*1 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA WALTER B. FREEMAN,
Plaintiff,
Civil Cаse No. 12-1094 (BAH) v. Judge Beryl A. Howell UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE
INTERIOR, et al. ,
Defendants. MEMORANDUM OPINION The plaintiff Walter B. Freeman filed this action under the Administrative Procedures Act (“APA”), 5 U.S.C. § 706(2), against the United States Department of the Interior (“DOI”) and two of its components, the Interior Board of Land Appeals (“IBLA”) and the Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”), seeking to set aside two decisions of the IBLA relating to the plaintiff’s mining rights, on the grounds that the decisions were arbitrary, capricious, and lacked substantial evidence. See Compl. at 19 (“Prayer for Relief”), ECF No. 1. Pending before the Court is the plaintiff’s Motion for Partial Summary Judgment on his First Cause of Action, challenging the May 7, 2008 IBLA decision in United States v. Freeman , 174 IBLA 290 (2008) (“2008 IBLA Decision”), [1] which upheld the jurisdiction of DOI’s Office of Hearings and Appeals (“OHA”) to determine the validity of unpatented mining claims at historical dates when the claims were allegedly subject to a government taking within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment of the *2 Constitution. Pl.’s Mot. Partial Summ. J. & Mem. Supp. (“Pl.’s Mot.”) at 2–3, ECF No. 15. [2] For the reasons explained below, the plaintiff’s motion is denied and the 2008 IBLA Decision stands. [3]
I. BACKGROUND
The Court first briefly reviews the statutory and regulatory framework for assessing the validity of mining claims under the General Mining Law of 1872 (“Mining Law”), 30 U.S.C. §§ 22‒54 (2006), before turning to a summary of the two decades of administrative proceedings that have culminated in this lawsuit.
A. Statutory and Regulatory Framework
“To encourage mining in the western United States, Congress enacted the General
Mining Act of 1872.”
Orion Reserves Ltd. P’ship v. Salazar
,
2009);
see also Watt v. W. Nuclear
,
Locke
,
Cl. 1981). [4] Those who locate “mining locations” on public land are expressly granted “the exclusive right of possession and enjoyment” but only “so long as they comply with the laws of the United States, and with State, territorial, аnd local regulations . . . .” 30 U.S.C. § 26.
1.
Requirements for Valid Mining Claim
Before a Congressional moratorium was enacted in 1994, claimants could “apply for
purchase of a deed, or ‘patent,’ conveying full legal title to the land on which their claims are
located.”
Orion Reserves
,
249, 252 (Fed. Cl. 1994),
aff’d
,
An unpatented mining claim is valid against the United States only when both a
discovery of valuable mineral deposit within the limits of the claim has been made, and the
claimant has complied with all statutory and regulatory requirements relating to the location,
recordation, and filing of claims.
See
30 U.S.C. §§ 22, 26, 28, 28e.
[6]
See also Best v. Humboldt
Placer Mining Co.
,
Thus, although a claimant may explore for mineral deposits before perfecting a mining
claim, without a discovery, the claimant has no right to the property against the United States or
an intervenor. 30 U.S.C. § 23 (mining claim perfected when there is a “discovery of the vein or
lode”);
see also Cole v. Ralph
,
To satisfy the discovery requirement for a valid claim, the mere physical presence of a mineral is insufficient. Instead, “the discovered deposits must be of such a character that ‘a person of ordinary prudence would be justified in the further expenditure of his labor and means, with a reasonable prospect of success, in developing a valuable mine.” United States v.
Coleman
,
2.
Administrative Review of Contested Claims
BLM is a subagency within DOI tasked with administering mining claims on federal
public land.
See generally
43 C.F.R. § 3809;
Nat’l Wildlife Fed’n v. Burford
,
Prior to validity proceedings, unpatented claims amount to a potential property interest,
since it is the discovery of a valuable mineral deposit and satisfaction of statutory and regulatory
requirements that bestows possessory rights.
See Ickes v. Underwood
,
claimants had only a gratuity from the United States);
Payne v. United States
,
The BLM has broad authority to initiate contest challenges, and may do so “for any cause affecting thе legality or validity of any entry or settlement or mining claim.” 43 C.F.R. § 4.451- 1. The meaning and scope of this regulation is the gravamen of the dispute at issue in the pending motion. Mining contest challenges are brought before the OHA, which “is an authorized representative of the Secretary for the purpose of hearing, considering, and deciding matters within the jurisdiction of the Department involving hearings, appeals, and other review functions of the Secretary.” 43 C.F.R. § 4.1. [8] The OHA provides two levels of review to resolve mining contests: Administrative Law Judges (“ALJs”) in the Hearing Division have authority to hold evidentiary hearings and issue decisions concerning the validity of mining claims; and the IBLA decides appeals from ALJ rulings. 43 C.F.R. §§ 4.452-4–8; 43 C.F.R. § 4.452-9.
In contest proceedings before an OHA ALJ, the BLM bears the initial “burden of going
forward with sufficient evidence to establish a
prima facie
case” that the claim is invalid.
Foster,
Lehmann & Assocs. of Montana, Inc. v. Salazar
,
United States
,
Everett Foster
,
Either party may appeal the ALJ determination to the IBLA, s
ee
43 C.F.R. § 4.410(a),
which serves as DOI’s “review authority charged with deciding, on behalf of the Secretary,
matters relating to the use and disposition of public lands and their resources.”
Aera Energy LLC
v. Salazar
,
Decisions of the IBLA constitute final agency action, 43 C.F.R. §4.403, and, therefore, no further
administrative appeal is authorized within DOI, 43 C.F.R. § 4.21(d).
See also Hoyl v. Babbitt
,
B. Factual and Procedural Background
The instant dispute stems from the plaintiff’s original 161 unpatented mining claims, [9] located by his predecessors-in-interest between 1940 and the early 1970s, on approximately 4,968 acres of Federal land administered by BLM and the United States Forest Service (“USFS”), mostly located in the Siskiyou National Forest in Southern Oregon. Freeman , 174 IBLA at 291; AR at 1183. Litigation over the validity of the plaintiff’s claims has been ongoing for over two decades before the United States Court of Federal Claims (“CFC”), in DOI administrative proceedings, and, now, before this Court.
1. Effect of Moratorium on Plaintiff’s Patent Application On September 9, 1992, the plaintiff filed an application seeking to patent 151 of the 161 mining claims. Freeman , 174 IBLA at 291 ‒ 92; AR 1183 ‒ 84. Before the application was acted on by BLM, the congressional moratorium took effect on October 1, 1994, halting the processing of patent applications for unpatented mining claims. See Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act of 1995 § 112. Due to this moratorium, “BLM has since refused to process [the plaintiff’s] application.” Freeman , 174 IBLA at 292; AR 1184. On December 17, 1992, the plaintiff filed a “plan of operations” (“POO”) with the USFS, proposing to sample and mine his claims. Id. “After several delays by the USFS and intervening administrative appeals by [the plaintiff], the USFS denied his POO, rejecting his last appeal on October 11, 2000.” Id.
2. Proceedings Before the U.S. Court of Federal Claims On January 22, 2001, the plaintiff filed suit in the CFC, alleging that the defendants had, “by refusing to approve his patent application and by effectively denying approval of his POO, engaged in a taking of his property rights,” in violation of the Fifth Amendment. Freeman , 174 IBLA at 292; AR 1184; see also AR 10699‒712 (CFC Complaint). The plaintiff’s claim before the CFC turns on whether he рossessed a compensable property right against the United States. To facilitate making this determination, the CFC stayed proceedings in the case and remanded the matter to the DOI “for determination of validity of plaintiff’s mining claims.” AR 10728 (CFC Order at 1, Freeman v. United States , No. 01-39L (Oct. 10, 2001)). [10]
Following the stay of CFC proceedings, the parties successfully reached agreement regarding both the dates when the plaintiff claimed the alleged taking occurred and the appropriateness of the use of those dates for a validity determination. The plaintiff’s counsel emphasized that “we believe this process should try to determine the validity of [the plaintiff’s] claims as of the date of the taking,” reiterating that “the critical date should be the date the claims were taken.” AR 10877, Ex. 101 at 5 (Letter, dated September 5, 2003, from Richard M.
Stephens, plaintiff’s counsel, to Otto Schumacher, Western Mine Engineering, Inc. & Terry
Maley, BLM). Indeed, the plaintiff’s counsel cautioned that “[w]e hope this case does not follow
the path used in
Skaw v. United States
,
In response to the plaintiff’s proposal about using the years 1993 or 2000 as the dates when the alleged taking occurred, DOI sought more precise dates than entire years. AR 10887 ‒ 89, Ex. 105 (Letter, dated November 12, 2003, from Bradley Grenham, Regional Solicitor DOI to Richard M. Stephens, plaintiff’s counsel). At the outset, DOI rejected the plaintiff’s suggestion that the date when a Forest Service employee allegedly made the “nо way in hell” statement could constitute the date of a taking since, even if that statement were made, such an oral statement would not constitute a final agency action necessary for the validity determination. Id. at 10888. At the same time, DOI suggested the date of October 6, 2000, for the validity determination, since this was the date of the denial of the POO, which was cited in the plaintiff’s complaint before the CFC as a taking. Id. at 10887 ‒ 88. In addition, DOI proposed October 1, 1994, the effective date of the congressionally imposed moratorium on the processing of mineral patents, as another possible date to use for the validity determination. Id. at 10888. The agency requested that the plaintiff provide notice, in writing, by December 1, 2003, of any disagreement about the use of either October 6, 2000, or October 1, 1994, as the dates of the alleged taking for the validity determination. Id.
