03-5098
EL-SHIFA PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRIES COMPANY
and SALAH EL DIN AHMED MOHAMMED IDRIS,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES,
Defendant-Appellee.
Stephen
J. Brogan, Jones Day, of Washington, DC, argued for
plaintiffs-appellants. With him on the
brief were Timothy J. Finn, Jonathan C. Rose, Daniel H. Bromberg
and Julia C. Ambrose. Of counsel
was Christopher J. Lovrien.
Peter H.
Oppenheimer, Attorney, Environment & Natural Resources Division,
Policy, Legislation & Special Litigation Section, United States Department
of Justice, of Washington, DC, argued for defendant-appellee. With him on the brief were Thomas L.
Sansonetti, Assistant Attorney General; and Kathryn E. Kovacs,
Attorney.
Appealed
from: United States Court of
Federal Claims
Judge
Lawrence M. Baskir
United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit
03-5098
EL-SHIFA
PHARMACEUTICAL INDUSTRIES COMPANY and
SALAH
EL DIN AHMED MOHAMMED IDRIS,
Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
UNITED
STATES,
Defendant-Appellee.
___________________________
DECIDED: August 11, 2004
___________________________
Before LOURIE,
CLEVENGER, and SCHALL, Circuit Judges.
CLEVENGER, Circuit
Judge.
El-Shifa
Pharmaceutical Industries Company ("El-Shifa") and Salah El Din Ahmed
Mohammed Idris ("Idris") (collectively "appellants")
brought this suit seeking just compensation for the destruction of a
manufacturing facility by the armed forces of the United States. The complaint alleges that destruction of the
appellants' facility constituted a taking of private property for public use
within the meaning of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. The Court of Federal Claims concluded that the
government's conduct did not rise to the level of a taking under the Fifth
Amendment and dismissed the complaint accordingly. El-Shifa Pharm. Indus. Co. v. United
States, 55 Fed. Cl. 751 (2003). For
the reasons stated below, we hold that the appellants failed to allege a valid
takings claim and therefore affirm the judgment of the Court of Federal Claims.
I
The complaint states that Idris is a
highly successful Saudi banker who was born and raised in Sudan. The chain of events leading up to the instant
lawsuit began in March 1998, when Idris purchased shares in El-Shifa, a
corporation organized under the laws of Sudan, for $18 million. At the time, El-Shifa was the sole and
exclusive owner of a manufacturing facility located in Khartoum, Sudan
("the Plant"). The appellants
allege that El-Shifa was the largest pharmaceutical manufacturing company in
Sudan and that it used the Plant to supply drugs sorely needed by the
impoverished people living in that country.
On August 7, 1998, the United States Embassies in
Nairobi, Kenya, and Dar es Salaam, Tanzania, were bombed in nearly simultaneous
attacks that were linked to Osama bin Ladin and the terrorist organization
al-Qaeda. On August 20, 1998, President
William Jefferson Clinton ordered the armed forces of the United States to
conduct strikes in Afghanistan and Sudan intended to "disrupt bin Ladin's
terrorist network and destroy elements of its infrastructure" there. President's Radio Address, 2 Pub. Papers
(Aug. 22, 1998). In particular, the stated
purpose of the strikes was to "destroy, in Sudan, [a] factory with which
bin Ladin's network is associated, which was producing an ingredient essential
for nerve gas." Id.
The day after the strikes, the
President sent a letter to Congress in which he stated that the Plant was being
used to produce chemical weapons. See
Letter to Congressional Leaders Reporting on Military Action Against Terrorist
Sites in Afghanistan and Sudan, 2 Pub. Papers (Aug. 21, 1998). The President stated the United States had
acted in self-defense, and that the
strikes were a necessary and proportionate
response to the imminent threat of further terrorist attacks against U.S.
personnel and facilities. These strikes
were intended to prevent and deter additional attacks by a clearly identified
terrorist threat. The targets were
selected because they served to facilitate directly the efforts of terrorists
specifically identified with attacks on U.S. personnel and facilities and posed
a continuing threat to U.S. lives.
Id. The President added that he ordered the
strikes "pursuant to [his] constitutional authority to conduct U.S.
foreign relations and as Commander and Chief Executive." Id.
Although bin Laden and al-Qaeda survived the strikes, the Plant was
"substantially, if not completely, destroyed." El-Shifa, 55 Fed. Cl. at 754. The appellants aver that the Plant was
destroyed by cruise missiles launched from American naval vessels operating on
the high seas.
The appellants filed a complaint in
the Court of Federal Claims on July 27, 2000, seeking $50 million in damages as
compensation for the destruction of the Plant by the United States. The complaint contained a series of factual
allegations denying assertions President Clinton and members of his
administration made regarding the Plant's involvement in the production of
chemical weapons as well as links between the appellants and al-Qaeda.
The government responded with a
motion to dismiss the complaint challenging the appellants' standing to sue as
well as the jurisdiction of the Court of Federal Claims to entertain their
takings claim. The government argued
first, that the appellants' complaint should be dismissed because nonresident
aliens do not have standing to sue the government for an alleged taking absent
a substantial voluntary connection between the United States and the claimants
or their property. Second, the
government characterized any injury the appellants may have suffered during the
strikes as a maritime tort over which the Court of Federal Claims lacked
subject matter jurisdiction. Third, the
government argued that the appellants failed to satisfy the specific
requirements of 28 U.S.C. § 2502, which limits the jurisdiction of the Court of
Federal Claims over suits brought by aliens to those in which United States
citizens enjoy a reciprocal right to sue the alien's home nation in its home
courts.
After oral argument on the
government's motion, the court ordered the parties to file additional briefing
addressing the justiciability of the appellants' claim in light of the Supreme
Court's political question doctrine and the applicability of the Takings Clause
of the Fifth Amendment to the governmental conduct described in the
complaint. El-Shifa, 55 Fed. Cl.
at 755. Ultimately, the government
briefed fully its contention that the political question and military necessity
doctrines counseled in favor of dismissal.
Id.
The Court of Federal Claims rejected
the three original grounds for dismissal, but nevertheless ruled in the
government's favor on the ground that the Takings Clause did not apply to the
facts alleged in the complaint. See
id. at 755-56 (stating that "the Takings Clause does not extend to
claims arising out of military operations against enemy war-making
instrumentalities"). The court
determined that the property in question in this case was transformed into
enemy property by the President, see id. at 771, and it
determined that the President's designation was conclusive in light of his
constitutional role as Commander-in-Chief, see id. at 772. The court concluded that it could "not
look behind the President's discharge of his Constitutional duties as Commander
in Chief, including his declaration of what constitutes an enemy target and his
determination to use military force to destroy that target." Id. at 774.
The Court of Federal Claims entered
judgment in the government's favor on March 14, 2003 and denied the appellants'
motion for reconsideration. The
appellants timely appealed the court's decision to this court. We have jurisdiction to entertain the appeal
pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1295(a)(3).
II
The appellants' assertion that the
Court of Federal Claims erred when it dismissed their complaint for failing to
state a claim upon which relief can be granted raises a question of law that we
review de novo. See
Leider v. United States, 301 F.3d 1290, 1295 (Fed. Cir. 2002); Boyle
v. United States, 200 F.3d 1369, 1372 (Fed. Cir. 2000). In reviewing a decision to dismiss for
failure to state a claim we must assume that all the well-pled factual
allegations in the appellants' complaint are true, and we draw all reasonable
inferences in their favor. See Leider,
301 F.3d at 1295. The government's
contention that the Court of Federal Claims erred when it rejected its motion to
dismiss for lack of subject matter jurisdiction also raises a question of law
warranting de novo review.
See Boyle, 200 F.3d at 1372; Moyer v. United States,
190 F.3d 1314, 1317-18 (Fed. Cir. 1999).
III
On appeal, the government raises anew its three original
grounds for dismissal of the appellants' complaint. Like the Court of Federal Claims, we think
none of these grounds provides a firm basis supporting entry of judgment in
favor of the United States.
A
The government's first ground raises the issue of
whether the Takings Clause reaches property owned by a nonresident alien
located beyond the shores of the United States.
The government argues that it does not if the nonresident alien or his
property lacks a substantial voluntary connection to the United States. The appellants oppose the government's
characterization of the Takings Clause in this respect and respond by stating,
in part, that the "Takings Clause imposes an absolute and unqualified
restriction upon government conduct . . . [that] is derived from a theory of
'natural law' and based upon a natural right to private property which is
universal in nature, not dependent on citizenship, and a fundamental principle
of international law . . . ." Appellants' Reply Br. at 20.
