This case involves a dispute between a state government and the federal government over title to the beds of three rivers. The issues arise under the Quiet Title Act.
FACTS
Judgment was on the pleadings, under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 12(c), so we take the facts as pleaded.
Three remote Alaskan rivers are at issue, the Kandik, Nation and Black. They are about 200 miles east and a little north of Fairbanks, Alaska, near the border with the Yukon Territory. Alaska was admitted to the Union as a state on January 3, 1959. Navigability as of that date determines which government owns the riverbed. If the river was navigable at statehood, then the state owns the bed; if not, the federal government owns it. It is undisputed that when the Union was created, each of the thirteen original states retained title to the lands covered by navigable waters, and that under the “equal footing doctrine” each new state succeeds upon statehood to the federal interest in these lands. The Submerged Lands Act gave Alaska title to the beds of navigable rivers on January 3,1959.
The State of Alaska pleads that the three rivers were navigable at statehood. The United States does not deny the fact. That would be the end of the case, but for the intricacies of the Quiet Title Act.
The Kandik and Nation Rivers
Alaska pleads that the United States has asserted claims to two of the three rivers. The context was a dispute with a native corporation after the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act was passed. That act provided that Alaska Native regional groupings and villages were to establish corporations, which would receive about $1 billion in cash and forty million acres in land.
When Doyon, Ltd., a regional corporation in Interior Alaska, made its land selections, the Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”) made a decision that the Kandik and Nation Rivers were nonnavigable at statehood. Doyon did not claim the rivers. What it claimed was that the rivers were navigable at statehood, so the state owned them. Doyon’s interest was in claiming navigability, so that it could get more land outside the riverbeds, and not have the riverbeds charged against its acreage entitlement. But the Bureau of Land Management claimed that the rivers were non-navigable at statehood, so that Doyon would be stuck with them and its dry land acreage entitlement reduced accordingly.
Doyon appealed the BLM decision. The administrative law judge took extensive evidence and decided in favor of Doyon. He found that the rivers were navigable at statehood, so the state owned them, they were unavailable for selection by Doyon, and they could not count against Doyon’s entitlement.
The area has temperatures varying from 70 below Fahrenheit to 90 above. Much of the time all water is frozen, but when it rains, permafrost prevents water from soaking into the soil. The streams vary a great deal, sometimes braided and nearly dry, sometimes flooding, sometimes blocked by log-jams, sometimes open and four or five feet deep. Few if any people lived in the area in the 1950’s, but people did live there by hunting, fishing, trapping and trading in the 1930’s, 1940’s, and 1960’s. The Kandik was used by a man who had a supply contact with the International Boundary Commission in 1910-1912 to pole and line two tons of supplies upstream to the Yukon border by scow. It took a month to get the supplies upstream, but only six hours to get down, because a cloudburst immediately before the return trip made the river high and swift. The ALJ concluded that it was likely that supplies were similarly brought up the Nation River to Hard Luck Creek.
Fur prices stimulated the heaviest trapping in the area in the 1920’s, 1930’s, and 1940’s. During that period sternwheelers would deliver supplies at the mouths of the Nation and Kandik, and the trappers would haul them upstream by boat or canoe in the summer, or dogsled in the winter. There were two known trappers on the Kandik in the 1920’s and 1930’s, and both poled boats up the stream. A trapping family used a boat with an inboard motor to get supplies up the Nation. Several other trappers used boats and canoes to get supplies up the Nation and furs down ( to be taken to Eagle for sale to middlemen) in the 1930’s.
The ALJ found that after statehood, the Kandik and Nation became popular recreational streams. This popularity was measured by Alaska standards, with at least two parties on the Kandik in 1978, when the evidence was taken, and three parties in one day on the Nation.
The BLM, having lost on its claim of nonnavigability before the ALJ, filed exceptions, maintaining its position of nonna-vigability which would cause the riverbeds to be charged against Doyon’s entitlement. The Alaska Native Claims Appeal Board adopted the ALJ’s findings, conclusions and recommended decision.
The Black River
As explained above, Doyon won its case establishing that the Kandik and Nation Rivers were navigable at statehood, so the rivers belonged to the State of Alaska and could not be counted against Doyon’s acreage. The Bureau of Land Management had fought the case, claiming that the Kandik and Nation were nonnavigable at statehood, so belonged to the United States (and after its land selection, Doyon). After Doyon won the Kandik and Nation Rivers case, the BLM had its historian prepare a study of the Black River. It is another obscure river in the exceedingly lightly populated eastern part of Interior Alaska.
