OPINION
Scylla and Charybdis were the treacherous sea monsters of Greek mythology, who lurked on the opposing sides of the Straits of Messina between Sicily and Calabria. According to lore, these nightmarish creatures were strategically placed so as to pose an inescapable threat to passing ships- — sail too close to the peninsula and Scylla would seize and devour your crew with her six serpentine heads; compensate, by navigating closer to
Some might say that, in Federal takings law, these fictional leviathans have been replaced by the doctrines of ripeness and limitations, both of which must successfully be navigated by claimants seeking to bring their cases before this court. File too early and risk having your ease dismissed as premature; delay too long, however, and face the loss of your entire suit, as time-barred. See Bayou Des Families Dev. Corp. v. United States,
Pending before the court in this takings and contract case is defendant’s motion to dismiss under RCFC 12(b), in which defendant’s principal claim — as the foregoing intimates — is that various counts are time-barred under the applicable six-year statute of limitations. For the reasons that follow, the court GRANTS, in part, and DENIES, in part, defendant’s motion.
I. BACKGROUND
While this case has a long and complicated history, the court need summarize here only those facts necessary to provide context.
Unlike other states, Louisiana does not recognize the existence of separate mineral estates. Instead, mineral rights take the form of a mineral servitude, the holder of which has the right to enter the property and extract the minerals. See La.Rev.Stat. § 31:21. Louisiana law has long provided that such servitudes are extinguished by “prescription resulting from nonuse for ten years.” La.Rev.Stat. § 31:27; see also Central Pines Land Co. v. United States,
In 1932, five Louisiana lumber companies agreed to pool the mineral rights on their respective lands. They created a joint venture called the “Good Pine Oil Company” (Good Pine), to which they conveyed the rights to explore and develop their property for the production of oil, gas and sulphur. Between November 12, 1932, and May 3, 1934, two of the five companies, Bodcaw Lumber and Grant Timber, made six conveyances of mineral rights, involving 180,000 acres of land, to Good Pine. As the affected parcels were noncontiguous, the transfers created multiple mineral servitudes under Louisiana law — ninety-six in all. Each of the deeds conveying mineral rights to Good Pine contained a clause explicitly providing that the ten-year period of prescription applied.
In the 1930s, the United States sought to buy land in Louisiana to consolidate into a national forest authorized by the Weeks Act of 1911, 36 Stat. 961, ch. 186, as amended by the Clarke-McNary Act of 1924, 43 Stat. 653, ch. 348. Although the Weeks Act allowed owners selling property to the United States to reserve their rights to minerals, see 36 Stat. 962, owners of large tracts of land in Louisiana were unwilling to sell their property to the United States, cognizant of several court decisions that had held that the reservation of mineral rights in Louisiana created only a “right in the nature of a servitude” which was subject to the prescription rule outlined above. After Bodcaw Lumber and Grant Timber rejected an offer to sell their surface estates to the United States, the Forest Service of the United States Department of Agriculture (the Forest Service) supplied the companies with an opinion by the Assistant Solicitor of the Department of Agriculture declaring that the prescription provisions of the Louisiana Civil Code would not apply to land sold to the United States under the Weeks Act. Allegedly in reliance on this opinion, Bodcaw Lumber and Grant Timber agreed to sell the surface estates of
From November 1934 through January 1937, Bodcaw Lumber and Grant Timber conveyed to the United States the surface rights to approximately 180,000 acres of land located in Grant, Winn and Natchitoches Parishes. The eleven instruments of transfer all expressly excluded from the transactions the mineral servitudes that had previously been conveyed to Good Pine. At the time of these sales, the officers and directors of Bodcaw and Grant believed that the mineral rights underlying this land were valuable. It is alleged that they would not have sold the timber lands to the United States at the price agreed had they thought the prescriptive provisions of Louisiana law applied.
In the years that followed, the United States’ efforts to acquire land in Louisiana continued to be met by resistance from landowners fearful of losing their mineral reservations through prescription. In 1940, the Louisiana Legislature passed Act 315 (the 1940 Act) to eliminate the rule of prescription for mineral rights on lands held by the United States:
[W]hen land is acquired by conventional deed or contract, condemnation or expropriation proceedings by the United States of America ... and by the act of acquisition, verdict or judgment, oil, gas, and/or other minerals or royalties are reserved, or the land so acquired is by the act of acquisition conveyed subject to a prior sale or reservation of oil, gas and/or other minerals or royalties, still in force and effect, said rights so reserved or previously sold shall be imprescriptible.
