Case Information
*1 Present: All the Justices
VIRGINIA MARINE RESOURCES COMMISSION
OPINION BY v. Record No. 130239 JUSTICE LEROY F. MILLETTE, JR.
April 17, 2014 CHINCOTEAGUE INN, ET AL.
FROM THE COURT OF APPEALS OF VIRGINIA
In this appeal we consider whether the Court of Appeals erred in holding that the Virginia Marine Resources Commission lacked authority under Virginia law to regulate the expansion of the Chincoteague Inn's restaurant operations onto a floating platform secured alongside its building and situated partially over state-owned subaqueous bottomland.
I. Facts and Proceedings
A. Relevant Facts
The Chincoteague Inn is a restaurant that sits adjacent to the Chincoteague Channel in the town of Chincoteague, Virginia. In late April and early May 2010, the Inn lashed together two steel barges, held the barges in place, and connected those barges to the Inn by way of a gangway to create a floating platform. Later, in June 2010, the Inn removed one of those barges and the floating platform was resituated alongside the Inn. The Inn intended to keep the floating platform positioned alongside its building to be used as part of the Inn's *2 restaurant sitting and dining area for approximately four months until September 2010.
The Inn's plans were interrupted when an unidentified competitor complained to the Virginia Marine Resources Commission that the Inn had added a "large floating platform" alongside the Inn's building structure. On June 11, Commission staff member George H. Badger followed up on this tip and conducted an onsite inspection. Mr. Badger ascertained that, while a portion of the floating platform was situated above a man-made boat basin, a 54-foot long by 13.6-foot wide portion of the floating platform was situated above state-owned subaqueous bottomland.
Based on Mr. Badger's determination that a portion of the floating platform was situated over state-owned subaqueous bottomland, the Commission concluded that it had jurisdiction over that portion of the platform. Further, the Commission categоrized this 54-foot by 13.6-foot portion of the floating platform as unauthorized and requiring removal. The Commission notified the Inn of this determination by a written Notice to Comply and demanded immediate removal of the unauthorized portion within 10 days. The Notice further warned the Inn that failure to comply would result in the matter being placed before the full Commission for an enforcement action, and that monetary penalties may be imposed.
The Inn, through its manager Raymond Britton, responded to the Commission's letter by submitting a joint permit application that requested an after-the-fact permit for the entire floating platform. The Commission, believing it inappropriate to act upon this application while a violation was ongoing, sent a letter to the Inn that again demanded removal of the unauthorized portion of the platform. On June 28, the Commission undertook another site inspеction and found that the 54-foot by 13.6-foot portion of the floating platform had not been removed.
B. Relevant Proceedings
The full Commission heard the enforcement action against the Inn, voted in favor of the enforcement request, and found that the 54-foot by 13.6-foot portion of the floating structure constituted an unlawful use of state-owned submerged lands pursuant to Code § 28.2-1203. The Commission directed removal of that portion of the floating platform within 10 days.
The Inn timely appealed the Commission's decision to the Circuit Court of Accomack County pursuant to Code § 2.2-4026, Rule 2A:2, and Rule 2A:4. The Inn challenged the Commission's decision on three points: (1) that the Commission failed to make express findings of fact required to allow a court to review an agency's actions, (2) that the Commission failed to make findings of fact based on the required substantiality of *4 the evidence, and (3) that the Commission lacked jurisdiction over the floating platform under Virginia state law, and that federal maritime law governed the floating platform.
The circuit court focused on this third argument to dispose of the case. In a final decree, the circuit court found that the floating platform was a "vessel" and that the Commission lacked jurisdiction to require removal of the floating platform. The final decree was unclear about whether this decision rested upon a determination that Virginia state law does not authorize the Commission to exercise jurisdiction over the floating platform, or upon a determination that federal maritime law preempts any such Virginia state law. The circuit court then set aside the Commission's decision, dismissed with prejudice the Commission's enforcement action, and awarded approximately $14,000 in fees and costs to the Inn.
