Court Opinion

ID: 4299284
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2018-07-30 20:02:09.091034+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T14:42:06.021645
License: Public Domain

In the United States Court of Federal Claims
                                           No. 14-817C

                                      (Filed: July 30, 2018)

*************************************
                                    *
NORTHERN CALIFORNIA POWER           *
AGENCY, et al.,                     *
                                    *
                                                     Illegal Exaction Claim; Department of
                    Plaintiffs,     *
                                                     Interior, Bureau of Reclamation; Central
                                    *
                                                     Valley Project Improvement Act; Statutory
v.                                  *
                                                     Authority; Statutory Interpretation; Plain
                                    *
                                                     Meaning.
THE UNITED STATES,                  *
                                    *
                    Defendant.      *
                                    *
*************************************

David T. Ralston, Jr., with whom were Frank S. Murray, Krista Nunez, and Jay N. Varon,
Foley & Lardner LLP, Washington, D.C., Jane Luckhardt, General Counsel, Northern
California Power Agency, Roseville, California, Robert R. Schmitt, City Attorney, City of
Roseville, Barry E. DeWalt, City Attorney, City of Redding, and Brian Doyle, City
Attorney, City of Santa Clara, for Plaintiffs.

P. Davis Oliver, with whom were Chad A. Readler, Acting Assistant Attorney General,
Robert E. Kirschman, Jr., Director, Franklin E. White, Jr., Assistant Director, Sosun Bae,
Ashley Akers, and Alex Haas, Trial Attorneys, Commercial Litigation Branch, Civil
Division, U.S. Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., for Defendant.

                                    OPINION AND ORDER

WHEELER, Judge.

      Plaintiffs Northern California Power Agency (“NCPA”),1 and the cities of Redding,
Roseville, and Santa Clara, California seek recovery of payments that they claim were
unlawfully assessed and collected by the Department of Interior, Bureau of Reclamation
1
 NCPA is a joint powers agency in California comprised of sixteen members including “municipalities, a
rural electric cooperative, and other publicly-owned entities interested in the purchase, aggregation,
scheduling, and management of electrical energy.” Stip. ¶ 3.
under section 3407(d) of the Central Valley Project Improvement Act (“CVPIA”), Pub. L.
102-575, 106 Stat. 4600, 4706–4731. In their illegal exaction claim, Plaintiffs argue that
the Bureau of Reclamation has ignored the “proportionality” provision in section 3407(d)
of the CVPIA and instead has followed a revenue-maximizing payment scheme that
unlawfully assesses disproportionate payments on Plaintiffs to fund fish and wildlife
habitat restoration projects within the Central Valley. In response, the Government
contends that the proportionality provision is not a mandatory limitation on its maximum
fund collection and that achieving proportionality has not been practicable.

        The calculation of payments due under the CVPIA from water and power customers
is complicated and somewhat perplexing. In years when California has experienced severe
droughts, the payment structure under the CVPIA has resulted in power customers bearing
a disproportionately high assessment of payments, because the water customers’ share of
payments is much lower. In effect, water customers’ payments are based upon actual
annual usage (lower in drought years), and power customers make up the difference to
reach an annual monetary objective. This payment system created by Congress is curious
in the extreme, but if the system is to be fixed, it should be addressed by Congress. It is
not the province of the judiciary to improve the perceived fairness of a statute. The
question presented is whether the Bureau of Reclamation has followed the mandate in the
statute.

       For the reasons explained below, the Court finds that the Bureau of Reclamation
essentially has followed the payment scheme created by Congress, and that the disparity
between water and power customers’ payments has occurred most notably in years of
severe California droughts. Disproportionate payments caused by droughts do not
constitute illegal exactions under the Fifth Amendment. Simply stated, the Bureau of
Reclamation has not done anything illegal. Accordingly, Plaintiffs’ amended complaint is
DISMISSED.

                                               Background2

        A. History of the Central Valley Project and CVPIA

       In 1935, Congress created the Central Valley Project to supply water to California
farms and communities for agricultural, municipal and industrial uses due to California’s
scarce water resources. Am. Compl. at ¶¶ 1–2, 4. The Central Valley’s need for water is
significant – it supplies eight percent of the United States’ total agricultural output and one-

2
 The Court refers to the trial transcript by witness and page as “Name, Tr. __” and to joint trial exhibits as
“JX __.” The parties’ stipulations of fact, filed on December 29, 2017, are referred to as “Stip. ¶ __.” The
pleadings referenced are Plaintiffs’ amended complaint and the parties’ post-trial briefs.

