Appeal from an order of the United States Claims Court dismissing the complaint of Erosion Victims of Lake Superior Regulation for failing to state a claim against the United States. 12 CLCt. 68 (1987). We affirm.
BACKGROUND *
The United States and Canada are parties to the Boundary Waters Treaty, Jan. 11, 1909, United States-United Kingdom, 36 Stat. 2448, T.S. No. 548, which established an International Joint Commission (IJC) to approve and regulate the use of waters along those countries’ common border. Id. at 2451.
Soon after the IJC’s creation, a private company applied to lease the waters of the St. Mary’s River (river), which connects Lake Superior with the lower Great Lakes, for electric power development. The IJC granted the lease in a 1914 order which created an International Lake Superior Board of Control (Board) to oversee and regulate the diversion of the river’s waters for power. An objective of the Board was to maintain the level of Lake Superior within certain limits by regulating the amount of water flowing through the power canal in the river at Sault Ste. Marie. The Board was to have two members: one officer of the United States Army Corps of Engineers, and one officer appointed by Canada. International Joint Comm’n, Further Regulation of the Great Lakes 81 (1976).
Heavy precipitation in the early 1970's having raised the levels of the lower Great Lakes and caused extensive flooding, the United States in 1973 petitioned the IJC for emergency relief, suggesting that the 1914 order be amended to permit reduction of Lake Superior outflows when necessary to relieve conditions on the lower Great Lakes. The IJC ordered the Board to reduce outflows from Lake Superior. Then, *299 in 1979, having studied the problem, the IJC formally adopted a plan allowing the Board to consider water levels in the lower Great Lakes when setting outflows from Lake Superior.
The Erosion Victims of Lake Superior Regulation (landowners) own property on the American shore of Lake Superior. In 1986 they sued the United States, saying their properties have “been eroded and/or flooded by waters of Lake Superior due to the actions of the United States, acting through the [IJC],” that the “United States, through the [IJC],” has raised the level of Lake Superior by “directpng] the closing of hydroelectric gates” in the river, and that the “actions of the [IJC] were reckless, careless and negligent with the result that the lakefront property of plaintiffs has been lost, damaged and taken contrary to the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution.” The government disputes each of those allegations, including the allegation that the damage was caused by anything other than natural conditions.
The Claims Court dismissed the complaint, holding that the landowners had failed to state a claim against the United States because “the only relevant actor is the IJC, and ... its actions, even when done in response to defendant’s request, are not attributable to the United States.”
ISSUE
Whether the Claims Court erred in dismissing the landowners’ complaint.
OPINION
The government argues that the United States cannot be liable for the landowners’ alleged damage because the complained-of actions were those of the IJC, an independent international organization. That fact standing alone does not, however, preclude United States liability under the just compensation clause of the Fifth Amendment. Nothing in precedent suggests that
“whenever
the final act of expropriation is by the hand of a foreign sovereign, the United States cannot be held responsible.
Langenegger v. United States,
One seeking just compensation from the United States for actions of an international organization must show “sufficient direct and substantial United States involvement.”
Langenegger,
The landowners argue that three facts establish the requisite United States involvement in this case: (1) the United States government negotiated the Boundary Waters Treaty; (2) the United States government in 1973 requested that the IJC order reduced outflows from Lake Superi- or; and (3) a United States government representative supervised the closing of the gates in the power canal at Sault Ste. Marie. Under the precedents of this court and those of our predecessor Court of Claims, those facts do not establish “sufficient direct and substantial United States involvement” to hold the United States responsible for the taking here alleged.
I. Treaty Negotiation
United States participation in an international agreement was involved in
Porter v. United States,
The nature of the United States’ negotiation and signing of the Boundary Waters Treaty of 1909 suggests less United States involvement here than that alleged in
Porter.
In Articles III, IY and VIII of the Treaty, the United States agreed that the IJC, not the United States, would have final say over the use of boundary waters.
II. Request to the IJC
This court and the Court of Claims have previously considered allegations that a United States request for action by another government constitutes direct and substantial United States involvement. For example, mere “diplomatic persuasion” is insufficient for United States liability under the just compensation clause.
Langenegger,
The United States’ request to the IJC to close the gates at Sault Ste. Marie and modify its method of regulating Lake Superior sought specific action to benefit the United States. In such circumstances, our precedents hold that the United States can be liable where its influence on the government from which action is requested is pervasive.
Compare Turney,
The landowners here have alleged no facts showing that the United States had the pervasive influence over the IJC that it had, for example, over the Philippine government in
Turney.
They do not dispute this Claims Court statement: “The IJC is a sovereign body which was free to reject the application of the U.S. if it had so decided.”
That the United States
requested
relief from high water levels on the lower Great Lakes supports, rather than negates, the view that the IJC exercised its own discretion in closing the gates.
See Edison,
III. Supervision by a United States Representative
It is undisputed that the United States Army Corps of Engineers employee who supervised the closing of the power gates at Sault Ste. Marie was acting as a representative of the Board, implementing the IJC’s orders.
Under our precedents, a showing that a United States employee has acted as a representative of an international organization does not establish direct, substantial United States involvement.
Josef Best v. United States,
CONCLUSION
The landowners having failed to allege facts which might constitute direct and substantial involvement sufficient for United States liability under the just compensation clause of the Fifth Amendment,
Langenegger,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
For more background see
Miller v. United States,
