                                          PUBLISHED

                           UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
                               FOR THE FOURTH CIRCUIT


                                          No. 15-2225


THE STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA, by and through its agency, the North
Carolina Department of Administration,

                        Plaintiff - Appellant,

                v.

ALCOA POWER GENERATING, INC.,

                        Defendant - Appellee.

------------------------------------

YADKIN RIVERKEEPER, INC.; NORTH CAROLINA WILDLIFE
FEDERATION, INC.; MICHAEL C. BLUMM, Jeffrey Bain Faculty Scholar and
Professor of Law, Lewis & Clark Law School, Portland, OR; MARY
CHRISTINA WOOD, Philip H. Knight Professor of Law, University of Oregon
School of Law, Eugene, OR; PATRICK C. MCGINLEY, Judge Charles H. Haden
II Professor of Law, West Virginia University College of Law, Morgantown, WV;
RACHAEL PASCHAL OSBORN, Adjunct Professor, Gonzaga University School
of Law, Spokane, WA; PATRICK PARENTEAU, Professor of Law and Senior
Counsel for Environmental and Natural Resources Law Clinic, Vermont Law
School, South Royalton, VT; ZYGMUNT J.B. PLATER, Professor of Law,
Boston College Law School, Boston, MA; WILLIAM RODGERS, Emeritus
Stimson Bullitt Professor of Law, University of Washington School of Law,
Seattle, WA; GERALD TORRES, Jane M.G. Foster Professor of Law, Cornell
Law School, Ithaca, NY; AMERICAN WHITEWATER,

                        Amici Supporting Appellant,

HIGH ROCK LAKE ASSOCIATION; TRADING FORD HISTORIC DISTRICT
PRESERVATION ASSOCIATION,

                        Amici Supporting Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court for the Eastern District of North Carolina, at
Raleigh. Terrence W. Boyle, District Judge. (5:13-cv-00633-BO)


Argued: October 27, 2016                                          Decided: April 3, 2017


Before NIEMEYER, KING, and AGEE, Circuit Judges.


Affirmed by published opinion. Judge Niemeyer wrote the majority opinion, in which
Judge Agee joined. Judge King wrote a dissenting opinion.


ARGUED: Robert Flynn Orr, Raleigh, North Carolina; Kelly Edward Greene,
WYRICK, ROBBINS, YATES & PONTON, LLP, Raleigh, North Carolina, for
Appellant. Erin Elizabeth Murphy, BANCROFT PLLC, Alexandria, Virginia, for
Appellee. ON BRIEF: Roy Cooper, Attorney General, Donald R. Teeter, Sr., Special
Deputy Attorney General, Ann W. Matthews, Special Deputy Attorney General, G. Mark
Teague, Assistant Attorney General, Lewis W. Lamar, Jr., Assistant Attorney General,
NORTH CAROLINA DEPARTMENT OF JUSTICE, Raleigh, North Carolina, for
Appellant. Paul D. Clement, Christopher G. Michel, BANCROFT PLLC, Washington,
D.C., for Appellee. James P. Longest, Jr., Shannon M. Arata, Duke Environmental Law
& Policy Clinic, DUKE UNIVERSITY SCHOOL OF LAW, Durham, North Carolina,
for Amicus Yadkin Riverkeeper, Inc. Patrick C. McGinley, Morgantown, West Virginia,
for Amici Michael C. Blumm, Mary Christina Wood, Rachael Paschal Osborn, Patrick A.
Parenteau, Zygmunt J.B. Plater, William Rodgers and Gerald Torres. Stephan C. Volker,
Jamey M.B. Volker, M. Benjamin Eichenberg, LAW OFFICES OF STEPHAN C.
VOLKER, Oakland, California; Thomas D. Blue, Jr., ELLIS & WINTERS LLP, Raleigh,
North Carolina, for Amicus American Whitewater. James L. Conner, II, CALHOUN,
BHELLA & SECHREST, LLP, Durham, North Carolina, for Amicus North Carolina
Wildlife Federation, Inc. Ashley C. Parrish, Justin A. Torres, KING & SPALDING,
LLP, Washington, D.C., for Amici High Rock Lake Association and Trading Ford
Historic District Preservation Association.




