OPINION
■Pending before the court is a second motion to dismiss by the defendant, the United States (“government” or “United States”). In its motion, the government argues that the complaint by the plaintiff, Royal Manor, Ltd. (“plaintiff’ or “Royal Manor”), should be dismissed under Rule 12(b)(1) of the Rules of the United States Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”) as untimely. The government contends that based on the court’s opinion on the government’s first motion to dismiss, the plaintiffs regulatory takings claim accrued more than six years prior to the filing of this lawsuit and therefore the claim is time-barred. 28 U.S.C. § 2501 (2000). For the following reasons, the government’s second motion to dismiss is DENIED.
BACKGROUND
The court previously fully recited the facts, taken from the plaintiffs complaint and accepted as true, in its April 8, 2005 Opinion on the government’s motion to dismiss; only a brief recitation is necessary here. The plaintiff is a limited partnership under the laws of Texas. Royal Manor owned Royal Manor Apartments, a low-income housing development in Fort Myers, Florida.
Congress enacted Section 236 of the National Housing Act, Pub.L. No. 90-448, 82 Stat. 498 (1968) (codified as amended at 12 U.S.C. § 1715z-l) (“Section 236”), to encourage the construction, ownership, and management of housing for low and moderate income residents. The program provides an interest subsidy for mortgage loans from private lenders in exchange for the owners’ agreement to restrictions on occupancy, rent amount, distribution of earnings, and eviction procedures. To participate, property owners were required to enter into both a regulatory agreement with the Deрartment of Housing and Urban Development (“HUD”) and a mortgage note with a private lender. HUD would contemporaneously enter into a contract of mortgage insurance with the private lender. The regulatory agreement was to remain in effect only so long as the mortgage insurance contract between HUD and the lender was in effect.
Royal Manor’s mortgage note, the agreement with its private lender, provides in part:
The debt evidenced by the Note may not be prepaid either in whole or in part prior to the final maturity date hereof without the prior written approval of the Federal Housing Commissioner except where: (1) The prepayment is in connection with the .release of an individual unit for sale to a lower income, elderly or handicapped person; o[r] (2) the maker is a limited dividend corporation which is not receiving payments from the Commissioner under a rent supplement contract pursuant to Section 101 of the Housing and Urban Development Act of 1965, and the prepayment occurs after the expiration of 20 years from the date of final endorsement ----
Pl.’s Ex. B (emphasis added).
Under this mоrtgage note and the regulatory agreement, Royal Manor would have been able to prepay its mortgage, thereby exiting the Section 236 program and terminating all the restrictions on the property on or about April 9,1993, the twentieth anniversary of its participation in the program. Royal Manor alleges that it would not have entered the program had it not had this contractual right to prepay, and that if the statutory scheme had remained the same, it would have prepaid its mortgage pursuant to the contract after twenty years.
In the 1980s, Congress became concerned that large numbers of Section 236 program participants would exit the program upon expiration of their twenty-year prepayment anniversary dates and that the availability of
Royal Manor filed a complaint seeking damages for breach of contract or compensation for a regulatory taking under the Fifth Amendment. The proceedings were stayed pending the final outcоme in Cienega Gardens v. United States. See Cienega Gardens v. United States,
DISCUSSION
A. Standard of Review
The government has filed a motion to dismiss for failure to state a claim pursuant to RCFC 12(b)(6).
The government argues that according to the Federal Circuit, in order for a regulatory takings claim to become ripe, and therefore to start the “statute of limitations clock,” three conditions must be satisfied: “(1) there had been a denial of economically viable use of the property as a result of the permit denial; (2) the property owner had distinct investment-backed expectations; and (3) the property interest taken was vested in the owner____” Bayou des Familles Dev. Corp. v. United States,
In response, the plaintiff relies on two eases, Franconia Associates v. United States,
Although the court agrees with the government that a regulatory takings claim accrues at the same time that it ripens, the court agrees with the plaintiff that its takings claim both ripened and accrued on its twenty-year prepayment anniversary date. As with any other tyрe of claim, a takings claim accrues within the meaning of 28 U.S.C. § 2501 (2000) “when all events have occurred that fix the alleged liability of the Government and entitle the plaintiff to institute an action.” Alliance of Descendants of Texas Land Grants v. United States,
1. A Regulatory Takings Claim Is Not Ripe Until the Plaintiff Suffers Actual Economic Impact
Implicit in the government’s statute of limitations argument is the assumption that in the ease of a regulatory taking if exhaustion of administrative procedures is not required, such as here where HUD did not have discretion to authorize prepayment, then the taking accrues when the statute affеcting the property is enacted. Thus, the government contends that, in this case, the plaintiffs claim that LIHPRHA effected a taking of its right to prepay its mortgage ripened upon passage of the statute. While the government’s analysis may be correct in some cases, it is not correct in this case, where the impact of the statute is not immediate. As discussed below, the plaintiffs regulatory takings claim did not ripen until the plaintiff suffered actual economic injury. Here, the plaintiff did not suffer actual economic injury until the statute barred the plaintiff from prepaying its mortgage on the plaintiffs twenty-year prepayment anniversary date.
