In this case of first impression, we must consider Alaskan Native Village claims of aboriginal title, including exclusive hunting and fishing rights, to the outer continental shelf of the United States.
I
The Alaskan Native Villages of Eyak, Ta-titlek, Chanega, Port Graham, and Nanwalek (collectively, the “Native Villages”) appeal the district court’s summary judgment in favor of the Secretary of the United States Department of Commerce (“Secretary”) in their action asserting unextinguished aboriginal title to a portion of the outer continental shelf (“OCS”)
The Native Villages are located in the Prince William Sound, the Gulf of Alaska, and the lower Cook Inlet regions of Alaska. They claim that, for more than 7,000 years, their members have hunted sea mammals and harvested the fishery resources оf the OCS. The Native Villages maintain that a majority of their members still maintain a subsistence lifestyle heavily reliant on the fish and wildlife of the OCS, and that their continued social, cultural, and economic well-being depends on their continued ability to hunt and to fish in their traditional territories on the OCS. The Native Villages argue that they are entitled to exclusive use and occupancy of their respective areas of the OCS, including exclusive hunting and fishing rights, based upon unextinguished aboriginal title.
The Secretary of Commerce
Both the Native Villages and the Secretary moved for summary judgment before the district court. Granting the Secretary’s motion and denying the Native Villages’ motion, the district court held: (1) that federal paramountcy precludes aboriginal title in the OCS and (2) that there is no exclusive aboriginal right to fish in navigable waters based on abоriginal title outside of a treaty or federal statute.
II
We first consider whether the district court erred in concluding that the federal paramountcy doctrine bars the Native Villages’ aboriginal title claims to the OCS, including exclusive hunting and fishing rights.
A
The “federal paramountcy doctrine” is derived, in essence, from four Supreme Court cases in which the federal government and various coastal states disputed ownership and control of the territorial sea and the adjacent portions of the OCS.
The first of these cases was United States v. California,
The issue before the Supreme Court, then, was “whether the state or the Federal Government has the paramount right and power to determine in the first instance when, how, and by what agencies, foreign or domestic, the oil and other resources of the soil of the marginal sea, known or hereafter discovered may be exploited.” Id. at 29,
Bolstered by the favorable outcome in California, the United States brought similar actions to confirm its title to the seabed adjacent to other coastal states. In United States v. Louisiana,
Protection and control of the area are indeed functions of national external sovereignty. The marginal sea is a national, not a state concern. National interests, national responsibilities, national concerns are involved. The problems of commerce, national defense, relations with other powers, war and peace focus there. National rights must therefore be paramount in that area.
Id. at 704,
The Court found that the оnly difference between the argument raised by Louisiana and the one raised by California was that Louisiana’s claimed boundary extended twenty-four miles beyond California’s three-mile claim. See id. at 705,
If ... the three-mile belt is in the domain of the Nation rather than that of the separate States, it follows a fortiori that the ocean beyond that limit also is. The ocean seaward of the marginal belt is perhaps even more directly related to the national defense, the conduct of fоreign affairs, and world commerce than is the marginal sea. Certainly it is not less so. So far as the issues presented here are concerned, Louisiana’s enlargement of her boundary emphasizes the strength of the claim of the United States to this part of the ocean and the resources of the soil under that area, including oil.
Id. at 705-06,
In the companion case to Louisiana, United States v. Texas,
The Supreme Court was not persuaded. While the Republic of Texas may have had complete sovereignty and ownership over the marginal sea and all things of value derived therefrom, the State of Texas did not. See Texas,
In the last of the paramountcy cases, United States v. Maine,
At the urging of the coastal states, the Supreme Court reexamined the decisions in California, Louisiana, and Texas. To the states’ dismay, the Court concluded that these cases remained grounded on sound constitutional principles. See id. at 524,
B
We turn now to the specific issue presented here: whether the federal paramountcy doctrine serves to bar not only state claims to the OCS, but also claims made by persons and entities indigenous to these lands, in this case, the Native Villages.
1
The district court reasoned thаt, if the states have no property rights in the OCS via the paramountcy doctrine, a fortiori, it cannot be otherwise for a tribal entity which, even if possessed of sovereign rights, is dependent upon the United States in the same manner as a state with regard to, inter alia, national defense, foreign affairs, and world commerce. Even though Indian tribes existed and governed North America before the United States came into existence, the same is true of the original states. Nevertheless, this did not prevent the Suрreme Court from
The Native Villages argue that the district court erred in so concluding. They contend that the district court based its decision on an erroneous legal premise, namely, that their claims of aboriginal title are the legal equivаlent of the states’ claims of fee title and sovereignty. .In fact, the Native Villages contend, the “legal, fee, or sovereign title” claimed by the states and aboriginal title are two very different property claims. According to the Native Villages, aboriginal title is not legal title or even a property'right at all. Aboriginal title, according to the Native Villages, “presumes federal paramountcy” and bestows only the exclusive right to use and to occupy territory to which the federal gоvernment admittedly holds sovereign title, until Congress provides otherwise. Consequently, the Native Villages contend, their claim does not conflict with the federal government’s paramount interests in the OCS.
