Yankee Atomic Electric Co. v. United States

40 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,808, 33 Fed. Cl. 580, 1995 U.S. Claims LEXIS 121, 1995 WL 372058
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedJune 22, 1995
DocketNo. 94-555 C
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 40 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,808 (Yankee Atomic Electric Co. 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
Yankee Atomic Electric Co. v. United States, 40 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,808, 33 Fed. Cl. 580, 1995 U.S. Claims LEXIS 121, 1995 WL 372058 (uscfc 1995).

Opinion

OPINION

WIESE, Judge.

Title 42 of the United States Code, section 2297g-1(c) (1988 & Supp. IV 1992), authorizes the Secretary of Energy to collect a special annual assessment from those domestic utilities which, in prior years, had utilized enriched uranium, produced by the Government, as a fuel in the operation of their nuclear-powered electricity generating facilities. The assessment is paid into a fund intended to meet the costs of decontaminating and decommissioning the industrial facilities that the Government used in producing the enriched uranium.

Plaintiff is among the utilities subject to this special assessment; its suit here seeks recovery of a portion of the approximately $3,000,000 it has thus far paid the Govern[582]*582ment.1 Three theories of recovery are advanced. First, plaintiff maintains that the assessment amounts to a breach of contract, in that it retroactively increases the cost of the Government’s uranium enrichment services, thereby violating the “fixed-price” character of the contracts under which those services initially were obtained. Second, even if imposition of the assessment does not amount to a breach of contract, plaintiff claims, it constitutes the deprivation of a contract-based advantage and hence, the taking of a property right. Finally, putting both contract and taking theories aside, plaintiff argues that Congress intended the assessment to apply only to those domestic utilities able to recover the cost involved through their rate base, that is, as a pass-through of a necessary and reasonable cost of fuel. And inasmuch as plaintiff ceased operations in early 1992, some eight months prior to the passage of the legislation authorizing the special assessment, it argues that the assessment represents an unlawful exactitude.

Defendant disagrees with these contentions; it maintains that the assessment represents a legitimate exercise of legislative authority that does not transgress plaintiffs contract rights or implicate the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment or violate the terms of the statute authorizing the special assessment.

Both sides have moved for summary judgment supported by written briefs, later supplemented by oral argument. At the conclusion of the argument, heard June 1,1995, the court issued a tentative ruling in plaintiffs favor and indicated its intention to address the issues more completely in a written decision. This opinion proceeds in accordance with the court’s earlier ruling.

FACTS

Until the shutdown of its operations in early 1992, plaintiff operated as a domestic utility engaged in the wholesale distribution of electrical power generated from nuclear fuels. The company, located in Rowe, Massachusetts, was organized in 1954 by a number of existing electric utility companies to facilitate their joint participation in the then-emerging use of atomic energy as an alternate-source fuel for the generation of electricity. The electricity produced by plaintiff was sold to its shareholder members (the organizing utilities) for redistribution to retail customers, both residential and commercial.

In the conduct of its business, plaintiff purchased uranium enrichment services from the Government. These purchases, which began in 1963, were carried out through successive multi-year contracts between plaintiff and the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC) and successor agencies, including the Department of Energy (DOE). Although the types and terms of the contracts varied over time, their constant feature was a pricing provision which set the charge for the Government’s services in accordance with “established Commission pricing policy,” that is, at the price in effect at the time the service was provided, subject, however, to a stated maximum amount.

Typical of this contract language was the provision that appeared in the “Agreement For Furnishing Uranium Enrichment Services” which the parties executed on March 9, 1971. Article III of this agreement specified in relevant part that:

1. The charges to be paid to the Commission for enriching services provided to the Customer hereunder shall be determined in accordance with the established Commission pricing policy for such services; provided, however, that the unit charge for enriching services during the term of this agreement shall in no event exceed a ceiling charge of $30.00 (subject to possible adjustment [for labor and power costs] pursuant to Section 3 of this article) per Kg unit of separative work for separation of U-235 from U-238, as defined in the established Commission pricing policy.

[583]*583The term “established Commission pricing policy” was defined in the contract to mean “any applicable price or charge in effect at the time of performance of any services under this agreement (i) published by the Commission in the Federal Register for material or services subject to this agreement, or (ii) in the absence of such a published figure, determined in accordance with the Commission’s Pricing Policy____”

The regulatory agencies involved in managing the Government’s uranium enrichment program (the Atomic Energy Commission and successor agencies), either failed to price, or were competitively disabled from pricing, their services high enough to pay for the future cleanup of the radiation contamination at the facilities where the enrichment services were being performed. H.R.Rep. No. 474, 102d Cong., 2d Sess., pt. I, at 142, 144; pt. VIII, at 76, 78 (1992), reprinted in 1992 U.S.C.C.A.N.1953, 1965, 1967, 2294, 2296.

This problem was one of many energy-related issues that Congress addressed in the Energy Policy Act of 1992, Pub.L. No. 102-486, 106 Stat. 2776 (the Act). Specifically, Title XI of the Act (106 Stat. 2951) amended the Atomic Energy Act of 1954 to provide, inter alia, for the creation of a fund — the Uranium Enrichment Decontamination and Decommissioning Fund — to accumulate, over a fifteen year period, the monies necessary for the cleanup costs of the uranium enrichment plants. (This amendment is now codified at 42 U.S.C. § 2297g.) The Act further provided that contributions to the fund, amounting to $480,000,000 annually, were to come from two sources: up to $150,000,000 annually was to be collected by “special assessment” from domestic utilities; the balance, from general appropriations. The Act also pi’ovided that each domestic utility’s share of the total annual assessment was to be determined on a per-unit basis (called a separative work unit) representing the measure of that utility’s past use of uranium enrichment services provided by the Government. (This amendment is now codified at 42 U.S.C. § 2297g-1.)

"Any special assessment levied under this section ... shall be deemed a necessary and reasonable current cost of fuel and shall be fully recoverable in rates in all Jurisdictions in the same manner as the utility's other fuel cost.”

Following passage of the Act in October 1992, the Department of Energy proceeded to assess plaintiff a share of the annual special assessment. Plaintiff took the position that it was not hable for the assessment because it no longer was an operating utility — the Rowe, Massachusetts facility having been shut down permanently in February 1992 — and therefore did not come within the intended reach of the Act.

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40 Cont. Cas. Fed. 76,808, 33 Fed. Cl. 580, 1995 U.S. Claims LEXIS 121, 1995 WL 372058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yankee-atomic-electric-co-v-united-states-uscfc-1995.