The Takings Clause tersely states: "nor shall private property be taken for
public use, without just compensation."
U.S. Const. amend. V. To be sure,
the text of the Takings Clause does not qualify what is meant by "private
property" or indicate that it must be located in this country. Nor does the text say that only American
citizens may receive just compensation.
Accordingly, the parties agree that a complaint does not have to allege
that the government has appropriated property physically located in the United
States in order to state a valid takings claim.
See Turney v. United
States, 115 F. Supp. 457, 464-65 (Ct. Cl. 1953) (rejecting argument that
Takings Clause did not apply to property located in a foreign country); Seery
v. United States, 127 F. Supp 601, 602-03 (Ct. Cl. 1955) (rejecting
government's argument that takings claims should be dismissed because private
property at issue was located in Austria).
They also agree that a claimant does not necessarily have to aver that
he is a United States citizen or resident alien in order to make out a valid
takings claim if his property is located in the United States. See Russian Volunteer Fleet v.
United States, 282 U.S. 481, 491-92 (1931) (holding Takings Clause reached
the claim of nonresident alien friend whose property the government seized when
it was located in the United States).
The parties disagree, however, over the legal
implication of the particular facts of the instant case, where the claimant is
a nonresident alien lacking substantial voluntary connection to this country and
the allegedly taken property was situated on foreign soil. In the government's view, this combination
sounds the death knell for the appellants' claim. The government relies on the Supreme Court's
decision in Verdugo-Urquidez v. United States, 494 U.S. 259, 274-75
(1990), where the Court held that the Fourth Amendment did not apply to the
warrantless search of a Mexican citizen's home in Mexico in connection with a
criminal investigation. The petitioner
in Verdugo-Urquidez argued that the Fourth Amendment's prohibition on
unreasonable searches applied to and prohibited the search because the Court
had in the past held that nonresident aliens enjoy certain rights under the
Constitution. Id. at 270-71. Among these rights was the right to just
compensation for property taken by the United States. Id. at 271 (citing Russian
Volunteer Fleet, 282 U.S. 481). The
Court rejected this argument and stated that:
These cases, however, establish only that
aliens receive constitutional protections when they have come within the
territory of the United States and developed substantial connections with the
country. . . . Respondent is an alien
who has had no previous significant voluntary connection with the United
States, so these cases avail him not.
Id. (citations omitted).
The appellants respond with authority from our
predecessor court, Turney v. United States, in which the court held that
the seizure by the United States of radar equipment located in the Philippines,
owned at the time by a Philippine corporation, constituted a taking for which
just compensation was owed. Turney,
115 F. Supp. at 463-64. Although the Turney
court did not specifically inquire into the substantial connections of the
corporation or its property to the United States, it did reject the
government's argument that the Takings Clause lacked extraterritorial
application.[1] Id. at 464. Nevertheless, in the appellants' view, Turney
binds us, and it stands for the proposition that the Takings Clause protects the
property interests of nonresident aliens located abroad even where there is no
demonstrable connection between them or their property and the United States.
The parties present us, on the one hand, with Turney,
which counsels in favor of extending the protections of the Takings Clause to
the appellants without regard to the absence of allegations of substantial
voluntary connections to the United States in their complaint. On the other hand, we are offered a reading
of Supreme Court precedent that purportedly overrules Turney and instead
suggests that the appellants would have to establish stronger voluntary
connections to this country before they would be entitled to benefit from the
protections its Constitution provides.
When presented with this same choice, the Court of Federal Claims
determined that the Verdugo-Urquidez Court extended the substantial
connections test to the Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment, but that it was
nevertheless bound by the doctrine of stare decisis to follow the
rule of Turney. See El-Shifa,
55 Fed. Cl. at 764. Indeed, the court
invited us to overrule Turney if we agreed with its reading of Verdugo-Urquidez.
We are hesitant to accept this invitation to the
extent that it asks us to expressly overrule Turney. "We cannot simply overrule the [Turney] decision,
even if we were persuaded . . . that it is appropriate; to overrule a precedent, the court must
rule en banc." George E. Warren Corp. v.
United States, 341 F.3d 1348, 1351 (Fed. Cir. 2003) (citing Newell Cos.
v. Kenney Mfg. Co., 864 F.2d 757, 765 (Fed. Cir. 1988)). Moreover, because we think the appellants'
takings claim at bottom presents a nonjusticiable political question, we are
not required to explore whether Turney enjoys any continuing vitality
after Verdugo-Urquidez in order to affirm the decision on appeal. Accordingly we decline to hold, as the
government asks, that the Takings Clause does not protect the interests of
nonresident aliens whose property is located in a foreign country unless they
can demonstrate substantial voluntary connections to the United States.
B
We find the government's second
original ground for dismissal to be without merit. In their complaint, the appellants include a
number of allegations disputing the accuracy of the President's determination
that, inter alia, the appellants were using the Plant to produce
chemical weapons ingredients for al-Qaeda.
The government argues that the appellants' claim is, at its core, that
the President acted negligently when he designated the Plant for destruction,
and that any theory of recovery based on this conduct necessarily sounds in
tort. Therefore, the government
concludes, the appellants' claim cannot be within the jurisdiction of the Court
of Federal Claims. See 28 U.S.C.
§ 1491(a)(1) (divesting Court of Federal Claims of jurisdiction in cases
sounding in tort). The government
asserts further that the alleged tortious behavior is maritime in character
because it involved the launch of cruise missiles from vessels at sea, and
therefore, jurisdiction over the appellants' claim lies properly with the
federal district courts. See 28
U.S.C. § 1333(1) (2000) (granting exclusive and original jurisdiction to
federal district courts over civil cases in admiralty and maritime
jurisdiction).
Although the complaint does recite a
series of allegations contradicting the purported links between Idris, the
Plant, and international terrorism, we read it to ask the Court of Federal
Claims to remedy a taking, not a tort.
Granted, these allegations, if true, would impugn the President's
characterization of the Plant as a chemical weapons factory. The United States may, or may not, have acted
negligently in targeting the Plant for destruction. However, this was not for the Court of
Federal Claims to decide, nor is it for us.
That the complaint suggests the United States may have acted tortiously
towards the appellants does not remove it from the jurisdiction of the Court of
Federal Claims. To the contrary:
If the government appropriates property without
paying just compensation, a plaintiff may sue in the Court of Federal Claims on
a takings claim regardless of whether the government's conduct leading to the
taking was wrongful, and regardless of whether the plaintiff could have
challenged the government's conduct as wrongful in another forum.
Del-Rio Drilling Programs, Inc. v. United States, 146 F.3d 1358, 1363 (Fed.
Cir. 1998); see also Rith Energy, Inc. v. United States, 247 F.3d
1355, 1365 (Fed. Cir. 2001) ("[A] takings claim lies, as long as the
government's action was authorized, even if the government's action was subject
to legal challenge on some other ground.").
As we have explained, an allegation that the
government has taken property in a legally improper manner states "two
separate wrongs [that] give rise to two separate causes of action." Rith Energy, 247 F.3d at 1365 (quoting
Del-Rio Drilling, 146 F.3d at 1364) (alteration in original). Under such circumstances, the plaintiff
"is free either to sue in district court for asserted improprieties
committed in the course of the challenged action or to sue for an uncompensated
taking in the Court of Federal Claims."
Id. (citing Del-Rio Drilling, 146 F.3d at 1364). The appellants have indeed filed an
administrative claim and a lawsuit in federal district court (filed on April 4,
2001) based on the same allegations found in the instant complaint.[2] See El-Shifa, 55 Fed. Cl.
at 754. With this in mind, it is
understandable why the Court of Federal Claims stated that the appellants had
filed a "multipurpose" complaint.
Id. The multipurpose
nature of the complaint did not deprive the Court of Federal Claims of
jurisdiction to entertain the takings claim alleged therein.[3]
We also reject the government's argument concerning
the implication that the maritime nature of the government's conduct has for
jurisdiction in the Court of Federal Claims.
Given that the appellants state a claim for takings, the government's
argument boils down to nothing more than assertion that a takings claim with
maritime overtones must necessarily fall within the maritime jurisdiction of
the federal district courts. This
argument lacks merit. A taking
consummated at sea is nevertheless a taking.