In support of their argument, the Villages point to Village of Gambell v. Hodel,
2
As an initial matter, we caution the Native Villages not to read too much into our statement in Gambell that aboriginal rights may coexist with the federal government’s paramount interests in the OCS. See Gambell,
Having said that, we note the statement in Gambell that the paramountcy doctrine is not limited merely to disputes between the national and state governments. See Gambell,
This case presents a markedly different situation from the one we considered in Gambell. The Native Villages here assert exclusive rights of use and occupancy, not limited rights. Although they assure us that their claims to the OCS are “subordinate” to federal sovereignty, in that aboriginal title “presumes” federal paramountcy in the OCS, we are hard pressed to see a practical diffеr
Further, the Native Villages’ purported concession that they “do not dispute Congress’s ultimate power to enact laws authorizing non-tribal members to fish within their aboriginal fishing grounds” is really no concession at all. The Supremacy Clause of the Constitution inhеrently requires the same of states; yet this truism did not save the states’ claims to the OCS. And it does not save the Native Villages’ claims here. Before the Supreme Court, the State of Texas raised a similar argument, contending that there could be “joint” ownership or control over the OCS. According to Texas, the federal government could hold complete and unimpaired sovereignty over the sea while Texas owned the resources lying beneath it. See Texas,
Finally, we reject the argument that the Native Villages are entitled to exclusive use of the OCS because they have hunted and fished in the sea for thousands of years prior to the founding of thе United States. While we respect the history of the Native Villages and appreciate the importance of the OCS to them, the Supreme Court was likewise cognizant of the history of the coastal states in California, Louisiana, Texas and Maine. This did not, however, convince the Court to put the ocean and its resources at the disposal of the states. Whatever interests the states might have had in the OCS and marginal sea prior to statehood were lost upon ascension to the Union. See Maine,
Ill
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the district court did not err in holding that the Native Villages’ claims to the OCS are barred by the federal paramountcy doctrine.
AFFIRMED.
Notes
."[The OCS includes] all submerged lands lying seaward and outside of the area of lands beneath navigable waters as defined in section 1301 of [the Submerged Lands Act], and of which the subsoil and seabed appertain to the United States and are subject to its jurisdiction and control.” 43 U.S.C. § 1331(a). The OCS includes those submerged lands outside state territorial boundaries (which in Alaska's case means beyond three miles) extending to the outer geologic edge of the continental shelf and within United States jurisdiction and control.
. The only defendant remaining in this action is the Secretary of Commerce. The Native Villages’ action against the Secretary of the Interior was dismissed for lack of ripeness and not appealed. The Native Villages’ action against the Trawler Diane Marie, Inc., was dismissed pursuant to a stipulation of the parties.
. Any boat that fishes commercially for sablefish or halibut in the regulated area must have an IFQ share permit issued by the Secretary specifying the individual fishing quota allowed for the vessel. See 50 C.F.R. § 676.13(a). The regulated area consists of portions of the Gulf of Alaska,
. The district court decided "only the aboriginal title issues, ... [and left] for another day the question of what nonexclusive fisheries rights, if any, plaintiffs might have in the OCS which are not dependent upon aboriginal title.” We therefore express no opinion on this issue.
. In addition, the Supreme Court held that the rule that paramount rights to the offshore seabed inhere in the federal government as an incident of national sovereignty was confirmed by Congress in both the Submerged Lands Act of 1953 ("SLA”), which granted the individual states title to submerged lands lying three miles off their coasts, and the Outer Continental Shelf Lands Act оf 1953, which the Court noted was a congressional reaffirmation of federal control over the OCS extending seaward of the three-mile limit. See id. at 524-528.
. Because we so hold, we need not reach the district court's alternative holding that common law property precepts preclude tribes from possessing exclusive hunting or fishing rights in navigable waters absent a treaty or statute. We have ruled on this issue previously in Wahkiakum Band of Chinook Indians v. Bateman,
Similarly, we need not reach the issue of whether the Villages' challenges to the sablefish regulations promulgated under the Magnuson Fishery Conservation Management Act are barred by the statute of limitations.