La.Rev.Stat. § 9:5806 (Supp.1973) (repealed 1975); see also La.Rev.Stat. § 31:149 (2004) (codifying a similar rule). The purpose of the 1940 Act was to facilitate the Forest Service’s purchase of large tracts of lands for national forests and parks, as well as military installations. See United States v. Little Lake Misere Land Co.,
Despite its prior representations, the United States, in 1948, filed a declaratory judgment action against Nebo Oil to quiet title to the minerals on a particular servitude claimed by the company as successor in interest to Good Pine. The complaint referred to a specific parcel, approximately 800 acres in size, lying in portions of section 19 (Township 13 North, Range 6 West) and section 24 (Township 13, Range 7 West) in Natchitoches Parish. This parcel was one of several acquired by the United States through a February 11, 1936, deed from Bodcaw Lumber, which covered 24,943.93 acres. Nebo Oil claimed a mineral servitude on the 800-acre parcel as a result of the 1932 conveyance of mineral rights from Bodcaw to Good Pine. In its complaint, the United States averred that: (i) no drilling operations had been conducted on the 800-acre parcel during the ten-year period beginning on November 12, 1932; (ii) the mineral servitude on the parcel had, therefore, prescribed for nonuse; and (iii) Nebo Oil intended to drill a well on the land and had advised the government that the company would resist interference. The United States sought declaratory relief and an order permanently enjoining Nebo Oil from entering the 800-acre parcel for mineral production.
The United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana concluded, inter alia, that the mineral rights underlying the tract in question were imprescriptible by virtue of the 1940 Act. United States v. Nebo Oil Co., Inc.,
On appeal, the United States Court of Appeals for the Fifth Circuit affirmed. United States v. Nebo Oil Co., Inc.,
Act 315 of 1940 provides that when lands are conveyed to the United States subject to a prior sale or reservation of oil, gas, or other minerals still in force and effect, the rights so reserved or previously sold shall be imprescriptible. It does not state or imply that the reserved rights shall be increased or varied but only that they shall not be lost by prescription. The consideration of $1.75 per acre paid by the United States did not cover the value of any mineral rights. Indeed, since the minerals underlying the lands had previously been sold to Good Pine Oil without limit for time of their enjoyment, Bodcaw did not own any minerals which it could sell to the United States. Neither could it reserve nor sell the expectation of a servitude lapsed for nonuser. All that Bodcaw had which it could sell to the United States was the timber land itself. That was the obligation of the contract and it remains unimpaired. By virtue of its ownership of the land appellant could merely hope that the outstanding servitude might lapse but this hope or expectancy was born of a statute of prescription based on the then existing public policy of the State as declared by its legislature. It was not a part of the obligation of the contract. It was wholly given by law and the power that gave it could increase, diminish, or otherwise alter, or wholly take it away without violating the Federal Constitution.
Nebo Oil,
So stood the law for twenty years. Subsequent to the Fifth Circuit’s decision, Nebo Oil placed affidavits in the land records of Grant, Winn and Natchitoches parishes in Louisiana wherein it claimed title, inter alia, to all the mineral rights conveyed to Good Pine through the conveyance instruments described above. During this same period, the land records of the Forest Service reflected that the minerals underlying the land in question were held by others in perpetuity.
In 1969, the United States filed suit in the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana seeking to quiet title to two parcels of land which it had acquired pursuant to the Migratory Bird Conservation Act, 45 Stat. 1222, 16 U.S.C. § 715, et seq., as part of the Lacassine Wildlife Refuge. The two transfer documents reserved to Little Lake Misc.e the rights to minerals for a period of ten years (and as long as any production begun during this period continued), and recited that, after this period, “complete fee title to said lands shall thereby become vested in the United States.” Although no production occurred during the period indicated, Little Lake Misc.e argued that it retained the right to the minerals under the 1940 Act. The district court and, in turn, the Fifth Circuit agreed, relying on the earlier Nebo Oil decision. See United States v. Little Lake Misere Land Co.,
The Court did not reject the Nebo Oil decision. Rather, invoking the choice-of-law doctrine in Clearfield Trust Co. v. United States,
After the decision in Little Lake Misere, the United States began granting mineral leases allowing the exploitation of minerals in the servitudes in question. At first, this activity was sporadic. While the parties disagree as to the exact timing of these leases (and, indeed, even as to number thereof), it appears that the wide majority of them were granted beginning in 1991, with more than forty-five leases made from that year up to the beginning of this lawsuit. Each of the leases was for a period of ten years.