                                            2
NIEMEYER, Circuit Judge:

       The State of North Carolina commenced this action against Alcoa Power

Generating, Inc., seeking a declaratory judgment that North Carolina owns a 45-mile

segment of the riverbed of the Yadkin River in North Carolina that, over the past 100

years, Alcoa purportedly acquired by deed and developed, with the construction of four

hydroelectric dams to supply electrical power to its aluminum smelting plant in Badin,

North Carolina. 1

       In its complaint, North Carolina alleged that, at the time it attained statehood in

1789, the 45-mile segment of the Yadkin River was navigable and therefore that North

Carolina had always “owned and continue[d] to own the submerged bed of the Relevant

Segment of the Yadkin River in its entirety and [to] hold title to that submerged land in

trust for the people of the State.” It alleged further that Alcoa had been using the segment

only with North Carolina’s permission and that, when Alcoa announced in April 2010

that it was permanently shutting down its smelting plant and laying off its employees

there, conditions changed so as to prompt North Carolina to withdraw its permission.


       1
         After oral argument, Alcoa filed a motion to substitute Cube Yadkin Generation
LLC as the party in interest, asserting that it has conveyed the property involved in this
case to Cube Yadkin Generation. North Carolina opposed the motion.
       Federal Rule of Appellate Procedure 43(b) provides that “[i]f a party needs to be
substituted for any reason other than death, the procedure prescribed in Rule 43(a)
[procedures for substitution upon death of a party] applies.” In view of the fact that
North Carolina has opposed the motion; that we have not heard from Cube Yadkin
Generation; and that we have not had the benefit of briefing to address the context of the
conveyance and what reason is sufficient to satisfy Rule 43(b), especially when Alcoa
continues as a viable corporation, we deny the motion but include this footnote to
acknowledge Alcoa’s sale of the property.

                                             3
       The district court, in an opinion making findings of fact and conclusions of law

following a bench trial, found that the relevant segment of the Yadkin River was not

navigable at North Carolina’s statehood so as to give it title to the riverbed as an aspect of

sovereignty. The court also ruled as a matter of law that Alcoa successfully proved its

title to 99% of the relevant segment under North Carolina’s Marketable Title Act and to

the remaining 1% under the doctrine of adverse possession.

       On North Carolina’s appeal, we affirm, concluding that the district court did not

clearly err in its factual finding that the Yadkin River was not navigable at statehood and

did not err in concluding, as a matter of law, that Alcoa has good title to the riverbed.


                                              I

       The Yadkin River rises in the northwestern part of North Carolina near the town of

Blowing Rock and, for a stretch, flows eastward before flowing southward across the

center part of the State to the North Carolina-South Carolina border, where it is known as

the Pee Dee River. The dispute in this case involves a 45-mile segment of the river

running through Rowan, Davie, Davidson, Stanly, and Montgomery Counties, which

Alcoa purportedly acquired by deed and developed.

       In 1915, Alcoa constructed its smelting plant in Badin and concurrently began

acquiring riverbed land and constructing hydroelectric dams to supply the plant with

electric power. It constructed one dam in 1917 in the area of the river known as the

Narrows; another in 1919 in an area known as the Falls; and a third in 1927 near High

Rock. When it sought to build a fourth dam in 1937 in Tuckertown, it filed a declaration


                                              4
of its intent to do so with the Federal Power Commission (“FPC”) but stated in its

declaration its belief that the federal government lacked regulatory jurisdiction because

the stretch of the Yadkin River on which the dam was to be constructed was not

navigable. North Carolina agreed with Alcoa’s position, stating to the FPC that the

segment of the river “at the Tuckertown project and below is not now and has not been a

navigable stream.” The State also represented to the FPC that Alcoa had acquired its

riverbed rights “in every respect in accordance with” state law.

       Some 20 years later, in 1956, when Alcoa applied to the FPC for a 50-year license

for its dams, it again stated its belief that the FPC did not have jurisdiction. Alcoa

acknowledged, however, that because the FPC had taken the position that the interests of

interstate commerce and foreign commerce would be affected by Alcoa’s activities, it

was applying for a 50-year license. Again, North Carolina supported Alcoa’s application

and adopted Alcoa’s evidence, which included the deeds by which Alcoa had acquired

the riverbed. The FPC granted Alcoa the 50-year license, as requested.

