In this Fifth Amendment “takings” case, the Fallinis, who are engaged in cattle ranching in Nevada, argue that the federal government has taken personal property from them without compensation. The Fallinis contend that the government effected a “taking” by requiring them to provide water to wild horses living in the area in which the Fallinis conducted their ranching activities. The Court of Federal Claims ruled against the Fallinis, concluding on motion for summary judgment that they had no property right that was taken by governmental action. Fallini v. United States,
I
The appellants, Susan and Joseph Fallini, own a 2700-acre ranch in south-central Nevada. The Fallinis’ ranch property is located within a region known as the Reveille Allotment, which consists of 657,520 acres of federally owned land. Pursuant to federal permits, the Fallinis graze cattle on the public land surrounding their ranch property.
The Fallini family has engaged in ranching in the area since the 19th century. Over time, they have developed a number of water sources on the public land to water the cattle that are permitted to graze there. Although the Fallinis do not own the land where the water sources are located, they contend that under federal and state law they enjoy proprietary rights in all the water they produce from the waterworks that they and their predecessors have constructed.
In 1971, Congress enacted the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act, 16 U.S.C. §§ 1331-1340, which provided for the management and protection of wild horses and
In November 1992, the Fallinis filed a complaint in the Court of Federal Claims, contending that the government had taken their property by requiring them “to provide water to wild horses whenever plaintiffs provided water to their domestic livestock after December 17, 1971 [the effective date of the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act], on penalty of loss of their grazing preference.” The Fallinis’ complaint does not describe exactly what the government required them to do in order to “provide water to the wild horses,” but they elsewhere assert that they have been prohibited from fencing their water sources in ways that would permit cattle access to the water but prevent wild horses from having access. In their complaint, the Fallinis alleged that between 1971 and 1991 the cost of providing water to wild horses that took water from the Fallinis’ developed water sources totaled approximately $1 million.
The Court of Federal Claims granted summary judgment to the government. The court first held that the Fallinis do not own the water they produce in excess of the amounts necessary to satisfy the cattle authorized under their federal grazing permits. The court further concluded that, because the government may regulate the use of the public lands on which the Fallinis’ cattle are allowed to graze, the Fallinis “did not have a compensable expectancy in exclusion of wild horses and other wild animals from the allotment or exclusive use of the forage and water.” Fallini v. United States,
On appeal, the Fallinis contend that the court erred in characterizing their interest in the water that they brought to the surface at the developed water sources on the Reveille Allotment. Based on their claim that they enjoy ownership rights in that water under federal and state law, the Fallinis argue that the government took their property without compensation when it prohibited them from barring the wild horses from drinking water at those sites.
The government responds, first, that the Fallinis failed to file their complaint within the applicable statute of limitations period and that the complaint therefore should be dismissed. On the merits, the government argues that the Court of Federal Claims was correct in ruling that the government had the right to condition the Fallinis’ use of the public lands on their not barring the wild horses from having access to the developed water sources.
II
We do not reach the merits of the Fallinis’ claim, but instead vacate the judgment of the Court of Federal Claims and direct that court to dismiss the complaint as untimely filed.
The Fallinis brought their claim against the United States under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491. Actions brought under the Tucker Act are time-barred unless they are filed within six years of the date that the cause of action accrued. 28 U.S.C. § 2501. As a general matter, a cause of action accrues when all the events have occurred that fix the defendant’s alleged liability and entitle the plaintiff to institute an action. Alliance of Descendants of Texas Land Grants v. United States,
In the present case, the objective standard is clearly met, because the appellants have been cognizant of the facts underlying the alleged taking since long before they filed their complaint in the Court of Federal Claims. The complaint alleges that the uncompensated taking began in 1971, when Congress enacted the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act, and has continued since that time.
The FaUinis advance two theories that, they claim, enable them to avoid dismissal under the time bar. First, they argue that their complaint was filed within the limitations period because they have experienced a continuous taking over many years and the taking did not stabüize until November 28, 1986, a date slightly less than six years before the filing of their suit. Second, they aUege that every drink taken by every vrild horse from 1971 through the date of the filing of their complaint constituted a separate taking. Under that theory, the FaUinis would not be able to recover for any water taken more than six years before they filed suit, but they would be entitled to claim compensation for the water taken within the six-year period before their complaint was filed. As we analyze the case, neither of the FaUinis’ theories suffices to overcome the limitations bar.