Issues regarding the application of the 1940 Act rose yet again in the late 1990s. At that time, Central Pines Land Co. filed a declaratory judgment action against the United States and several oil companies that had entered into lease agreements with the United States for the exploration and production of oil and gas in the area of various servitudes. On April 7, 1999, the district court ruled that the 1940 Act was inapplicable to a 1929 servitude created before the 1940 passage of the Act, but applied to servi-tudes that arose in 1941 through 1981, rendering the latter servitudes imprescriptible. On July 28, 2000, the same court ruled that, based on inactivity, the 1929 servitude, in fact, had prescribed.
In affirming these rulings, the Fifth Circuit first decided whether Little Lake Misere required application of federal common law to the case. Central Pines Land Co.,
On February 18, 2000, after the first of the district court’s rulings in Central Pines, but before the second, Petro-Hunt, along with the other co-owners of the mineral estate,
On appeal, the Fifth Circuit reversed. Petro-Hunt, LLC v. United States,
On June 25, 2008, plaintiff filed its first amended complaint in this court, in which it asserted seven counts. In the first six of these, plaintiff averred that the United States had effectuated: (i) a permanent taking of ninety servitudes; (ii) a temporary taking of ninety-one servitudes by issuing mineral leases to third parties; (iii) a temporary taking of servitudes over which the United States had asserted ownership during the quiet title action; (iv) breaches of the original land conveyance contracts which plaintiff may pursue as the successor-in-interest to Good Pine; (v) breaches of the original land conveyance contracts which plaintiff may pursue as a third-party beneficiary; and (vi) breaches of the covenant of good faith and fair dealing associated with the original land conveyance contracts. A seventh count sought reformation of the original land conveyance contracts. On September 2, 2008, defendant moved to dismiss the amended complaint for lack of jurisdiction, primarily arguing that the claims were time-barred. It also argued that various counts in the complaint failed to state a claim. Following the completion of briefing on that motion, the court conducted oral argument on the motion on April 9, 2009. The court ordered supplemental briefing, which was completed on July 31, 2009.
Defendant raises a host of objections to plaintiffs amended complaint. As the court previously indicated to the parties, the court will resolve only those objections properly raised in the context of RCFC 12, to wit, issues involving jurisdiction and whether various counts of plaintiffs complaint fail to state a claim. It will not consider, at this time, defendant’s alternative motion for summary judgment, which relies on evidence that goes well beyond the specific allegations in the complaint. The arguments made in this alternative motion are, in the court’s view, premature and must await the completion of discovery.
A. Lack of Jurisdiction — Statute of Limitations
In considering a motion challenging jurisdiction, the court construes factual allegations in the complaint most favorably to the plaintiff, resolving ambiguities in its favor. Scheuer v. Rhodes,
The Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1), grants this court jurisdiction to render judgment on any claim against the United States founded, inter alia, on the Constitution or a contract. See United States v. Testan,
In the 1930s, defendant persuaded the pri- or owners of the property in question to sell their surface rights by supplying them with an opinion that held that the prescriptive provisions of Louisiana law did not apply to these lands. Consistent with that view, the documents transferring those surface rights reserved the associated mineral interests. In 1940, the Louisiana legislature passed a law stating that the prescriptive provisions did not apply to land acquired by the United States. In its 1950 Nebo Oil decision, the Fifth Circuit, relying upon prior decisions of
Despite the recentness of the latest of these developments, defendant claims that most of the counts in plaintiffs lawsuit are barred by the statute of limitations — contending, in its original motion, that the claims accrued “long before” the 2004 court rulings on the servitudes. Defendant’s choice of the pliant phrase “long before” apparently was not inadvertent, for, in briefing the pending motion, it has taken various views as to when the claims here accrued for limitations purposes. At points, it has argued that the claims accrued in the 1940s — when the minerals allegedly first came into the possession of the United States under the Louisiana law of prescription. Alternatively, it has asserted that the claims accrued in 1973 when the Supreme Court issued its opinion in Little Lake Misc.e. And, at still other instances, it has asseverated that the claims accrued during the late 1980s and early 1990s, when defendant began to grant mineral leases relating to the properties. Yet, while itself advocating alternating accrual dates that span nearly a half a century, defendant audaciously managed, in its final brief, to accuse plaintiff of “throwing ... alternative arguments at the wall, [in hopes] one will stick”— a classic example of the pot calling the kettle black, if there ever was one. As it turns out, both parties present arguments that are a bit viscid. To sort through them — and to determine which adhere to the fabric of the law— the court will consider plaintiffs permanent takings, temporary takings and contract claims seriatim.
