This case, an appeal from a grant of summary judgment and dismissal of a complaint, primarily presents a novel, narrow issue: whether the United States is respon
*1567
sible under the Just Compensation Clause of the Fifth Amendment for the expropriation of a United States citizen’s property in a foreign land when the taking was mandated by a foreign sovereign’s legislation passed at the prompting of the United States, and hemispheric stability is an ultimate benefit hoped for by the United States, but the immediate benefit inures to natives of the expropriating nation. Appellants alleged such a taking in Counts I and II of their complaint below; alternatively they alleged that the United States is responsible under the fifth amendment for extinguishing their claim under international law (Count V). The Claims Court, Kozinski,
C.J.,
held that the actions of the United States and its derived benefit did not amount to a taking, as a matter of law.
Langenegger v. United States,
Facts
The facts developed on summary judgment and viewed in their most favorable light for claimants-appellants, are as follows: They are American citizens and residents of Kansas and New Mexico who claim ownership of a large coffee plantation of approximately 4,500 acres, known as Las Lahas, located in El Salvador. Rosa Langenegger, a Salvadoran national and the previous owner of Las Lahas, died in 1978, and appellants’ ownership is based on inheritance.
The unfortunate political turmoil that has afflicted El Salvador is known to many in the United States. The 1970’s saw political violence become common there, with both leftwing and rightwing extremists pressuring the government. On October 15, 1979, Salvadoran military officers staged a coup d’etat and established a Revolutionary Junta comprised of members of the military and civilians. The new government promised economic, social, and political change, including banking, commerce, labor and human rights reform as well as agrarian reform. As a preliminary step, the Junta promulgated Decree No. 43, which рrohibited transfer of agricultural lands in excess of 100 hectares (247 acres).
The months that followed saw little progress in reform, and violence and demonstrations escalated. Concern grew in the United States that the government of El Salvador was in danger of collapse and that a Marxist government, similar to the then newly-formed government of Nicaragua, might result. It is undisputed and indeed well known in this country that as a matter of foreign policy the United States supports the stability of governments not antagonistic to it аnd that, in the case of El Salvador, the United States strongly supported the implementation of reforms as necessary to stability. Appellants assert that the level of “encouragement” is in dispute. They allege that the United States tied economic and military assistance to reform, provided financial aid for reform programs, and assisted in drafting the agrarian reform proposals by providing an expert who was under contract to the United States. If the Salvadoran government had not been amenable to United States recommendations, it could have expected a loss of financial support. For summary judgment purposes only, we take all this as true.
On March 6, 1980, the government of El Salvador promulgated Decree No. 153, proposing land reforms which, inter alia, provided for expropriation of all agricultural estates over 500 hectares (1,235 acres) and conversion of these properties into cooperatives run by those who work the estates. Owners of the estates were to bе compensated with nonnegotiable bonds said never likely to pay off at anything like the value of the property taken. The decree was implemented in March 1980, and Las Lahas was taken. Appellants have urged the United States Government to help them obtain more, but so far have received no effective assistance.
Discussion
We note at the onset the procedural posture of this case. As this case is presented
*1568
as a review of a summary judgment, the nonmoving party is given the benefit оf all presumptions, inferences, and intendments. Summary judgment is appropriate only when there is no genuine issue of relevant and material fact.
Adickes v. S.H. Kress and Co.,
The question presented to the court in this case is both a complex and a sensitive one: it is complex as it calls upon this court to consider the jurisprudence of the Just .Compensation Clause, a jurisprudence comprised of many precedents but few concrete rules; and sensitive as the government counsels this court to act with restraint and declare the claim at issue nonjusticiable in accordance with the “political question” doctrine. We hold that the circumstances set forth do not present a taking, though this claim is subject to judicial scrutiny.
I
In considering the taking claims, the Claims Court concluded that “[important considerations of judicial restraint provide an independent basis for refusing to recognize a cause of action on the basis of the facts alleged by plaintiffs.”
Langenegger,
The seminal discussion of the political question doctrine is found in
Baker v. Carr,
it is error to suppose that every case or controversy which touches foreign relations lies beyond judicial cognizance. [Previous cases] show a discriminating analysis оf the particular question posed, in terms of the history of its management by the political branches, of its susceptibility to judicial handling in the light of its nature and posture in the specific case, and of the possible consequences of judicial action.
Id.
at 211-12,
More recently, three factors for consideration have been presented as determinative of this issue:
(i) Does the issue involve resolution of questions committed by the text of the Constitution to a coordinate branch of Government? (ii) Would resоlution of the question demand that a. court move beyond areas of judicial expertise? (iii) Do prudential considerations counsel against judicial intervention?
