This case involves a jurisdictional dispute between the state of Wisconsin (“the State”) and a band of American Indians. Each claims exclusive jurisdiction to regulate fishing and hunting by the general public in certain navigable lakes in Wisconsin. After a bench trial on the merits, the district court upheld the State’s claim and granted declaratory and injunctive relief against defendant officials of the band. Defendants appeal from that final judgment; the State cross-appeals from four findings in the district court’s opinion reported in
In 1848 Wisconsin became a state. Six years later the United States signed a treaty with the Chippewa Indians of Lake Superior and the Mississippi River. The terms of that treaty provided for the cession by the Chippewas of some seven million acres of land in northeast Minnesota in exchange for a promise by the United States "to set apart and withhold from sale, for the use of the Chippewas” certain tracts of land in Wisconsin and Michigan estimated as totalling roughly four hundred and eighty thousand acres.
United States v. Bouchard,
The 1854 treaty did not fix the precise boundaries of the Band’s reservation. Instead, the treaty provided that “the boundaries of [the Band’s reservation] shall be hereafter agreed upon or fixed under the direction of the President [of the United States].” It was not until 1873 that a list of the parcels of land comprising the reservation was finally agreed upon and not until 1876 that the outer boundaries of the reservation were surveyed and fixed. Of the 69,120 acres of land in the 1873 list, the Band presently owns some 24%; individual members of the Band 39%; and non-members of the Band 37%.
Pursuant to the Indian Reorganization Act of 1934, 25 U.S.C. § 461, 48 Stat. 984, the Band has enacted its own constitution. The constitution establishes a governing board (“the Governing Board”) whose members are elected by the Band. Article 7 of the constitution empowers the Governing Board “to regulate, by enactment of ordinances, the activities of hunting, fishing, *1326 ricing, trapping, or boating by members and non-members of [on] all lands and waters” within the Band’s reservation.
In 1976, the Governing Board enacted a “Fishing, Hunting, Trapping, and Ricing Code” (“the Code”). Sections of the Code purport to restrict fishing and hunting in all waters within the Band’s reservation. Violators are subject to fines of up to $500 and incarceration in the Band’s jails for up to six months. 1 Three days after the Code’s effective date, the State filed suit in a Wisconsin circuit court against members of the Governing Board. The State sought a declaratory judgment that defendants’ enforcement of the Code against non-members of the Band infringed upon the general public’s right to fish, hunt, and recreate in navigable state waters.
Defendants removed the suit to federal district court under 28 U.S.C. § 1441 and the State moved for a preliminary injunction enjoining defendants from prohibiting non-members of the Band from fishing in certain navigable lakes without a license issued by the Band. The district court granted the State’s motion on July 9, 1976 (App. lla-12a), and some five years later, after a two-day bench trial, entered a final order awarding the State declaratory and permanent injunctive relief. The district court’s final order declared that the State enjoys “exclusive jurisdiction to regulate hunting and fishing activities by non-members of [the Band] on and in the navigable waters lying within the outer boundaries of the [Band’s] reservation” and that “[defendants enjoy no jurisdiction to regulate hunting and fishing activities by such nonmembers on and in such navigable waters” and permanently enjoined “defendants, their successors in office, their agents and employees from enforcing or attempting to enforce against any non-members of the [Band] on any navigable water[s] lying within the outer boundaries of the [Band’s] reservation” the Code’s fishing regulations.
1. Federal Question Jurisdiction
Section 1441(a) of Title 28 of the U.S.Code permits removal to a federal district court of “any civil action brought in a State court of which the district courts of the United States have original jurisdiction.” Because there is no diversity of citizenship between the State and defendants — a state is not a citizen of a state for purposes of diversity jurisdiction,
Moor v. County of Alameda,
In its complaint, the State asserts as trustee for its public two distinct property interests: (1) title to the beds underlying navigable Wisconsin lakes and (2) the right to enjoy free access to the waters of those lakes “for purposes of navigation, fishing, hunting, swimming, commerce, enjoyment of scenic beauty, and general recreation.” Both interests are descendant from federal law. Prior to Wisconsin’s admission into statehood, the United States held these
*1327
same interests in trust for the public pursuant to a 1783 deed of cession by four of the original 13 states and the Northwest Ordinance of 1787. See 1783 Virginia Act of Cession; Northwest Ordinance, Act of July 13, 1787, art. IV; _ reenacted Aug. 7, 1789, ch. 8, 1 Stat. 50;
Pollard’s Lessee v. Hagan,
We disagree. That a right of property was at one time governed by federal law or first conveyed by the United States does not render a suit to enforce that right one “arising under” federal law.
