The Clean Water Act prohibits any discharge of dredged or fill
materials into "navigable waters" -- defined as the "waters of the
United States" -- unless authorized by a permit issued by the Army
Corps of Engineers (Corps). Construing the Act to cover all
"freshwater wetlands" that are adjacent to other covered waters,
the Corps issued a regulation defining such wetlands as
"those areas that are inundated or saturated by surface or
ground water at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and
that under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of
vegetation typically adapted for life in saturated soil
conditions."
After respondent Riverside Bayview Homes, Inc. (hereafter
respondent), began placing fill materials on its property near the
shores of Lake St. Clair, Michigan, the Corps filed suit in Federal
District Court to enjoin respondent from filling its property
without the Corps' permission. Finding that respondent's property
was characterized by the presence of vegetation requiring saturated
soil conditions for growth, that the source of such soil conditions
was ground water, and that the wetland on the property was adjacent
to a body of navigable water, the District Court held that the
property was wetland subject to the Corps' permit authority. The
Court of Appeals reversed, construing the Corps' regulation to
exclude from the category of adjacent wetlands -- and hence from
that of "waters of the United States" -- wetlands that are not
subject to flooding by adjacent navigable waters at a frequency
sufficient to support the growth of aquatic vegetation. The court
took the view that the Corps' authority under the Act and its
implementing regulations must be narrowly construed to avoid a
taking without just compensation in violation of the Fifth
Amendment. Under this construction, it was held that respondent's
property was not within the Corps' jurisdiction, because its
semi-aquatic characteristics were not the result of frequent
flooding by the nearby navigable waters, and that therefore
respondent was free to fill the property without obtaining a
permit.
Held:
1. The Court of Appeals erred in concluding that a narrow
reading of the Corps' regulatory jurisdiction over wetlands was
necessary to avoid a taking problem. Neither the imposition of the
permit requirement
Page 474 U. S. 122
itself nor the denial of a permit necessarily constitutes a
taking. And the Tucker Act is available to provide compensation for
takings that may result from the Corps' exercise of jurisdiction
over wetlands. Pp.
474 U. S.
126-129.
2. The District Court's findings are not clearly erroneous, and
plainly bring respondent's property within the category of
wetlands, and thus of the "waters of the United States" as defined
by the regulation in ques tion. Pp.
474 U. S.
129-131.
3. The language, policies, and history of the Clean Water Act
compel a finding that the Corps has acted reasonably in
interpreting the Act to require permits for the discharge of
material into wetlands adjacent to other "waters of the United
States." Pp.
474 U. S.
131-139.
729 F.2d 391 reversed.
WHITE, J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Page 474 U. S. 123
JUSTICE WHITE delivered the opinion of the Court.
This case presents the question whether the Clean Water Act
(CWA), 33 U.S.C. § 1251
et seq., together with certain
regulations promulgated under its authority by the Army Corps of
Engineers, authorizes the Corps to require landowners to obtain
permits from the Corps before discharging fill material into
wetlands adjacent to navigable bodies of water and their
tributaries.
I
The relevant provisions of the Clean Water Act originated in the
Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, 86 Stat.
816, and have remained essentially unchanged since that time. Under
§§ 301 and 502 of the Act, 33U.S.C. §§ 1311 and 1362, any discharge
of dredged or fill materials into "navigable waters" -- defined as
the "waters of the United States" -- is forbidden unless authorized
by a permit issued by the Corps of Engineers pursuant to § 404, 33
U.S.C. § 1344. [
Footnote 1]
After initially construing the Act to cover only waters navigable
in fact, in 1975 the Corps issued interim final regulations
redefining "the waters of the United States" to include not only
actually navigable waters but also tributaries of such waters,
interstate waters and their tributaries, and nonnavigable
intrastate waters whose use or misuse could affect interstate
commerce. 40 Fed.Reg. 31320
Page 474 U. S. 124
(1975). More importantly for present purposes, the Corps
construed the Act to cover all "freshwater wetlands" that were
adjacent to other covered waters. A "freshwater wetland" was
defined as an area that is "periodically inundated" and is
"normally characterized by the prevalence of vegetation that
requires saturated soil conditions for growth and reproduction." 33
CFR § 209.120(d)(2)(
h) (1976). In 1977,the Corps refined
its definition of wetlands by eliminating the reference to periodic
inundation and making other minor changes. The 1977 definition
reads as follows:
"The term 'wetlands' means those areas that are in undated or
saturated by surface or ground water at a frequency and duration
sufficient to support, and that under normal circumstances do
support, a prevalence of vegetation typically adapted for life in
saturated soil conditions. Wetlands generally include swamps,
marshes, bogs and similar areas."