The Black flows about 300 miles toward the northwest, from some mountains north of the Yukon, past an abandoned Indian village called Salmon Village, through the Yukon Flats near the presently occupied village of Chalkytsik, and into the Porcupine River about 25 miles upstream from where the Porcupine flows into the Yukon. Before the Alaska Purchase in 1867, the Hudson’s Bay Company maintained an important post at Fort Yukon just below the confluence of the Porcupine and Yukon Rivers, and mapped the Black River, so probably was buying furs from trappers up the Black. The economy probably declined after the United States purchased Alaska, because the War Department compelled the Hudson’s Bay Company to move its trading post up the Porcupine River to Rampart House, on the other side of the Yukon Territory border.
During the first half of the century, local Athabascans, the Tranjik Kutchin, traveled upriver in the fall in canoes for winter hunting in the headwaters, and came downriver in the spring for fishing. White trappers and prospectors explored the area beginning in the first decade of the twentieth century, and operated ■ several trading posts from time to time along the river. Trading posts sold some supplies to
After a school was built at Chalkytsik (formerly the summer fish camp known as Fishhook Village), the local Indians began settling there year round. By 1945, Chalkytsik had about 80 people, and by 1970, the population had risen to about 95 people, with 26 houses, two stores, and two churches. Pilots started flying bush planes in around 1940, and by 1970 bush planes were the usual means for trappers to bring in supplies and bring out their furs. Trapping was the main industry, but a considerable portion of village income was earned by firefighting. In the summer, when trapping and hunting are no good, the villagers made regular boat trips down the Black River and the Porcupine to Fort Yukon to visit relatives and fly out for jobs. But the river continued to be used for these purposes as well.
The BLM State Director decided in 1980 that the Black River was navigable at statehood from the Porcupine up to Wood River, based on its historian’s report. Part of the river consists of dead-end sloughs and oxbow lakes during the summer, but at the request of the Village of Chalkytsik, the BLM determined that they were navigable too.
The State of Alaska’s complaint pleads, and the United States admits, that the United States “does not consider itself bound” by these past determinations that all three rivers were navigable at statehood. The state claims that its inability to ascertain with finality whether the United States concedes navigability at statehood for purposes of title in the state impedes its land and water resource management and its ability to provide public information. It therefore sought a declaratory judgment against the United States and the native regional and village corporations owning land along the rivers, Doyon and Chalkytsik, to establish that the three rivers as described above were navigable at statehood, and that the state held title to their beds.
The federal government and the Native corporations moved to dismiss. Their theory was that because the United States was not at that time asserting a claim, sovereign immunity had not been waived under the Quiet Title Act, so the court had no jurisdiction to establish that the United States’ claim, if it ever chose to assert one, was invalid. The Native corporations stood to obtain title to the riverbeds, apparently in addition to the title they had already obtained to other land on the assumption that they would not receive the riverbeds, if the rivers were held to be nonnavigable at statehood.
The district judge denied the motion to dismiss.
ANALYSIS
We review dismissal on the pleadings de novo.
I. “Claims an interest.”
The Quiet Title Act allows suits against the United States to adjudicate disputed titles in real property “in which the United States claims an interest.”
The United States’ argument is that it currently makes no formal assertion of any claim to the rivers, that the final determinations in the disputes regarding Doyon’s objection to counting the Kandik and Nation riverbeds against its acreage established that it had no claim as of that time, and it has not interfered with any assertion of a claim or usage by the state of the three rivers. The United States also argues that until it “claims an interest,” the dispute is not ripe for purposes of Article III jurisdiction. We need not consider the Constitutional argument, because it is in this case nothing more than a restatement of the statutory argument, and the case can be resolved fully on the statutory questions. The Quiet Title Act must be construed strictly because it waives sovereign immunity,
The United States argues as a matter of policy that we should be chary of allowing the State of Alaska to burden the federal government by requiring it to study all the waters of its expanse on pain of losing title to them. Basically it says it has to be a “dog in the manger,” because the State of Alaska is too big for it to know about in any detail. This is a serious point, though in the forty years since statehood, with its enormous fleets of federal aircraft, satellite photographs, archives of aerial photographs, and large staffs of employees patrolling Alaska, the federal government has not been entirely helpless in its ability to make decisions about its interests in the state.
