Anderson-Tully Company (ATCO) appeals the district court’s 1 dismissal of its suit against the Arkansas Attorney General, Dustin McDaniel. In its suit, ATCO asserted ownership of two bodies of water within the state of Arkansas which McDaniel has asserted are public waters. ATCO sought to quiet title and enjoin McDaniel from attempting to claim the disputed waters for public use by application of the recreational use test of navigability. We affirm the district court’s dismissal.
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ATCO owns a large tract of land in Desha County, Arkansas, located next to the Mississippi River. Stimson Lake Land & Timber Co., LLC (Stimson Land), owns an adjoining tract of land. Included within the two entities’ tracts of land is a lake called Stimson Lake, as well as a three-mile river chute called Stimson Chute. Stimson Chute connects the lake to the Mississippi River during times of high water, when the river backs into Stimson Lake through the chute.
When Arkansas first became a state, the area of land now occupied by the lake and chute were “fast land.” “Fast land” refers to land that is above or landward of the existing high water mark, as opposed to “submerged land” which refers to land that is below the existing high water mark. Over the years, however, the Mississippi River migrated westward until the 1930s, then began migrating back eastward, and in the process created Stimson Lake.
ATCO leases its land to Stimson Land and Little Mozart Hunting Club. For many years, the Hunting Club had the quiet enjoyment of hunting, fishing, and other recreation on and around Stimson Lake and Stimson Chute. In January 2008, however, a duck hunter contacted the Arkansas Attorney General’s office seeking confirmation of his right to hunt and fish below the ordinary high water mark of the lake and chute, indicating he was “being threatened with arrest if [he hunted]” there. App. at 239. Charles Moulton, an assistant attorney general, sent the hunter an email stating:
So if this lake/chute has a water connection to the [Mississippi] (even part of the year), has a history of public use, and where you hunt is below the ordinary high water mark, then I would say it’s navigable and you have every right to be there.
Id. at 238.
Although the record is unclear, the hunter apparently took the Attorney General’s office at its word and went hunting, because Stimson Land (but not ATCO) subsequently filed a civil trespass action in the Circuit Court of Desha County against “trespassers” duck hunting on Stimson Lake. McDaniel filed a motion to intervene in the suit asserting ownership of Stimson Lake and Stimson Chute pursuant to the recreational use doctrine of navigability adopted by the Arkansas Supreme Court in
State v. McIlroy,
Not being a party to the state court action filed by Stimson Land in state court, ATCO elected to bring its own action against McDaniel in federal district court. Stimson Land then nonsuited its state court action before the state court ruled on McDaniel’s motion to intervene, leaving ATCO’s federal suit as the only pending suit.
In its federal suit, ATCO alleged a deprivation of its federal constitutional rights under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 and sought a declaration that the Arkansas Supreme Court’s adoption of the recreational use doctrine of navigability in Mcllroy violated the federal constitution. The suit also sought to quiet title in Stimson Lake and Stimson Chute. In addition, ATCO sought “to enjoin the Attorney General from attempting to take private property for public use by application of the recreational use test of navigability.” App. at 6. An amended complaint later filed by ATCO similarly sought injunctive relief. Id. at 19.
McDaniel moved to dismiss the federal suit on the basis of, among other things, sovereign immunity under the Eleventh Amendment. He relied primarily upon
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the Supreme Court’s decision in
Idaho v. Coeur d’Alene Tribe of Idaho,
The district court granted the motion to dismiss, but without directly addressing McDaniel’s claim of sovereign immunity. Instead, the district court concluded:
This case is not ripe for decision. A suit under 42 U.S.C. § 1983 requires state action, and at this point, none has occurred. It seems to me that a state court must first determine who owns the land in question before any § 1983 claim would present itself. I cannot decide if Defendant has acquired this land unfairly and in violation of § 1983 if no determination has been made to rightful ownership. Plaintiffs suit is the “functional equivalent of a quiet title action” which raises an issue that “implicates special sovereignty interests.” ... An Arkansas state court should determine who owns the property before there can be any analysis under § 1983.
Anderson-Tully Co. v. McDaniel,
No. 5:08-CV-0134-WRW,
The district court also denied all pending motions, which included a motion by ATCO to amend its complaint, as moot. ATCO subsequently brought a motion for reconsideration under Rules 59 and 60 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, which the district court summarily denied. ATCO then filed this timely appeal contending the case is ripe and is not barred by the Eleventh Amendment.
II
We review the district court’s grant of a motion to dismiss de novo.
Crooks v. Lynch,
ATCO first asserts the district court erred in concluding this case is not ripe for adjudication. We agree. Both ATCO and McDaniel assert ownership of Stimson Lake and Stimson Chute, clearly putting title in dispute as between the two parties. While Article III would prohibit us from issuing an advisory opinion upon a “hypothetical” set of facts,
KCCP Trust v. City of N. Kansas City,
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Although we believe the district court was mistaken about the ripeness of this controversy, we must still affirm because we are convinced the district court reached the correct result.
Helvering v. Gowran,
ATCO urges us to ignore its quiet title action and still address its request for injunctive relief under the exception to sovereign immunity established in
Ex parte Young,
The Supreme Court’s reference to “this suit” meant the functional equivalent of a quiet title action against a state, which implicated a state’s “special sovereignty interests” involving the navigability of waters or the state’s control over submerged lands.
See id.
at 281-83,
ATCO contends
Coeur d’Alene
is distinguishable because the Coeur d’Alene Tribe was suing to
obtain
recognition of its ownership of the lake bed and submerged lands, whereas in this case ATCO is suing to
retain
recognition of its ownership of the disputed waters. A close examination of
Coeur d’Alene,
however, indicates the decision did not turn upon such a distinction. Indeed, the Supreme Court recognized the Tribe “claimed ownership of the submerged lands pursuant to unextinguished aboriginal title,”
id.
at 265,
Our recitation of the ties between the submerged lands and the State’s own sovereignty, and of the severance and diminishment of state sovereignty were the declaratory and injunctive relief to be granted, is not in derogation of the Tribe’s own claim. As the Tribe views the case, the lands are just as necessary, perhaps even more so, to its own dignity and ancient right. The question before us is not the merit of either party’s claim, however, but the relation between the sovereign lands at issue and the immunity the State asserts.
Id.
at 287,
Ill
This case is barred by the Eleventh Amendment. The Ex Parte Young exception does not apply. This suit involves claims which must be brought in state court. We therefore affirm the district court’s dismissal.
Notes
. The Honorable William R. Wilson, Jr., United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Arkansas.
. We note that those cases indicating
takings
claims are not ripe for adjudication in federal court until they have been exhausted in state administrative and judicial proceedings,
e.g., Johnson v. City of Shorewood, Minn.,