As such, the Court of Federal Claims is the proper forum in which such cases
are to be adjudicated. The appellants'
allegation that the United States used its Navy to launch projectiles that
destroyed their Plant does not divest the Court of Federal Claims of
jurisdiction to entertain their takings claim.
C
The government's third original
ground for dismissal is its weakest.
Section 2502 of Title 28 states that:
Citizens or subjects of any foreign
government which accords to citizens of the United States the right to
prosecute claims against their government in its courts may sue the United
States in the United States Court of Federal Claims if the subject matter of
the suit is otherwise within such court's jurisdiction.
28
U.S.C. § 2502 (2000). Section 2502,
known as the Reciprocity Act, burdens alien plaintiffs who invoke the process
of the Court of Federal Claims with showing that their home courts treat
natives and American citizens equally when they adjudicate claims brought
against their home countries. See
Ferreiro v. United States., 350 F.3d 1318, 1322 (Fed. Cir. 2003)
("Equal treatment is the paramount requirement of the Reciprocity
Act.").
The appellants met this burden in
the proceedings before the Court of Federal Claims. They introduced evidence tending to show that
in law, and in practice, American citizens may sue the Sudanese government on
equal terms with Sudanese citizens.
Based on this evidence, the Court of Federal Claims concluded that the
"Constitution of the Republic of the Sudan guarantees for all persons the
right to prosecute claims against the government." El-Shifa, 55 Fed. Cl. at 756. The thrust of the government's evidence in
support of its motion to dismiss suggested that the Sudanese courts have lost
their independence and are beholden to Islamic religious law. Id.
As such, the government asserted, they are instruments of discrimination
against non-Muslims. Id.
The Court of Federal Claims was
correct to require a greater showing from the government in order to defeat the
appellants' prima facie showing of reciprocity. See id. at 758. Although the government's evidence suggested
that pro-Muslim political elements probably wield undue influence on the courts
of Sudan, we have recently held that "political interference alone on the
part of the foreign sovereign will not serve to defeat a claim of
reciprocity." Ferreiro, 350
F.3d at 1325. Moreover, there was no
evidence in the record that the non-Muslim Sudanese were any better off than
non-Muslim Americans in Sudanese courts.
Such evidence was necessary if the government's arguments regarding the
influence of Muslim law on the Sudanese courts were to have any probative value
on the issue of reciprocity.
On appeal, the government argues that blanket
provisions of the Sudanese constitution guaranteeing to all people equal
treatment before and equal access to the Sudanese courts were suspended in
1999, and therefore, the appearance of reciprocity in the appellants' evidence
is likely illusory. Even if this
disputed fact, which apparently was not before the Court of Federal Claims,
were true, we think it would bolster rather than undermine a finding of
reciprocity. As blanket provisions that
apply to "all people," the legal consequences of their repeal would
apparently apply equally to Sudanese as well as American citizens. The government does not contend that the
provisions were repealed only insofar as they had previously applied to
American citizens. We think such
evidence would be critical if repeal of these provisions were to evince
disparate treatment adverse to American citizens tending to undermine the
appellants' reciprocity allegation. See
id. at 1322 ("[T]he Reciprocity Act 'contemplates only that
American citizens enjoy an equal standing with foreigners in actions against
the foreign State' and does not require the existence of an action against the
foreign state of identical nature or scope." (quoting Nippon Hodo
Co. v. United States, 285 F.2d 766, 767-68 (Ct. Cl. 1961))).
IV
Having disposed of the government's three original
arguments in favor of dismissal, we now consider its contention that the
Takings Clause does not reach the class of Executive conduct that led to the
destruction of the Plant.
A
The appellants do not contend, nor
could they, that the Takings Clause can be successfully invoked against all
military conduct that results in the appropriation or destruction of private
property. Rather, they concede at the
very outset of their argument to this court that the "just compensation
requirement does not apply to 'enemy property.'" Appellants' Opening Br. at 2. In its opinion, the Court of Federal Claims
noted that the appellants admitted the same in the proceedings before it and
that they stated further that "no takings claim could arise out of the
destruction of property in any country that actually belongs to an enemy
of the United States . . . ." El-Shifa,
55 Fed. Cl. at 767. That the United
States does not have to answer under the Takings Clause for the destruction of
enemy property or, as the Court of Federal Claims termed it, "enemy
war-making instrumentalities," is to us a concept so manifest that it
hardly requires further elaboration. A
contrary rule that, by way of example, would require the government to provide
compensation for the destruction of a vehicle (a tank, jet, etc.) used to
engage United States armed forces in battle, strikes us as absurd in the
extreme.
However, it is equally true that the government does
not avoid the Takings Clause by simply using its military forces as cover for
activities that would otherwise be actionable if performed by one of its
civilian agencies. Military conduct that
does not touch on the destruction or appropriation of enemy property can
sometimes give rise to a valid takings claim.
See, e.g., Argent v. United States, 124 F.3d 1277, 1281-85
(Fed. Cir. 1997) (holding that a private property owner may state a valid
taking claim arising from military aircraft overflights). In such cases, the military merely carries
out the sovereign's eminent domain prerogative which, under our Constitution,
the United States may not exercise without providing just compensation.
Thus, military takings cases often ask courts to
ascertain the precise point at which the military conduct complained of is no
longer coextensive with the state's civil power of eminent domain, but rather, enters
the zone of conduct, outside the reach of the Takings Clause, where the United
States appropriates the property of its enemies. Cf. Nat'l Bd. of YMCAs v. United
States, 396 F.2d 467, 470 (1968) ("It is axiomatic that the fifth
amendment is not suspended in wartime, but it is equally well recognized that a
destruction of private property in battle or by enemy forces is not
compensable."). In order to decide
whether the facts of any particular military takings case paint a picture
cognizable as a compensable taking under the Fifth Amendment, courts have
look[ed] to the general principles announced
in the decisional law to find the narrow and sometimes indistinct line that
separates losses that are necessary incidents of the ravages and burdens of war
from those situations where the Government is obliged to pay compensation to
the owner of private property that is taken for public use.
Id. at 471.
The decision of the Court of Claims in Perrin v.
United States, 4 Ct. Cl. 543 (1868), aff'd 79 U.S. 315, 316 (1870),
is a seminal case in that decisional law.
While the phrase "enemy property" seems to have its origins as
a term of art for prize courts,[4]
Perrin was the first case in which the outlines of an enemy property
doctrine applicable to takings jurisprudence can be recognized. The facts of Perrin concerned the
destruction of private property that resulted from the razing of the city of
Greytown, Nicaragua, on July 13, 1854, by a United States naval vessel. Id. at
546-47. With the discovery of
gold in California, safe passage from the Eastern States to that territory
through Central America became a matter of strategic importance for the United
States. Id. at 546. The court's opinion in Perrin suggests
that the trip through Greytown was a hazardous one. The property of American citizens traveling
to California was frequently taken and destroyed by townspeople, often with the
support and at the behest of the local government. Id.
The diplomatic efforts of the United
States to put an end to these disruptions were to no avail. An appeal to the national government of
Nicaragua and the dispatch of an emissary to Greytown failed to end the
attacks. Id. Consequently, the President decided to send
the Cyane, a sloop of war commanded by one Hollins, to press the nation's
grievances. Id. Commander Hollins delivered an ultimatum
demanding recompense for the taken property and an apology on pain of
attack. Id. at 546-47. The ultimatum went unheeded, and Commander
Hollins ordered Greytown destroyed. The
operation was a complete success. Id.
at 547.
The Greytown affair resulted in the
destruction of valuable merchandise owned by the Perrins, neither of whom were
personally hostile to the United States.
Id. at 546. They sued the
United States in the Court of Claims for the value of the merchandise under a
theory of takings. The court observed
initially that:
No government, except as a special favor
bestowed, has ever paid for the property of even its own citizens in its own
country destroyed in attacking or defending against a common public enemy; much
less is any government bound to pay for the property of neutrals domiciled in
the country of its enemy, which its forces may chance to destroy in its
operations against such enemy.
