AMENDED MEMORANDUM DECISION AND ORDER RE: JULY 3, 2000, CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT AND FOR RECONSIDERATION
This decision and order amends the decision and order filed March 2, 2001 (Doc. 346).
INTRODUCTION
This matter, is before the Court on the cross-motions for summary judgment submitted by Plaintiff and the Boston Ranch Parties 1 (who are Defendants, Counter-claimants, and Third-Party Plaintiffs) as to the disposition of $9,679,000 held by the Court in escrow', see Doc. 328 ¶ 1 (government’s statement of undisputed facts in support of motion for summary judgment). 2 Oral argument was held on Monday, August 28, 2000.
I. THE CLAIMS
The dispute underlying this action concerns: (1) the price per acre-foot the United States Department of the Interior (“Interior”), Bureau of Reclamation (“Bureau”), 3 is permitted to charge water-users who take water from the San Luis Unit of the United States Central Valley Project (“CVP”); and (2) a drainage-charge component. Interior argues 43 U.S.C. § 390ww(h), enacted in 1987, which requires the Secretary of the Interior to collect the “full cost” for providing all federal (including CVP) water, establishes the price. See Doc. 1. The water-users are members of Westlands Water District (“Westlands”), 4 interpled into this action by defendant Westlands, and contend that the price was fixed at $8.00 per acre-foot by a 1963 water-service contract between Westlands and the Bureau (“1963 Contract”), authorized by the Reclamation Act of 1902, 32 Stat. 388, former 43 U.S.C. §§ 371-616 (1902), which authorizes Interior and the Bureau to contract with water districts (not individual water-users) for water service from a federal reclamation project. See, e.g., 43 U.S.C. § 485h(e) (2000).
The United States brought this action against Westlands on February 27, 1989, after Westlands refused to pay “full cost” for CVP water furnished under the 1963 Contract. It sought: (1) a declaratory judgment that Westlands violated 43 U.S.C. § 890ww(h) “as a result of its failure to pay full cost to the United States for federal reclamation project irrigation
The water-users object to paying more than the “Contract” price for water services by counterclaims and a third-party complaint against the federal parties, alleging nine causes of action for declaratory relief, see Doc. 48, and seeking a refund of any payments made for drainage service after 1986. These claims advance legal theories that 43 U.S.C. § 390ww(h)’s full-cost provision does not apply to the water-users.
In their November 4,1991, opposition to the government’s Motion for Order to Enter Final Judgment, the water-users raised many issues, including whether the term “service” in the 1963 Contract and recordable contracts includes “providing drainage service to recipients.” Doc. 141 17:28-18:3 (quoting
Barcellos & Wolfsen, Inc. v. Westlands Water Dist.,
An April 16, 1993, decision on the government’s motion for final judgment notes: “the drainage provided by the United States to Westlands has been greatly attacked. To the Court’s knowledge, no case had considered the effect upon the respective rights and duties of the parties under the various agreements.” Doc. 178 at 15:17-22. By April, 1993, only two triable issues of fact remained: (1) “appropriate issues relating to drainage,” id. at 15:23-24; and (2) “any issues pertaining to the calculation of the sum owed to the United States, and the calculation of the interest to be paid [to whomever the fund belongs],” id. at 16:3-4.
The current cross-summary judgment motions were filed July 3, 2000. See Docs. 324-26. The water-users seek summary judgment:
(1) for restitution against the United States, of such amounts equal to the payments by the water-users for drainage service and facilities not provided by the United States;
(2) that the United States breached its contract by failing to perform contractual water-pricing obligations, and that the water-users are entitled to such amounts equal to the water surcharges they paid into the interpled fund; and
(3) they are entitled to interest earned on interpled funds.
See Doc. 324 at vii:9-14 (water-users’ memorandum in support of partial or summary adjudication of issues). On April 3, 1997, summary judgment was granted against the water-users and for the United States on the second issue (contractual price of water). See Doc. 278 at 25:18-27:13. The water-users now move for reconsideration of that decision “in light of the Ninth Circuit’s recent Sumner Peck decision [and] for other changes of circumstances.” Doc. 324 at vii:16-17.
The government seeks summary judgment, alleging the water-users “are not entitled to any of the funds” because:
1. The monies in escrow represent the difference between the contract rate for water deliveries and “full cost,” as that term is defined under federal law, and federal law does not vest the Bureau with discretion not to collect full cost for federal water.
2. Regardless whether the counterclaims have a basis in law, there is no independent jurisdiction for the water-users’ assertion against the United States, given the Orff decision.
3. Firebaugh Canal Co. v. United States,203 F.3d 568 (9th Cir.2000), underscores that compliance by the United States with the San Luis Act did not require construction of the interceptor drain, the action that the water-users asserted was the quid pro quo for their having to pay for drainage.
See Doc. 327 at 2:3-14 (government’s opening brief).
II. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
This suit arises from the Bureau’s administration of the San Luis Unit, a division of the CVP. The CVP is the nation’s largest federal reclamation project, spanning “the length of California’s Central Valley, from Shasta Dam, in the north, to the Frianb-Kern Canal, in the south.”
Firebaugh Canal Co.,
Construction of the San Luis Unit was authorized by the San Luis Act.
6
The “principal purpose” of the San Luis Unit is to furnish irrigation to land in Merced, Fresno, and Kings counties, California.
See Firebaugh Canal,
First, Section (a) of the San Luis Act requires the Government to provide drainage service to Westlands. “Any water project that brings fresh water to an agricultural area must take the salty water remaining after the crops have beén irrigated away from the service area.”
Firebaugh Canal,
Second, “[t]he 1963 Contract prohibits the District from furnishing Project water to an owner who wishes to use the water to irrigate his ‘excess lands,’ or lands in excess of 160 acres, unless the owner agrees in a separate, recordable contract with Interior to certain significant restraints on his rights to the excess lands.”
Barcellos,
The primary benefit that the landowners receive from the federal reclamation program is the privilege of receiving subsidized water. Having to sell then-excess lands within a limited period of time at an artificially low appraised price is an intended burden.
Id. at 824. These recordable contracts also have a provision, Article 13, that extends the ten-years period of ownership whenever “water or service from the Project may not be available to the land involved through no fault of the District or the Landowner.”
This suit concerns three issues:
(1) the payment rate for San Luis Unit water applicable to excess lands during extension periods, i.e., full-cost or subsidized (the 1963 Contract rate); and if the fund before the court contains any water service payments that should be refunded;
(2) who is entitled to any drainage component payments; and
(3) whether any declaratory relief is appropriate.
A. 1902: Reclamation Act of1902. 9
Any discussion of federal water in California begins in 1902: “The Reclamation Act of 1902 provided the framework for modern day reclamation law.” Martin J. Jackley,
Reclamation Law and the Bell Fourche Irrigation District: A Desperate Fight for a Way of Life in Times of Change,
40 S.D. L. REV. 478, 479 (1995) (footnote omitted). “The final westward migration of the late 1800s resulted in an enormous demand by the settlers for irrigation systems.”
Peterson v. United States Dep’t of Interior,
The 1902 Act had two purposes: “encourage family farming on modest-sized parcels [160 acres];” and “to increase agricultural output by subsidizing the irrigation of formerly arid and unproductive lands.”
Barcellos,
Under the 1902 Act, there was very limited regulation of excess lands, because prior to the 1982 RRA, Interior did not regulate leasing of excess lands receiving subsidized water.
See
32 Stat. 389 (1902) (making landowner eligible for federal project water if he owned less than 160 acres, but not limiting such water delivery to non-leased lands). The Omnibus Adjust
B.1963: 1963 Contract
“Westlands entered into a water service contract with the United States in 1963 under which the United States, through the Bureau of Reclamation, agreed to make available for Westlands’ purchase 900,000 acre-feet of water from the San Luis Unit of the Central Valley Project CCVP’).”
Barcellos & Wolfsen, Inc. v. Westlands Water Dist.,
(1) a specified volume of water provided at $8.00/acre-foot ($7.50/acre-foot for water service and $0.50/aere-foot for drainage service) in Article 6(a); and
(2) before water could be delivered to “excess lands” (lands in excess of 160 acres), the owner must execute a “recordable contract” to sell those excess lands within ten (10) years at a price that does not consider the water rights (Article 23(a)), or Interior would do so through a power of attorney granted by the owner (Articles 24-25). 12
C. 1976: D.C. District Court Injunction
On August 9, 1976, the District of Columbia district court issued an injunction preventing approval of any new contracts for excess land sales until the initiation of public rule-making proceedings.
See Nat. Land for People v. Bureau of Reclamation,
As a result, Interior halted all land sales under recordable contracts nationwide, and did not approve land sales from 1976 through 1984. As ten years of ownership of water users’ excess lands began to expire, a problem surfaced: although under the injunction, the water-users were unable to complete sale of them excess lands, they nevertheless continued to receive subsidized water for these excess lands for more than ten years.
D. 1978: The Interior Department Increases the Water Price
In 1978, the Solicitor of the Interior Department “issued a legal opinion stating that the $8.00 rate specified in the 1963 Contract was inadequate to recover the escalating costs of the Project and was therefore contrary to the federal reclamation laws,
see
43 U.S.C. § 461, and not binding.”
Barcellos,
E. 1979: The Water-Users and West-lands sue to enforce the 1963 Contract’s luater-pricing provision
In 1979, the water-users sued Westlands in state court, “seeking among other things to have the $8.00 rate enforced.” Id. Westlands joined the United States as a party, and the action was later removed to the United States District Court for the Eastern District of California. See id. 15
F. 1982: Congress passes the Reclamation Reform Act of 1982 (“RRA”): “Full-Cost” water
In 1982, Congress attempted to address the problems caused by the district court injunction against selling excess lands and the Krulitz opinion recommending full-cost rates for all water, by passing the RRA, 43 U.S.C. §§ 390aa to zz-1, 16 which:
(1) required that water delivered to excess lands be paid for at full-cost; (RRA § 205(a));
(2) extended the time for landowners to dispose of their excess lands for which there were recordable contracts, by not counting the six-year effective period of the district court injunction (1976-1982) against the ten-year period for disposal of excess lands under Article 13 of the recordable contracts (RRA § 209(e)); and
(3) confined eligibility to receive subsidized water for excess lands under the recordable contracts to a total of ten years, regardless whether Article 13 extended the ownership term; but suspended termination of the right to such subsidized water (and a corresponding duty to pay “full cost”) until eighteen (18) months after the date when the Secretary began again to approve land sales (RRA § 205(c)).
Section 209(d) superseded the 1976 district court injunction, explicitly requiring Interior to establish rules for disposing of the excess lands under recordable contracts, and extended recordable contracts for a time period equal to the unexpired portion of the ten-year term when the district court injunction took effect. See 43 U.S.C. § 390ii (2000).
Section 204 of the RRA also increased the allowable amount of “non-excess” lands from 160 to 960 acres, see 43 U.S.C. § 390dd (1986), and applied this acreage limitation to all irrigated lands, whether owned or leased, see id. at § bb(6) (1986), closing the loophole that previously existed under the 1902 Act.