1. Permanent Takings
The Fifth Amendment provides that private property shall not “be taken for public use without just compensation.” U.S. Const. Amend. V. A claim alleging a Fifth Amendment taking “ ‘accrues when that taking action occurs.’ ” Goodrich v. United States,
One such corollary — focusing on when the government’s liability is fixed — stems from the interlocking nature of this court’s Tucker Act jurisdiction with that of the district courts under the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. § 551 et seq., and other statutes. It holds that if a necessary element to a claim must be established in a different forum, the claim will not accrue for section 2501 until that element is finally established in the other proceeding. A prime
Is this a case like Samish? Plaintiff certainly thinks so. It contends that it had to complete its quiet title action in the district coui't befox’e it could pursue its permanent takings claims here. Unlike in Samish, however, thei’e was no legal requirement that plaintiff obtain a ruling from the district court to establish an element of its permanent takings claim. To be sux-e, it is axiomatic that to maintain a takings claim, a claimant must show that it had a propex’ty interest that was impacted by government action. See, e.g., Air Pegasus of D.C., Inc. v. United States,
While the Samish-line of eases deals with situations where a claim has not yet accrued, another salvific corollary invoked by plaintiff — the so-called “accrual suspension rule” — applies where “an accrual date has been ascertained, but plaintiff does not know of his claim.” Japanese War Notes Claimants Ass’n v. United States,
Under the accrual suspension rule, “the accrual of a claim against the United States is suspended, for purposes of 28 U.S.C. § 2501, until the claimant knew or should have known that the claim existed.” Martinez,
Mindful that the “accrual suspension” rule is to be “strictly and narrowly applied,” Martinez,
But, again, is this a ease like Neely ? Plaintiff asserts that prior to the 2004 ruling of the Fifth Circuit, its permanent takings claim was not legally apparent. It argues that until this decision, it had every reason to believe that the Louisiana law of prescription did not apply to its servitudes. Its predecessors, of course, had been assured of that by the Department of Agriculture in inducing them to sell their surface rights, and the transfer documents reflected this view. As further evidence that prescription did not apply, plaintiff cites not only the 1950 ruling of the Fifth Circuit in Nebo Oil, but the 2000 ruling of that same court in Central Pines, and even the 2001 ruling of the Louisiana district court in the quiet title action related to this case. And while defendant asserts that the 1973 decision in Little Lake Misc.e should have alerted plaintiff that the law had changed to its detriment, plaintiff notes that: (i) the decision was factually distinguishable; (ii) the Fifth Circuit, in Central Pines, held that Nebo Oil was still good law; and (in) there was good reason to believe that even if Nebo Oil had been overruled, the res judica-ta impact of that ruling remained and still protected all of its servitudes — a belief validated by the Louisiana district court as late as 2001. Based on this, plaintiff contends that its permanent takings claims were inherently unknowable until the Fifth Circuit
Were these all the relevant facts, plaintiffs suspension claim, in the court’s view, would be compelling. There is little doubt that the accrual suspension rule applied here to some extent. Otherwise, the permanent takings claim here would have accrued when the servitudes in question prescribed, which for some of the properties, and perhaps almost all, occurred in the 1940s — it was at that time that the property interests here were obtained by the United States. The question, rather, is how long that suspension lasted— did it extend, critically, all the way until August 28, 1994, so as to be within six years of the filing of the original lawsuit here? Almost certainly, that suspension was in effect when the Louisiana legislature passed the 1941 Act (recall that statute was retroactive) and, later, when the Fifth Circuit decided Nebo Oil. And while defendant claims otherwise, it would appear that plaintiff has the better of the ease in asserting that the suspension remained in effect even after the Supreme Court’s decision in Little Lake Mi-sere, particularly because the latter ease left unaffected plaintiffs ability to invoke res ju-dicata as to the earlier Nebo Oil opinion.
