John H. BOONE, Esq., Trustee of the Maud Van Cortland Hill
Schroll Trust, Plaintiff-Appellee,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, and Department of the Army;
United States Corps of Engineers; John O. Marsh, Jr., Sec.
of Army, Lieutenant General Henry J. Hatch, Brigadier
General Arthur E. Williams, and Colonel F.W. Wanner,
Defendants-Appellants.
No. 90-15661.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted June 10, 1991.
Decided Sept. 23, 1991.
Aрphia T. Schley, Dept. of Justice, Washington, D.C., for defendants-appellants.
Diane D. Hastert, Damon, Key, Bocken, Leong, Kupchak, Honolulu, Hawaii, for plaintiff-appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the District of Hawaii.
Before CHAMBERS, BRUNETTI and RYMER, Circuit Judges.
BRUNETTI, Circuit Judge:
Appellee John Boone, as trustee for the Maud Van Cortland Hill Schroll Trust ("the Trust"), brought an action against the United States to secure the Trust's right to deny public access to Puko'o Lagoon on the Island of Molokai, Hawaii. In a counter-suit, the United States sought a declaration that Puko'o Lagoon is subject to the federal navigational servitude. The district court found in favor of the Trust. See Boone v. United States,
I.
Around 1829, native Hawaiians created Puko'o Fishpond, a littoral Hawaiian fishpond, by constructing a stone wall across an inlet to the sea.1 The record contains no evidence of the size, condition, use, or water depth of the inlet prior to the construction of the wall. The fishpond wall was approximately 2000 feet long, ten feet wide and five feet high. The wall contained two Makaha, or openings to the sea, in which sluice grates were placed to allow fish to enter and exit the fishpond. Puko'o Fishpond covered about twenty-five acres; the depth of the pond ranged from one to three feet and was subject to the ebb and flow of the tides.
At the time the fishpond wall was constructed, Hawaiian fishponds were an integral part of the Hawaiian feudal system.
Chiefs gave land, including its fishponds, to sub-chiefs, or took it away at will. Any fishponds in conquered chiefdoms became the personal property of the conquering high chief and were treated in the same manner the high chief treated all newly subjugated lands and appurtenances. The commoner had no absolute right to fish in the ponds, nor in the sector of ocean adjacent to the chief's land--all of such rights were vested in the chiefs and ultimately in the King, alone.
United States v. Kaiser Aetna,
In 1946, a tsunami, or tidal wave, struck and damaged the fishpond wall. The extent of the damage is in dispute. At trial, the government presented testimony of witnesses who claimed they could navigate their flat bottomed boats through holes in the wall at high tide. The Trust presented evidence thаt the wall was intact prior to its destruction in the early 1970s and could not be breached by boats.
Around 1960, Pukoo Properties, Inc., purchased the property surrounding and including Puko'o Fishpond. Pukoo Properties, Inc., subsequently entered into a joint venture, "Canadian-Hawaiian Developers" ("Canadian-Hawaiian"), which planned to develop the property into a resort complex. Canadian-Hawaiian obtained zoning changes and permits from the United States Army Corps of Engineers ("the Corps") and various state agencies to dredge the waters contiguous to Puko'o Fishpond. Dredging was necessary to create an approach channel to the planned Puko'o Lagoon, a boat anchorage basin, and public beaches on submerged public lands. Because the fishpond was considered private property, no permits from the County or State were required or sought for dredging inside the fishpond. Boone,
In 1980 Canadian-Hawaiian abandoned its development plans and sold the property and the related development rights to the Trust for $5,750,000. The Trust's representatives believed the lagoon and its waters were private property and would not have purchased the property had they known there was a question about its private nature. Id. at 1519. The Trust subsequently invested an additional $340,000 to $500,000 in the property. The Trust seeks "to keep the property as clean and tranquil as possible by limiting access to the area to a limited number of organizations who share the Trust's expressed goal of promoting native Hawaiian culture." Id. at 1510. Public and commercial uses are excluded "so as to avoid spoilage of the property." Id. at 1519.
In 1982, a local chartеr boat operator complained to the Corps that the Trust had denied him access to Puko'o Lagoon. The Corps expressed its view that the denial of public access violated a condition in its dredging permit and the public's rights under the federal navigational servitude. In 1988, the Trust filed a declaratory judgment action to secure a right to deny public access to the lagoon. After cross-motions for summary judgment were denied, the Corps filed a counter-suit seeking, inter alia, a declaration that the Lagoon is subject to the federal navigational servitude. After a bench trial, the district court found that although Puko'o Lagoon is presently navigable, the lagoon was not subject to the navigational servitude and the Corps could not require public access without payment of compensation under the fifth amendment. Id. at 1525. The Corps filed a motion to alter or amend the judgment which was deniеd in the part pertinent to this appeal.