In the 1982 RRA, Congress also added the so-called “hammer clause,” section 203(b), codified at 43 U.S.C. § 390cc (2000), in conference committee, 17 which gave districts with water contracts predating the effective date of the RRA a choice to either voluntarily and irrevocably elect to amend their contracts to comply with the RRA’s “full-cost” provisions for excess lands (and enjoy § 204’s increased 960-acre limitation for non-excess lands), or remain under the 1902 Act, with its 160-acre limitation. See 43 U.S.C. §§ 390ee(a) & (b) (2000). 18
G. 1986: The 1986 Barcellos Consent Judgment Re-Establishes the 1968 Contract Water Price
Interior rescinded the 1978 Krulitz opinion on June 17, 1986 (“Tarr reeission”).
See Barcellos,
The 1968 Contract is a valid, enforceable and implementable contract entitling the District through the end of 2007 to water and other service by the United States as specified therein.
Doc. 141 exhibit E at 12 ¶ 4.1. 20 The 1986 Barcellos Judgment prescribes three distinct water prices, depending on the type of land to which the water was delivered (original Westlands area, lands electing to come under the 1982 RRA’s “discretionary” provisions, and former Westplains lands 21 ):
(1) Article 4.1 provides that “the District and the United States shall perform the 1963 Contract;”
(2) Article 4.2 provides that any water delivered to the former Westplains area (referred to as Areas 2A and 2B) is governed by Articles 4.4 and 4.5 below;
(3) Article 4.4 specifies: “The agricultural water service component of the rates to be paid to the United States for water delivered under Article 3 of the 1963 Contract to lands which become subject to the Discretionary Provisions of the 1982 Act 22 shall bethe higher of (a) $7.50 per acre foot or (b) the appropriate rate as of the date of delivery established pursuant to the 1982 Act [full-cost];”
(4) Article 4.5 provides that water for Municipal and Industrial Uses “shall be paid for ... at the applicable Central Valley Project water rate as of the date of delivery.”
Doc. 141 exhibit E at 13-14 (1986 Judgment). The water-users in this case initially chose not to be “hammered” into a 1982 RRA election; ie., did not irrevocably elect to amend their contracts to subject recordable contract lands in excess of 160 acres to the full cost provisions. See Doc. 48 ¶ 26. 23 The water-users all owned original Westlands lands (Areas 1A or IB). See id. at ¶ 15. Under the 1986 Judgment, the water-users are governed by the 1963 Contract’s $8.00/acre-foot rate. The Judgment also provided for:
refunds to landowners of all water payments in excess of the $8.00 contract rate made since the time of the Krulitz opinion, including ... payments in excess of the $8.00 rate for water used on excess lands controlled by the landowners for the extended period provided in § 209(e) of the Act.
Barcellos,
Neither the 1986 Judgment nor the 1963 Contract has a provision that explicitly addresses the United States’ sovereign power to legislate. But see infra Part IV.F.3.C.
H. 1987: Congress Re-sets the water price at “Full Cost” for excess lands under recordable contract
On December 22, 1987, less than one year after entry of the
Barcellos
Judgment, Congress amended federal reclamation law through the Omnibus Budget Reconciliation Act of 1987
24
by adding section 224(h), codified at 43 U.S.C. § 390ww(h) (2000). Section 224(h) requires the Secretary of the Interior to collect “Ml cost” for federal reclamation water delivered to excess lands under pre-RRA recordable contracts.
See
43 U.S.C. § 390ww(h) (2000).
25
It does this by applying section 205
26
of the 1982 RRA to “all recordable contracts executed prior to October 12, 1982.”
27
Section 205(a) mandates collecting the “full cost” rate for water as defined by the statute,
28
a substantially higher amount
Aside from the “full cost” requirement, section 205(c) also limited the water-users to a total of ten years of subsidized water for their excess lands, regardless of any ownership extension period provided by Article 13 of the recordable contracts. See id. at § 390ee(c).
Shortly after ERA § 224(h) (43 U.S.C. § 390ww(h)) was enacted, Westlands brought a motion in
Barcellos
to specifically enforce the 1986
Barcellos
Judgment, arguing that the Judgment constrained the United States to charge only the water-service rates specified in the 1986 Judgment and the 1963 Contract, $8.00 per acre-foot.
See Barcellos,
I. 1989: The Instant Suit
After the Barcellos appeal was filed, in 1989, the United States brought this action against Westlands Water District: First, for a declaratory judgment that Westlands violated RRA section 224(h) 29 “as a result of its failure to pay full cost to the United States for federal reclamation project irrigation water delivered to certain lands located within Westlands Water District which are encumbered by extended recordable contracts,” Doc. 1 ¶ 1; and second, for a “money judgment for the difference between the applicable full cost rate and the rate paid by the Westlands Water District for federal reclamation project irrigation water delivered to such lands encumbered by extended recordable contracts,” id.
Westlands moved to stay the action pending the Barcellos appeal. See Doc. 5. The motion for stay was denied. See Doc. 15 at 4.
J. 1989: The Counter-claims, Request for Interpleader, and the Joinder of, inter alia, the Water-Users
On July 10, 1989, Westlands answered the complaint and filed a “counterclaim for interpleader.”
See
Doc. 19. It requested that: (1) “the court order that Water Users be made party defendants to respond to the complaint and to [the instant] counterclaim;” (2) “the United States and
Because Westlands maintained that Section 390ww(h) did not apply to it, beginning July 28, 1989, Westlands began depositing with the Court assessment monies it collected from the water-users that they requested Westlands withhold from the United States. See Doc. 25. On September 15, 1989, the court held that West-lands had “the right to [interjplead the interested party.” Doc. 30 at 5. 30
On November 3, 1989, Westlands filed a second amended counterclaim. See Doc. 38. It named, inter alia, water-users Boston Ranch Company, S. Stamoules & Company, South Boston Company, and Wes-thaven Farming Company. On January 26, 1990, the water-users, including the Boston Ranch parties, replied to the second amended counterclaim, see Doc. 47, and filed a counterclaim and third-party-complaint against the federal parties, see Doc. 48. The water-users alleged nine causes of action for declaratory relief, seeking to avoid application of Section 390ww(h)’s full-cost provision. See id.
K. 1990: Issuance of the Stay and the Barcellos Opinion
On May 11, 1990, the parties stipulated to a stay pending the outcome of the Bar-cellos appeal. See Doc. 110.
The
Barcellos
appellate decision issued March 16, 1990, and was amended June 7, 1990, on denial of rehearing and rehearing
en banc. See Barcellos,
On December- 3, 1990, the Supreme Court denied
certiorari. See Boston Ranch Co. v. Dep’t of the Interior,
L. 1991: The Government Moves for Entry of Judgment
On July 30, 1991, the Government moved for entry of final judgment. See Doc. 127. It argued that the 1990 Barcel-los appellate decision disposed of all issues in this lawsuit. See id. at 6-7. The water-users argued that the failure to provide drainage, an issue not decided by Barcel-los, affects that calculus. See Doc. 141. On April 16, 1993, the motion for final judgment was denied, see Doc. 178, because two triable issues of fact were identified. First, were “appropriate issues relating to drainage.” Id. at 15:16-24:
[T]he drainage provided by the United States to the Westlands Water District has been greatly attacked. To the' Court’s knowledge, no ease had considered the effect upon the respective rights and duties of the parties under the various agreements. Clearly, the cross-defendants and the third-party plaintiff cannot be precluded from raising appropriate issues relating to drainage in this litigation.
Second, were “any issues pertaining to the calculation of the sum owed to the United States, and the calculation of the interest to be paid them.” Id. at 16:3-4.
“Drainage issues” were brought to the forefront in approximately June, 1986, when the United States ceased providing drainage to Westlands and the San Luis Unit. The San Luis Feasibility Report, prepared by the Secretary of the Interior in 1956, contemplated “a system of tile drains that would empty into an interceptor drain that would convey the water 197 miles to the Contra Costa Delta for disposal.”
Firebaugh Canal Co.,
Rather, a subsurface drainage collector system was constructed. See id. Drainage service utilizing this system commenced in 1978. See id. It operated until June, 1986, as follows:
The subsurface collector drainage system discharged approximately 7,300 acre-feet annually of collected subsurface agricultural drainage into the portion of the drain constructed prior to 1975. The drain carried the drainage water to Kesterson Reservoir, which had become the temporary terminus of the drain.
Id. In mid-1983, however, “waterfowl nesting studies at Kesterson Reservoir revealed instances of embryo deformity and mortality.” Id.
It was suspected that selenium in some of the soils in Westlands was being carried with drainage water into Kesterson Reservoir and was concentrating in biota. Like other metals, selenium can impair the growth of crops and is hazardous to human and animal life when present in high concentrations.
Id. at 571-72. As a result, “[ojn March 15, 1985, the Secretary of the Interior announced that it would close the Reservoir.” Id. at 572.
By June, 1986, “the drains at Westlands were plugged and the middle portion of the interceptor drain was closed.” Id. The United States continued to deliver water to Westlands after June, 1986, but without providing drainage service. 33 Ultimately, the Government took the position that “subsequent changes in the law and environmental knowledge made compliance with the San Luis Act impossible, and thereby excused the United States from performing th[e] duty [to provide drainage].” Id. Affected landowners filed suit “seeking completion of the master drain to the Contra Costa Delta.” Id. at 571. Two suits were filed, Sumner Peck Ranch, Inc. v. Bureau of Reclamation, No. CV-F-91-048, and Firebaugh Canal Co. v. United States, No. CV-F-88-634, which “were partially consolidated to resolve the plaintiffs’ common allegation that the Secretary of Interior is required by law to construct facilities to drain agricultural drainage water from certain lands in Westlands Water District.” Id. Such a statutory duty was found, as was breach of the duty to provide drainage. Judgment was entered for the landowners on these issues on March 12, 1995. See Firebaugh Canal Co. v. United States, No. CV-F-88-634 (E.D.Cal. Mar. 12, 1995) (Doc. 442).
The Government appealed, reiterating its arguments that it had no drainage obligation under the San Luis Act, or alternatively, if it did have such an obligation, the obligation had been excused by factual or legal impossibility.
M. 1991: Released Funds
On March 28, 1994, the Government moved to release all funds in the escrow account, except the funds claimed by claimants. See Doc. 216. All counsel agreed $1,733,201.00 could be released to the United States, see Doc. 236 at 6:9-11, and on December 7, 1994, the Government’s motion was granted to the extent of the agreed sum, see id. at 6:13-14; 7:1-5.
N. 1996: Cross-motions for Summary Judgment Re: Remaining Funds
On August 23, 1996, the Government sought a final order to distribute the remainder of the escrow account funds to it.
See
Doc. 247. On August 26, 1996, the water-users filed a cross-motion for partial judgment on the pleadings, or, in the alternative, summary judgment against the United States.
See
Doc. 250. They advanced two theories: first, that the United States breached contracts with the water-users and Westlands. Specifically: Article 13 of their recordable contracts provides that the Secretary of Interior holds power of attorney over their excess lands for ten years after the recordable contracts were signed. This ten-year period is tolled when “water or ‘service’ ” from the CVP was not available. The water-users contend that the term “service” includes ade
Assuming,
arguendo,
that
Barcellos
makes section 224(h)
35
applicable to their contracts, the water-users contend the government’s failure to provide drainage service breached the 1963 Contract and their recordable contracts, entitling them to damages.
See Doc. 250
at 17:3-8. They anticipate the Government’s assertion of the unmistakability and the sovereign acts defenses, preemptively arguing these defenses fail under
United States v. Winstar Corp.,
Third, assuming, arguendo, that there was no breach of contract by the Government’s failure to provide drainage service, the water-users assert a non-contractual theory of recoveiy: restitution of all drainage-related payments, because they paid for drainage, but never received it. See id. at 23.