In support of their first theory, the Fallinis claim that they have been subject to a continuous taking under United States v. Dickinson,
In Dickinson, the Supreme Court announced the principle that, when the government allows a taking of land to occur by a continuing process of physical events, plaintiffs may postpone filing suit until the nature and extent of the taking is clear.
Dickinson contains language that can be read to suggest that a cause of action for a taking does not accrue until all the damages resulting from the taking can be finally calculated. See, e.g., Dickinson,
The Supreme Court has not read Dickinson so expansively. In United States v. Dow,
Following Dow, the Court of Claims adopted a similarly narrow interpretation of Dickinson and the meaning of “stabilization” in the takings context. In Kabua v. United States,
In the case at bar, the “permanent nature” of the taking was evident to the Fallinis at least by 1983, when they sent their water bill to the Bureau of Land Management. The Fallinis maintain that the taking was continuous from 1971 on, but that it did not “stabilize” until November 28, 1986. The only event to occur on or about that date, however, was the formation of the Herd Management Area (HMA) in settlement of one of the Fallinis’ prior suits against the government.
The HMA established the historical location and herd population of wild horses in the Reveille Allotment. As part of the settlement, the Bureau of Land Management undertook to conduct an annual census of wild horses in the HMA and to remove any excess horses. Thus, the formation of the HMA served only to reduce the damages the Fallinis were suffering because of the alleged taking; it did nothing to establish that the horses’ drinking constituted a taking for which the United States was liable.
Three years before the HMA was established, the Fallinis billed the federal government for the water allegedly taken by the wild horses up to that point. At least by that time, the situation had become clearly apparent, and therefore had “stabilized” within the meaning of Dickinson, because the bill that the Fallinis sent to the Bureau of Land Management indicated that they were fully aware of all the facts that, on their view of the ease, led to the conclusion that the government’s actions amounted to a taking. The only changes in the ensuing years were changes in the number of protected horses in the Reveille Allotment, and thus the amount of water taken. Nothing that happened in those later years had the legal effect of triggering, for the first time, the Fallinis’ obligation to sue for the alleged takings that had occurred since the enactment of the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act in 1971. Thus, the Fallinis’ first theory does not allow them to avoid the statute of limitations bar.
Under their second theory, the Fallinis concede application of the time-bar as to pre-1986 events, but seek compensation for injury they suffered after 1986, i.e., within the six years prior to the filing of their suit. That claim, however, depends upon characterizing every drink by every wild horse as a new and independent federal taking compensable under the Fifth Amendment.
In analyzing this theory of recovery, it is useful to analogize the conduct at issue in this case to a taking of real property. If a landowner owns a parcel of beachfront property and the government enacts legislation demanding that the landowner allow others to walk along the shore, the government has effected a taking of an easement on the landowner’s property. See Nollan v. California Coastal Comm’n,
The analysis of the present facts is similar. In their complaint, the Fallinis allege that the Wild Free-Roaming Horses and Burros Act deprived the Fallinis of their right to exclude wild horses from the developed water sources on the Reveille Allotment. In light of those allegations, it is the enactment of the statute, not the individual intrusions by the horses, to which a court must look to determine if there has been a taking.
The fact that the water at issue in this ease is personalty and the land at issue in the easement case was realty does not alter the nature of the analysis. For purposes of determining when the Fallinis’ claim accrued, it is necessary in either ease to look to the nature and timing of the governmental action that constituted the alleged taking. Alliance of Descendants of Texas Land Grants v. United States,
If the horses were agents or instrumentalities of the United States government, the analysis of what governmental action constituted the alleged taking might well be different. See Mountain States Legal Found. v. Hodel,
What the Fallinis may challenge under the Fifth Amendment is what the government has done, not what the horses have done. The only governmental action that could constitute a compensable taking in this ease is the government’s directive forbidding the Fallinis from shooing the horses away from the water that the Fallinis have produced at their developed water sources. That governmental action cannot be regarded as recurring with every new drink taken by every wild horse, even though the consumption of water by the wild horses imposes a continuing economic burden on the Fallinis. See Delaware State College v. Ricks,
Ill
Based on our analysis of the Fallinis’ takings claim, we conclude that their claim was time-barred. We therefore vacate the judgment and remand this case to the Court of Federal Claims with instructions to dismiss the complaint as untimely.
Each party shall bear its own costs.
VACATED AND REMANDED WITH INSTRUCTIONS