The Commission timely appealed to the Court of Appeals. A
thrеe judge panel concluded that the Commission admitted that
it failed to preserve the issue about whether the floating
platform was a "vessel," and noted that the Commission had
conceded that the structure was indeed a "vessel." Virginia
Marine Res. Comm'n v. Chincoteague Inn,
The Court of Appeals granted the Inn's petition for a
rehearing en banc and stayed the panel decision's mandate.
Virginia Marine Res. Comm'n v. Chincoteague Inn, 60 Va. App.
719, 720,
The Commission timely filed a petition for appeal with this Court.
C. Assignments of Error
Upon appeal, our review considers three logically distinct
legal issues. First, whether Code § 28.2-1203(A) permits the
Commission to regulate the floating platform. Second, whether
federal maritime law applies to the floating platform because
it is a "vessel" under 1 U.S.C. § 3. Third, whether, if both
Code § 28.2-1203(A) and federal maritime law apply to the
floating platform, state and federal law may simultaneously
govern that floating platform or if federal maritime law
preempts Code § 28.2-1203(A). The Court of Appeals in its en
banc decision addressed the first two of these issues. It did
not reach the third issue of federal preemption. Virginia
Marine,
In this appeal we address the assignments of error and the arguments of the parties to the extent they direct us to evaluate the follоwing:
1. Whether the Court of Appeals erred in determining that the Commission lacked jurisdiction to regulate the floating platform under Code § 28.2-1203(A). *7 2. Whether the Commission can withdraw its concession that the floating platform is a "vessel" as defined under 1 U.S.C. § 3.
II. Discussion
A. Standard of Review
This appeal requires us to resolve issues of
constitutional interpretation and statutory construction. We
resolve these purely legal issues de novo. L.F. v. Breit, 285
Va. 163, 176,
This appeal involves an administrative agency. Typically,
we give deference to the decisions of administrative agencies
when those decisions "fall within an area of the agency's
specialized competence." Virginia Dep't of Health v. NRV Real
Estate, LLC,
B. The Commonwealth's Sovereign Authority Over State-Owned Subaqueous Bottomland
The focus of this appeal is the operation of Code § 28.2-
1203(A). It is our "duty" to "constru[e] a statute to avoid
any conflict with the Constitution" of Virginia and the United
States Constitution. Commonwealth v. Doe,
1. The Basis for the Commonwealth's Sovereign Authority Over
State-Owned Subaqueous Bottomland
Under the common law of England, the sovereign Crown held
title to and exercised dominion over all tidal waters and tidal
bottomland below the high water line located within England's
*9
geographic jurisdiction. Shively v. Bowlby,
After the American Revolution, this title and dominion
formerly belonging to the English sovereign was claimed by the
individual Thirteen Colonies who had, through the
Constitutional Convention, become sovereign states. See id. at
14-16; see also Alden v. Maine,
As a state sovereign, the Commonwealth retains an
"absolute right to all [its] waters, and the soils under them,
for [its] own common use." Mаrtin,
2. The Scope of the Commonwealth's Sovereign Authority Over
State-Owned Subaqueous Bottomland
The Constitution of Virginia directs the General Assembly to "undertake the conservation, development, or utilization of lands or natural resources of the Commonwealth, . . . and the protection of its atmosphere, lands, and waters from pollution, impairment, or destruction." Va. Const. art. XI, § 2. The General Assembly has affirmed the continued existence of the Commonwealth's sovereign authority over state-owned subaqueous *11 bottomland, as that authority derives from the English common law. See Code § 1-200. Moreover, the General Assembly has defined the scope of that sovereign authority so that it extends to "[a]ll the beds of the bays, rivers, creeks[,] and the shores of the sea within the jurisdiction of the Commonwealth" unless such subaqueous bottomland has been "conveyed by special grant or compact according to law." Code § 28.2-1200. [1] As we previously explained, the Commonwealth's sovereign authority over public environments, including subaqueous bottomland, has two facets.
