj. Op. 17 n.12. *63 ,
necessary” “to prevent the introduction, transmission, or spread of communicable diseases,” the statute is concerned with preventing the interstate movement of “infected or contaminated” articles or persons. § 264(a). The CDC’s order is unlike any of the specific examples of permitted agency action in the text of the statute, the examples ref- erenced in the legislative history, or past practices under predecessor statutes. It is not an action within the CDC’s normal scope of duties.
Second, the statute had been in existence for 76 years, but the CDC’s eviction moratorium order was unlike any previous action taken under the PHSA before the COVID- 19 pandemic. “Prior to the COVID-19 pandemic, agencies that were delegated authority under Section 361 generally invoked the provision to issue regulations related to the quarantine and isolation of individuals believed to have been infected or exposed to a contagious disease, as well as the control or treatment of areas, animals, or articles that were susceptible or subject to contamination or infection.” W EN W. S HEN C ONGRESSIONAL R ESEARCH S ERVICE , S COPE OF CDC A UTHORITY U NDER S ECTION 361 OF THE P UBLIC H EALTH S ERVICE A CT (PHSA) 11 (2021) (footnotes omitted). Specifically, “[u]ntil the COVID-19 pandemic, the CDC pri- marily invoked its [s]ection 361 authority to issue and re- fine regulations relating to quarantine and isolation.” at 12.
The CDC’s eviction moratorium is more like prior state eviction moratoriums designed to mitigate the economic ef- fects of a pandemic than a public health measure designed to prevent the spread of disease. President Biden indeed *64 justified the CDC’s eviction moratorium in part because “it will probably give some additional time while we’re getting that $45 billion out to people who are, in fact, behind in the rent and don’t have the money.” The White House, Re- marks by President Biden on Fighting the COVID-19 Pan- demic (Aug. 3, 2021). Economic regulations are plainly not within the CDC’s normal scope of duties.
The Supreme Court in
Alabama Realtors
confirmed
that the statute “ha[d] rarely been invoked—and never be-
fore to justify an eviction moratorium. Regulations under
this authority have generally been limited to quarantining
infected individuals and prohibiting the import or sale of
animals known to transmit disease.”
eviction moratorium exceeded the CDC’s statutory author-
ity, the district court explained that “[i]t is also telling that
the CDC has never used [section 361] in this manner. As
the [CDC] confirms, [section 361] ‘has never been used to
implement a temporary eviction moratorium,’ and ‘has
rarely [been] utilized . . . for disease-control purposes.’”
Al-
abama Ass’n of Realtors v. United States Dep’t of Health &
Hum. Servs.
,
Third, in defending the CDC’s Order before the Su- preme Court in Alabama Realtors , the government never characterized the order as a routine exercise of authority. Instead, the government explained that the Order “rested on the CDC’s findings that the United States faced the risk of an unprecedented wave of evictions” based on “an un- precedented public emergency.” Response in Opposition to Applicants’ Emergency Application to Vacate the Stay at 16, 34, Alabama Realtors . The majority here likewise de- scribes the eviction moratorium as “hardly a run-of-the- mill law implicating the landlord-tenant relationship” and “[i]nstead, it is a highly unusual—and, so far as the parties have shown, unprecedented—Order.” Maj. Op. 34. The CDC’s Order was a response to an extreme event, and not a routine order issued within the normal scope of its duties.
Fourth, and most significantly, the Supreme Court’s
decision in
Alabama Realtors
made clear that the CDC’s
action is far outside any reasonable construction of the
statute. In vacating a stay of the injunction barring en-
forcement of the eviction moratorium, the Supreme Court
found “that the applicants are virtually certain to succeed
on the merits of their argument that the CDC has exceeded
its authority.”
Alabama Realtors
,
It cannot be both that the eviction moratorium was
within the normal scope of the CDC’s duties and that “[t]his
claim of expansive authority under § 361(a) is unprece-
dented.”
Id.
at 765. The Supreme Court explained that
“[w]e expect Congress to speak clearly when authorizing an
agency to exercise powers of ‘vast “economic and political
significance.”’” at 764 (quoting
Util. Air Regul. Grp. v.
EPA
,
Thus, even under the majority’s expressed view of Del- Rio , the CDC’s eviction moratorium was not within the nor- mal scope of its duties under the PHSA and thus the CDC’s action was unauthorized. A takings claim cannot lie for such unauthorized acts of a government official.
As discussed earlier, the majority’s mistake will have significant consequences for future cases. It will impose potential takings liability on agencies for virtually any act that is not contrary to a specific statutory prohibition or taken in bad faith. The increased risk of takings liability will deter government programs, and the government in this case alone has potential liability upwards of $50 bil- lion. This major change to our takings jurisprudence is *67 without support and cannot be correct. I respectfully dis- sent.