Oneida Indian Nation v. County of Oneida,
The suit before us is not to decide what property rights in navigable lakes Wisconsin acquired when it was admitted to the Union in 1848. For that matter, defendants concede that when Wisconsin became a state it acquired the rights it asserts in this suit. Rather, the State claims that it continues to hold in trust for the public the same property rights it acquired in 1848 and that defendants are infringing those rights. That claim “arises under” federal law, however, only if federal law continues to govern property rights in the beds and waters of navigable Wisconsin lakes. It does not. The grant of statehood to Wisconsin was a grant both of property rights and of sovereign power. In 1848 the United States conveyed to Wisconsin property interests in navigable waters and the power to determine by its own laws the future course of ownership of those interests. “After a State enters the Union, title to the land [under navigable waters] is governed by state law.”
Montana v. United States,
*1328
' In addition to the claim that defendants have infringed property rights it holds in trust for the public, the State makes another claim in its complaint. The State asserts that defendants have no right under the 1854 treaty to regulate public fishing and hunting in any navigable Wisconsin lakes. Complaint ‘HI 19, 22. There is no question that this claim “arises under” federal law. The State relies directly upon a federal treaty to defeat a federal right — the right to prevent the general public from fishing and hunting in navigable lakes — asserted by the Band in its constitution and 1976 Code and by defendants in enforcement of that Code against the general public. Federal interest in providing a federal forum for a claim that denies the existence of a right founded upon federal law is no less than for a claim that asserts the existence of such a right. The rationale for providing federal tribunals for the adjudication of federal rights — that state tribunals might treat federal rights ungenerously — applies equally to both types of claim. That rationale is especially applicable in the case before us where the State in effect claims that its state-created property interests are superior to an Indian tribe’s federally-created property interests. See
United States v. Kagama,
But it is the plaintiff that stands to benefit in this suit if a state court casts an unsympathetic eye upon federal rights. That may partly explain why the State initiated this action in one of its own courts and why defendants promptly petitioned for removal to federal court. At any rate, this fact — that defendants are the claimants of the federal right to be protected from rough treatment at the hands of a state court — raises the question whether the State’s claim under the 1854 treaty is well-pleaded.
It was long ago established that a litigant may not gain access to federal court by artful pleading,
Skeily Oil Co. v. Phillips Petroleum Co.,
Looked at one way, the State’s claim that defendants do not have a federal right to exclude the public from navigable lakes looks like an attempt to secure entry into federal court by rebutting an anticipated defense. Had the State sued only for an injunction enjoining defendants from infringing public property rights in navigable lakes, that claim would have arisen only in replication to a claim by defendants that the 1854 treaty conferred such rights upon them,
4
and a. federal court would not have had jurisdiction over it.
5
Looked at another way, however, the State’s federal claim looks like an attempt to force litigation of a claim that defendants could bring in federal court. Defendants could have sued in federal court to enjoin state officials responsible for issuing state fishing licenses from
*1329
licensing persons to fish and hunt in the navigable lakes over which the Band claims jurisdiction. See Wis.Stat. § 844.01 (1973);
Mescalero Apache Tribe v. New Mexico,
Looked at the first way — we assume without deciding that the only coercive action the State could bring against defendants is one for an injunction to enjoin a continuing trespass against public property rights in navigable waters (see,
e.g., Baker v. Voss,
When an alleged patent infringer sues for a declaratory judgment that a patent is invalid or uninfringed, he asserts a federal claim that could have arisen either as a replication in a state coercive action,
American Well Works Co. v. Layne & Bowler Co.,
Accordingly, we conclude that the district court had original subject-matter jurisdiction over this action and that removal from state court under 28 U.S.C. § 1441 was proper. 7
II. Sovereign Immunity
We have yet another jurisdictional threshold to cross before reaching the merits of this appeal. In the district court, defendants moved to dismiss this suit on the ground that though the State’s complaint named individual members of the Band as defendants, the suit was in effect against the Band and the Band enjoyed sovereign immunity from suit. The district court denied the motion, holding that because the 1854 treaty did not confer upon the Band exclusive fishing and hunting rights in navigable lakes, defendants acted beyond the scope of their authority as members of the Band’s governing board when they restricted public fishing and hunting in navigable lakes.