33 CFR § 323.2(c) (1978). In 1982, the 1977 regulations were
replaced by substantively identical regulations that remain in
force today.
See 33 CFR § 323.2 (1985). [
Footnote 2] Respondent Riverside Bayview
Homes, Inc. (hereafter respondent), owns 80 acres of low-lying,
marshy land near the shores of Lake St. Clair in Macomb County,
Michigan. In 1976, respondent began to place fill materials on its
property as part of its preparations for construction of a housing
development. The Corps of Engineers, believing that the property
was an "adjacent wetland" under the 1975 regulation defining
"waters of the United States," filed suit in the United States
District Court for the Eastern District of Michigan, seeking to
enjoin respondent from filling the property without the permission
of the Corps.
Page 474 U. S. 125
The District Court held that the portion of respondent's
property lying below 575.5 feet above sea level was a covered
wetland, and enjoined respondent from filling it without a permit.
Civ. No. 77-70041 (Feb. 24, 1977) (App. to Pet. for Cert. 22a);
Civ. No. 77-70041 (June 21, 1979) (App. to Pet. for Cert. 32a).
Respondent appealed, and the Court of Appeals remanded for
consideration of the effect of the intervening 1977 amendments to
the regulation. 615 F.2d 1363 (1980). On remand, the District Court
again held the property to be a wetland subject to the Corps'
permit authority. Civ. No. 77-70041 (May 10, 1981) (App. to Pet.
for Cert. 42a).
Respondent again appealed, and the Sixth Circuit reversed. 729
F.2d 391 (1984). The court construed the Corps' regulation to
exclude from the category of adjacent wetlands -- and hence from
that of "waters of the United States" -- wetlands that were not
subject to flooding by adjacent navigable waters at a frequency
sufficient to support the growth of aquatic vegetation. The court
adopted this construction of the regulation because, in its view, a
broader definition of wetlands might result in the taking of
private property without just compensation. The court also
expressed its doubt that Congress, in granting the Corps
jurisdiction to regulate the filling of "navigable waters,"
intended to allow regulation of wetlands that were not the result
of flooding by navigable waters. [
Footnote 3] Under the court's reading of the regulation,
respondent's property was not within the Corps' jurisdiction,
because its semiaquatic characteristics were not the result of
frequent flooding by the nearby navigable waters. Respondent was
therefore free to fill the property without obtaining a permit.
Page 474 U. S. 126
We granted certiorari to consider the proper interpretation of
the Corps' regulation defining "waters of the United States" and
the scope of the Corps' jurisdiction under the Clean Water Act,
both of which were called into question by the Sixth Circuit's
ruling. 469 U.S. 1206 (1985). We now reverse.
II
The question whether the Corps of Engineers may demand that
respondent obtain a permit before placing fill material on its
property is primarily one of regulatory and statutory
interpretation: we must determine whether respondent's property is
an "adjacent wetland" within the meaning of the applicable
regulation, and, if so, whether the Corps' jurisdiction over
"navigable waters" gives it statutory authority to regulate
discharges of fill material into such a wetland. In this
connection, we first consider the Court of Appeals' position that
the Corps' regulatory authority under the statute and its
implementing regulations must be narrowly construed to avoid a
taking without just compensation in violation of the Fifth
Amendment.
We have frequently suggested that governmental land use
regulation may, under extreme circumstances, amount to a "taking"
of the affected property.
See, e.g., Williamson County Regional
Planning Comm'n v. Hamilton Bank, 473 U.
S. 172 (1985);
Penn Central Transportation Co. v.
New York City, 438 U. S. 104
(1978). We have never precisely defined those circumstances,
see id. at
438 U. S.
123-128, but our general approach was summed up in
Agins v. Tiburon, 447 U. S. 255,
447 U. S. 260
(1980), where we stated that the application of land use
regulations to a particular piece of property is a taking only "if
the ordinance does not substantially advance legitimate state
interests . . . or denies an owner economically viable use of his
land." Moreover, we have made it quite clear that the mere
assertion of regulatory jurisdiction by a governmental body does
not constitute a regulatory taking.
