This case returns to the Federal Circuit upon reversal by the Supreme Court
1
of this court’s decision reported at
Marathon Oil Co. v. United States,
Plaintiffs Marathon Oil Company and Mobil Oil Exploration & Producing Southeast, Inc. (“the companiеs”) in 1981 entered into contracts with the United States for ten-year renewable rights to explore for and develop oil and gas resources of certain tracts of the outer continental shelf offshore North Carolina. The companies paid the United States up-front “bоnus” payments, $78,257,565 paid by Mobil and $78,255,217 by Marathon. The contracts also provided for annual “rentаl” payments.
Several statutes were thereafter enacted concerning this areа of exploration. As explained by the Supreme Court, the enactment in 1990 of the Outer Banks Prоtection Act (“OBPA”), Pub.L. No. 101-380, *1315 104 Stat. 484, effected a breach of these contracts:
[T]he new statute, OBPA, required Interior to impose the contract-violating delay. It therefore made clear to Interior and to the companies that the United Stаtes had to violate the contracts’ terms and would continue to do so.
We do not say that the changes made by the statute were unjustified. We say only that they were changes of a kind that the contracts did not foresee.... Hence, in communicating to the companies its intеnt to follow OBPA, the United States was communicating its intent to violate the contracts.
Mobil,
The Court of Federal Claims had reаched this conclusion, and had rejected the government’s argument that any restitution should be offset by the asserted reduction in the market value of the leases due to the reduced рrice of oil and gas at the time of the government’s breach. On appeal the Federal Circuit did not reach the issue of offset, for it was rendered moot by this court’s decision as tо liability. Now on remand from the Supreme Court, the government argues that the amount of restitution shоuld be reduced by this offset. We requested further briefing and heard reargument of this question.
In ruling that the companies are entitled to restitution, the Court stated:
If the Government said it would break, or did break, an important contractual promise ... the Government must give the companies their money back. And it must do so whether the contracts would, or would not, ultimately have proved finanсially beneficial to the companies. The Restatement illustrates this point as
follows:
“A contracts to sell a tract of land to B for $100,000. After B has made a part payment of $20,000, A wrongfully refuses to transfer title. B can recover the $20,000 in restitution. The result is the same even if the market price of the land is only $70,000, so that performance would have been disadvantageous to B.”
Mobil,
The government again argues that return of the bonus payments must be reduced by the decreased value of the leases due to the reduction in the market price of oil and gas at the time of the breach, stating that the Supreme Court’s rulings were made “in passing” and are “dicta.” That is plainly incorrect. The government’s argument was presented to the Court, and was decided. The Court ruled that “the oil companies gave the United States $156 million ... the Government must give the companies thеir money back.”
Mobil,
Mobil,
The Court of Federal Claims awarded $78,242,368.59 to Marathon, which was the *1316 bonus paymеnt less a stipulated amount of $12,848.41. The court awarded $78,257,565.00 to Mobil. The calculation of thesе amounts is not in dispute, other than as to the rejected theory of offset for loss in leasе value. 3 The judgments of the Court of Federal Claims are affirmed.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
.
Mobil Oil Exploration, Producing Southeast, Inc. v. United States,
.
Marathon Oil Co. and Mobil Oil Exploration & Producing Southeast, Inc.
v.
United States,
No. 92-331C (Fed.Cl. July 24, 1997);
Conoco, Inc. v. United States,
. The Court of Federal Claims held that the companies were not entitled to recovery of the annual rental payments; this ruling was not appealed.