When circumstances beyond an appellant’s control render moot a question decided and appealed from, a federal appellate court will vacate the decision below.
Great Western Sugar Co. v. Nelson,
Circumstances beyond defendants’ control have not prevented them from exercising their right of appeal from the judgment below. They exercised that right by filing a notice of appeal and later voluntarily attempted to waive the sovereign immunity defense in this Court in the apparent hope of escaping the preclusive effect of the district court’s rejection of that defense. Had they decided not to file a notice of appeal, or had they simply abandoned their appeal after filing it, the district court’s adverse sovereign immunity decision would not have been deprived of preclusive effect.
Federated Department Stores v. Moitie,
Even assuming that the Band had the power to waive its sovereign immunity after the adverse decision on that issue, see
United States
v.
Oregon,
Defendants contend that absent an effective waiver they are immune from this suit first because the Band is immune from suit and secondly because they acted on behalf of the Band when they attempted to restrict public fishing and hunting in navigable lakes. The district court rejected defendants’ second contention, holding that because the 1854 treaty did not confer upon the Band power to restrict public fishing and hunting in navigable lakes, defendants were not acting on behalf of the Band when they attempted to exercise such power. Defendants argue that the district court erred in looking to the 1854 treaty to determine the scope of their authority as Band officials. They argue that the constitution of the Band, not the 1854 treaty, defines the limits of their authority to act on behalf of the Band and that the Band’s constitution does indeed authorize members of its Governing Board to restrict public fishing and hunting in navigable lakes.
At a superficial level, defendants’ argument is appealing. A federal official is immune from suit unless a plaintiff alleges either that the United States did not delegate to the official the power to act as he did or that his exercise of that power violates the federal Constitution.
Larson
v.
Domestic & Foreign Corp.,
But the argument has a fatal flaw: The argument assumes that common law sovereign immunity protects a sovereign’s officials from suit even when they set out to do what their sovereign lacks the power to do. It does not. When a federal officer — or state officer for that matter — violates the federal Constitution, he exercises a power that his sovereign does not enjoy. That is the rationale for stripping him of his authority and immunity as a federal or state officer:
viz.,
he has exercised a power that his sovereign was powerless to convey to him.
11
See
Ex Parte Young,
By and large, however, limitations upon the sovereignty of Indian tribes are found not in the federal Constitution, see
Taiton v. Mayes,
Defendants do not contend that the sovereignty of the Band over navigable lakes and Wisconsin citizens fishing and hunting in those lakes is unlimited. They concede that whatever sovereignty the Band enjoys over public fishing and hunting derives from the 1854 treaty. We therefore conclude that the district court did not err in holding that defendants enjoy immunity from this suit only if the 1854 treaty conferred upon the Band the power that the Band in turn conferred upon defendants to restrict public fishing and hunting in navigable lakes. Since the treaty did not do so (infra Part III), defendants’ sovereign immunity defense must fail.
III. The Effect of the 1854 Treaty Upon State Sovereignty Over Navigable Waters
The 1854 treaty between the United States and the Chippewa Indians reserved “for the use of” the Band a tract of land in central Wisconsin “equal in extent to three townships.” Nineteen years after the signing of that treaty, the United States and the Band prepared a list of land parcels— with a total dry acreage (about 69,120) roughly equivalent to that of three townships — included within the tract reserved to the Band, and three years later, the United States surveyed those land parcels and prepared a map designating the outer boundaries of the Band’s reservation. Defendants claim that nineteen navigable lakes are wholly or partly within those outer boundaries, that the 1854 treaty conferred upon the Band the exclusive right to fish and hunt in the waters of those lakes, and that defendants therefore enjoy the power to restrict public fishing and hunting in those lakes. The State of course denies each of these claims. The district court found that though the outer boundaries of the reservation do encompass or intersect nineteen navigable lakes, and though the Band understood in 1854 that it would enjoy exclusive fishing and hunting rights in all waters within the outer boundaries of its reservation, the 1854 treaty did not confer such rights upon the Band, and the Band therefore lacks jurisdiction to restrict public fishing and hunting in navigable lakes. On appeal, defendants argue that the district court erred in holding that the fishing and hunting rights conferred upon the Band are not exclusive.