       In 2006, when the FPC license expired and Alcoa applied for a renewal, North

Carolina again received notice of Alcoa’s claim of ownership of the riverbed and again

did not object to Alcoa’s claim.

       For decades, Alcoa has paid property taxes on the riverbed parcels it acquired and

posted signs on its property prohibiting trespassing.      Alcoa has also granted North

Carolina permits and licenses to enter its property.

       In 2007, Alcoa decided to cease its aluminum smelting operations at Badin, and it

ultimately closed that plant in 2010, laying off the plant’s employees. Nonetheless, it

                                             5
continued to seek and obtain renewals of its licenses for the operation of its hydroelectric

dams, enabling it to sell at wholesale the electricity produced by those dams.

       In response to Alcoa’s closure of the smelting plant, North Carolina commenced

this action in 2013 in the Wake County Superior Court. It sought a declaratory judgment

that the riverbed of the relevant segment of the Yadkin River was “the sole and exclusive

property of the State.” It claimed that Alcoa had been using North Carolina’s property

with its permission and that the closure of the Badin plant “so fundamentally changed the

basis” of its relationship with Alcoa that North Carolina now wished to withdraw that

permission. To support its claim of ownership, North Carolina alleged that the relevant

segment of the Yadkin had always been and continued to be navigable in fact and that, as

a consequence of the segment’s navigability, it owned and had owned since statehood not

only the riverbed of the relevant segment but also the entire river, as an incident of

sovereignty.

       Alcoa removed the case to the district court pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 1441(a),

contending that the issue of navigability for title was a question of federal law arising

under the U.S. Constitution. North Carolina disagreed, however, and filed a motion to

remand the case to state court, asserting that its complaint did not state a claim arising

under federal law.     The district court agreed with Alcoa’s invocation of federal

jurisdiction and denied North Carolina’s motion to remand.

       The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, which the district court

denied, concluding that the question of navigability, which was central to the resolution

of other issues, could not be resolved without a trial. At a bench trial on this issue, North

                                             6
Carolina presented one witness — Professor Larry Tise, an expert in history — and

Alcoa presented four witnesses, three of whom were expert witnesses — Dr. Michael

Harvey, a fluvial geomorphologist; Dr. Mark Newell, an expert marine archeologist; and

Dr. Dan Morrill, a historian. Alcoa’s fourth witness was Ray Barham, an Alcoa manager

who testified as to Alcoa’s claim of ownership of the riverbed beneath the relevant

segment and its activities there.

       At the conclusion of the trial, the district court found that North Carolina had not

carried its burden of proving that the contested segment of the Yadkin River had been

navigable at statehood. The court concluded first that the geography of the relevant

segment was characterized by “steep slopes, narrow valleys, rapids, falls, ledges, and

exposed rock.” It found also that pole boats and flats, the primary means of commercial

navigation in 1789, “would have had difficulty navigating shallow, steep, swift-moving,

rocky rivers.” Finally, it concluded that while the historical record from the relevant area

was somewhat sparse, it nonetheless revealed a lack of commercial navigation at

statehood and repeated efforts thereafter directed at making the relevant segment

navigable.

       Based on its findings of facts relevant to navigability of the relevant segment, the

court then applied the legal standard for determining navigability, as set forth in PPL

Montana, LLC v. Montana, 132 S. Ct. 1215 (2012), concluding that the 45-mile segment

had not been navigable at statehood. In particular, the court recognized PPL Montana’s

requirement to consider the navigability of a river on a segment-by-segment basis and to

treat portages within segments as defeating a finding of navigability.

                                             7
       Following the bench trial, the district court addressed Alcoa’s undisputed evidence

supporting its title to the segment’s riverbed on its second motion for summary judgment

and concluded, as a matter of law, that Alcoa had title to 99% of the contested riverbed

under North Carolina’s Marketable Title Act and title to the remaining 1% by reason of

adverse possession.

       From the district court’s final judgment dated September 28, 2015, North Carolina

filed this appeal challenging (1) the district court’s subject matter jurisdiction; (2) its

finding of navigability; and (3) its application of the Marketable Title Act and the

doctrine of adverse possession.


