UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Plaintiff-Appellee, v. 819.8 ACRES OF LAND, MORE OR LESS, LOCATED IN WASATCH AND SUMMIT COUNTIES, STATE OF UTAH, Defendants, and STICHTING MAYFLOWER RECREATION FONDS and STICHTING MAYFLOWER MOUNTAIN FONDS, Defendants-Appellants.
No. 96-4134 (D.C. No. 87-C-0525S) (D. Utah)
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS TENTH CIRCUIT
JAN 7 1998
Before EBEL and HOLLOWAY, Circuit Judges, and BLACK, District Judge.
ORDER AND JUDGMENT*
Before EBEL and HOLLOWAY, Circuit Judges, and BLACK, District Judge.1
Facts and Procedural History
Stichtings held ownership interests in a large tract of land in Utah, and were in the process of planning the development of portions of the land for use as a resort. The United States decided to exercise its power of eminent domain over some of the land, as part of a plan to create a reservoir and recreation area in the vicinity of the proposed resort. At the outset of the condemnation process the government and Stichtings agreed to conduct a study of certain mine tailings located on Stichtings’ property. The purpose
After the contractors hired to conduct the study finished their report, Stichtings requested the release of the escrowed funds. They pointed to the fact that the ultimate conclusions of the report did not contain any recommendations for steps needed to be taken to protect the proposed reservoir and recreation area from contamination. The government opposed the request. According to the government, the report contained contradictory statements that needed to be resolved before it could be determined that none of the funds in escrow would be needed to pay for protective measures to prevent contamination of the reservoir or recreation area. The district court agreed that an evidentiary hearing was necessary to resolve the questions raised concerning the report.
Stichtings did not quietly acquiesce in the district court‘s decision. Instead, they filed a renewed motion for release of the funds, a motion for summary judgment, and a
In support of its contention that Stichtings were not a party entitled to fees under the EAJA, the government pointed out below that to be a qualifying party, a corporation must have a net worth of $7,000,000 or less at the time the civil action was filed, as well as fewer than 500 employees.
The appendix submitted to this Court for our review of this case does not indicate the nature of Stichtings’ response to the government‘s contention that Stichtings might not be financially eligible for an EAJA award of attorney fees. Stichtings did file a response to the government‘s objection, but that response has not been included in the appendix. Neither, for that matter, has Stichtings’ original motion for fees been submitted as part of the appendix. These omissions are probable violations of 10th Cir. R. 10.3.2(b), which requires that relevant portions of briefs, memoranda, and other documents filed in support of a motion should be included in the appendix when the appeal is from an order denying that motion. In any event, the government‘s brief on appeal maintains that Stichtings responded with a “bare assertion” that their net worth was below $7,000,000, and nothing in the appendix contradicts that statement. In addition, at oral argument, counsel for Stichtings was asked about the financial-eligibility issue. Counsel maintained that the question had not been raised below, which is not a correct statement, as we have discussed above. Counsel also maintained that there was ample evidence in the record of Stichtings’ financial position. If that is true, it is not to be found in the portions of the
The party requesting EAJA fees bears the burden of establishing that it is eligible for such an award. Pate v. U.S., 982 F.2d 457, 459 (10th Cir. 1993) (discussing statute,
In this case Stichtings apparently did not submit an affidavit or any other kind of proof of their financial status. Given the government‘s specific challenge to their financial eligibility for an award of fees, this failure meant that Stichtings did not establish that they met the definition of “party” set out in the EAJA. Stichtings therefore did not satisfy their burden of showing they qualified for a fee award under the EAJA.
We recognize that the district court did not rely on this ground in denying the application for fees. However, the government raised the issue below and Stichtings had an opportunity to respond by submitting adequate proof of their financial condition. Nothing in the record that has been submitted to us indicates that Stichtings took advantage of that opportunity. In the absence of such proof, Stichtings were ineligible for a fee award as a matter of law. We may therefore affirm on that ground. See Griffith v. State of Colorado, 17 F.3d 1323, 1328 (10th Cir. 1994) (this Court may affirm on any ground adequately presented to the district court, or on a ground not presented to that court if both parties had an adequate opportunity to develop the record on the issue and the proper resolution of the issue is clear from the record).
Furthermore, again given the limited information submitted to us, we reject Stichtings’ claim that the agreement between the Bureau of Reclamation and Stichtings made the conclusions of the study, rather than the body of the study, binding on the government. The agreement speaks in terms of steps “identified by the Study” as necessary to protect the reservoir, not “steps identified in the conclusions of the Study.” The statements we have discussed above raised a genuine question in the minds of both the district court and the government as to whether the body of the study actually identified any potential hazards to the reservoir and steps that could be taken to minimize or eliminate such hazards. The purpose of the evidentiary hearing resisted so vigorously by Stichtings was, paraphrasing the district court, to test the credibility of the experts whose conclusions were ultimately that the tailings presented no danger to the reservoir. The district court specifically found that additional information presented at that hearing satisfied the concerns the court had possessed before the hearing began. Having no access to the report, we cannot determine whether the material presented at the hearing was merely duplicative of that contained in the report, or was indeed additional information that proved helpful in resolving the issue of the potential threat to the reservoir. Again, we cannot hold that the district court‘s determination on this question was an abuse of discretion.
Entered for the Court
Bruce D. Black
District Judge
