This suit charges that the defendant violated the Clean Water Act by discharging pollutants into navigable waters from “point sources” without the permit from the Corps of Engineers that is required when the pollutant consists of dredge or fill material (otherwise the permit must be sought from the EPA or, in some cases, a state). 33 U.S.C. §§ 1311(a), 1362(12). The district judge granted summary judgment for the government and imposed a civil penalty of $55,000 on the defendant.
The Clean Water Act defines “navigable waters” as “waters of the United States.” Id. § 1362(7). A regulation defines the latter term to include not only waters “susceptible to use in interstate or foreign commerce,” which are “navigable waters” in the usual sense, but also tributaries of such waters and- — of particular pertinence to this case — “wetlands adjacent to” such waters or to such tributaries. 33 C.F.R. §§ 328.3(a)(1), (5), (7). (That is the Corps’ regulation; the EPA’s, 40 C.F.R. §§ 230.3(b)(1), (5), (7), is identical.)
The defendant dumped dredged stumps and roots, plus sand-based fill (all conceded to be pollutants within the meaning of the Act, 33 U.S.C. § 1362(6);
Borden Ranch Partnership v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
Located on a 5.8 acre tract near Tomah, Wisconsin, that the owner wanted to develop, the wetlands are drained by a ditch that runs into a nonnavigable creek that runs into the nonnavigable Lemonweir River, which in turn runs into the Wisconsin River, which is navigable. The Lemon-weir River is thus a tributary of a navigable river, but are the wetlands “adjacent” to the Lemonweir? They are connected to it in the sense that water from the wetlands flows into the river, but they might be thought “adjacent” not to the river but merely to the ditch, and a ditch is not what one would ordinarily understand as a “tributary.” The Wisconsin River, because it flows into the Mississippi, is connected to the Gulf of Mexico, but it would be odd to describe it as “adjacent” to the gulf.
Gerke, however, does not argue that the regulation is inapplicable to this case, and would not get far with the argument because of how the regulation has been interpreted — as treating a ditch connected to a tributary of a navigable waterway as a tributary of a tributary, e.g.,
Carabell v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
Gerke argues instead that the regulation exceeds the authority granted the Corps of Engineers by the Clean Water Act because the wetlands are not “waters of the United States,” or, if the regulation is within the congressional grant of authority, then it exceeds the authority that the commerce clause of the Constitution grants Congress. The arguments are interchangeable, since the only reason Gerke gives to doubt the validity of the regulation is the principle that the meaning of a statute or a regulation can be stretched where that is necessary to avoid its being held unconstitutional. The idea here would be that the Corps of Engineers would prefer a bobtailed regulation to none if that is the choice forced on it by the Constitution.
Congress can regulate waterways used to transport people and goods in interstate or foreign commerce.
Kaiser Aetna v. United States,
Obviously, filling in a 5.8 acre tract (not all of it wetlands — we do not know how much of it is) is not going to have a measurable effect on the depth of the Wisconsin or Mississippi Rivers. But that cannot be the test. The sum of many small interferences with commerce can be large, and so to protect commerce Congress must be able to regulate an entire class of acts if the class affects commerce, even if no individual act has a perceptible effect. See, e.g.,
Gonzales v. Raich,
— U.S. -,-,
Congress’s power to regulate commerce is not limited to removing obstructions; otherwise it could not forbid trafficking in controlled substances, a program designed to reduce a form of commerce. Congress may forbid the pollution of navigable waters even if the pollution has no effect on navigability, which is the usual case, though we’ve found a couple of cases in which pollution did impede navigability. Ker
nan v. American Dredging Co.,
So it doesn’t matter whether the objection to allowing the Gerkes of this world to dry out wetlands is that the effect may be to reduce water levels in navigable waterways to the point at which navigation would be affected or that the effect may be to increase the level of pollution in such waters by reducing the supply of unpolluted wetlands water. Nothing in the Constitution forbids interpreting the Clean Water Act to cover any wetlands that are connected to navigable waters. Whether the wetlands are 100 miles from a navigable waterway or 6 feet, if water from the wetlands enters a stream that flows into the navigable waterway, the wetlands are “waters of the United States” within the meaning of the Act.
United States v. Rapanos,
Gerke argues that the wetlands of the United States are so extensive that the Corps’ interpretation will tilt the balance between federal and state power too far in the direction of the federal government.
In re Needham,
Granted, a particular wetlands could be extensive yet not be a source of water for navigable waterways. In a decision about wetlands that are isolated from navigable waterways, the Supreme Court held in
Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County (SWANCC) v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
AFFIRMED.
