Venture Coal Sales Company, Sanner Energies, Inc., and Future Industries, Inc. (collectively “Venture Coal”) appeal from the decision of the United States Court of Federal Claims granting the government’s motion to dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction.
Venture Coal Sales Co. v. United States,
BACKGROUND
The appellants are three Pennsylvania coal companies in the business of mining and selling coal, both domestically and through export. During the period beginning with the first quarter of 1988 and ending with the second quarter of 1995, the companies paid a tax on all the coal they produced, pursuant to the Coal Sales Act, 26 U.S.C. § 4121 (1994) (“Coal Sales Tax”). The tax was imposed both on coal sold domestically and on coal that was exported. Section 4221(a) of Title 26 of the United States Code lists certain sales as exempt from taxation under that chapter of the code, but specifically excludes the Coal Sales Tax from that exemption. Id. § 4221(a) (”[N]o tax shall be imposed under this chapter (other than section b.121 ...) on the sale by the manufacturer ... of an article ... for export, ... but only if such exportation ... is to occur before any other use.” (emphasis added)).
In September 1997, seven coal corporations, not including the appellants, filed a complaint in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, seeking a refund of taxes on exported coal paid between January 1 and March 31 of that same year. In 1998, the district court held in that case that the Coal Sales Tax violated the Export Clause of the United States Constitution, art. I, § 9, cl. 5, and ordered a refund of the taxes to those coal corporations.
Ranger Fuel Corp. v. United States,
In October 2003, the appellants, who were not parties to the Virginia lawsuit, filed suit in the United States Court of Federal Claims seeking a refund of taxes paid on coal they exported from 1988 through 1995 pursuant to the Coal Sales Act. They alleged jurisdiction in the Court of Federal Claims under the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1) (1994). The government, however, argued that the plain *1104 tiffs failed to bring their suit within the six-year statute of limitations period for Tucker Act claims, id. § 2501, as the taxes were paid more than seven years before the suit was initiated. Accordingly, the government moved to dismiss the suit for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, and the Court of Federal Claims granted the motion. The coal companies appealed. We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3).
DISCUSSION
The Court of Federal Claims’ dismissal of a case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction is a legal determination that we review de novo.
Frazer v. United States,
I. Accrual of Claims
On appeal, Venture Coal disputes the application of § 2501. It argues that its claims accrued only when the Eastern District of Virginia rendered its Ranger Fuel decision in 1998. Venture Coal alleges that only when the district court first held that the statute was unconstitutional and then awarded the plaintiffs in that case damages in the form of refunded taxes did a cause of action accrue. Venture Coal maintains that until that decision, events sufficient to support its own claim had not yet occurred and it had no cause of action. Thus, because it initiated its suit within six years of that decision, Venture Coal argues that its own case was timely filed and was not barred by the statute of limitations.
In support of its position, Venture Coal cites
McKesson Corp. v. Division of Alcoholic Beverages & Tobacco,
The government responds that a new claim accrued each time Venture Coal paid the Coal Sales Tax. It argues that Venture Coal, like the plaintiffs in
Ranger Fuel,
could have filed suit as soon as it paid the tax. The government asserts that the claims are time-barred because Venture Coal filed its suit after the six-year period permitted by 28 U.S.C. § 2501. With respect to
McKesson,
the government counters that the Supreme Court stated in that case that a lawsuit seeking the refund of an unconstitutional state tax should be governed by the appropriate state statute of limitations. Thus, it argues that enforcement of the six-year statute of limitations period here is consistent with
McKesson.
The government further asserts that
Hatter v. United States,
We agree with the government that Venture Coal’s claims are barred by the
*1105
statute of limitations.
2
Section 2501 of Title 28 of the United States Code provides that “[e]very claim of which the United States Court of Federal Claims has jurisdiction shall be barred unless the petition thereon is filed within six years after such claim first accrues.” We have held that “a claim does not accrue until all events necessary to fix the liability of the defendant have occurred — when ‘the plaintiff has a legal right to maintain his or her action.’ ”
Catawba Indian Tribe v. United States,
While the Supreme Court’s pronouncement in 1986 might be relevant to fixing the time when the Tribe subjectively first knew what the Act meant, it is fundamental jurisprudence that the Act’s objective meaning and effect were fixed when the Act was adopted. Any later judicial pronouncements simply explain, but do not create, the operative effect.
Id. Accordingly, we held that the tribe’s claim was barred by § 2501.
The same rule applies here. Each time that Venture Coal paid the Coal Sales Tax, the language of the statute and its possible unconstitutional nature were thus fixed, injury was inflicted, and a separate claim accrued when Venture Coal remitted each payment of the Coal Sales Tax.