First, the Commonwealth retains the right of jus publicum,
"the right of jurisdiction and dominion for governmental
purposes." Commonwealth v. City of Newport News,
Second, the Commonwealth retains the right of jus
privatum, "the right of private property" retained by the
Commonwealth because it is "proprietor" of the public domain
that has not been lawfully conveyed. Id. at 546, 164 S.E. at
696. This is the Commonwealth's authority to act "in a
proprietary capacity" because it also has "the right and title
of a private owner." G. L. Webster Co.,
The Commonwealth retains "a most solemn duty to [both]
administer the jus privatum of the [Commonwealth] and to
exercise its jus publicum for the benefit of the people." City
of Newport News,
However, whether an activity is a right of the people
inherent to the jus publicum is a matter of Virginia common law
subject to the Constitution of Virginia and the General
Assembly's modification by statute. See, e.g., id. at 549-52,
It is within this constitutional context that we construe the plain language of Code § 28.2-1203(A).
*14 C. Whether Code § 28.2-1203(A) Allowed the Commission to Regulate the Floating Platform
1. Construing Code § 28.2-1203(A)
The Commission's geographic jurisdiction includes "the Commonwealth's territorial sea and extend[s] to the fall line of all tidal rivers and streams except in the case of state- owned bottomlands where jurisdiction extends throughout the Commonwealth." Code § 28.2-101. The Commission's jurisdiction therefore extends to the state-owned subaqueous bottomland over which the Inn's floating platform was situated. The question before us is whether the General Assembly empowered the Commission to regulate the Inn's floating platform because that platform was engaging in either a "trespass" or "encroach[ment]" under Code § 28.2-1203(A).
The General Assembly has made it "unlawful for any person to build, dump, trespass[,] or encroach upon or over [subaqueous bottomland that is] the beds of the bays, ocean, rivers, streams, or creeks which are the property of the Commonwealth, unless such act is performed pursuant to a permit issued by the Commission or is necessary for" various enumerated exceptions. Code § 28.2-1203(A). [4] Engaging in such *15 an unlawful act is a Class 1 misdemeanor. Code § 28.2-1203(B). The Commission has authority to undertake inspections, issue orders, and apply for injunctions to ensure compliance with this statutory prohibition of unlawful building, dumping, trespassing, or encroaching upon or over the Commonwealth's subaqueous bottomland. Code §§ 28.2-1211; 28.2-1212.
Code § 28.2-1203(A) is not ambiguous. See Brown v.
Lukhard,
"Encroach" means "[t]o enter by gradual steps or stealth into the possessions or rights of anothеr; to trespass or intrude," and "[t]o gain or intrude unlawfully upon another's lands, property, or authority." Black's Law Dictionary 607 (9th ed. 2009). "Trespass" means "[a]n unlawful act committed against the person or property of another[, especially] wrongful entry on another's real property." Id. at 1642. We has the legal right to order others off of that property, and, upon refusal, the legal right to use proper force to expel such others).
recognize an overlap between these terms, and therefore
construe them so that neither is surplusage. Travelers Prop.
Cas. Co. of Am. v. Ely,
However, we must construe these terms so that they do not
contravene the Constitution of Virginia. Doe,
2. Code § 28.2-1203(A) and the Constitution of Virginia The interplay between Code § 28.2-1203(A) and the constitutional protection of the public rights inherent to the jus publicum manifests in the following three-step analysis.
a. Did the Plain Language of Code § 28.2-1203(A) Apply
to the Floating Platform?
First, the analysis questions whether the floating platform was subject to Code § 28.2-1203(A) because it was committing a "trespass" or "encroach[ment] upon or over" state- owned subaqueous bottomland. The clear answer is yes.
