Seneca Sawmill Company v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJuly 2, 2020
Docket16-1001
StatusPublished

This text of Seneca Sawmill Company v. United States (Seneca Sawmill Company 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
Seneca Sawmill Company v. United States, (uscfc 2020).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims No. 16-1001C (Filed: July 2, 2020)

) Keywords: Motion for Summary SENECA SAWMILL COMPANY, ) Judgment; Breach of Contract; ) Environmental Assessment; Supplemental Plaintiff, ) Environmental Assessment; Timber ) Sale Contract; Res Judicata; Termination v. ) Provision; Mitigation of Damages; ) Compliance with Injunction. THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) ) Defendant. ) ) ) )

Michael E. Haglund and Julie E. Weis, Haglund Kelley LLP, Portland, OR, for Plaintiff.

Daniel B. Volk, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for Defendant, with whom were Elizabeth M. Hosford, Assistant Director, Robert E. Kirschman, Jr., Director, and Joseph H. Hunt, Assistant Attorney General. Benjamin Hartman, Office of the General Counsel, United States Department of Agriculture, Portland, OR, Of Counsel, for Defendant.

OPINION AND ORDER

KAPLAN, Judge.

Plaintiff, the Seneca Sawmill Company (“Seneca”), brings this action seeking damages for breach of a timber sale contract it entered with the United States Forest Service. The timber sales were to be undertaken in connection with the Trapper Project, a landscape management effort in the Willamette National Forest in Oregon. The project was authorized following a 2003 environmental assessment (“2003 EA”) which found it would have no significant environmental impact.

The alleged breach of the timber sale contract occurred in the wake of a successful suit environmental groups brought in 2010 alleging that—given new information and changed circumstances—the National Environmental Policy Act (“NEPA”), 42 U.S.C. §§ 4321, et seq., required the 2003 environmental assessment to be revisited. See Cascadia Wildlands v. U.S. Forest Serv., 791 F. Supp. 2d 979 (D. Or. 2011). The district court ordered the timber sale enjoined pending the preparation of a supplemental environmental assessment (“EA”) and Decision Notice that addressed two issues: 1) the effect of the harvesting of timber on the northern spotted owl and its habitat, and 2) whether new information called into question the continued learning value of the project.

In response to the injunction, the Forest Service conducted new environmental surveys and prepared a revised EA and Decision Notice. The revised assessment addressed not only the issues that had been the subject of the district court’s order; it also identified additional obstacles to the timber harvest arising out of, among other things, the presence of red tree vole nests. Based on the results of that revised assessment, the Forest Service removed all but twenty-seven of the approximately 150 harvestable acres that were the subject of the contract and invoked its authority under the contract to partially terminate it to comply with a court order.

Seneca alleges that the Forest Service breached the timber sale contract when it issued a new EA rather than a supplemental one limited to the issues identified in the court order. According to Seneca, the Forest Service’s actions were not justified by the contractual provision authorizing terminations to comply with a court order. In addition, it argues, the Forest Service violated the duty of good faith and fair dealing implied in the contract by not limiting its response to the court order to the specific deficiencies the district court identified.

The government has moved for summary judgment. It argues that because Seneca was an intervenor in Cascadia Wildlands, res judicata precludes it from arguing that the Forest Service went further than necessary to comply with the district court’s order. Second, the government contends that Seneca’s interpretation of the contract’s termination provision is erroneous. It argues that Seneca’s good faith and fair dealing claim—which posits that the Forest Service had an obligation to attempt to minimize injury to Seneca in responding to the district court order—is without merit as a matter of law. The government further argues Seneca’s breach claim has been waived because it actually performed under the modified contract. Finally, in the event that the Court does not grant summary judgment as to liability, the government moves for summary judgment regarding a proof of damages issue.

For the reasons that follow, the government’s motion for summary judgment is denied-in- part and granted-in-part.

BACKGROUND

The Origins of the Trapper Project 1

As noted above, the Forest Service entered the timber sale contract at issue in this case as part of its implementation of the Trapper Project. That Project was a product of the Blue River Landscape Strategy (“BRLS”) which the Forest Service initiated in 1998 pursuant to the

1 The Court’s opinion on the government’s motion to dismiss in this case contains a more thorough recitation of the facts surrounding the formation of the contract. See Seneca Sawmill Co. v. United States, 130 Fed. Cl. 774 (2017). The facts in this section are based on the appendices to the government’s motion for summary judgment and the plaintiff’s response. Unless specifically noted, the facts set forth are not in dispute.

2 Northwest Forest Plan (“NWFP”) for the Central Cascades Adaptive Management Area. Def.’s Summ. J. App. (“Def.’s App.”) at 8–9, 15, 1005, ECF Nos. 48, 48-5. The Strategy involved experimental timber harvesting and other measures intended to replicate the results of wildfires for study by the Forest Service. Id. at 9. The Project involved, among other things, “using timber harvesting techniques, prescribed fire and snag creation methods to approximate stand structures resulting from historic high severity, stand-replacement fires and partial-stand replacement fires on 155 acres.” Id. at 12.

In accordance with section 7 of the Endangered Species Act, the Forest Service formally consulted with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (“FWS”) concerning the Project. The FWS issued a Biological Opinion in September 1998 that found that the project was “not likely to jeopardize the continued existence of the spotted owl or result in the destruction or adverse modification of spotted owl critical habitat.” Id. at 70.

In May of 2003, relying on this Opinion, among other things, the Forest Service issued an EA and a Decision Notice and Finding of No Significant Impact for the Trapper Project (“2003 FONSI”). Id. at 177–96. The district ranger concluded that the project was “not a major Federal action that would significantly (40 CFR 1508.27) affect the quality of the human environment (40 CFR 1508.14).” Id. at 194. Citing the FWS Opinion, the district ranger determined that the project “may effect, but [was] not likely to adversely affect” the northern spotted owl—a determination that served as partial justification for the Trapper Project without preparing an environmental impact statement. Id. at 192; see also id. at 194–95 (reporting under the heading “Finding of No Significant Impact” that “Biological Evaluations . . . for . . . Threatened . . . species . . . indicated that the proposed project will have no significant effects or adverse impacts to any species or their habitats”).

The Timber Sale Contract

The Forest Service conducted an auction on October 14, 2003 and awarded the Trapper Timber Sale Contract No. 000533 to Seneca on October 23, 2003. Id. at 222. The contract granted Seneca the right to harvest timber, primarily from mature Douglas fir trees of 140 years in age, over an area approximately 149 or 155 acres in size. Id. at 162– 72; 178. 2

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