II.
The Corps makes two arguments on appeal. First, it contends that the district court erred in finding that the area presently comprising Puko'o Lagoon was not navigable in fact within the meaning of the federal navigational servitude at the time the fishpond wall was destroyed in the early 1970s. Second, the Corps argues, regardless of the navigability of the fishpond in 1970, the Lagoon is subject to the navigational servitude because the area was a navigable inlet of the Pacific Ocean in its natural state.
Whether Puko'o Lagoon is subject to the navigational servitude is a mixed question of fact and law. The application of a rule of law to established facts is reviewed de novo when the question requires consideration of legal concepts in mix of facts and law. United States v. McConney,
A. The Commerce Clause and the Navigational Servitude.
The commerce clause3 supports two distinct but often overlapping phenomena relevant to this appeal: the congressional authority to regulate the nation's interstate waterways and the federal navigational servitude. Kaiser Aetna v. United States,
"Commerce," the Supreme Court explained, "includes navigation. The power to regulate commerce comprehends the control for that purpose, and to the extent necessary, of all the navigable waters of the United States which are accessible from a State other than those in which they lie." Gilman v. Philadelphia,
In United States v. Appalachian Electric Power Co.,
[I]t cannot properly be said that the constitutional power of the United States over its waters is limited to control for navigation. By navigation respondent means no more than operation of boats and improvement of the waterway itself. In truth the authority of the United States is the regulation of commerce on its waters. Navigability, in the sense just stated, is but a part of this whole. Flood protection, watershed development, recovery of the cost of improvements through utilization of power are likewise parts of commerce control.... [The authority to regulate waterways] is as broad as the needs of commerce.... The point is that navigable waters are subject to national planning and control in the broad regulation of commerce granted the Federal Government.
Id. at 426-27,
Though similarly grounded in the commerce clause, Kaiser Aetna,
The origin of this "unique position" held by the government over navigable waters, Rands,
The best explanation for the special no compensation rule of the navigation servitude is that the long history of the recognition and protection of public rights of navigation, even against the sovereign, has put all riparians on notice that private claims inconsistent with the exercise of the servitude will not be recognized.
Tarlock, supra, at § 9.04[a]; see also United States v. Kansas City Life Ins. Co.,
The navigational servitudе, unlike the power to regulate navigable waters under the commerce clause, is not coextensive with Congress' regulatory authority. First, unlike Congress' power to regulate waters for purposes of navigation, the navigational servitude "does not extend beyond the high-water mark" of navigable streams. Rands,
Second, the determination of navigability is different in different contexts. Kaiser Aetna,
B. Navigability of Puko'o Fishpond.
The district court, after "weighing the evidence submitted by both parties on the disputed issue of the navigability of the pond, [found] the Trust's evidence to be more persuasive than that submitted by the government." Boone,
1. Consistency of the Corps' Witnesses.
The district court found that the Corps' witnesses gave inconsistent testimony "as to their alleged points of entry into the fishpond as well as to the specific means they claim to have used to navigate the fishpond." Boone,
The district court did not state what precise effect or weight the inconsistencies had in its decision. In the Corps' motion to alter or amend the district court's decision, the Corps made an argument similar to that presented here. The district court then clarified its view of the Corps' witnesses:
This court carefully evaluated the testimony of each of those witnesses and weighed their demeanor and crеdibility (including any apparent motive or bias)--items which cannot be discerned simply by reading a transcript of the trial. The court found, and continues to believe, that the testimony of these government witnesses was inconsistent and not as credible as the testimony of plaintiff's witnesses on this issue.
....
The court does not accept the government's argument that the admitted inconsistencies within the testimony of its five fact witnesses reflect the state of disrepair of the fishpond wall rather than the credibility of their testimony.
2. Credibility Findings.
The Corps next argues that the district court's rationale for finding the Trust's witnessеs more credible than its own was erroneous. The Corps finds fault with the following statement made by the district court:
The government has presented the testimony of several residents of Molokai who claim to have navigated from Puko'o Harbor into Puko'o Fishpond, as admitted trespassers, in flat bottom boats over the fishpond wall to take fish from what they knew to be private property. The court notes that these individuals claim to have surreptitiously entered the fishpond by methods designed to avoid detection by the authorities or others.
