Clear Creek Community Services District v. United States

100 Fed. Cl. 78, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1873, 2011 WL 4379484
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedSeptember 8, 2011
DocketNo. 10-420 C
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 100 Fed. Cl. 78 (Clear Creek Community Services District v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Federal Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Clear Creek Community Services District v. United States, 100 Fed. Cl. 78, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1873, 2011 WL 4379484 (uscfc 2011).

Opinion

RULING ON PLAINTIFF’S MOTION FOR DISCOVERY

SWEENEY, Judge.

Before the court is plaintiffs motion for discovery (“motion”).1 Plaintiff, a local government agency providing water service in the Clear Creek watershed in California, filed a three-count complaint alleging breach by the United States of a 2005 long-term renewal contract (“the Contract”). According to plaintiff, the government failed to (1) repair portions of — and perform operation and maintenance (“O & M”) services on — the Muletown Conduit, a pipe that distributes water, and (2) provide plaintiff with the amount of water to which it is entitled under the Contract. Plaintiff alleges that the United States Department of Interior’s Bureau of Reclamation (“BOR”) effectuated a Fifth Amendment taking of its property interest without just compensation by instituting an interim water shortage policy and diverting water to other downstream users. As such, plaintiff seeks money damages for the government’s alleged breach and BOR’s purported taking of its property. Plaintiff also seeks equitable relief, viz., a declaration that the government is obligated to perform O & M services on the Muletown Conduit and provide to plaintiff 15,300 acre feet of water for purely domestic or non-agrieultural use (referred to as “municipal & industrial” or “M & I” water).

Defendant, asserting that plaintiffs O & M claim accrued greater than six years before plaintiff filed suit, moved to dismiss the claim on statute of limitations grounds. Alternatively, defendant sought summary judgment on the O & M claim, arguing that plaintiff either (1) is required under the Contract to perform O & M services on the Muletown Conduit itself or (2) cannot establish the government’s obligation to perform O & M services under the Contract. Defendant also asserted that the Contract expressly ineorpo-[80]*80rated the BOR’s water shortage policy and that plaintiff agreed the Contract was governed by that policy. Consequently, defendant argued, plaintiff cannot bring a breach of contract action challenging the policy. Furthermore, defendant argued that plaintiffs takings claim failed as a matter of law because the government did not violate the policy referenced in the Contract. Finally, defendant moved to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction plaintiffs claim for declaratory relief.

I. PLAINTIFF’S MOTION

Plaintiffs motion addresses a need for discovery related to jurisdiction, its 0 & M claim, and its entitlement to water and takings claims. With respect to the statute of limitations issue and its 0 & M claim, plaintiff argues that the government “did not make its final position known until it executed the contract of March 1, 2005, and breach therefore occurred less than six years prior to plaintiffs filing of the complaint.” Pl.’s Mot. 17; see also Pl.’s Reply 6 (“The Government could not have breached the contract, nor could a cause of action have arisen for the Government’s failure to provide O & M of the [Muletown] Conduit, prior to February 25, 2005.”). In order for it to respond to defendant’s motion for summary judgment on the O & M claim, plaintiff argues that discovery is necessary to determine the scope of the parties’ contractual obligations, namely Article 39 of the Contract and prior agreements that addressed the parties’ O & M responsibilities.2 Although plaintiff acknowledges that contract interpretation is generally a matter of law, it argues that extrinsic evidence related to the “negotiation and execution of the Long-Term Renewal Contract will lead to a determination of the parties’ understanding of the language of Article 39 of the contract and their consequent responsibilities thereunder....” Pl.’s Mot. 12.

With respect to its entitlement to water and takings claims, plaintiff explains:

To determine if there was a breach of the Government’s obligation to provide [plaintiff] with the allotment of water it was entitled to under the contract at the time of the breach, ... one must look to the terms of the water shortage policy. However, the Government’s defensive position is to simultaneously and inconsistently claim that it has no “policy,” while also enforcing a policy, while not knowing what its own policy contains if it has a policy, and not knowing what water shortage policy was in effect at the time of the Government’s breach; then when [plaintiff] asserts that its contract rights are violated by the Government’s application of the water shortage policy, the Government disingenuously claims impossibility because it purportedly either has no policy or it has a policy it refuses to define.

Id. at 13. Thus, plaintiff argues that discovery is needed in order for it to ascertain the BOR’s policy and how the BOR applied that policy to plaintiffs operation of the Muletown Conduit. See id. at 16 (explaining that discovery is necessary to “determine the terms of the Water Shortage Policy the Government states it was implementing in compliance with the Long-Term Renewal Contract”), 18 (arguing that defendant “has not indicated ... what the terms of the Water Shortage Policy were at the time of [its] breach” and asserting that discovery will “establish exactly what the Government believed the Water Shortage Policy to be and how that was implemented”).

Defendant contends that discovery is irrelevant to any response that plaintiff might raise in response to its motion, though it agrees that discovery is warranted “[i]f [plaintiff] can show that the contract is susceptible to more than one reasonable inter-pretation____” Def.’s Resp. 3. Nevertheless, defendant argues that plaintiff neither [81]*81establishes how discovery could aid its response nor states with precision how any materials obtained during discovery would help it oppose summary judgment. Id. at 4 (citing Simmons Oil Corp. v. Tesoro Petroleum Corp., 86 F.3d 1138, 1144 (Fed.Cir.1996)); see also id. at 5-6 (contending that plaintiff fails to satisfy the five-part set of prerequisites set forth in Theisen Vending Co. v. United States, 58 Fed.Cl. 194 (2003)).

II. DISCUSSION

Plaintiff filed its motion pursuant to RCFC 56(d) and in response to the summary judgment portion of defendant’s motion to dismiss and for summary judgment. Nevertheless, plaintiff asserts that its discovery request “also bears” on defendant’s statute of limitations argument. PL’s Mot. 11. Consequently, the court first addresses plaintiffs motion in the context of seeking discovery for the purpose of establishing jurisdiction and then turns to discovery requests under RCFC 56(d).

A. Discovery to Aid in Determining Jurisdiction

The Tucker Act confers upon the United States Court of Federal Claims jurisdiction to render judgment on any claim against the United States founded upon a contract. 28 U.S.C. § 1491(a)(1) (2006). A claim must be brought “within six years after such claim first accrues.” Id. § 2501. Under section 2501, a claim accrues “as soon as all events have occurred that are necessary to enable the plaintiff to bring suit, ie.,

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Bluebook (online)
100 Fed. Cl. 78, 2011 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1873, 2011 WL 4379484, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/clear-creek-community-services-district-v-united-states-uscfc-2011.