It is evident from the record that a 54-foot by 13.6-foot portion of the floating platform occupied the physical space over the Commonwealth's subaqueous bottomland. The Inn was not violating any other law when it had the floating platform occupy the space above the Commonwealth's subaqueous bottomland. Thus, the floating platform was an "encroach[ment] upon or over" the Commonwealth's subaqueous bottomland. On the *18 face of the statute, Code § 28.2-1203(A) applied to the floating platform.
b. Was the Inn's Activity Issued a Permit by the Commission or
Exempted by a Statutory Exception?
Second, the analysis questiоns whether (1) the Commission issued a permit for the floating platform, or (2) the Inn's floating platform was exempted from Code § 28.2-1203(A) by satisfying a statutory exception. The clear answer to both questions is no.
It is evident from the record that the floating platform's encroachment was neither authorized by permit nor exempted from Code § 12.2-1203(A) by a statutory exception. The floating platform's encroachment therefore violated Code § 28.2-1203(A).
c. Was the Inn's Activity a Public Right Inherent
to the Jus Publicum?
Third, the analysis questions whether the Inn, in using the floating platform above state-owned subaqueous bottomland, was engaging in an activity that is a public right inherent to the jus publicum. The clear answer is no.
The General Assembly has modified the jus publicum to
include the public's right to use the Commonwealth's subaqueous
bottomland to "fish[], fowl[], hunt[], and tak[e] and catch[]
oysters and other shellfish." Code § 28.2-1200; see also
Bradford v. Nature Conservancy,
We have acknowledged that the jus publicum includes the
public right to navigate the Commonwealth's waters. James
River & Kanawha Power Co. v. Old Dominion Iron & Steel Corp.,
This necessarily follows from the fact that determining what activity the Inn was engaged in requires evaluating the totality of the circumstances. See id. at 550-51, 164 S.E. at 698 (distinguishing between engaging in navigation, which includes "mov[ing] from place to place," and the right of fishery, which as a matter of practicality may require some degree of movement across water). Regardless of the length of time a structure has stopped moving, we must evaluate the *20 circumstances surrounding that cessation of movement to determine just what activity is being undertaken.
The record reveals that the Inn's floating platform occupied the space over the Commonwealth's subaqueous bottomland for approximately two months before the Commission conducted its site inspection in June 2010. The Inn intended for the floating platform to occupy that space for a total time period of approximately four months. Although the Inn interrupted the floating platform's fixed nature for a 32- minute trip down the Chincoteague Channel in July 2010, this momentary engagement in the right of navigation does not obviate the facts showing that the floating platform was otherwise stationary for at least two months.
Moreover, those months of being stationary were not incident to the right of navigation. When the floating platform was supported by two barges, the Inn placed a bar and tables on the floating platform for its restaurant patrons. When one of those barges was taken away, the Inn refitted the floating platform with a new deck and handrails, and two gangways led from the Inn to the barge so that restaurant patrons could use the bar area and have outdoor seating on the water. The Health Department permitted the Inn to conduct this additional restaurant activity on the barge. Underscoring the point, the Inn admitted to the full Commission during the *21 enforcement proceeding that the barge was being used as a restaurant.
Restaurant operations are not incident to the right of
navigation. Indeed, using the floating platform for restaurant
operations "convert[ed] the public property," that is, the
waters above the Commonwealth's subaqueous bottomland, "pro
tanto to a use which is essentially private, whether it [was]
exercised for pleasure or profit." City of Newport News, 158
Va. at 551,
Thus, the Constitution of Virginia does not restrict the plain language of Code § 28.2-1203(A) from applying to the Inn's floating platform, and therefore the Commission may regulate that floating platform as an "encroach[ment] upon or over" state-owned subaqueous bottomland. [6]
*22 D. Whether the Commission Can Withdraw Its Concession That the Floating Platform Is a "Vessel" Under 1 U.S.C. § 3
The Commission asks to withdraw its concеssion that the
floating platform is a "vessel" as defined under 1 U.S.C. § 3.