The Corps also argues the district court's description of a Trust witness demonstrates the court's erroneous reasoning. The court stated:
The court finds particularly persuasive the testimony of a disinterested, life-long Puko'o, Molokai resident, Laura Duvauchelle Smith, who was intimately familiar with the fishpond and its surrounding environs from her childhood.
Id. at 1512. The Corps argues that this description does not differentiate this witness from most of the Cоrps' witnesses. Though perhaps true, the failure to also describe some of the Corps' witnesses in the same manner is not grounds for reversal. The court found Smith's testimony "particularly persuasive" and was entitled to give it more weight.
3. Reliance on the Trust's Witnesses.
The Corps argues that the court's reliance on the testimony of two of the Trust's witnesses, Dr. Grigg and Captain Brodie, was clearly erroneous.
Dr. Grigg was hired by the Hawaii Department of Health in 1971 to study the potential environmental impact of dredging in Puko'o Harbor. On one day in 1971, Dr. Grigg spent about three hours snorkeling in and around Puko'o Fishpond. At the time he swam alongside the wall the water was at "a high low tide." High tide is about two feet above the low tide. Dr. Grigg testified that he swam along the inside of the fishpond wall from the western corner to the middle of the wall. At that point he climbed over the wall and swam offshore. He testified that the water was two to three feet deep and at the point he climbed over the wall it was two to three feet high. It is not clear from our record of the testimony if he meant the wall was two to three feet above the fishpond floor or above the water line.
The Corps argues that Grigg's testimony indicates that the wall was two to three feet above the fishpond floor as was the water depth at low tide; therefore the water was at the top of the wall during low tide and, a fortiori, above the wall at high tide. This requires a strained interpretation of the testimony. When asked how high the wall was when he climbed over it, Grigg stated, "having got out of the water and actually climbed out with my fins and camera, [I estimate it] to be about two to three feet." If the water was at the top of the wall, as the Corps argues his testimony reveals, this statement appears unlikely. If the wall was the same height to the pond's floor as the depth of the water, it would seem strange to have to estimate its height by reference to climbing out of the water and over the wall.
The court's view of the testimony is supported by other testimony of Grigg. Grigg did not see any breaks in the wall, observe any areas he could swim through the wall, or see any place where the wall was not out of the water. He also stated that he did not believe that it was possible to navigate a boat from the ocean into the pond, and that he "didn't see any place where the wall was under water, or even awash, for that matter." Though the Corps' view of Grigg's testimony is remotely plausible, the court's interpretation was not clearly erroneous.
Captain Brodie testified that in 1970 he walked the full length of the fishpond wall in connection with his work with a dredging company. The court found this testimony "probative."
In sum, we reject the Corps' first argument. The record supports the district court's conclusion that "the fishpond wall in its ordinary state constituted a barrier to navigation," Boone,
4. Photographic Experts.
The district court also heard expert testimony from the Corps' photogrammetric technician and the Trust's photogrammetric engineer regarding their conclusions drawn from various aerial and ground level photographs. The court concluded, "In light of all other relevant evidence, the court finds the testimony of the Trust's expert witness to be more credible than that of defendants' expert witness." Id. at 1512. The Corps argues that the court's reliance on the testimony is misplaced and contests the probative value of the ground level photographs submitted by the Trust. Though different interpretations and conclusions regarding this evidence is possible, the court's reliance was not clearly erroneous.
C. The Dormant Navigational Servitude.
The Corps argues that regardless of the navigability of the walled fishpond, a "dormant navigational servitude" attached to the fishpond by virtue of the original navigability of the area.13 This dormant servitude, the Corps argues, was reactivated by the destruction of the wall when the area again became navigable in interstate commerce. The Corps relies almost solely on Economy Light & Power Co. v. United States,
1. The Applicability of Economy Light.
In Economy Light, the United States sought an injunction against the building of a dam by a power company across the Desplaines River. The United States argued that the building of the dam without the permission of the government violated the Rivers and Harbors Appropriation Act. This Act prohibits the construction of dams over navigable waters without the prior permission of Congress. 33 U.S.C. § 403. The Power Company argued that permission was unnecessary because the Desplaines River was not navigable within the meaning of the Act.
Until at least 1825, the Desplaines River was navigable and used commercially. Several natural and human-made events subsequently rendered the river impassable and, at the time the case was decided, the river had "been out of use for a hundred years." Economy Light,
is within the power of Congress to preserve for purposes of future transportation, even though it be not at present used for such commerce, and be incapable of suсh use according to present methods, either by reason of changed conditions or because of artificial obstructions.