There are weighty reasons for presuming that the 1854 treaty did not confer upon the Band exclusive hunting and fishing rights in navigable Wisconsin lakes. In 1846, the United States authorized the people of Wisconsin “to form a constitution and State government, for the purpose of being admitted into the Union on an equal footing with the original States in all respects whatsoever.... ” Wisconsin Enabling Act of 1846, 9 Stat. 56. Pursuant to that grant of authority, the people of Wisconsin adopted a constitution providing for a republican form of government, and in 1848 Wisconsin became a state and a government elected by the people of Wisconsin was vested with all of the same powers possessed by the governments of the original thirteen states. Act of March 3, 1847, 9 Stat. 178. The power to regulate fishing and hunting in navigable lakes is one of those powers,
Montana v. United States,
The United States shares the interest of the Wisconsin citizenry in preserving state sovereignty. It undertook to admit Wisconsin into the Union on an “equal footing” with the original states. Presumably that undertaking reflects a belief that it is better to distribute power evenly than unevenly throughout a union of states and that a local government is better able than a national government to promote public welfare in matters of local concern. We know of no reason to suppose that the United States abandoned these beliefs in the six years between the date it admitted Wisconsin into the Union on an “equal footing” with the other states and the date the United States reserved “for the use of” a band of Chippewa Indians some sixty-nine thousand acres of dry land in Wisconsin.
Even assuming that the Constitution empowers the United States to effect a post-statehood conveyance of sovereignty over navigable state lakes to a band of Indians,
*1335
we must therefore presume — absent evidence of a contrary intention “definitely declared or otherwise made plain,” or of a “public exigency” sufficient to warrant an inference of such an intention — that the United States did not exercise that power in 1854 when it signed a treaty with the Chippewa Indians.
Montana, supra
In sum, because the 1854 treaty did not expressly reserve exclusive rights in navigable waters (see
Blake v. Arnett,
IV. The State’s Cross-Appeal
In its opinion, the district court expressly found that the outer boundaries of the
*1336
Band’s reservation encompass navigable lakes.
We need not decide in this case whether the outer boundaries of the Band’s reservation encompass navigable lakes because regardless of whether they do, defendants lack jurisdiction to restrict public fishing and hunting in them. 13 We therefore vacate the district court’s finding on that issue, and order that the district court’s appended judgment be modified by substituting “lakes adjacent to the dry lands of the Lac Courte Oreilles Reservation” for that part of the first sentence of the judgment after “navigable” and by substituting the same phrase for that part of the third sentence of the judgment after “navigable” through “October 23, 1981”.
Affirmed as modified.
APPENDIX
UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT POR THE WESTERN DISTRICT OF WISCONSIN
Civil Action No. 76-C-359
State Of Wisconsin, vs. Odric Baker, et al., Plaintiff, Defendants.
JUDGMENT
This action came on for trial before the Court, Honorable James E. Doyle, United States District Judge, presiding, and the issues having been duly tried and a decision having been duly rendered,
It is Ordered and Adjudged that there resides in the State of Wisconsin exclusive jurisdiction to regulate hunting and fishing activities by non-members of the Lac Courte Oreilles Band on and in the navigable waters lying within the outer boundaries of the Lac Courte Oreilles Reservation, as those boundaries are defined in finding 86, in the opinion and order entered on October 23,1981. Defendants enjoy no jurisdiction to regulate hunting and fishing activities by such non-members on and in such navigable waters.
It is Further Ordered and Adjudged that defendants, their successors in office, their agents and employees are enjoined from enforcing or attempting to enforce against any non-members of the Lac Courte Oreilles Band on any navigable water[s] lying within the outer boundaries of the Lac Courte Oreilles Reservation, as defined in finding 86, in the opinion order entered on October 23, 1981, the provisions of Section *1337 VIII of the Fishing, Hunting, Trapping, and Ricing Code of the Lac Courte Oreilles Band, which was implemented on or about May 24, 1976.