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quarter of the nation’s food – but annual rainfall does not provide a reliable source of water
for Central Valley farmers. Id. at ¶ 3. Today, the Central Valley Project is a “network of
dams, reservoirs, canals and aqueducts” and is one of the nation’s largest federal
reclamation projects, stretching the length of California’s Central Valley, from the Cascade
Range in the north, to the Kern River in the south. Id. at ¶ 1.

        The Bureau of Reclamation (“Reclamation”) of the United States Department of
Interior manages the Central Valley Project and oversees approximately nine million acre-
feet of water annually. Id. at ¶ 4. An acre-foot is approximately 326,000 gallons of water.
Id. Each year, the Central Valley Project delivers five million acre-feet of water for
agricultural purposes. Id. at ¶ 5. Another 600,000 acre-feet of water are furnished for
municipal and industrial purposes and another 1.2 million acre-feet of water are dedicated
to mitigation and restoration purposes such as fish, wildlife, refuges and wetlands. Id.
Central Valley water districts and farmers, California municipalities, and other water users
(“CVP Water Customers”) pay Reclamation for the water they receive. Id.

        The delivery of much needed water to farms, businesses and residents is not the only
benefit from the Central Valley Project. The dams built as part of the Central Valley
Project allow the production of hydroelectric power. Am. Compl. at ¶ 6. Reclamation,
acting through the Department of Energy Western Area Power Administration
(“Western”), sells the hydroelectric power created from the Central Valley Project. Id.
Plaintiffs, among others (“CVP Power Customers”), contract with Western to receive the
electric power and pay Western for the power they purchase. Id. at ¶ 7. In addition to
paying for the water and power they receive, CVP Water Customers and CVP Power
Customers also repay the Government for the “allocated proportional reimbursable costs
of building, operating and maintaining the [Central Valley Project].” Id. Since the CVP
is primarily a water-focused project, CVP Water Customers are responsible for more than
three-quarters of the CVP repayment costs, and CVP Power Customers are responsible for
less than one quarter of those costs. Id.

        In 1992, to offset the environmental impacts from the Central Valley Project,
Congress passed the CVPIA. As part of the CVPIA, Congress created a fund designated
as the “Restoration Fund” to restore the fish and wildlife habitats within the Central Valley
Project. The Restoration Fund is one possible source of funding for CVPIA projects and
activities. Id. at ¶ 29. CVPIA funding is also available through separate federal and state
appropriations. Id. In order to raise additional money for the Restoration Fund project, the
CVPIA requires CVP Water Customers and CVP Power Customers to contribute payments
assessed by Reclamation. Id. at ¶8. The contributions from CVP Water Customers and
CVP Power Customers include the additional annual mitigation and restoration payments
(“M&R payments) that are at issue in this case. Id. at ¶ 35. Congress also contemplated

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other, nondiscretionary sources of revenue streams to support the Restoration Fund: (1) the
Friant Surcharge, established in section 3406(c)(1), requiring water contractors who
receive water from the Friant Division of the CVP to be assessed a charge per acre foot of
water delivered; (2) the contract pre-renewal charge listed in section 3404(c)(3) to
encourage early renewal of long-term water contracts; (3) the water transfer charge,
authorized by section 3405(a)(1)(B), directing a charge on certain water transferred
between a CVP and non-CVP contractor; and (4) a tiered water charge, established in
section 3405(d). From the possible sources of revenue streams, Reclamation can collect
up to $50 million for the Restoration Fund as appropriated by Congress each year. The
total collection amount is subject to statutory limitations.

       B. Relevant Facts of This Case

       As stated, the CVPIA authorizes the appropriation of up to $50 million for the
Restoration Fund. Reclamation has proposed appropriations language between fiscal years
2008 and 2017, which Congress has adopted with the exception of fiscal year 2013. Stip.
¶ 27. Each year, Reclamation has requested Restoration funding of $50 million, and
Congress has directed the collection of the full amount of payments authorized by section
3407(d) of the CVPIA. See JX 4; see also Lubas-Williams, Tr. 1299-1300. In developing
the Restoration Fund budget, Reclamation relies on a three-year rolling average calculated
using one year of actual collections from the previous fiscal year and one year of projected
calculations from the current fiscal year. Lubas-Williams, Tr. 1233–35. In practice,
Reclamation attempts to collect as close as it can to the $50 million ceiling, because it
believes the language in the appropriations acts and the CVPIA require this outcome.
Mooney, Tr. 539–40.