Id.
at 547-48. As for non-hostile claimants
such as the Perrins, whose only offense was to have physically located their
property within the shores of enemy territory, the court held:
[O]ne who takes up a residence in a foreign
place and there suffers an injury to his property by reason of belligerent acts
committed against that place by another foreign nation, must abide the chances
of the country in which he chose to reside; and his only claim, if any, is a
personal one against the government of that country in which his own sovereign
will not interest himself.
Id.
at 548. Accordingly, the court dismissed
the Perrins' complaint as their property was located in Greytown, a foreign
place hostile to the United States, and it was therefore rightly designated as
enemy property subject to destruction. See
Juragua Iron Co. v. United States, 212 U.S. 297, 305-06 (1909) (finding
no compensable taking where government destroyed suspected source of infectious
disease located on enemy soil); Seery, 127 F. Supp. at 605-06 (rejecting
government's enemy property defense because property belonging to military
takings claimant was actually located in friendly territory when it was taken).
The Supreme Court applied enemy property doctrine to a
number of military takings cases that followed Perrin. United States v. Pacific Railroad Co.,
120 U.S. 227, 228-31 (1887), concerned the destruction of a number of bridges
by Union forces operating in Missouri during the Civil War. The claimant, Pacific Railroad Company,
provided certain transportation services to the government during the war for a
fee that had remained unpaid since the cessation of hostilities. Id. at 228. The railroad brought a lawsuit against the
United States to recover the fee. Id.
Also during the war, Union forces determined they
could impede the advance of the Confederate Army through the area if they
destroyed several of the railroad's bridges.
Id. at 229. The military
destroyed a number of bridges, and thereafter it repaired all of them except
four. Id. The Court's opinion suggests that what
bridges the military repaired, it did so in order to facilitate the advance of
its own forces throughout the theater of operations. Id. at 231-32. In responding to the railroad's demand, the
government argued that the trial court should have offset any monies it may
have owed the railroad by an amount equal to the cost of these repairs. Id. at 229, 232.
The Court reversed the decision of the Court of Claims
granting the offset. Id. at
240. In so doing, the Court addressed
the nature and scope of the parties' obligations to each other that may have
arisen from their conduct during the war.
The Court concluded that the railroad had no obligation to offset the
government's debt. In its view:
[P]rivate parties cannot be charged for works
constructed on their lands by the government to further the operations of its
armies. Military necessity will justify
the destruction of property, but will not compel private parties to erect on
their own lands works needed by the government, or to pay for such works when
erected by the government.
Id.
at 239. The government was to bear alone
the burden of constructing the roads and bridges it needed to move troops and
supplies. Id. Granting its request for an offset would be
tantamount to impermissibly placing on the railroad that portion of the burden
of moving troops through the battlefield represented by the government's bridge
reconstruction costs.
The Court also addressed, at length,
the existence of any obligation of the government to the railroad under the
Takings Clause. Id. at
233-39. It relied on the enemy property
doctrine to conclude that the railroad could not hold the government liable in
takings for the destruction of any of its bridges. In the Court's view, a state of war
unquestionably existed in Missouri at the time Union forces destroyed the
railroad's bridges—a war in which:
More than a million of men were in the armies
on each side. The injury and destruction
of private property caused by their operations, and by measures necessary for
their safety and efficiency, were almost beyond calculation. For all injuries and destruction which
followed necessarily from these causes no compensation could be claimed from
the government. By the well-settled
doctrines of public law it was not responsible for them. The destruction or injury of private property
in battle, or in the bombardment of cities and towns, and in many other ways in
the war, had to be borne by the sufferers alone, as one of its
consequences. Whatever would embarrass
or impede the advance of the enemy, as the breaking up of roads, or the burning
of bridges, or would cripple and defeat him, as destroying his means of
subsistence, were lawfully ordered by the commanding general. Indeed, it was his imperative duty to direct
their destruction.
Id.
at 233-34. Although, as the Court
observed, individuals over the years had petitioned Congress for compensation
for the loss of property suffered at the hands of the military under similar
circumstances, that body had never granted any such claim. Id. at 235-39. Indeed, by the time Pacific Railroad
was decided, "[t]he principle that, for injuries to or destruction of
private property in necessary military operations during the civil war, the
government is not responsible[, was] established." Id. at 239.
However settled the doctrine may have been, it was not
boundless. Rather, the Pacific
Railroad Court explained instead that the government could not use the
enemy property doctrine to shield itself from takings liability when:
[P]roperty of loyal citizens is taken for the
service of our armies, such as vessels, steamboats, and the like, for the
transport of troops and munitions of war or buildings to be used as store-house
[sic] and places of deposit of war material, or to house soldiers or take care
of the sick, or claims for supplies seized and appropriated. In such cases, it has been the practice of
the government to make compensation for the property taken.
Id.
at 239; see also United States v. Russell, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.)
623, 629 (1871) (holding that the United States owed private takings claimant
just compensation for requisitioning three steamboats to ferry Union soldiers
during Civil War). In such cases, the
military acted pursuant to the state's power of eminent domain, and the
government could justifiably be charged with paying just compensation as a
result.[5]
To be sure, the Court's exegesis, which distinguished
between the military's civil functions (requiring just compensation) and its
war-making functions (which the enemy property doctrine immunized from takings
liability) was not strictly necessary to answer the precise question presented,
i.e., whether the law obligated the railroad to reimburse the government
for reconstructing four of its destroyed bridges. However, nearly seventy years later, the
Court confirmed that the Pacific Railroad Court's discussion of the
enemy property doctrine was in fact the law of the land. See United States v. Caltex
(Phil.), Inc., 344 U.S. 149, 154 (1952) ("[W]hether or not the
principle laid down by Mr. Justice Field [in Pacific Railroad] was
dictum when he enunciated it, we hold that it is law today.").
Caltex presented the Court with a military takings claim brought by
three oil companies that owned oil terminal facilities in the Philippines when
Pearl Harbor was attacked on December 7, 1941.
Id. at 150. After the
attack, and in advance of the Japanese invasion of Manila, United States forces
determined that it was necessary to destroy the companies' facilities as well
as the oil stored therein so that they might not fall into enemy hands. Id. at 150-51. The Army carried out the destruction of the
property as the Japanese were entering the city, thereby depriving them of a
"valuable logistic weapon." Id.
at 151.
The companies relied on two Civil War era cases to
support their argument that the government ought to pay them just compensation
as a consequence. The first, Mitchell
v. Harmony, 54 U.S. (13 How.) 115 (1852), presented a military takings
claim arising from the Mexican and American War. During that war, it was the government's
policy to permit merchants to follow the military into Mexican territory to
trade with the inhabitants residing there.
Id. at 132-33. It was
thought this would "conciliate" the Mexican provinces and thereby
"weaken the power of the hostile government of Mexico, with which we were
at war." Id. at 133. Plaintiff Harmony was a trader who followed
the United States forces as they moved into New Mexico. At one point, Harmony was forced to follow
against his will, and ultimately, the military used his wagons and mules in the
battle of Sacramento and in a subsequent march deeper into Mexican
territory. Id. at 128-30. Indeed, the Court noted that the military had
taken Harmony's property for no other reason than to "insure the success
of [this] distant and hazardous expedition." Id. at 135. Under such circumstances, the Court held that
the law did not permit the military to use Harmony's property without paying
just compensation. Id. at
136. The Court determined further that
the same result would obtain even if the military had appropriated Harmony's
property in order to prevent it from falling into the hands of the enemy. In that regard, the Court stated that,
"[t]here are, without doubt, occasions in which private property may
lawfully be taken possession of or destroyed to prevent it from falling into
the hands of the public enemy . . . .
Unquestionably, in such cases the government is bound to make full
compensation to the owner[.]" Id.
at 134.
The second case, United States v.
Russell, held that the government was bound to compensate a takings
claimant whose steamboats the military impressed in order to ferry Union troops
during the Civil War. Russell, 80
U.S. (13 Wall.) at 628-29, 632. In
language that was noted in Caltex, see 344 U.S. at 152-53 n.3,
the Russell Court suggested that in all cases where the government is
shown to have taken private property "in time of war or immediate and
impending public danger," "the government is bound to make full
compensation to the owner[,]" see Russell, 80 U.S. (13
Wall.) at 628 n.6 (relying on Mitchell, 54 U.S. (13 How.) at 134).
The Caltex Court rejected the oil companies'
arguments based on Mitchell and Russell and held the government
was not liable to them for the value of the destroyed oil storage
facilities. Caltex, 344 U.S.