0. 1997: Decisicm on cross-summary judgment motions
A memorandum decision and order on these cross-motions issued April 3, 1997. See Doc. 278. As to the first argument, the term “ ‘service’ must include ‘drainage service.’ ” Id. at 25:18-19. ' However, as Barcellos teaches: “It does not follow ... that Claimants had a right to subsidized water as long as they owned their excess land.” Id. at 25:23-24. The water-users’ interpretation that the self-extended recordable contracts made RRA § 224(h) 36 inapplicable was “strained at best.” Id. at 26:26. This April, 1997, memorandum decision held that RRA section 224(h) “does not abridge any contract right because Claimants have no absolute contract right to the unqualified delivery of water at the $8.00 rate.” Id. at 27:10-12. Any Wins-tar analysis was found unnecessary, because “no enforceable contract right existed that § 224(h) could breach.” Id. at 27:12-13. On the first two issues, summary judgment was granted against the water-users and for the Government, holding that section 224(h) did not wrongfully impair the water-users’ contractual rights. See id. at 27:14^15. This holding was based on Barcellos. See id. at 24-27. For reasons stated below, reconsideration of these rulings is appropriate.
The Government did not address the water-users’ non-contractual theory of recovery. See id. at 26:21. Finding that the Firebaugh Canal Co. appeal would impact the water-users’ unjust enrichment theory, their cross-motion for summary judgment was denied without prejudice, pending the Ninth Circuit’s decision in Firebaugh Canal Co. See id. at 27:22-28:20. The Ninth Circuit decided Firebaugh Canal Co. on February 04, 2000.
P. 2000: Firebaugh Canal Co. v. United States
In Firebaugh Canal Co., the Ninth Circuit rejected the Government’s position that it need not provide drainage to the San Luis Unit contractors, see Firebaugh, 203 F.Sd at 568:
Affected landowners, both inside and outside the San Luis Unit service area, sued the Department of the Interior,seeking completion of the master drain to the Contra Costa Delta. See Sumner Peck Ranch, Inc. v. Bureau of Reclamation, 823 F.Supp. 715 [(E.D.Cal.1993)]; Firebaugh Canal Co. v. United States, No. CV-F-88-634.... In May of 1992, these lawsuits were partially consolidated to resolve the plaintiffs’ mutual allegation that the Secretary of Interior is required by law to construct facilities to drain agricultural drainage water from certain lands in Westlands Water District.
Id. at 572. The United States appealed the entire district court judgment that, inter alia:
require[d] the Department to “take such reasonable and necessary actions to promptly prepare, file and pursue an application for a discharge permit” with the California Water Resources Control Board, pursuant to the Government’s duty to provide drainage under the San Luis Act.
Id. at 570 (quoting without citing the district court judgment). The Ninth Circuit affirmed the district court holding that: (1) the Government has a duty to provide drainage to the San Luis Unit; (2) performance of that duty has been unreasonably and unlawfully delayed; and (3) the time has now come to provide such drainage service. See id. at 575. 37
Q. 2000: Cross Motions Re: Remaining Funds
The current cross-summary judgment motions were filed July 3, 2000. See Docs. 324-28. “In light of the Ninth Circuit’s recent Firebaugh decision” and “for other changes of circumstances,” Doc. 324 at vii: 14-18, the water-users seek reconsideration of the April 3, 1997, memorandum and order (Doc. 278), which held that they were required to pay the “full cost” rate as defined by RRA § 224(h). The water-users have two basic arguments: (1) they re-assert the contractual interpretation argument that the 1963 Contract’s subsidized water rate applies to excess lands during Article 13 extension periods caused by the government’s failure to provide drainage service; and (2) they are owed restitution for any drainage payments, because the government has not provided drainage.
The water-users support these arguments by claiming
Barcellos
is inapposite after
Winstar
and
Firebaugh.
38
Their previously advanced
Winstar
argument was rejected in the 1997 memorandum decision, because “no enforceable contract right existed that § 224(h) could breach.” Doc. 278 at 27:9-15. The water-users ar
However, no case has yet interpreted, outside of dictum, whether the 1963 Contract, the recordable contracts, and the 1986 Barcellos Judgment afford the water-users contract-priced (rather than full-cost) water for their excess lands during any time extended recordable contracts are effective if drainage service was not provided (which will be decided in the Firebaugh Canal Co. remand). This issue directly affects whether summary judgment should be granted.
Two other issues remain. First, the water-users argue they are entitled to restitution of the fees paid for drainage facilities and service under a theory of unjust enrichment, because the United States has not yet provided for such facilities and service. In addition, they argue they are entitled to interest on the interpled funds.
The United States rejoins that the water-users “are not entitled to any of the funds” because: (1) the Bureau has no discretion “other than to collect full cost;” (2) based on Orff, no independent jurisdiction exists to hear the water-users’ counterclaims; and (3) Firebaugh Canal Co. held the United States was not required to construct the interceptor drain under the San Luis Act, which “was the quid pro quo” for the water-users’ drainage payments. See Doc. 327 at 2:3-14. The government’s last argument addresses only part of the landowners’ drainage claim. The landowners contend that even if “drainage” does not include the interceptor drain with East Bay terminus, they have not received “any drainage,” i.e., drainage service to which the Court of Appeals held they were entitled under the San Luis Act, which breaches their recordable contracts and the contract embodied within the 1986 Barcellos Judgment.
R. Types of Funds
There are three different types of funds on deposit in this case:
(1) the fifty-cent drainage component from each $8.00 or “full cost” acre-foot payment since the 1986 Barcellos Judgment; 39
(2) the difference between the $8.00 contract rate and the “full cost” rate paid for excess lands between 1986 and present; and
(3) any separate “drainage fund” payments.
III. LEGAL STANDARD
A. Summary Judgment
“Summary judgment ‘shall be rendered forthwith if the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to
[T]he plain language of Rule 56(c) mandates the entry of summary judgment, after adequate time for discovery and upon motion, against a party who fails to make a showing sufficient to establish the existence of an element essential to that party’s case, and on which that party will bear the burden of proof at trial. In such a situation, there can be “no genuine issue as to any material fact,” since a complete failure of proof concerning an essential element of the nonmoving party’s case necessarily renders all other facts immaterial.
Celotex Corp. v. Catrett,
The more implausible the claim or defense asserted by the opposing party, the more persuasive its evidence must be to avoid summary judgment.
See United States ex rel. Anderson v. N. Telecom, Inc.,
B. Reconsideration
“[A] motion for reconsideration of summary judgment is appropriately brought under either Rule 59(e) or Rule 60(b).”
Fuller v. M.G. Jewelry,
1. Rule 59(e)
“A motion for reconsideration of summary judgment is appropriately brought under Rule 59(e).”
Backlund,
2. Rub 60
Rule 60(b) permits reconsideration of a district court order based on: (1) mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect; (2) newly-discovered evidence that supports grounds for a new trial under Rule 59; (3) fraud by an adverse party; (4) the judgment is void; (5) the judgment has been satisfied, released or discharged; or (6) any other reason justifying relief
Rule 60 reconsideration is generally appropriate in three instances: 1) when there has been an intervening change of controlling law, 2) new evidence has come to light, or 8) when necessary to correct a clear error or prevent manifest injustice.
Sch. Dist. No. 1J,
A. Reconsideration
The water-users meet the requirements for reconsideration under Rule 60, because a clear error may have been made in, or a manifest injustice may occur as a result of, the 1997 memorandum decision’s finding that Barcellos is dispositive of the contractual interpretation issues presented.
B. Impact of the 1990 Barcellos 46 decision
Before a re-interpretation of the 1963 Contract, the Recordable Contracts, and the 1986 Barcellos Judgment can be performed, the extent to which the 1990 Bar-cellos appellate decision interprets then-disputed provisions as an explicit holding (rather than dicta), which is law of the case, must be decided.
Barcellos
definitively answers the “quite narrow,”
Barcellos,
The 1997 memorandum decision interpreted the
Barcellos
appellate decision to find that regardless of the intended meaning of the term “service” in Article 13, the water-users had no contract right to subsidized water during any period of “extended” (more than 10 years’) ownership of their excess lands,
48
in view of the
Barcel-
Barcellos
is factually distinguishable, because the only extending event at issue was Interior’s non-approval of excess land sales during 1976 until 1984. The event of an express Article 13 extending cause, absence of drainage “service,” was not at issue. Because “land sale approval” was not encompassed by the Article 13 terms, “water or service,” the gratuitous discussion in
Barcellos
regarding the right to subsidized water during extension periods was not necessary to the decision; it is dicta.
See Trent v. Valley Elec. Ass’n, Inc.,
The
Barcellos
pronouncement that there was no possibility that a right to subsidized water existed during any Article 13 extension periods, for ihore than 10 years, is dicta. It is not binding as law of the case. Careful re-analysis of
Barcellos
leads to the conclusion that it does not decide the issues presented here. The entire 1963 Contract was not interpreted by the
Barcellos
majority. Further interpretation of the 1963 Contract by another panel in
O’Neill
shows that extrinsic evidence may be relevant.
See O’Neill,
C. Contractual Interpretation
1. Contractual Interpretation: Basic Principles
When interpreting a contract, the plain language within the four corners of the contract must first be examined to determine the mutual intent of the contracting parties.
See, e.g., United States v. Clark,
“A written contract must be read as a whole and every part interpreted with reference to the whole, with preference given to reasonable interpretations.”
Klamath Water Users Protective Ass’n v. Patterson,
“A contract is ambiguous if reasonable people could find its terms susceptible to more than one interpretation. The fact that the parties dispute a contract’s meaning does not establish that the contract is ambiguous.”
Barcellos & Wolfsen, Inc.,
Federal common law controls contractual interpretation if the United States is a party to the contract and entered into it pursuant to federal law.
See Klamath Water Users Protective Ass’n,
Although “[u]nder the parol evidence rule, a court looks to, and enforces, the plain language of a contract and does not look to ‘extrinsic evidence to interpret the terms of an unambiguous written instrument,’ ”
United States v. Nunez,
The U.C.C.' specifically differentiates between a usage of trade; a course of dealing; and a course of performance. A usage of trade is:
any practice or method of dealing having such regularity of observance in a place,vocation or trade as to justify an expectation that it will be observed with respect to the transaction in question. The existence and scope of such a usage are to be proved as facts.
U.C.C. § 1-205(2). A course of dealing is:
a sequence of previous conduct between the parties to a particular transaction which is fairly to be regarded as establishing a common basis of understanding for interpreting their expressions and other conduct.
Id. at (1).
Where the contract for sale involves repeated occasions for performance by either party with knowledge of the nature of the performance and opportunity for objection to it by the other, any course of performance accepted or acquiesced in without objection shall be relevant to determine the meaning of the agreement.
Id. at § 2-208.
If an ambiguity persists in the contract after resort to extrinsic evidence, the doctrine of
contra
‘proferentem
58
must be applied, which construes any ambiguity in the contract against the drafter.
See, e.g., Vizcaino v. Microsoft Corp.,
Last, if no other method can adequately interpret the contractual provision in question, the court allocates the risk of the unforeseeable loss to the more efficient risk bearer. See, e.g., Robert Cooter & Thomas Ulen, Law & Economics 200-03 (3d ed.2000); Ian Ayers & Robert Gertner, Filling Gaps in Incomplete Contracts: An Economic Theory of Default Rules, 99 Yale L.J. 87 (1989).