See
Hodel v. Virginia
Surface Mining & Reclamation Assn., 452
Page 474 U. S. 127
U.S. 264,
452 U. S.
293-297 (1981). The reasons are obvious. A requirement
that a person obtain a permit before engaging in a certain use of
his or her property does not, itself, "take" the property in any
sense: after all, the very existence of a permit system implies
that permission may be granted, leaving the landowner free to use
the property as desired. Moreover, even if the permit is denied,
there may be other viable uses available to the owner. Only when a
permit is denied and the effect of the denial is to prevent
"economically viable"use of the land in question can it be said
that a taking has occurred.
If neither the imposition of the permit requirement itself nor
the denial of a permit necessarily constitutes a taking, it follows
that the Court of Appeals erred in concluding that a narrow reading
of the Corps' regulatory jurisdiction over wetlands was "necessary"
to avoid "a serious taking problem." 729 F.2d at 398. [
Footnote 4] We have held that, in
general,
"[e]quitable relief is not available to enjoin an alleged taking
of private property for a public use, duly authorized by law,
Page 474 U. S. 128
when a suit for compensation can be brought against the
sovereign subsequent to a taking."
Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto Co., 467 U.
S. 986,
467 U. S.
1016 (1984) (footnote omitted). This maxim rests on the
principle that, so long as compensation is available for those
whose property is in fact taken, the governmental action is not
unconstitutional.
Williamson County, supra, at
473 U. S.
194-195. For precisely the same reason, the possibility
that the application of a regulatory program may in some instances
result in the taking of individual pieces of property is no
justification for the use of narrowing constructions to curtail the
program if compensation will, in any event, be available in those
cases where a taking has occurred. Under such circumstances,
adoption of a narrowing construction does not constitute avoidance
of a constitutional difficulty,
cf. Ashwander v. TVA,
297 U. S. 288,
297 U. S.
341-356 (1936) (Brandeis, J., concurring); it merely
frustrates permissible applications of a statute or regulation.
[
Footnote 5] Because the Tucker
Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491, which presumptively supplies a means of
obtaining compensation for any taking that may occur through the
operation of a federal statute,
see Ruckelshaus v. Monsanto
Co., supra, at
467 U. S.
1017, is available to provide compensation for takings
that may result from the Corps' exercise of jurisdiction over
wetlands, the Court of Appeals' fears that application of the
Corps' permit program might result in a taking did not justify the
court in adopting a
Page 474 U. S. 129
more limited view of the Corps' authority than the terms of the
relevant regulation might otherwise support. [
Footnote 6]
III
Purged of its spurious constitutional overtones, the question
whether the regulation at issue requires respondent to obtain a
permit before filling its property is an easy one. The regulation
extends the Corps' authority under § 404 to all wetlands adjacent
to navigable or interstate waters and their tributaries. Wetlands,
in turn, are defined as lands that are
"inundated or
saturated by surface
or ground
water at a frequency and duration sufficient to support, and
that under normal circumstances do support, a prevalence of
vegetation typically adapted for life in saturated soil
conditions."
33 CFR § 323.2(c) (195) (emphasis added). The plain language of
the regulation refutes the Court of Appeals' conclusion that
inundation or "frequent flooding" by the adjacent body of water is
a
sine qua non of a wetland under the regulation. Indeed,
the regulation could hardly state more clearly that saturation by
either surface or ground water is sufficient to bring an area
within the category of wetlands, provided that
Page 474 U. S. 130
the saturation is sufficient to, and does, support wetland
vegetation. The history of the regulation underscores the absence
of any requirement of inundation. The interim final regulation that
the current regulation replaced explicitly included a requirement
of "periodi[c] inundation." 33 CFR § 209.120(d)(2)(h) (1976). In
deleting the reference to "periodic inundation" from the regulation
as finally promulgated, the Corps explained that it was repudiating
the interpretation of that language "as requiring inundation over a
record period of years." 42 Fed.Reg. 37128 (1977). In fashioning
its own requirement of "frequent flooding" the Court of Appeals
improperly reintroduced into the regulation precisely what the
Corps had excised. [
Footnote 7]
Without the nonexistent requirement of frequent flooding,the
regulatory definition of adjacent wetlands covers the property
here. The District Court found that respondent's property was
"characterized by the presence of vegetation that requires
saturated soil conditions for growth and reproduction,"
Page 474 U. S. 131
App. to Pet. for Cert. 24a, and that the source of the saturated
soil conditions on the property was groundwater. There is no
plausible suggestion that these findings are clearly erroneous, and
they plainly bring the property within the category of wetlands as
defined by the current regulation. In addition, the court found
that the wetland located on respondent's property was adjacent to a
body of navigable water, since the area characterized by saturated
soil conditions and wetland vegetation extended beyond the boundary
of respondent's property to Black Creek, a navigable waterway.