See Hatter,
We accordingly reject Venture Coal’s argument that the district court’s specific holding of unconstitutionality in Ranger Fuel started the running of the six-year statute of limitations period. Venture Coal relies on the notion that the district court’s reasoning can be partitioned to yield separate determinations on constitutionality and damages. We find no merit in that artificial construction of the district court’s opinion. Venture Coal’s position *1106 would effectively remove the statute of limitations from nearly all similar lawsuits because any claim filed subsequent to a decision that a particular tax was unconstitutional would be entitled to recovery of all past taxes, regardless when the taxes were actually paid. Rather, the constitutionality challenge and the refund request are the same cause of action. The holding that the tax was unconstitutional was simply the confirmation of the correctness (at least as determined by one district court) of the legal theory behind the plaintiffs’ claim for a refund; without the refund request, the plaintiffs arguably lacked standing because there would be no other injury asserted. Venture Coal was entitled to challenge the Coal Sales Tax when it paid the taxes as much as were the plaintiffs in Ranger Fuel.
Additionally,
McKesson
does not support Venture Coal’s position. In that case, the Florida Supreme Court held that a specific state tax was unconstitutional. However, it refused to grant the petitioner
any
refund for taxes already paid because of the state’s interest in fiscal stability. The United States Supreme Court reversed, emphasizing the state’s responsibility to provide an avenue for
some
retrospective relief to taxpayers contesting the validity of a state tax. The Court held that “the Due Process Clause requires the State to afford taxpayers a meaningful opportunity to secure postpayment relief for taxes already paid pursuant to a tax scheme ultimately found unconstitutional.”
Venture Coal’s argument based on
Swisher
is likewise unpersuasive. ' Although that case relates to refunds of the unconstitutional Harbor Maintenance Tax, it focused primarily on protest procedures unique to the Court of International Trade and their impact on the court’s jurisdiction. Contrary to the apparently open-ended customs regulations in
Swisher
relating to the time for filing refund requests,
see
19 C.F.R. § 24.24(e)(5) (1999), Venture Coal’s suit in the instant case is based on jurisdiction under the Tucker Act, which our precedent clearly states is subject to its statute of limitations.
See Brown Park Estates-
*1107
Fairfield Dev. Co. v. United States,
Because the appellants filed their suit more than six years after the tax payments for which they now request a refund, the case is barred by 28 U.S.C. § 2501.
II. Tolling
Alternatively, Venture Coal asserts that the statute of limitations should be tolled because it did not know nor could it have known in the exercise of reasonable diligence that its claims had accrued. The government responds that Venture Coal has not shown that its injury was inherently unknowable. Instead, the government urges that Venture Coal merely pleads ignorance of its legal rights, a defense that is not sufficient to invoke tolling. We agree with the government that Venture Coal is not entitled to tolling of the statute of limitations.
In
Japanese War Notes Claimants Ass’n of the Philippines, Inc. v. United States,
[a] [pjlaintiff must either show that defendant has concealed its acts with the result that plaintiff was unaware of their existence or it must show that its injury was “inherently unknowable” at the accrual date.... In [the latter] situation the statute will not begin to run until plaintiff learns or reasonably should have learned of his cause of action.
Id. at 359 (footnote omitted).
Venture Coal does not meet that test. Its argument that its injury was “inherently unknowable” until the issuance of the 1998
Ranger Fuel
decision because acts of Congress are considered constitutional is flawed. It is correct that, as the Court of Federal Claims has properly stated, that concept reflects “judicial restraint with respect to legislative branch actions,”
Venture Coal Sales,
CONCLUSION
We have considered the appellants’ remaining arguments and are not persuaded. For the aforementioned reasons, we conclude that appellants’ claims are barred by the statute of limitations, and we accordingly affirm.
*1108 COSTS
No costs.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The government acquiesced to the ruling in
Ranger Fuel
that the Coal Sales Tax was unconstitutional by issuing a notice to the public in the Cumulative Bulletin, Notice 2000-28, 2000-
. The trial court characterizes the ground of its decision as being a lack of subject matter jurisdiction, and it is true that we have stated that "the statute of limitations is jurisdictional, because filing within the six-year period was a condition of the waiver of sovereign immunity in the Tucker Act.”
Caguas Cent. Fed. Sav. Bank v. United States,
. Importantly, the Court assumed that the plaintiffs in
McKesson
were in "apparent compliance with the statutory requisites for preserving a claim” under applicable state laws and regulations.
