Henry SKRANAK, Plaintiff, and Alan Skranak; James Skranak, Plaintiffs-Appellants, v. Robert CASTENADA, Supervisor, Kootenai National Forest; United States Forest Service, of the United States Department of Agriculture, Defendants-Appellees. Charles W. Harpole, Plaintiff-Appellant, v. Robert Castenada, Supervisor, Kootenai National Forest; United States Forest Service, of the United States Department of Agriculture, Defendants-Appellees.
Nos. 04-35053, 04-35056
United States Court of Appeals, Ninth Circuit
Argued and Submitted Feb. 10, 2005. Filed Oct. 12, 2005.
425 F.3d 1213
Ward A. Shanahan, Gough, Shanahan, Johnson and Waterman, Helena, MT, argued the cause for the appellants and was on the briefs.
Katherine W. Hazard, Washington, D.C., argued the cause for the appellees. Thomas L. Sansonetti, Assistant Attorney General, Ruth Ann Storey, and John Smeltzer, United States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C., and Alan Campbell and James Snow, United States Department of Agriculture, Washington, D.C., were on the brief.
Before: MCKAY*, O‘SCANNLAIN, and BEA, Circuit Judges.
We must decide whether the United States Forest Service properly denied owners access to their patented mining claims within the Kootenai National Forest in Montana.
I
A
Alan Skranak and James Skranak (“the Skranaks“) currently own the 50-acre “Fourth-of-July” tract,1 consisting of four mining claims in the Kootenai National Forest in Montana. The United States granted a patent on one in 1907 and on the other three in 1912. A six-foot wide wagon road was built to the tract in 1902. The road has long since been closed to motorized traffic and now functions as the Fourth-of-July trail.
Henry Skranak, the Skranaks’ father, bought the Fourth-of-July tract in 1961 and has had numerous run-ins with the Forest Service over issues of access in his efforts to work the mining claims. In 1995 Henry Skranak requested a special use permit under the Alaska National Interest Land Conservation Act (“ANILCA“) to construct a 2.1-mile access road on and near the Fourth-of-July trail. The Forest Service considered the request and its potential effects on endangered species, water quality, and recreation, among other concerns. The Forest Service decided to allow the road to be built, but along a different, 2.52-mile route, in order to minimize its impact. Road construction would only be permitted from June 16 to October 15 in each year. The Forest Service promised to issue an “easement” good for a ten-year period and renewable thereafter upon completion of construction, estimated to be within two to three years. In order to protect grizzlies, the Forest Service would permit only 46 vehicle round trips from June 16 to September 15, and 38 round trips from September 16 to November 15, with unlimited access in the winter. Use would be forbidden from April 1 to June 15.
B
Charles Harpole owns the 40-acre “Wayup Mine” tract, consisting of two mining claims which the United States patented in 1903. Currently, a non-system primitive road off of Forest Road 6746 (“FR 6746“) provides access. FR 6746 is open year round to motorized traffic, but is in need of maintenance and reconstruction. The Forest Service states that FR 6746 was built sometime between 1900 and 1930, and has not been maintained for 30 years. The non-system road is 1.3 miles long and in need of significant work before it can be used by motorized traffic.
Beginning in 1983, Harpole worked the mining claims episodically. During such times, the Forest Service allowed him to have access but required that he obtain a permit. The Forest Service has blocked access entirely during those periods in which Harpole was not using it.
In 1995, after nearly a decade of inactivity, Harpole applied for a special use permit under ANILCA to reconstruct and to use FR 6746 and the non-system road. The Forest Service considered the request and its potential effects on endangered species, water quality, and recreation, among other concerns and granted Harpole‘s permit, but with conditions. Road construction would only be permitted from June 16 to October 15 in each year. The Forest Service promised to issue an “easement” good for a ten-year period and renewable thereafter upon completion of construction, estimated to be within two to three years. In order to protect grizzlies, the Forest Service would permit only 38 vehicle round trips from April 1 to June 15, 46 vehicle round trips from June 16 to
C
Henry Skranak and Harpole appealed from the denial of unconditional permits, complaining that the special use permits either took or ignored their easements. They also complained that they ought not to bear the cost of improving Forest Service roads that would become accessible to the public. The Forest Service denied their joint administrative appeal.
At that point, the Skranaks (their father having died and ownership of the Fourth-of-July tract having passed to them) filed suit in district court to quiet title to an easement to the Fourth-of-July tract under the Quiet Title Act and to challenge the Forest Service‘s permit as arbitrary and capricious under the Administrative Procedure Act (“APA“). In a separate action, Harpole raised similar Quiet Title Act and APA claims with respect to the Wayup Mine.
On cross motions in the two respective actions, the district court granted summary judgments in favor of the Forest Service. The district court held that neither the Skranaks or Harpole had owned an easement under any theory; that if they did, ANILCA had extinguished it; and, with respect to the APA claims, that the conditions on the permits were reasonable. Harpole and the Skranaks have timely appealed.
II
As the district court should have, we forbear any consideration of the Skranaks’ and Harpole‘s easement claims under the Quiet Title Act until we determine whether we have jurisdiction. The Skranaks and Harpole filed suit on those claims on December 28, 2000. The Quiet Title Act contains a 12-year statute of limitations.