Id. at 123,
The Corps argues that in light of the original navigability of the inlet, the district court "evaded the inescapable conclusion that Puko'o Lagoon is subject to a navigational servitude under Economy Light." Economy Light, however, defined navigability for purposes of determining the reach of congressional regulation under the commerce clause and the applicability of the Rivers and Harbors Appropriation Act. The parties do not dispute that Puko'o Lagoon is within the regulatory jurisdiction of the Corps.14 The question here is whether the Corps may require public access to the Lagoon and thereby deprive the Trust of "one of the most essential sticks in the bundle of rights that are commonly characterized as property--the right to exclude others." Kaiser Aetnа,
The Supreme Court has rejected the notion that navigability for purposes of the takings clause is coterminous with navigability for purposes of regulatory power or admiralty jurisdiction. Kaiser Aetna,
In Kaiser Aetna, the Court rejected the government's reliance on several cases interpreting navigability stating:
It is true that Kuapa Pond may fit within definitions of "navigability" articulated in past decisions of this Court. But it must be recognized that the concept of navigability in these decisions was used for purposes other than to delimit the boundaries of the navigational servitude: for example, to define the scope of Congress' regulatory authority under the Interstate Commerce Clause, to determine the extent of the authority of the Corps оf Engineers under the Rivers and Harbors Appropriation Act of 1899, and to establish the limits of the [admiralty] jurisdiction of federal courts.... Although the Government is clearly correct in maintaining that the now dredged Kuapa Pond falls within the definition of "navigable waters" as this Court has used that term in delimiting the boundaries of Congress' regulatory authority under the Commerce Clause, this Court has never held that the navigational servitude creates a blanket exception to the Takings Clause whenever Congress exercises its Commerce authority to promote navigation. Thus, while Kuapa Pond may be subject to regulation by the Corps of Engineers, acting under the authority delegated it by Congress in the Rivers and Harbors Appropriation Act, it does not follow that the pond is also subject to a public right of access.
Id. at 172,
2. The Applicability of Kaiser Aetna.
The district court found this case indistinguishable from Kaiser Aetna. Boone,
Kaiser Aetna leased property adjacent to and including Kuapa Pond for subdivision development. Id. at 167,
"The navigational servitude," the Court stated,
is an expression of the notion that the determination whether a taking has occurred must take into consideration the important public interest in the flow of interstate waters that in their natural condition are in fact capable of supporting public navigation.
Id. at 175,
Without defining more precisely the nature of the important public interest or when submerged, littoral, or riparian lands do or do not have "the law back of them," the Court concluded that Kuapa Pond "is not the sort of 'great navigable stream' that [the] Court has previously recognized as being '[incapable] of private ownership.' " Id.,
It is clear that prior to its improvement, Kuapa Pond was incapable of being used as a continuous highway for the purpose of navigation in interstate commerce. Its maximum depth at high tide was a mere two feet, it was separated from the adjacent bay and ocean by a natural barrier beach, and its principal commercial value was limited to fishing.... And, as previously noted, Kuapa Pond has always been considered to be private property under Hawaiian law.
Id.,
Though factually different in some respects, we must come to the same conclusion reached by the Court in Kaiser Aetna. Like Kuapa Pond, Puko'o Fishpond was incapable of use as a сontinuous highway for the purpose of navigation in interstate commerce. Indeed, there is little evidence in the record of any commercial use of Puko'o Fishpond since 1957. Though the maximum depth of the Fishpond was three feet--one foot more than the depth of Kuapa Pond--this fact does not render this case distinguishable. The Supreme Court also found relevant the fact that the pond "was separated from the adjacent bay and ocean by a natural barrier beach." Id. Thus, although Kuapa Pond was a natural fishpond reinforced by a stone wall, rather than a fishpond created entirely by an artificial wall, this also is insufficient to require a different result.17
The possible prior navigability of the area comprising Puko'o Lagoon in its natural state, while insufficient to impose the navigational servitude as a matter of law, is a relevant factual consideration in determining whether the nаvigational servitude applies. United States v. Cress,
The Court placed significant weight on the treatment of Kuapa Pond as private property and the reasonable investment-backed expectations of the Pond's owners. This is consistent with the notion that the navigational servitude is grounded in considerations of English common law and notice to the parties of the government's "dominant servitude." United States v. Rands,
The Trust purchased the property surrounding and including Puko'o Lagoon in reliance on the private status, under Hawaiian law, of the lagoon. Though reliance on local law is not by itself sufficient to defeat the superior interest of the federal government in the navigational servitude, see United States v. Rio Grande Dam & Irrigation Co.,
AFFIRMED.