154-56. The Court determined that the
language in those cases lending support to their takings claim was in fact
"far broader than the[ir] holdings," and that both cases had only
required the Court to adjudicate takings claims concerning "equipment
which had been impressed by the Army for subsequent use by the Army." Id. at 152-53. In neither case did the military
"destroy[] property of strategic value to prevent the enemy from using it
to wage war the more successfully."
Id. at 153. Rather, the
property at issue in Caltex was enemy property subject to destruction by
the government under the doctrine set forth in Pacific Railroad. Id. at 154, 156. As the Court explained,
The short of the matter is that this
property, due to the fortunes of war, had become a potential weapon of great
significance to the invader. It was
destroyed, not appropriated for subsequent use.
It was destroyed that the United States might better and sooner destroy
the enemy. The terse language of the
Fifth Amendment is no comprehensive promise that the United States will make
whole all who suffer from every ravage and burden of war. This Court has long recognized that in wartime
many losses must be attributed solely to the fortunes of war, and
not to the sovereign.
Id. at 155-56 (footnote and citations omitted).
The role of the judiciary in much of our precedent in
the area of military takings, including the cases we discussed above, has been
to draw a "thin line . . . between sovereign immunity and governmental
liability." Nat'l Bd. of YMCAs,
396 F.2d at 472. The instant case is
unique however in military takings jurisprudence, in that we are not asked to
determine on which side of that line the governmental conduct at issue
falls. Indeed, under our precedent, if
it were actually true in 1998, as the government then maintained, that the
nation's terrorist enemies were using the Plant to manufacture chemical weapons
destined for use against American citizens and interests around the globe, then
the appellants' property loss would be subsumed by the enemy property doctrine,
and that would be the end of it.
Accordingly, today, we need not further sharpen the line that separates
private property lost to the "fortunes of war" from that the military
takes pursuant to the state's power of eminent domain.
This case asks
us to draw a line of a different sort.
The complaint filed by the appellants challenges the government's designation
of the Plant as enemy property by, inter alia, suggesting that the
President relied on flawed intelligence in targeting it for destruction. It is replete with allegations contradicting
the government's, indeed the President's, determination that the Plant was part
of Osama bin Laden's array of weapons deployed against Americans at home and
abroad. For the reasons set forth more
fully below, we think the power set forth in Article III, section 1 of the Constitution
does not encompass judicial supervision over the President's designation as
enemy property the private property belonging to aliens located outside the
territory of the United States.
B
Without question, "it is emphatically the
province and duty of the judicial department to say what the law is." Marbury v. Madison, 5 U.S. (1 Cranch)
137, 177 (1803). "Sometimes, however, the law is that the judicial department
has no business entertaining [a] claim of unlawfulness—because the question is
entrusted to one of the political branches or involves no judicially
enforceable rights. Such questions are
said to be 'nonjusticiable' or 'political questions.'" Vieth v. Jubelirer, 124 S. Ct. 1769,
1776 (2004) (citations omitted).
In Baker v. Carr, 369 U.S. 186, 217
(1962), the Supreme Court set forth six tests for the presence of a
nonjusticiable political question:
[1] a textually demonstrable
constitutional commitment of the issue to a coordinate political
department; or [2] a lack of judicially
discoverable and manageable standards for resolving it; or [3] the impossibility of deciding without
an initial policy determination of a kind clearly for nonjudicial
discretion; or [4] the impossibility of
a court's undertaking independent resolution without expressing lack of the
respect due coordinate branches of the government; or [5] an unusual need for unquestioning
adherence to a political decision already made;
or [6] the potentiality of embarrassment from multifarious
pronouncements by various departments on one question.
See also Nixon v. United States, 506 U.S. 224,
228-36 (1993) (finding in the Constitution a textual commitment of impeachment
proceedings to the Senate and House of Representatives); United States v. Munoz-Flores, 495
U.S. 385, 389-96 (1990) (holding adjudication of Origination Clause challenges
by the federal courts do not evince lack of respect due political branches of
government or lack any judicially manageable standards); Davis v. Bandemer, 478 U.S. 109 (1986)
(concluding political gerrymandering claims are susceptible to resolution with
a judicially discoverable and manageable standard), questioned in Vieth,
124 S. Ct. at 1776-92 (discussing reasons for plurality's desire to overrule Davis). Recently, the Court indicated that the Baker
Court "probably listed [the six tests] in descending order of both
importance and certainty." Vieth,
124 S. Ct. at 1776.
The decision that a question is
nonjusticiable is not one courts should make lightly. Although each Baker test is independent, id., we must satisfy ourselves that at least one
of the six Baker tests is inextricably present in the facts and
circumstances in this case before we may conclude that it presents a
nonjusticiable political question, Baker, 396 U.S. at 217. This is so because courts should not use the
political question doctrine to avoid deciding cases with political overtones or
questions that they might categorize simply as "political." See id. (calling for
discriminating inquiry and admonishing "semantic cataloguing" in
political question cases). Over the
appellants' arguments to the contrary, we conclude that the facts and
circumstances of this case satisfy the first Baker test for the
presence of a nonjusticiable political question.
C
The "issue" presented here, for purposes of
deciding whether there is "a textually demonstrable commitment of the
issue to a coordinate political department," is the inherent power vel
non of the President to designate as enemy property the private property
of an alien that is situated on foreign soil.
Whatever inherent power the President may have to make such designations
must emanate from the Constitution. See
Ex parte Quirin, 317 U.S. 1, 25-26 (1942) ("Congress and the
President, like the courts possess no power not derived from the
Constitution."). The Constitution
grants to the President the "executive Power," see U.S. Const.
art. II, § 1, cl. 1, and requires that he "take Care that the Laws be
faithfully executed," id., art. II, § 3. The President is "Commander in Chief of
the Army and Navy of the United States, and of the Militia of the several
States, when called into actual Service of the United States." Id., art. II, § 2, cl. 1.
The appellants take these passages of the Constitution
at face value and find lacking in them a "textually demonstrable commitment
in the Constitution of the question of the enemy status of property under the
Takings Clause to the Executive Branch."
Appellants' Opening Br. at 36-39.
The appellants read the Constitution to be silent on the power of the
President, and the military he commands, to designate, even in the heat of
battle, private property as being enemy property subject to destruction outside
the protections of the Takings Clause.
This silence, in their view, forecloses entirely adopting the
government's position that the political question doctrine requires us to
abstain from addressing on the merits their contention that the President erred
when he deemed the Plant enemy property.
Apparently, the appellants' understanding of the Court's political
question doctrine demands from the Constitution an in haec verba
commitment of the issue in order for a nonjusticiable political question to be
present.
The appellants' understanding is flawed for several
reasons. As an initial matter, we reject
the notion that the test of textual commitment requires in this case an
explicit statement in the Constitution committing the issue to the President
with the level of specificity the appellants demand. As Justice White explained:
Although Baker directs the Court to search
for 'a textually demonstrable constitutional commitment' . . . there are few,
if any, explicit and uneq-uivocal
instances in the Constitution of this sort of textual commitment. . . . The courts therefore are usually left to
infer the presence of a political question from the text and structure of the
Constitution. In drawing the inference
that the Constitution has committed final interpretive authority to one of the
political branches, courts are sometimes aided by textual evidence that the
Judiciary was not meant to exercise judicial review—a coordinate inquiry
expressed in Baker's 'lack of judicially discoverable and manageable
standards' criterion.
Nixon, 506 U.S. at 240-41 (White,
J. concurring in the judgment) (citations omitted). Moreover, whatever the Constitution says
regarding the President's war powers, either explicitly in its text or by its
structure, it need not say anything about the Takings Clause per se
in order for us to conclude that it commits exclusively to the President the
power to make extraterritorial enemy property designations. The Constitution either commits this power to
the President or it does not. Whether
the putative commitment touches on the Takings Clause in particular is of no
moment to the analysis. Indeed, the
implications of this power for the purposes of claims made under the Takings
Clause are readily apparent from the cases discussed above from which the
courts have crafted the enemy property doctrine. Once duly exercised, the power transforms
private property into enemy property and precludes recovery of just
compensation from the government as a result of its destruction. Finally, and more fundamentally, the
appellants' argument on this point ignores what the Supreme Court and our
predecessor court, have had to say regarding the President's inherent war
powers and the ways in which separation of powers principles require that he
share it with the Congress and the federal courts.