Contractual interpretation principles apply to the 1963 Contract, the recordable contracts, and the 1986 Judgment, because a federal court consent judgment “is a negotiated agreement that is entered as a judgment of the court, ... has attributes of both contracts and judicial decrees,”
Bragg v. Robertson,
2. Express Language Analysis
a. Article IS “Service” includes drainage service
Do the Article 13 extension period provisions from the recordable contracts apply to lack of drainage service? The “Definitions” section of the 1963 Contract does not explicitly define “service.” The “Explanatory Recitals” expressly state that Westlands contracts with the government to furnish the landowners with “a supplemental water supply from the Project
and for drainage service.”
1963 Contract, at 13-16 (emphasis added). “[Tjhroughout the documents defining the relationship among the landowners, the District, and Interior, ‘service’ appears in contexts where it clearly refers to the service of distributing water and
providing drainage facilities to recipients.” Barcellos,
The price per acre-foot of water provision in Article 6(a) of the 1963 Contract confirms that “water or service” in Article 13 of the recordable contracts includes drainage service, because those two items were the predominant benefit of the bargain: $7.50/acre-foot for water, and $0.50/ acre-foot for drainage. By unambiguous terms within the 1963 Contract, a failure to provide drainage service implicates the Article 13 extension provision of the recordable contracts.
b. 1963 Contract
Westlands and the government entered into the 1963 Contract on June 5, 1963, for the express purpose that the government provide CVP water to lands within West-lands’ boundaries for a forty-year term. See 1963 Contract ¶ 2. Article 3 separates the amount of water to be provided into three periods:
(1) years 1-5;
(2) years 6-15;
(3) years 16-40.
In each such period, the total volume of water that the United States must provide is reduced from the previous period, with the government’s performance obligation described as:
the United States shall furnish to the District, and the District each such year shall accept and pay, as provided in Article 6 hereof, for water from the San Luis Unit in the quantities specified in the schedule ....
1963 Contract ¶ 3(a) (emphasis added). The 1963 Contract does not differentiate between excess and non-excess lands for the per acre-foot water price.
Only one contractual term explicitly sets the acre-foot
61
price for water. Article 6(a) of the 1963 Contract provides that the annually-announced contract rate for water “may not be in excess of Eight Dollars ($8) per acre-foot and shall include a drainage service component of not to exceed
In describing how Westlands will annually pay for water, e.g., half before January 1st, Article 6(b) specifically references paragraph 6(a) for the rate: “[t]he District shall make payments to the United States each year at the rate fixed as provided in subdivision (a) of this article.” 1963 Contract ¶ 6(b) (emphasis added). Article 5 limits Westlands’ water delivery to lands within the District without prior written consent.
Article 23(a) prevents Westlands from delivering water to any excess lands 62 “unless the owners thereof shall have executed valid recordable contracts in form prescribed by the United States.” In Article 25(b)(i), as a “further condition precedent to the right to receive water made available pursuant to [the 1963] contract for any of his excess land,” each water-user in these recordable contracts:
agree[d] to dispose of his excess land ... to persons who can take title thereto as nonexcess land ... within a period of ten (10) years after the date of the execution of said recordable contract and agree[dj further that if said land is not so disposed of within said period of ten (10) years, the Secretary shall have the power to dispose of said land at the appraised value thereof fixed ... on behalf of such large landowner ....
“Each [water-user] entered into at least one such recordable contract with Interior between 1969 and 1974.”
Barcellos,
The 1963 Contract provides Westlands with water service for a specific annual volume at a $7.50/aere-foot water price and $0.50/acre-foot for drainage service. The Contract contains substantial detail about the maximum volume of water to be deliv- . ered in any year, and any reductions for water available from the Corcoran clay. See 1963 Contract ¶¶ 3(a)-(e). Only Article 6(a) enumerates the price for each acre-foot of water. Article 15 provides: “the payment of charges at the rate and upon the terms and conditions provided for herein is a prerequisite to the right to the use of water furnished to the District pursuant to this contract.”
c. Recordable Contract(s)
The prefatory recitals of the recordable contracts highlight that the landowners agreed to divest themselves of their excess lands “as an inducement to the United States to make water and distribution facilities available to the District for the excess land of the Landowner.” 63 Under Article 5, “[a]ll rights of the Landowner to receive Project water for its excess land shall be subject to the provisions of the [1963] District Contract and this contract.” Article 8 of the recordable contracts limits the provision of water and service to excess lands under the terms of the 1963 Contract to times when the landowner owns the land, or sells it to a qualified “nonexcess landowner.” 64
The landowner hereby irrevocably makes, constitutes, and appoints the Secretary of the Interior, United States Department of the Interior, its true and lawful attorney for it in his name, place, and stead, to sell and transfer at any time following the expiration of a period of ten (10) years immediately following the date of execution of this agreement, all of its right, title, and interest in and to any or all of the excess land described in article 2 ....
Article 13 of these recordable contracts reads:
... the computation of the ten-year period prescribed in article 11 hereof shall not include any year or years in which water or service from the Project may not be available to the land involved through no fault of the District or the Landowner.
3. Extrinsic Evidence: Course of Performance
The
Barcellos
opinion’s contractual interpretation must be reconsidered in light of the Ninth Circuit’s later interpretation of the 1963 Contract. Under federal common law, which includes the Uniform Commercial Code in
O’Neill,
The
Barcellos
majority recognized the propriety of interpreting the 1963 Contract as a whole,
see Barcellos,
a. December, 1983: Interior Final Rule U(i)(k)
“Land under recordable contract which is held by a water user not subject to the discretionary provisions may continue to receive irrigation water at the contract rate for the extended term of the contract ....”
By paragraphs 8-9,
67
the 1986 Consent Judgment refunded all water payments in excess of the $8.00/acre-foot contract rate made since June 30, 1978, the date of the Krulitz opinion,
including payments for water used on excess lands. See also Bar-cellos,
The Senate apparently understood that the 1986
Barcellos
Consent Judgment allowed water to continue to be delivered to excess lands at the $8.00/acre-foot rate for the “extended duration of the contract.”
See, e.g.,
132 Cong. Rec. S16575-01 (daily ed. Oct. 17, 1986) (statement of Sen. Proxmire) (“Under the [1986
Barcellos
Consent Judgment] Westlands could violate the [1982 RRA limitation of subsidized water to only non-excess lands] for an additional 20 years.”); 132 Cong. Rec. E2762-01 (extension of remarks, Aug. 6, 1986) (Rep. Tony Coelho) (“[Under the 1986
Barcellos
Consent Judgment] [t]he United States would agree to perform the water service contract that it has had with Westlands since 1963, a contract whose validity has not been challenged. This contract has been approved by the President, by Congress, and by the Court. This contract requires the United States to deliver 900,000 acre-feet of firm water supply at a rate of $7.50 per acre-foot plus the additional drainage service change [sic] of 50 cents per acre-foot.”); 132 Cong. Rec. E2711-01 (extension of remarks, Aug. 1, 1986) (Hon. Howard Wolpe) (“In direct violation of the 1982 Reclamation Reform Act, [the 1986
Barcellos
Consent] settlement entitles a group of wealthy Westland agricultural interests to
expanded
water rights at a fraction of their actual cost.... The settlement not only releases West-lands from responsibility for [the Kester-son Wildlife Refuge] problem, but in fact encourages further such problems by
increasing
the amount of cheap water avail
c. December, 1987: RRA § 224(h)
In December, 1987, Congress amended the RRA to add section 224(h), codified at 43 U.S.C. § 390ww(h), which applied § 205(c) to all recordable contracts executed prior to October 12, 1982, including the Contracts in dispute here. Section 205(c), part of the original RRA, limited the right to subsidized water to ten years from the date the recordable contract was originally executed, regardless whether the ownership period was extended by Article 13 of those recordable contracts (adding the eighteen-month grace period immediately following the resumption of land sales), and mandated “full cost” payment after that grace period.
4. Discussion
The 1963 Contract in Article 3(a) provides that Westlands shall receive water at the contract rate for the duration of the Contract, until 2003 (40 years). 70 The Contract specifies only one price for water — in Article 6(a): a ceiling of $8.00 (with $7.50 water and $0.50 drainage components). The 1963 Contract does not differentiate between the price per acre-foot for excess and non-excess lands, only requiring that the owner of the excess lands execute a recordable contract as a condition precedent to receiving water for those excess lands. There is no dispute that under the 1963 Contract, each landowner was entitled to subsidized water for excess lands during the initial ten-year period within which those excess lands had to be sold. The 1963 contract does not, on its face, absolutely limit the provision of subsidized water to excess lands to a maximum of ten years.
One interpretation now advanced is that the 1963 Contract is not ambiguous, and that the landowners are entitled to the contractual (subsidized) rate for water delivered to all their land as long as they own it, including excess lands during any extension period under Article 13, caused by a condition not their fault, e.g., the government’s failure to adequately provide drainage service.
Undisputed evidence of the contracting parties’ performance during the extension period while the D.C. district court injunction against excess land sales was in effect and afterwards proves:
(1) under Interior’s (one of the contracting parties) December, 1983-87 Rules (expressly revoked 71 by Congress under RRA § 224(h)), water was delivered to excess lands during an extended period (lasting more than 20 years) at the 1963 Contract, not full-cost, rate; and
(2) the 1986 Barcellos Judgment refunded any “full cost” payments made for water delivered to excess lands during the extended period following the 1978 Krulitz opinion until December 30, 1986, the date of the Judgment.
5. Contractual Interpretation Conclusion
The 1963 Contract is unambiguous with respect to water price: it sets the $8.00/acre-foot water and drainage-service rate in Article 6(a). No other contractual provision differentiates between excess and non-excess lands regarding water price, treating all land the same: “the United States shall furnish to the District,
The subsequent course of performance of the parties, as shown by both the 1986 Barcellos Judgment and Interior’s 1983 and 1987 Final Rules, is evidence that the parties, despite the political battle that raged in the Executive and Legislative branches, applied the 1963 Contract water rate uniformly to Westlands’ lands, including excess lands during any extended period: Article 8 of the 1986 Barcellos Judgment provides that the government would not seek full-cost reimbursement for any water delivered before 1986 (a twenty-three-year period), even to excess lands. Interior Final Rule ll(i)(4), promulgated during the extension period, provided that the excess lands “may continue to receive irrigation water at the contract rate for the extended term of the [recordable] contract.”
The action of a non-party, Congress, also supports the water-users’ interpretation, because if the 1963 Contract rate did not apply to the excess lands, there was no need for Congress to pass § 224(h) in 1987 to retrospectively apply § 205(c)’s full-cost requirement to those lands under recordable contracts. Rather, Interior could simply have collected full cost for water delivered to excess lands within Westlands. Section 224(h) was necessary to abrogate any right to subsidized water for excess lands beyond the ten-year period.
Last, this reading also comports with the contractual analysis doctrine that every contract should be read as a whole, with the preference against interpretations that are internally inconsistent. See Trident Ctr.,
The 1963 Contract and 1986 Barcellos Judgment give a protectable contractual right to $8.00/acre-foot water for the water-users’ excess lands during any Article 13 extension periods caused by the government’s failure, if any, to provide drainage service.
The analysis of what drainage service was actually provided and when, requires
F. Impact of RRA section 22b(h)
The 1963 Contract’s water rate applies to excess lands during any extension period under Article 13 of the recordable contracts. “When the United States enters into contract relations, its rights and duties therein are governed generally by the law applicable to contracts between private individuals.”