In the 1970s and 1980s, the United States entered into a few mineral leases relating to the servitudes in question. Perhaps, those isolated leases should have aroused suspicions. Perhaps not. Then, in 1991, when defendant sought to enter into several new leases, one of plaintiffs predecessors-in-interest, Hunt Petroleum Corporation, formally protested, claiming in a March 18, 1991, letter that it owned the relevant servitudes and requesting that the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) withdraw the parcels.
These documents in themselves should have indicated to plaintiffs predecessor-in-interest that a permanent takings claim should be pursued — and with that task taking on added urgency in January of 1994 (again more than six years prior to the filing suit), when the Forest Service engaged in a series of additional leases. Moreover, the documents discussed above reference title reports that plaintiff does not deny were publicly available, which reports would have further revealed the extent of (and rationale underlying) defendant’s prescription claims. See Catawba,
Because plaintiff filed suit more than six years after that critical juncture, the court must conclude that its permanent takings claim was time-barred.
2. Temporary Takings
Landowners, of course, must be justly compensated for both permanent and temporary takings. See First English Evangelical Lutheran Church of Glendale v. County of Los Angeles, California,
In the case sub judice, the temporary takings claims are predicated upon a series of mineral leases entered into between the United States and third parties, involving the servitudes at issue. Each of these leases had a term of ten years. The parties have filed competing affidavits cataloguing the leases they believe are at issue.
The decisional law suggests that the timing of the accrual of a temporary takings claim may depend upon the nature of the takings involved. Several cases indicate that a temporary regulatory takings claim accrues when the “process that began it has ended” because, among other things, the property owner “would not know the extent of [its] damages until the Government completes the ‘temporary' taking.” Creppel v. United States,
Plaintiff asserts that the leases made by the United States effectuated physical takings. The court agrees that because these leases authorized the physical occupation of property, they should be analyzed as potentially giving rise to physical, not regulatory takings. See Lucas,
While a close issue, there are several reasons why temporary and permanent physical takings claims seemingly ought to be treated the same for accrual purposes. In both instances, the “taking occurs when the owner is deprived of the use of the property.”
It is in the context of these factors, with their heavy emphasis on the degree of diminution of the value of the property, that courts have found it appropriate to await the end of a temporary takings before treating a claim as accrued. The delay allows the property owner to assess fully the economic impact of the regulation in question. Thus, after reviewing the three-pronged Penn Central test, the Federal Circuit in Creppel reasoned—
[T]he Constitution recognizes a distinction between a temporary and a permanent talcing. Simply declaring a regulation that takes property invalid does not grant a constitutionally sufficient remedy. Thus, property owners cannot sue for a temporary taking until the regulatory process that began it has ended. This is because they would not know the extent of their damages until the Government completes the ‘temporary' taking. Only then may property owners seek compensation.
Moreover, with all due respect to contrary decisions, any analogy between the accrual rules for temporary physical takings and the repudiation of contracts is superficial and strained. In Franconia, the Supreme Court held that the enactment of the Emergency Low Income Housing Preservation Act (ELIHPA) effectuated a repudiation of prior loan contracts entered into by the Farmers’ Home Administration, not an immediate breach.
Finally, it should not be overlooked that, in drawing major distinctions between permanent and temporary physical takings, the accrual rule espoused by plaintiff (and the decisions discussed above) has the potential to bail out some claims, but sink others. The decisional law suggests that the “distinction between ‘temporary and ‘permanent’ prohibitions is tenuous.” Tahoe-Sierra,
To sum up, the court concludes, as this court did in Kemp, that the accrual date is the same for both permanent or temporary physical takings. As such, plaintiffs claims with respect to the twelve leases that were entered into more than six years before the initiation of this lawsuit are untimely and, to that extent, must be dismissed. The remainder of the plaintiffs temporary takings claims that are at issue are predicated upon leases that were executed within the six-year limitations period and thus meet the requirements of section 2501.