       Reclamation’s practice prioritizes the attempt to reach $50 million over ensuring
that CVP Water and Power Customers pay in proportion to their repayment allocations.
Mooney, Tr. 579. It attempts to justify this action by stating that collecting $50 million is
a requirement based on appropriations language. Mooney, Tr. 649–50; 660. Therefore, if
other funding sources do not sufficiently materialize to allow Reclamation to meet the $50
million ceiling, which has been the case in some years, Reclamation seeks to collect $30
million in M&R payments. Mooney, Tr. 582–83. In order to reach the $30 million,
Reclamation calculates the difference between what it expects to receive from CVP Water
Customers and $30 million. Mooney, Tr. 642–43. It then assesses the difference to CVP
Power Customers. Id.

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              1. Reclamation’s Assessment and Collection Process: Water Customers

        Most water contracts require contractors to schedule and pay water charges two
months in advance, so Reclamation collects an estimated amount of water charges prior to
actual payment. Wolfe, Tr. 827, 947. Reclamation area office specialists categorize and
track water deliveries. Wolfe, Tr. 948–50. Once delivery information is entered into
Reclamation’s system, the regional office performs an accounting analysis to confirm
water rates and to ensure that Reclamation received payment for water and Restoration
Fund charges. Wolfe, Tr. 946–47, 952. Reclamation describes its water accounting
analysis as a three-step process. First, Reclamation verifies water deliveries between area
offices and contractors. Wolfe, Tr. 951. Following water delivery verification,
Reclamation prepares for a rate “true-up,” during which Reclamation compares estimated
rates and actual cost information to determine each contractor’s net position. Wolfe, Tr.
947, 953–54. Lastly, Reclamation reviews charges and payments received to determine if
there is an underpayment or overpayment. Wolfe, Tr. 954. If there is an underpayment,
the system generates a bill for the contractor, and the bill states that payment is due within
thirty days. Id. Reclamation’s practice concerning water contractors’ potential
overpayment is unclear. See Wolfe, Tr. 840.

              2. Reclamation’s Assessment and Collection Process: Power Customers

        To calculate CVP Power Customers’ payment obligation, Reclamation starts with a
$90 million ceiling, for the three years reflecting the prior, current and upcoming fiscal
years, in order to maintain the three-year rolling average going forward. Trujillo-Bixby,
Tr. 91–94. Reclamation uses the actual amount collected for the prior year and projected
payments for the current fiscal year; it then subtracts that sum from the $90 million to reach
the CVP Power Customers’ payment obligation. Trujillo-Bixby, Tr. 91–92. Prior to the
start of each fiscal year, Reclamation sends Western a letter informing Western of CVP
Power Customers’ payment obligations for M&R charges. See Rieger, Tr. 1751–52; see
also Trujillo-Bixby, Tr. 85–86. Partially through the fiscal year, Reclamation conducts a
midyear adjustment, during which Reclamation may adjust the power payment obligation
from the amount stated in the initial obligation letter to more accurately reflect the charges
for the remainder of the fiscal year (“midyear adjustment”). Rieger, Tr. 1752. The midyear
adjustment is based on M&R collections and more current hydrologic projections. Trujillo-
Bixby, Tr. 100; Mooney, Tr. 370. At the end of the fiscal year, Reclamation undergoes a
“true-up” process, in which it compares actual M&R payment receipts to the projected
payments for that year. Trujillo-Bixby, Tr. 85, 106.

       If the actual M&R payments received in a recently concluded fiscal year are lower
than the projected amount of M&R payments for that year, this occurrence constitutes a

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“shortfall.” Trujillo-Bixby, Tr. 107. In the event of a shortfall, Reclamation notifies CVP
Power Customers and rolls the additional amount owed by power users into the three-year
average; this action affects the second projected year in the three-year rolling average,
allowing Reclamation to maintain the $30 million ceiling on a three-year average. Trujillo-
Bixby, Tr. 268. If the actual M&R payments received in a given year exceed the projected
M&R payment amount, Reclamation temporarily moves the excess amount to a suspense
fund and issues a credit to the CVP Power Customers’ payment for the following fiscal
year. Trujillo-Bixby, Tr. 110–12.

       Reclamation’s ability to collect from CVP Water Customers directly affects CVP
Power Customers. For example, drought years in California affect Reclamation’s ability
to collect M&R payments from CVP Water Customers, because less water is sold and
delivered in dry years; Reclamation only collects M&R payments on water that is both sold
and delivered. Mooney, Tr. 641; Wolfe, Tr. 828. When water deliveries are low,
Reclamation’s practice results in CVP Power Customers exceeding their proportion of the
CVP Repayment Costs.

