Case Information
*1 In the
United States Court of Appeals For the Seventh Circuit
No. 99-3364
Shawnee Trail Conservancy, Illinois Trail Riders, Horsemen’s Council of Illinois, Southern Illinois Campground and Ranch Owners Association, and Illinois Federation of Outdoor Resources, Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
United States Department of Agriculture, United States Forest Service, Daniel Glickman, Secretary of Agriculture, Michael P. Dombeck, Chief, United States Forest Service, Robert T. Jacobs, Regional Forester, Eastern Region (R-IX), United States Forest Service, and Louise Odegaard, Supervisor, Shawnee National Forest,
Defendants-Appellees.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Southern District of Illinois, Benton Division. No. 98-CV-4248-JPG--J. Phil Gilbert, Chief Judge. Argued March 29, 2000--Decided July 25, 2000 Before Flaum, Ripple, and Kanne, Circuit Judges.
Flaum, Circuit Judge. The Shawnee Trail Conservancy, the Illinois Trail Riders, the Horsemen’s Council of Illinois, the Southern Illinois Campground and Ranch Owners Association, and the Illinois Federation of Outdoor Resources brought suit in federal district court under both the United States Constitution and the Administrative Procedure Act ("APA"), 5 U.S.C. sec. 701 et seq., alleging that the defendants lacked the constitutional and statutory authority to designate certain areas of the Shawnee National Forest (the "Shawnee") as Research Natural Areas ("RNAs"). The district court dismissed both of the plaintiffs’ claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, finding that the plaintiffs’ constitutional claim was an adverse claim of title against the United States and therefore had to be brought pursuant to the Quiet Title Act of 1972 ("QTA" or the "Act"), 28 U.S.C. sec. 2409a et seq., and that the plaintiffs *2 failed to exhaust their administrative remedies for purposes of their APA claim. For the reasons stated herein, we affirm the decision of the district court.
I. Facts
The dispute in this case centers on the use of the Shawnee National Forest, an area that consists of approximately 265,135 acres in southern Illinois. The Shawnee is managed by the United States Forest Service according to a land use and management plan required by statute. According to the applicable regulations, the goal of the land use and management plan is to "maximize[ ] long term net public benefits in an environmentally sound manner." In November 1986, the Forest Service issued its 1986 Land and Resource Management Plan. Among other things, the Plan proposed that twelve areas in the Shawnee, including the Atwood Ridge area and the Burke Branch area, be designated RNAs. RNAs are areas of land within a National Forest on which the Forest Service allows natural conditions to prevail in order to promote biological diversity, research and monitoring, and education. The Chief of the Forest Service followed the recommendations of the 1986 Plan and established the Atwood Ridge RNA in September 1990 and the Burke Branch RNA in March 1991.
The Forest Service has designated a total of eighty-one areas in the Shawnee as RNAs. In order to protect these areas, mountain bikes, all- terrain vehicles, and off-road motorcycles are prohibited. In addition, equestrian use is limited to designated trails. On January 31, 1997, the Forest Service took the additional step of closing forty of the Shawnee’s RNAs, including the Atwood Ridge RNA and the Burke Branch RNA, to all equestrian use.
In July 1998, the plaintiffs filed suit in federal district court challenging the Forest Service’s decision to restrict access to the Atwood Ridge and Burke Branch areas and its decision to designate those areas as RNAs. The district court dismissed the plaintiffs’ constitutional claim on the ground that it challenged the United States’ title to land and consequently had to be brought under the QTA. The district court also dismissed the plaintiffs’ APA claim, holding that they failed to exhaust their administrative remedies. This appeal followed.
II. Analysis
We review de novo the district court’s grant of
the defendants’ motion to dismiss for lack of
*3
subject matter jurisdiction. See Sapperstein v.
Hager,
A. The Quiet Title Act
The plaintiffs’ complaint alleged that the Forest Service lacks the authority to restrict the use of certain roads in the Atwood Ridge RNA and the Burke Branch RNA. According to the plaintiffs, these roads are subject to both public and private easements and rights-of-way that pre-date the creation of the Shawnee. The plaintiffs contend that because these easements and rights-of-way have been continually used and have not been vacated or abandoned, the right to control the use of the roads in the Atwood Ridge RNA and the Burke Branch RNA are not held by the Forest Service. In other words, the plaintiffs contend that the Forest Service cannot restrict the use of the roads in the Atwood Ridge and Burke Branch areas because they do not own the property rights necessary to make decisions concerning their incidents of use.
The district court did not reach the plaintiffs’ constitutional claim on the merits, but rather concluded that it did not have subject matter jurisdiction over this claim because the plaintiffs’ argument represented a clear challenge to the United States’ ownership of the land in question. According to the district court, all such challenges must be brought pursuant to the QTA. Because the plaintiffs did not bring their claim under the QTA, but rather under the Constitution, the district court held that it could not consider the issue of title to the land. The district court further found unpersuasive the plaintiffs’ attempt to structure their claim as a constitutional challenge to the federal government’s regulatory authority, and not to its title. On appeal, the plaintiffs contend that this decision was erroneous and that the district court properly had subject matter jurisdiction over their constitutional challenge to the restrictions imposed by the Forest Service.