                                             II

       North Carolina contends first that the district court lacked subject matter

jurisdiction over the complaint and therefore should have remanded this case to state

court, where the complaint had initially been filed. It argues that its complaint alleged a

garden variety state law claim to quiet title under the North Carolina Declaratory

Judgment Act and that therefore, under the well-pleaded complaint doctrine, its election

to pursue a state law claim in state court should have been honored. See Caterpillar Inc.

v. Williams, 482 U.S. 386, 392 (1987) (noting that the plaintiff, as “master of the claim,”

may avoid federal jurisdiction by alleging a claim under state law); Am. Well Works Co.

v. Layne & Bowler Co., 241 U.S. 257, 260 (1916) (noting that generally a suit “arises

under the law that creates the cause of action”). As it asserts, “the State did not allege or




                                             8
seek a judgment that its ownership of the riverbed was dependent upon federal law in any

way.”

        While North Carolina’s characterization of its complaint may be accurate as far as

it goes, such a characterization will not always resolve whether federal jurisdiction exists.

Regardless of the allegations of a state law claim, “where the vindication of a right under

state law necessarily turn[s] on some construction of federal law,” the claim arises under

federal law and thus supports federal question jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1331.

Franchise Tax Bd. v. Constr. Laborers Vacation Tr. for S. Cal., 463 U.S. 1, 9 (1983).

The more relevant question, therefore, is whether the right that North Carolina seeks to

vindicate — the right to title of riverbed land as determined by the river’s navigability vel

non at statehood — turns on construction of federal law. The district court concluded

that it did, relying on the Supreme Court’s statement in PPL Montana that “questions of

navigability for determining state riverbed title are governed by federal law.” 132 S. Ct.

at 1227.

        Although North Carolina acknowledges the navigability principle announced in

PPL Montana, it nonetheless argues that the principle is not applicable to the original 13

States because PPL Montana based its finding of federal jurisdiction on the Equal

Footing Doctrine, which applies only to the 37 later-admitted States so as to make them

coequal to the original 13. 2 It maintains that because it was one of the original 13 States,


        2
        While PPL applied the Equal Footing Doctrine “to States later admitted to the
Union, because the States in the Union are coequal sovereigns under the Constitution,”
PPL Montana, 132 S. Ct. at 1227, it is not clear that all remaining 37 States, as North
(Continued)
                                             9
the law governing navigability for title must be state law. Thus, it contends, “PPL, an

equal footing case, has no bearing on the riverbed title of an original State. PPL’s

language that ‘questions of navigability for determining state riverbed title are governed

by federal law,’ 132 S. Ct. at 1227, applies solely to the ‘new’ equal footing States,” i.e.,

the remaining 37.

       In making this argument, however, North Carolina leaves out important steps in

the historical analysis and misconstrues the scope of the Supreme Court’s holding in PPL

Montana that questions of navigability for determining riverbed title are governed by

federal law.

       The Supreme Court long ago recognized that the title to a State’s navigable waters

and their riverbeds vested in the State as an aspect of sovereignty obtained when

separating from the British Crown and becoming a State. See Martin v. Waddell’s

Lessee, 41 U.S. (16 Pet.) 367, 410 (1842). In Waddell’s Lessee, one party claimed title to

oyster beds in the navigable waters of the Raritan River and Bay in New Jersey, tracing

its title to a pre-statehood grant from the British Crown, and the other party asserted

ownership by reason of a post-statehood New Jersey law. Because each party was thus

able to trace ownership — one to the Crown and the other to the State of New Jersey —




Carolina suggests, are covered by the Equal Footing Doctrine. For instance, Maine and
West Virginia might be considered in the class of the original 13 States, as they were
originally part of Massachusetts and Virginia, both of which were among the original 13
States. Any resolution of this question, however, is not material to North Carolina’s
argument that the original 13 States are treated differently under PPL Montana than are
the later admitted States.

                                             10
the dispute required the Supreme Court to analyze the nature of state sovereignty under

the Constitution. The Court held that “when the revolution took place, the people of each

state became themselves sovereign” and that the rights that flowed from that sovereignty

upon the subsequent ratification of the Constitution meant that States “hold the absolute

right to all their navigable waters, and the soils under them, for their own common use,

subject only to the rights since surrendered by the constitution to the general

government.” Id. The Court subsequently reiterated this constitutional basis for a State’s

title to beds of navigable waters, stating that a “State receives absolute title to the beds of

navigable waterways within its boundaries upon admission to the Union” and that its

absolute title to the beds of navigable waters “is conferred not by Congress but by the

Constitution itself.” Oregon ex rel. State Land Bd. v. Corvallis Sand & Gravel Co., 429

U.S. 363, 372, 374 (1977) (emphasis added).