The plaintiff’s response did not dispute the appropriateness of these two dates—October 1, 1994 and October 6, 2000—as the alleged taking dates. Rather, the plaintiff agreed that “October 6, 2000 is one possible appropriate date.” AR 10892, Ex. 106 (Letter, dated November 19, 2003, from Richard M. Stephens, plaintiff’s counsel, to Bradley Grenham, Regional Solicitor *12 DOI). The plaintiff reiterated that 1993 was another possible date, but acknowledged that, since this date was close to the 1994 moratorium date offered by the agency, the plaintiff agreed that “October 4, 1994 is the appropriate date for the temporary taking of Mr. Freeman’s rights to a patent.” Id.
With this agreement on the alleged “taking” dates, the BLM reviewed the plaintiff’s mining claims to determine whether the requisite discovery had occurred by either of those dates. After extensive examination, the mineral team assigned to determine the validity of the mining claims as of the two alleged “taking” dates, determined that there was a lack of discovery and recommended that the BLM issue a mining contest. AR 7751–52, Ex. 1 (DOI-BLM Mineral Report, dated January 31, 2005, stating “no discovery . . . exists on any of the Claimant’s 161 mining claims . . . It is recommended that the BLM initiate contest proceedings . . . . Minerals have not been found on any of the 161 mining claims . . . in sufficient qualities or quantities to constitute a discovery. The minerals could not have been marketed at a profit as of either the 1994 or 2000 marketability dates.”).
3. 2007 OHA ALJ Ruling An OHA ALJ conducted a 25-day contest claim hearing initiated by BLM, and received over 400 exhibits and over 3,400 transcript pages of testimony elicited by the parties. See Freeman, 174 IBLA at 293; AR 1186. At the conclusion of the hearing, the ALJ raised sua sponte the concern that he lacked “jurisdiction or authority to resolve the allegation of the [contest] Complaint that discovery of a valuable mineral deposit did not exist on any of the contested claims as of 1994 and 2000.” AR 1264 (OHA ALJ Order, dated August 10, 2007, on “Ruling on Jurisdictional Issue and Certification for Interlocutory Appeal; Claim Validity As of the Date of Hearing Is Not At Issue”) (“2007 ALJ Ruling”). Both parties expressed *13 disagreement with the jurisdictional concern expressed by the ALJ and took the position that OHA “has jurisdiction to determine the validity of the claims as of the alleged takings dates in 1994 and 2000.” Id . at 1265. [11] Nevertheless, contrary to the views of both parties, the ALJ ruled that the OHA lacked jurisdiction to review the validity of mining claims at the critical historical dates when the alleged takings occurred. Id . at 1262, 1265. [12]
The 2007 ALJ Ruling acknowledged the lack of “any controlling precedent directly addressing the jurisdictional issue,” as well as the lack of clear direction as to what constitutes the “critical date for determining validity when a patent application has been filed.” AR 1266.
Due to this perceived dearth of controlling authority, the 2007 ALJ Ruling relied heavily on dicta in two other ALJ decisions, “which concluded that this office had no authority to determine whether contested mining claims were valid as of the date of alleged takings which were subject to a federal lawsuit.” Id. at 1265 (citing United States v. Aloisi , CACA 41272 (May 2, 2007) and United States v. Story , Idaho 15974 (Nov. 19, 1981)).
Threе inter-related reasons are set out in the 2007 ALJ Ruling to reach this conclusion about the OHA ALJ’s lack of authority to decide the validity of mining claims as of the alleged takings dates. First, the ALJ construed the authority of the government to initiate claim contests under the DOI regulation codified at 43 C.F.R. 4.451-1, and found that although this regulation *14 grants “broad” power to DOI to initiate a contest, it also limits the charge or contest that may be brought to “a cause affecting the legality or validity of a mining claim.” Id . at 1268. The ALJ listed such causes as including “the failure to discover a valuable mineral deposit within the claim, the failure to properly locate the claim, or the failure to pay any required annual maintenance fee.” Id . at 1274. By contrast, the ALJ characterized “the alleged taking of a mining claim” as a “motivating reason[] for filing a contest but . . . not [a] cause[] affecting the legality or validity of a claim.” Id . In short, the ALJ determined that the regulation “has conditioned” the Secretary’s authority regarding mining claims to causes “affecting the legality or validity of a mining claim” and such causes “do not include an alleged taking of the mining claim.” Id .
Second, and relatedly, since a validating discovery of valuable minerals “may be made
even after a contest proceeding has been initiated,”
id
. at 1268 (citing
United States v. Foster
, 65
Interior Dec. 1, 5 ‒ 6 (1958),
aff’d
,
Foster v. Seaton
,
Finally, the ALJ concluded that the purpose of the Mining Law is “better served by restricting” validity determinations to the critical dates of the contest hearing or compliance with *15 patent requirements, rather than “based upon facts existing as of the dates of the alleged takings or some other non-critical dates in the past.” Id . at 1270. Indeed, the ALJ called it “nonsensical to encourage and reward through a determination of validity the development and discovery of deposits not presently valuable,” or to find “a deposit which is presently valuable, and whose development should rewarded and encouraged by validating the encompassing mining claim, . . . invalid for lack of discovery at some prior point in time.” Id . at 1271 .
The ALJ found that “[t]he foregoing leads to the conclusion that [DOI] has no authority to initiate a contest, and this office has no jurisdiction to resolve a contest, based upon the charge that no discovery existed on each mining claim as of 1994 and 2000 rather than the applicable critical date.” Id. at 1274.
4. 2008 IBLA Decision Reversing ALJ’s 2007 Ruling The BLM filed an interlocutory appeal to the IBLA challenging the 2007 ALJ ruling that the Secretary, and by extension OHA, did not have the necessary jurisdiction to determine the validity of unpatented mining claims as of alleged takings dates prior to the contest hearing. [13] On May 7, 2008, the IBLA reversed the ALJ’s ruling that it lacked jurisdiction, finding instead that “the Secretary, through BLM, has the authority to bring a contest to determine the validity of mining claims as of the dates of the alleged takings,” and that OHA ALJs have “jurisdiction and *16 authority to adjudicate such a contest.” Freeman , 174 IBLA at 297; AR 1189. The IBLA observed that while “a claimant may make a discovery and validate a mining claim after any such date, even after contest proceedings have begun,” there “is nothing in the applicable statutes, Departmental regulations, or case law that restricts mining contests” in the manner interpreted by the ALJ. Freeman , 174 IBLA at 296; AR 1188. In fact, the IBLA noted that “[t]he Board has upheld numerous cоntest decisions in which the contestant’s complaint alleged invalidity only as of a date years prior to the date of the hearing.” Freeman , 174 IBLA at 296 n.9; AR 1188 (citing United States v. Clear Gravel Enters., Inc. , 2 IBLA 287 (1971); United States v. Stewart , 1 IBLA 161 (1970); and United States v. Bartlett , 2 IBLA 275 (1971)).
The IBLA disagreed with the ALJ’s interpretation of the governing DOI regulations and
concluded that a “claim that is not supported by a discovery as of the alleged takings dates would
be invalid
at that time
under the mining laws, and the Government can surely bring a contest on
that basis pursuant to 43 C.F.R. § 4.451-1.”
Freeman
, 174 IBLA at 296; AR 1188 (emphasis in
original).
[14]
The IBLA pointed out that the “Department’s authority to determine claim validity
as of any point in time has long been recognized by the courts.”
Freeman
, 174 IBLA 295; AR
1187 (citing
Cameron
,
5. Remand and 2010 IBLA Decision The IBLA remanded the matter to the ALJ. During post-hearing briefing, the plaintiff conceded the invalidity of 50 claims, which the ALJ declared null and void. Subsequently, the *17 ALJ concluded that discovery of valuable mineral deposits had not been made on the remaining 111 claims at the time of the alleged takings. See United States v. Freeman , 179 IBLA 341, 345 (2010) (“2010 IBLA Decision”); AR 5809. The IBLA affirmed this decision in 2010. Id. at 389–90. [15]
6. The Plaintiff’s Instant Complaint On June 27, 2012, the plaintiff filed the instant complaint, challenging the 2008 and 2010 IBLA Decisions in two causes of action. See Compl. at 1. The first cause of action alleges that IBLA’s 2008 holding “that mining claims can be determined to be presently invalid based on historic economic conditions is arbitrary, capricious, [] [an] abuse of discretion, [] not in accordance with the law,” id. ¶ 32, and “in excess of its statutory jurisdiction,” id. ¶ 33. The plaintiff alleges that the IBLA “confuse[d] the initiation of contest proceedings with the establishment of intervening rights,” id. ¶ 36, failed to observe procedural rules, id. ¶ 38, failed to support its decision by substantial evidence, id. ¶ 39, and that the DOI “is collaterally estopped from taking [a] position contrary to the rulings” in other OHA cases, id. ¶ 40.