        According to Plaintiffs, Reclamation’s assessment of the Restoration Fund
payments has caused CVP Power Customers to pay more than $120 million in excess
charges. Am. Compl. at ¶¶ 10–11. Plaintiffs in this lawsuit seek reimbursement of the
$120 million in Restoration Fund payments that they claim were assessed by Reclamation
in violation of section 3407(d)’s proportionality provision. The parties principally disagree
about whether the proportionality provision in section 3407(d)(2)(A) is a limitation on the
$50 million to be collected for the Restoration Fund, and whether Reclamation has
attempted to achieve said proportionality.

                                    Procedural History

       Plaintiffs filed their complaint in this Court on September 4, 2014. On January 20,
2015, the Government filed a motion to dismiss under Rules 12(b)(1) and 12(b)(6) for lack
of subject matter jurisdiction and failure to state a claim upon which relief can be granted.
The Court denied the Government’s motion on June 29, 2015. See N. California Power
Agency v. United States, 122 Fed. Cl. 111 (2015). Plaintiffs filed an amended complaint
on September 27, 2016. Dkt. No. 35.

       The Court conducted a trial in this case during January 16 – 25, 2018, in San
Francisco, California. The trial was limited to the issue of the Government’s liability and
did not address valuation. The Court heard testimony concerning Reclamation’s CVPIA
implementation, M&R payment collections, and accounting practices. David Mooney,
former CPVIA Program Administrator; David Murillo, Regional Director; Gail Trujillo-

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Bixby, CVPIA Accountant; Autumn Wolfe, Regional Financial Manager and former CVP
Ratesetting Manager; Ann Lubas-Williams, Program Coordination Office Manager; and
Richard Woodley, Regional Resources Manager, served as witnesses from Reclamation’s
Mid-Pacific Region. Regina Rieger, Rates Manager for Western’s Sierra Nevada
Customer Service Region, testified about Western’s interpretation of the CVPIA and CVP
Power Customers’ payment burden. The parties simultaneously filed post-trial briefs on
April 2, 2018 and response briefs on May 4, 2018. See Dkt. Nos. 102, 103, 104, 105. The
Court heard closing arguments at the National Courts Building in Washington, D.C. on
June 1, 2018.

                                        Discussion

        Under the Tucker Act, the Court can hear any claim that is “founded either upon the
Constitution, or any Act of Congress or any regulation of an executive department, or upon
any express or implied contract with the United States, or for liquidated or unliquidated
damages in cases not sounding in tort.” 28 U.S.C. § 1491. It is well established that based
on the Tucker Act, the Court can hear claims “made for recovery of monies that the
government has required to be paid contrary to law.” Areolineas Argentinas v. United
States, 77 F.3d 1564, 1572 (Fed. Cir. 1996) (defining an illegal exaction claim). An illegal
exaction claim may be maintained where “the plaintiff has paid money over to the
Government, directly or in effect, and seeks return of all or part of that sum that was
improperly paid, exacted, or taken from the claimant in contravention of the Constitution,
a statute, or a regulation.” Id. at 1572–73. Overpayment claims are one of the
quintessential illegal exaction claims. See Suwannee S.S. Co. v. United States, 279 F.2d
874, 876–77 (Fed. Cir. 1960). Jurisdiction to recover the exaction is provided when “the
exaction is based on an asserted statutory power,” Areolineas, 77 F.3d at 1573, and the
statute invoked by the plaintiff must provide “either expressly or by ‘necessary
implication,’ that ‘the remedy for its violation entails a return of money unlawfully
exacted,’” Norman v. United States, 429 F.3d 1081, 1095 (Fed. Cir. 2005) (citing Cyprus
Amax Coal Co. v. United States, 205 F.3d 1369, 1373 (Fed. Cir. 2000)). In order to prevail
on an illegal exaction claim, Plaintiffs must demonstrate that the funds collected by
Reclamation were taken contrary to the Central Valley Improvement Act.

       A. Statutory Interpretation    and Limitations      to Reclamation’s      Collection
          Requirement

        Plaintiffs first argue that Reclamation’s methodology for calculating M&R charges
violates the CVPIA’s proportionality provision, because proportionality is a strict
limitation to which Reclamation’s total revenue collection must comply. In order to
evaluate this assertion, the Court has examined the relevant provisions of the statute. See

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Sante Fe Indus., Inc. v. Green, 430 U.S. 462, 472 (1997) (explaining that the starting point
in any case involving statutory construction is the language of the statute itself).

