Legal Research AI

Zelman v. Gregg

Court: Court of Appeals for the First Circuit
Date filed: 1994-02-18
Citations: 16 F.3d 445
Copy Citations
3 Citing Cases
Combined Opinion
                UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
                                         

No. 93-1416

               VICTOR ZELMAN and BETTY ZELMAN,

                   Plaintiffs, Appellants,

                              v.

 RICHARD L. GREGG, COMMISSIONER OF THE PUBLIC DEPT., ET AL.,

                    Defendants, Appellees.

                                         

         APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

                  FOR THE DISTRICT OF MAINE

         [Hon. D. Brock Hornby, U.S. District Judge]
                                                   

                                         

                            Before

                    Cyr, Boudin and Stahl,

                       Circuit Judges.
                                     

                                         

Victor Zelman and Betty Zelman on brief pro se.
                              
Stuart E.  Schiffer, Acting  Assistant  Attorney  General, Jay  P.
                                                                  
McCloskey, United States Attorney, Barbara  C. Biddle and Deborah Ruth
                                                                  
Kant on brief for appellees.


                                         

                      February 17, 1994
                                         

     BOUDIN, Circuit Judge.  This is a suit by the owners  of
                          

federal savings bonds that were allegedly stolen and redeemed

without the owners' permission.  The district court dismissed

the suit on the ground that it had been brought in  the wrong

court.  With certain clarifications, we affirm.

                              I.

     In this case Victor and Betty Zelman, a husband and wife

residing in  Maine, brought  suit pro  se  in district  court
                                         

against the Secretary of the Treasury and the Commissioner of

the Public Debt.   Their complaint alleged that  six series E

bonds issued to  one or both of the  Zelmans, currently worth

(in total) more  than $10,000, had been stolen  from them and

that  the government was now refusing to issue replacements.1

Claiming  that the  government had  breached the  contractual

rights   reflected  in  the  bonds,  the  Zelmans  sought  an

injunction to require the issuance of replacements.  

     Prior  to  bringing  suit,  the  Zelmans  had  requested

replacements from the Bureau of Public Debt which administers

the  savings bond  program for  the Treasury.   In  reply the

Bureau told  the Zelmans  the following:   first,  government

records showed the bonds to  have been redeemed more than ten

                    

     1The series E  bonds assertedly stolen from  the Zelmans
appear  to  have  been registered  bonds  rather  than bearer
bonds.  See 31 C.F.R.   315.5 ("Savings bonds are issued only
           
in  registered form. . . .  The registration is conclusive of
ownership,  except as  provided  in     315.49  [relating  to
correction of error in registration].").

                             -2-

years   ago;   second,   government  regulations   create   a

presumption that redeemed bonds have been properly paid if no

claims have been  filed within ten  years of redemption;  and

third,  since the  government now  retains  no other  records

after ten years has elapsed following redemption, "no details

regarding .  . .  redemption [of the  Zelmans' bonds]  can be

furnished."

     Broadly  speaking   and  with   certain  qualifications,

government  bonds  are   viewed  as  contracts  between   the

government and the owners, whose terms are fixed by statutes,

regulations  and  offering  circulars.   Estate  of  Curry v.
                                                          

United States,  409 F.2d 671,  675 (6th Cir. 1969);  Wolak v.
                                                          

United States,  366 F.  Supp. 1106,  1111-12 (D.  Conn. 1973)
             

(collecting and quoting numerous cases).  In response  to the

Zelmans' suit, which explicitly alleged a breach of contract,

the U.S.  Attorney asserted  that the  district court  lacked

subject matter jurisdiction  over the suit.  This  is so, the

U.S. Attorney argued in a motion to dismiss, because contract

claims  against the United States for amounts of over $10,000

may  be  brought only  in  the Claims  Court.   28  U.S.C.   

1346(a)(1), 1491(a)(1).  

     The district  court agreed with the  government, stating

that "since this is an action for breach of contract and more

than $10,000  is  at  stake, the  Tucker  Act  provides  that

jurisdiction exists only in the  . . . Claims  Court . . . ."

                             -3-

Noting that no request for such a transfer had been made, see
                                                             

28 U.S.C.    1631, the district court dismissed  the case for

want of jurisdiction and without prejudice to a new action in

a court with jurisdiction.  The Zelmans have sought review in

this court, arguing that the dismissal was improper  and that

redress apart from damages should be afforded to them.