Again, the court's finding is not clearly erroneous. Together,
these findings establish that respondent's property is a wetland
adjacent to a navigable waterway. Hence, it is part of the "waters
of the United States" as defined by 33 CFR § 323.2 (1985), and if
the regulation itself is valid as a construction of the term
"waters of the United States" as used in the Clean Water Act, a
question which we now address, the property falls within the scope
of the Corps' jurisdiction over "navigable waters" under § 404 of
the Act.
IV
A
An agency's construction of a statute it is charged with
enforcing is entitled to deference if it is reasonable and not in
conflict with the expressed intent of Congress.
Chemical
Manufacturers Assn. v. Natural Resources Defense Council,
Inc., 470 U. S. 116,
470 U. S. 125
(1985);
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v.
Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
467 U. S. 837,
467 U. S.
842-845 (1984). Accordingly, our review is limited to
the question whether it is reasonable, in light of the language,
policies, and legislative history of the Act, for the Corps to
exercise jurisdiction over wetlands adjacent to, but not regularly
flooded by, rivers, streams, and other hydrographic features more
conventionally identifiable as "waters." [
Footnote 8]
Page 474 U. S. 132
On a purely linguistic level, it may appear unreasonable to
classify "lands," wet or otherwise, as "waters." Such a simplistic
response, however, does justice neither to the problem faced by the
Corps in defining the scope of its authority under§ 404(a) nor to
the realities of the problem of water pollution that the Clean
Water Act was intended to combat. In determining the limits of its
power to regulate discharges under the Act, the Corps must
necessarily choose some point at which water ends and land begins.
Our common experience tells us that this is often no easy task: the
transition from water to solid ground is not necessarily or even
typically an abrupt one. Rather, between open waters and dry land
may lie shallows, marshes, mudflats, swamps, bogs -- in short, a
huge array of areas that are not wholly aquatic but nevertheless
fall far short of being dry land. Where on this continuum to find
the limit of "waters" is far from obvious. Faced with such a
problem of defining the bounds of its regulatory authority, an
agency may appropriately look to the legislative history and
underlying policies of its statutory grants of authority. Neither
of these sources provides unambiguous guidance for the Corps in
this case, but together they do support the reasonableness of the
Corps' approach of defining adjacent wetlands as "waters" within
the meaning of§ 404(a). Section 404 originated as part of the
Federal Water Pollution Control Act Amendments of 1972, which
constituted a comprehensive legislative attempt "to restore and
maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the
Nation's waters." CWA § 101, 33 U.S.C. § 1251. This objective
incorporated a broad, systemic view of the goal of maintaining and
improving water quality: as the House Report on the legislation put
it, "the word
integrity' . . . refers to a condition in which
the natural structure and function of ecosystems [are] maintained."
H.R.Rep. No. 92911, p. 76(1972). Protection of aquatic ecosystems,
Congress recognized,
Page 474 U. S.
133
demanded broad federal authority to control pollution, for
"[w]ater moves in hydrologic cycles, and it is essential that
discharge of pollutants be controlled at the source." S.Rep.No.
92414, p. 77 (1972). In keeping with these views, Congress chose to
define the waters covered by the Act broadly. Although the Act
prohibits discharges into "navigable waters," see CWA §§
301(a), 404(a), 502(12), 33 U.S.C. §§ 1311(a), 1344(a), 1362(12),
the Act's definition of "navigable waters" as "the waters of the
United States" makes it clear that the term"navigable" as used in
the Act is of limited import. In adopting this definition of
"navigable waters," Congress evidently intended to repudiate limits
that had been placed on federal regulation by earlier water
pollution control statutes, and to exercise its powers under the
Commerce Clause to regulate at least some waters that would not be
deemed "navigable" under the classical understanding of that term.
