OPINION
Michael Stovall (plaintiff), an African-American farmer in Alabama, brings suit against the United States for breach of his settlement agreement with the Farm Service Agency (FSA), an arm of the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA). This claim was originally part of a broader lawsuit that Mr. Stovall filed in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia. In that forum, defendant vigorously asserted that
I. BACKGROUND
In 1993, plaintiff, a lifelong Alabama farmer, attempted to apply for farm loans through the FSA office in Lawrence County, Alabama, but was denied even an application. In 1994, he received an application form and submitted requests for an ownership loan and farm operating loan, both of which were denied by the FSA office. Plaintiff pursued an administrative appeal, after which the application for the operating loan was approved. In March 1995, those loan funds were disbursed.
After failing in other attempts to obtain loans, plaintiff, in January 1996, filed a complaint with the USDA’s Office of Civil Rights (OCR), charging FSA with racial discrimination. OCR ruled in his favor, finding that the FSA discriminated against him in denying the 1994 farm ownership loan and a 1995 farm operating loan. On February 27, 1998, plaintiff and OCR settled his administrative complaint, memorializing the settlement in a “Resolution Agreement.” Under that agreement, Mr. Stovall waived any rights against USDA and its employees arising from his complaint in exchange for USDA’s promises to pay him $145,000 in compensatory damages, discharge his debts to FSA, offer him priority consideration on future loan applications, provide reasonable attorney’s fees and costs, and other relief.
In early 1998, plaintiff purchased farm land from the FSA’s inventory property, and filed a new application for a farm ownership and operating loan from FSA, this time obtaining the assistance of several USDA employees, including Carolyn Cooksie and Sam Snyder. The loans were approved in March 1998, and plaintiff received these funds in November 1998. In April 1999, plaintiff applied for additional funds to build two chicken houses. In December 1999, FSA approved an additional $35,000 loan to build those houses. However, following a meeting with a contractor and local FSA employee, Richard Knouff, it became apparent that additional funds were necessary to construct the projects. Plaintiff requested these funds from Mr. Knouff, who responded that plaintiff had reached his loan limit with the FSA. Plaintiff alleges that Mr. Knouff told the contractor to terminate the project.
Plaintiff contacted Mr. Snyder, who developed a “Farm and Home Plan” to assess the commercial viability of the chicken houses. According to plaintiff, Mr. Snyder and other USDA employees purposely set up the plan so that he could not demonstrate adequate cash flow, causing his request for additional loans or loan restructuring to be denied by the FSA in October of 2001. Plaintiff alleges this was a collective ploy to force him out of business. In October of 2001, Mr. Knouff again notified Mr. Stovall that FSA could not consider additional loans or loan restructuring.
In January of 2004, plaintiff brought suit in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia, asserting, inter alia, that defendant had breached the settlement agreement by failing to implement various paragraphs of the Resolution Agreement. Plaintiff sought damages of $4,000,000, plus
II. DISCUSSION
The plain language of the Tucker Act applies to claims based upon “any express or implied contract with the United States.” Regarding this language, the Federal Circuit has repeatedly stated — “[A]ny agreement can be a contract within the meaning of the Tucker Act, provided that it meets the requirements for a contract with the Government, specifically: mutual intent to contract including an offer and acceptance, consideration, and a Government representative who had actual authority to bind the Government.” Massie v. United States,
While Kania distinguishes between contracts relating to proprietary versus sovereign actions — holding that the latter is outside the purview of the Tucker Act — it only loosely mapped the contours of those governmental spheres. There, the Court of Claims stated—
The contract liability which is enforceable under the Tucker Act consent to suit does not extend to every agreement, understanding, or compact which can semantically be stated in terms of offer and acceptance or meeting of minds. The Congress undoubtedly had in mind as the principal class of contract case in which it consented to be sued, the instances where the sovereign steps off the throne and engages in purchase and sale of goods, lands, and services, transactions such as private parties, individuals or corporations also engage in among themselves.