3. Breach of Contract
A breach of contract claim accrues “when all the events have occurred which fix the liability of the Government and entitle the claimant to institute an action.” Oceanic S.S. Co. v. United States,
Preliminarily, defendant contends that because plaintiffs contract claim was not filed until it amended its complaint in 2008, that claim is well out of time. RCFC 15(c)(1)(B), however, provides that “[a]n amendment to a pleading relates back to the date of the original pleading when ... the amendment asserts a claim or defense that arose out of the conduct, transaction, or occurrence set out— or attempted to be set out — in the original pleading.” The Federal Circuit has instructed that “ ‘the inquiry in a determination of whether a claim should relate back will focus on the notice given by the general fact situation set forth in the original pleading.’”
That plaintiffs contract claim arose from the same transaction that gave rise to its takings claim, however, leaves plaintiff with the same statute of limitations problem encountered above. In short, while it would appear that the accrual of plaintiffs breach claim was suspended for many years, every indication is that plaintiff was constructively on notice of that claim (through its predecessor) at the same time it became aware of its takings claims. That was in 1991, or, at the latest, 1993, and thus more than six years prior to the filing of this lawsuit. Accordingly, plaintiffs breach of contract claims must also be dismissed as time-barred under section 2501.
B. Failure to State a Claim
In its motion to dismiss, defendant also contends that a variety of counts in plaintiffs amended complaint fail to state a claim upon which relief may be granted and thus must be dismissed under RCFC 12(b)(6). To survive such a motion, the complaint must have sufficient “facial plausibility” to “allow[ ] the court to draw the reasonable inference that the defendant is liable.” Ashcroft v. Iqbal, — U.S. -,
The court will consider defendant’s merits arguments only insofar as it has concluded that it has jurisdiction over the enumerated claims. In other words, it will not address arguments regarding the counts that will be dismissed as untimely.
1. Temporary Takings
Defendant asserts that plaintiff’s temporary takings claims should be dismissed with respect to the ninety prescribed servitudes that were determined to have prescribed in the quiet title action. It contends that the judgment of the United States District Court for the Western District of Louisiana collaterally estops plaintiff from contending that it has a compensable property interest in the prescribed servitudes, requiring its temporary takings claims as'to those servitudes to be dismissed.
Here, the district court effectively resolved which of the servitudes in question prescribed. There is no indication in the record, however, that it found when the prescriptions occurred. Indeed, the judgment rendered by that court on December 7, 2005, focused not on the properties that had prescribed, but instead concluded that plaintiff had retained interests on five servitudes and that any leases issued by the United States with respect to those servitudes were “can-celled and set aside as null and void.” Unlike in the quiet title action, timing here is critical: we know plaintiff originally had a compensable property interest in the servi-tudes — the question is whether it still had that interest at the time that the leases in question were granted. If the prescription of a given servitude occurred after the lease thereon was let, then defendant conceivably could still be liable for any temporary takings associated with the leasing — at least for any period of overlap. Resolution of when the servitudes prescribed cannot be made based upon the facts disclosed in plaintiffs amended complaint and, therefore, must await resolution following discovery in this case.
Finally, in arguing that plaintifPs temporary takings claims should be dismissed, defendant essentially asserts that the leases in question could not have effectuated a takings because, under the Louisiana law regarding mineral servitudes, plaintiff could not preclude defendant from making those leases. Defendant bases this remarkable claim on La.Rev.Stat. § 31:121, which states that “[a] mineral lessee may takes leases from persons claiming the leased land or mineral rights or interests therein adversely to his lessor.” A
The rule stated in Article 121 is consistent with the rule of Article 120 that the mineral lessor’s warranty is that of a seller. Early jurisprudence took a common-sense view of the mineral lease, holding that the rule that a lessee may not contest his lessor’s title is inapplicable to mineral leases ... However, following the decision in Gulf Refining Co. v. Glassell,186 La. 190 ,171 So. 846 (1936), which held a mineral lease to be like a predial lease and denied lessees the right to bring real actions, the United States Court of Appeals refused to follow the early decisions on this point and held that a lessee cannot deny his lessor’s title. Sabine Lumber Co. v. Broderick,88 F.2d 586 (5th Cir.1937). The problem posed by this jurisprudence has usually been met by the inclusion in mineral leases of a clause permitting the lessee to take leases from adverse claimants. Article 121 therefore lays to rest a question existing in the jurisprudence and adopts what has become customary practice in the industry.