See S.Conf.Rep. No. 921236, p. 144 (1972); 118 Cong.Rec.
33756-33757(1972) (statement of Rep. Dingell). Of course, it is one
thing to recognize that Congress intended to allow regulation of
waters that might not satisfy traditional tests of navigability; it
is another to assert that Congress intended to abandon traditional
notions of "waters" and include in that term "wetlands" as well.
Nonetheless, the evident breadth of congressional concern for
protection of water quality and aquatic ecosystems suggests that it
is reasonable for the Corps to interpret the term "waters" to
encompass wetlands adjacent to waters as more conventionally
defined. Following the lead of the Environmental Protection Agency,
see 38 Fed.Reg. 10834 (1973), the Corps has determined
that wetlands adjacent to navigable waters do, as a general matter,
play a key role in protecting and enhancing water quality:
"The regulation of activities that cause water pollution cannot
rely on . . . artificial lines . . . , but must focus on all waters
that together form the entire aquatic system.
Page 474 U. S. 134
Water moves in hydrologic cycles, and the pollution of this part
of the aquatic system, regardless of whether it is above or below
an ordinary high water mark, or mean high tide line, will affect
the water quality of the other waters within that aquatic
system."
"For this reason, the landward limit of Federal jurisdiction
under Section 404 must include any adjacent wetlands that form the
border of or are in reasonable proximity to other waters of the
United States, as these wetlands are part of this aquatic
system."
42 Fed.Reg. 37128 (1977).
We cannot say that the Corps' conclusion that adjacent wetlands
are inseparably bound up with the "waters" of the United States --
based as it is on the Corps' and EPA's technical expertise -- is
unreasonable. In view of the breadth of federal regulatory
authority contemplated by the Act itself and the inherent
difficulties of defining precise bounds to regulable waters, the
Corps' ecological judgment about the relationship between waters
and their adjacent wetlands provides an adequate basis for a legal
judgment that adjacent wetlands may be defined as waters under the
Act. This holds true even for wetlands that are not the result of
flooding or permeation by water having its source in adjacent
bodies of open water. The Corps has concluded that wetlands may
affect the water quality of adjacent lakes, rivers, and streams
even when the waters of those bodies do not actually inundate the
wetlands. For example, wetlands that are not flooded by adjacent
waters may still tend to drain into those waters. In such
circumstances, the Corps has concluded that wetlands may serve to
filter and purify water draining into adjacent bodies of water,
see 33 CFR§ 320.4(b)(2)(vii) (1985), and to slow the flow
of surface runoff into lakes, rivers, and streams, and thus prevent
flooding and erosion,
see §§ 320.4(b)(2)(iv) and (v). In
addition, adjacent wetlands may
"serve significant natural biological functions, including food
chain production, general habitat, and nesting,
Page 474 U. S. 135
spawning, rearing and resting sites for aquatic . . .
species."
§ 320.4(b)(2)(i). In short, the Corps has concluded that
wetlands adjacent to lakes, rivers, streams, and other bodies of
water may function as integral parts of the aquatic environment
even when the moisture creating the wetlands does not find its
source in the adjacent bodies of water. Again, we cannot say that
the Corps' judgment on these matters is unreasonable, and we
therefore conclude that a definition of "waters of the United
States" encompassing all wetlands adjacent to other bodies of water
over which the Corps has jurisdiction is a permissible
interpretation of the Act. Because respondent's property is part of
a wetland that actually abuts on a navigable waterway, respondent
was required to have a permit in this case. [
Footnote 9]
B
Following promulgation of the Corps' interim final regulations
in 1975, the Corps' assertion of authority under § 404 over waters
not actually navigable engendered some congressional opposition.
The controversy came to a head during Congress' consideration of
the Clean Water Act of 1977, a major piece of legislation aimed at
achieving "interim improvements within the existing framework" of
the Clean Water Act. H.R.Rep. No. 95139, pp. 1-2 (1977). In the
Page 474 U. S. 136
end, however, as we shall explain, Congress acquiesced in the
administrative construction.
