Yankee Atomic Electric Company v. United States

125 Fed. Cl. 641
CourtUnited States Court of Federal Claims
DecidedMarch 25, 2016
DocketCase 13-584 C, 13-585 C, 13-586 C
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 125 Fed. Cl. 641 (Yankee Atomic Electric 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
Yankee Atomic Electric Company v. United States, 125 Fed. Cl. 641 (uscfc 2016).

Opinion

Spent Nuclear Fuel Storage Cost; Breach of Contract Damages; Cost of Corporation Existence; Termination of Benefit Programs Costs; Property Transfer Costs.

OPINION

Merow, Senior Judge

Yankee Atomic Electric Company (‘Yankee Atomic”), Maine Yankee Atomic Power Company (“Maine Yankee”), and Connecticut Yankee Atomic Power Company (“Connecticut Yankee”) (collectively “plaintiffs”), filed complaints on August 16, 2013, alleging the government’s breach of its contractual obligations related to the removal of spent nuclear fuel (“SNF”) from plaintiffs’ facilities. See Case No. l:13-cv-584, Doc. 1; Case No. l:13-cv-585, Doc. 1; Case No. l:13-cv-586, Doc. 1. The three cases have been consolidated for trial. 1

This is the third round of litigation as a result of the government’s continuing breach of the same agreements. In the first set of cases, the government’s liability was established. See Yankee Atomic Elec. Co. v. United States, 73 Fed.Cl. 249 (2006). The parties, however, continue to disagree as to the damages each plaintiff is entitled to recover. Plaintiffs now seek damages in an amount of approximately $77.9 million, for costs incurred as a result of the government’s breach between January 1, 2009 and December 31, 2012. See Doe. 39 at 6.

To resolve the dispute, trial was held on June 30 through July 1, 2015, Following the submission of post-trial briefs, supplemental briefing was ordered to clarify part of the legal framework for plaintiffs’ claims relating to costs associated with administration of health and welfare benefits programs. See Doc. 44. Final oral argument was held on Friday, February 19, 2016.

FINDINGS OF FACT

The government entered into nearly identical Standard Contracts with each of the utilities in this case, under which the government, through the Department of Energy (“DOE”), agreed to dispose of the utilities’ SNF. 2 At the time of trial, all three utilities had been shut down, and currently each maintains its corporate existence only due to the SNF stored at the sites as a result of the government’s breach of its obligations to dispose of it. See Tr. at 16:18-17:8 (Norton). As a result of this “steady-state” existence, plaintiffs’ claim:

[A ]ll costs reasonably incurred by each Yankee to maintain its corporate existence following the completion of decommissioning of its power plant are related to the management of SNF/GTCC, and are recoverable unless those costs would have also been incurred in the non-breach world. After the date when the company would have gone out of business in the non-breach world, there should be no set-off to the costs actually incurred.

Doc. 39 at 6-7 (emphasis in original).

At the direction of the court, the parties have cooperated in an extensive audit process, through which they evaluated the specific costs included in plaintiffs’ damages claim. See Docs. 12, 13. Although the government contends that plaintiffs should recover none of the claimed damages for failure *645 to establish a sufficient non-breach world model, see Doc. 42 at 19-20, the government specifically objects only to the following categories of damages: (1) the costs to plaintiffs of administering their health and welfare plans, (2) the distribution of settlement proceeds from the Stone & Webster Engineering Corporation (“SWEC”) litigation, (3) costs associated with transfer of the property on which the nuclear plants were situated, and (4) the legal and tax expenses related to the recovery of damages from the first round of this litigation. The following facts are relevant to resolving these issues.

I. Plaintiffs’ Calculation of Damages

Each utility arrived at its amount of claimed damages by calculating the actual costs incurred as a result of the government’s breach, less the costs that the utility would have incurred in the non-breach world. See Tr. at 83:16-84:4 (Smith). The starting point for these calculations are the storage facility costs, or “ISFSI Operational Costs” for each utility during the claim period. See Doc. 39 at 11; Tr. at 91:21-92:3 (Smith). The operational costs include: full and part-time employees, security costs, contracted labor for temporary or special projects, taxes, insurance, utility costs, materials and supplies, and other miscellaneous expenses. See Tr. at 17:9-21:14 (Norton). These costs were not only deemed reasonable by plaintiffs’ own witness, see Tr. at 24:20-26:18 (Norton), but were also reviewed and allowed by the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”), see Tr. at 99:11-19 (Smith). The specific figures are presented in Exhibits P3004A, P3005A, and P3006A, each of which is accompanied by supporting details derived from the utilities’ accounting system, invoices, purchase orders, and payroll information. See Tr. at 95:7-96:18 (Smith).

For Connecticut Yankee and Yankee Atomic, the damages calculation includes offsets for the utilities’ corporate existence into the instant claims period, See Ex. P3004A, Ex. P3006A; Tr. at 92:23-93:24 (Smith). Absent the government’s breach, plaintiffs contend, Connecticut Yankee and Yankee Atomic would have been out of business by the end of 2010. See Tr. at 37:14-16 (Norton). No such offset is included in Maine Yankee’s calculation of damages because in the non-breach world, it allegedly would have been out of business at the end of 2008. See Tr. at 29:1-2 (Norton); 122:7-124:5 (Smith).

Finally, all three utilities include “agreed-to-reductions” in the damages calculus. Through the audit process, the parties agreed to the modification of certain costs in the government’s favor. See Tr. at 92:6-20 (Smith).

In accordance with this methodology, the specific as follows;

*646 Connecticut Yankee
ISFSI Operational Costs: $36,585,702
Offset for Minimal Corporate Continuation: ($2,213,299)
Agreed-to Reductions: ($1.444.809)
Total: $32,927,594
Maine Yankee
ISFSI Operational Costs: $25,278,882
Agreed-to Reductions: ($239.083)
Total: $25,039,799
Yankee Atomic
ISFSI Operational Costs: $22,841,715
Offset for Minimal Corporate Continuation: ($1,669,886)
Agreed-to Reductions: ($1.235.177)
Total: $19,936,652

See Doc. 39 at 13-14; Exs. P3004A, P3004B, P3004C (Connecticut Yankee); P3005A, P3005B (Maine Yankee); P3006A, P3006B, P3006C (Yankee Atomic).

II.

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125 Fed. Cl. 641, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/yankee-atomic-electric-company-v-united-states-uscfc-2016.