The second cause of action alleges that the “IBLA’s 2010 decision[,] declaring Plaintiff’s mining claims invalid for lack of discovery of a valuable mineral deposit,” id . ¶ 43, is “arbitrary and capricious,” id. ¶ 44, contrary to the plaintiff’s constitutional rights, id. ¶ 45, in excess of statutory authority, id. ¶ 46, “issued without observance” of procedural requirements under the APA, id. ¶ 47, and unsupported by substantial evidence, id. ¶ 48. The plaintiff’s pending partial motion fоr summary judgment addresses only the first cause of action.
II. LEGAL STANDARD
A. Summary Judgment
Granting a motion for summary judgment is appropriate if the movant carries the burden
of showing “that there is no genuine dispute as to any material fact and the movant is entitled to
judgment as a matter of law,” based upon the pleadings, depositions, and affidavits, and other
factual materials in the record. F ED . R. C IV . P. 56(a), (c);
Ali v. Tolbert
,
242, 247–48 (1986). The Court is only required to consider the materials explicitly cited by the parties, but may, on its own accord, consider “other materials in the record.” F ED . R. C IV . P.
56(c)(3).
In this case, the Court is presented with a partial motion for summary judgment for the
purposes of reviewing the plaintiff’s legal challenge to a final agency action in the form of an
IBLA decision. “[W]hen an agency action is challenged[] . . . [t]he entire case on review is a
question of law, and only a question of law.”
Marshall Cnty. Healthcare Auth. v. Shalala
, 988
F.2d 1221, 1226 (D.C. Cir. 1993). This Court need not and ought not engage in lengthy fact
finding, since “[g]enerally speaking, district courts reviewing agency action under the APA’s
arbitrary and capricious standard do not resolve factual issues, but operate instead as appellate
courts resolving legal questions.”
James Madison Ltd. by Hecht v. Ludwig
,
B. Deference Under APA
When an administrative determination is challenged under the APA, “a reviewing court
shall set aside any agency action, finding, or conclusion that is ‘arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of
discretion, or otherwise not in accordance with law.’”
Theodore Roosevelt Conservation P’ship
v. Salazar
,
Co.
,
An agency’s interpretation of its own regulation commands substantial judicial deference.
See Bowles v. Seminole Rock & Sand Co.
,
SmithKline Beecham Corp.
,
The D.C. Circuit has provided explicit instructions on the scope of review under the
arbitrary and capricious standard applicable to challenges, such as the instant one, to a decision
of the IBLA regarding mining claims.
See Aera Energy LLC
,
III. DISCUSSION
The Supreme Court has long recognized that the Secretary of DOI is granted broad
plenary authority under the Mining Law over the administration of public lands, including the
determination of the validity of any mining claims. As the Supreme Court explained in
Cameron
,
[b]y general statutory provisions the execution of the laws regulating the acquisition of rights in the public lands and the general care of these lands is confided to the Land Department, as a special tribunal; and the Secretary of the Interior, as the head of the department, is charged with seeing that this authority is rightly exercised to the end that valid claims may be recognized, invalid ones eliminated, and the rights of the public preserved.
Id. The Court further made clear that even when “the mineral land law does not in itself confer such authority . . . in the absence of some direction to the contrary, the general statutory provisions before mentioned vest it in the land department.” Id . at 461. See also Best , 371 U.S. at 336–39 (noting that “the Department has been granted plenary authority over the administration of public lands, including mineral lands; and it has been given broad authority to issue regulations concerning them” and that “Congress has entrusted the Department of the Interior with the management of the public domain and prescribed the process by which claims against the public domain may be perfected”).
The plaintiff does not challenge the general jurisdiction of DOI to make claim validity determinations or the grant to the OHA, under 43 C.F.R. § 4.1, of “the full authority of the Secretary.” Pl.’s Mot. at 13. Rather, the plaintiff contends that OHA’s authority to exercise the power of the Secretary has been limited by regulation “to those matters within the jurisdiction of the Department involving hearings and appeals,” which jurisdiction is set out in regulation 43 C.F.R. § 4.451-1, governing the government’s initiation of contests. Id . According to the plaintiff, regulation 43 C.F.R. § 4.451-1 does not provide authority for the agency to make determinations regarding the legality or validity of mining claims as of discrete historical dates, but may only “determin[e] the legality or validity [of mining claims] in the present .” See Pl.’s Mot. at 13 (emphasis in original); id. (“A contest complaint which does not seek a determination of present legality or validity is not within the scope of this regulation.”); id . at 14 (“despite the broad authority of OHA, its jurisdiction is limited by the Department’s regulations regardless of whether the parties, including the Department, desire a decision”). The defendants disagree with this “pinched and constricted” reading of the disputed regulation, Defs’ Opp’n at 24, contending *23 that the plain language of this regulation broadly authorizes the agency “to determine validity on any date relevant to the action prompting the validity determination,” id . at 33.
The plaintiff argues that this regulation does not authorize OHA “to determine the validity of Freeman’s claims as of historical dates based on historical circumstances no longer in existence,” Pl.’s Mot. at 2–3, and that the 2008 IBLA Decision to the contrary is arbitrary and capricious, for principally the following three reasons: (1) the plain meaning of the disputed regulation limits OHA’s jurisdiction “to determining the legality or validity in the present,” id . at 13; (2) the decision conflicts with DOI policies and the purpose of the Mining Law, id . at 23–27; and (3) the decision relies upon precedent not supportive of the conclusion and fails to follow precedent in a manner violative of collateral estoppel principles and the Equal Protection clause, id . at 27–35.
For the reasons discussed below, the Court finds that regulation 43 C.F.R. § 4.451-1 is unambiguous and, further, that the agency’s interpretation of its regulation reflected in the 2008 IBLA Decision is fully consistent with the plain language of the regulation and entitled to substantial deference. For the reasons set out below, the plaintiff’s arguments that the 2008 IBLA Decision is arbitrary and capricious are unavailing.
A. 2008 IBLA Decision Reflects Unambiguous Meaning of Disputed Regulation The DOI regulation at issue here, 43 C.F.R. § 4.451-1, provides, in pertinent part, that “The Government may initiate contests for any cause affecting the legality or validity of . . . any mining claim.” 43 C.F.R. § 4.451-1. The parties dispute whether the phrase “affecting the legality or validity,” as used in the regulation, is sufficiently broad to provide authority for the OHA to evaluate mining claims based on historical dates. See Pl.’s Mot. at 13 (language of disputed regulation “does not refer to the ‘historical validity’ of the mining claim”); Defs.’ Mem. *24 Opp’n Pl.’s Partial Mot. Summ. J. (Defs.’ Opp’n”) at 15, ECF No. 16 (“[T]here is nothing in the applicable statutes, Departmental Regulations, or case law that restricts mining contest” in this manner). Construction of this DOI regulation must begin with the words in the regulation and their plain meaning.
The regulation permits the government to contest a mining claim and the OHA to hear such contest, premised on “any cause.” Thus, the power of the government to bring, and OHA’s concomitant power to hear, a contest claim is broad. As the Supreme Court has recently noted, the word “any” “has an “ ‘expansive meaning,’” that “can broaden to the maximum, but never change in the least, the clear meaning of the phrase selected by Congress here.” Freeman v.
Quicken Loans, Inc.
,
Rucker
,
Rather than focus on the key terms of “any cause” related to “any mining claim,” the plaintiff seizes upon the phrase “affecting the legality or validity,” to argue that this “reference . . *25 . is in the present tense.” See Pl.’s Mot. at 13. As noted, according to the plaintiff, 43 C.F.R. § 4.451-1 “does not refer to the ‘historical validity’ of the mining claim,” but rather is “limited to determining the legality or validity in the present .” Id. (emphasis in original). As a result, under the plaintiff’s reading of the disputed regulation, “[a] contest complaint which does not seek a determination of present legality or validity is not within the scope of this regulation.” Id. Notwithstanding the fact that an OHA ALJ adopted this same construction of the regulation in the 2007 Jurisdictional Decision, this argument that OHA is limited to making validity determinations only as of the present time is specious for at least three reasons.
First, contrary to the plaintiff’s interpretation, the phrase “affecting the legality or validity” does not indicate “the present,” but rather no time tense at all. This gerund phrase functions to describe the subject matter of the contest proceeding that may be initiated by the government, without constraint on the timing of when that proceeding is brought or the point in time when the mining claim is subject to evaluation.