We think consideration of the decisional law touching on
the nature and scope of the President's war powers sheds important light on our
present inquiry under Baker's "demonstrable textual
commitment" test. The Supreme Court
has characterized the nature of the President's war powers thusly:
The Constitution . . . invests the President
as Commander in Chief with the power to wage war which Congress has
declared, and to carry into effect all laws passed by Congress for the conduct
of war and for the government and regulation of the Armed Forces, and all laws
defining and punishing offenses against the law of nations, including those
which pertain to the conduct of war.
Ex parte Quirin, 317 U.S. at 26 (emphasis
added). And where circumstances are such
that war is made on the Nation rather than declared by the Congress, the Court
has long held that although he may "not initiate the war, [the President]
is bound to accept the challenge without waiting for any special legislative
authority." The Prize Cases,
67 U.S. (2 Black) at 668.
In exercising the power to wage war, the President finds
authorization in the Constitution itself to "direct the performance of
those functions which may constitutionally be performed by the military arm of
the nation in time of war." Ex
parte Quirin, 317 U.S. at 28. Within
these functions are "important incident[s] to the conduct of war"
such as "the adoption of measures by the military command . . . to repel
and defeat the enemy . . . ." Id. They also include "the power to seize
and subject to disciplinary measures those enemies who in their attempt to thwart
or impede our military effort have violated the law of war." Id. at 28-29; see also Hamdi
v. Rumsfeld, 124 S. Ct. 2633, 2640 (2004) ("The capture and detention
of lawful combatants and the capture, detention and trial of unlawful
combatants, by 'universal agreement and practice,' are 'important incident[s]
of war.'" (citing Ex parte Quirin, 317 U.S. at 28)).
In our view, the President's power to wage war must also
necessarily include the power to make extraterritorial enemy property
designations because such designations are also an important incident to the
conduct of war. As much is borne out of
the history of this nation's many declared and undeclared wars, part of which
is documented in the cases where courts have applied the enemy property doctrine. The cases teach that the purpose of such
designations is almost always to "repel and defeat the enemy" by
diminishing the sum of material resources it has at its disposal to prosecute
hostilities against the United States and its citizens. Whether the private property destroyed as
enemy property is a tank firing rounds at American forces, a bridge the enemy
finds necessary to advance to the front, or a commodity, such as oil, imperiled
by advancing forces, the aim is the same—to "wage war successfully." See Hirabayashi v. United States,
320 U.S. 81, 93 (1943) (stating "[t]he war power of the national
government is the power to wage war successfully" (internal quotation
marks and citation omitted)). We
cannot envision how a military commander, much less the Commander-in-Chief,
could wage war successfully if he did not have the inherent power to decide
what targets, i.e., property, belonged to the enemy and could therefore
be destroyed free from takings liability.
Moreover, in one case where the Court of Claims
considered the interplay between political question doctrine and the Takings
Clause, the court expressly declined to consider a takings claim that arose
from military conduct directly traceable to the President's conduct as
Commander-in-Chief. As the court
recounted in its opinion in Ingenio Porvenir C. Por A. v. United States,
70 Ct. Cl. 735, 738 (1930), in 1916, the Navy occupied the Dominican Republic,
including its capital Santo Domingo, pursuant to a Presidential
proclamation. During the occupation, the
provisional government issued a requisition order for the plaintiffs' sugar
prohibiting them from selling it on the open market. Id.
The price of sugar dropped while the requisition order was in effect,
and the plaintiffs filed a takings claim against the government seeking just
compensation for the loss. Id.
The court observed that there were several reasons why it
thought the plaintiffs could not recover, but one was certainly
dispositive—political question doctrine.
Id. at 739-40. The court
explained that:
In a general way, the act of taking over the
Government of Santo Domingo and all the proceedings thereunder were political
matters as to which we have no jurisdiction.
Under the Constitution the President is the Commander-in-Chief of the
Army and Navy, and this court has no jurisdiction to review his acts in
exercising the power so granted in a foreign country and base a judgment
thereon. The acts which are claimed to
fix a liability on the defendant were done under the orders of the President
and occurred in a foreign country. The
policy which he adopted and the acts done pursuant thereto were matters of
state and wholly within his discretion.
Id. at 739. It concluded that the case was controlled by
"principles . . . settled by a long line of decisions, which hold that
such cases as . . . [the one that was before the court] . . . present political
questions exclusively within the jurisdiction of the Executive Department of
the Government." Id. We think the conclusion of the Court of
Claims, whose precedent we are bound to follow, see S. Corp. v.
United States, 690 F.2d 1368, 1369 (Fed. Cir. 1982) (en banc),
applies with even greater force in this case.
Although we conclude, based on our reading of precedent,
that those passages of the Constitution that create and define the President's
inherent war powers include within their terms the authority to make
extraterritorial enemy property designations, our analysis under the first Baker
test is not at an end. This is so
because the entirety of the war powers the Constitution creates are not the
President's to exercise alone. They are
instead shared with the Congress and the federal courts, especially where an
individual's right to own and enjoy property is concerned. See Hamdi, 124 S. Ct. at 2650
("Whatever power the United States Constitution envisions for the
Executive in its exchanges with other nations or with enemy organizations in
times of conflict, it most assuredly envisions a role for all three branches
when individual liberties are at stake."); Youngstown Sheet & Tube
Co. v. Sawyer, 343 U.S 579, 644 (1952) (Jackson, J., concurring) (The
President "has no monopoly of 'war powers' whatever they are."). As the Supreme Court recently reminded, the
President does not enjoy a "blank check" merely because a state of
war exists. Hamdi, 124 S. Ct. at
2650 (citing Youngstown Sheet & Tube Co., 343 U.S. at 587).
With these important separation of powers principles in
mind, we conclude nevertheless that the appellants may not seek judicial review
of the President's designation of the Plant as enemy property. The appellants' theory of takings liability
centers on the alleged inaccuracy of the President's designation of the Plant
as enemy property. This must be the
case, because as we noted above, if the Plant was in fact the property of
al-Qaeda, the appellants would have no claim in takings against the United
States for its destruction. In essence
then, the appellants are contending that the President failed to assure himself
with a sufficient degree of certainty that the Plant was in fact a chemical
weapons factory, despite his declaration to the contrary that the information
he possessed in 1998 indicated al-Qaeda was using it to manufacture chemical
weapons ingredients. The appellants
would have the Court of Federal Claims in the first instance, and this court on
appeal, provide them with an opportunity to test that contention, and in the
process, require this court to elucidate the constitutional standards that are
to guide a President when he evaluates the veracity of military
intelligence.
We are of the opinion that the federal courts have no
role in setting even minimal standards by which the President, or his
commanders, are to measure the veracity of intelligence gathered with the aim
of determining which assets, located beyond the shores of the United States,
belong to the Nation's friends and which belong to its enemies. In our view, the Constitution envisions that
the political branches, directly accountable to the People, will adopt and
promulgate measures designed to ensure that the President makes the right
decision when, pursuant to his role as Commander-in-Chief, he orders the
military to destroy private property in the course of exercising his power to
wage war. Today, we need not decide
whether and to what extent the Executive and Legislative branches share that
responsibility. We conclude only that
the Constitution does not contemplate or support the type of supervision over
the President's extraterritorial enemy property designations the appellants
request in this case.
The circumstances here, under which the Plant was
targeted and destroyed, strengthen this conclusion. When the President ordered the Plant
destroyed, he exercised the "authority . . . the Constitution itself gives
the Commander in Chief, to direct the performance of those functions which may
constitutionally be performed by the military arm of the nation in time of
war." Ex parte Quirin, 317
U.S. at 28. In 1998, the President determined
that the Plant's destruction was a necessary and proper response to "the
imminent threat of further terrorist attacks against U.S. personnel and
facilities." (J.A. at 210.) In his radio address following the strike on
the Plant, he maintained that he had "convincing" evidence that the
"bin Laden network of radical groups," was responsible for the then
recent attacks on United States embassies in Kenya and Tanzania as well as
"compelling evidence that the bin Laden network was poised to strike at [the
United States] again." President's Radio Address, 2 Pub. Papers
(Aug. 22, 1998).