It is Ordered and Adjudged that plaintiff recover of defendants its costs of action.
Approved as to form:
Dated this 26th day of October, 1981.
By The Court:
/s/ James E. Doyle District Judge
Dated at Madison WI, this 26th day of October, 1981.
/s/ Joseph W. Skupniewitz Clerk of Court
Notes
. In 1978, two months after the Supreme Court held in
Oliphant v. Suquamish Tribe,
. We note that newly revised Circuit Rule 9(b), effective January 10, 1983, requires that appellants include in their main briefs a jurisdictional summary “which will appear before the statement of the case and shall include an explanation of the statutory basis for the jurisdiction of the district court (if applicable) and of this court, as well as other information relevant to jurisdiction .. . ”,
. The State does not contend that federal law requires it to continue to hold in trust for the public the same fishing and hunting rights it acquired in 1848.
. See Wis.Stat. § 844.16 (1973) as to requirements for complaint dealing with interference with real property interest.
. The waiver by the United States in 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(a) of its immunity to quiet title actions does not “apply to trust or restricted Indian lands ... ”,
. Although the State alleges in its complaint that navigable lakes are not within the Band’s reservation and the defendants therefore lack jurisdiction to restrict public fishing and hunting in them, the State does not expressly pray for a declaratory judgment to that effect. But the district court inferred such a prayer from the allegations in the State’s complaint, and given that plaintiffs in declaratory judgment suits define their own causes of action and that six and one-half years have elapsed since the State filed suit, we are not prepared to insist on a more restrictive interpretation of the State’s complaint.
. Because we hold that the State’s claim that defendants lack federal jurisdiction to restrict public fishing and hunting “arises under” federal law, we need not consider the State’s novel contention that Indian tribes are covered by the Tenth Amendment and that defendants’ enforcement of the Code against non-Indians is a violation of that Amendment.
. Defendants’ attempt to waive immunity retroactively is tantamount to a Rule 15(d) motion under the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to file a supplemental answer relating back to their original pleading. Such motions are routinely denied when granting them would upset a concluded or well-advanced litigation.
United States v. Wissohickon Tool Works, Inc.,
. We do not mean to suggest that a sovereign may not exercise its powers retroactively. Cf.
Flower Cab Co. v. Petitte,
. The relevant part of the post-judgment resolution reads:
Now, Therefore, Be It Hereby Resolved, that the Governing Board of the Lac Courte Oreilles Tribe hereby authorizes its attorneys of record on appeal in this case to waive the defense of sovereign immunity of the Tribal Governing Board on the issue of whether the Tribe has reserved to it the exclusive and/or preferential use of the navigable waters within the boundaries of the Lac Courte Oreilles Reservation for fishing, hunting, and ricing.
App. 75a.
. It is apparently an unsettled question whether state officials enjoy immunity from suit when they violate a federal statute that creates a private right of action. Cf.
Maine v. Thiboutot,
. In a case argued on the same day as the one before us, this Court adopted the rule that Indian treaties are to be interpreted as the Indians who negotiated them understood them.
Lac Courte Oreilles Band of Lake Superior Chippewa Indians v. Voight,
Our decision not to afford the Indians’ understanding of the 1854 treaty controlling weight in this case is not at odds with our holding in
Voight.
There are other concerns besides facilitating communication between the United States and the Indians that may come into play when a court is asked to resolve a dispute regarding the interpretation of an Indian treaty. Preserving the power of state governments to promote public welfare is one such concern,
Charles River Bridge, supra
. We do not decide today whether the Band enjoys fishing and hunting rights in these navigable lakes superior to those enjoyed by the general public. We decide only that the Band does not enjoy jurisdiction to restrict public fishing and hunting in them. Defendants argue that even if the Band’s fishing and hunting rights in navigable waters near its reservation are not exclusive, they are certainly superior to the public’s fishing and hunting rights in those waters. That may be (see
Puyallup Tribe, Inc. v. Department of Game,
