Yankee Atomic Electric Company, Plaintiff/cross-Appellant v. United States

112 F.3d 1569
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
DecidedAugust 15, 1997
Docket96-5021, 96-5025
StatusPublished
Cited by113 cases

This text of 112 F.3d 1569 (Yankee Atomic Electric Company, Plaintiff/cross-Appellant v. 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
Yankee Atomic Electric Company, Plaintiff/cross-Appellant v. United States, 112 F.3d 1569 (Fed. Cir. 1997).

Opinions

Opinion of the court filed by Circuit Judge CLEVENGER. Dissenting opinion filed by Circuit Judge MAYER.

CLEVENGER, Circuit Judge.

This case requires us to decide whether, in light of prior contracts specifying the price to be paid for uranium enrichment services, the Government may impose upon domestic utilities a special assessment to aid in funding the clean-up costs associated with the facilities that provided those enrichment services.

The United States appeals the decision of the United States Court of Federal Claims, Yankee Atomic Electric Co. v. United States, 33 Fed. Cl. 580 (1995), granting summary judgment to Yankee Atomic Electric Company (Yankee Atomic). In that decision, the court determined that the assessment imposed upon Yankee Atomic to fund clean-up costs constitutes an unlawful exaction because it violates the Government’s earlier contractual agreements to supply enriched uranium at fixed prices. We conclude that the assessment was lawful and therefore reverse.

[1572]*1572I

As both parties acknowledge, the salient facts are not in dispute. Yankee Atomic was organized in 1954 by a number of existing utility companies in an effort to participate in the use of atomic energy as an alternative-source fuel for génerating electricity. Yankee Atomic produced electricity using nuclear fuels and sold the resulting electricity to the organizing utilities, which, in turn, sold it to retail customers.

Yankee Atomic’s operations required an enriched form of uranium, which was produced by separating useful isotopes of uranium from other isotopes. Beginning in 1963, Yankee Atomic purchased the uranium enrichment (or separation) services from the Government through a series of contracts. Those services were provided at enrichment plants operated first by the Atomic Energy Commission (AEC or Commission) and later by the Energy Research and Development Administration and the Department of Energy (all collectively DOE). Although these contracts varied somewhat from one to another, they each stated that the price paid by Yankee Atomic for the enrichment services would be based on “established Commission pricing policy,” which was defined as the price in effect at the time the service was provided. There is no dispute that the Government fulfilled its contractual obligation to provide the enrichment services, and that Yankee Atomic fulfilled its obligation to pay the price in effect at that time.

In the late 1980s, Congress determined that it had to restructure the Government’s uranium enrichment services in order to remain competitive with enrichment services provided by other parties. It did so by creating a new, for-profit, governmental corporation called the United States Enrichment Corporation. At the same time, Congress realized that there would be large costs associated with decontaminating and decommissioning the facilities that had previously been used to provide enrichment services. The Department of Energy estimated that the total cost of this clean up could exceed $20 billion over 40 years, which amounted to about $500 million per year, indexed to inflation. H.R.Rep. No. 474, pt. VIII, at 77 (1992), reprinted in 1992 U.S.C.C.A.N. 2282, 2295. Because this decontamination and decommissioning fiscal problem was not recognized until the 1980s, the prices charged in the Government’s past uranium enrichment contracts had not accounted for the problem.

This clean-up problem was one of many energy-related issues that Congress addressed in the Energy Policy Act of 1992 (Energy Policy Act or Act). The Act establishes an account to be known as the Uranium Enrichment Decontamination and Decommissioning Fund (Fund), which, over a 15-year period, would accumulate the monies required to clean up the old uranium enrichment plants. The Act provides that the annual deposits of $480 million (adjusted for inflation), will come from two sources: (i) up to $150 million is to be collected as a special assessment from domestic utility companies; and (ii) the balance, at least $330 million, is to come from public funds appropriated by Congress.

The Act further provides that each utility is responsible for a pro-rata share of the total annual assessment based on the percentage of uranium enrichment work units it previously purchased from the DOE relative to the total number of work units previously produced by the DOE. The Act states that a utility is considered to have purchased a work unit from the DOE if the work unit was originally produced by DOE, even if the utility actually purchased it from another source. Similarly, a utility is not considered to have purchased a work unit from the DOE if it resold that work unit to another utility.1 In sum, the Act imposes the assessment upon whichever utility company eventually uses the enrichment services.

[1573]*1573Following the passage of the Act in October 1992, the DOE sought to assess Yankee Atomic’s share of the annual special assessment. Yankee Atomic responded by arguing to the DOE that it should be exempted from the assessment because its facilities had shut down before passage of the Act. When the DOE rejected this argument, Yankee Atomic paid approximately $8 million pursuant -to three annual assessments, and filed a lawsuit in the Court of Federal Claims seeking recovery of those payments.

II

Upon cross-motions for summary judgment, the Court of Federal Claims ruled in favor of Yankee Atomic. The court rejected the Government’s contention that the special assessment was a lawful exercise of Congress’s taxing power under the sovereign acts doctrine. The court explained that although the sovereign acts doctrine would have some force if the ease involved a general tax that fell on all utilities alike, it had no impact in the present case which involves an assessment that “reaches only those utility companies that previously had contracted with the Government for the purchase of uranium enrichment services.” Accordingly, the court viewed the special assessment as a unilateral retroactive increase in the price previously charged by the Government for its uranium enrichment services.

The court explained that such a retroactive price increase would constitute an unlawful exaction in view of the prior contracts between the Government and Yankee Atomic. Because those prior contracts specified a fixed price for the uranium enrichment services, the “economic benefit which [Yankee Atomic] gained by virtue of the Government’s promise, being a benefit enforceable at law, thus became a property interest that fell beyond the reach of the Government’s power to take away.” 33 Fed. Cl. at 585.

Based on this conclusion, the court granted Yankee Atomic’s motion for summary judgment without addressing Yankee Atomic’s argument that it was exempt from the assessment because its facilities had closed before passage of the Act. We review the Government’s appeal, and Yankee Atomic’s cross-appeal, from the judgment of the Court of Federal Claims pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3) (1994).

Ill

The decision of the Court of Federal Claims is driven by its characterization of the special assessment as a retroactive price increase rather than an exercise of the sovereign’s taxing power, and the parties’ dispute over this characterization frames the dispositive issue of this appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
112 F.3d 1569, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yankee-atomic-electric-company-plaintiffcross-appellant-v-united-states-cafc-1997.