Critics of the Corps' permit program attempted to insert
limitations on the Corps' § 404 jurisdiction into the 1977
legislation: the House bill as reported out of committee proposed a
redefinition of "navigable waters" that would have limited the
Corps' authority under § 404 to waters navigable in fact and their
adjacent wetlands (defined as wetlands periodically inundated by
contiguous navigable waters). H.R. 3199, 95th Cong., 1st Sess., §
16 (1977). The bill reported by the Senate Committee on Environment
and Public Works, by contrast, contained no redefinition of the
scope of the "navigable waters" covered by § 404, and dealt with
the perceived problem of overregulation by the Corps by exempting
certain activities (primarily agricultural) from the permit
requirement, and by providing for assumption of some of the Corps'
regulatory duties by federally approved state programs. S.1952,
95th Cong., 1st Sess., § 49(b) (1977). On the floor of the Senate,
however, an amendment was proposed limiting the scope of "navigable
waters" along the lines set forth in the House bill. 123 Cong.Rec.
26710-26711 (1977).
In both Chambers, debate on the proposals to narrow the
definition of navigable waters centered largely on the issue of
wetlands preservation.
See id. at 10426-10432 (House
debate);
id. at 26710-26729 (Senate debate). Proponents of
a more limited § 404 jurisdiction contended that the Corps'
assertion of jurisdiction over wetlands and other
nonnavigable"waters" had far exceeded what Congress had intended in
enacting § 404. Opponents of the proposed changes argued that a
narrower definition of "navigable waters" for purposes of § 404
would exclude vast stretches of crucial wetlands from the Corps'
jurisdiction, with detrimental effects on wetlands ecosystems,
water quality, and the aquatic environment generally. The debate,
particularly in the Senate, was lengthy. In the House, the debate
ended with the adoption of a narrowed definition of "waters"; but
in the Senate the limiting
Page 474 U. S. 137
amendment was defeated and the old definition retained. The
Conference Committee adopted the Senate's approach: efforts to
narrow the definition of "waters" were abandoned; the legislation
as ultimately passed, in the words of Senator Baker, "retain[ed]
the comprehensive jurisdiction over the Nation's waters exercised
in the 1972 Federal Water Pollution Control Act." [
Footnote 10]
The significance of Congress' treatment of the Corps' § 404
jurisdiction in its consideration of the Clean Water Act of 1977 is
twofold. First, the scope of the Corps' asserted jurisdiction over
wetlands was specifically brought to Congress' attention, and
Congress rejected measures designed to curb the Corps'
jurisdiction, in large part because of its concern that protection
of wetlands would be unduly hampered by a narrowed definition of
"navigable waters." Although we are chary of attributing
significance to Congress' failure to act, a refusal by Congress to
overrule an agency's construction of legislation is at least some
evidence of the reasonableness of that construction, particularly
where the administrative construction has been brought to Congress'
attention through legislation specifically designed to supplant it.
See Bob Jones University v. United States, 461 U.
S. 574,
461 U. S.
599-601 (1983);
United States v. Rutherford,
442 U. S. 544,
442 U. S. 554,
and n. 10 (1979).
Second, it is notable that even those who would have restricted
the reach of the Corps' jurisdiction would have done so not by
removing wetlands altogether from the definition of "waters of the
United States," but only by restricting the scope of "navigable
waters" under § 404 to waters navigable in fact
and their
adjacent wetlands. In amending the definition of "navigable
waters" for purposes of § 404 only, the backers of the House bill
would have left intact the existing definition of "navigable
waters" for purposes of § 301 of the
Page 474 U. S. 138
Act, which generally prohibits discharges of pollutants into
navigable waters. As the House Report explained: "
Navigable
waters,' as used in section 301, includes all of the waters of the
United States, including their adjacent wetlands." H.R.Rep. No.
95139, p. 24 (1977). Thus, even those who thought that the Corps'
existing authority under § 404 was too broad recognized (1) that
the definition of "navigable waters" then in force for both § 301
and § 404 was reasonably interpreted to include adjacent wetlands,
(2) that the water quality concerns of the Clean Water Act demanded
regulation of at least some discharges into wetlands, and (3) that
whatever jurisdiction the Corps would retain over discharges of
fill material after passage of the 1977 legislation should extend
to discharges into wetlands adjacent to any waters over which the
Corps retained jurisdiction. These views provide additional support
for a conclusion that Congress in 1977 acquiesced in the Corps'
definition of waters as including adjacent wetlands.