Second, the other clauses in the regulation also impose no time constraints on when the “cause,” which prompts the need for the contest proceeding and a determination of a mining claim’s validity, may arise. The cause affecting the validity of a mining claim may arise in the past and the effect of that cause may be determined as of that time. In other words, the plaintiff’s construction of the disputed regulation, and by extension the OHA ALJ’s 2007 Jurisdictional Decision, reads into the regulation a time limitation requiring a determination of validity only as of the “present” time. The plain meaning of “any cause,” authorizes a determination of validity that, depending upon the nature of the cause, may be as of the time of the cause’s effect, which may not be in the “present” time. The plaintiff incorrectly conflates the timing of a determination, which is obviously made in the present time, with the date when a mining claim *26 may be deemed valid. See Pl.’s Mot. at 15 (conceding that “Secretary may institute a challenge to the validity of a mining claim at any point in time,” but opining that this “does not mean the Department may contest the validity of mining claims as of any point in time”) (emphasis in original). Contrary to the plaintiff’s opinion, a mining claim may be deemed valid or not, as of any date covered by the broad swathe of time when “any cause” may arise.
Finally, if the Secretary “intended that its mining claims validity determinations be
limited to specific instances and specific dates, then the government contest regulation could
easily have been writtеn in this manner.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 25. The defendant correctly points out
that this regulation has “no part . . . limiting it to only present circumstances” and does not “state
“‘any present cause’ or ‘present legality or validity’” as a limit on contests. Defs.’ Opp’n at 19.
In other words, the disputed regulation does not limit, as the plaintiff contends, the “cause”
triggering the need for a contest proceeding to those affecting the validity of a mining claim in
the present time but instead more broadly authorizes a contest for “any cause.” As the
defendants point out, “[t]o read the regulation as stringently as does Plaintiff is simply to read
‘any cause’ out of the regulation.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 25. Such cherry-picking of regulatory
language does not lead to accurate interpretation or appropriate application.
See Fin. Planning
Ass’n v. SEC
,
Changing tack, the plaintiff also contends that “the mere filing of a taking claim is not a cause affecting the legality or validity of the mining claims.” Pl.’s Reply Supp. Mot. Partial Summ. J. (“Pl.’s Reply”) at 5, ECF No. 17 (emphasis in original); id . at 7 (“a takings lawsuit is *27 not a ‘cause affecting the legality or validity’ of a mining claim”). Consequently, in the plaintiff’s view, a referral for an administrative determination of claim validity arising from a takings claim does not confer authority under the disputed regulation for the initiation of a contest. See id . at 12 (“to read the regulation as authorizing contest proceedings simply because a takings claim, the presence of which has no effect on the legality or validity of the claims, is to read ‘any cause affecting the legality or validity’ out of the regulation.”). This contention simplistically conflates the legal questions raised in the plaintiff’s CFC complaint with the underlying question posed in the administrative proceeding. The “cause” for the initiation of the сontest hearing is not, as the plaintiff suggests, his taking claims pending in another tribunal, but the lack of any validating discovery on the plaintiff’s mining claims that “could [] have been marketed at a profit as of either 1994 or 2000.” AR 7469 (Contest Complaint ¶ 5.1).
In analogous circumstances, the Supreme Court has expressly approved the referral of
claim validity determinations to DOI as “the administrative agency that has special competence
in the field.”
Best
,
Noting DOI’s “plenary authority over the administration of public lands,” id . at 336, as well as the different purposes of the condemnation case “to obtain immediate possession” of the property and the administrative proceeding to determine claim validity, the Court concluded *28 “that the District Court acted properly in holding its hand until the issue of the validity of the claims has been resolved by the agency entrusted by Congress with the task.” Id. at 340. Just as in Best , where the compensation that would be due upon condemnation turned on the validity of the mining claims located on the condemned property, the compensation due to the plaintiff in his CFC complaint turns on the validity of his mining claims, which matter DOI has “plenary authority” to decide. The “cause” of the administrative proceedings in both Best and here was not the federal suit, as the plaintiff suggests, but the fundamental question of whether the mining claims are valid, a question plainly within the authority of DOI and its OHA to determine.
The 2008 IBLA Decision relied upon the plain and unambiguous meaning of the disputed regulation to conclude that “there is nothing in the applicable statutes, Departmental regulations, or case law that restricts mining contests in the manner suggested by [the 2007 ALJ Ruling].” Freeman , 174 IBLA at 296; AR 1188. Rather, the legal claim that a taking occurred raises the separate mixed legal and factual question of whether the property interest underlying such taking claim was valid as of the date underlying the alleged taking event. Both the statutory authority granted to the Secretary and the delegated authority to the OHA set out in the disputed regulation are sufficiently broad in scope to authorize the government to initiate a contest proceeding to accomplish the task of answering the question regarding the validity of the property interest.
Since the plain language of the disputed regulation supports this conclusion, not surprisingly, the 2008 IBLA Decision observed that DOI’s authority to perform this task of “determin[ing] claim validity as of any point in time has long been recognized by the courts.” Freeman , 174 IBLA at 295; AR 1187. [17] The IBLA’s decision that DOI “can initiate a contest and an ALJ can determine the validity of mining claims as of the date of alleged takings,” AR *29 1186, is not only entitled to substantial deference as an agency interpretation of its own regulation, but also is a clearly reasonable conclusion to be reached based on the plain language of the disputed regulation. Thus, the defendants understandably urge that “[b]ecause the government contest regulation is written so broadly and is plain on its face, no further analysis is necessary to conclude that the contest at issue was properly filed under 43 C.F.R. § 4.451-1. . .
[and] OHA has jurisdiction.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 16.
Nevertheless, in the face of the plaintiff’s challenge, the Court proceeds to discuss how IBLA’s interpretation of the disputed regulation is both consistent with DOI policies and furthers the purposes of the Mining Lаw.
B. 2008 IBLA Decision Comports with DOI Policies and Furthers Purpose of the Mining Law
The plaintiff contends that the 2008 IBLA Decision neither comports with DOI policies, as reflected in the BLM Handbook titled “Mineral Reports—Preparation and Review,” No. 3060 (“BLM Handbook”), Pl.’s Mot. at 23–24, nor furthers the statutory purposes of the Mining Law, id . at 24. These arguments are unavailing.
1. DOI Policies The plaintiff relies on a provision of the BLM Handbook that provides guidance for validity determinations of mining claims on “land open to entry” and instructs that “the discovery date is the date of the field examination by the Mineral Examiner or the hearing.” Pl.’s Mot. at 24 (citing BLM Handbook at .081C1). The plaintiff points out that this guidance is consistent with BLM’s Mineral Commodity Pricing (“MCP”) policy, 65 Fed. Reg. 41,724, AR 7246, which provides that, “where there is no patent application and no withdrawal,” mining claim validity determinations are made “ as of the date of the mineral examination.” Pl.’s Mot. *30 at 24 (quoting AR 7197 and AR 7247) (emphasis in plaintiff’s motion)). According to the plaintiff, these policies “demonstrate the longstanding policy of the Department to determine the validity of mining claims using current, as opposed to historical, information, except where there is a withdrawal or a patent.” Id . at n.37. Contrary to the plaintiff’s contention, the 2008 IBLA Decision does not conflict with these cited BLM policies.
At the outset, notably, the IBLA is not bound by the BLM Handbook, which sets out DOI
internal guidance.
See Byrd v. Jossie
,
Thus, even if the policies articulated in the BLM Handbook and the MCP policy applied to a validity determination made in the context of evaluating an alleged taking, which they do not, any lack of adherence by the IBLA to those policies would not, standing alone, render the 2008 IBLA Decision arbitrary or capricious.
Turning first to consideration of the BLM Handbook, the plaintiff correctly recites the guidance set out in the section titled “Determination Dates for Mineral Reports.” This guidance suggests two possible dates for discovery, stating that, for certain validity determinations, “the discovery date is the date of the field examination by the Mineral Examiner or the hearing,” BLM Handbook, § .08 D.3. The plaintiff overlooks the significant limitation on the use of this guidance, however. Specifically, the very first section of the Handbook sets out its “Purpose” to provide “minimum standards for preparing, reviewing and approving energy and mineral resources reports in response to a specific action or application listed in” four other sections of *32 the handbook. BLM Handbook § .01. None of the enumerated actions requiring a mineral report that are covered by the scope of this Handbook refer to alleged takings claims. See, e.g., id . § 11 (“Actions Requiring a Mineral Report”); id . § .21 (“Actions Requiring a Coal Mineral Report”); id . § .22 (“Actions Requiring an Other-Solid Leasable Minerals Report”); and id . § .31 (“Actions Requiring a Fluid Minerals Report”). This explicit limitation on the application of this guidance is a good reason “not to treat the cited guidance as exhaustive,” as the defendants urge, noting “that there are obvious omissions.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 32 n.9. [18]
Similarly, the MCP policy undercuts, rather than supports, the plaintiff’s view that
historical dates may not be used to determine the validity of a mining claim. In order to provide
“a consistent approach in determining claim validity,” this policy outlines various steps “to
determine the price of mineral commodities when analyzing the economic marketability of a
mineral deposit,”
The plaintiff also highlights language in the MCP policy indicating that when, as here,
there is “no patent application and no withdrawals,” the validity of unpatented mining claims is
determined “as of the date of the mineral examination.”