[1] Pub. L. No. 78-410, sec. 361, 58 Stat. 682, 703–04 (1944).
Notes
[2] The Order did not prevent evictions for certain rea- sons unrelated to rent, such as engaging in criminal activ- ity on the premises or threatening the health and safety of other residents. at 55294. The Order also prevented evictions only if the tenant was a “[c]overed person,” which, as defined, generally meant someone who supplied a sworn declaration attesting to economic hardship. See id. at 55293. Neither side has suggested that this latter qual- ification should affect our analysis of the legal issues that we decide in this appeal. Therefore, and for simplicity’s sake, we will refer to the Order generally as having pre- vented evictions for nonpayment of rent.
[3] Although these extensions included some modifica- tions to the originally issued Order, they are immaterial to this opinion’s discussion.
[4] Appellants alternatively claimed that the Order constituted an illegal exaction. The Court of Federal Claims dismissed that claim, and Appellants appealed that dismissal. At oral argument, however, Appellants repre- sented that if we reversed the dismissal of the takings claim (which we do), we need not reach the dismissal of the illegal-exaction claim. Oral Arg. at 39:34–40:01, https://oralarguments.cafc.uscourts.gov/default.aspx?fl= 22-1929_09072023.mp3. We therefore do not reach the dis- missal of the illegal-exaction claim.
[5] Although the en banc D.C. Circuit vacated the
panel’s opinion and judgment in
Ramirez
, we have ob-
served that “the en banc court did not disagree with the
panel’s analysis of the authorization issue.”
Del-Rio
,
[6] We will assume in this opinion that the Order ex- ceeded the CDC’s statutory authority under the PHSA. Although Appellants correctly observe that the Supreme Court in Alabama Association of Realtors did not directly rule on that merits issue (having instead considered it only in the context of ruling on the stay), we find it difficult to ignore the Court’s clearly expressed view of that issue. So, while we appreciate the distinction Appellants observe, we will still assume that the Order exceeded the CDC’s statu- tory authority. Again, however, as we explain, an action can be “authorized” in the takings context even if it was done without such authority.
[7] In determining when an agent’s act is attributable to a principal, it is not novel to define the agent’s authority based on its reasonable (even if ultimately mistaken) un- derstanding of the authority that the principal gave it. See, e.g. , Restatement (Third) of Agency § 2.02 cmt. c (Am. Law. Inst. 2006) (“Actual authority is an agent’s power to affect the principal’s legal relations in accord with the agent’s reasonable understanding, at the time the agent acts, of the principal’s manifestations to the agent. . . . If an agent’s understanding is reasonable, the agent has actual authority to act in accordance with the understanding, although the principal subsequently establishes that the agent was mis- taken .” (emphasis added)).
[8] Technically, and contrary to the government’s
characterization, this court in
Del-Rio
never held that the
agency had “mistakenly interpreted the statute.”
Contra
Appellee’s Br. 24. We instead held that whether it had
done so was immaterial to the takings claim’s viability.
See
Del-Rio
,
[9] The
Del-Rio
court described each of these as a de-
fining characteristic of actions done “ultra vires,”
id.
(italics
removed), and it contrasted ultra vires actions with those
that are “chargeable to the government” (and thus capable
of supporting takings liability),
id.
at 1362. We recognize
that, in
City of Arlington
, the Supreme Court viewed “ultra
vires” agency action more generally as anything going “be-
yond what Congress has permitted it to do.”
See City of
Arlington v. FCC
,
[10] This court’s predecessor distinguished
Hooe
on a
similar basis.
See Armijo v. United States
,
[11] Neither side has suggested that any factual dispute or other reason here prevents us from resolving this issue as a matter of law at this stage.
[12] The PHSA named the Surgeon General when set- ting forth this authority, but it is undisputed that the rele- vant authority now lies with the CDC Director.
[13] We note that, although
Youngstown
involved an is-
sue of national significance and impact—namely, the Pres-
ident’s seizure of most of the nation’s steel mills in response
to a threatened labor strike—the Supreme Court in
Youngstown
did not decide the takings-claim-authorization
issue.
See Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co. v. Sawyer
,
[14] We reiterate that Congress, in a neighboring sec- tion of the Consolidated Appropriations Act, 2021, appro- priated $25 billion in emergency rental assistance (ultimately intended for lessors) and another $21.55 billion soon thereafter. See supra Background Part I. While un- necessary to our decision, we think this contemporaneous action further suggests that Congress appreciated that any taking resulting from the Order would be “chargeable to the government”—in quite a literal sense. Indeed, had the congressionally appropriated money made its way to oth- erwise-unpaid lessors, there may have been little to no un- compensated -taking allegations to speak of.