Two features actually included in the legislation that Congress
enacted in 1977 also support the view that the Act authorizes the
Corps to regulate discharges into wetlands. First, in amending §
404 to allow federally approved state permit programs to supplant
regulation by the Corps of certain discharges of fill material,
Congress provided that the States would not be permitted to
supersede the Corps' jurisdiction to regulate discharges into
actually navigable waters and waters subject to the ebb and flow of
the tide, "including wetlands adjacent thereto." CWA § 404(g)(1),
33 U.S.C.§ 1344(g)(1). Here, then, Congress expressly stated that
the term "waters" included adjacent wetlands. [
Footnote 11] Second, the
Page 474 U. S. 139
1977 Act authorized an appropriation of $6 million for
completion by the Department of Interior of a "National Wetlands
Inventory" to assist the States "in the development and operation
of programs under this Act." CWA § 208(i)(2), 33U.S.C. §
1288(i)(2). The enactment of this provision reflects congressional
recognition that wetlands are a concern of the Clean Water Act, and
supports the conclusion that, in defining the waters covered by the
Act to include wetlands, the Corps is "implementing congressional
policy, rather than embarking on a frolic of its own."
Red Lion
Broadcasting Co. v. FCC, 395 U. S. 367,
395 U. S. 375
(1969).
C
We are thus persuaded that the language, policies, and history
of the Clean Water Act compel a finding that the Corps has acted
reasonably in interpreting the Act to require permits for the
discharge of fill material into wetlands adjacent to the "waters of
the United States." The regulation in which the Corps has embodied
this interpretation, by its terms, includes the wetlands on
respondent's property within the class of waters that may not be
filled without a permit; and, as we have seen, there is no reason
to interpret the regulation more narrowly than its terms would
indicate. Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals is
Reversed.
[
Footnote 1]
With respect to certain waters, the Corps' authority may be
transferred to States that have devised federally approved permit
programs. CWA § 404(g), as added, 91 Stat. 1600, 33 U.S.C. §
1344(g). Absent such an approved program, the Corps retains
jurisdiction under § 404 over all "waters of the United
States."
[
Footnote 2]
The regulations also cover certain wetlands not necessarily
adjacent to other waters.
See 33 CFR §§ 323.2(a)(2) and
(3) (1985). These provisions are not now before us.
[
Footnote 3]
In denying the Government's petition for rehearing, the panel
reiterated somewhat more strongly its belief that the Corps'
construction of its regulation was "overbroad and inconsistent with
the language of the Act." 729 F.2d at 401.
[
Footnote 4]
Even were the Court of Appeals correct in concluding that a
narrowing construction of the regulation is necessary to avoid
takings of property through the application of the permit
requirement, the construction adopted which requires a showing of
frequent flooding before property may be classified as a wetland is
hardly tailored to the supposed difficulty. Whether the denial of a
permit would constitute a taking in any given case would depend
upon the effect of the denial on the owner's ability to put the
property to productive use. Whether the property was frequently
flooded would have no particular bearing on this question, for
overbroad regulation of even completely submerged property may
constitute a taking.
See, e.g., Kaiser Aetna v. United
States, 444 U. S. 164
(1979). Indeed, it may be more likely that denying a permit to fill
frequently flooded property will prevent economically viable use of
the property than denying a permit to fill property that is wet but
not flooded. Of course, by excluding a large chunk of the Nation's
wetlands from the regulatory definition, the Court of Appeals'
construction might tend to limit the gross number of takings that
the permit program would otherwise entail, but the construction
adopted still bears an insufficiently precise relationship with the
problem it seeks to avoid.
[
Footnote 5]
United States v. Security Industrial Bank, 459 U. S.
70 (1982), in which we adopted a narrowing construction
of a statute to avoid a taking difficulty, is not to the contrary.
