United States v. Union Pacific Railroad

565 F. Supp. 2d 1136, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10599, 2008 WL 413765
CourtDistrict Court, E.D. California
DecidedFebruary 13, 2008
DocketCIV S-06-1740 FCD/KJM
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 565 F. Supp. 2d 1136 (United States v. Union Pacific Railroad) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, E.D. California primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Union Pacific Railroad, 565 F. Supp. 2d 1136, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10599, 2008 WL 413765 (E.D. Cal. 2008).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM AND ORDER

FRANK C. DAMRELL, JR., District Judge.

This case arises out of the “Storrie Fire” that occurred on August 17, 2000 and resulted in damages to approximately 52,000 acres of National Forest System (“NFS”) land in the Plumas and Lassen National Forests before it was suppressed. This matter is before the court on four motions for partial summary judgment, three brought by defendant Union Pacific Railroad Company (“defendant” or “UP”) and one brought by plaintiff United States of America (“plaintiff”). 1 In general, the motions ask the court to adjudicate core legal issues regarding the proper measures of alleged natural resource damages in this action and to issue specific orders defining the application of those measures. Because the motions raise overlapping issues, the court considers them jointly herein. 2

At issue are the following key questions: (1) whether diminution of market value of the subject real property is the proper, over-arching measure of plaintiffs natural resource damages in this case; 3 (2) if diminution in market value is not the proper standard, whether plaintiff may recover as separate and distinct injuries alleged timber damages, of over $121 million, reforestation 4 costs, between $24 and $33 million, and loss of use of non-timber forest services, including loss of habitat and environmental services, during the period of regrowth (the so-called “habitat equivalency” damages), of approximately $13 million; (3) as to plaintiffs alleged timber damages, whether such damages are recoverable for burned NFS lands located on “deferred” or “offbase” lands under the “Quincy Library Group Act” or located in designated “Wilderness” areas, when certain legal restrictions preclude commercial logging of these lands; (4) if such an award of timber damages is legally permissible, whether defendant is entitled to an offset of such damages based upon the full administrative costs of any such theoretical sale of the timber and for the theoretical salvage *1139 value of the timber; (5) as to plaintiff’s reforestation costs, whether said costs are unreasonable or too speculative to serve as a basis for a damages award; and (6) as to plaintiffs habitat equivalency damages, whether said damages are duplicative or unauthorized and thus excludable from any damages award.

For the reasons set forth below, defendant’s motions are DENIED and plaintiffs motion is GRANTED in part and DENIED in part. 5 The court finds that diminution in market value is not the proper measure of damages in this case. Plaintiff may recover damages for its separate injuries to the trees, to the soil and pre-merchantable timber, and its loss of use of habitat and environmental services during the period of forest regrowth. Defendant will not be permitted to argue at trial that plaintiffs requested timber damages, which amount is in dispute, are inflated due to a failure to consider certain administrative costs, and it will not be permitted an offset, pursuant to its affirmative defense of failure to mitigate damages, based on the theoretical salvage value of the timber. Plaintiffs reforestation costs are recoverable, in addition to the other requested damages, and are not unreasonable or too speculative. And finally, plaintiffs habitat equivalency damages are legally permissible and separately compen-sable from the other requested damages.

BACKGROUND 6

The Storrie Fire ignited on August 17, 2000 on NFS lands in Plumas County, California. (T-RUF ¶ 1.) 7 As addressed in plaintiffs separate motion for summary adjudication on liability issues, plaintiff contends a UP work crew ignited the fire while repairing a rail at the origin area of the Storrie Fire, and UP and its crew breached the standard of care in conducting the repair and in failing to monitor and suppress the fire before leaving the scene. 8 Plaintiff asserts it sustained a range of damages as a result of the fire, including fire suppression costs, resource damages and rehabilitation costs. The latter two types of damages are the subject of the instant motions. 9

The Storrie Fire area encompassed over 51,000 acres of NFS lands, with trees destroyed on approximately 21,000 acres in the Plumas and Lassen National Forests. (NR-RAF ¶ 1; NR-RUF ¶ 1.) 10 Most of *1140 the NFS trees killed in the Storrie Fire, or likely to die because of the fire damage, were located on NFS lands designated as “deferred” or “offbase” for purposes of the Herger-Feinstein Quincy Library Group Forest Recovery Act of 1998 (“Quincy Library Group Act”) (sometimes referred to herein as “QLG offbase lands”). (T-RUF ¶ 3.) Trees were also destroyed on another portion of the land damaged in the fire known as the “Bucks Lake Wilderness,” designated as “Wilderness” under the California Wilderness Act of 1984 and protected under the federal Wilderness Act of 1964. (SA-RUF ¶ s 20-21.) 11 Also damaged in the fire were trees located on areas designated General Forest areas. (SA-RUF ¶ 18.) Overall, less than 1% of the NFS lands within the Storrie Fire perimeter were designated forest land that was unsuitable for timber production. (SA-RUF ¶ 17.) 12

Plaintiff maintains that the Storrie Fire was predominately a moderate to high intensity burn. As a high intensity burn, plaintiff contends, the fire burned the soil cover so the soil itself eroded, and the needles burned off the trees so that there will not be any future duff to become soil. (NR-RAF ¶ s 8, 9, 10.) In addition to this damage, plaintiff asserts the fire also had a major impact on wildlife habitats and the environment, destroying, among other areas, vast acres of spotted owl habitat and carnivore habitat, as well as an uncounted number of animals. (NR-RAF ¶ s 12-17.) The forests’ use for recreation and scenic enjoyment was also sorely impacted, plaintiff asserts, including Highway 70 which is designated a “scenic byway” and the Pacific Crest Trial. (NR-RAF ¶ 18.) 13

Since 1999 and to the present, the Quincy Library Group Act prohibited the Forest Service from selling the timber on the QLG offbase lands. The Act likewise prohibited the Forest Service, following the fire, from conducting a salvage sale of the burned trees located on the QLG offbase lands. (T-RUF ¶ s 4, 9.) Had the trees on *1141 these lands not been wholly destroyed by the fire, plaintiff could have harvested the trees over time, after the expiration of the Quincy Library Group Act. 14 (T-RUF ¶ s 8, 9.) Similarly, no logging or reforestation was allowed in the Bucks Lake Wilderness, at the time of the fire, and no logging or reforestation of the area is permitted today.

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Bluebook (online)
565 F. Supp. 2d 1136, 2008 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 10599, 2008 WL 413765, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/united-states-v-union-pacific-railroad-caed-2008.