       This constitutional insight — that with the formation of the Nation, the States

gained title to all of the navigable waterways within their borders — was later expanded

to new States as they joined the Union. In cases like Pollard’s Lessee v. Hagan, 44 U.S.

(3 How.) 212 (1845), Knight v. United Land Association, 142 U.S. 161 (1891), and

Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U.S. 1 (1894), the Supreme Court recognized that later-admitted

States were co-equal sovereigns under the Constitution and accordingly applied the Equal

Footing Doctrine.

       Thus, it was the constitutional nature of state ownership of navigable waters that

led the Court to determine that navigability for title was governed by federal law and was

thus an appropriate basis for federal question jurisdiction. This basis for federal question

                                              11
jurisdiction was explicitly invoked in United States v. Utah, 283 U.S. 64 (1931), where

the Court explained, in resolving a property dispute between the United States and Utah,

that, because Utah’s claim of ownership relied on the navigability of a segment of the

Colorado River at statehood, the “question of navigability [was] thus determinative of the

controversy, and that is a federal question.” Id. at 75. The Court then applied the federal

standard of navigability, which was set out in The Daniel Ball, 77 U.S. (10 Wall.) 557,

563 (1870) (articulating the criteria for navigability).

       Thus, when the PPL Montana Court stated that “questions of navigability for

determining state riverbed title are governed by federal law,” it was only reaffirming the

federal nature of the issue of navigability for title, a nature evident since the founding and

recognized in cases over the course of more than 150 years. 132 S. Ct. at 1227.

       In response to our holding on federal jurisdiction, the opinion of our good

colleague in dissent dismisses as irrelevant Waddell Lessee’s treatment of navigability for

title as a federal question — based on the nature of state sovereignty under the

Constitution — by focusing only on North Carolina’s pre-Constitution sovereignty at the

time of the Revolution in 1776. Although Waddell’s Lessee noted that original States

such as New Jersey did obtain sovereignty upon their separation from England in 1776,

the Court nonetheless relied on the post-Constitution sovereignty of a State in treating

navigability for title as a federal question. Accordingly, even though North Carolina did

enjoy sovereignty before its ratification of the Constitution, the nature of its sovereignty

emanating from ratification formed the basis for federal jurisdiction. This is the reading

that the Supreme Court has repeatedly given Waddell’s Lessee in subsequent Supreme

                                              12
Court decisions. See PPL Montana, 132 S. Ct. at 1227 (explaining Waddell’s Lessee to

hold that “for the 13 original States, the people in each State, based on principles of

sovereignty, hold the absolute right to all their navigable waters and soils under them”

(emphasis added, internal quotation marks omitted)); Corvallis Sand & Gravel, 429 U.S.

at 378 (explaining that under Waddell’s Lessee and Pollard’s Lessee, “the State’s title to

lands underlying navigable waters within its boundaries is conferred . . . by the

Constitution itself”); United States v. Utah, 283 U.S. at 440–441 (noting that the

substantive “question of navigability is . . . a federal question,” after which it applied the

standard for navigability from The Daniel Ball); Pollard’s Lessee, 44 U.S. (3 How.) at

230 (reiterating the law of Martin’s Lessee and concluding that the “right of eminent

domain over the shores and soils under the navigable waters . . . belongs exclusively to

the states within their respective territorial jurisdictions, and they, and only they, have the

Constitutional power to exercise it” (emphasis added)). Accordingly, the dissenting

opinion’s discussion of North Carolina’s pre-Constitution sovereignty simply avoids the

relevant question.