In that case, the problem was that there was a substantial argument
that retroactive application of a particular provision of the
Bankruptcy Code would in every case constitute a taking; the
solution was to avoid the difficulty by construing the statute to
apply only prospectively. Such an approach is sensible where it
appears that there is an identifiable class of cases in which
application of a statute will necessarily constitute a taking. As
we have observed, this is not such a case: there is no identifiable
set of instances in which mere application of the permit
requirement will necessarily or even probably constitute a taking.
The approach of adopting a limiting construction is thus
unwarranted.
[
Footnote 6]
Because the Corps has now denied respondent a permit to fill its
property, respondent may well have a ripe claim that a taking has
occurred. On the record before us, however, we have no basis for
evaluating this claim, because no evidence has been introduced that
bears on the question of the extent to which denial of a permit to
fill this property will prevent economically viable uses of the
property or frustrate reasonable investment-backed expectations. In
any event, this lawsuit is not the proper forum for resolving such
a dispute: if the Corps has indeed effectively taken respondent's
property, respondent's proper course is not to resist the Corps'
suit for enforcement by denying that the regulation covers the
property, but to initiate a suit for compensation in the Claims
Court. In so stating, of course, we do not rule that respondent
will be entitled to compensation for any temporary denial of use of
its property should the Corps ultimately relent and allow it to be
filled. We have not yet resolved the question whether compensation
is a constitutionally mandated remedy for "temporary regulatory
takings,"
see Williamson County Planning Comm'n v. Hamilton
Bank, 473 U. S. 172
(1985), and this case provides no occasion for deciding the
issue.
[
Footnote 7]
The Court of Appeals seems also to have rested its
frequent-flooding requirement on the language in the regulation
stating that wetlands encompass those areas that "under normal
circumstances do support" aquatic or semiaquatic vegetation. In the
preamble to the final regulation, the Corps explained that this
language was intended in part to exclude areas characterized by the
"abnormal presence of aquatic vegetation in a nonaquatic area." 42
Fed.Reg. 37128 (1977). Apparently, the Court of Appeals concluded
that the growth of wetlands vegetation in soils saturated by ground
water, rather than flooded by waters emanating from an adjacent
navigable water or its tributaries, was "abnormal" within the
meaning of the preamble. This interpretation is untenable in light
of the explicit statements in both the regulation and its preamble
that areas saturated by ground water can fall within the category
of wetlands. It would be nonsensical for the Corps to define
wetlands to include such areas and then, in the same sentence,
exclude them on the ground that the presence of wetland vegetation
in such areas was abnormal. Evidently, the Corps had something else
in mind when it referred to "abnormal" growth of wetlands
vegetation -- namely, the aberrational presence of such vegetation
in dry, upland areas.
[
Footnote 8]
We are not called upon to address the question of the authority
of the Corps to regulate discharges of fill material into wetlands
that are not adjacent to bodies of open water,
see 33 CFR
§§ 323.2(a)(2) and (3) (1985), and we do not express any opinion on
that question.
[
Footnote 9]
Of course, it may well be that not every adjacent wetland is of
great importance to the environment of adjoining bodies of water.
But the existence of such cases does not seriously undermine the
Corps' decision to define all adjacent wetlands as "waters." If it
is reasonable for the Corps to conclude that, in the majority of
cases, adjacent wetlands have significant effects on water quality
and the aquatic ecosystem, its definition can stand. That the
definition may include some wetlands that are not significantly
intertwined with the ecosystem of adjacent waterways is of little
moment, for where it appears that a wetland covered by the Corps'
definition is, in fact, lacking in importance to the aquatic
environment, or where its importance is outweighed by other values
the Corps may always allow development of the wetland for other
uses simply by issuing a permit.
See 33 CFR § 320.4(b)(4)
(1986).
[
Footnote 10]
123 Cong.Rec. 39209 (1977);
see also id. at 39210
(statement of Sen. Wallop);
id. at 39196 (statement of
Sen. Randolph);
id. at 38950 (statement of Rep. Murphy);
id. at 38994 (statement of Rep. Ambro).
[
Footnote 11]
To be sure, § 404(g)(1) does not conclusively determine the
construction to be placed on the use of the term "waters" elsewhere
in the Act (particularly in § 502(7), which contains the relevant
definition of "navigable waters"); however, in light of the fact
that the various provisions of the Act should be read
in pari
materia, it does at least suggest strongly that the term
"waters," as used in the Act, does not necessarily exclude
"wetlands."