Mobil Oil Exploration, Producing S.E., Inc. v. United States,
1. Applicability
The Ninth Circuit explicitly held that “Section 224(h) clearly applies” to the water-users.
Barcellos,
In this case by contrast, an Article 13 extension may operate, once the disputed factual determination is made what “drainage service” means for the purposes of extension of the ten-year period. Fire-baugh establishes “drainage service” has not been provided, at least since 1986. This does not end the inquiry.
2. Impact
RRA § 224(h), in combination with RRA §§ 205(a)-(c), abrogate the contractual right to receive CVP water at the 1963 Contract water and drainage-service price, as interpreted by the 1986 Judgment (¶ 4), because together those RRA sections mandate, as of § 224(h)’s effective date, December 22, 1987, that the Bureau charge the “full cost” rate for water to excess lands, not the contractual $8.00/acre-foot rate, and revoke Interior’s rules to the contrary. See 43 U.S.C. §§ 390ee(a)-(e); 390ww(h) (2000). This abridgement of a U.S. government contractual right requires analysis of the unmistakability and sovereign acts defenses.
3.Government Defenses: Unmistaka-bility and Sovereign Acts Doctrines
The government argues that even if a contractual right to the subsidized water rate for excess lands during any Article 13 extension periods caused by the failure to provide drainage existed under the 1963 Contract, it is nevertheless excused from any breach caused by § 224(h)’s full-cost requirement, based upon Congress’ sovereign power to legislate.
“[P]unctilious fulfillment of contractual obligations is essential to the maintenance of the credit of public as well as private debtors.”
Winstar,
a. Unmistakability doctrine
“The Unmistakability Doctrine provides that contracts limiting the government’s future exercise of regulatory authority must be expressed in unmistakable terms.”
Far W. Fed. Bank v. Office of Thrift Supervision-Dir.,
However, Congress passed the Financial Institutions Reform, Recovery, and Enforcement Act of 1989 (“FIRREA”), Pub.L. 101-73, 103 Stat. 183, which,
inter alia,
phased out by 1985 the ability of thrifts to count supervisory goodwill as part of their reserves.
See id.
at 856-57,
The plaintiffs acquired failed thrifts before the enactment of FIRREA, thrifts that federal regulators thereafter seized and liquidated for failure to meet FIR-REA’s new capital reserve requirements, which limited the ability to include “supervisory goodwill.”
See id.
at 858,
One formulation of the unmistakability doctrine is that it applies only when “enforcement of the contractual obligation alleged would block the exercise
of
a sovereign power of the Government.”
Id.
at 879,
Although seven Justices formed the majority to support the
.Winstar
unmistaka-
Five Justices disagreed with the conclusion that the unmistakability doctrine was not available simply because the contracts were risk-shifting agreements. However, three of them, Justices Scalia, Thomas, and Kennedy, nevertheless concurred in the judgment, because they interpreted the government’s actions as conveying an unmistakable promise to continue the favorable regulatory treatment.
See Winstar,
(1)Six Justices agree that the unmis-takability doctrine mandates that the “[sovereign power governs all contracts subject to the sovereign’s jurisdiction, and will remain intact unless surrendered in unmistakable terms.”
Id. at 872,116 S.Ct. 2432 (quoting Pub. Agencies Opposed to Soc. Sec. Entrapment,477 U.S. 41 , 52, [106 S.Ct. 2390 ,91 L.Ed.2d 35 ] (quoting Merrion,455 U.S. at 148 ,102 S.Ct. 894 )) (alteration added and ellipsis omitted).
(2) Six Justices agree that such waiver must be in the form of a “second promise” not to legislate over the contract. (Three Justices explicitly hold that no such promise is necessary).
(3) Only Four Justices agree whether the doctrine’s applicability turns on if a “sovereign power” is implicated, ie., the type of contract. See id. at 879,116 S.Ct. 2432 . (Two Justices explicitly hold that the doctrine applies to all contracts with the government).
(4) Three Justices formulate the doctrine as a type of “reverse presumption,” i.e., the unmistakability doctrine eschews the normal contract rule that parties impliedly promise not to make their performance under the contract impossible. See id. at 920-21,116 S.Ct. 2432 (Scalia, J., concurring in the judgment). 78
Unfortunately, but not unsurprisingly, given the Supreme Court opinion, the few cases applying the unmistakability doctrine after
Winstar
(most from the Federal Circuit) also diverge in their formulation and interpretation of the doctrine. For example, in
Yankee Atomic Electric Co.
79
the Federal Circuit applied
Winstar
to hold that the government’s imposition of special assessments for clean-up of former uranium enrichment plants under a Congressional Act
80
did not violate any rights of the plaintiffs, who were nuclear power plants owners that had fully performed contracts with the United States for the purchase of uranium at fixed prices. These plaintiffs argued that by assessing them for cleanup costs for past use of the uranium, the government had in essence retroactively increased the price they must pay for that uranium, a price that was firmly set in their contracts. The court’s conclusion that the unmistakability doctrine nevertheless shielded the government from liability in this situation rests on its finding that the Act was “a general exercise of Congress’s taxing power for the purpose of addressing a societal problem rather than an act that retroactively increases the price charged to contracting parties for uranium enrichment services.”
Id.
at 1577. This panel rejected the (apparent) five-justice majority holding that the unmistakability doctrine applies regardless of the nature of the underlying contract,
see id.
at 1579,
81
and instead applied a different
Winstar
holding (probably only supported by four Justices — the Souter view) that “application of the unmistak-ability doctrine turns on whether the enforcement of the contractual obligation would effectively block the exercise of a sovereign power of the Government,”
id.
at 1579 (quoting
Winstar,
In
Adams v. United
States,
83
the unmis-takability defense applied to insulate the government against breach of contract
Barsebáck Kraft AB v. United States 84 rejects a breach of contract claim against the government based on a change in the method it used to calculate the price for uranium enrichment services provided under contracts it held with plaintiffs. The court distinguished Winstar because the contract at issue in Barsebáck Kraft AB stated “the charges to be paid to DOE for enrichment services provided to the Customer hereunder will be determined in accordance with the established DOE pricing policy for such services,” which was defined in the contract as “any policy established by DOE that is applicable to prices or charges in effect at the time of performance of any services under this contract,” id. at 1477-78 (quoting contract articles), thereby placing the risk on the plaintiffs, see id. at 1481 (“this case is the other side of the Winstar coin.”). The Barsebáck contract specifically provided the contract provisions were subject to subsequent legislative changes by the pricing language: “any policy” applicable to prices or charges in effect at the time the uranium enrichment services were performed. The court concluded that no contractual promise had been broken and found it unnecessary to reach the unmis-takability defense.
In 2000,
General Dynamics Corp.
combined the unmistakability doctrine with the sovereign acts doctrine (discussed infra) by imputing the requirement that the purported sovereign act be “public and general” in order for the unmistakability doctrine to apply.
See Gen. Dynamics Corp.,
Most recently,
Schism v. United
States
85
appears to reformulate the unmis-
Unmistakability analysis has been applied to include at least four discrete components: (1) existing contractual right; 86 (2) impairment of that right; (3) implication of a sovereign power (arguably); and (4) unmistakable waiver of sovereign authority within the contract, ie., second promise (or at least Justice Scalia’s application of the reverse presumption).
Here, the first requirement is met: the 1963 Contract contains a right to a $7.50/aere-foot water and $0.50/acre-foot drainage-service rate for excess lands during Article 13 ownership extension periods caused by lack of water or drainage service. Subsequent legislation, RRA sections 205(c) and 224(h), impair that right, because they increase the cost to “full cost” payment for water delivered to excess lands. 87
Sections 205(c) and 224(h) require only that a higher price (“full cost”) be charged for governmental resources: water and drainage service. The 1963 Contract is analogous to the example given by Justice Souter in
Winstar
of a contract to which the unmistakability doctrine does not apply,
e.g.,
a supply contract for procuring food for the army.
88
But see Winstar Corp.,
Where no sovereign power is implicated under the 1963 Contract or the 1986 Bar-cellos Judgment, it is unnecessary to determine whether the government unmistakably waived its power to legislate as to those contracts. A parity of reasoning applies to rebut the Justice Scalia reverse presumption, because the “essential” term of the 1963 Contract is the pricing per acre-foot for water and drainage service.
The unmistakability doctrine does not insulate the government from performing the water-pricing terms of the 1963 Contract, the recordable contracts, and the 1986 Barcellos Judgment.
b. Sovereign Acts doctrine
“The Sovereign Acts doctrine provides that government as contractor cannot be held liable for the acts of government as regulator.”
Far W. Fed. Bank,
As with the unmistakability doctrine, no consensus regarding the sovereign acts doctrine exists under
Winstar.
Justice O’Connor did not join Justice Souter’s plurality addressing the “public and general” requirement for applicability of the sovereign acts doctrine (Sections TV-A and B), nor did she write separately on the point. Justice Ginsburg joined the Rehnquist dissent, but not the part of his dissent addressing the sovereign acts doctrine (Part III), failed to join any other opinion, and did not write separately on the sovereign acts doctrine. What
Winstar
leaves is a 3-1 splintering (Justices Souter, Stevens, and Breyer versus Justice Rehnquist) in favor of the “public and general” requirement for application of the sovereign acts defense. In the minority, Justice Rehnquist applies the sovereign acts defense to relieve the government from contractual liability whenever its legislative act has a general “regulatory” purpose, regardless whether a significant impact of that action relieves the government of its contractual obligations.
See id.
at 933-34,
In Scott Timber Co. v. United States, 89 a timber contractor brought suit contending the government breached timber sales contracts when it suspended them from logging in order to protect the marbled murrelet, 90 prompted by a TRO issued by a district court that prohibited the logging on any habitat of the threatened species. See id. at 172-73. The court applied the (Souter three-Justice) sovereign acts doctrine, which it found consisted of two prongs:
First, the court must ask whether the action that impedes the government’s performance of the contract is in fact a “sovereign act,” that is, whether the act is “public and general” and therefore attributable to the government as sovereign. An act of government is considered public and general, in turn, so long as the impact on public contracts is “merely incidental to the accomplishment of a broader governmental objective.”
If the court finds that the government action which prevents- performance of the contract is, in fact attributable to the government as sovereign, then the court must determine in the second step of its analysis whether the government as contractor should be discharged from liability under the common law doctrine of impossibility. To successfully show that the government should be shielded from liability under the impossibility defense, “the Government like any other defending party in a contract action, must show that the sovereign act rendering its performance impossible was an event contrary to the basic assumption of the parties.” Put differently, to satisfy the second prong of the sovereign acts defense, the government must show that the “nonoccurrence of the sovereign act was a basic assumption of the contract.”
Scott Timber Co.,
Here, applying the first step of the three-Justice version of the sovereign acts doctrine, as did Scott Timber Co., the government cannot meet the first prong: a public and general requirement (or even Justice Rehnquist’s regulatory construct). The 1963 Contract has a singular overriding purpose: the government supplies a specified volume of water (and drainage service) to Westlands at a subsidized price ($8.00/acre-foot) over a defined time period (40 years). Section 224(h) raises the acre-foot water price to “full cost,” specifically targeting Westlands and recordable contract contractors with low, fixed-rate water contracts, arising from the legislators’ concern with over-subsidizing “rich corporations and large farmers.” See, e.g. 133 Cong. Rec. E4995-02 (extension of remarks, Dec. 22, 1987) (statement of Rep. George Miller); 133 Cong. Rec. E335-01 (extension of remarks, Feb. 3, 1987) (statement of Rep. George Miller); H.R. Conf. Rep. No. 495, 100th Cong., 2d Sess. 786. 91
There is no “broader governmental objective” to RRA § 224(h), other than to target contractors who had contractual promises for a (low) fixed price per acre-foot for CVP water. The RRA provision is not public and general, because its impact on the 1963 Contract is not “merely incidental” to,
e.g.,
some broader regulatory scheme.
