Hearts Bluff Game Ranch, Inc. (“Hearts Bluff”) appeals from the decision of the United States Court of Federal Claims (the “Claims Court”) dismissing its claim for just compensation under the Fifth Amendment for an alleged taking based on the Army Corps of Engineers’ (the “Corps”) denial of Hearts Bluffs proposal to operate a mitigation bank on its property. Hearts Bluff Game Ranch, Inc. v. United States, No. 09-498L (Ct. Cl. June 11, 2010) (the “Order”). Because Hearts Bluff did not have a cognizable property interest in obtaining a mitigation banking instrument, we affirm.
Background
Hearts Bluff purchased approximately 4,000 acres of land in Titus County, Texas, for use as a mitigation bank. Id. at 3. A mitigation bank is an offset of preserved and restored wetlands used to compensate for the environmental impact of more destructive land use. See Final Guidance for the Establishment, Use and Operation of Mitigation Banks, 60 Fed.Reg. 58605, 58607 (Nov. 28, 1995). Mitigation banking allows landowners who would develop areas protected by pollution-control laws to do so notwithstanding those laws if they protect or improve similar areas in other parts of the country. Landowners can apply for mitigation banking instruments to participate in the program, and then can sell credits under the instrument to developers to offset environmentally destructive projects covered by section 404 permits under the Clean Water Act. See 33 U.S.C. § 1344. The Corps is in charge of the mitigation banking program and it has issued regulations to establish procedures for granting instruments for mitigation banks. One of the requirements of that mitigation bank program is that property held in the mitigation bank must be capable of being held in perpetuity.
Hearts Bluff contacted the Corps prior to purchasing its land, seeking assurances that the land would be suitable for mitigation banking. Order, at 3. At the time, the Marvin Nichols Reservoir had been proposed for the region where the 4,000 acres were located, but the Corps communicated that it then saw no impediments to creating the mitigation bank. Id. But in 2004, the Corps gave public notice of Hearts Bluffs application, following which the Texas Water Development Board announced that the Reservoir would become less viable (if not infeasible) if the mitigation bank were approved. Id. After the 2004 notice, the water plan for the Marvin *1328 Nichols Reservoir was elevated from a potential site to “unique value” status, and the Corps learned that the Reservoir was to be adopted in the 2007 State Water Plan with a recommendation that it be constructed. Id. at 3-4. The Corps then denied Hearts Bluffs application in July 2006 because the mitigation bank overlapped with the proposed Reservoir and it concluded that Hearts Bluffs land might not exist in perpetuity. Id.
Hearts Bluff sought reconsideration of the July 2006 ruling, which the Corps denied in July 2008. Id. Hearts Bluff then brought suit in state court, alleging, in part, a Fifth Amendment takings claim against the United States government. That suit was later removed to the U.S. District Court for the Western District' of Texas. The takings claim was then subsequently transferred to the Claims Court for trial under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1). Hearts Bluff asserted that the government, acting through the Corps, took its property when the Corps denied it the necessary permit to create a mitigation bank.
The Claims Court dismissed the complaint for failure to state a claim. The court held that Hearts Bluff did not have a property interest that could be subject to a Fifth Amendment taking because a mitigation banking instrument is not “an inherent stick in a landowner’s bundle.” Id.- at 5. The court noted that no landowner has the capacity to develop a mitigation bank absent the enabling regulations and approval of the Corps of Engineers. Id. at 6. The court also rejected the argument that Hearts Bluff had an “investment-backed reliance” property interest that was taken, because Hearts Bluff had merely been deprived of a hope that it could create a mitigation bank, which is a collateral interest, not a compensable property interest. Id. at 7-8. The court did not reach the merits of the takings claim. Hearts Bluff timely appealed.
Discussion
I.
We review a decision by the Court of Federal Claims to' dismiss a complaint for failure to state a claim upon which relief could be granted under RCFC 12(b)(6)
de novo. See Acceptance Ins. Cos. v. United States,
The Fifth Amendment of the Constitution prohibits the government from taking private property without just compensation. U.S. Const. Am. V. “Real property, tangible property, and intangible property all may be the subject of takings claims.”
Conti v. United States,
When evaluating whether governmental action constitutes a taking, a court employs a two-part test.
Acceptance,
Hearts Bluff urges us to skip the first “cognizable property interest” part of the test and go directly to the merits under the
Penn Central
factors.