A discussion of the history and nature of Hawaiian fishponds is found in the district court's decision, Boone v. United States,
A significant issue at trial was whether a condition in the Corps' permit requiring public access to navigable waters at or adjacent to the work authorized by the permit applied to Puko'o Lagoon. The district court found that the permit and the condition applied only to the area outside the fishpond wall. Boone,
Notes
3 U.S. Const. art. I, § 8, cl. 3.
See The Daniel Ball,
Those rivers must be regarded as public navigable rivers in law which are navigable in faсt. And they are navigable in fact when they are used, or are susceptible of being used, in their ordinary condition, as highways for commerce, over which trade and travel are or may be conducted in the customary modes of trade and travel on water.
Although The Daniel Ball involved an interpretation of navigability for purposes of admiralty jurisdiction, its "navigable in fact" test has been adopted by cases interpreting Congress' power under the commerce clause, see United States v. Appalachian Electric Power Co.,
See, e.g., United States v. Grand River Dam Authority,
See, e.g., Arizona v. California,
Appalachian Power,
Though the navigational servitude reflects a "dominant right" held by the government over the navigable waters of this country, Cherokee Nation,
The label, "servitude," implies a property interest. How a constitutional grant of authority to Congress creates such an interest is explained in United States v. Twin City Power Co.,
The interest of the United States in the flow of a navigable stream originates in the Commerce Clause. That Clause speaks in terms of power, not of property. But the power is a dominant one which can be asserted to the exclusion of any competing or conflicting one. The power is a privilege which we have called "a dominant servitude," or "a superior navigation easement."
Id. at 224-25,
Jus publicum, in this context, is the sovereign's right to jurisdiction and control over navigable waters for the benefit of the public. Morreale, supra, at 26. The public trust doctrine asserts that "states own the submerged soil and foreshore of all navigable bodies of water." MacGrady, The Navigability Concept in the Civil and Common Law: Historical Development, Current Importance, and Some Doctrines that Don't Hold Water, 3 Fla.St.U.L.Rev. 511, 589 (1975). These theories are supported by Martin v. Waddell's Lessee,
The Court in Grand River Dam Authority declined to decide whether the navigational servitude extends to nonnavigable tributaries.
Though waters navigable in fact may be subject to the navigational servitude, the Supreme Court has rejected a mechanical test imposing the servitude on all waters navigable in fact. Kaiser Aetna,
The Corps' argument assumes that the inlet, which was sеgregated from the Pacific Ocean by the construction of the fishpond wall, was navigable water within the meaning of the navigational servitude. The district court, however, made no express finding on the navigability of the area prior to the construction of the wall and the record is inconclusive. Because we reject the Corps' dormant servitude theory, no further fact-finding on this issue is necessary
Under the test stated in Economy Light, not only Puko'o Lagoon but also the walled fishpond would undoubtedly have been subject to the regulatory power of Congress even though Puko'o Fishpond was "incapable of [carrying commerce among the States] according to present methods." Economy Light,
The Corps also relies on Loving v. Alexander,
The Loving court thеn affirmed the district court's holding regarding the plaintiffs' taking claim. Without separately determining navigability for purposes of the navigational servitude, the court stated:
The navigational servitude has existed since the ratification of the Constitution, so nothing has been taken from the property owners subject to it by the declaration of the Corps of its existence. Thus, the plaintiffs are not entitled to compensation merely on that account.
Id. The Corps argues that Loving supports their theory that waterways once navigable are presently subject to the navigational servitude. Though the Fourth Circuit did not, as required by Kaiser Aetna, distinguish among cases interpreting navigability, the district court's decision in Loving did. Though the district court recognized that "navigability for purposes of regulation did not equal navigability for purposes of imposing a navigational servitude," Loving v. Alexander,
The Supreme Court also considered, and decided on the same day as Kaiser Aetna, Vaughn v. Vermilion,
Vaughn is inapplicable to this case as the Corps does not argue that the construction of the Lagoon rendered other navigable waters unnavigable.
This factual difference was also apparently insignificant to native Hawaiians. Although fishponds were distinguished "by the manner in which they were constructed and by the location relative to the sea," both Kuapa Pond and Puko'o Fishpond are considered loko kuapa. Boone v. United States,
