Dairyland Power Cooperative v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedDecember 7, 2021
Docket18-1922
StatusUnpublished

This text of Dairyland Power Cooperative v. United States (Dairyland Power Cooperative 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
Dairyland Power Cooperative v. United States, (uscfc 2021).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims No. 18-1922C (Filed under Seal: November 19, 2021) Reissued: December 7, 2021 1

************************************* * DAIRYLAND POWER COOPERATIVE, * * Plaintiff, * * v. * * THE UNITED STATES, * * Defendant. * * *************************************

OPINION AND ORDER

DAMICH, Senior Judge

This case is before the Court after a 5-day trial on damages. Plaintiff Dairyland Power Cooperative (“Dairyland”), an electric generation and transmission cooperative, seeks to recover $25,634,658 in damages for contractual breach from the Defendant (the United States Government – “Government”) incurred between January 1, 2013 and December 31, 2018. 2 This is the third round (“Round 3”) of damages litigation concerning Spent Nuclear Fuel liabilities, which must be filed every six years.

Previously, the parties both moved for Summary Judgment, and the Court granted the Government’s motion and denied Dairyland’s, reducing Dairyland’s original claim from $54,391,039 to the current disputed amount, $25,372,186. Of this sum, the Government contests $14,247,848 and concedes the remainder.

1 No redactions were forthcoming from the parties. 2 Round 1, determining Dairyland’s damages incurred through December 31, 2006, awarded Dairyland $37,685,902 after trial. Dairyland Power Coop. v. United States, 90 Fed. Cl. 615 (2009); Dairyland Power Coop. v. United States, 645 F.3d 1363 (2011); Dairyland Power Coop. v. United States, 104 Fed. Cl. 400 (2012). Round 2, determining Dairyland’s damages incurred between January 1, 2007 and December 31, 2012, ended in a settlement between the parties for $73.5 million. 1 Dairyland generally seeks to recover their claimed direct and indirect costs of running the LaCrosse Boiling Water Nuclear Reactor facility (“LACBWR”) and Independent Spent Fuel Storage Installation (“ISFSI”), which holds Dairyland’s Spent Nuclear Fuel (“SNF”). Both LACBWR and the ISFSI are located in Genoa, Wisconsin.

Comprising its damages claim, Dairyland seeks (1) LACBWR Operations costs ($5.14 million), (2) ISFSI monitoring and maintenance costs ($13.91 million), (3) the costs of a Special Early Retirement Plan (“SERP”) offered to LACBWR union employees near retirement ($2.24 million), (4) insurance and taxes ($1.88 million), (5) the “indirect” general and administrative costs underlying LACBWR and the ISFSI ($2.19 million) and (6) the remaining minor costs for “Private Fuel Storage,” an abandoned contingency plan for storing nuclear fuel in lieu of the Government’s breach ($1,301). 3

Responding to these claimed damages, the Government proposes a total of $14,247,848 in deductions. The Government does not challenge the fundamental existence of Dairyland’s costs, but nonetheless proposes deductions for costs allegedly reflecting (A) actual decommissioning costs, (B) costs not caused by the Government’s breach (or at least not foreseeable at the time), (C) costs reflecting “claim support deficiencies” and (D) excess general and administrative costs stemming from a questionable calculation.

The 5-day damages trial was held from June 8-14, 2021. The Court heard from 9 witnesses. For the reasons presented, the Court awards Dairyland $23,153,322.84. The Court has reduced the amount of damages claimed because of credible evidence that $2,218,863.16 of Dairyland’s claim is tied to decommissioning.

I. Trial Testimony Over the course of the trial, this Court heard testimony from a series of Dairyland witnesses: Roger Christians (plant manager of LACBWR), Lane Peters (manager of the Genoa site), Robert Palmberg (a longtime Dairyland executive and VP), Keith Stubbendick (Director of Accounting and Controller). April Wehling (Chief Strategy Officer) and Dr. Cheryl Olson (ISFSI manager, whose work included LACBWR).

This Court also heard testimony from three expert witnesses, Mary Karen Wills for Dairyland, and Gregory Maret and Robert Peterson for the Government. 4 Ms. Wills was admitted as an expert in financial accounting, cost and managerial accounting and breach of

3 This Court found in 2009 that PFS reflected Dairyland mitigation against the Government’s breach – but-for that breach, no alternative means of storing SNF outside the LACBWR plant would have been necessary. See Dairyland Power Coop. v. United States, 90 Fed. Cl. 615, 637 (2009). Under direct examination at trial, Mr. Palmberg alleged, “We had not yet made the decision to unwind PFS, so there were small bills that came in just to keep the operation going.” Tr. 285 (Palmberg). The Government contests these costs in a footnote of its brief (see ECF No. 126 at 24, n.8) but failed to challenge them at trial – therefore, these costs are awarded to Dairyland. 4 Dairyland filed motions in limine to exclude the testimony of Mr. Maret and Mr. Peterson. Both motions were denied by the Court. See ECF No. 100; ECF No. 102. 2 contract damages (allowed to offer an expert opinion but not legal opinion). Mr. Maret was admitted as an expert in nuclear power plant operations and management, the management of SNF, decommissioning and regulatory compliance. Mr. Peterson was admitted as an expert in damages in cost and pricing, construction contracts, Government contracts, financial analysis and damages analysis.

II. Discussion of Damages Calculations In addition to the $25,372,186 claimed by Dairyland in this litigation for costs related to LACBWR, Dairyland originally claimed an additional $28,756,381 in decommissioning costs, purportedly distinguished from LACBWR operations. The Government moved for partial summary judgment, requesting an offset in the amount of the growth of Dairyland’s Nuclear Decommissioning Trust (NDT) ($40,623,353), against Dairyland’s claimed $28,756,381 in claimed decommissioning costs.

This Court granted the Government’s motion, finding that “Dairyland was required to assure funding for decommissioning and did this by “set[ting] aside the NDT funds to cover it future decommissioning liability.” See ECF No. 99 at 1 (citing ECF No. 50). With the $40,623,353 offset absorbing Dairyland’s claimed $28,756,381 in decommissioning costs, if the Government is able to additionally construe Dairyland’s claimed LACBWR costs as “decommissioning,” these costs are likewise subject to offset from the remaining NDT funds rather than recoverable as damages.

Thus, the dispute at the core of this litigation comprises Government allegations that Dairyland’s claimed LACBWR costs are actually decommissioning costs, which, if so, would prevent Dairyland from recovering such costs as damages.

A. Decommissioning Deductions: SAFSTOR/LACBWR Operations 5

In the late 1980’s and early 1990’s, it became apparent that DOE was not going to begin retrieving SNF by 1998 as required under the Standard Contract signed between Dairyland and the Government for the disposal of SNF. See Dairyland Power Coop. v. United States, 90 Fed. Cl. 615-16, 619-21 (2009). Dairyland recognized its duty to mitigate, and that it would not be able to decommission the LACBWR facility as long as the SNF was stored in LACBWR’s wet pool. Id. at 649. Dairyland therefore pursued alternative methods of removing the SNF to enable decommissioning of the LACBWR plant. Id. Finally, beginning in 2007, technological progress enabled Dairyland to construct an ISFSI, to which it moved the SNF from the wet pool – this work was completed in 2012. Id. at 623, 637; Tr. 40-41 (Christians).

Irrespective of the removal of the SNF, the LACBWR plant remained in SAFSTOR 6 mode afterwards – it was necessary to keep the plant running operationally because it contained

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