See, e.g., Adams,
c. Effect of Article 26 of the 1963 Contract
Article 26 of the 1963 Contract
92
provides in material part: “... in the event that the Congress amends the excess-land provisions or other provisions of the Federal reclamation laws, the United States agrees, at the option of the District, to negotiate amendments of appropriate articles of this contract, all consistently with the provisions of such repeal or amendment.” The amendments to the federal reclamation laws after 1963 gave the District the option to negotiate amendments of appropriate articles of the 1963 Contract, consistent with the provisions of such amendments. Assuming that the addition of § 224(h) was such an amendment of the federal reclamation laws, negotiations by the District were unsuccessful to retain the contract price for water service furnished during any period of extension to the excess lands under recordable contracts. Although unnecessary to the analysis for reasons stated above, Article 26 is an express reservation of authority to
d. Conclusion
RRA section 224(h) abridges the contractual right to subsidized water for excess lands during any Article 13 extension period caused by the government’s failure to provide water or drainage service. Neither the unmistakability doctrine nor the sovereign acts doctrine shields the government from the breach caused by section 224(h).
G. . Jurisdiction over the Unjust Enrichment Counter-Claim
1. Offset
The Government argues summary judgment is appropriate, claiming that regardless whether the counter-claims for restitution for drainage-component payments are legally sufficient, there is nevertheless no independent waiver of sovereign immunity that allows the water-users to bring an unjust enrichment counterclaim to recover the drainage component previously paid by water-users to Westlands for the government. See Doc. 327 at 2.
“The United States, as the sovereign, is immune from suit unless express permission to sue it has been granted by Congress.” 6 ChaRles Alan Wright, Arthur R. Miller, & Mary Kay Kane, Federal PraCtioe and Procedure § 1427, at 194 (3d ed.1990) (footnote omitted). “When sovereign immunity is at issue, the government is immune from a suit, whether couched as an original claim or as a counter claim, unless it has waived its immunity.”
United States v. $277,000 U.S. Currency,
The cases cited by the water-users are not to the contrary. In both
Northern Cheyenne Tribe v. Lujan,
This rule is, however, subject to one very narrow exception: where a party seeks simply to offset the amount of the sovereign’s recovery.
See Presidential Gardens
Assocs.,
The water-users’ allegation that the United States is not entitled to retain the monies collected by Westlands for the drainage-service component of the per-acre-foot water rate is in substance based on offset. The government argues that the water-users owe the difference between the full cost rate for excess lands and the contractual rate that the water-users paid. The water-users rejoin that they paid for drainage as a component of the per acre-foot water payments and did not receive drainage, entitling them to return of those funds under an unjust enrichment counterclaim. See, e.g., 1 B.E. Within, Summary of California Law (Contracts) § 91, at 122 (9th ed. 1987) (“When one obtains a benefit which he may not justly retain, he is unjustly enriched. ... [Unjust enrichment] is designed to restore the aggrieved party to his former position by return of the thing or its equivalent in money.”) (quoting sources).
The water-users assert an offset counterclaim; to the extent any funds are due them for the absence of drainage service, that amount may decrease any amount they owe for water-service payments less than the full-cost rate. 95 Under Presidential Gardens Assocs. ’s offset (recoupment) exception to sovereign immunity, jurisdiction exists to hear the water-users’ counterclaim for unjust enrichment premised on not receiving drainage service. 96
This case is distinguishable from
Orff’s
jurisdictional analysis. There, water-users sought to directly enforce, as intended third-party beneficiaries, Westlands’ contractual rights under its water-service agreement with Interior.
See Orff v. United States,
CIV-F-93-5217 (April 12, 2000)
(Orff Doc. 634).
Westlands was not a party and did not seek enforcement of the contract. Here, Westlands, the contractor, has interpled all water-service and drainage assessments for the disputed period. The water-users are real parties-in-interest against the United States in the dis-puté over their entitlement to funds they paid under direct contract with the government, which are deposited with the court. No one else is willing to litigate these claims on them behalf. A res in the form of money held by the court, over which there is an entitlement dispute, is a different and independent basis for jurisdiction.
See, e.g., Miranne v. First Fin. Bank, F.S.B. (In re Miranne),
The recordable contracts of each water-user are direct contracts with the United States, which require interpretation and a declaration of rights and duties to resolve who is entitled to the funds each water-user has paid to Westlands for the United States and are held by the court. 97 The money on deposit in this case provides another basis for jurisdiction. Independent jurisdiction exists; this case is not governed by Orff.
H. Prematurity of Unjust Enrichment Claim
Despite the age
of
this litigation, the unjust enrichment claim is inchoate. In
Firebaugh Canal Co.,
the Court of Appeals ordered the Bureau of Reclamation, on remand, to promptly take action to provide Westlands with drainage service, although not necessarily by construction of an interceptor drain as described in the San Luis Act. Rather, deference has been extended to the reasonable discretion of Interior to choose an alternative means of drainage.
See Firebaugh Canal Co.,
Drainage, encompassing a physical drain or an alternative, cannot be provided without funding. It may be that if the drainage component funds paid by, inter alia, the water-users are used to provide for drainage service to comply with the Fire-baugh Canal Co. mandate, the Government is not unjustly enriched, because it will not have impermissibly retained the drainage monies. 98
1. Article 28 of the 1963 Contract
A separate issue concerning the appropriate remedy arises under Article 28 of the 1963 Contract. Article 28 provides in material part:
28. The expenditure of any money or the performance of any ivork by the United States hereunder which may require appropriation of money by the Congress or the allotment of funds shall be contingent upon such appropriations or allotment being made. The failure of the Congress so to appropriate funds or the absence of the allotment of funds shall not relieve the District from any obligations then accrued under this contract, and no liability shall accrue to the United States in case such funds are not appropriated or allotted.
1963 Contract ¶ 28 (emphasis added).
The question that is presented by Article 28’s release from liability to the United States for failing to appropriate or allot funds to engage in “the performance of any work” under the 1963 Contract has not been fully considered in this litigation. NOTICE IS GIVEN THAT AS PART OF ANY FUTURE PROCEEDINGS OVER THE NATURE AND EXTENT OF RECOVERY, THE MEANING AND EFFECT OF ARTICLE 28 MUST BE ADDRESSED.
The water-users’ motion for summary judgment under a theory of unjust enrichment is premature; it must await determination on remand in Firebaugh Canal Co. or here, of the value of any drainage “service” previously provided or to be provided to the water-users.
The watei'-users’ and Interior’s course of performance, under the 1986 Barcellos Judgment and the 1963 Contract’s four corners, is evidence that they interpret the 1963 Contract in a manner consistent with the reasonable interpretation of its language: that the $8.00/acre-foot contractual rate applies to excess lands during any extension period under Article 13, if drainage service was not provided for at least ten years to lands under recordable contract. A failure to provide drainage service is an Article 13 cause for extension. However, if the evidence establishes that following 1963, the water-users received a total of ten years of water and drainage service for their excess lands under recordable contract, then no contractual right to continued subsidized water for excess lands exists, because the benefit of the bargain under the 1963 Contract has been received.
In December 1987, RRA section 224(h) abrogated the contract price by mandating full-cost payment for San Luis water service. The unmistakability defense does not apply, because § 224(h) does not implicate any sovereign power, and if it did, the explicit price and time terms in the contract suffice to rebut the reverse presumption. The sovereign acts defense does not apply because § 224(h) is not a “public and general” statute (nor even regulatory in nature), but rather, was specifically enacted to target less than full-cost pricing in federal water contracts. This is evident from the legislative history, which refers to the 1963 Contract’s fixed, low-cost rates for federal reclamation water and drainage service.
Factual issues, inter alia, remain: (1) what is the extent and value of any failure to provide drainage service; (2) what is the effect of Article 28 of the 1963 Contract on any remedy sought; (3) whether the United States is unjustly enriched by-retaining the water-users’ payments for drainage service and facilities; (4) when and for what time was any Article 13 extension applicable to water service for any landowners’ excess lands under recordable contract; and (5) to whom does the interest on the interpled fund belong. These issues cannot be resolved without further evidentiary proceedings. For the foregoing reasons, IT IS HEREBY ORDERED:
1. The water-users’ motion to reconsider the Court’s April 3, 1997, memorandum decision and order (Doc. 278) is GRANTED.
2. The finding in the April 3, 1997, memorandum decision that no enforceable right exists to $8.00/acre-foot water for excess lands during any extension period is VACATED.
3. The water-users are entitled to summary adjudication that they have an enforceable right under the 1963 Contract, recordable contracts, and the 1986 Barcellos Judgment to the contract rate of water, $8.00/acre-foot, for excess lands during any lawful Article 13 extension period caused by the government’s failure, if any, to provide drainage service.
4. The parties are given NOTICE that as part of any future proceedings over the nature and extent of damages from lack of drainage service, Article 28’s meaning and effect must be addressed.
5. The remaining cross-summary judgment motions are DENIED WITHOUT PREJUDICE.
SO ORDERED.
Notes
. The group "Boston Ranch Parties” consists of Boston Ranch Company, S. Stamoules & Company, South Boston Company, and Wes-thaven Farming Company ("water-users”).
. As of February 22, 2001, the Treasury Bill had a present value of $10,379,000.
. See Bureau of Reclamation, at http://www.usbr.gov/main/index.html (visited Jan. 10, 2001) (last modified Jan. 8, 2001).
. See, e.g., Bryan J. Wilson, Westlands Water District and Its Federal Water: A Case Study of Water District Politics, 7 STAN. ENVTL. L.J. 187, 188 (1987/1988) (“Westlands Water District lies on the western edge of California's San Joaquin Valley, southwest of Fresno. It is roughly rectangular, bounded approximately by Interstate 5 on the west and the San Joaquin River on the east.”) (citing WEST-LANDS WATER DISTRICT, FACTS AND FIGURES 2 (1987)).
. For an in-depth description of the history of the CVP and the lands involved, see
Ivanhoe Irrigation Dist. v. McCracken,
. Pub.L. No. 86-488, 74 Stat. 156 (1960).
. Boston Ranch Company "executed two recordable contracts in 1972, covering 23,711 acres of excess lands.”
Barcellos,
.Westhaven Farming Company "executed five recordable contracts in 1973 and 1974, covering 5,556 excess acres.”
Barcellos,
. Reclamation Act of 1902, Pub.L. No. 57-161, ch. 1093, § 5, 32 Stat. 388 (former 43 U.S.C. §§ 371-573).
. "The purpose of the original 1902 Act was to encourage people to go West, not to engage in big-time speculation, but to grow crops on modest family farms in the country’s drier regions so that the nation’s agricultural bounty would increase.” Id. at 815 (internal citation omitted). Additional objectives were to widely distribute the benefits of publicly-financed water reclamation projects; promote owner-operated farms; and preclude speculative gain. See 35 Cong. Rec. 6758 (June 13, 1902) (statement of Rep. Martin).