There is also a serious policy concern in favor of allowing resolution of disputes based on the United States’ inchoate claim to everything in Alaska but what it has disclaimed. Eventually all the witnesses will be dead, reducing the reliability of litigation. Someone who used one of these rivers in 1959 at age 20 is now 60. The population in the area was so sparse at all relevant times — probably no more than a couple of hundred people who might have used the three rivers during the relevant time, most too young to have relevant knowledge or too old to have survived the forty years since statehood — that a few deaths by old age can remove most or all the knowledgeable witnesses. Also, a state entitled as of 1959 to all the incidents of ownership in its rivers, yet still deprived of clear title forty years later, is effectively deprived of what it is entitled to under the equal footing doctrine.
For the Nation and Kandik Rivers, there can be no question that the United States did in fact actively assert a claim of ownership. The Bureau of Land Management took the position in the Doyon case, before the administrative law judge and
That the United States does not say the same thing now as then does not eliminate the cloud on the State of Alaska’s title that its claim created. After all, the federal government has now taken three positions: (1) the rivers were not navigable at statehood, so we retained ownership, and now Doyon owns them so they reduce the amount of dry land Doyon can get from us; (2) the rivers were navigable at statehood, so we did not retain title and they do not count against Doyon’s acreage (after the BLM lost at two levels in the administrative adjudication against Doyon); (3) we refuse to take a position on whether the rivers were navigable at statehood, so the State of Alaska cannot settle title one way or the other. These positions are not consistent, and have nothing in common except that (1) and (3) served whatever was the federal government’s interest at the time. There is apparently nothing to stop the United States from taking again the position at any time in the future, that the rivers were not navigable at statehood. Its first position, against Doyon, establishes that at least one federal bureau’s personnel believed that that is the correct position.
By reading the statute itself and performing the traditional exercise of attributing a rational purpose to the legislature, we can attribute to Congress a purpose of furnishing a means by which state governments can remove clouds on their title created by federal assertions of claims.
Both sides urge us to examine snippets of legislative history. Even were legislative history to be determinative, there is nothing in any of the snippets cited answering the question of just what the United States must do to “claim[ ] an interest” for purposes of Quiet Title Act jurisdiction. The United States quotes one snippet that says “claims an interest,” as the statute does, as though the identical words in the legislative history somehow explain or strengthen the words in the statute. They do not.
The United States argues that because the Alaska Native Claims Appeal Board made the final decision for the Department of the Interior,
Once the government has formally asserted a claim to an interest in land, a state government is entitled to treat the land as “real property in which the United States claims an interest”
By contrast, in the case at bar, the United States once actively claimed in litigation that it owned the riverbeds, and in this litigation when put to the test by the district court refused to file a disclaimer, because it wanted to retain the power to assert a claim in the future. Since the statute provides that the United States can destroy jurisdiction by filing a disclaimer, it would be illogical to construe it to mean that the United States can also destroy jurisdiction by filing a refusal to make a disclaimer.
Our recent decision in Leisnoi, Inc. v. United States
By contrast with Leisnoi, in the case at bar the United States rather than a private party has disputed the State of Alaska’s title. Nor has it clarified and dissipated any ambiguity in its previous assertion of title to the Nation and Kan-dik Rivers. In Leisnoi the United States attempted to file a formal disclaimer of all interest under the Quiet Title Act.
By contrast, in the case at bar, the United States itself has formally claimed that the Kandik and Nation were nonnavi-gable at statehood so that it retained title and the State of Alaska did not obtain title. The United States formally admitted the State of Alaska’s averment that the United States “does not consider itself bound for purposes of title by the BLM’s past navigability determinations.”
The United States, in its brief before us, argues that “even if the question of navigability requires an answer, the district court should have permitted the United States to amend its answer to provide one.” That would be a strong argument, had the United States asked the district court for leave to amend. But it did not. Even after it lost in district court on navigability, and filed a motion for reconsideration, the United States did not seek leave to amend. The United States stuck so firmly to its contention that it did not have to answer the navigability averment, that it never asked for permission to answer the averment even after the district court decided it had to answer. Where a party never asked for permission, its argument that the “district court should have permitted” is without force.
“We have permitted only narrow and discretionary exceptions to the general rule against considering issues for the first time on appeal. They are (1) when review is necessary to prevent a miscarriage of justice or to preserve the integrity of the judicial process.
