This case is before the court on defendant’s motion for summary judgment and plaintiffs’ opposition thereto. We have heard oral argumеnt. For the reasons discussed below, we deny defendant’s motion for summary judgment and remand for further proceedings.
The plaintiffs in this case are California farmers who reside in, and purchase water from, the Westland Water District. The Water District, in turn, purchases its water
In July 1976, plaintiffs submitted two proposed sales, number F-76-106 and F-76-107. In April 1977, the Government notified plaintiffs that processing of their sales requests had been suspended due to an injunction issued by a federal district court judge. Although the Government and plaintiffs reached a temporary agreement to begin processing the applications again, that processing and that of all such requests was halted again in June 1977 at the direction of the Secretary of the Interior. In December 1978, the Government again began processing all sales applications. In January 1980, the Governmеnt disapproved the sales requests (as amended) for a stated failure of those purchasers to meet a residency requiremеnt. Plaintiffs’ purchasers thereafter submitted agreements to meet the residency requirements. Sale number F-76-107 was approved in March 1980; sale number F-76-106 remains pending.
The petition alleges normal processing time should have been 7 months. Here, plaintiffs continue, approvаl of one sale took 45 months and the other has not yet been approved. Had the sales requests been approved in a timely manner, plaintiffs argue, the March 1980 sale would have been at a higher price. Also, plaintiffs claim, had approval been timely thе sales would not have been subject to additional requirements imposed during the pendency of the sales applications. Plaintiffs conclude total damages aggregate $5,000,000.
In its motion for summary judgment, defendant raises two major issues. First, defendant argues that plaintiffs’ claim is in rеality based on a contract implied in law, over which this court has no jurisdiction. Second, defendant argues that in any event defendant’s actions here were in
Regarding the defendant’s first argument, defendant correctly observes that there is no term of these express contracts requiring timely performance by the Gоvernment. Absent such provision, defendant says, an obligation of timeliness is a contract implied in law and any claim based thereon must be dismissed. See, e.g., Merritt v. United States,
Defendant’s second theory of summary judgment is that any administrative actions which might have delayed apprоval or which placed additional restrictions on approved sales were done pursuant to the reclamation statutes аnd affected all persons with recordable contracts, not just plaintiffs. These actions, defendant says, are sovereign acts for which no contractual liability can lie. See Horowitz v. United States,
done in the governing role. Horowitz, supra; Tony Downs Foods Co. v. United States,
The above-cited cases clearly show that existence of the sovereign act defense necеssarily turns on the nature and circumstances of each such act. As plaintiffs present their case, there are a number of acts which may or may not be sovereign acts. As the exact scope and nature of each act is presently unclear, we are unаble to conclude that the sovereign act defense precludes all Government liability. We therefore deem it advisable to deny the motion for summary judgment at this time and remand the case for further proceedings in our trial division. Such proceedings should include but are by nо means limited to:
(1) Whether any of the acts which plaintiffs say caused the alleged delay are sovereign acts within the meaning of our prior cases;
(2) Assuming that there is at least some delay not excused by the sovereign act doctrine, whether such delay under the circumstances was unreasonable; and
*827 (3) Assuming there was at least some unreasonable delay, whether any of the acts plaintiffs say contributеd to the quantum of their damages is excused by the sovereign act doctrine.
it is therefore ordered that defendant’s motion for summary judgment be and is hereby denied. The case is returned to the trial division consistent with this order.