Such bar is jurisdictional. The Quiet Title Act is a waiver of sovereign immunity. If the statute of limitations has run on a waiver of sovereign immunity, federal courts lack jurisdiction. Block v. North Dakota, 461 U.S. 273, 292, 103 S.Ct. 1811, 75 L.Ed.2d 840 (1983); see also Adams v. United States, 255 F.3d 787, 796 (9th Cir.2001) (“Adams I“) (holding that a district court grant of summary judgment to the government on a Quiet Title Act claim was improper because the statute of limitations had run, removing jurisdiction). Although the United States did not move to dismiss the Quiet Title Act claim on statute of limitations grounds below, jurisdictional bars cannot be waived by the parties and may be addressed sua sponte. Humboldt County v. United States, 684 F.2d 1276, 1280 (9th Cir.1982). Before reaching the merits, then, we must decide whether the Skranaks and Harpole have actions to quiet title that accrued before December 28, 1988.
A
We have given significant guidance as to when a Quiet Title Act statute of limitations begins running in McFarland v. Norton, No. 03-35831, 425 F.3d at 724, 2005 WL 2495728 (9th Cir.2005). We pointed out that the government, in its capacity as the owner of the alleged servient tenement, has “the right to reasonable use of its land,” and we concluded that “mild interference with the use of an easement pursuant to the government‘s own property interests will not start the statute of limitations running.” Id. at 727. More importantly, we explained that federal agencies like the Forest Ser-
1
Since the statute of limitations issue was not addressed in the district court, the record is not well developed. Even on the current scanty record, however, we are able to determine that the Skranaks’ action to quiet title accrued before 1988. By the 1940s, at the latest, the Forest Service had converted the road into a trail usable only for hiking and riding. Although merely barring the public‘s vehicular access would not have necessarily been inconsistent with the Skranaks’ predecessors-in-interest‘s easement,2 affirmatively converting the road to a trail barred not only the public‘s vehicular access but the owner‘s use of the alleged easement as well. Because converting the road to a trail barred access in a way that was neither temporary nor obviously overcome by the securing of a permit or special permission, the Skranaks’ predecessors-in-interest should then have been put on notice. In addition, Henry Skranak appears to have been well aware that the Forest Service was adverse to his claimed right of access. In 2000 he stated that he “ha[d] been denied access to his property for more than 39 years.” In a 1991 letter, he complained that “[d]ue to the policy of the Department of Agriculture and the Forest Service over the years, we have been barred out by berms, Kelly ditches, arrests and fines.” Such was sufficient to start the statute of limitations running and thus to defeat the Skranaks’ ability to bring a quiet title action. Therefore, the grant of summary judgment against the Skranaks on their Quiet Title Act claim must be vacated and the district court is instructed to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
2
In Harpole‘s case, what evidence there is tends to suggest that previous restrictions on his access were consensually negotiated, or at least were consistent with the Forest Service acting in a regulatory capacity (i.e., requiring a permit for further use), instead of in the capacity of a landowner claiming exclusive rights.3 In 1983, when Harpole started making repairs on the non-system road (it had not been used since at least 1971), a forest ranger called him and agreed that he had a “right of access” but told him he needed to request a special use permit or file a plan of operations. Harpole and the ranger “mutually agreed that the access [] created would be closed by the Forest Service until [Harpole] had acquired a special use permit.” In 1984, Harpole‘s plan
III
The Skranaks and Harpole also challenge the Forest Service‘s ANILCA access permit on APA grounds. See
A
As with the Quiet Title Act claims, we must first consider whether this court has jurisdiction. “[T]he APA waives sovereign immunity for suits against federal officers in which the plaintiff seeks nonmonetary relief. The APA, however, does not waive immunity as to any claims which are expressly or impliedly forbidden by ‘any other statute that grants consent to suit.’ The Quiet Title Act ... is such an act.” Metro. Water Dist. of S. California v. United States, 830 F.2d 139, 143 (9th Cir.1987) (citing Block, 461 U.S. at 286). For any easement claims that were resolved in an administrative proceeding commenced 12 years or more after the Skranaks or Harpole were on notice of the need to quiet title, the district court has no jurisdiction. However, though “[t]he statute limits the time in which a quiet title suit against the United States can be filed, .... [it] does not purport to effectuate a transfer of title. If a claimant has title to a disputed tract of land, he retains title even if his suit to quiet his title is deemed time-barred under § 2409a(f).” Id. at 291. While Block would bar judicial review of an agency‘s resolution of state or common law property claims raised in an administrative proceeding, Block does not bar the agency from resolving such claims in the administrative proceeding itself. Neither does Block prevent us from reviewing an agency‘s failure to resolve such claims. Because the Skranaks and Harpole only challenge the Forest Service‘s failure to resolve whether they had easements, the district court has jurisdiction to entertain a claim under the APA.
B
The Skranaks and Harpole claim that
The Skranaks and Harpole are correct that the Forest Service refused to address whether they had common law easements. The Forest Service did determine, although cursorily, that they did not have an easement under
The Skranaks’ and Harpole‘s claim that such response violated
We are persuaded that our normal deference to the Forest Service does not require rejecting the Skranaks’ and Harpole‘s reading of
Such interpretation of
We defer to
Notwithstanding any other provision of law, and subject to such terms and conditions as the Secretary of Agriculture may prescribe, the Secretary shall provide such access to nonfederally owned land within the boundaries of the National Forest System as the Secretary deems adequate to secure to the owner the reasonable use and enjoyment thereof: Provided, That such owner comply with rules and regulations applicable to ingress and egress to or from the National Forest System.
IV
The district court‘s grant of summary judgment with respect to the Quiet Title Act claims is vacated; the Skranaks’ claim is remanded with instructions to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction and Harpole‘s claim is remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion. The district court‘s grant of summary judgment with respect to the APA claims is reversed.
VACATED IN PART, REVERSED IN PART, AND REMANDED.