The Commission relies upon the fact that the United States
Supreme Court published its opinion in Lozman v. City of
Riviera Beach,
Had the Commission conceded only the legal issue, we would
not be bound by that concession of law. This is because an
"issue [which] is a question of law . . . is not subject to a
concession binding on this Court." Wright v. Commonwealth, 278
Va. 754, 760 n.3,
But the Commission did more than concede a legal issue. The Commission also conceded that it did not preserve the issue of whether the flоating platform was a "vessel." Such a navigation, or are themselves a public right inherent to the jus publicum, is beyond the scope of today's appeal.
concession was appropriate because the Commission did, in fact,
fail to preserve the issue by failing to assign error to the
circuit court's determination that the floating platform was a
"vessel." Thus, under the law of the case doctrine, the
floating platform is a "vessel" as defined under 1 U.S.C. § 3
for purposes of this appeal. See Miller-Jenkins v. Miller-
Jenkins,
It is important to note, however, that whether the
floating platform was engaged in the public right of navigation
inherent to the jus publicum, and whether the floating platform
is a "vessel" under 1 U.S.C. § 3, are separate inquiries. The
definition of "vessel" under 1 U.S.C. § 3 does require that a
structure be "in navigation." Stewart v. Dutra Constr. Co.,
Our definition of the "right of navigation" inherent to
the jus publicum focuses on the active and immediate moving
across the navigable waters. See City of Newport News, 158 Va.
at 550,
For these reasons, although the Commission failed to preserve the issue of whether the floating platform is a "vessel" under 1 U.S.C. § 3, that legal definition does not dictate our analysis of whether the floating рlatform was engaged in the public's "right of navigation" inherent to the jus publicum.
III. Conclusion
This appeal involves a restaurant placing a floating platform over the Commonwealth's subaqueous bottomland without a permit or statutory exception in violation of Code § 28.2- 1203(A). Moreover, the floating platform was used to undertake restaurant operations, and therefore was not protected by the Constitution of Virginia as a public right inherent to the jus publicum. For these reasons, we hold that the Court of Appeals erred in interpreting the scope of the Commission's authority under Code § 28.2-1203(A). Further, we hold that the *25 Commission failed to preserve the issue of whether the floating platform is a "vessel" under 1 U.S.C. § 3.
For the aforementioned reasons, we reverse the Court of
Appeals' en banc decision. Although the Court of Appeals'
panel opinion addressed the issue of federal prеemption, the
Court of Appeals vacated that panel opinion upon granting en
banc review. See Moore v. Commonwealth,
Reversed and remanded. JUSTICE POWELL, with whom JUSTICE McCLANAHAN joins, dissenting.
I agree with the majority that the dispositive question in this case is whether the Inn, in using the barge [1] above state- *26 owned subaqueous bottomlands, was engaging in an activity that is a public right inherent in the jus publicum. However, I disagree with the majority’s decision to disregard the importance of the barge’s designation as a vessel. It is readily apparent to me that a vessel “in navigation” is necessarily engaging in the “right of navigation.” As a result of the majority’s failure to give the barge’s status as a vessel the proper consideration, the application of the Code § 28.2-1203(A) yields an absurd result. Accordingly, I must respectfully dissent.
In my opinion, the VMRC’s concession that the barge is a
vessel is dispositive in this case. The majority, however,
disregards the importance of this designation, holding that
“the ‘in navigation’ requirement prescribed by a definition
within a federal statute is not synonymous with the ‘right of
navigation’ protected by the Constitution of Virginia.” The
majority’s holding is rendered erroneous by the fact that the
law has changed significantly since 1932 when this Court
decided Commonwealth v. City of Newport News,
inherent to the jus publicum. [2] Notably, it has since been well- established that Congress is the ultimate arbiter of what activities are encompassed by the right of navigation, not the Constitution of Virginia.