See Penn Central Transp. Co. v. New York,
The government is of course correct that section 404 permits are separate and distinct from the mitigation banking program. Section 404 permits allow landowners to conduct environmentally destructive activity on their land that they would normally be able to do but for the existence of government regulations. We have held that the denial of a section 404 permit could amount to a taking of a cognizable property right as it deprives the landowner of a right inherent in land ownership, as might certain zoning decisions.
E.g., Palm Beach Isles
Assocs.
v. United States,
Mitigation bank operators, on the other hand, do not necessarily possess section 404 permits; they sell credits from the mitigation banking program to section 404 permit holders or applicants so that the section 404 permit holders or applicants can satisfy the compensatory mitigation obligations of section 404. As discussed below, the mitigation banking program does not restrict land use at all prior to entering into a mitigation banking instrument. The mitigation banking program merely gives access to the credit swapping program. Indeed, section 404 and mitiga *1330 tion banking are governed by different regulations. Therefore, we do not agree with Hearts Bluffs argument that prior cases analyzing the Penn Central factors with respect to section 404 permits govern our threshold analysis with respect to mitigation banking instruments. We do not find the section 404 permit cases relevant.
We have established precedent for applying a two-part test for governmental takings mentioned above.
Acceptance,
II.
The first step in our analysis then is to identify the subject of the alleged taking. In assessing whether or not a Fifth Amendment property interest exists, we look for “crucial indicia of a property right,” such as the ability to sell, assign, transfer, or exclude.
Conti,
Hearts Bluff asserts that as a landowner it is entitled to operate a mitigation bank on its land and that the Corps’ rejection of its mitigation bank proposal was a taking of its property right. The government counters that Hearts Bluff was never entitled to operate a mitigation bank solely by virtue of its ownership of the land and that it did not have a property right in access to the mitigation banking program because the program is entirely a creature of the government and subject to pervasive and discretionary government control. We agree with the government that Hearts Bluff does not possess a compensable property interest in obtaining a mitigation banking instrument.
“As an initial matter, a claimant seeking compensation from the government for an alleged taking of private property must, at a minimum, assert that
its
property interest was actually taken by the government action.”
Air Pegasus,
Furthermore, we have rejected claims of a cognizable property interest in government programs where the government has discretionary authority to deny access to that program, where the alleged property is subject to pervasive government control, or where the property is entirely a product of government regulations.
See, e.g., Mitchell Arms,
For example, in
Acceptance,
we held that the plaintiffs interest in selling American Growers’ crop insurance policies was not a legally cognizable property interest because the plaintiff “could not freely transfer the policies at issue” without discretionary government approval, despite the fact that an insurance company may generally have the right to sell its policies.
Acceptance,
Similarly here, it is undisputed that the Corps has discretionary authority to deny access to the mitigation bank program. The mitigation banking program is run exclusively by the Corps, subject to its pervasive control, and no landowner can develop a mitigation bank absent Corps approval. Mitigation banking in its entirety would not exist without the enabling government regulations. Under our precedent, therefore, the Corps’ discretionary denial of access into the Corps program cannot be a cognizable property interest. As Hearts Bluff does not have a property interest in access to the program, it like *1332 wise does not have a property interest in the program’s related benefits, such as the mitigation banking instrument and credits.
Finally, Hearts Bluff argues that the representations by the Corps that the land was suitable for a mitigation bank gave rise to a reasonable investment-backed expectation property interest. Hearts Bluff argues that the Corps’ representations caused it to invest hundreds of thousands of dollars in developing a mitigation bank. The government responds that Hearts Bluff merely hoped that the Corps would exercise its discretion and authorize entry into a mitigation banking instrument, and that such hope or expectation is a collateral interest, not a cognizable property interest. Again, we agree with the government.
First and foremost, the “reasonable investment backed expectation” is part of a
Penn Central
merits analysis.
Schooner Harbor Ventures, Inc. v. United States,
Hearts Bluff emphasizes that it invested in the property based on the hope that it and the Corps would enter into a mitigation banking instrument and Hearts Bluff could then operate a mitigation bank and sell the related credits. But such hopes and expectations of future property use are not in and of themselves a cognizable property interest.
Acceptance,
As for Hearts Bluffs assertion that the denial of the mitigation banking instrument was arbitrary and capricious, that issue is not before us. Hearts Bluff brought suit under the Tucker Act, a concession that the government action was valid.
Tabb Lakes, Ltd. v. United States,
Conclusion
Because the Court of Federal Claims did not err in holding that Hearts Bluff did not possess a legally cognizable Fifth Amendment property interest in a mitigation bank instrument, we affirm.
AFFIRMED
