Seneca Sawmill Company v. United States

CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedAugust 19, 2022
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 2022).

Opinion

In the United States Court of Federal Claims

) SENECA SAWMILL COMPANY, ) ) Plaintiff, ) ) No. 16-1001C v. ) (Filed: August 19, 2022) ) THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, ) ) Defendant. ) ) ) )

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

Daniel B. Volk, Senior Trial Counsel, and Jimmy S. McBirney, Trial Attorney, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil Division, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, DC, for Defendant, with whom were Elizabeth M. Hosford, Assistant Director, Patricia M. McCarthy, Director, and Brian M. Boynton, Acting Assistant Attorney General. Benjamin Hartman, Office of the General Counsel, U.S. Department of Agriculture, Portland, OR, Of Counsel, for Defendant.

OPINION AND ORDER KAPLAN, Chief Judge.

This case arises out of a decision by the United States Forest Service (“Forest Service”) to partially terminate a timber sale contract it entered with Plaintiff, Seneca Sawmill Company (“Seneca”). The termination was effected on the basis of a “supplemental environmental assessment” the Forest Service conducted at the direction of the United States District Court for the District of Oregon in Cascadia Wildlands v. U.S. Forest Serv., 791 F. Supp. 2d 979 (D. Or. 2011).

A contracting officer rejected Seneca’s claim that the Forest Service breached the contract when it notified Seneca that it would not be permitted to harvest all of the acreage subject to sale under the contract. He concluded that the contract contemplated suspensions and partial terminations of timber harvesting based on a variety of causes, including intervening litigation. Therefore, he found, Seneca could not recover damages for breach of contract, and was limited to the compensation the contract provided. The Chief of the Forest Service determined that Seneca was only entitled to recover its out-of-pocket expenses under the contract because, he concluded, the partial termination was necessary to comply with a court order as provided in the contract. After the Court granted in part and denied in part the government’s motion for summary judgment, see Seneca Sawmill Co. v. United States (Seneca I), 149 Fed. Cl. 83 (2020), a trial was held on Seneca’s breach-of-contract claim in November 2021 in Eugene, Oregon. The purpose of the trial was to determine, first, whether the provision of the contract upon which the Forest Service relied, concerning terminations to comply with a court order, covered the partial termination of the timber sale contract. The Court concludes for the reasons set forth below that the Forest Service’s invocation of that provision as grounds for partially terminating the contract was improper.

Notwithstanding that conclusion, the parties stipulated at the pre-trial conference that— even if the Forest Service’s reliance on the provision addressing terminations to comply with a court order was improper—the agency could have invoked another provision that allows termination where continuation of the contract would cause certain environmental injuries or other adverse effects. In light of that stipulation, the government can rely on the constructive termination doctrine to avoid liability for breach of contract. Therefore, the primary issue before the Court, and the focus of most of the testimony at the trial, was what additional compensation, if any, would have been due Seneca had the Forest Service proceeded under that alternative provision. A subsidiary issue concerns whether Seneca has yet been fully compensated for its out-of-pocket expenses.

The Court has carefully considered the evidence before it and concludes, for the reasons set forth herein, that Seneca has failed to show that—using the measure of compensation set forth in the contract—it is entitled to additional relief. It has also failed to establish its entitlement to additional reimbursement for out-of-pocket expenses. The Court therefore enters judgment in favor of the government.

FINDINGS OF FACT 1

Seneca Sawmill Company

Seneca is the largest lumber producer in Oregon, and one of the largest in the United States. Trial Tr. (“Tr.”) vol. 1, 33:11–16. It manufactures commodity-type lumber products that are used in construction projects, chiefly in single- and multi-family homes. Id. 13:18–23, 29:5– 9. Seneca operates three sawmills in Eugene, Oregon, id. 25:24; see also Pl.’s Post-Trial Br. (“Pl.’s Br.”) at 3, ECF No. 102, and produces more than five-hundred million board feet of lumber per year, Tr. vol. 1, 33:6–10.

Seneca purchases approximately twenty percent of the timber it processes from the Forest Service, the United States Bureau of Land Management, and the Oregon Department of Forestry. Id. 40:20–24. The rest of the timber is sourced from its own land, id. 40:7–19, or is purchased on the “open market . . . from other private timber landowners,” id. 40:23–25.

1 This section sets forth the Court’s principal findings of fact pursuant to Rule 52(a) of the Rules of the Court of Federal Claims (“RCFC”). Other findings of fact and rulings on questions of mixed fact and law are set out in the Discussion section.

2 The majority of the timber that passes through Seneca’s mills—whether harvested from its own land or purchased—consists of “second-growth” logs, which are sourced from relatively young trees. Id. 25:3–4, 25:12–16, 28:10–19, 32:2–16, 44:19–45:3, 49:2–5, 204:23–205:4; Pl.’s Br. at 3–4. Such logs have visible, “coarse” growth rings, “representati[ve] of a second-growth log that has grown relatively quickly out in the forest.” Tr. vol. 1, 31:4–8.

Seneca also occasionally harvests or purchases timber from older, larger trees, which supply logs of a “much higher quality than [it] normally see[s] in the [commodity] marketplace.” Id. 42:1–8; see also id. 41:21–43:18, 48:9–17, 49:12–18; Pl.’s Br. at 4. These “higher-and-better-use” logs are distinguishable by their “fine grain ring count,” Tr. vol. 1, 42:2– 4, and “clear grain”—that is, by a lack of “knot characteristics” throughout the wood, id. 42:21– 23.

Seneca earns a greater profit when it sells high-grade logs to specialty cutting mills than it would if it processed the logs into commodity products in its own facilities, because specialty mills place a premium on the aesthetic value of older logs with a higher ring count. Id. 41:21– 43:18 (discussing the “fine grain ring count [of] . . . higher-and-better-use logs” which lack “the knot depictions that you would find in the typical commodity products [Seneca] make[s]”); id. 49:12–18 (Seneca CEO agreeing that, “from a financial standpoint, [it is] important to segregate those logs and resell them as opposed to mill them [at Seneca],” and explaining that “[t]he value [Seneca] receive[s] by selling them is higher than the value we receive if we were to produce it in just the commodity products we make”); see also Pl.’s Br. at 4. 2

Where the percentage of high-grade logs in a timber sale is relatively small, Seneca brings all of the timber harvested to its complex in Eugene, where the high-grade logs are culled out for sale to specialty cutting mills. Tr. vol. 1, 48:2–17; see also id. 41:21–43:18, 49:12–18; id. 92:5–9 (“If a log comes into our yard that has the higher-and-better-use characteristic, it gets set aside and sold.”); Pl.’s Br. at 4. If Seneca expects a high yield of “higher-and-better-use” logs, on the other hand, it sends the logs directly from the harvest site to a specialty cutting mill. Tr. vol. 1, 47:6–48:1.

The Trapper Timber Sale

The timber sale contract at issue in this case was the product of a forest management effort dubbed “the Trapper Project.” Joint Ex. (“JX”) 2 at 8–9, 13.

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Seneca Sawmill Company v. United States, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/seneca-sawmill-company-v-united-states-uscfc-2022.