As an initial matter, it is important to note that navigation is a subset of commerce. See Gilman v.
Philadelphia,
The Commerce Clause confers a unique position upon the Government in connection with navigable waters. “The power to regulate commerce comprehends the control for that purpose, and to the extent necessary, of all the navigable waters of the United States . . . . For this purpose they are the public property of the nation, and subject to all the requisite legislation by Congrеss.” Gilman, [70 U.S.] 713, 724-25. This power to regulate navigation confers upon the United States a “dominant servitude,” FPC v. Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., 347 U.S. 239, 249 (1954), which extends to the entire stream and the stream bed below ordinary high-water mark.
United States v. Rands,
Indeed, this Court acknowledged Congress’s power over navigation in City of Newport News, stating:
By the adoption of the Constitution of the United States the State of Virginia to a limited extent, defined by the Constitution itself, relinquished a portion of its sovereignty to the United States. In *28 so doing it imposed upon itself the limitation that it may not so dispose of or appropriate to uses its tidal waters and their bottoms as to interfere with the power and right granted to the United States to regulate and control the navigation thereof, so far as may be necessary for the regulation of commerce with foreign nations and among the States.
Id. at 543-44,
In 1932, when City of Newport News was decided, however, it was beliеved that Congress’ power over navigation was strictly limited to those navigable streams involved in interstate and international commerce. See id. Implicitly, this meant that power over intrastate commerce fell to the individual states. Thus, at that time, the Constitution of Virginia was the starting point for determining the activities encompassed by the right of navigation.
However, in 1942, the United States Supreme Court effectively eliminated the distinction between intrastate and interstate commerce with regard to Congress’ power under the Commerce Clause.
The commerce power is not confined in its exercise to the regulation of commerce among the states. It extends to those activities intrastate which so affect interstate commerce, or the exertion of the power of Congress over it, as to make regulation of them [the] appropriate meаns to the attainment of a legitimate end, the effective execution of the granted power to regulate interstate commerce. . . . The power of Congress over interstate commerce is plenary and complete in itself, may be exercised to its utmost extent, and acknowledges no limitations other than are prescribed in the Constitution. . . . It follows that no form of state activity can *29 constitutionally thwart the regulatory power granted by the commerce clause to Congress. Hence the reach of that power extends to those intrastate activities which in a substantial way interfere with or obstruct the exercise of the granted power.
United States v. Wrightwood Dairy Co.,
In 1953, Congress ceded “title tо and ownership of the lands beneath navigable waters within the boundaries of the respective States, and the natural resources within such lands and waters.” Submerged Lands Act of 1953, 43 U.S.C. § 1311. However, in ceding title and ownership of the subaqueous bottomlands, Congress specifically retained “all its navigational servitude and rights in and powers of regulation and control of said lands and navigable waters for the constitutional purposes of commerce, navigation, national defense, and international affairs.” 43 U.S.C. § 1314(a) (emphasis added). Moreover, Congress specifically established that its rights in and powers of regulation and control over the subaqueous bottomlands “shall be paramount to” the rights and powers of the respective states. Id.
While the majority is correct that “a federal statute cannot dictate how we understand the right of jus publicum under the Constitution of Virginia,” it ignores the Supremacy Clause which specifically states that the “Constitution, and the Laws of the United States which shall be made in Pursuance thereof . . . shall be the supreme Law of the Land . . . any Thing in the Constitution or Laws of any State to the Contrary notwithstanding.” U.S. Const., Art. VI, cl. 2. (emphasis added). It is readily apparent that Congress has deemed that the starting point for determining what activity is encompassed by the “right of navigation” inherent in the jus publicum is no longer found in the Constitution of Virginia; rather, the starting point is federal law.