       Section 3407(b), the meaning of which is not in dispute, authorizes “up to
$50,000,000 per year (October 1992 price levels) . . . to be appropriated to the Secretary to
be derived from the Restoration Fund to carry out programs, plans, and habitat restoration,
improvement, and acquisition provisions of this title . . . .”

      Section 3407(c) is titled “Mitigation and Restoration Payments by Water and Power
Beneficiaries.” Subsection 3407(c)(1) states:

              To the extent required in appropriation Acts, the Secretary
              shall assess and collect additional annual mitigation and
              restoration payments, in addition to the charges provided for or
              collected under [other] sections . . . of this title, consisting of
              charges to direct beneficiaries of the Central Valley Project
              under subsection (d) of this section in order to recover a portion
              or all of the costs of fish, wildlife, and habitat restoration
              programs and projects under this title.

By its very language, subsection 3407(c)(1) directs the assessment and collection of M&R
charges from the CVP’s direct beneficiaries – CVP Water and Power Customers. These
M&R payments are to be collected in addition to other, nondiscretionary charges listed in
the statute.

       Subsection 3407(c)(2) first states:

              The payment described in this subsection shall be established
              at amounts that will result in the collection, during each fiscal
              year, of an amount that can be reasonably expected to equal the
              amount appropriated each year, subject to subsection (d) of this
              section, and in combination with all other receipts identified
              under this title, to carry out the purposes identified in
              subsection (b) of this section. . . .

This text describes one method for M&R fund collections: the appropriations approach.
Under this approach, Reclamation would be required to achieve total collections equal to
the appropriated amount. The total collection would be “subject to subsection (d) of this
section.” After introducing the appropriations approach, subsection 3407(c)(2) continues:

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              Provided, That if the total amount appropriated under
              subsection (b) of this section for the fiscal years following
              enactment of this title does not equal $50,000,000 per year
              (October 1992 price levels) on an average annual basis, the
              Secretary shall impose such charges in fiscal year 1998 and in
              each fiscal year thereafter, subject to the limitations in
              subsection (d) of this section, as may be required to yield in
              fiscal year 1998 and in each fiscal year thereafter total
              collections equal to $50,000,000 per year (October 1992 price
              levels) on a three-year rolling average basis for each fiscal year
              that follows enactment of this title.

This excerpt explains another method for M&R fund collections: the $50 million approach.
Under this approach, if the total amount appropriated by Congress for the fiscal years
following the enactment of the CVPIA does not equal $50 million per year on an average
annual basis, Reclamation is required to impose charges as may be sufficient to yield $50
million per year on a three-year rolling average basis. The total collections would be
“subject to the limitations in subsection (d) of this section.” (Emphasis added).

       The parties do not dispute that subsection 3407(c)(2) identifies two funding
methods: the appropriations approach and the $50 million approach. See Pls.’ Br. at 42;
see also Def.’s Resp. at 13–14. The parties do, however, disagree about which method
governs this case and what limitations are included in subsection (d).

       Reading 3407(c)(2) on its face, if the $50 million appropriations amount was not
realized after the enactment of the CVPIA, the $50 million approach evidently governs.
The total amount that Congress appropriated for the years following CVPIA enactment has
not equaled $50 million per year on an average annual basis. Mooney, Tr. 625. Therefore,
the $50 million method, not the appropriations approach, applies here. Plaintiffs argue that
the appropriations approach should be used, emphasizing that it is superior to the $50
million approach and yields better results in both wet and dry years. See Tr. of Closing
Arg. at 1887, Dkt. No. 107. Unfortunately, the applicable approach does not depend on
which method produces more favorable results. As written, the statute requires the latter-
explained funding method if the $50 million amount was not fulfilled. As this amount was
not realized, the $50 million approach governs. The statute, however, contains limitations
on this approach.