2. Purposes of the Mining Law Relying upon a point raised in the 2007 ALJ Ruling, the plaintiff argues that the IBLA’s interpretation would undercut the Mining Law’s purpose. Pl.’s Mot. at 24. The reasoning parroted by the plaintiff is that the purpose of the Mining Law, “‘to reward and encourage the discovery and development of valuable mineral deposits,’” id . at 25 (quoting 2007 ALJ Ruling at AR 1270), would not be served “by making the discovery determination for land still open to mineral entry based upon facts existing as of the dates of the alleged taking or some other non- critical date in the past,’” id . (quoting 2007 ALJ Ruling at AR 1270). To further the goal of *34 developing mining claims that are currently valuable, the plaintiff argues that the date of the hearing must be used “as the critical date.” Id . Otherwise, validity claims would be asserted for claims with no current value or, conversely, claims with current value would be invalidated due to a determination based on a date in the past when the claim lacked value. Id . The plaintiff further speculates that allowing the government to initiate contests based upon a selection of “an earlier and most inopportune market conditions to determine that a claim is presently invalid based on those earlier market conditions,” would “create[] a significant uncertainty in mining law.” Id . at 26. The plaintiff’s reasoning mixes contexts like proverbial apples and oranges and is therefore fundamentally flawed for at least two reasons.
First, context matters. The legal question concerning the validity of a mining claim may turn on different critical dates, depending on the factual context prompting the contest hearing.
No matter the critical date at issue, whether it is in the present or past, OHA has been granted broad jurisdiction to make the determination. For example, if the current validity of a mining claim were at issue, reaching back in time to some historical date to evaluate a claimant’s discovery or compliance with requirements would likely be both irrelevant and unfair. On the other hand, as even the plaintiff concedes, if a claimant asserts a claim on land that has been withdrawn, the past date of withdrawal, not the date of the hearing, becomes the critical date since, if no discovery occurred as of the date when the land is withdrawn, the claim is not perfected on that date and no rights have either been acquired or lost as a result of the withdrawal. See United States v. Mavros , 122 IBLA 297, 301 (1992) (considering marketability of mining claim as of a past critical date on withdrawn land); Pl.’s Reply at 11.
The Supreme Court’s decision almost a century ago in Cameron v. United States , 252 U.S. at 459, is instructive on this point. In that case, the United States sued to enjoin a miner *35 from using land on the southern rim of the Grand Canyon in Colorado. Id . at 454. While the miner had located his mining claims at issue in 1902, the land was withdrawn as a monument reserve in 1908. Id . at 455. A saving clause granted continued rights “to any ‘valid’ mining claim theretofore acquired.” Id . at 455. In a contest hearing held shortly after the creation of the monument reserve, the miner sought “to bring the claim within the savings clause,” requiring him to show that “discovery must have preceded the creation of that reserve.” Id . at 456–57.
The Secretary found no discovery at the time of the hearing nor at a time “‘prior to the establishment of the National Monument and the withdrawal of the lands therein embraced, as to bring them within the saving clause of the Executive Order.’” Id . at 457 (quoting Secretary’s decision). The miner challenged, inter alia , the Secretary’s “authority to determine the character of the land or the question of discovery, or to pronounce the claim invalid.” Id . at 459. The Supreme Court rejected as “not tenable,” id . at 459, the challenge to the Secretary’s authority to make a validity determination, including at the historical date of the withdrawal of the land, and confirmed that the “power of the department to inquire into the extent and validity of the rights claimed against the Government does not cease until the legal title has passed,” id . at 413 (internal quotation and citation omitted).
As the defendants point out, just because certain dates are critical to determine claim validity in patenting and withdrawal cases, due to the factual and legal contexts that typically arise in such cases, does not mean “these exact dates must limit OHA’s jurisdiction in all contests.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 21. The defendants provide additional examples of circumstances where the purposes of the Mining Law are served by examination of the validity of mining claims as of historical dates outside of the context of patent applications and withdrawn land. Specifically, when association placer mining claims are transferred from an original number of *36 locators to a smaller number of locators, discovery must exist at the time of the transfer. See 43 C.F.R. § 3833.33(a). In this context, validity of the association placer mining claim must be established as of the date of the transfer, not the date of the hearing, and restricting a determination to the hearing date “would make it impossible for the Department to combat abuses of the Mining Law with respect to association placer claims.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 34.
Similarly, in order tо mine “common variety” minerals, which were removed from the purview of the Mining Law on July 23, 1955, see 30 U.S.C. § 611, the claimant must show a validating discovery as of that 1955 date. The defendants explain that the “only way to know whether the common variety mineral can be mined under the locatable minerals regulations (because discovery predated the 1955 act) or whether the mineral must be mined under the material sales regulations at 43 C.F.R. § 3600 (because there was no discovery as of 1955 or discovery was lost sometime after 1955) is to examine validity of the mining claims as of July 23, 1955.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 35.
When a contest hearing is initiated to inform a CFC’s determination of whether a
compensable taking occurred, the critical date for the determination of validity “is the date of the
event that the mining claimant alleges resulted in a governmental taking of the mining claims.”
Id
. at 22. A mining claim not supported by discovery of valuable minerals as of the date of the
alleged taking, would be invalid at that time and no compensable right would have vested in the
claimant.
See
30 U.S.C. § 23 (noting that a mining claim perfected when there is a “discovery of
the vein or lode”);
see also Best
,
Thus, when a contest is initiated to determine the validity of a claim at the time of an alleged government taking, historical dates are not arbitrarily picked by the government with the “manipulat[ive]” purpose of pre-dating discovery and undermining a legitimate claim, as the plaintiff suggests. Pl.’s Mot. at 26. Calling the plaintiff’s argument a “red herring,” the defendants point out that, in takings litigation, the historical dates are identified by the mining claimant, not the government, and used to determine the validity of the claim in order to evaluate whether any comрensable property interest was taken. Defs.’ Mot. at 30. In fact, the dates of the alleged takings at issue here, in 1994 and 2000, originated in the complaint filed by the plaintiff before the CFC alleging a taking of his property interests in the mining claims at issue based on two alleged events associated with those dates. See AR 10702 (CFC Complaint ¶¶ 6, 11–12 (stating that in 1994 BLM notified the plaintiff that “it would not process applications,” including the patent applications he had previously filed, “due to moratorium contained in Congressional appropriations act”)); AR 10706 (CFC Complaint ¶ 30 (stating that “[o]n October 11, 2000, the Regional Forester denied [plaintiff’]s appeal of the ROD,” which is the Record of Decision denying plaintiff’s Plan of Operations)). Moreover, the plaintiff agreed, in a stipulation, to the historical dates in 1994 and 2000 as the critical dates of the alleged takings asserted in the complaint. See Defs.’ Mot. at 8; AR 10877 (plaintiff’s counsel acknowledged that 1994 and 2000 might not be the most economically opportune dates but they were appropriate because “the critical date should be the date the claims were [allegedly] taken”). [19] When the key *38 legal question triggering the initiation of a contest hearing is the validity of mining claims at dates when a claimant alleges a government taking, the use of those historical dates is obviously necessary to answer the question.
A second reason that the OHA does not undermine the purpose of the Mining Law when
making a validity determination as of historical dates of an alleged taking identified by a
claimant, is that this is precisely the role statutorily assigned to the Secretary of the Interior and
delegated to the OHA. Although the plaintiff focuses on the purpose of the Mining Law “to
encourage the development of mineral deposits,” Pl.’s Mot. at 25, this purpose is not unbounded.
Norton
,
for a patent, the Secretary may require further inquiry into the validity of claimed rights to public
land.”);
Davis
,
Supervision of the public’s rights in public lands
vis a vis
mining claimants
“encompasses providing assistance to the United States in resolving a takings lawsuit that arises
out of mineral entries on public lands.”
Id.
at 295; AR 1187;
see Holden
,
Accordingly, the plaintiff’s arguments that application of the plain terms of the disputed regulation would undermine DOI policies and the purposes of the Mining Law are simply unsupportable.
C. The 2008 IBLA Decision Properly Addresses Precedent The plaintiff makes several arguments designed to deconstruct the reasoning of the 2008 IBLA Decision and show that the decision was arbitrary and capricious. Specifically, the *40 plaintiff contends that the IBLA, first, improperly “conclude[d] that the initiation of a mining contest is the establishment of an intervening right,” Pl.’s Mot. at 19, and, second, otherwise relied upon cases that “simply do not provide the needed support,” id . at 27. Next, the plaintiff argues that the IBLA “employ[ed] differing procedures to [plaintiff] than to others similarly situated,” id. at 31, which amounts to a violation of collateral estoppel principles and the Equal Protection clause of the U.S. Constitution, id . at 32, 34. These claims are addressed, seriatim, below.