. 44 Slat. 478 (1926) (amending 1902 Act).
. Between 1969 and 1974, all water-users entered into recordable contracts that complied with the 1963 Contract. See Barcellos, 899 F.2d at 816.
. This suit was brought by the National Land for People on behalf of several small farmers who were unsuccessful in their attempt to purchase excess lands in the West-lands Water District and sought to prevent Westlands from engaging in questionable land transfers by requiring Interior to promulgate regulations of its approval of Westlands excess lands sales under recordable contracts.
.See 85
Interior Dec. 197, at 297,
. The action was captioned: Barcellos & Wolfsen, Inc. v. Westlands Water Dist., No. CV-F-79-106 EDP (E.D.Cal.).
. Before the 1982 RRA, federal reclamation law was primarily comprised of the 1902 RRA, 32 Stat. 388, as amended by: (1) the Omnibus Adjustment Act of 1926, 44 Stat. 636; and (2) the Reclamation Project Act of 1939, 53 Stat. 1187.
. See S. Con. Rep. No. 568, 97th Cong., 2d Sess. 5 (1982).
. These sections read:
(a) Generally
The provisions of this subchapter shall be applicable to any district which—
(1) enters into a contract with the Secretary subsequent to October 12, 1982;
(2) enters into any amendment of its contract with the Secretary subsequent to October 12, 1982, which enables the district to receive supplemental or additional benefits; or
(3) which amends its contract for the purpose of conforming to the provisions of this subchapter.
(b) Amendment of existing contracts
Any district which has an existing contract with the Secretary as of October 12, 1982, which does not enter into an amendment of such contract as specified in subsection (a) of this section shall be subject to Federal reclamation law in effect immediately prior to October 12, 1982, as that law is amended or supplemented by sections 209 through 230 of this title [43 U.S.C.A. §§ 390ii to 390zz-l, 373a, 422e, 425b, 485h], Within a district that does not enter into an amendment of its contract with the Secretary within four and one-half years of October 12, 1982, irrigation water may be delivered to lands leased in excess of a landholding of one hundred and sixty acres only if full cost, as defined in section 390bb(3)(A) of this title, is paid for such water as is assignable to those lands leased in excess of such landholding of one hundred and sixty acres: Provided, That the interest rate used in computing full cost under this subsection shall be the same as provided in section 390ee(a)(3) of this title.
Id.
. 79-106 Doc. 412.
. Congress approved the 1986 Stipulated Judgment by inaction, because under Public Law 99-190, § 122, Congress had 30 days to act after the Judgment was submitted to it, but did not stop its effectiveness.
. See, e.g., Bryan J. Wilson, Westlands Water District and Its Federal Water: A Case Study of Water District Politics, 7 STAN. ENVTL. L.J. 187, 197 (1987/1988) (discussing boundaries of original Westlands and Westplains areas, which merged into present-day Westlands).
. Interior intended the so-called "hammer clause” to encourage compliance with the new acreage and pricing limitations of the 1982 RRA,
see 128
Cong. Rec. 26,073 (Sept. 29, 1982) (statement of Rep. Udall), by giving water contractors a choice: voluntarily and irrevocably elect to amend their contracts to comply with the RRA’s full-cost pricing provisions for excess lands in order to take advantage of the expanded acreage limitations (960 acres),
see
43 U.S.C. § 390cc(b) (2000), or continue to receive water’ at the subsidized
. Boston Ranch sold approximately 20,280 acres of excess lands in May, 1989, and 2,848 excess lands in November, 1989. See Doc. 48 ¶ 39. However, on January 23, 1990, Boston Ranch executed an election to subject its remaining 632 acres to the discretionary provisions of the 1982 RRA.
In 1986, S. Stamoules & Company gifted 160 acres of land. See id. at ¶ 40. In January, 1988, it distributed approximately 960 acres to each of its individual partners, who elected to subject those lands to the discretionary provisions of the 1982 RRA. See id.
South Boston Company and WestHaven sold the last of their excess lands in approximately 1992.
. Pub.L. No. 100-203, 101 Stat. 1330.
. It did, however, provide that Interior "shall not seek reimbursement for any amounts due under this subsection ... which was due prior to December 22, 1987.” Id.
. Section 205(a) of the RRA states in relevant portion:
(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of law, any contract with a district entered into by the Secretary [of Interior] ... shall provide for the delivery of irrigation water at full cost ... to [excess lands]
43 U.S.C. § 390ee(a) (2000).
. This amendment was probably necessary because § 203(b) stated that 1982 RRA §§ 209-30 govern contracts executed before the RRA's enactment date, but did not include § 205(c) (the "full cost” requirement) as one of those sections.
. "Full cost” is defined as:
an annual rate as determined by the Secretary that shall amortize the expenditures for construction properly allocable to irrigation facilities in service, including all operation and maintenance deficits funded, less payments, over such periods as may' be required under Federal reclamation law or applicable contract provisions, with interest on both accruing from October 12, 1982, on costs outstanding at that date, or from the date incurred in the case of costs arising subsequent to October 12, 1982: Provided, That operation, maintenance, and replacement charges required under Federal reclamation law, including this subchapter, shall be collected in addition to the full cost charge.
43 U.S.C. § 390bb(3)(A) (2000).
. 43 U.S.C. § 390ww(h) (2000).
. A party seeking to bring an interpleader action under Rule 22 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure must first establish federal jurisdiction over its claims.
See Aetna Life Ins. Co. v. Bayona,
. 43 U.S.C. § 390ww(h) (2000).
. But see id. at 830 ("at the time Congress added section 224(h) to the RRA, [the water users] had an existing contract right to receive water for their excess lands at the 1963 contract rate.”) (Fernandez, J. dissenting).
. This proved to be a improvident course of action, because an essentially impermeable clay layer underlies most of the western San Joaquin Valley (where Westlands is located), which means that the waste water that was not drained could not move downward through the soil to leach out the salts, causing a think layer of salt and selenium to rest on the surface of the farm land, which will continue to cause irreparable harm to the land. See, e.g., RUTH PATRICK, EMILY FORD, & JOHN QUARLES, GROUNDWATER CONTAMINATION IN THE UNITED STATES 96 (1987);- KENNETH D. FREDERICK & JAMES C. HANSON, WATER FOR WESTERN AGRICULTURE 190 (1982).
. 43 U.S.C. § 390ww(h) (2000).
. Id.
. 43 U.S.C. § 390ww(h) (2000).
. Firebaugh also held "the subsequent Congressional action has not eliminated the Department’s duty to provide drainage, but that it has given the Department the authority to pursue alternative options other than the interceptor drain to satisfy its duty under the San Luis Act,” id. at 577 (emphasis added):
Although the district court can compel the Department of Interior to provide drainage service as mandated by the San Luis Act, the district court cannot eliminate agency discretion as to how it satisfies the drainage requirement. By ordering the Department of Interior to apply for a discharge permit, the district court precludes other, non interceptor-drain, solutions to the drainage duty created by the San Luis Act.
id, at 578 (remanding to district court, for implementation of, and compelling the Department to provide, drainage service).
. In a letter dated October 23, 2000, the Boston Ranch Parties point to
General Dynamics Corp. v. United States,
. Article 20 of the 1986 Judgment specifically precludes any reimbursement for the $0.50 drainage component paid prior to the Judgment: "No party or water user shall be enli-tied to reimbursement of any $0.50 per acre foot drainage service charged paid in the past.”
. Evidence submitted in support of or in opposition to a motion for summary judgment must be admissible under the standard articulated in 56(e).
See Keenan v. Hall,
. A district court’s denial of either motion is reviewed for an abuse of discretion.
See Fuller,
. The underlying decision on the merits,
United States v. Navarro,
. “On motion and upon such terms as are just, the court may relieve a party or a party’s legal representative from a final judgment, order, or proceeding for the following reasons: (1) mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect; (2) newly discovered evidence which by due diligence could not have been discovered in time to move for a new trial under Rule 59(b); (3) fraud (whether heretofore denominated intrinsic or extrinsic), misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse party; (4) the judgment is void; (5) the judgment has been satisfied, released or discharged, or a prior judgment upon which it is based has been revered or otherwise vacated, or it is no longer equitable that the judgment should have prospective application; or (6) any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.” Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(b) (1992).
. Local Rule 78-23 0(k) permits reconsideration of:
any motion [that] has been granted or denied in whole or in part, ... [upon motion] setting forth the material facts and circumstances surrounding each motion for which reconsideration is sought, including:
(1) when and to what Judge or Magistrate Judge the prior motion was made,
(2) what ruling, decision or order was made thereon, and
(3) what new or different facts or circumstances are claimed to exist which did not exist or were not shown upon such prior motion, or what other grounds exist for the motion.
E.D. Cal. Civ. L.R. 78-230(k) (Aug. 1, 1997).
.“Relief under Rule 60(b)(2) 'is an extraordinary remedy that is to be granted only in exceptional circumstances.’ ’’
N. Ind. Gun & Outdoor Show, Inc. v. Hedman,
.
Barcellos,
. I.e., if "water or service” in Article 13 did not encompass approving land sales, then Article 13 did not give the water-users a right to extend the 10 years of ownership and subsidized water. If the ten years of ownership and subsidized water was not extended by the recordable contracts perforce, then § 244(h)'s increase in the acre-foot rate did not infringe any protected contractual right.
. Barcellos contains a few statements that, if read out of context, appear to hold that the 1963 Contract provides for only ten (10) years of subsidized water for excess lands:
(1)Article 13, when properly construed, perhaps at most implicitly provides for the converse relationship between extended ownership and extended water rights. If a landowner were actually to suffer from a cut off of water through no fault of his own, it is arguable that he would be entitled to hold onto his lands for a long enough time to receive the benefit that Article 13 seems intended to confer, id. at 823-34;
(2) We have found no provision in either the District Contract or the recordable contracts that provides that the right to receive water on excess lands for more than ten years follows from the right to own them for more than ten years, id. at 824;
(3) Although we hold that the District contract and the [water-users'Jrecordable contracts did not give them any contractual right to receive more than ten years of subsidized water ...., id. at 825; and
(4) In sum, since we find that the appellants never had a contractual right to receive more than ten years of water for their excess lands, Congress, in enacting § 224(h), did not deprive them of a property right within the meaning of the fifth amendment, id.
Each of these passages must be considered as it bears on the specific issue before the Appeals Court: did the term "water or sendee” in Article 13 of the recordable contracts encompass the "service” of approving land sales? In finding no basis to treat land-sales approval as "water or service,” no contractual right to an Article 13 extension existed, so § 224(h) did not abridge any contractual right.
.
But see Levander v. Prober (In re Levander),
. Under the doctrine of res judicata, a prior adjudication may have two distinct types of preclusive effects: claim preclusion and issue
. E.g., in Barcellos, the water-users argued that because they were prevented by injunction from selling their lands during its term, that period tolled the ten-years’ deadline to divest themselves of their lands, and they were entitled to continue to receive low-cost water until that ten years expired; an interpretation that the Ninth Circuit rejected.
. There can be no argument for Article 13 extension if water and drainage service were provided to excess lands for ten years following execution of any recordable contract. This issue has been decided by Barcellos.
. Sources of federal common law include: (1) the Restatement of Contracts (2d); (2) the U.C.C.; (3) federal caselaw; and (4) state law. See Robert E. Jones, Gerald E. Rosen, William E. Wegner, and Jeffrey Scott, Federal Civil Trials and Evidence ¶ 8:4455 (2000) (citing cases).