Id. at 268-69 (emphasis added). Subsequent cases, particularly Sanders v. United States,
That Kama did not limit this court’s Tucker Act contract jurisdiction to procurement contracts is a thought perhaps too banal to merit remark were it not for the fact that defendant somehow reads the quoted language above as if the word “principal” was not there. Any notion that the word “contract” in the Tucker Act should be so limited does not bear scrutiny. For one thing, defendant can anchor its hollow view of this court’s jurisdiction neither to the natural reading of the language of the Tucker Act nor to any binding precedent construing that statute. Adoption of its view, indeed, would be a remarkable fin-de-siécle retrenchment that could only mean that, over the last decade, this court (with the complicity of the Supreme Court and the Federal Circuit) has usurped jurisdiction not only over dozens of so-called Winstar cases, cf., e.g., Winstar Corp. v. United States,
To be sure, claims under the Tucker Act must be payable in money. See United States v. King,
Indeed, most cases in which courts have refused to exercise contract jurisdiction do not turn upon the proprietary/sovereign distinction at all, but rather are properly viewed as involving statutory preemption, that is, situations where Congress has either expressly or impliedly withdrawn this court’s grant of Tucker Act jurisdiction in favor of some other court. See Tex. Peanut Farmers v. United States,
In offering its wooden view of this court’s jurisdiction, defendant also invokes the notion that this court is one of “limited jurisdiction.” While defendant often quotes this language as if it had biblical proportions, this maxim “is little more than a truism, as universally applicable to lower federal courts as it is generally unhelpful in resolving any specific issue of jurisdiction or authority.” Pueblo of Laguna v. United States,
Within the jurisdictional rubric described, this is a relatively straight-forward case. The case sub judice does not involve a “sovereign” agreement within the meaning of Kania and Sanders. Rather, it involves the settlement of a discrimination claim, a type of agreement that arises frequently in the private sector. Nor does this matter involve a category of ease that has been dedicated
III. CONCLUSION
This court will not paint the lily. For the reasons previously stated, defendant’s motion to dismiss must be denied. The Clerk is ordered to mail a copy of this opinion to the district court judge who handled this matter in the United States District Court for the District of Columbia.
IT IS SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The court construes allegations in the complaint most favorably to the plaintiff, resolving ambiguities in his favor. Henke v. United States,
. See Michelle Visser, “Sovereign Immunity and Informant Defectors: The United States' Refusal to Protect its Protectors,” 58 Stan. L.Rev. 663, 686 (2005) ("Sovereign contracts ... refer to contracts for which there could be no private analogue — where only the government, as the sovereign, has the authority necessary to make the promises made.”); see also Houston v. United States,
. See Moore v. United States,
. A broad formulation of what is "sovereign” would sweep in every authorized action taken by the government and inevitably run into the same difficulties that have led the Supreme Court to abandon the “proprietary/govemmental” distinction in other contexts, including cases involving the Interstate Commerce Clause. See Garcia v. San Antonio Metro. Transit Auth.,
. Indeed, at oral argument, defendant’s counsel indicated that he had not considered the broader implications of the jurisdictional argument he was posing.
. Sanders explains that one reason criminal agreements do not come within this court's jurisdiction is that they do not enjoy this presumption. Sanders, 252 F.3d at 1334 (“Although agreements that are in part civil and in part criminal may be governed by the presumption concerning the availability of damages in civil cases, a different rule obtains where the agreement is entirely concerned with the conduct of the parties in a criminal case.... [Kania] has previously established that in those circumstances a damages remedy is not ordinarily available.”) (footnote omitted).
. See Testan,
. To avoid misapplying the sovereign/proprietaiy distinction, care must be taken to focus primarily on the nature of the agreement and the promises contained therein, rather than the specific subject matter covered. See Drakes,
. In the briefs that it filed in the African-American farmer cases in the D.C. Circuit, defendant consistently argued that this court, rather than the D.C. District Court, had jurisdiction over FSA settlement agreements. Defendant claims that it has since reconsidered its position, although one must wonder how it will approach future cases in the D.C. Circuit, given the binding precedent it has helped to establish there. At least at this juncture, however, there is no occasion for the court to consider whether judicial estoppel should prevent defendant from taking a position herein inconsistent with its prior views. See, however, Cuyahoga Metro. Housing Auth. v. United States,
