This case arises from the efforts of the United States Coast Guard to compel James and Janell Needham (“Needhams”) to reimburse the United States, under the Oil Pollution Act (“OPA”), 33 U.S.C. §§ 2701-2720 (2000), for cleanup costs associated with an oil spill. The bankruptcy court, in the first instance, and the district court on appeal, held that the Needhams were not liable to the United States for the cleanup costs because the waters in ques *343 tion were not navigable, and were therefore beyond the reach of the OPA. However, for the reasons stated below, we disagree and therefore reverse and remand.
I. BACKGROUND
On or about January 25, 1999, the Louisiana Department of Environment Quality (“LDEQ”) received a complaint of an oil spill in LaFourche Parish, Louisiana. The spill occurred at a facility known as the Thibodeaux Well when Tommy Jones, a pumper/gauger employed by Needham Resources, Inc. (“NRI”), pumped oil from a containment basin into an adjacent drainage ditch. The well is co-owned by NRI and D&C Operating, Inc. (“D&C”). 1 James Needham (“Needham”) is the sole owner of NRI.
The EPA investigated the spill and contacted James Needham to discuss the matter. Initially, NRI hired a private contractor to perform the necessary cleanup, but lacked the resources to complete the operation. The EPA and the Coast Guard then assumed responsibility for the cleanup effort funded by the Oil Spill Liability Act. Their efforts cost roughly $207,000. 2
On February 8, 1998, the Needhams filed a Chapter 11 bankruptcy petition in the Western District of Louisiana. 3 The next day, the United States sued the Needhams, NRI and D&C in federal court to recover its cleanup costs. The civil suit was and remains stayed pending resolution of this bankruptcy court dispute over the government’s proof of claim against the Needhams. D&C also filed a proof of claim, contingent upon a finding of liability under the OPA. The Needhams objected to the EPA’s proof of claim, asserting, inter alia, that the spill did not implicate any navigable waters subject to federal jurisdiction, and was therefore not regulated by the OPA.
At the bankruptcy court hearing on the disputed claim, the United States offered a videotape showing the extent of the oil spill. Patrick Breaux, an environmental coordinator with the LDEQ, narrated the video and offered further testimony concerning the nature and extent of the cleanup. Breaux was the hearing’s only live witness. Moreover, within a litany of documentary evidence, the parties submitted a five-page written stipulation addressing a variety of evidentiary and substantive issues. Importantly, the parties there agreed that the oil, which was originally discharged into the drainage ditch at Thi-bodeaux Well, spilled into Bayou Cutoff, and then into Bayou Folse. Bayou Folse flows directly into the Company Canal, an industrial waterway that eventually flows into the Gulf of Mexico.
After reviewing the evidence, the bankruptcy court found that “neither the drainage ditch nor Bayou Cutoff are navigable waters nor are they sufficiently adjacent to the navigable waters to support an extension of the OPA.” In
re Needham,
II. STANDARD OF REVIEW
We review the factual findings of the trial court for clear error.
In re Gerhardt,
III. DISCUSSION
The United States challenges the bankruptcy court’s conclusion that the oil discharged from the Needham facility did not contaminate waters regulated by the federal government under the OPA. It contends that the oil spilled into navigable-in-fact waters, or at a minimum, into waters adjacent to an open body of navigable water. Because we agree with the latter argument, we reverse the bankruptcy court’s decision.
A
The OPA imposes strict liability upon parties that discharge oil into “navigable waters,” a term defined in the statute to mean “the waters of the United States, including the territorial sea.” 33 U.S.C. § 2701(21)(2000).
5
This is eo-extensive with the definition found in the Clean Water Act (“CWA”).
See Rice v. Harken Exploration Co.,
Although under both the OPA and the CWA “waters and wetlands need not always actually be navigable-in-fact to be protected,”
id.
at 268, the Supreme Court recently found the inclusion within “waters of the United States” of certain isolated, non-navigable waters exceeded the Army
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Corps of Engineers’ regulatory power under the CWA.
Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County v. United States Army Corps of Engineers (“SWANCC"),
SWANCC
narrowed, but did not overturn
United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes,
Nevertheless, the United States urges this court to approve its regulatory definition of “navigable waters.”
See
40 C.F.R. § 300.5 (2003). This definition includes as “navigable waters” all “tributaries” of navigable-in-fact waters.
See id.
at § 300.5(d). According to the government, the definition covers all waters, excluding groundwater, that have any hydrological connection with “navigable water.” At least two courts appear to have agreed with this expansive interpretation.
See United States v. Deaton,
In our view, this definition is unsustainable under
SWANCC.
The CWA and the OPA are not so broad as to permit the federal government to impose regulations over “tributaries” that are neither themselves navigable nor truly adjacent to navigable waters.
See Rice,
B.
Using this interpretation of the OPA, we next consider the bankruptcy court’s findings of fact. Two finding of fact are critical. First, the court found that the oil spilled only into the drainage ditch adjacent to the Thibodeaux Well and Bayou Cutoff.
See In re Needham,
Specifically, it was clear error to disregard the effects of the spill on Bayou Folse and the Company Canal. The parties’ stipulation of facts contained the following language: “On or before January 25, 1995, oil was discharged from the Thi-bodeaux facility into Bayou Cutoff
and Bayou Folse
near Thibodeaux, LaFourche Parish, Louisiana.” (emphasis added). “Under federal law, stipulations of fact fairly entered into are controlling and conclusive and courts are bound to enforce them, unless manifest injustice would result therefrom or the evidence contrary to the stipulation was substantial.”
