Joe Aulston and Lola Aulston v. The United States

823 F.2d 510
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedJuly 2, 1987
Docket87-1054
StatusPublished
Cited by42 cases

This text of 823 F.2d 510 (Joe Aulston and Lola Aulston 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
Joe Aulston and Lola Aulston v. The United States, 823 F.2d 510 (Fed. Cir. 1987).

Opinion

DAVIS, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiffs appeal from the United States Claims Court’s decision granting the Government’s motion to dismiss on the ground that the court lacks jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1491 (1982). Aulston v. United States, 11 Cl.Ct. 58 (1986) (Wiese, J.). The Claims Court properly held that it lacked the power to decide appellants’ Fifth Amendment taking case in its present procedural posture in view of the Interior Board of Land Appeals’ (IBLA) prior adjudication that appellants had no ownership rights. However, because this case potentially involves fatal statute of limitations problems, we vacate the Claims Court dismissal and order it to suspend the case on its docket for a reasonable time to enable appellants to seek review and overturn (in a district court) of the adverse IBLA decision and, if successful there, to return to the Claims Court to pursue their monetary claims for a compensable taking.

I. Facts 1

Plaintiffs-appellants are owners of certain tracts of land located in southwestern Colorado and originally acquired under the Act of July 17, 1914, as amended, 30 U.S.C. § 121 (1982) (“Agricultural entry or purchase of lands withdrawn or classified as containing phosphate, nitrate, potash, oil or gas; reservations to United States; application”). When the Government granted such patents to appellants, it specifically reserved for itself the rights to “oil and gas.”

The parties vigorously dispute the ownership of rich deposits of liquid carbon dioxide, located in a vast reservoir beneath appellants’ land. In the Government’s view, carbon dioxide in a liquid state is embraced within the definition of “gas” as that term was used in the 1914 Act. Consequently, the Government claims ownership of the carbon dioxide under the explicit reservation of “gas" in the original land grant.

According to appellants, however, Congress used the term “gas” in the 1914 Act to refer to natural gas which is a hydrocarbon. Because carbon dioxide is not a hydrocarbon, they maintain that it is not included within the reservation of “gas.” As further support for their position, appellants emphasize that, when they received their land from the Government, the commercial significance of carbon dioxide was unknown. They argue therefore that the Government could not have intended in 1914 to reserve for itself the right to minerals which, at that time, were considered worthless.

In an initial attempt to establish their ownership of the carbon dioxide, various of the plaintiffs requested a determination by the Department of the Interior that the reservation by the United States of oil and gas under the lands patented pursuant to the 1914 Act did not include carbon dioxide. Relying in part upon 43 C.F.R. § 3000.0-5(a) (as amended 1985), 2 Interior deter *512 mined that, under the terms of the reservation, the United States owned the carbon dioxide. 3

Soon thereafter, the Government began leasing to oil companies the rights to the carbon dioxide. Ultimately, in 1982, BLM and Shell Oil Company executed an agreement (the McElmo Dome (Leadville) Unit Agreement) under which carbon dioxide owned by the United States and other local property owners would be pooled and withdrawn. Aulston, 11 Cl.Ct. at 59. Since 1984 when production began, the Government has been receiving the royalties accruing from the extraction of carbon dioxide from beneath appellants’ land.

The Aulston parties’ second attempt to establish their ownership of the carbon dioxide occurred in 1980 when they filed suit in the United States District Court for the District of Colorado. In that action, plaintiffs sought (1) review of BLM’s July 12, 1979 memo designating carbon dioxide as an “oil and gas” under the 1914 Act; (2) review of the Government’s subsequent leasing of the carbon dioxide; (3) a declaratory judgment regarding the ownership of the carbon dioxide; and (4) an injunction restraining the Government from asserting a claim to the carbon dioxide deposits. Additionally, claimants alleged that the Government’s designation of carbon dioxide as a gas and the leasing to various oil companies of the mineral rights to carbon dioxide beneath their lands constituted a taking of their property and interference with their contract rights without just compensation.

On March 25, 1981, the District Court dismissed the complaint. The court held that appellants’ taking claims, which exceeded $10,000, fell within the exclusive jurisdiction of the then Court of Claims under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1491 and 1346(a)(2).

Moreover, the court adjudged appellants’ request for judicial review of the July 12, 1979 BLM memo not to be ripe for adjudication because of appellants’ failure to exhaust administrative remedies. 4 Despite the dismissal of their complaint, at no time did appellants act to “ripen” their claims for judicial review by challenging before the IBLA either the Government’s leases to various oil companies or the 1982 agreement between BLM and Shell Oil Company.

Instead, nearly three years after the dismissal of their District Court suit, plaintiffs mounted their third attack on the Government’s claim to ownership of the carbon dioxide. This time, on January 9, 1984, appellants filed with the Department of the Interior an application for a disclaimer of interest under 43 U.S.C. § 1745. Under that statute, if the Secretary of the Interior determines that the United States has no interest in certain lands, he may issue a document of disclaimer, which operates as a quit-claim deed. However, because the agency (BLM) again concluded that the United States holds all right, title and interest to the carbon dioxide by virtue of the reservation of oil and gas contained in the 1914 Act, BLM denied the application in December 1984. On February 20, 1986, IBLA affirmed BLM’s denial of appellants’ application. 5

Appellants’ fourth attack on the Government’s assertion of ownership of the carbon dioxide furnishes the basis of the *513 present appeal. Instead of seeking district court review of the IBLA decision, they took a different approach, filing suit in the Claims Court and requesting damages in excess of $10,000 for a Government taking. The complaint alleged that the Department of the Interior "arbitrarily and capriciously determined ...

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