       Subsection 3407(d)(2)(A), the remaining disputed provision in this litigation, reads:

              The Secretary shall require Central Valley Project water and
              power contractors to make such additional annual payments as

                                              9
are necessary to yield, together with all other receipts, the
amount required under paragraph (c)(2) of this subsection;
Provided, That such additional payments shall not exceed
$30,000,000 (October 1992 price levels) on a three-year rolling
average basis; Provided further, That such additional annual
payments shall be allocated so as not to exceed $6.00 per acre-
foot (October 1992 price levels) for agricultural water sold and
delivered by the Central Valley Project, and $12.00 per acre-
foot (October 1992 price levels) for municipal and industrial
water sold and delivered by the Central Valley Project;
Provided further, that the charge imposed on agricultural water
shall be reduced, if necessary, to an amount within the probable
ability of the water users to pay as determined and adjusted by
the Secretary no less than every five years, taking into account
the benefits resulting from implementation of this title;
Provided further, That the Secretary shall impose an additional
annual charge of $25.00 per acre-foot (October 1992 price
levels) for Central Valley Project water sold or transferred to
any State or local agency or other entity which has not
previously been a Central Valley Project customer and which
contracts with the Secretary or any other individual or district
receiving Central Valley Project water to purchase or
otherwise transfer any such water for its own use for municipal
and industrial purposes, to be deposited in the Restoration
Fund; And Provided further, That upon the completion of the
fish, wildlife, and habitat mitigation and restoration actions
mandated under section 3406 of this title, the Secretary shall
reduce the sums described in paragraph (c)(2) of this section to
$35,000,000 per year (October 1992 price levels) and shall
reduce the annual mitigation and restoration payment ceiling
established under this subsection to $15,000,000 (October
1992 price levels) on a three-year rolling average basis. The
amount of the mitigation and restoration payment made by
Central Valley Project water and power users, taking into
account all funds collected under this title, shall, to the greatest
degree practicable, be assessed in the same proportion,
measured over a ten-year rolling average, as water and power
users' respective allocations for repayment of the Central
Valley Project.

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(Emphases added). In assessing the language of the statute, the first phrase after the word
“Provided” imposes a $30 million annual limit on the total amount of M&R payments.
Applying this limitation to the three-year rolling average, Reclamation cannot collect more
than $90 million in M&R payments over a three-year period. The next phrase, beginning
with “Provided further,” places a ceiling on charges to agricultural and municipal and
industrial (“M&I”) water sold and delivered by the CVP. The third phrase, also starting
with “Provided further,” continues this list and explains that Reclamation must reduce the
additional M&R payments imposed on agricultural water by considering their ability to
pay for such charges. The next provision, also beginning with “Provided further,” places
an additional charge of $25 per acre-foot for certain M&I water. The list ends with the
final clause prefaced by “And Provided further,” and indicates that if Reclamation
completes the fish, wildlife, and habitat mitigation and restoration actions mandated under
section 3406, the $50 million mandate and the M&R ceiling are reduced. Semicolons,
suggesting a continuation of some sort, separate the aforementioned phrases. The parties
agree that these five phrases are subsection (d) limitations, meaning, these limitations
supersede Reclamation’s requirement to collect $50 million.3 See Pls.’ Br. at 44; Def.’s
Br. at 43. Plaintiffs argue that the list of limitations also includes the final sentence of this
subsection:

                The amount of the mitigation and restoration payment made by
                Central Valley Project water and power users, taking into
                account all funds collected under this title, shall, to the greatest
                degree practicable, be assessed in the same proportion,
                measured over a ten-year rolling average, as water and power
                users’ respective allocations for repayment of the Central
                Valley Project.

3407(d)(2)(A).     According to Plaintiffs, Reclamation is required to prioritize
proportionality over the $50 million collection, similar to the other provisions. Pls.’ Br. at
44. Plaintiffs maintain that in order for the proportionality provision to constitute one of

3
  In its June 29, 2015 ruling, the Court referred to five limitations to which Reclamation is subject when
collecting M&R funds. It included (1) the $30 million ceiling mandate, (2) maximum for agricultural and
M&I water, (3) the consideration of agricultural water customers’ ability to pay; (4) reduction of the annual
ceiling upon carrying out section 3406 actions, and (5) the proportionality provision. The Court omitted
the additional annual charge of $25 per acre-foot for certain M&I water, which neither party questions as a
subsection (d) limitation. The Court instead mentioned proportionality as the fifth limitation. See N.
California Power Agency, 122 Fed Cl. at 114. Though mistakenly absent from that opinion, the $25 per
acre-foot charge is a clear qualification. The effect of the proportionality provision is discussed below in
this Opinion.

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the subsection (d) limitations, it must simply qualify as a restraint and be listed within
3407(d) of the CVPIA. Id. at 50.