Goldwater v. Carter,
We have considered the determinative factors and find here that the doctrine does not control this case. We note as well the recent consideration given this issue by our sister circuit in
Ramirez De Arellano v. Weinberger,
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Consideration of land taking claims is clearly the rolе of the judiciary according to the Constitution, Amendment V, and ascertainment of “just compensation” is a judicial function,
United States v. New River Collieries,
We disagree with the Claims Court’s determination that appellants claim to be damaged by the manner in which our government conducts foreign relations. Such a sweeping characterization is not mandatеd by the law. Nor do we find that adjudication of the claims would require discussion of sensitive and confidential communications. We note that appellee has been given opportunities to assert the “state secret” privilege and has declined to do so. Such a privilege is absolute and would protect the government from the dangers with which the Claims Court is concerned.
See Northrop Corp. v. McDonnell Douglas Corp.,
The courts are often presented with questions which consider congressional or executive actions and purposes, and have managed to decide eases without putting the government in a fishbowl. For example, the Court of Claims developed a “good faith effort” test to be applied to Indian taking claims, but held that it would not find a taking where Congress had made a facially or purportedly genuine effort to obtain for the Indians a fair equivalent to land lost through congressional land transactions.
Three Tribes of Fort Berthold Reservation v. United States,
The Langeneggers’ claims require inquiry into the United States’ actions. These actions are to be found from the typical sources: committee reports, executive messages, and other nonsecret documents. Consideration of El Salvador’s motives for expropriation is not the central focus of a сlaim alleging a taking by our country. To the extent that such motivation may be pertinent, we find that the relevant facts reside in what that government “purported” to do. If the “purported” reasons for action are not the real reasons, we think the matter is not one the judicial bench can correct; a subjective determination of a government’s motive is beyond judicial inquiry.
Finally, we find that prudential considerations, identified in Baker v. Carr, do not bar adjudication. Such considerations include:
*1570 [Tjhe impossibility of deciding without an initial policy determination of a kind clearly for nоnjudicial discretion; or the impossibility of a court’s undertaking independent resolution without expressing lack of the respect due coordinate branches of government; or an unusual need for unquestioning adherence to a political decision already made; or the potentiality of embarrassment from multifarious pronouncements by various departments on one question.
Baker v. Carr,
We note again that this is a claim of narrow focus, requiring no second-guessing of the executive branch or detailеd inquiry into the ulterior motives of the two governments. While cases involving foreign affairs may make the courts uncomfortable, the Constitution mandates the role of the judiciary without regard to its comfort. A holding that a taking has occurred is in no way an attribution to the United States of reprehensible conduct. Rather, the assumption is that Congress has provided the safety net of the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491, to make sure that its actions will meet the standard of respect for property rights that the Constitution requires.
Regional Rail Reorganization Cases,
II
The Just Compensation Clause 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,
While interpretations of the Just Compensation Clause indeed are nebulous, especially where a foreign government’s involvement exists, several established authorities serve as useful guides. It is settled law that the United States is bound by our Constitution when it takes actions that affect citizens outside our territory,
Reid v. Covert,
*1571 Taken together, these precedents themselves do not preclude the appellants’ claims. There is nothing to suggest, as appellee contends, that whenever the final act of expropriation is by the hand of a foreign sovereign, the United States cannot be held responsible. When considering a possible taking, the focus is not on the acts of others, but on whether sufficient direct and substantial United States involvement exists.
This court’s predecessor, the Court of Claims, previously hаd opportunities to consider the level of involvement necessary to hold the United States responsible for a foreign-based taking. In
Turney v. United States,
The Court of Claims found that the exchange amounted to a taking covered by the fifth amendment.
The relations, * * * between our Government and the Philippine Government, were close. Our armed forces had just liberated the Philippines * * *. Our Government had given one hundred million dollars worth of surplus property to the Philippines, * * * and had sold the property for the account of the Philippine Government. When we requested that Government to place an embargo upon the exportation of any of the property, it, naturally, readily complied. That put irresistible pressure upon the corporation to come to terms with the United States Army * * *. We think that the taking occurred * * * when the Army officially took possession.
Turney,
The Court of Claims holding thus rested upon the finding that the Army’s request for the embargo was substantial, direct involvement, forcing the corporation to exchange the radar. The benefit to the United States was clear; the Army reacquired the radar it mistakenly had sold.
The Court of Claims again considered the level of United States involvement necessary for a foreign-based taking in
Anglo Chinese Shipping Co. v. United States,
The Langeneggers’ claim falls within the factual situations of neither
Turney, Anglo Chinese Shipping,
nor
Best.