1. 2008 IBLA Decision Does Not Hold that Contest Proceeding Establishes An Intervening Right
The plaintiff spills much ink arguing that the IBLA incorrectly “assumes” that “‘intervening rights’ are nothing other than the issuance of a contest complaint.” Pl.’s Mot. at 18. This argument is simply a straw man attack on the 2008 IBLA Decision, since the IBLA never held, as the plaintiff contends, that the United States’ “intervening right, where there is no withdrawal or change in the law, prevent[s the plaintiff] from having a discovery after the contest proceeding was underway.” Pl.’s Mot. at 18.
There is no dispute that an “intervening right” refers to the rights of third parties “who
make a discovery after the original locator, but before the original locator makes a discovery.”
Pl.’s Mot. at 19. The 2008 IBLA Decision refers to “intervening rights” in a summary of well-
settled law that a mining claim location may be valid and provide “[v]ested property rights
against the United States” only after “the discovery of valuable minerals,” unless an intervening
right is asserted that renders the date of discovery “‘of no effect.’” 174 IBLA 295; AR 1187
(quoting
Cole
,
Contrary to the plaintiff’s strained reading, the 2008 IBLA Decision did not deem the government’s initiation of a contest proceeding as an intervening right that would automatically render a mining claim invalid. Instead, the decision stated the law clearly that discovery was a prerequisite for a validity determination, and mentioned the caveat that “the presence of an intervening right” would render a discovery ineffective. 174 IBLA at 295; AR 1187. Moreover, the IBLA’s decision did not declare that the plaintiff was prevented from seeking to relocate his claims. To the contrary, the IBLA expressly noted that “if the lands remain open to mineral entry, [plaintiff] would still be free to relocate the claims. . . .” 174 IBLA 296 n.10; AR 1188–89. The plaintiff even concedes this point, stating that “[t]he IBLA also noted that [plaintiff] could simply relocate his claims, which he has done.” Pl.’s Mot. at 28 n.40. Likewise, the IBLA’s decision also did not attempt to bar the plaintiff from proving discovery at a date later than the alleged takings, but determined that this was not an issue properly before the OHA. 174 IBLA at 298; AR 1190 (concluding that OHA ALJ “properly held that the validity of the 161 claims as of the hearing date was not at issue because the contest complaint did not include such a charge.”). Indeed, the IBLA noted that “[a]ssuming the lands remain open to entry under the mining law, the unsuccessful claimant,” who failed to “prove a discovery during the contest hearing,” may just like anyone else “‘seek[] to make a mining location.’” Id . at 296 n.8; AR 1188. Thus, the plaintiff’s criticism of the 2008 IBLA Decision based on extrapolations, which are expressly refuted in the decision, does not in any way undercut the merits of the decision.
2 . 2008 IBLA Decision Cites Supportive Precedent As part of his deconstruction of the 2008 IBLA Decision, the plaintiff challenges the legal cases cited as support for the conclusion that OHA has jurisdiction to make validity determinations as of historical dates, arguing that the four cases relied upon by the IBLA are distinguishable. Pl.’s Mot. at 27–30. The plaintiff apparently reasons that “the IBLA is [s]ilent as to the [d]istinguishing features” of those cited cases, id . at 27, and, consequently, “arbitrarily ignores its own precedent [to] creates [sic] a new rule applicable only to [plaintiff],” id . at 30.
The plaintiff’s argument is unpersuasive.
First, the plaintiff takes on the IBLA’s citation in a footnote to Gwillim v. Donnellan , 115 U.S. 45, 55 (1985), for the proposition that, “If the claimant does not prove a discovery during the contest hearing, then the claimant’s entire location falls before the superior interest of the United States, regardless of the date for which validity has been challenged.” Id . at 27 (quoting 174 IBLA 296 n. 8; AR 1188). To the extent that the plaintiff’s analysis is intelligible, he appears to be arguing that Gwillim involved “parties who claimed a right to the same minerals at different times,” unlike the instant case which involves a contest initiated by the government, and that Gwillim does not stand for the proposition that a government contest is “the establishment of an intervening right that precludes [plaintiff] from establishing a discovery.” Id . As the discussion in Part III.C.1., supra , indicates, the IBLA decision did not equate a government contest with the assertion of an intervening right and, thus, Gwillim simply was not cited for such a proposition.
Second, the plaintiff challenges the IBLA citation in another footnote to three cases for the proposition that the IBLA has “upheld numerous contest decisions in which the contestant’s complaint alleged invalidity only as of a date years prior to the date of the hearing.” Pl.’s Mot. at *43 27–28 (discussing 174 IBLA 296 n.9; AR 1188 n. 9 (citing Clear Gravel Enters., Inc. , 2 IBLA at 287 ; Stewart , 1 IBLA at 161; and Bartlett , 2 IBLA at 275)). According to the plaintiff, “[t]he IBLA is silent as [to] the obvious difference between these cases and the present,” id . at 28, and “never addresses” the argument that invalidity of a mining claim requires “prоof that the claims were not presently valid,” id . at 30.
The IBLA decision does not assert that the three cases challenged by the plaintiff are identical on their facts to the instant case, but rather, using the signal “ See, e.g. ,” cited the cases as examples of circumstances when historical dates are used to determine claim validity. In both Clear Gravel Enterprises, Inc. , 2 IBLA at 294 and Stewart , 1 IBLA at 164, the IBLA determined that the claims were invalid because “the materials on the claims were not marketable” as of a prior historical date when a congressional act removed those materials from the mining laws. In Bartlett , 2 IBLA at 276, the IBLA determined that as of a historical date when the land was withdrawn from mineral entry, “a market did not exist for” the minerals, which invalidated the claim.
The crux of the plaintiff’s criticism of the IBLA’s citation to these three IBLA cases is that validity determinations as of historical dates should be limited to the factual scenarios presented in those three cases, namely, “the withdrawal of land or ‘withdrawal’ of specified minerals,” and “when the miner has filed to receive a patent to the land.” Pl.’s Mot. at 29. The plaintiff points out the obvious, that “[n]one of those considerations exist in the present case,” id ., and apparently reasons from that observation that the IBLA lacked precedential foundation for its conclusion regarding OHA’s jurisdiction to determine claim validity as of historical dates of alleged takings.
The factual differences noted by the plaintiff are immaterial. Instead, as the plaintiff
acknowledges, in the factual scenarios presented in the three cited IBLA cases, “the
consideration of validity in the past is critical to determining present validity or present relief.”
Pl.’s Mot. at 29. This same consideration applies here: whether a valid claim existed at the
historical date of an alleged taking is “critical” to determining whether a claimant is entitled to
“present relief” for a compensable interest subject to that historical taking. Thus, the IBLA
properly relied upon these cases in support of its conclusion and the factual distinctions in the
three cited IBLA cases do not render the IBLA’s decision-making erroneous.
[21]
See Thomas
Jefferson Univ.,
The plaintiff’s view that “discovery may be proven after adverse proceedings have been started,” Pl.’s Mot. at 22, is well-supported when the query before the OHA is whether a mining claim is presently valid. Yet, that was not the query raised either in (1) the plaintiff’s CFC complaint, where he contends that the “Forest Service’s actions caused a taking of [plaintiff]’s property rights,” AR 10699–712 (CFC Complaint ¶¶ 40, 48, 55, 62), which alleged actions all occurred at historical dates prior to the future contest hearing; or (2) the government’s contest complaint, which charged in relevant part that “[m]inerals have not been found on any of the 161 *45 mining claims in sufficient qualities or quantities to constitute a discovery [and] [a]ny minerals could not have been marketed at a profit as of either 1994 or 2000,” AR 7468–76 (Contest Complaint at ¶ 5). In other words, prompted by the plaintiff’s complaint before the CFC, the query posed in the contest complaint was whether the plaintiff’s mining claims were valid as of the historical dates of the alleged takings. Thus, it is the plaintiff, not the IBLA, who relies on incorrect precedent by relying on caselaw focused on the present validity of mining claims.
For example, the plaintiff relies on
United States v. Foster
,
Allowing validation of claims at historical points of time would, according to the plaintiff,
impermissibly depart “
sub silientio
” from
Foster
and its progeny.
Id.
at 23 (quoting
FCC v. Fox
Television Stations, Inc
.,
Both
Foster
and
Davis
, however, contain important caveats that undercut the plaintiff’s
reliance and, instead, confirm that the use of historical dates to evaluate the validity of a claim
may be required in some contexts. The issue addressed in
Foster
was straight-forward: the
claimants contended that validating mineral deposits had been discovered both at the time of the
government initiated contest hearing and at a prior time when the government believed the
location had been withdrawn.
