The November 23, 1993 opinion of the court, sitting en banc, concluded:
We remand to the panel to determine whether North Star’s claim is contractually or statutorily based, and any other issues presented by this appeal.
North Star Alaska v. United States,
I
If a plaintiff’s claim is “concerned solely with rights created within the contractual relationship and has nothing to do with duties arising independently of the contract ... [the] claim is ‘founded ... upon [a] ... contract with the United States’ and is therefore within the Tucker Act and subject to its restrictions on relief.”
North Side Lumber v. Block,
North Star argues that its claim for reformation “seek[s] to enforce extracontractual Constitutional and statutory obligations.” The jurisdictional issue, however, turns on the “source of the rights upon which the plaintiff bases its claim.”
Megapulse,
II
North Star argues that the district court cannot refuse jurisdiction if there is no alternative forum available to hear North Star’s claim. In support, North Star cites
Bowen v. Massachusetts,
Both
Bowen
and
Marshall,
however, involve interpretations of § 704 of the APA which requires judicial review of “final agency action for which there is no other adequate remedy in a court.”
Bowen
could be interpreted as taking a more expansive view of district court jurisdiction under the APA than we have previously recognized. Describing the forms of monetary relief that were not “money damages” and thus were within the scope of § 702, the
Bowen
Court includes “ ‘equitable actions for monetary relief under a contract.’ ”
Bowen,
Ill
We hold that the APA does not waive sovereign immunity for North Star’s contractually based claim for equitable relief. The judgment is
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The equitable remedy of reformation is appropriate “[i]f, by reason of mistake of law, the legal effect of the words in which a contract or conveyance is expressed is different from that on which the parties were agreed.” 3 Corbin on Contracts § 614 (1960).
. According to North Star, because the government "has not and cannot” make the findings *38 required by the statute cited in the Outlease, "the parties were mutually mistaken in including in the Outlease the wrong statutory reference.” Unless North Star is making a clearly erroneous argument about backwards-causation, its argument must be that the government's failure to comply with § 2667 is evidence that a different statute was intended to authorize the Outlease. The claim is not that the government is violating the law; the claim is that the government is following a different law from the one stated in the contract. This, as the district court concluded, is a contractual issue.