[A]mong the factors of particular significance in the [regulatory takings] inquiry are the economic impact of the challenged action and the extent to which it interferes with reasonable investment-backed expectations. Those factors simply cannot be evaluated until the administrative agency has arrived at a final, definitive position regarding how it will apply the regulations at issue to the particular land in question.
Williamson County Reg’l Planning Comm’n v. Hamilton Bank of Johnson City,
As discussed below, until the twentieth anniversary date passed and the plaintiff was unable to exercise its prepayment right, the plaintiff did not suffer any concrete injury. Thus, until the plaintiff could exercise its prepayment right, the court could not evaluate the economic impact or the interference with investment-backed expectations. Therefore, the court’s April 8, 2005 opinion, which held that application to HUD under § 4108 was futile and therefore not required in order to ripen the claim, did not necessarily mean that the plaintiffs claim ripened upon passage of LIHPRHA.
2. Royal Manor Did Not Suffer Actual Economic Impact Until Its Twentieth Anniversary Date
In view of the foregoing, the plaintiff did not suffer actual ecоnomic impact until its twentieth anniversary date on April 9, 1993. Here, even assuming that the government is correct that the plaintiff had met two of the Bayou des Familles conditions for takings ripeness as of LIHPRHA’s effective date, the plaintiff did not begin to suffer concrete injury — actual economic impact — until it was actually unable to prepay on its twentieth anniversary date. It was only then that the plaintiff began to suffer damages. See Alder Terrace,
The plaintiff alleges the taking of a contractual right. . See Compl. ¶ 32 (referring to “Royal Manor’s property interest in the contractual right to prepay and exit the HUD-
It is for this reason that the government’s position must be rejected. According to the government, the plaintiffs takings claim ripened upon passage of LIHPRHA in 1990, three years before the plaintiff was eligible to exercise the right to prepay its mortgage. If the plaintiff had filed its claim in 1990, before LIHPRHA actually had an impact on its rental income, the court would have had no market data on which to base an evaluation of economic impact, as the market to be considered would have been three years in the future. Moreover, under the government’s theory, any Section 236 program participants whose twenty-year prepayment anniversary dates occurred after LIHPRHA was repealed by the HOPE Act in 1996 would have had ripe regulatory takings claims in 1990. Thus under the government’s theory, these participants conceivably could have been compensated for their claims that LIHPRHA took their contractual rights to prepay their mortgages on their twentieth anniversary dates even though LIHPRHA was repealed prior to those anniversary dates.
Such results plainly would be inconsistent with regulatory takings ripeness doctrine, which, as discussed above, seeks to ensure that a takings plaintiff has suffered concrete injury. Because the plaintiff did not suffer concrete injury and the court would not have been able to determine whether there was a cоmpensable taking until the plaintiffs prepayment date, the plaintiffs takings claim did not ripen until that time. The plaintiffs takings claim therefore accrued on its twentieth anniversary date, April 9, 1993. See Bayou des Familles,
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, the government’s second motion to dismiss, filed July 11, 2005, is DENIED. The parties shall file a joint status report by Thursday, December 1, 2005 detailing the next steps in the litigation.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. Although the plaintiff’s amended complaint refers to both ELIHPA and LIHPRHA, at the October 20, 2005 oral argument the plaintiff withdrew any claim that ELIHPA, which expired prior to the plaintiff’s twentieth anniversary date on April 9, 1993, effected any taking of its property. Contrary to the government's assertions, the complaint’s reference to ELIHPA in the context of alleging causation of financial loss, Compl. 1111 32-33, is not a judicial admission that the plaintiff suffered economic injury prior to its twentieth anniversary date. All the complaint stated was: "ELIHPA and LIHPRHA interfered with Royal Manor's property interest and caused Royal Manor to sustain a serious financial loss ____" Compl. 1133. This statement is far from an unequivocal concession that the plaintiff suffered damages prior to its anniversary date, and the court will not treat it as such.
. Based on Fisher v. United States,
. This is not to imply that the plaintiff's damages must be complete or fully known before the claim will be considered ripe. See Fallini v. United States,
. The government's reliance on footnote 4 of the court's April 8, 2005 opinion is misplaced. In that note, the court in distinguishing Boise Cascade Corp. v. United States,
. The government’s argument that some theoretical economic injury might have occurred upon passage of LIHPRHA is misplaced. As discussed above, the ripeness doctrine in the regulatory taking context is concerned with ensuring that the court is able to determine the extent of the taking at the time a plaintiff brings suit. Therefore, to hold that the plaintiff's claim was ripe before the plaintiff was actually prevented from exercising its contractual right to prepay, based on a merely theoretical injury, would be inconsistent with the doctrine.
In Cienega Gardens VIII, some of the plaintiffs’ twentieth anniversary dates may have fallen between 1988 and 1990, when ELIHPA was still in effect. .
