Is a houseboat a house or a boat? That, in the abstract, is the enigma posed by this case. Fortunately, we need not answer it directly. As a court of law, we leave such metaphysical rumination to the disciples of Jacques Derrida, and address ourselves instead to the more tractable question of whether the Army Corps of Engineers (the Corps) properly deemed two particular houseboats to be permanently moored structures within the meaning of section 10 of the Rivers and Harbors Act, 33 U.S.C. § 403 (1988). The district court ruled that the Corps did not act arbitrarily or capriciously either in subjecting the houseboats to the
I
La Parguera is a bay in Puerto Rico acknowledged by all interested agencies and groups to have great beauty and eсological value. To slow deterioration of the environment, Puerto Rico and the Corps signed a joint memorandum of understanding (the J-Mem) in 1978. Among other things, execution of the J-Mem brought a screeching halt to construction of stilthouses along the shore.
There are, of сourse, several ways to skin a cat — or, more to the point, to provide lodging in a picturesque setting. Thus, after the moratorium on new construction took effect, numerous houseboats sprouted in the bay. In 1987, the Corps informed the owners of these houseboats that they were subject to the permitting requirements of section 10. Some houseboat owners, including the appellants, applied for after-the-fact permits, but their applications were denied. On June 5, 1990, the Corps issued a final order directing all remaining houseboats to move. 1
As a test case to establish its authority, the government brought suit to enforce the denial of permits to four houseboat owners. It prevailed below.
See United States v. Seda Perez,
II
Section 10 of the Rivers and Harbors Act, 33 U.S.C. § 403, outlaws any unauthorized “obstruction” to the navigable capacity of the waters of the United States.
2
Its second clause contains a long, non-exclusive enumeration of things that are presumed to constitute obstructions.
See United States v. Republic Steel Corp.,
Ill
The standards of review are stringent, and present high hurdles to parties challenging fact-based decisions of an administrative agency. In scrutinizing administrative action, a reviewing court is free to correct errors of law, but, otherwisе, the court is limited to a search for arbitrary or capricious behavior.
See
5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A);
see also Town of Norfolk v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers,
When, as now, a district court, after itself taking evidence, upholds agency action, the hurdle is higher still; factbound determinations of the district court are reviewable only for clear error.
See, e.g., Roland M. v. Concord Sch. Comm.,
IV
Appellants’ depth charges are aimed, in the main, at the district court’s finding that their houseboats should be considered as stationary structures. Much of this bombardment targets the court’s subsidiary finding that the houseboats’ “seaworthiness is doubtful, to say the least.”
Seda Perez,
Because we are in substantial agreement with the lower court and see no profit in trolling the same watеrs, we do not wax longiloquent. In our view, three decurtate observations, largely evocative of the district court’s reasoning, place the assigned errors into bold relief and demonstrate that appellants’ depth charges miss the mark.
First: Navigability does not have thе same meaning for all purposes; hence, the DNR’s determination of navigability, in a markedly different context, cannot be accorded decretory significance with regard to the Corps’ permitting process. The district court was free to consider, and, ultimately, tо rely upon, the contrary evidence before it.
Appellants contest this point both in the abstract and in the particular. They save their loudest outcry for the district court’s acceptance of the opinion testimony offered by a Corps official lacking specialized nautical training. We are unimpressed with this line of argument. Under the Federal Rules of Evidence, a trial judge has broad latitude in determining whether a proffered expert has suitable qualifications to give opinion testimony relating to a given topic.