        In opposition, the Government argues that proportionality is not a subsection (d)
limitation, as it is distinct from the five provisos that precede it. Def.’s Br. at 43. The
Government explains, “A proviso is ‘[a]n article or clause in any statute, contract, grant, or
other writing, by which a condition is introduced, usually beginning with the word
provided.’” Id. at 42 (citing Webster’s New International Dictionary (2d ed. 1995)). “The
general office of a proviso is to except something from the enacting clause, or to qualify it
or restrain its generality.” Republic of Iraq v. Beaty, 556 U.S 848, 858 (2009) (quoting
United States v. Morrow, 266 U.S. 531, 534 (1925)). A proviso limits the language of the
legislature. See Tilge v. United States, 2 U.S. Cust. App. 129, 134 (1911). The
Government contends that all of the subsection (d) limitations, to which the $50 million
ceiling is subject, are prefaced with provisos such as “Provided,” “Provided further,” and
“And Provided further,” making the exceptions easily identifiable. Def.’s Br. at 43.

        The Court agrees with the Government. There is a clear distinction between the five
limiting clauses and the proportionality provision that immediately follows. If Congress
intended for the proportionality provision to function in the same limiting way as the other
five phrases, it would have used similar language. Instead, the proportionality provision is
not prefaced by such language and is likely not of the same ilk as the undisputed limitations.
Plaintiffs reject this interpretation, noting that Congress intentionally placed the
proportionality provision in subsection (d) along with the five, definite limitations. Pls.’
Br. at 51–52. This point, however, begs the question of Congress’ intent to visibly exclude
limiting language from the proportionality provision in addition to using disparate
punctuation for the proportionality sentence. This exclusion is more telling than the
proportionality placement. “[W]here, in a statute, an express limitation or proviso is made
with respect to a given subject matter, and, in the same statute, no such limitation or proviso
is made applicable to a related subject matter, the absence of the limitation or proviso in
the second instance is a strong indication that it is not intended to apply, or by implication,
that it is excluded.”) Green Co. v. Chelsea, 149 F.2d 927, 929 (1st Cir. 1945) (emphasis
added).

        Distinguishing between the limiting clauses in 3407(d) and the proportionality
provision in that section is aligned with Reclamation’s actual practice. According to the
record and trial testimony, Reclamation’s assessment of M&R charges to CVP Water and
Power Customers is premised on the statutory mandate to collect $50 million per year on
a three-year rolling average basis. Mooney, Tr. 582–83. In doing so, Reclamation seeks
to collect the maximum amount as the five limitations allow. The Court concludes that the
proportionality provision is not a strict subsection (d) limitation to be prioritized above the

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$50 million collection target. Therefore, Reclamation’s practice of considering
proportionality after the collection target does not violate the CVPIA.

       B. Practicability and Reclamation’s Attempts to Achieve Proportionality

        Although the Court does not interpret the proportionality provision to be an absolute
limitation that supersedes Reclamation’s $50 million collection target, it is nonetheless a
statutory provision that Reclamation cannot ignore. The use of the word, “shall” in the
provision is mandatory language. See, e.g. Sharp Elecs. Corp. v. McHugh, 707 F.3d 1367,
1373 (Fed. Cir. 2013). The proportionality provision gives some flexibility to Reclamation
in assessing the payment allocations for water and power users by stating that
proportionality shall be carried out “to the greatest degree practicable.” The statute itself
anticipates that proportionality may not always be possible. The relevant issues, therefore,
are whether proportionality has been practicable for Reclamation, and if so, whether
Reclamation has attempted to achieve proportionality.

              1. Feasibility

       The word “practicable” means “possible” or “feasible.” According to Reclamation,
proportionality has not been practicable due to the imperative to collect $50 million, the
relevant limitations on the $50 million total, and depressed water revenues. Mooney, Tr.
643. Annual appropriations language directs Reclamation “to assess and collect the full
amount of the annual mitigation and restoration payments authorized by section 3407(d).”
See JX 4. The total amount collected is affected by the sum of non-M&R, or
nondiscretionary charges, namely the Friant Surcharge, the contract pre-renewal charge,
the water transfer, and the tiered water charge. For example, if the non-M&R charges equal
$30 million per year, Reclamation could collect $20 million in M&R charges per year in
order to reach the $50 million total. If the nondiscretionary charges equal $10 million per
year, Reclamation would collect $30 million in M&R charges per year, keeping in line
with the statute’s $30 million ceiling and attempting to reach the $50 million collection
total. The total M&R payments do not exist in a vacuum. They are affected by the non-
M&R charges as well as statutory limitations.