Consequently, I believe that the determination that the barge is a vessel under 1 U.S.C. § 3 is dispositive, as Congress has deemed that all vessels are, by definition, “in navigation.” As a necessary corollary, any watercraft that is “removed from navigation for extended periods of time,” is no longer a vessel. Lozman v. City of Riviera Beach, 133 S. Ct. 735, 751 (2013). Therefore, it is axiomatic that the use of a watercraft in navigation (i.e., as a vessel) invokes the right of navigation under federal law.
Additionally, the determination that the barge is a vessel obviates the need for any examination of how the vessel is used. As the United States Supreme Court explained,
the “in navigation” requirement is an element of the vessel status of a watercraft. It is relevant to whether the craft is “used, or capable of being used” for maritime transportation. A ship long lodged in a drydock or shipyard can again be put to sea, no less than one permanently moored to shore or the ocean floor can be cut loose and made to sail. The question remains in all cases whether the watercraft's use “as a means of transportation on water” is a practical possibility or merely a theoretical one.
Stewart v. Dutra Constr. Co.,
Thus, the majority’s examination of the Inn’s use of the barge is moot. Indeed, by examining the issue of how the barge is used, thе majority effectively disregards the barge’s designation as a vessel. It cannot be disputed that the barge in the present case is a vessel. Therefore, in my opinion, it similarly cannot be disputed that the Inn was engaging in its public right of navigation through its use of the barge.
Furthermore, to hold that the VMRC has jurisdiction to
enforce Code § 28.2-1203(A) with regard to vessels would yield
an absurd result. This Court has recognized that “when the
language of an enactment is free from ambiguity, resort to
legislative history and extrinsic facts is not permitted
because we take the words as written to determine their
meaning.” Brown v. Lukhard,
In construing statutes, courts are charged with
ascertaining and giving effect to the intent of the
legislature. That intention is initially found in
the words of the statute itself, and if those words
are clear and unambiguous, we do not rеly on rules of
statutory construction or parol evidence, unless a
literal application would produce a meaningless or
absurd result.
Crown Cent. Petroleum Corp. v. Hill,
It is readily apparent that the majority’s definition of
the right of navigation would render Code § 28.2-1203(A)
incapable of operation. The majority’s definition of the right
of navigation would give the VMRC jurisdiction to require every
watercraft not used for commercial purposes to get a permit
every time it is over state-owned subaqueous bottomlands. This
is not such a far-fetched proposition, as the VMRC has
unequivocally indicated that it would embrace such a ruling, as
demonstrated by its statement, which the majority quoted, that
anything that floats over state-owned subaqueous bottomland “is
an encroachment because it entered into the rights and
*33
authority of the Commonwealth without its permission.” As the
Court of Appeals correctly noted, it would be impossible for
the VMRC to implement such a requirement because “vessels can
move and stop over the bottomlands numerous times in one day.”
Virginia Marine Res. Comm’n v. Chincoteague Inn, 61 Va. App.
371, 386,
Additionally, the majority’s approach results in the de facto criminalization of the act of temporarily mooring non- commercial vessels. As stated above, every vessel not used for commercial purposes would be required to get a permit every time it is moored over state-owned subaqueous bottomlands. The failure to acquire such a permit from the VMRC would subject the owner of the vessel to prosecution for a Class 1 misdemeanor, Code § 28.2-1203(B), and a fine of up to $25,000 рer day. Code § 28.2-1213(A).