                             II.

     On appeal, the Zelmans first argue that each bond should

be treated  as a  separate contract  and that,  individually,

each such claim  in this case is under $10,000 and within the

jurisdiction  of the district court.  The government responds

that  there  is  "some authority"  for  the  proposition that

separate  claims for under $10,000 should not be aggregated;2

but  it   says  that   the  district   court  still   "lacked

jurisdiction" to afford the only remedy sought by the Zelmans

in  this case, namely, an injunction directing re-issuance of

the bonds.   Indeed, we  have held that "[f]ederal  courts do

not  have  the power  to  order specific  performance  by the

United  States  of   its  alleged  contractual  obligations."

Coggeshall Development Corp.  v. Diamond, 884 F.2d  1, 3 (1st
                                        

Cir. 1989).

                    

     2See e.g., Baker  v. United  States, 722  F.2d 517,  518
                                        
(9th  Cir. 1983);  United States  v.  Louisville &  Nashville
                                                             
R.R., 221 F.2d 698, 701-03 (6th Cir. 1955); Sutcliffe Storage
                                                             
& Warehouse Co.  v. United States, 162 F.2d  849, 851-52 (1st
                                 
Cir. 1947);   see also 14 C.  Wright, A. Miller &  E. Cooper,
                      
Federal Practice and Procedure,   3647 at 287 (2d ed. 1985).
                              

                             -4-

     One  could argue  about  whether "jurisdiction"--a  term

with many shades of meaning--is  lacking if the complaint has

asserted  a  colorable claim  (in  this case,  for  breach of

contract) but named  an unavailable remedy.   But the Zelmans

did not  argue to the district  court that the claims  may be

disaggregated  (although  two sentences  in  their memorandum

hinted at such an argument)  and even now the government does

not quite  concede the point.   We are reluctant  to overturn

the district court in a  civil suit based on a disaggregation

theory not raised in that court.  Indeed, the government does

not confess error  on this issue and  may dispute or hope  to

distinguish the disaggregation precedents.

     Accordingly,  we  are  disposed to  affirm  the district

court but without  prejudice to the Zelmans' filing  of a new

suit  in the same district court if they wish to pursue their

disaggregation theory.  We say "if" because  the Claims Court

has unquestioned jurisdiction, assuming that the  Zelmans are

now prepared to accept damages  as their relief.  The Zelmans

might prefer to refile their suit in the Maine district court

or they might  conclude that the Claims  Court, although more

distant, is  a preferable  forum  in order  to avoid  another

possible round  of jurisdictional  controversy.   The initial

choice is theirs.

     But we  have something more  to say about the  course of

this matter.  The pages of correspondence between the Zelmans

                             -5-

and  the  Treasury's  Bureau  of  the  Public  Debt  will  be

familiar, at least as a prototype, to anyone who has ventured

to assert a money claim against a public  body.  Although the

Bureau's letters to the Zelmans  (and later to their senator)

may well  be accurate  in a literal  sense, most  lay readers

would  likely  believe  that the  Bureau  had  determined the

Zelmans' claim to be without merit.   The critical sentences,

repeated in several of the letters, are these:

          [T]he regulations governing savings bonds
          provide that bonds for which no claim has
          been  filed   within  10  years   of  the
          recorded  date  of   redemption  will  be
          presumed to have been properly paid.   At
          that  time, the  payment records  of such
          bonds  are  destroyed  and  from then  on
          there  is no  data  available from  which
          photographs  or  other  details regarding
          the redemption can be obtained.

     The  critical phrase,  "presumed  to have  been properly

paid,"  is   taken  verbatim   from   the  current   Treasury

regulations, 31 C.F.R.    315.29(b), although the  regulation

in question is not cited in the letters.  The word "presumed"

has more  than one  meaning but  it quite  often refers to  a

rebuttable presumption; that  is, when the predicate  fact is

proved  (here, that the  bonds were redeemed  by someone over

ten years ago), then  some other "presumed" fact (here,  that

the bonds were  redeemed by their real owners)  will be taken

to be true--unless and until the party disputing the presumed

fact offers substantial countervailing evidence.  See Fed. R.
                                                     

                             -6-

Evid. 301; 2 J. Strong, McCormick on Evidence   342 (4th  Ed.
                                             

1992).3 

     Assuming for purposes of discussion that  the regulation

refers to  a rebuttable  presumption, then  quite likely  the

Zelmans have  the burden  of offering  evidence to  establish

that the  bonds were  stolen from them  and if  redeemed were

redeemed  without their permission.   They might  have such a

burden even  without the  presumption.   The  Zelmans may  be

hindered because  the  Bureau has apparently disposed  of the

records  of redemption  apart  from  recording  the  fact  of

redemption.    Still,  a factfinder  might  well  believe the

Zelmans, especially if they can corroborate the theft of  the

bonds.   Stolen bonds are  unlikely to have been  redeemed by

their rightful owner.