Foster,
Consequently, the IBLA did “not reach” the question of whether the claims were valid before the lands were purportedly withdrawn, id . at 11, certainly implying that such a determination at an earlier date was within its purview to “reach.” The defendants further note that the decision in Foster supports the IBLA’s conclusion because, “[j]ust as [in] Foster ” where “‘a discovery after the withdrawal will not serve to validate the claim,’ similarly a discovery after the date of alleged taking will not serve to create a property right as against the United States as of the date of alleged taking.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 20.
The plaintiff’s reliance on
Davis v. Wiebbold
,
In short, the cases relied upon by the plaintiff and in the 2008 IBLA Decision support the common sense conclusion that the relevant date for determination of a mining claim’s validity may vary, depending upon the legal and factual context at issue.
3.
2008 IBLA Decision Is Not Barred By Collateral Estoppel
In a last gasp effort to avoid the ruling in the 2008 IBLA Decision, the plaintiff argues
that BLM should be precluded from asserting that the OHA had jurisdiction to review the mining
claims as of the alleged takings dates because the agency is barred from doing so under the
doctrine of collateral estoppel. Pl.’s Mot. at 32. Specifically, the plaintiff relies on two
“unappealed” ALJ rulings in unrelated contest proceedings, in which the ALJ found that “OHA
has no jurisdiction to determine the validity of mining claims in the past when such a ruling has
no effect on the present validity of the claims.” Pl.’s Mot. at 32 (citing ALJ rulings in
Aloisi
,
CACA 41272 and
Story
, Idaho 15974). Although recognizing that collateral estoppel cannot be
applied “automatically” offensively against the government,
id
. (citing
United States v. Mendoza
,
First, OHA ALJ rulings simply are not binding on the IBLA or even other OHA ALJs. See West Cow Creek Permittees v. Bureau of Land Mgmt. , 142 IBLA 224, 237 (1998) *48 (“Decisions of administrative law judges are not Departmental precedents and are not binding on this Board or other administrative law judges.” (citation omitted)); McLean v. Bureau of Land Mgmt , 133 IBLA 225, 235 n.16 (1995) (“decisions of [ALJs], while certainly worthy of respectful consideration, are not Departmental precedents and are not binding on this Board nor are they binding upon other [ALJs], unless they are adopted by the Board in adjudication of an appeal”); Robison , 120 IBLA at 183 (finding ALJ decisions not controlling because “Hearings Division decisions are not published, the Board does not routinely receive copies, and appellants have not submitted copies of the cited decisions. In any case, decisions of subordinate officials of the Department have no precedential value.”); United States v. Gayanich , 36 IBLA 111, 116 (1978) (noting that decisions of hearing examiners “absent any appeal, become final for the Department, although not precedential”). The fact that the rulings in Aloisi and Story were not appealed and, thus, were final in that sense for purposes of those proceedings, does not elevate them to the level of a binding final agency action, which is reserved solely for IBLA decisions.
43 C.F.R. § 4.21 (d);
Wildearth Guardians v. Jewell
,
Moreover, the fact that the ALJ rulings in Aloisi and Story relied upon by the plaintiff for preclusive effect in this case were not appealed by BLM does not somehow make them more authoritative or binding on DOI.
Second, the undisputed description by the defendants of the procedural posture of Aloisi and Story when the ALJ’s issued their no-jurisdiction rulings explains why those rulings were “unаppealed.” See generally Pl.’s Reply. The lack of any appeal of those unrelated ALJ rulings was certainly not due to DOI agreeing with or acquiescing in those decisions in a manner that would suggest a changed agency policy being applied to the plaintiff here. In Aloisi , the ALJ refused to certify an interlocutory appeal of his ruling that he lacked jurisdiction to determine *49 validity as of the dates of the alleged temporary takings when the contest complaint failed to provide those dates, or to stay the imminently-scheduled hearing, which did not leave adequate time for an appeal prior to the hearing. Defs.’ Opp’n at 37–38; AR 1335–36. By contrast, in this case, the OHA ALJ certified the interlocutory appeal of his jurisdictional ruling and the contest complaint clearly set out the dates of the alleged takings as the appropriate dates for the validity determination. In Story , the contest proceeding was dismissed without prejudice, before the issuance of any decision on the merits of the contest, because the mining claims were declared abandoned and void by operation of law due to the claimant’s failure to comply with mandatory annual filing requirements, obviating any need for an interlocutory appeal of the ALJ’s jurisdictional ruling. See Defs.’ Opp’n at 39. [22]
Finally, the plaintiff tries to justify his invocation of collateral estoppel here as
“
defensive
,” and falling outside the general rule against applying
offensive
estoppel to the
government, Pl.’s Mot. at 32, but this distinction makes no difference. The Supreme Court has
made clear that a private party may not invoke non-mutual collateral estoppel against the
government with respect to an issue on which a different private party prevailed in prior
litigation with the government. In
Mendoza
,
allowing nonmutual collateral estoppel against the Government in such cases would substantially thwart the development of important questions of law by freezing the first final decision rendered on a particular legal issue. Allowing only one final adjudication would deprive this Court of the benefit it receives from permitting several courts of appeals to explore *50 a difficult question before this Court grants certiorari.
Id.
Moreover, the Court stressed that “a contrary result might disserve the economy interests in
whose name estoppel is advanced by requiring the Government to abandon virtually any exercise
of discretion in seeking to review judgments unfavorable to it.”
Id
. at 163.
See also United
States v. Alaska
,
Accordingly, the ALJ rulings in two unrelated proceedings have no preclusive effect on the IBLA and do not operate to bar application of the 2008 IBLA Decision in this case.
4.
2008 IBLA Decision Does Not Violate the Equal Protection Clause
Finally, the plaintiff argues that because the IBLA reached a different conclusion in the
plaintiff’s case than did the ALJs in
Aloisi
and
Story
, the IBLA violated the “fundamental norm
*51
of administrative procedure that requires an agency to treat like cases alike,” Pl.’s Mot. at 34
(quoting
Westar Energy, Inc., v. Fed. Energy Regulatory Comm’n
,
Cir. 2007)), was arbitrary and capriсious, and violated equal protection of the laws. Pl.’s Mot. at 34. The essence of this argument is that the plaintiff is similarly situated to other mining claimants, but treated differently without a legitimate government interest.
Under both the APA and the Equal Protection Clause, agencies are prohibited from
treating similarly situated individuals differently without providing sufficient justification.
See Muwekma Ohlone Tribe v. Salazar
,
Hosp. of Univ. of Penn. v. Sebelius,
Assuming arguendo that the plaintiffs in Aloisi and Story are similar in sufficiently material respects with the instant plaintiff, the plaintiff’s argument is nonetheless unavailing because the 2008 IBLA Decision was well justified. First, an equal protection claim cannot be *52 used to impose a requirement on the IBLA to adhere to ALJ rulings that otherwise have no binding or precedential value for the IBLA. Second, the IBLA has sufficient justification based upon the plain meaning of the disputed regulation to exercise its authority and review the plaintiff’s mining claims based upon historical dates. Finally, the 2008 IBLA Decision is bolstered on the merits by the additional justifications that the contest charges alleging the mining claims’ invalidity as of historical dates were based upon the parties’ agreement regarding the dates of the alleged takings, see Freeman , 174 IBLA at 292; AR 1184; prior IBLA decisions employed historical dates to determine claim vаlidity, id . at 295; AR 1187; and plenary authority of DOI to supervise public business on public lands is sufficiently broad to encompass providing assistance in resolving takings claims by determining validating discovery as of alleged taking dates, id.
Accordingly, the IBLA’s decision does not run counter to the mandates of the APA or the
Equal Protection Clause.
See Envtl. Def. Fund, Inc. v. Costle
,
1981) (explaining that the “highly deferential” arbitrary and capricious standard “mandates
judicial affirmance if a rational basis for the agency's decision is presented”);
Safari Club Int’l v.
Jewell
, 11-CV-01564 BAH,
IV. CONCLUSION
For the aforementioned reasons, the plaintiff’s Partial Motion for Summary Judgment is denied. An appropriate order accompanies this Memorandum Opinion.
Date: April 16, 2014
__________________________ BERYL A. HOWELL United States District Judge
Notes
[1] The 2008 IBLA Decision is contained in the Administrative Record (“AR”) for this action, at pages AR 1182–90. Since the voluminous AR, which contains 15,274 pages of documents, is on a CD provided to the Court and has not been filed on the docket for this case, s ee Notice Regarding AR at 1, ECF No. 14, citations to the 2008 IBLA Decision will be to both the publicly available IBLA Digest of decisions and the AR.
[2] The Court acceded to the parties’ request to bifurcate review of the plaintiff’s two causes of action and to decide, first, whether the IBLA correctly concluded in its 2008 decision that DOI’s OHA had jurisdiction over DOI’s contest challenge, before considering the plaintiff’s second cause of action, which seeks review of IBLA’s 2010 merits decision that concluded plaintiff’s mining claims were null and void as of the alleged taking dates due to the lack of discovery of valuable mineral deposits. S ee Meet and Confer Statement, at 1, ECF No. 13. The parties explain that, “[i]f, as Plaintiff contends, jurisdiction was lacking in the agency below, there will be no need for judicial review of the merits of the agency’s decision under the second cause of action” since “[t]he judicial challenge to the agency’s decision on the merits will be moot if the agency had no jurisdiction.” Id .