Under
these conditions, where the President's own assessment of the offensive posture
of the Nation's enemies overseas leads him to conclude that the Nation is at
risk of imminent attack, we cannot find in the Constitution any support for
judicial supervision over the process by which the President assures himself
that he has in fact targeted that part of the enemy's wealth of property that
he thinks, if it were destroyed, would most effectively neutralize the
possibility of attack. In the Prize
Cases, the Supreme Court was asked to review the correctness of President
Lincoln's determination that a state of war existed between the Union and the
secessionist States, and pursuant to that decision, to exercise the right of
prize and capture on behalf of the United States over the plaintiffs' ships
which had been seized pursuant to an embargo.
The Prize Cases, 67 U.S. (2 Black) at 666-70. On that question, the Court concluded:
Whether the President in fulfilling his
duties, as Commander-in-chief, in suppressing an insurrection, has met with
such armed hostile resistance, and a civil war of such alarming proportions as
will compel him to accord to them the character of belligerents, is a question
to be decided by him, and this Court must be governed by the decisions
and acts of the political department of the Government to which this power was
entrusted. "He must determine what
degree of force the crisis demands." The proclamation of blockade is
itself official and conclusive evidence to the Court that a state of war
existed which demanded and authorized a recourse to such a measure, under the
circumstances peculiar to the case.
Id. at 670. Likewise, as we indicated above, we think
that it is up to the President to determine when he has received
"convincing" or "compelling" information sufficient to
justify the use of force to destroy private property located outside the
territory of the United States belonging to a nonresident alien. Such a determination is, in our view, "a
core strategic matter[] of warmaking belong[ing] in the hands of those who are
best positioned and most politically accountable for making them." See Hamdi, 124 S. Ct. at 2647
(citing Dep't of Navy v. Egan, 484 U.S. 518, 530 (1988), and Youngstown
Sheet & Tube Co., 343 U.S. at 587).
Moreover, we wonder how a federal court might go about
testing the veracity of the intelligence relied upon by the President in
deciding to attack the Plant. On this
point, the appellants argue that "the question whether an individual [or
his property] is associated with a nation or group hostile to the United States
is a question of historical fact which the adversarial system is well-suited to
determine." Appellants' Opening Br.
at 39. We suspect this characterization
belies the complicated and sensitive nature of determining whether private
property has in fact been pressed into use by terrorists. More than "questions of historical
fact," enemy property designations made pursuant to the President's duty
to prevent future terrorist attacks from the country's enemies abroad are often
"delicate[] and complex" and can "involve large elements of
prophecy" at the time at which they are made. See Chi. & S. Air Lines, Inc.
v. Waterman S.S. Corp., 333 U.S. 103, 111 (1948). The appellants' desire for judicial review of
the President's decision to target the Plant would most surely give way to the
specter of field commanders vetting before the civil courts the intelligence on
which they rely in selecting targets for destruction while simultaneously
dealing with the exigencies of waging war on the battlefield. The Supreme Court has considered what such a
state of affairs would mean for the military's ability to wage war and has stated
that:
It would be difficult to devise more
effective fettering of a field commander than
to allow the very enemies he is ordered to reduce to submission to call him to
account in his own civil courts and divert his efforts and attention from the
military offensive abroad to the legal defensive at home.
Johnson v. Eisentrager, 339 U.S. 763, 779
(1950). These concerns apply with equal
force here, given the appellants' desire to test the veracity of the
information upon which the President claims to have relied in ordering the
destruction of their property.[6]
For all of these reasons, we think the Constitution, in
its text and by its structure, commits to the President the power to make
extraterritorial enemy property designations such as the one made regarding the
appellants' Plant.
D
The appellants argue further that in the past, courts
have looked beyond the President's designation of a takings claimant's property
as enemy property, and therefore, the dismissal of their complaint by the Court
of Federal Claims on political question grounds is in conflict with
precedent. In our view, none of these
cases can be read, as the appellants argue they should, to authorize the type
of searching inquiry into the accuracy of the President's designation of the Plant
as enemy property.
The appellants rely on Juragua Iron Company, where
the Supreme Court was confronted with a takings claim for the destruction of
mining facilities and equipment United States armed forces ascertained were
housing "fever germs" that threatened the health of soldiers
operating in Cuba during the Spanish-American War. Juragua Iron Co., 212 U.S. at
301-03. The appellants apparently rely
on isolated language in the Court's opinion where it stated that the case
depended "upon the facts found" by the trial court and in which it
concluded that the "circumstances disclosed by the record"
demonstrated there was no implied promise by the government to compensate the
claimant for its losses. Id. at
301, 309.
Aside from being directed to a theory of recovery resting
on implied contract rather than takings, this language is a slim reed on which
we might find what seems to us to be the sweeping authority of the federal
courts to review the President's designation of the Plant as the property of
al-Qaeda. The Juragua court
stated that it could be "assumed that the health, efficiency and safety of
the troops required that to be done which was done." Id. at 302. There is no indication from the Supreme
Court's opinion that the claimant disputed the accuracy of the military's
determination that its facility did in fact house infectious agents that posed
an imminent and immediate threat to the health of its soldiers—a determination
analogous to the one President Clinton made here regarding the uses to which
the Plant was being put. Consequently, Juragua
is inapposite because the level of deference owed that determination was never
at issue.
Seery v. United States is similarly unavailing to
the appellants' case. In Seery,
the Court of Claims was confronted with a takings claim made by a United States
citizen concerning the appropriation by the Army of the claimants' estate in
Austria as an officer's club during World War II. Seery, 127 F. Supp. at 602-03. The court considered in some detail the
status of Austria as an enemy of the United States during the war in order to
resolve what it believed was a dispositive issue in the case—whether the estate
was located within enemy territory and could, as the government contended, be
appropriated by the army with immunity. Id.
at 603-06. Although the government
insisted that Austria had been enemy territory during the war, this assertion
contradicted the official position of the State Department. The court explained that:
If we take at anywhere near face value the
numerous expressions of the Executive Department, which is responsible for the
conduct of our foreign relations, Austria was, after the surrender of Germany,
a nation liberated from a German occupation which had never been recognized as
lawful by our Government. The property in question, then, was no more subject
to uncompensated confiscation than it would have been had it been located in
Holland or France or the Philippines.
Id. at 606. The appellant's characterization of Seery
notwithstanding, the court, in our view, deferred to the government's own
official pre-litigation determination that Austria was not an enemy of the
United States during World War II.
Unlike the instant case, the status of the taken property in Seery
as enemy property was at odds with the official government policy on the
matter. This suggests the government's
contradictory assertion during litigation was nothing more than a proffer of
counsel, and as a result, it was not worthy of judicial deference. The facts of Seery contrast sharply
with those of the instant case where explicit statements by the
Commander-in-Chief made immediately after the 1998 strikes set forth the
official position of the Executive Branch on the question of the enemy status
of the Plant.
Finally, we think the appellants' reliance on the Prize
Cases is at once puzzling and misplaced.
The Court's decision in the Prize Cases is often cited as
authority for judicial deference to the President in the area of
war-making. This comes as no surprise
since, as we recounted above, the only view the Court expressed on a matter of
judicial deference concerned the power of the President to blockade merchant
ships engaged in commerce with southern States.
On that score, the Court concluded that the declaration of the blockade
was itself "official and conclusive evidence" that a state of war
existed. The Prize Cases, 67 U.S.
(2 Black) at 670. The remainder of the
Court's exegesis of applicable legal principles concerned the proper definition
of the term "enemies' property" in view of the plaintiffs' contention
that the property of a citizen or an ally of the United States could not be
considered enemy property as a matter of law.
Id. at 671-74. Nothing in
that portion of the Court's opinion states, much less suggests, that the
federal courts have any role in supervising extraterritorial enemy property
designations made in the face of imminent attack. Like Juragua and Seery, the Prize
Cases do not provide the appellants any basis for disturbing the judgment
of the Court of Federal Claims dismissing the complaint.
E
We also do not read the recent decisions in Hamdi
and Rasul v. Bush, 124 S. Ct. 2686 (2004), to counsel a different
outcome than the one we reach today.
Those cases concerned the detention, away from the front, of citizen and
alien enemy combatants captured on the battlefield. Among the issues considered by the Court in
both cases was the legality of the President's decision to hold the detainees
indefinitely on soil over which the United States exercises, at the very least,
plenary and exclusive jurisdiction, without permitting them access to counsel,
giving them an opportunity to contest the factual predicates of their detention
before a neutral decision maker, or providing them with other forms of
procedural due process.