[15] The dissent also relies on Mitchell v. United States , 267 U.S. 341 (1925), to support its bright-line rule. See Dissent 7–8, 24. We think its reliance is misplaced. In Mitchell , the Supreme Court primarily held that plaintiffs whose land was taken could not recover consequential damages for the resulting loss to their business. at 344–45. The Court additionally reasoned that (1) there was no finding that the government intended to take the business (and that without such intent, there could be no
[16] Moreover, we think that in such a case, the lack of legal authority that would demand ending the occupation would become apparent relatively quickly in any litigation challenging the occupation.
[17]
Florida Power
provides another example of this
type of caveat. There, the Supreme Court stated that “stat-
utes regulating the economic relations of landlords and ten-
ants are not per se takings.”
Fla. Power
,
[1] Other sources have similarly estimated that the amount of back rent, utilities, and late fees owed as of Jan- uary 2021 would be $57 billion. Jim Parrott & Mark Zandi, Averting an Eviction Crisis 2 (Urb. Inst. 2021), https://www.urban.org/sites/default/files/publication/ 103532/averting-an-eviction-crisis.pdf.
[2]
See also Larson
,
[3]
See, e.g.
,
Nat’l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Bos. & Me.
Corp.
,
[4]
See Brooks v. United States
, 39 Ct. Cl. 494, 505
(1904) (“It is not controverted that the Secretary of the
Navy was authorized by law to construct the vessels in con-
troversy and to construct them in the most improved way,
to do which he was necessarily clothed with large discre-
tion, both as to the materials and methods to be used, as
was the Secretary of War in the case of the
Great Falls
Manufacturing Co. v. The Attorney-General
(
[5] The Supreme Court also relied on an alternative
ground. It “further said that all such objections [to the ac-
curacy of the survey and effectiveness of the published no-
tice] were waived by the company when, proceeding under
the act of 1882, it invoked the jurisdiction of the Court of
Claims to give judgment against the United States for such
compensation as it was entitled to receive for its land and
water rights.”
Great Falls
,
[6]
See, e.g. Rith Energy, Inc. v. United States
, 247
F.3d 1355, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2001) (“[A] takings claim lies, as
long as the government’s action was authorized, even if the
government’s action was subject to legal challenge on some
other ground.”);
Del-Rio
,
[7] The plaintiff had entered into a mineral lease with
the government, allowing it to extract oil and gas on an In-
dian reservation. In creating the reservation, the govern-
ment became trustee for the Indian Tribe for the surface
rights, but retained the mineral interest.
[8] 1. “The first [question] is whether the government
conduct at issue was ‘authorized,’
i.e.
, whether the alleged
invasion of property rights is chargeable to the government
or is an act committed by a government agent acting
ultra
vires
.”
Del-Rio
,
[10] The majority also points to
Ramirez
as suggesting
the relevance of agency law and to the Restatement of
Agency for the proposition that “it is not novel to define the
agent’s authority based on its reasonable (even if ulti-
mately mistaken) understanding of the authority that the
principal gave it.” Maj. Op. 11 n.7. However,
Ramirez
it-
self recognizes that authority in the takings context is “not
as liberal as[] the ‘scope of employment’ test for application
of the doctrine of
respondeat superior
in private law.”
Ramirez
,
[11] Our nonprecedential decisions after Del-Rio have likewise held that authorization is required for takings li- ability. In Filler v. United States , the plaintiff claimed that an online post by a government agent, employed by the Na- tional Marine Fisheries Service (“NMFS”), regarding a medical procedure, was an authorized government act that resulted in a taking of the plaintiff’s medical license. 602 F. App’x 518, 519–20 (Fed. Cir. 2015) (non-precedential). We held there was no taking because the “NMFS does not have the statutory authority to regulate medical practices or drug safety.” Id. at 521. Because there was no statutory authority, there was no taking. In Canuto v. United States , we found no taking. 651 F. App’x 996, 998 (Fed. Cir. 2016) (non-precedential). The plaintiff alleged “that on several occasions, members of the United States military” assaulted her and her family and took her property. at 997. We found that “[the plaintiff] does not allege any facts that can plausibly be taken to show that the government agents, members of the military, were acting in an authorized manner in the conduct she alleges” because “[s]he has not, for instance, identified a law-enforcement initiative, an investigation, a military op- eration, or a statutory mandate that might have led gov- ernment agents to commit the acts she alleges.” at 998.
[12] Since its enactment in 1944, Congress has only substantively amended the provision once, in 2002, as part of the Public Health Security and Bioterrorism Prepared- ness and Response Act. The amendment expanded the Health and Human Services (“HHS”) Secretary’s authority
[14] Many states enacted eviction moratoriums aimed at addressing the economic effects of the pandemic. See , e.g. , Baptiste v. Kennealy , 490 F. Supp. 3d 353, 376 (D. Mass. 2020) (“The House Speaker said, ‘We acted to
[16] Since the takings claim must be rejected for lack of authority, I do not reach the physical takings issue.