The problem lies in the fact that the VMRC does not have
the authority to issue the required permit. Under Code § 28.2-
1207(A), the VMRC may approve permits “to trespass upon or over
or encroach upon subaqueous beds which are the Commonwealth's
property.” (Emphasis added.) Notably absent is the authority
to approve permits for encroachments over state-owned
subaqueous bottomlands. Under the maxim expressio unius est
exclusio alterius, the mention of a specific item in a statute
implies that the “omitted items were not intended to be
*34
included.” Virginian-Pilot Media Cos. v. Dow Jones & Co., 280
Va. 464, 468-69,
It is readily apparent that the majority recognizes these inherent flaws in its opinion as demonstrated by its decision to address what this “appeal” does not address in footnote 6. The majority is correct: the VMRC’s “appeal” does not address any of the situations listed. However, the majority ignores the fact that its holding would still be dispositive of those factual situations. Although the majority implies that docking a boat used for purposes of personal travel or living on a houseboat over state-owned subaqueous bottomlands would somehow require a different result from the present case, it offers no indication of how. Nor could it, as neither of these activities involves the movement or transportation of goods from place to place. Indeed, if today’s holding does not apply to those factual situations, then the majority must acknowledge that it is not defining the public right of navigation; rather, *35 it is defining the right of navigation as it applies solely to the Inn.
Such a subjective approach can only lead to abuse. Indeed, I find it particularly telling that, at oral argument, the VMRC conceded that a boat that is moored for a majority of the year and used primarily as a guesthouse would not be subject to Code § 28.2-1203(A), because its use is incident to navigation. However, the barge in the present case, which is only moored for four months of the year and then actively used as a work barge for the remaining eight months would be subject to Code § 28.2-1203(A). The majority, however, tacitly approves of such an arbitrary distinction.
Allowing the VMRC to enforce Code § 28.2-1203(A) with regard to vessels, whether temporarily moored or otherwise, would necessarily result in the relinquishment, surrender, alienation, destruction or substantial impairment of the right of navigаtion, a clear violation of the jus publicum.
Moreover, the application of Code § 28.2-1203(A) to vessels renders the statute incapable of operation and ripe for abuse. Accordingly, I would affirm the Court of Appeals’ decision finding that the VMRC does not have jurisdiction to enforce Code § 28.2-1203(A).
Notes
[1] The Commonwealth has ceded its sovereign authority to the
owners of subaqueous bottomland that rests above the mean low-
water mark, and to the owners of subaqueous bottomland beneath
creeks and rivers comprised within the limits of a lawful
survey. Code § 28.2-1202. Also, we have previously observed
that the General Assembly "chose not to include 'lakes' in its
designation of bodies of water whose beds remain the property
of the Commonwealth in the absence of a special grant or
compact." Smith Mountain Lake Yacht Club, Inc. v. Ramaker, 261
Va. 240, 246,
[2] The right of jus publicum has sometimes been termed the "trust" or "public trust" theory by other courts and commentators. Although we have sometimes used that
[3] This imperative arose by implication from the 1902
Constitution of Virginia. City of Newport News, 158 Va. at
546-47,
[4] Code § 12.2-1203(A) is a valid exercise of the right of
jus privatum as falling within the Commonwealth's proprietary
capacity as the entity retaining the right and title to the
subaqueous bottomland. See Montgomery v. Commonwealth, 99 Va.
833, 835,
[5] On this point the Court of Appeals erred by inverting the
jus publicum. The jus publicum is a constitutional doctrine
that simultaneously empowers and limits the actions of the
Commonwealth, not private individuals. See City of Newport
News,
[6] It is important to recognize what this appeal does not address. It does not address facts where an individual docks his boat, as necessary to disembark after traveling across the water, at a pier situated above state-owned subaqueous bottomland. It does not address facts where an individual lives in a floating structure situated above state-owned subaqueous bottomland. Determining whether those factual situations involve activities incident to the right of
[1] Unlike the majority, I believe that the term “floating platform” is a misnomer. In reality, the “floating platform” was simply one or two work barges with new decking installed. The majority, however, implies otherwise, as demonstrated by the majority’s subsequent description that “the floating platform was supported by two barges.” (Emphasis added.)
[2] Additionally, the majority fails to address the fact that this definition was dicta. In City of Newport News, the issue before the Court was whether the Constitution of Virginia includes the public right of fishery, not the definition of the right of navigation.158 Va. at 533-34 ,164 S.E. at 692 .