[3] The plaintiff has requested oral argument on the pending motion, Pl.’s Mot. at 3, but given the ample written submissions of the parties, this request is denied. See LCvR 7(f) (allowance of oral hearing is “within the discretion of the court”).
[4] The Secretary of the Interior is authorized to withdraw or sequester land from mining operations under the Mining
Law. 43 U.S.C. § 1714;
Kosanke v. U.S. Dep’t of Interior
,
[5] Beginning on October 1, 1994, Congress placed a moratorium on the processing of patent applications for unpatented mining claims in the Department of the Interior and Related Agencies Appropriations Act of 1995, Pub. L. No. 103-332, § 112, 108 Stat. 2499, 2519 (1994) (“[N]one of the funds appropriated or otherwise made available pursuant to this Act shall be obligated or expended to accept or process applications for a patent for any mining . . . claim.”). The moratorium did not apply to certain applications pending before the Secretary of the Interior at the time of the moratorium, see id. § 113; Omnibus Consolidated Appropriations Act, Pub. L. No. 104-208, § 314(c), 110 Stat. 3009 (1996), but the plaintiff’s claims were affected. This moratorium has been continued in effect. See Consolidated Appropriations Act of 2008, Pub. L. No. 110-161, § 408(a), 121 Stat. 1844, 2519 (2007).
[6] The D.C. Circuit in
Orion Reserves
,
[7] A complementary “marketability” test may be used to evaluate whether the mine can be operated and minerals can
[8] OHA is composed of a Hearings Division and three standing boards: Interior Board of Contract Appeals, Interior Board of Indian Appeals, and the IBLA. Only the decisions of the IBLA are at issue in this action.
[9] The minerals contained within these mining claims are nickel, iron and chromium. See Pl.’s Mot. at 1, n.1. During the contest proceedings, the plaintiff abandoned at least 79 of these claims, reducing the number of contested claims to 82. Id. at 7, n.15.
[10] The CFC commonly stays litigation over alleged government takings of unpatented mining claims until the “BLM
has determined the validity of the plaintiffs’ mining claims.”
Holden v. United States
,
[11] Indeed, the plaintiff argued strenuously in his written submission before the OHA ALJ that “THE ALJ HAS AUTHORITY TO RULE WHETHER FREEMAN’S MINING CLAIMS WERE VALID IN 2000 AND IN 1994,” AR 1350 (capitalization in original), noting that “there is nothing to restrict the authority of the Secretary from making a validity determination on any particular date.” AR 1351 (“Contestee Walter Freeman’s Brief on Authority of [ALJ] To Determine Validity as of Certain Dates”). Moreover, the plaintiff pointed specifically to the language in the regulation in dispute here, stating, “this language is broad and certainly includes the allegations by the Government that in 1994 or 2000 the Freeman claims were not legal or valid discovery.” AR 1353.
[12] The ALJ rejected the plaintiff’s alternative suggestion that the validity of the mining claims be determined at the date of the hearing, in addition to the alleged taking dates, because the contest complaint challenged only “the existence of a discovery as of 1994 and 2000.” Id. This part of the 2007 ALJ Ruling was affirmed by the IBLA. Freeman , 174 IBLA at 293; AR 1185.
[13] Until the ALJ threw a proverbial “monkey wrench” into the proceedings by raising sua sponte the issue of jurisdiction, both parties agreed that the dates of the alleged taking were appropriate benchmarks for determining discovery. See Defs.’ Opp’n at 9 (citing Pl.’s Brief on Authority of Administrative Law Judge to Determine Validity as of Certain Dates at 7, 11; AR 1351, 1355). In what the defendants accurately label as an “about-face from the years over which Plaintiff agreed that the mineral exam and any contest would consider October 1994 and October 2000 as the validity dates,” Defs.’ Opp’n at 9, the plaintiff did not join BLM’s interlocutory appeal but rather reversed his position. Specifically, after “initially agreeing with BLM that [the ALJ] has jurisdiction to determine validity as of the alleged takings dates,” before the IBLA, the plaintiff “assert[ed] that the ALJ lacks such jurisdiction.” Freeman , 174 IBLA at 296 n.4; AR 1190. The plaintiff filed his own interlocutory appeal to the IBLA challenging only the ALJ’s ruling that OHA lacked authority to determine the validity of the plaintiff’s mining claims as of the hearing date. As noted, see note 11, supra , the 2008 IBLA Decision denied the plaintiff’s interlocutory appeal and affirmed the ALJ’s determination that the validity of the claim as of the hearing date was not alleged in the contest petition and, therefore, not at issue. Id .; AR 1190.
[14] The IBLA noted that the ALJ failed to consider another prerequisite for validation of a mining claim in addition to discovery, namely, the absence of an intervening right, stating that, “regardless of the date for which validity has been challenged,” upon initiation of a contest claim, the United States is asserting a “competing property interest against that of the claimant. 174 IBLA 296 n.8; AR 1188.
[15] Since the 2010 IBLA Decision is challenged in the plaintiff’s second cause of action, described below, and not at issue in the pending motion, the reasoning of this decision is not further discussed here.
[16] The plaintiff makes the unremarkable and undisputed observation that the IBLA’s jurisdiction is limited by department regulations. Pl.’s Mot. at 14. The defendants note, however, that the plaintiff exaggerates this claim. For example, while the plaintiff cites several cases for this proposition, “none of the cases concern mining contests,” and are wholly inapplicable to the instant case. Defs.’ Opp’n at 21; see e.g. , Defenders of the Wildlife , 169 IBLA 117, 127 (2006) (dismissing a request to order the BLM to update its Environmental Impact Statements and Records of Decision).
[17] The plaintiff’s challenge to the case law precedent for this conclusion is discussed in Part III.C., infra .
[18] The defendants also note that the guidance provided in the BLM Handbook is not entirely correct, explaining that the section cited by the plaintiff provides “that validity on withdrawn lands should be determined as of the date of withdrawal and the date of mineral examination or hearing,” when instead “the date of hearing has no relevance” and “the relevant dates for mining claims on withdrawn lands that are the subject of a pending patent application are only: (1) the date of each applicable withdrawal that pre-dates the patent application; and (2) the date that the mining claimant satisfied all the requirements for patenting.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 32 n.9. This is yet another reason for the IBLA not to be bound by internal guidance documents from BLM.
[19] The strategy behind the plaintiff’s agreement to the “critical” dates is clear: the plaintiff hoped to avoid a scenario where his mining claims would be invalidated based upon events occurring after the events of the alleged takings. See AR 10877 (plaintiff’s counsel noting, in September 5, 2003 letter to BLM, that the parties “should try to
[20] The Supreme Court “express[ed] no views” on the claimants’ objection that “in the District Court value would be
determined as of the time of the taking, while before the agency value is determined as of the date of the hearing
before the Examiner.”
Best
,
[21] The plaintiff also relies on
United States v. Houston
,
[22] Informed by this background information explaining the reasons for no appeal of the ALJ no-jurisdiction rulings in Aloisi and Story , the plaintiff’s reliance on State of Alaska Dep’t of Transp. and Public Facilities (“State of Alaska”), 154 IBLA 57 (2000), is particularly inapposite. Pl.’s Mot. at 32 n. 44. In State of Alaska , the IBLA determined that mutual collateral estoppel may be applied “when a party had an opportunity to obtain review within the Department and no appeal was taken,” and applied the doctrine to the State of Alaska, which “had the opportunity to challenge before the Board all facets of [a prior] decision, but it elected not to take advantage of that option by not appealing.” 154 IBLA at 61. Here, the plaintiff is seeking to apply non-mutual collateral estoppel against the government and, even if this were appropriate, agency had little to no opportunity to appeal the no- jurisdiction rulings in Aloisi and Story.
[23] The plaintiff argues “in the alternative” that “if the OHA does have jurisdiction to determine the validity of mining claims as of the dates of alleged takings, the IBLA’s decision that 1994 and 2000 were the alleged takings dates is reversible under 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(E).” Pl.’s Mot. at 37. The defendants respond that the “IBLA did not independently determine the alleged dates of takings, so there is nothing to reverse.” Defs.’ Opp’n at 43. As this partial motion for summary judgment solely challenges the IBLA’s decision regarding jurisdiction, see Pl.’s Mot. at 36 (calling the jurisdictional issue the “primary issue”), not the subsequent IBLA determination on the merits that the plaintiff’s mining claims were not valid as of 1994 and 2000, because there was no discovery as of those alleged takings dates, the Court concludes that this “alternative” argument relates to the plaintiff’s second cause of action, which the parties requested to be subject to separate briefing. Consequently, the “alternative” argument will not be addressed here.