The QTA operates as a limited waiver of
sovereign immunity in cases where a party seeks
to adjudicate a title dispute to real property in
which the United States claims an interest.
Specifically, the Act provides that: "The United
States may be named as a party defendant in a
civil action under this section to adjudicate a
disputed title to real property in which the
*4
United States claims an interest, other than a
security interest or water rights." 28 U.S.C.
sec. 2409a(a). In its decisions interpreting the
QTA, the Supreme Court has made clear that,
through its adoption of the Act, "Congress
intended . . . to provide the exclusive means by
which adverse claimants could challenge the
United States’ title to real property." Block v.
North Dakota,
The plaintiffs contend that the "adverse claimants" language in the Supreme Court’s Block opinion is an important limitation on the exclusivity of the QTA. The plaintiffs admit that the Act is the exclusive means by which a party claiming a property interest in land in which the United States also maintains an interest may challenge the United States’ assertion of title. However, the plaintiffs argue that the QTA does not limit their ability to challenge the United States’ regulatory authority by bringing suit pursuant to other statutes or the Constitution as long as they do not seek to quiet title in themselves. Under this theory, because the plaintiffs do not claim that they own the easements or rights-of-way over the roads in the Atwood Ridge RNA and the Burke Branch RNA, the plaintiffs’ suit need not be brought pursuant to the QTA.
In support of this argument, the plaintiffs do
not cite any case law specifically limiting the
exclusivity of the QTA to suits in which the
plaintiffs seek to quiet title in themselves.
Instead, they rely on cases that have entertained
challenges to the regulatory authority of the
United States without addressing the QTA. See,
e.g., Wilkensen v. Department of the Int., 634
F.Supp. 1265 (D. Colo. 1986); Stupak-Thrall v.
Glickman,
United States,
Although no other court has considered the
issue presented to us in as direct a fashion as
the Ninth Circuit, several courts have indicated
that the Ninth Circuit’s broad reading of the
exclusivity of the QTA is correct. In a suit for
money damages based on an allegedly invalid
*6
government sale of land, the Supreme Court
rejected the plaintiff’s attempts to avoid the
QTA on the ground that resolution of the case
entailed determining who held valid title to the
land in question. See United States v. Mottaz,
In adopting the QTA, Congress waived the United
States’ sovereign immunity to suits challenging
the United States’ title to land. See Lombard v.
United States,
B. The Administrative Procedure Act
The plaintiffs next contend that the Forest
Service violated the APA in acting arbitrarily,
capriciously, and not in accordance with the law
when it designated the Atwood Ridge and Burke
Branch areas of the Shawnee as RNAs. The district
court dismissed this APA claim for lack of
subject matter jurisdiction, finding that the
plaintiffs failed to exhaust their administrative
remedies before filing suit in federal district
court. The plaintiffs appeal this holding,
arguing that the district court erred when it
refused to excuse the plaintiffs’ failure to
exhaust their administrative remedies because,
according to the plaintiffs, pursuing those
administrative remedies would have been futile.
The requirement of administrative exhaustion is
a traditional common law doctrine that has now
been codified in section 10(c) of the APA, 5
U.S.C. sec. 704. Although section 10(c) only
permits review of agency actions that are
"final," any definitive agency decision is
considered "final," and therefore reviewable,
unless the agency’s regulations require
exhaustion as a prerequisite to judicial review.
See Darby v. Cisneros,
The plaintiffs do not challenge the conclusion
that an administrative exhaustion requirement
could apply to their case, but rather contend
that this requirement should have been waived
because any administrative appeal would have been
futile. See, e.g., McCarthy v. Madigan, 503 U.S.
140, 146-49 (1992) (discussing waiver of the
exhaustion requirement in circumstances where an
appeal is futile); Wilczynski v. Lumbermens
Mutual Casualty Co.,
Although we do not believe that the district
court had the power to waive the statutorily-
mandated exhaustion requirement of the APA, see
Glisson,
After a review of the record, we conclude that the district court did not abuse its discretion in requiring the plaintiffs to exhaust their administrative appeals. While it is true that the 1988 settlement agreement does not appear to allow the Forest Service to re-open roads in the Burke Branch and Atwood Ridge areas, the agreement does not give any party the right to compel the Forest Service’s compliance with that obligation. It is possible that had the plaintiffs pursued the available avenues for administrative relief, the Forest Service would have altered its decision to designate the Burke Branch and Atwood Ridge areas as RNAs and would have re-opened the closed roads in those areas. The result of such an action would have been a possible breach of the 1988 settlement agreement and a consequent nullification of that agreement, but the plaintiffs would have received the relief that they sought. In this case the Forest Service’s 1988 settlement agreement presents an obstacle to the administrative actions requested by the plaintiffs, but it does not render the defendants powerless to grant the plaintiffs’ request. Under these circumstances, we cannot conclude that the district court erred in refusing to apply the futility exception to excuse the plaintiffs’ failure to exhaust their administrative remedies.
III. Conclusion
The district court correctly dismissed the plaintiffs’ QTA and APA claims for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We accordingly AFFIRM the decision of the district court.