Comment to La.Rev.Stat. § 31:121. Summarizing this history, a Louisiana Court of Appeals has observed that this provision “was incorporated into the Mineral Code to enable a mineral lessee to protect its rights to explore for and produce minerals.” Am. Lung Ass’n v. State of La.,
One obvious shortcoming in defendant’s claim is that section 121, by its terms, is inapplicable here, as there is no indication— certainly nothing in the amended complaint — that defendant’s lessees were previously leasing the same servitudes from plaintiff. Defendant, however, persists in suggesting that the existence of this provision indicates that a lessor in Louisiana is not liable to the rightful property owner for any damages occasioned by a mineral lease. But, can it be that Louisiana law holds blameless one who, without authorization, leases someone else’s property? In fact, as the above commentary reveals, the provision cited by defendant is intended to protect lessees who wish to pursue drilling and extraction on contested lands, not to protect lessors who are found to have leased servi-tudes they did not own. One seeking confirmation of this need consider not only the many eases arising under Louisiana law in which the rightful owners of property have successfully pursued false lessors,
At this nascent stage of the proceedings, this court need go no further — contrary to defendant’s intimations, plaintiff need not plead every single fact concerning every single lease in order to meet the “plausibility” standard of Twombly. The Supreme Court in the latter case (and, even more so in its recent decision in Iqbal) made clear that it intended neither to defenestrate the notice pleading rules that have reigned under Conley v. Gibson,
Accordingly, this court finds that, to the extent plaintiffs temporary takings claims are timely, they state a valid claim.
2. Reformation
In its complaint, plaintiff seeks to reform the contracts entered into between its predecessor-in-interest and the United States. While this court lacks general equitable powers, it may “exercise equitable powers as an incident to [its] general jurisdiction ... by reforming a contract and enforcing it as reformed in an action of law.” Carney v. United States,
Accordingly, for a variety of reasons, plaintiffs reformation claim must also be dismissed.
III. CONCLUSION
This court will not gild the lily. Like Odysseus’s Ithacan vessel of old, plaintiffs complaint survives for another day (albeit with a complement of fewer claims).
Based on the foregoing, the court GRANTS, in part, and DENIES, in part, defendant’s motion to dismiss. Specifically, the Clerk shall dismiss from the complaint Count I (permanent taking of the ninety-six servitudes); counts IV, V and VI (dealing with contract claims); and count VII (reformation). In addition, count II shall be dismissed to the extent that it presents temporary takings claims as to particular leases that are not timely. On or before November 30, 2009, the parties shall file a joint status report setting forth a proposed discovery plan for this case.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The Fifth Circuit did not cite Nebo Oil. Rather, it indicated that it could not reconsider litese constitutional points based upon its decision in United States v. Little Lake Misere Land Co.,
. See also Kingman Reef Atoll Investments, L.L.C. v. United States,
. See also, e.g., Heck v. Humphrey,
. See, e.g., Acceptance Ins. Cos., Inc. v. United States,
After the passage of the QTA, however, the government frequently argued that the court was divested of jurisdiction to adjudicate takings claims where resolution of a title dispute was subsumed in the determination. That argument, however, has been firmly laid to rest. It is now well-established that the court has jurisdiction to make independent factual determinations of a claimant's specific property interest as a matter of course in adjudicating takings claims. Mannatt v. United States,48 Fed.Cl. 148 , 152 (2000); Chevy Chase Land Co. of Montgomery County v. United States,37 Fed.Cl. 545 , 564 (1997); Oak Forest,23 Cl.Ct. at 96 ; Yaist,228 Ct.Cl. at 285-86 ,656 F.2d 616 .
Dwen,
. See Am. Pelagic Fishing Co.,
. This is important, of course, as there can be no equitable tolling of the statute of limitations in section 2501, which is jurisdictional. See John R. Sand & Gravel Co.,
.The rule has been applied in cases where defendant has deliberately or fraudulently concealed its acts from plaintiff. See, e.g., Barrett v. United States,
. See Kubrick,
. See also Wollman v. Gross,
. In Central Pines Land Co. v. United States,
. For reasons unexplained, it seems that defendant first made this point in its supplemental brief — late enough that the court would be disinclined to consider this point were it not related to jurisdiction. Even then, while claiming that Hunt Petroleum was a "predecessor" to plaintiff, defendant failed to cite any evidence in support of that claim. However, the record contains an affidavit filed by plaintiff in the Louisiana quiet title action in which it admits that Hunt Petroleum was an “ancestor in title."