. "The basis for the rule that 'extrinsic evidence is inadmissible to interpret, vary or add to the terms of an unambiguous written instrument’ is that
if parties to an agreement could not rely on written words,, to express their consent to the express terms of that agreement, those words would become little more than sideshows in a circus of self-serving declarations as to what the parties to the agreement really had in mind. The parole evidence rule thus enables parties to rely on written instruments as embodying a complete memorial of their agreement, and to avoid costly and disruptive litigation over the existence of oral and implied termsthat may or may not have been contemplated by the parties.”
Barcellos & Wolfsen, Inc.,
.
See Cent. Ariz. Water Conservation Dist. v. United States,
. U.C.C. § 2-202 provides:
Terms with respect to which the confirmatory memoranda of the parties agree or which are otherwise set forth in a writing intended by the parties as a final expression of their agreement with respect to such terms as are included therein may not be contradicted by evidence of any prior agreement or of a contemporaneous oral agreement but may be explained or supplemented
(a) by course of dealing or usage of trade (Section 1-205) or by course of performance (Section 2-208); and
(b) by evidence of consistent additional terms unless the court finds the writing to have been intended also as a complete and exclusive statement of the terms of the agreement.
. “[T]he maxim
omnia praesumuntur contra proferentem ...
favor[s] that meaning which least benefits the drafter, if it finds one or more provisions are subject to multiple reasonable meanings.”
Sharpe v. W. Indian Co., Ltd.,
. See, e.g.,
Indep. Petroleum Ass'n of Am. v. Armstrong,
.See also Gilmore v. California,
. See also, e.g., United States ex rel. Lindenthal v. Gen. Dynamics Corp.,
. An acre-foot is a "volume measurement in irrigation equal to the amount of water that will cover one acre of land in one foot of water." BLACK’S LAW DICTIONARY 24 (7th ed.1999). It is equivalent to 325,851 gallons of water, see, e.g., Water Science Glossary of Terms, at http://wwwga.usgs.gov/edu/ dictionaiy.html (last visited Feb. 19, 2001) (no modification date given), which is 43,560 ft3.
. Section 25(a) of the 1963 Contract defines "excess land” as lands in excess of 160 acres for a single person or 320 acres for a husband and wife jointly owning the land.
. Pages 2-3.
. Article 8 of the recordable contract reads in its entirety:
None of the excess land described in article 2 hereof shall be entitled to receive water nor shall service be made available to such land pursuant to the [1963] Contract, except while owned by the Landowner, unless the same shall have been sold to a person who, as the owner of such land, is qualified as a nonexcess landowner to receive Project water under the provisions of the Federal reclamation laws, the District Contract, and this agreement in full compliance with the provisions thereof.
. Former 43 C.F.R. § 426.11(i)(4).
. "Land under recordable contract which is held by a water user not subject to the discretionary provisions may continue to receive irrigation water at the contractual rate for the extended term of the contract."
. Pages 32-36,
. The Boston Ranch Parties executed their recordable contracts in 1972. Under Section 205(c), their right to subsidized water expired in 1982, with the 18-month extension from when land sales were resumed, which also was in 1982 (under § 205(d)). There was a period from mid-1983 to 1986, 2.5 years, that the Boston Ranch Parties received subsidized water that § 205(c) said they should not receive. Nevertheless, the 1986 Barcellos Judgment refunded to them any "full cost” amounts they paid for their excess lands before 1986 and prevented recovery of any amounts over the contract rate through the date of the 1986 Barcellos Judgment. See 1986 Judgment ¶ 8.
.It was, however, unclear whether § 205(c) could legitimately apply to contracts executed prior to the effective date of the 1982 RRA, which lead to the passage of § 224(h).
. Paragraph 4.1 of the 1986 Barcellos Judgment extended the 1963 Contract’s effective period until the end of 2007.
. RRA § 224(h) specifically revoked Interi- or's Rule that provided that the contractual water rate applied to excess lands during the extended period. See 43 U.S.C. 390ww(h) (2000) (“any decision, rule, or regulation promulgated by the Department of the Interior to the contrary is hereby revoked.”).
. I.e., the parties agreed in the 1963 Contract to ten years of subsidized water and drainage service for excess lands under recordable contract. However, if drainage service has not been provided, which the Fire-baugh remand will determine, then those ten years of "water and service" for the excess lands have not yet been provided (even though more than 10 years of subsidized water has been). In that case, Article 13 extends the ownership and contract-priced water for the excess lands until 10 total years of water and drainage service have been provided.
. No consideration, aside from rational basis review, was given to the retroactive application of the "full cost” rate or the legal effect of the later legislation on the 1963 Contract and the 1986
Barcellos
Judgment.
Barcellos
analyzed the enactment of Interior Rule 1 l(i)(4) as not giving rise to a constitutionally-protectable expectation that could not be overridden by Congressional passage of RRA § 224(h).
See Barcellos,
. I.e., if the government continually enters contracts and subsequently legislates over them, it will lose bargaining credibility, because other contracting parties will lack trust that it will fulfill its promises. This will lead to contract uncertainty, which will in turn lead to higher transaction costs, e.g., parties contracting with the government will attempt to place every possible contingency within the contract to prevent any legislative problems, which would be inefficient.
. If “a contract is reasonably construed to include a risk-shifting component that may be enforced without effectively barring the exercise of [a power peculiar to the government], the enforcement of the risk allocation raises nothing for the unmistakability doctrine to guard against, and there is no reason to apply it.” Id. at 880 (Souter, J.).
. For a discussion of a few cases decided post-Winstar, see Joshua I Schwartz, The Status of the Sovereign Acts and Unmistakability Doctrines in the Wake of Winstar: An Interim Report, 51 Ala. L.Rev. 1177 (2000).
. Justice Souter announced the judgment of the Court, and was joined by Justices Stevens and Breyer and Justice O’Connor, in part. Justice Breyer wrote a separate concurring opinion, which no other Justice joined. Justice Scalia wrote a separate concurring opinion, joined by Justices Thomas and Kennedy. Justice Rehnquist authored a dissent, which Justice Ginsburg joined in part.
. Justice Scalia states:
In my view, the doctrine has little if any independent legal force beyond what would be dictated by normal principles of contract interpretation. It is simply a rule of presumed (or implied-in-fact) intent. Generally, contract law imposes upon , a party to a contract liability for any impossibility of performance that is attributable to that party’s own actions. That is a reasonable estimation of what the parties intend. When I promise to do x in exchange for your doing y, I impliedly promise not to do anything that will disable me from doing x, or disable you from doing y — so that if either of our performances is rendered impossible by such an act on my part, I am not excused from my obligation. When the contracting party is the government, however, it is simply not reasonable to presume an intent of that sort. To the contrary, it is reasonable to presume (unless the opposite clearly appears ) that the sovereign does not promise that none of its multifarious sovereign acts, needful for the public good, will incidentally disable it or the other party from performing one of the promised acts. The requirement of unmistakability embodies this reversal of the normal reasonable presumption. Governments do not ordinarily agree to curtail their sovereign or legislative powers, and contracts must be interpreted in a commonsense way against that background understanding.
Id. (emphasis in original).
.
. Energy Policy Act of 1992 (creating the Uranium Enrichment Decontamination and Decommissioning Fund).
. Presumably, the five Justices are the three concurring Justices (Scalia, Kennedy, and Thomas) and the two dissenters (Rehnquist and Ginsburg).
. The panel employed the questionable reasoning that because the plaintiffs sought money damages, they essentially blocked the “exercise of this sovereign power to tax, for if [they] were to prevail, the Government would be required to refund the entire amount assessed. This is akin to a tax rebate, which even the plurality seemed to recognize as a blocking of the exercise of sovereign power.”
Id.
(citing
Winstar,
.
.
.
.
See, e.g., Stohler v. Menke,
. The prefatory language in the 1963 Contract: "This Contract, made ... in pursuance generally of the Act of June 17, 1902 (32 Stat. 388), and acts amendatory thereof or supplementary thereto," is distinguishable from the language in Barseback Kraft AB, because there, the contract specifically left the yearly uranium enrichment pricing subject to subsequent legislation ,by defining the price as that under "any policy established by DOE that is applicable to prices or charges in effect at the time of performance of any services."
Here, in contrast, there is simply prefatory language that indicates that the amendments and supplements to the 1902 Act up until the date of the 1963 Contract applied to the Contract. Nowhere is the water price subjected to future rules as may be in effect when it is delivered. This exact contractual language has previously been interpreted as not expressly subjecting the 1963 Contract to subsequent legislation.
See Westlands Water Dist. v. United States Dep’t of Interior, Bureau of Reclamation, 850
F.Supp. 1388, 1405-07 (E.D.Cal.1994) ("The interpretation offered by the.government would amount to a reservation of 'an unlimited right to escape its contractual obligations,’ a disfavored construction which renders the government’s promises 'illusory and the contract void.’ ’’);
accord Barcellos & Wolfsen,
. It is possible to construe any government contract as implicating a sovereign power by virtue of the government’s role as a contracting party, e.g., the army food contract could be viewed as implicating the sovereign power to regulate the nation's armed forces. However, as Winstar shows from its facts, the implicated sovereign power should be construed narrowly.
.
. See, e.g., The Marbled Murrelet, at http://www.foer.org/murrelet.htm (last visited Feb. 23, 2001) (last modified Nov. 13, 2000).
. At that time, there was only a handful of pre-1982 contracts for subsidized water to which Section 224(h) applies.
. Article 12 of the recordable contracts is essentially the same.
. Neither
United States v. California,
.
E.g.,
in
United States v. Iron Mountain Mines, Inc.,
. I.e., for purposes of offset, (Water underpayment) — (drainage overpayment) = Government’s recovery a 0.
. Any recoupment for the water-users based on the $0.50 drainage component is, of course, limited to defeating the government's recovery,
i.e.,
to the extent the drainage re-coupment reduces liability for the full-cost
.
See also, e.g., 43 U.S.C.
§ 390uu (2000) ("Consent is given to join the United States as a necessary party defendant in any suit to adjudicate, confirm, validate, or decree the contractual rights of a contracting entity and the United States regarding any contract executed pursuant to Federal reclamation law. The United States, when a party to any suit, shall be deemed to have waived any right to plead that it is not amenable thereto by reason of its sovereignty, and shall be subject to judgments, orders, and decrees of the court having jurisdiction, and may obtain review thereof, in the same manner and to the same extent as a private individual under like circumstances. Any suit pursuant to this section may be brought in any United States district court in the State in which the land involved is situated.”);
Sumner Peck Ranch, Inc.,
. On August 28, 2000, the water-users argued that the government has been unjustly enriched regardless of the drainage determination on remand in Firebaugh, so their claim is ripe now, because some of the owners sold their lands before 1992, and therefore any drainage in the future will not benefit them. See Doc. 344 15:8-18:17. Although facially appealing because these owners will not prospectively benefit from any drainage, no unjust enrichment exists until such time as either the determination is made whether the studies and interim activities performed by the Bureau since 1986 are or are not "drainage service.” Neither the 1963 contract nor any subsequent agreement requires that the fifty-cent drainage component be used for drainage in the same year in which it was collected. Even if it is eventually found that the government provided no "drainage service” since 1986, whether the government may apply the drainage monies to future drainage must be determined.