     If the Bureau regards the presumption as rebuttable, one

might expect  at least one of its letters  to say this to the

Zelmans  in plain  language and,  further, to tell  them what

process  (a review  board, a  court)  is available  to get  a

decision on the factual issue.   If instead the Bureau thinks

                    

     3Occasionally the term "presumption" is used to indicate
that  the  presumed  fact  is  conclusively  or  irrebuttably
presumed and  the opponent  will not be  allowed to  show the
contrary.  See e.g., Stanley  v. Illinois, 405 U.S. 645, 656-
                                         
57  (1972) (voiding  irrebuttable  statutory presumption);  2
McCormick at 451.  And,  to make matters even more confusing,
         
the term  is sometimes  used to refer  to a  mere permissible
inference.  See  County Court of Ulster County  v. Allen, 442
                                                        
U.S.  140, 157 (1979)  (referring to "an  entirely permissive
inference  or   presumption,  which   allows--but  does   not
require"--an inference of one fact from proof of another).

                             -7-

that  the regulation  creates an  irrebuttable presumption--a

kind  of mini-statute of  limitations--then it ought  to have

said so plainly  to the Zelmans.   To leave  the matter in  a

state of confusion is not an attractive posture for an agency

that must face this very issue with some frequency.

     The  government is  a huge  body  employing millions  of

people,  and  needs  to use  regulations,  routines  and form

letters.  It is also right  that its servants should be chary

about claims against the Treasury, claims that are often ill-

founded and sometimes dishonest.  But  it is not too much  to

ask that the Bureau of the Public Debt give a plain statement

of  its  position--and   even  useful  directions--to   those

citizens  who have lent the government money, seek repayment,

and have very little idea  how to navigate through the forest

of rules and procedures.

                             III.

     The Zelmans'  filings, both in the district court and in

this  court, argue variously that case law supports equitable

relief; that it  is a violation of the due  process clause to

apply regulation    315.29(b) as a statute  of limitations to

bonds  sold before the  regulation was promulgated;  and that

the  records concerning the  redemption should not  have been

destroyed since without  them the Zelmans cannot  prove their

case.    These arguments  do  not  alter  our view  that  the

district court should be affirmed.

                             -8-

     The  Zelmans' argument for equitable relief rests on the

ground that the  government had an obligation,  under the law

as  it  existed when  the  bonds were  purchased,  to replace
                                                             

stolen  bonds that  have  been  improperly  redeemed.    This

argument is  difficult to appraise  because the  text of  the

provisions relied  upon by the  Zelmans is not quoted  by the

Zelmans,  and the  statutes  and  regulations  to  which  the

Zelmans cite do not clearly set forth the obligation that the

Zelmans impute.4   Whether such an  obligation might be  made

out, however, is an issue we need not determine.

     On  the  Zelmans'   own  version  of  the   matter,  the

obligation  on which  they rely  existed  under statutory  or

regulatory language that  has since been repealed.   Although

their position is not clearly explained, they may  be arguing

that the  procedures and  remedies that  applied in 1968  and

1969 were incorporated into the bond contracts by implication

or by the offering circular (which is not, however, quoted or

cited).   See generally Wolak, 366  F. Supp. at  1113-14.  If
                             

this is their argument, then  the Zelmans are back to arguing

                    

     4Former  31 U.S.C.   738a(a) provided that the Secretary
of  the  Treasury,  when  it   is  "clearly  proved  to   the
satisfaction of the Secretary" that non-bearer  securities of
the United  States have been lost or stolen, "shall" re-issue
a security "which  has not matured or  become redeemable" and
shall  make  payment  on  one  that "has  matured  or  become
redeemable."  This section was supplanted in 1971 by one that
said that  the Secretary  had authority to  grant relief  for
loss  or theft  of government  securities, 85  Stat.  74; the
current  comparable version  is  31  U.S.C.     3125(a)  (The
Secretary . . . may provide relief . . .)".