See United States v. Ladd,
It is also appropriate to note that the district court did not embrace this testimony in a vacuum. The district judge also drew on testimony from a court-appointed expert, whose qualifications have not been assailed, as well as on the photographs and other documentary evidence. We, ourselves, have reviewed the administrative record, the trial transcript, and the exhibits. Notwithstanding the DNR certification, we think that the subsidiary finding of doubtful navigability is аmply supported, and that the district court’s conclusions respond to the weight of the evidence. Because we are not left with a “strong, unyielding belief that a mistake has been committed,”
Cumpiano v. Banco Santander,
Second:
Appellants berate the district court for considering motive, intent, and environmental factors, rather than limiting its inquiry strictly to capacity to navigate. But navigability is only one element in the statutory assessment. Since neither the statute nor the regulations plaсe restrictions on the Corps’ discretion to issue permits,
see Di Vosta Rental, Inc. v. Lee,
We are confident that, under this standard, motive and consequence qualify. And we hasten to add that the district court’s findings as to apрellants’ motives are solidly rooted in the record. In sum, the court spotted a pattern of deceit: the houseboats were put in place to circumvent the ban on stilthouses; they were primarily intended to serve as vacation homes, pure and simple; the gаdgets attached to them over time were meant to camouflage the scheme rather than for seafaring
per se;
and the occasional jaunts about the bay represented perfunctory attempts to satisfy the terms of the statute.
See Seda Perez,
Nor can the agency’s attention to the impact of the houseboats on the ecosystem of La Parguera be faulted. Agency officials understood what appellants evidently do not: that the Rivers and Harbors Act has been transformed into an instrument of environmental policy. This transformation occurred long ago. Indeed, Justice Douglas could hardly have been more plain: the Act must be read “charitably,” with full consideration for the public purposes to be served.
Republic Steel,
In recognition of the evolution of the Act, the Cоrps’ general policies for evaluating permit applications, which were scrupulously applied in this case, are dominated by ecological concerns. See 33 C.F.R. § 320.4 (1993). These concerns do no violence to the statutory language. They are rationally related to the goals of the Act. Consequently, they may, and should, drive policy. In arguing to the contrary, appellants’ counsel has missed the boat.
Third:
In any event, the finding that the houseboats constitute “structures” is not necessary to the ultimate determination that the
We agree fully with the district court’s legal analysis, and we are unable to say that its underlying finding of fact is clearly erro-' neous. Nevertheless, we choose to affirm on the court’s primary ground of decision — that the houseboats in this instance constituted structures — rather than explore here the limits of what constitutes an obstruction outside the list of presumptive obstructions contained in the statute itself. Although wе take the Court’s lead in construing the Rivers and Harbors Act in spirit with the times, we remain wary of the danger that it might be construed so broadly as to criminalize the dumping of tap water,
see Standard Oil,
Y
We need go no further. 4 Appellants have failed to find a route to safe harbor. Thus, the order and judgment of the district court еnforcing the agency’s' eviction order must be
Affirmed. Costs to appellee.
Notes
. Appellants failed to seek direct review of this order in a timely fashion. Yet they seek review indirectly, for they are resisting the agency's effort to obtain a determination of legal enforceability by arguing that the agency lacked jurisdiction over their vessels. Notwithstanding this odd procedural configuration, we think that appellants can assert their claim. Although exhaustion of administrative remedies is often a prerequisite to judicial review of administrative action, jurisdictional questions arе generally not waived, because an action taken by an agency lacking jurisdiction is a nullity.
See Manual Enterprises v. Day,
. The statute provides in pertinent part:
The creation of any obstruction not affirmatively authorized by Congress, to the navigable capacity of any of the waters of the United States is prohibited; and it shall not be lаwful to build or commence the building of any wharf, pier, dolphin, boom, weir, breakwater, bulkhead, jetty, or other structures in any port, roadstead, haven, harbor, canal, navigable river, or other water of the United States, outside established harbor lines, or where no harbor linеs have been established, except on plans recommended by the Chief of Engineers and authorized by the Secretary of the Army....
33 U.S.C. § 403 (1988).
. To be sure, the Fifth Circuit has suggested that "the imprecise statutory language of section 10 leaves the Corps with
quasi-legal
authority to determine what 'effects' constitute 'obstructions.' ”
Vieux Carre Property Owners v. Brown,
. Because an appellate court is not obliged to cоnsider arguments presented in a perfunctory manner,
see Ryan v. Royal Ins. Co.,