. Plaintiff also argues that its takings claims are timely under the "continuing claims” doctrine, asserting that the government's issuance of leases are wrongful acts that took place over a period of time, culminating in defendant’s assertion of ownership in the 2001 quiet title action. The continuing claims doctrine applies where a plaintiff's claim is "inherently susceptible to being broken down into a series of independent and distinct events or wrongs, each having its own associated damages.” Brown Park Estates-Fairfield Dev. Co. v. United States,
. Again, as these affidavits involve jurisdictional facts, the court may consider them even though they present matter not found within the four corners of the amended complaint.
. Plaintiffs affidavit recites one lease entered into on August 1, 1983, on Servitude No. 2, and another entered into on February 1, 1973.
. In Creppel, the Federal Circuit determined that the alleged temporary taking occurred in 1976 when an Army Corps of Engineers’ officer issued an order modifying a flood control levee project in Jefferson Parish, Louisiana.
. In this regard, the Supreme Court explained—
*67 In sum, once it is understood that ELIHPA is most sensibly characterized as a repudiation, the decisions below lose force. To recapitulate, "[t]he time of accrual ... depends on whether the injured party chooses to treat the ... repudiation as a present breach." 1 C. Corman, Limitation of Actions § 7.2.1, p. 488 (1991). If that party ‘‘[e]lects to place the repudiator in breach before the performance date, the accrual date of the cause of action is accelerated from [the] time of performance to the date of such election.” Id., at 488-489. But if the injured party instead opts to await performance, “the cause of action accrues, and the statute of limitations commences to run, from the time fixed for performance rather than from the earlier date of repudiation.” Id., at 488.
. Should discovery produce new facts regarding the mineral leases, either party may revisit this ruling in an appropriate motion for summary judgment.
. Defendant further argues that plaintiff's contract claim is barred by the doctrine of laches. Laches is an inexcusable delay that results in prejudice to the defendant. See Nat'l R.R. Passenger Corp. v. Morgan,
. A careful reader might perceive tension between this conclusion and the conclusion that plaintiff's permanent takings claim accrued in 1991, or at the latest 1993, and thus is untimely. In the court's view, however, that plaintiff's temporary takings claim may proceed, while its permanent takings claim does not, results from the different burdens plaintiff had in terms of responding to defendant’s motion to dismiss. As to the jurisdictional prongs of that motion, plaintiff was obliged to show that its claims were timely— and its failure to demonstrate factually that any of the servitudes prescribed within six years of the filing of its complaint meant that its permanent takings claim was untimely. But, plaintiff is not obliged to demonstrate now when the servitudes in question prescribed for purposes of the claims made by defendant with respect to the merits. Rather, it may rely on its complaint which, in the court's view, demonstrates that it has a plausible claim.
. See, e.g., Nelson v. Young,
. Article 120 provides that "[a] mineral lessor impliedly warrants title to the interest leased unless such warranty is expressly excluded or limited. The liability of the lessor for breach of warranty is limited to recovery of money paid or other property or its value given to the lessor for execution or maintenance of the lease and any royalties delivered on production from the lease.” Commentary to this provision indicates that Article 2506 of the Louisiana Civil Code authorizes the lessee to recover from the false lessor "the fruits or revenues when he is obliged to return them to the true owner.” Comment to La.Rev.Stat. § 31:120.
. In arguing to the contrary, defendant relies upon American Lung Ass'n. In that case, a Louisiana intermediate appellate court was faced with a situation in which La.Rev.Stat. § 31:120 plainly applied, namely, one in which the lessee of the rightful property owner also entered into what the court termed a "protective” lease with a competing claimant.
. Nor will the court resolve, at this early juncture, whether defendant did or did not issue leases with respect to certain of the servitudes still owned by plaintiff. In making factual claims with respect to these and other issues, defendant relies upon detailed declarations (and associated charts) from two expert witnesses, seemingly swatting aside the evidentiaiy limitations associated with a motion to dismiss. To the extent those declarations assert facts that are non-jurisdictional, this court hereby excludes that matter and will not convert defendant's motion into what the court views as a premature motion for summary judgment. See RCFC 56(d).