In contrast, here we are faced with what seems to us to
be a fundamentally different set of facts giving rise to the appellants'
takings claim. Unlike the enemy
combatant designations at issue in Hamdi and Rasul, whose purpose
was to invoke the President's power to detain indefinitely captured enemy
combatants, the enemy property designation here was made in view of the
President's "go/no go" decision regarding the use of force in what is
deemed to be a foreign theater of war and in the face of what he perceived to
be an imminent terrorist attack on the United States. To be sure, had President Clinton considered
the potential takings liability of the United States before making the instant
enemy property designation, he may have experienced a moment of pause before
ordering the Navy to destroy the Plant.
Nevertheless, for the reasons we discuss above, we are loath to add to
the President's calculus concerns regarding takings liability when he exercises
his power as Commander-in-Chief to wage war on behalf of the country under the
circumstances that obtained in this case.
The appellants credit the President with having formed a
good faith belief that the Plant was a chemical weapons factory disguised as a
pharmaceutical works, yet they nevertheless question the basis for that belief
in an effort to obtain just compensation.
We may surmise without deciding that the outcome in this case very well
may have been different had there never been any evidence in the record, compelling,
convincing, or otherwise, that the President had determined that the property
at issue belonged to an enemy of the United States. Faced with a contrary set of facts here, our
reading of the Constitution and the Supreme Court's political question doctrine
counsels deference to the President's extraterritorial enemy property
designation.
In coming to this conclusion, we must emphasize that we
express no opinion regarding the President's power, inherent or otherwise, to
make enemy property designations over property that is located within the
territory of the United States. Here too
we might also surmise, without deciding, that the outcome in this case might
have been different if the appellants' property were located within the borders
of a State rather than in Sudan. In Youngstown,
Justice Jackson indicated that the constitutional calculus might be different
if a domestic, rather than extraterritorial, enemy property designation were at
issue:
That military powers of the Commander in
Chief were not to supersede representative government of internal affairs seems
obvious from the Constitution and from elementary American history. Time out of mind, and even now in many parts
of the world, a military commander can seize private housing to shelter his troops. Not so, however, in the United States, for
the Third Amendment says, 'No Soldier shall, in time of peace be quartered in
any house, without the consent of the Owner, nor in time of war, but in a
manner to be prescribed by law.' Thus,
even in war time, his seizure of needed military housing must be authorized by
Congress. It also was expressly left to
Congress to 'provide for calling forth the Militia to execute the Laws of the
Union, suppress Insurrections and repel Invasions
. . . .' Such a limitation on the
command power, written at a time when the militia rather than a standing army
was contemplated as the military weapon of the Republic, underscores the
Constitution's policy that Congress, not the Executive, should control
utilization of the war power as an instrument of domestic policy.
Youngstown Sheet & Tube
Co., 343
U.S. at 644 (footnote omitted). Today,
we need not reach the complex question of the judiciary's role in balancing the
interests of the Congress and the President in exercising that aspect of the
war powers that includes the power to make domestic enemy property
designations. We raise the issue only to
emphasize the limited reach of our holding solely to those extraterritorial
enemy property designations the President makes in anticipation of imminent
attack on American citizens or military forces.
Finally, although it was not raised by the appellants in
the proceedings before us, we might consider, sua sponte, whether
or not the test articulated in Mathews v. Eldridge, 424 U.S 319 (1976),
requires a different outcome in this case.
The Mathews test is "[t]he ordinary mechanism that [the
Supreme Court] use[s] for balancing [the] serious competing interests [of the
government and the individual], and for determining the procedures that are
necessary to ensure that a citizen is not 'deprived of life, liberty, or
property, without due process of law,' U.S. Const., Amdt. 5[.]" Hamdi, 124 S. Ct. at 2646. "Mathews dictates that the process due in any given instance is
determined by weighing 'the private interest that will be affected by the
official action' against the Government's asserted interest, 'including the
function involved' and the burdens the Government would face in providing
greater process." Id.
(citing Mathews, 424 U.S. at 335).
Here, application of the Mathews test would require us to balance
the appellants' strong interest in not being deprived of their property
interest in the Plant without due process against the President's interest and
capacity to wage war overseas. In other
words, we would have to consider whether providing the appellants additional
process to contest the single enemy property designation at bar is worth
risking the possibility that the panoply of such decisions the President makes
in "waging war successfully" overseas will likewise be subjected to
review in the federal courts. In short,
we think the question answers itself.
The balance, in this case, must necessarily tip in the President's
favor.
V
For the foregoing reasons, the decision
of the Court of Federal Claims to dismiss the complaint because it raises a
nonjusticiable political question is affirmed.
AFFIRMED
[1]
We note, only in passing, that the court's opinion
indicates that the allegedly taken radar equipment once belonged to the United
States and that the Philippine corporation was closely held by a small group of
shareholders that included two former members of the United States Air
Force. See Turney, 115 F.
Supp. at 458-59.
[2] Ever mindful of this court's duty to attend to its own jurisdiction, see Morgan v. Principi, 327 F.3d 1357, 1363 (Fed. Cir. 2003), we consider whether the appellants' later filing in federal district court ousted the Court of Federal Claims of jurisdiction over their takings claim under 28 U.S.C. § 1500 ("section 1500"). Section 1500 states, in pertinent part, that: "The United States Court of Federal Claims shall not have jurisdiction of any claim for or in respect to which the plaintiff or his assignee has pending in any other court any suit or process against the United States . . . ." We determine "whether another claim is 'pending' for purposes of § 1500 . . . at the time at which the suit in the Court of Federal Claims is filed[.]" Loveladies Harbor, Inc. v. United States, 27 F.3d 1545, 1548 (Fed. Cir. 1994) (en banc). Accordingly, the appellants did not vitiate the jurisdiction of the Court of Federal Claims over their first complaint by later filing the same claim in federal district court. See Tecon Eng'rs, Inc. v. United States, 343 F.2d 943, 946 (Ct. Cl. 1965) (rejecting argument that plaintiff ousted Court of Claims of jurisdiction by later filing the same suit in federal district court); see also Hardwick Bros. Co. v. United States, 72 F.3d 883, 886 (Fed. Cir. 1995) (confirming that the Tecon Engineers exception to section 1500 is still good law); Dico, Inc. v. United States, 48 F.3d 1199, 1203 (Fed. Cir. 1995) (same); Loveladies Harbor, 27 F.3d at 1549 (same).
[3] Because we conclude that the appellants' complaint states a takings claim falling within the jurisdiction of the Court of Federal Claims, we need not address the government's argument that the Supreme Court's tests for finding federal district court jurisdiction over maritime torts have been satisfied in this case. See Br. of Appellee at 45-53.
[4]
See The Prize Cases, 67 U.S. (2 Black) 635, 674
(1862) (stating "enemies' property" is "a technical phrase
peculiar to prize courts . . .").
[5]
The Court has in the past relied alternatively on a
theory of implied contract to find compensable takings, especially in those
cases where "property of loyal citizens is taken for the service of our
armies." See Pac. R.R.,
120 U.S. at 239 (stating that the obligation to pay just compensation in such
cases is "supposed to rest upon the general principle of justice that
compensation should be made where private property is taken for public
use," but nevertheless, the military's seizure and appropriation of
property in these instances "may not be within the terms of the constitutional
clause"); Russell, 80 U.S. (13 Wall.) at 630 (explaining that
government's obligation to pay for use of steamboats to ferry troops was
founded upon implied promise to compensate their owner for the services he
rendered); see also Nat'l Bd. of YMCAs, 396 F.2d at 471
(discussing Russell and other cases where courts have found compensable
military takings and suggesting that "the property in those cases was
requisitioned in a manner much akin to the procurement of goods and services
under contract—in the absence of immediate danger, after deliberation, and for
a somewhat later and less temporary use").
[6]
We are aware that these concerns also touch on the
coordinate inquiry under Baker of a "lack of judicially
discoverable and manageable standards" for resolving the dispute between
the appellants and the government.
Although we need not reach this Baker criterion, we suspect that
even if the concerns expressed in Eisentrager did not obtain here, it
would be difficult, if not extraordinary, for the federal courts to discover
and announce the threshold standard by which the United States government
evaluates intelligence in making a decision to commit military force in an
effort to thwart an imminent terrorist attack on Americans.