                             -9-

that  the government  has  breached  its  contract  and  that

equitable relief should be afforded for this breach.

     The  difficulty is  that it is  settled in  this circuit

that equitable relief  cannot be obtained on  contract claims

against the government, Coggeshall, 884 F.2d at 3,  with very
                                  

narrow  statutory exceptions that are  not here relevant.  28

U.S.C.     1491(a)(2), (3).   This rule  may not  be followed

everywhere  and it  can  be especially  hard  to apply  where

contract claims are  mingled with other claims  not dependent

on  contract.  See, e.g., Transohio Savings Bank v. Director,
                                                             

Office of Thrift Supervision, 967  F.2d 598 (D.C. Cir. 1992).
                            

However, the rule remains the law of this circuit and may not

normally be reconsidered except by the court en banc.5
                                                    

     The  Zelmans'  next  argument is  that  it  violates due

process  for the  government  to  impose, through  regulation

315.29, a ten-year  statute of limitations (measured  from an

illegal  redemption)  on  requests  by  rightful  owners  for

replacement  or  payment  of their  stolen  bonds.   No  such

regulation  existed, say the  Zelmans, when their  bonds were

purchased; and (they  say) their bonds have  been extended by

                    

     5As already  noted, the Zelmans have not  pointed to any
law currently in  force that gives them a  statutory right to
re-issuance  of the  bonds (as  opposed to  damages based  on
breach of  contract).  Thus  we have no occasion  to consider
whether or  when--despite the  Tucker  Act--a district  court
might  be  able  to grant  injunctive  relief,  with monetary
implications, based on statute rather than contract.  Compare
                                                             
Esch  v. Yeutter,  876 F.2d  976  (D.C. Cir.  1989); Hahn  v.
                                                         
United States, 787 F.2d 581 (3d Cir. 1985).
             

                             -10-

the Treasury for thirty years past their original maturity so

the Zelmans had no earlier reason to inquire into their theft

or illegal redemption.  

     It will be time enough for the courts to consider such a

constitutional  attack  on  the regulation  if  and  when the

government  endorses the  reading  of  the  regulation  as  a

statute of limitations and if and when the courts accept that

reading.   As we  have already noted,  the regulation  on its

face is  susceptible to  a quite  different reading,  namely,

that  it creates a rebuttable presumption (starting ten years

after  a redemption) that  the bonds were  lawfully redeemed.

This  in turn would  leave it open  to the rightful  owner to

show that the bonds were lost or stolen and were not redeemed

by the rightful owner.  

     The Zelmans, appearing pro se, may misunderstand what is
                                  

entailed in a  showing of this kind.   It would not  be their

automatic obligation to establish the details of the theft or

identify the party  who wrongfully redeemed  the bonds.   One

might expect them to shed some  light on where the bonds were

kept, how they might have been purloined, why it took so long

to discover  the loss, whether  the loss was reported  to the

police,  and what  investigations were  made;  but these  are

matters that  go to plausibility  and corroboration.   If the

Zelmans tell a plausible story, nothing prevents the trier of

fact from accepting it.

                             -11-

     As for the  details of the redemption, all  that a trier

of fact  would likely  demand from  the Zelmans  is testimony

that they did not redeem  the bonds, did not authorize anyone

to do so,  and have no  idea who did  redeem the bonds.   The

fact that  the government has  destroyed the records  is more

likely  to inconvenience it rather than the Zelmans, assuming

that they have a plausible story to tell.  Of course,  we are

proceeding on the arguendo premise that the regulation is not
                          

a  statute  of  limitations;  but  if  it  is  a  statute  of

limitations,  the  destruction  of  the  records is  probably

irrelevant anyway.  

     We  do not  know whether the  Zelmans will  refile their

contract claim lawsuit in the district court or in the Claims

Court.  But we trust that, once a  forum with jurisdiction is

chosen, government counsel will pay some mind to the question

whether the Zelmans have a valid claim against the government

or  how to  get this  issue  decided at  minimum expense  and

without further delay.  Thus far, this case is not much of an

advertisement for savings bonds.

     The judgment of  the district court is  affirmed without
                                                     

prejudice to the filing of a  new suit for damages either  in

the  Claims  Court  or  in the  district  court  (subject  to

resolution of the disaggregation issue).  No costs.

                             -12-