Appellant Dico, Inc. (“Dico”) pled in the United States Court of Federal Claims 1 a cause of action under the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution, seeking compensation for certain expenses Dico incurred pursuant to an environmental cleanup order issued by the United States Environmental Protection Agency (“EPA”). At the time Dico filed suit in the Court of Federal Claims, it had pending a District Court action. In that action, Dico sought reimbursement for those same expenses under § 106(b) of the Comprehensive Environmental Response, Compensation, and Liability Act (“CERCLA”), codified as amended at 42 U.S.C. § 9606(b) (1988). 2 The Court of Federal Claims, on motion by the Government, held that it lacked jurisdiction over Dico’s action under 28 U.S.C. § 1500, and dismissed the action without prejudice. We affirm.
*1201 BACKGROUND
Pursuant to its authority under CERCLA, EPA ordered Dieo to undertake certain measures to clean up contaminated groundwater at a site in which Dieo operated a manufacturing facility. Although it informed EPA that certain contamination had originated with sources other than Dieo, Dieo undertook at its expense the cleanup as ordered, which included installing groundwater extraction and monitoring wells and related equipment and treating the extracted water. Dieo also purchased and obtained access to third party property to carry out the groundwater treatment. During the operation of this system, Dieo concluded that contamination from a separate source north of its facility (“the northern plume”) was being induced toward and captured by its system, and that Dieo therefore was providing a cleanup remedy for contamination for which it was not liable under CERCLA. See 42 U.S.C. § 9607(b) (no liability when release or threat of release of hazardous substance and resulting damage are caused solely by act or omission of independent third party).
Dieo therefore filed with EPA a claim for reimbursement of the portion of its cleanup costs attributable to the northern plume. See 42 U.S.C. § 9606(b)(2)(A),-(C) & § 9606 note. EPA denied the claim on the ground that Dieo was ineligible to seek reimbursement because EPA’s Order had been issued before the enactment of the reimbursement provisions.
Dieo then filed, as permitted under CERC-. LA, an action in the District Court for the Southern District of Iowa. 42 U.S.C. § 9606(b)(2)(B). In its complaint to the District Court, Dieo prayed for reimbursement from the Government of “$764,134.08 in response costs related to the northern plume and such additional costs related to the northern plume as Dieo has incurred or may incur . -.. [to] the date of judgment,” as well as a declaration that the Government was obliged under § 106(b) to reimburse Dieo for future response costs. In addition, Dieo sought a declaration that, “to the extent reimbursement for past and future response costs is not available under Section 106(b),” the Government was obliged to reimburse Dieo under the Fifth Amendment’s Due Process and Takings Clauses. 3
Shortly after Dieo filed its complaint in the District Court, it filed a complaint in the Court of Federal Claims. 4 The portions of the complaint setting forth the underlying facts concerning the cleanup and northern plume were in all material respects identical to those of Dico’s District Court complaint. The complaint then set forth two counts, one asserting entitlement to relief under the Due Process clause of the Constitution, and one under the Takings clause. The complaint closed with a prayer for reimbursement of “$764,134.08 in response costs related to the northern plume and such additional costs related to the northern plume as Dieo has incurred or may incur ... [to] the date of judgment.” Dieo also included a prayer that the court declare that the Government was obliged under the Fifth Amendment to reimburse Dieo for future response costs related to the northern plume.
The Government moved to dismiss the complaint on the basis of 28 U.S.C. § 1500, which provides that
The United States Court of Federal Claims shall not have jurisdiction of any claim for or in respect to which the plaintiff or his assignee has pending in any other court any suit or process against the United States....
At the time the Court of Federal Claims considered the Government’s motion, the court had before it our
in banc
decision in
UNR Indus., Inc. v. United States,
962 F.2d
*1202
1013 (Fed.Cir.1992)
(in
banc). The Supreme Court had not yet handed down its review of
UNR, Keene Corp. v. United States,
— U.S. -,
On the basis of the caselaw before it, the Court of Federal Claims granted the motion to dismiss, without prejudice. The court found that the two actions undisputedly arose out of the same operative facts, as defined in
Johns-Manville Corp. v. United States,
Dico appealed to this court. Between the time of the Court of Federal Claims’ judgment and opinion, and oral argument in this court, both Keene and Loveladies were decided. Dico argues here, first, that these cases changed the law of' § 1500 as it was applied by the Court of Federal Claims, and, second, that as a result Dico escapes the clutches of § 1500. Dico is correct on the first point, but not the second.
DISCUSSION
Dico argues that it pursued different relief in the Court of Federal Claims than it •did in the District Court. The Court of Federal Claims rejected the premise that seeking different relief precluded the operation of § 1500. The court found that our decision in
UNR
had purported to overrule the line of cases, exemplified by
Casman v. United States,
Dico, however, did not pursue different relief in its two actions. Dico argues that its District Court action sought reimbursement under CERCLA of monies expended pursuant to EPA order and for which Dico was not actually liable, while its Court of Federal Claims action sought money damages for the deprivation of its property rights. In its briefs, and again at oral argument, Dico identified this distinction as the difference between money damages and statutory reimbursement, the latter of which Dico characterizes as “monetary relief.”