Quest Medical, Inc. v. Apprill,
There is no basis to disregard the stipulation, and indeed none has been argued. Not only is the stipulation consistent with the evidence adduced at the hearing, but in his opening statement, counsel for the Needhams acknowledged that the residue from the spill was found 10 to 12 miles from the oil well, ie., in Bayou Folse. 10
As a result of the stipulation, the court should not have limited its application of the OPA to the spill’s impact on Bayou Cutoff. Under
Rice,
and in light of the stipulation, the proper inquiry is whether Bayou Folse, the site of the farthest traverse of the spill, is navigable-in-fact or adjacent to an open body of navigable water.
See Rice,
We conclude, because it is undisputed, that Bayou Folse is adjacent to an open body of navigable water, namely the Company Canal.
11
“[T]he term ‘navigable waters’ is not limited to oceans and other very large bodies of water.”
Rice,
The Company Canal falls within the definition of navigable waters. At the bankruptcy court hearing, Breaux testified that “[t]he Company Canal is an industrial corridor between the Intracoastal Waterway and Bayou LaFourche.” He also observed that the Company Canal contains “shipyards, repair' facilities, dry docks, [and a] gas freeing operation.” An inland waterway, such as the Company Canal, that supports commerce, is unobstructed, and is traversed on a consistent basis is navigable-in-fact.
Thus, the only remaining question is whether Bayou Folse is adjacent to the Company Canal. Under
Rice,
the term “adjacent” cannot include every possible source of water that eventually flows into a navigable-in-fact waterway.
12
Rather, adjacency necessarily implicates a “significant nexus” between the water in question and the navigable-in-fact waterway.
See SWANCC,
IV. CONCLUSION
Under Rice, the OPA permits the recovery of cleanup costs in only two instances: (1) if oil spills into navigable-in-fact waters or (2) if oil spills into non-navigable waters (or wetlands) that are truly adjacent to an open body of navigable water. Here, the parties stipulated that oil spilled into Bayou Folse. Bayou Folse is adjacent to the Company Canal, which is an open body of navigable water. We therefore conclude that the OPA applies to the spill at issue. Consequently, we REVERSE and REMAND this matter for consideration of the Needhams’ remaining defenses. 13
Notes
. D&C owns 90% of the well and NRI, the well operator, owns the remaining 10%.
. The Oil Spill Liability Trust Fund is directly available to the EPA and the Coast Guard to fund federal removal costs. See 33 U.S.C. §§ 2712(a); 1321(s)(2000). Moreover, the Fund is available to pay uncompensated removal costs to third parties. See 33 U.S.C. § 1012(a)(4)(2000).
.The Needhams' bankruptcy petition was later converted to Chapter 7.
. This court's decision in
Dardar
appears to be in tension with the Supreme Court’s decision in
United States v. Appalachian Elec. Power Co.,
. Under the OPA, "each responsible party for a vessel or facility from which oil is discharged ... into or upon the navigable waters or adjoining shorelines ... is liable for the removal costs and damages ... that result from such incident.” 33 U.S.C. § 2702(a)(2000).
.
Rice
was the first case in this circuit to examine the contours of the OPA, and offers a persuasive analysis of its text and legislative history.
. As the Court stated in
SWANCC:
"We said in
Riverside Bayview Homes
that the word 'navigable' in the statute was of ‘limited effect’ and went on to hold that § 404(a) extended to non[-]navigable wetlands adjacent to open waters. But it is one thing to give a word limited meaning and quite another to give it no effect whatsoever.” 531
U.S.
.at 682-83,
. In short, the regulatory definition, if applied in this fashion, would push the OPA to the outer limits of the Commerce Clause and raise serious constitutional questions. As noted above,
Rice
and SWANCC have rejected such an expansive reading of the OPA and CWA respectively. Accordingly, the regulation is not entitled to
Chevron
deference.
SWANCC,
. In the end, there must be "a close, direct and proximate link between ... [the] ... discharges of oil and any resulting actual, identifiable oil contamination of natural surface water that satisfies the jurisdictional requirements of the OPA.”
Rice,
. Additionally, Patrick Breaux testified that the oil was visible in the water "near a point where Highway 90 intersects Bayou Folse.”
. Whether Bayou Folse is navigable-in-fact is a close question, and one we need not resolve here. Bayou Folse’s adjacency to the Company Canal is sufficient to resolve this matter. Moreover, it is unwise for a court to overreach and resolve issues unnecessarily, particularly when, as is the case here, the issue involves navigable waters.
See Appalachian Elec. Power Co.,
. Neither the CWA nor the OPA define the term "adjacent.” The Army Corps of Engineers defines "adjacent” to mean “bordering, contiguous, or neighboring.” 33 C.F.R. § 328.3. However, this regulation was invalidated, at least in part, in SWANCC. Nevertheless, the Corps’ definition comports with the term's plain meaning. Webster's Third New International Dictionary 26 (1986) offers several definitions: "(a) not distant or far off: nearby but not touching; (b) relatively near and having nothing of the same kind intervening: having a common border: abutting, touching: living nearby or sitting or standing relatively near or close together; and (c) immediately preceding or following with nothing of the same kind intervening.” Hence, both the regulatory and plain meaning of "adjacent” mandate a significant measure of proximity. Therefore, including all "tributaries” as "navigable waters” would negate Rice's adjacency requirement, and extend the OPA beyond the limits set forth in SWANCC.
. On appeal, the parties submitted supplemental briefs addressing the remaining questions under the OPA: (1) whether James Needham was an owner or operator of the
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facility and (2) whether Needham could establish a third party affirmative defense.
See
33 U.S.C. § 2701(32)(2000); 33 U.S.C. § 2702(a)(2000); 33 U.S.C. § 2703(a)(2000). However, we conclude, in our discretion, that the bankruptcy court should address these fact-laden issues in the first instance.
See Louisiana World Exposition v. Federal Ins. Co.,