The method of analysis of those cases, as well as the general doctrines enunciated by the Supreme Court, however, are controlling here. These precedents clearly establish that in determining whether a taking exists where a foreign government’s actions are involved, the focus of the inquiry is the same as that undertaken in a domestic taking case: the court must consider whether the
United States’
involvement was sufficiently direct and substantial to warrant its responsibility under the fifth amendment.
See Porter v. United States,
Since
Porter
holds that in the circumstances of that case acts of the then government of the Pacific Islands Trust Territory, though controlled in the United States Department of the Interior, cannot be imputed to the United States in a Tucker Act suit under either a contract or a taking theory, acts of an independent sovereign are excluded
a fortiori.
Where the actual expropriation is by the hand of a foreign sovereign, the United States cannоt be held responsible merely because its activity is that of “friendly” persuasion regarding general policy, common among allies, or when the sole benefit to the United States is the political stability of its neighbors. Diplomatic persuasion among allies is a common occurrence, and as a matter of law, cannot be deemed sufficiently irresistible to warrant a finding of direct and substantial involvement, however difficult refusal may be as a practical matter. Such “nebulous forms of United States influence * * * are insufficient to make defendant constructively responsible for the taking alleged.”
Porter,
If the United States is to be held liable for a taking by federal officers under the fifth amendment аnd 28 U.S.C. § 1491, it is also a legal requirement that the acts of the officers be authorized, expressly or by implication,
Regional Rail Reorganization Cases,
Cases of “inverse” takings without physical invasion or ouster [by U.S. officials] are not very numerous, and when they occur, as in * * * [citing cases] this court has been careful to consider the role of Congress, and the taking, if not expressly authorized or directed by Congress, at least is a natural consequence of Congressionally approval measures.
NBH Land Co. v. United States,
This, of course, includes instances where Congress nеver adverted to the possibility of land invasion or acquisition per se; thus United States military flyers were held to effect a taking of rights in air space used by them, landing or taking off while on practice flights in their normal manner.
United States v. Causby,
It is our view also that one who owns land in a foreign country looks to the laws of that country to determine his inci *1573 dents of ownership including his rights in the event of expropriation. He may look also to international law if a foreigner in the expropriating country, but that is a secondary backup that does not vary the source of his primary rights.
Appellants assert as an alternative claim that the United States’ “encouragement” of El Salvador extinguished appellants’ possible claim under international law; this claim extinguishment allegedly is a taking violative of the fifth amendment. The Claims Court below incorrectly held that appellants’ claim was nonjusticiable and that the extinguishment of a claim under international law cannot amount to a taking; the court relied on
Shanghai Power Co. v. United States,
In Shanghai Power, the Claims Court was presented with a claim by former owners of property held by the Peoples’ Republic of China. Plaintiffs, in that case, had lost their properties when the Peoples’ Republic ascended to power and nationalized their holdings. In 1979, President Carter established diplomatic relations with the Peoples’ Republic, and the two nations settled outstanding claims of United States nationals against China as part of the normalization process. Plaintiffs claimed that by settling their claims for less than the value of the original property located in China, the United States took their property in violation of the fifth amendment.
The Claims Court properly held the claims plaintiffs had against China under international law were a property right, but that a taking did not exist based on all the circumstances, and this court affirmеd. We note, however, that the lower court’s
Shanghai Power
decision does not present an absolute rule that the extinguishment of a claim under international law can never amount to a taking. “[T]he determination must be made on the basis of ‘the particular circumstances [of each] case.’ ”
Shanghai Power,
It was actual extinguishment, absent here, that created whatever closeness there was in the Shanghai Power case. With no extinguishment, this aspect of the claim is wholly without substance. In the case before us, appellants assеrt that the State Department has been uncooperative and will not attempt a diplomatic settlement with El Salvador. Appellee counters that it is the appellants who are uncooperative, and that El Salvador has agreed to abide by the Caribbean Basin Economic Recovery Act, Pub.L. No. 98-67, Title II, 97 Stat. 384 (1983), and therefore to allow international arbitration to resolve this conflict, if only appellants would avail themselves of that forum. The government contends that appеllants may proceed internationally without government assistance, according to the Act. As appellants have not provided evidence to the contrary, we find that the international forum is available and that the claim has not yet been extinguished. Thus the claim of appellants under Count V of their complaint must be dismissed, without prejudice. The Claims Court judgment as to Count V is vacated.
Conclusion
The Claim Court’s decision on Counts I and II is affirmed. Count V is vacated and the case is remanded with directions to dismiss Count V without prejudice to a new proceeding if actual extinguishment can be shown.
AFFIRMED IN PART, VACATED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