The Black River
The Black River is a harder case for the State of Alaska, because the federal government held off on asserting its position until after Doyon’s administrative litigation was resolved as to the Nation and Kandik, and then threw in the towel without forcing Doyon through another administrative proceeding. It is plain from the record that the United States applied the administrative decision for the Kandik and Nation Rivers in deciding what its position would be on the Black River, and would probably have followed it had it come out the other way. That cuts in favor of jurisdiction, because the state officials know that the federal government considers the Black to be like the Kandik and Nation, and if it asserts a claim on those rivers, it will most probably assert a claim on the Black. But the United States has never, so far as the record shows, expressly asserted a claim on the Black, which cuts against jurisdiction.
Arguably under our decision in Shultz v. Department of Army,
We have held that the statute of limitations portion of the Quiet Title Act “does not require that the United States communicate its claim in clear and unambiguous terms,” which argues in favor of jurisdiction, but that a cause of action does not accrue for limitations purposes “when the United States’ claim is ambiguous or vague.”
Our recent decision in Leisnoi
This is not to say that the State of Alaska ought not to be able to sue to quiet title in the Black River. Arguably it should. Forty years after statehood, it ought to be able to manage its property knowing what is its property. And the litigation, if there is to be litigation, ought to take place while witnesses with personal knowledge are still alive to testify. The district court’s concerns about the federal “dog in the manger” posture are well taken. But the statutory language as construed in Leisnoi nevertheless leaves the district court without jurisdiction to quiet title in the Black River. A title cannot be said to be “disputed” by the United States if it has never disputed it. The statute as it stands does not enable us to repair this practical problem. We are compelled to reverse the district court’s judgment insofar as it spoke to the Black River, and remand the case so that the claim can be dismissed for lack of jurisdiction as to the Black River.
II. Indian lands.
The United States argues that, to the extent we affirm, the district court should be required to reword its judgment to exclude Indian lands from its scope. The Native corporations have not appealed.
The United States argues that because the Quiet Title Act does not permit suit against it to quiet title with respect to “trust or restricted Indian lands,”
A “colorable” claim that land is Indian trust or restricted land defeats Quiet Title Act jurisdiction, but a claim that is not even “colorable” does not.
There being no colorable claim to any Indian lands in the beds of the Kandik and Nation Rivers, the district judge did not err in rejecting the United States’ proposed language in the judgment.
The judgment is AFFIRMED with respect to the Kandik and Nation Rivers and REVERSED with respect to the Black River. As to the Black River, the matter is remanded to the District Court with instructions to dismiss for lack of jurisdiction.
Notes
. 43 U.S.C. §§ 1301-1315; State of Alaska v. Ahtna, Inc.,
. 28 U.S.C. § 2409a.
. 43 U.S.C. § 1601 etseq.
.
. The United States filed an interlocutory appeal, before judgment was entered. It was dismissed because there was no final judgment. Alaska v. United States,
. McGann v. Ernst & Young, 102 F.3d 390, 392 (9th Cir. 1996).
. 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(a).
. Block v. North Dakota,
.Longview Fibre Co., v. Rasmussen,
. P.L. 99-595, 100 Stat. 3351 (1986).
. 43 C.F.R. § 4.1(b)(5) (1980).
. See, e.g., Knapp v. United States,
. 28 U.S.C. § 2409(a).
. 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(e).
. Leisnoi, Inc. v. United States,
. 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(e).
.Amended complaint ¶ 30; Answer ¶ 30.
. Id. ¶¶21, 22, 23.
. United States v. Appalachian Electric Power Co.,
.Fed.R.Civ.P. 8(d).
. 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(a).
. Jovanovich v. U.S.,
. Black v. Payne,
. Jackson,
. Shultz v. Department of Army,
. Michel v. United States,
.28 U.S.C. § 2409a(a).
. 28 U.S.C. § 2409(g).
. State of California v. Yuba Goldfields, Inc.,
. Leisnoi, Inc. v. United States,
. 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(a).
.Leisnoi,
. 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(a).
. Appellant's Brief, 40-41.
. State of Alaska v. Babbitt,
. Montana v. United States,
. 43 U.S.C. §§ 270-1, 270-3 (1970) (repealed in 1971).
. In re Frank Rulland, 41 IBLA 207 (1979); In re Hermann Kroener, 124 IBLA 57, 62 (1992); State of Alaska, 119 IBLA 260, 271 (1991).