Dico cites as authority for this distinction
Bowen v. Massachusetts,
The funding scheme at issue involved advanced quarterly payments by the federal government to the state to help fund its Medicaid program. The state sought to prevent the federal government from excluding the expenditures at issue from future reimbursement and from adjusting subsequent grants to recover federal monies already spent on such expenditures. Given the prospective nature of the relief sought and the “intricate, ongoing relationships” between the state and federal governments “in-volv[ing] constantly shifting balance sheets,” the Court distinguished the “monetary aspects of the relief’ sought by the state from traditional “money damages” compensating a past loss.
Bowen,
Whatever may be the precedential scope of the
Bowen
Court’s distinction in the statutory law of federal entitlement programs administered through advanced payment streams,
see
Clearly, Dico’s two actions seek the “same or ... overlapping relief,”
Loveladies,
At oral argument, however, Dico urged a basis for distinguishing its relief that was not enunciated in its briefs. Dico argued that its Takings count in the Court of Federal Claims was not for the costs of the remediation, but for the taking of other, separate property interests, such as the value of property reserved or purchased for the placement of wells and other Government impositions.
5
Dico points to this court’s opinion in
Hendler v. United States,
The plain language of the complaint Dico filed in the Court of Federal Claims belies any such distinction. Dico’s Due Process claim seeks reimbursement based on an unlawful deprivation of property — namely, EPA’s “requiring it to incur response costs to remedy contamination caused by others and to use its own property and to take actions on and acquire the property of others for that purpose.” The Takings count states that “EPA’s requirement that Dico address the ... contamination caused by others by (1) constructing on its property and operating a remedial system for such plume of contamination, (2) installing monitoring wells on its property and the property of others, (3) conducting monitoring of wells on its property and the property of others, and (4) acquiring the property of others, constitutes a taking of property-” The two counts obviously were pled in the alternative, and seek, along with Dieo’s District Court action, compensation for the portion of its groundwater treatment system costs attributable to contamination from the northern plume.
As this court stated in
UNR,
and the Supreme Court affirmed in
Keene,
the § 1500 bar rises, if at all, at the time the complaint is filed in the Court of Federal Claims,
see UNR,
Even Dico’s declaratory judgment prayers' sought the same relief. In the prayer for relief in its District Court suit, Dico asked that the court “declare that, to the extent reimbursement for past and future response costs is not available under Section 106(b), defendants are obliged to provide reimbursement under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States.” Similarly, in its Court of Federal Claims complaint, Dico prayed that the court “declare that defendant is obliged under the Fifth Amendment to the Constitution of the United States to reimburse Dico for future response costs related to the northern plume.” 6
UNR established that § 1500 is a battle of pleadings. Loveladies further established that if the Court of Federal Claims complaint pleads facts which demonstrate a different legal injury from that pursued in another court, or seeks different relief, it involves a different claim which § 1500 does not bar. If a plaintiff in fact has two different claims, as defined in Loveladies, then it is the responsibility of the plaintiff to allege, clearly and with specificity, that different claims are involved in its two actions. An analysis of this case shows that the same claims were made by Dico in both actions. Dico’s two complaints, which obviously copied each other with only minor or irrelevant variations, do not indicate otherwise or identify the distinction that Dico now claims to have intended.
Dico, in its brief, argued presciently that Casman still lived, and sought to bring itself within the scope of that aspect of the § 1500 rule. For the reasons we have explained, however, Dico failed to do so. Although the trial court granted the Government’s motion to dismiss without prejudice based on law that was later changed, that ruling nevertheless was correct, and is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. Effective October 29, 1992, the United States Claims Court became the United States Court of Federal Claims. Federal Courts Administration Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-572, § 902(a), 106 Stat. 4506, 4516. For simplicity, we refer to the court throughout by its new name.
. Unless otherwise indicated, statutory references are to the 1988 edition of the United States Code.
. The district court dismissed Dico's declaratory relief claims and granted the Government summary judgment on the statutory claims.
Dico, Inc. v. Diamond,
. On the significance of the order of filing,
see Tecon Engineers, Inc. v. United States,
. Dico did not assert, and there is nothing to suggest, that these items are not reimbursable under CERCLA § 106(b)(2).
. Despite the prayer in its complaint in the Court of Federal Claims, in its brief to this court Dico acknowledged that the Court of Federal Claims is without jurisdiction to grant the prayed-for declaratory relief. Likewise, the District Court ruled that the thrust of Dico’s declaratory judgment claim in its court under the Fifth Amendment was to obtain money, and therefore the claim impermissibly intruded upon the exclusive jurisdiction of the Court of Federal Claims.
Dico, Inc. v. Diamond,
