Gene Peters v. The United States

694 F.2d 687, 30 Cont. Cas. Fed. 70,498, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 12549
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedNovember 12, 1982
Docket201-78
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 694 F.2d 687 (Gene Peters v. The United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gene Peters v. The United States, 694 F.2d 687, 30 Cont. Cas. Fed. 70,498, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 12549 (Fed. Cir. 1982).

Opinion

FRIEDMAN, Circuit Judge.

The issues in this case, on appeal from the United States Claims Court, * are (1) whether a written modification of a government timber sale contract, by which the contractor agreed to increase the contract price for the timber in return for authority to use a cheaper logging method than the contract specified, was valid; and (2) if valid, whether the modification properly was applied to cover timber cut and removed prior to the modification. In his recommended decision, Trial Judge Yock of the United States Court of Claims upheld the modification, but gave it only prospective effect. He recommended that the court (1) enter judgment for the plaintiff for $40,031.65, constituting the additional charges the plaintiff had paid for timber cut before the modification, and (2) dismiss the government’s counterclaim, which sought the additional amount the government had neglected to collect from the plaintiff for timber cut before the modification.

We affirm the trial judge’s decision that the modification was valid but reverse his ruling that the modification was effective only prospectively. We therefore reverse the judgment of the United States Claims Court and remand the case to that court to (1) enter judgment for the defendant on its counterclaim, and (2) dismiss the petition.

*689 I.

A. The timber sale contract, entered into in February 1975, covered timber in a national forest. The major part of the contract was to cut Douglas fir trees. Because there was an epidemic infestation of Douglas fir bark beetles in the timberland of the forest, the logging was required to be completed by June 30, 1975, during the period when the insects lay dormant in the trees and therefore could be eliminated as the infested trees were removed.

The plaintiff Peters’ timber sales contract was one of 10 contracts the government made for the forest during the winter of 1974-75. Four of the contracts, including Peters’, covered land totally or partially located in an area the United States Forest Service had proposed as a roadless wilderness. This meant that the Park Service could not build or authorize new roads in those areas. For this reason and because the June 30 deadline for completing logging prevented the Forest Service from taking the time to determine whether existing roads could be used for access and log removal, the Forest Service required that logging from these roadless wilderness areas be done by helicopter.

Harvesting timber by helicopter is three or four times more expensive than conventional logging. The consequence is that the government receives less for timber .to be harvested by helicopter. The government received between $1 and $2 million dollars less than it would have obtained from the four areas where helicopters were required.

The area for which Peters had the contract was subdivided into 10 units. The contract required units 1 to 3 and part of unit 4 to be conventionally logged (there was an existing Forest Service road that provided access to those areas). The balance was to be logged by helicopter.

There was a narrow county road (the Carr Road) that skirted the area to be cut. The road had been used for logging but portions of it crossed private land. The road provided potential access for conventional logging of units 5, 6, and 10.

Peters became aware of the proposed sale (the Skyo Line sale) in December 1974. He obtained the pertinent documents, carefully examined the area, and made his own estimate of the amount of timber to be recovered. He discussed the sale with Forest Service personnel.

The trial judge found:

One item explored in the discussions was an alternative access to portions of the sale area. The Forest Service acknowledged that there was access by routes other than as planned in the prospectus, sale map and contract. In particular, there was a concensus [sic] that the Carr Road, a county roadway, was in place and possibly could be used to haul timber from the lower portion of units 5 and 6 and all of unit 10. Plaintiff had used the Carr Road for access in visiting the sale site as had Forest Service personnel in laying out the sale[.] The Carr Road was an obvious topographical feature of the Skyo Line sale. Service personnel indicated that the sale was not planned using access to the Carr Road because they considered the road inadequate for timber hauling and they did not have sufficient time to gain easements (or whatever was necessary) from the private landowners claiming ownership.

Fdg. 20(a).

The government cannot sell timber for less than the greater of the Forest Service’s appraised value or a minimum stumpage rate the Service sets. In determining appraised value, the Forest Service first estimates the selling price of the finished lumber end products. From this it deducts the estimated logging and manufacturing costs, including profit. The Forest Service then divides between itself and the purchaser the difference between the estimated sales price of the end products and the operating costs of removing the timber. The government’s portion of this amount is the estimated fair market value of the timber, known as “stumpage.” For the Skyo sale, the government set a minimum stumpage rate of $5.39 per MBF.

*690 The Forest Service determined that the appraised value of the timber in the Skyo sale was minus $6.40 per thousand board feet (MBF). It therefore used its minimum rate of $5.39 per MBF as the minimum bid. In addition to the Douglas fir trees, there was a small amount of timber of lower quality to be removed. The Forest Service determined the additional value of this timber, described as per acre material (“PAM”), at 57 cents per acre. There were 174 acres of this material, and the purchaser was required to pay $99.18 for it.

Following the receipt of qualifying bids for the minimum amount, the Forest Service on January 24,1975, conducted its usual oral auction to select the purchaser. Peters was the highest of six bidders. He bid a premium $32.61 over the minimum of $5.39, for a total price of $38 per MBF. The next highest bidder offered $37.05, and the bids then descended to $22.30, $20, $8, and $5.39. Based on the Forest Service’s estimate that 9,400 MBF could be obtained, Peters’ total bid was approximately $357,-000.

Peters made his bid
with a view toward seeking from the Forest Service a change in in [sic] the helicopter logging system designated for units 5, 6, and 10, to a more economical logging system. Plaintiff realized that the Forest Service would have to agree to the changes, but felt that this was a risk worth taking.

Fdg. 23. In a logging plan Peters filed on February 18, 1975, he “indicate[d] his continued interest in changing the logging systems for several units.” Fdg. 24. He stated that he had obtained rights of way from private landowners “so logs can be hauled out the Karr [sic] Road,” that the county had indicated that “some improvements can be made to make [the road] safe for truck traffic” and that “[c]able yarding portions of Units 5, 6, and 10 are proposed.” Id.

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Bluebook (online)
694 F.2d 687, 30 Cont. Cas. Fed. 70,498, 1982 U.S. App. LEXIS 12549, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gene-peters-v-the-united-states-cafc-1982.