       Generally, the non-M&R revenues have not been at least $20 million a year and are
affected by external factors such as droughts in California. Mooney, Tr. 641, 655–56.
Therefore, in an attempt to fulfill the $50 million mandate, Reclamation has collected the
maximum amount of M&R charges. Def.’s Br. at 46. It is possible that, when drafting the
CVPIA, Congress anticipated greater revenue from non-M&R sources. However, this has
not been the reality. See Wolfe, Tr. 703–04, 798, 924–25, 928–29. Based on this fact,

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Reclamation’s practice of collecting the maximum amount of M&R charges in order to
achieve $50 million is logical.

        With this consideration, the Court examines if proportionality is possible when
Reclamation collects the maximum M&R payments allowed. Subsection 3407(d)
limitations are integral to this analysis. 3407(d)(2)(A) limits M&R payments on
agricultural and M&I water sold and delivered by the CVP and mandates necessary
reductions for certain water contractors’ ability to pay. The strict limitations on water
charges conversely affect the amount of charges assessed to power contractors. Achieving
proportionality while collecting the maximum amount of M&R charges is therefore a
difficult objective and may not be feasible in many years, depending on the circumstances.

              2. Proportionality Attempts

       Reclamation’s practices show its consideration of proportionality when possible.
For example, although Reclamation has the discretion to collect less than $6 per acre-foot
for agricultural water and $12 per acre-foot for M&I water, it does not. It instead assesses
the maximum additional M&R water charges. Trujillo-Bixby, Tr 177–79; Mooney, Tr.
345, 583, 636. This maximization increases the amount paid by water contractors, thereby
decreasing power contractors’ obligation. See Money, Tr. 637. Similarly, Reclamation is
working toward completing the objectives set forth in section 3406, because completion of
these activities reduces the restoration fund ceiling—decreasing CVP Power Customers’
payments. See Mooney, Tr. 583, 667–68.

        Also, in fiscal year 2014, Reclamation contemplated an effort titled, “Pathway to
Proportionality,” intending to examine ways to bring CVP Power Customers’ Restoration
Fund payments closer to proportionate with their CVP cost allocation. Mooney, Tr. 657.
While Reclamation did not execute the plan due to its lack of viability, the consideration
should not go unnoticed. Mooney, Tr. 657–58. Lastly, Reclamation has made attempts to
consider proportionality through its actions in fiscal years 2014 and 2015 concerning the
mid-year adjustment. During these years, California experienced a severe drought,
resulting in lower water payments. Mooney, Tr. 641–42. In order to provide CVP Power
Customers relief, Reclamation rescinded the fiscal year 2014 midyear adjustment. Murillo,
Tr. 1073–75. In fiscal year 2015, Reclamation decided to defer the midyear adjustment to
alleviate the burden on power users, keeping the power payment obligation as listed in that
year’s initial obligation letter. These actions were within Reclamation’s discretion and
were attempts to lessen CVP Power Customers’ payment obligation.

      At trial, the evidence showed that Reclamation’s collection and monitoring methods
for water charges perhaps work better in theory than in practice. Some CVP Water
Customers have unpaid balances, dating back several years. Wolfe, Tr. 897, 900–01.

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Reclamation has conducted historical reconciliations to address monitoring issues and
water payment discrepancies.        During such reconciliations, which consisted of
Reclamation comparing charges reflected in the system and actual payments and billing
for unpaid charges, Reclamation discovered a $1.1 million discrepancy in Restoration
funds. Wolfe, Tr. 995. Similarly, historical reconciliations revealed a $624,000
discrepancy in M&R charges. Wolfe, Tr. 987. Plaintiffs view Reclamation’s imperfect
collection methods as evidence of the agency’s violation of the statute. Reclamation’s
monitoring and enforcement methods are not perfect and arguably should be improved.
Nonetheless, these collection practices do not amount to an illegal exaction.

       The CVPIA provides protections for water customers that it does not make available
to power customers. As such, proportionality becomes a difficult objective when
considering the effect that drought years have on water payments, coupled with the
collection limitations mandated by the statute. Considering the totality of the
circumstances, Plaintiffs have not shown that Reclamation’s assessment and collection
practices violate the CVPIA.

                                      Conclusion

       For the reasons stated above, the Court finds that Reclamation’s practices do not
violate the CVPIA. Plaintiffs’ amended complaint is DISMISSED. The clerk is directed
to enter judgment accordingly. No costs.

      IT IS SO ORDERED.

                                                      s/ Thomas C. Wheeler
                                                      THOMAS C. WHEELER
                                                      Judge

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