       In urging that the Equal Footing Doctrine could be the only basis for federal

jurisdiction over this case, North Carolina argues, as does the dissenting opinion, that

PPL Montana’s invocation of the Equal Footing Doctrine for federal jurisdiction creates

a basis of federal jurisdiction applicable only to the later-admitted 37 States, leaving the

remaining 13 States without federal jurisdiction for the same type of case.               This

argument, however, not only misunderstands the federal basis for federal jurisdiction

over the issue of navigability for title, it also posits an unacceptable inequality among the

                                              13
States in its effort to avoid federal jurisdiction. Indeed, its position is irreconcilable with

the tenets of the Equal Footing Doctrine itself, which was designed to ensure that the new

States enter the Union with “the same rights, sovereignty, and jurisdiction . . . as the

original states.”    Pollard’s Lessee, 44 U.S. (3 How.) at 230 (emphasis added).

Application of the Equal Footing Doctrine was necessary to recognize that all of the

States, both the original ones and the new ones, “are coequal sovereigns under the

Constitution.” PPL Montana, 132 S. Ct. at 1227. In this manner, federal jurisdiction

flows directly from the same original principle — i.e., the constitutional nature of state

ownership of navigable waters — that the Equal Footing Doctrine extends to the Nation’s

later-admitted States.

       The position advocated by North Carolina and the dissenting opinion would result

in a bizarre state of affairs with two different classes of States under the Constitution. It

posits that navigability for title presents a federal question in 37 States and a state

question in the original 13 States, resulting in unequal footing among the States. Thus,

for example, state courts in Georgia, one of the original 13 States, would apply state law

to resolve the navigability for title issues for the Chattahoochee River, while federal

courts in Florida, a later-admitted State, would apply federal law to rule on the

navigability of the same river under the principles articulated in PPL Montana.

Consequently, Georgia courts could hold that when a portion of the river is navigable, the

entire river is navigable, as the State of Montana did in PPL Montana, rejecting any

notion of segmentation for purposes of determining navigability and disregarding

portages for unnavigable segments, whereas Florida would have to conclude, being

                                              14
governed by PPL Montana, that segmentation was necessary and that portages precluded

a finding of navigability. Such an outcome would place the States on unequal footing

and would, indeed, challenge the supremacy of federal law and the equal application of

Supreme Court cases to the States.

       The dissenting opinion, in addressing this unacceptable inequality, conflates its

discussion of federal question jurisdiction over issues of navigability for title with the

substantive question of who has title to particular riverbeds. This confusion obscures the

serious problems that would result if the reasoning of the dissent were adopted as law.

Thus, the opinion suggests that our ruling on jurisdiction is based on the notion that all 50

states must have the same law with respect to land titles. Post, at 38–39. At no point,

however, do we propose or imply such an idea; the States self-evidently possess title to

lands differently from each other. Instead, we reject the arguments advanced by North

Carolina and by the dissenting opinion because they would lead to States having different

jurisdiction over questions of title.     Thus, in our hypothetical discussion of the

Chattahoochee River, the bizarre state of affairs that we seek to avoid is not concerned

with an inequality of land titles or with different States having different substantive

property laws. Our hypothetical is instead intended to highlight that North Carolina’s

position would lead to an inequality of jurisdiction between the courts of two States.

Both North Carolina and the dissenting opinion advocate for a legal paradigm in which

the courts of Georgia can hear questions of a sort forbidden to the courts of Florida, a

truly strange proposition which bears little resemblance to any other aspect of American

jurisprudence.

                                             15
       At bottom, we conclude that the district court did have subject matter jurisdiction

over the issue of navigability for title under 28 U.S.C. § 1331 and therefore did not err in

denying North Carolina’s motion to remand to state court.


                                            III

       On the merits of whether the relevant segment of the Yadkin River was navigable

for title, the district court found that it was not. The court considered whether the

relevant segment was navigable at the time of North Carolina’s statehood in 1789, as

required by PPL Montana. It found that the relevant segment — which the parties agreed

was a 45-mile segment from river miles 233.1 to 279.7 — was characterized by “steep

slopes, narrow valleys, rapids, falls, ledges, and exposed rock.” It also found that pole

boats and flats, the primary means of commercial navigation at statehood, “would have

had difficulty navigating shallow, steep, swift-moving, rocky rivers.” Finally, it observed

that while the historical record from the relevant era was sparse, it nonetheless revealed

both a lack of commercial navigation at statehood and repeated efforts after statehood in

attempting to make the relevant segment navigable. Applying the standard of PPL

Montana — that rivers are navigable “when they are used, or are susceptible of being

used, in their ordinary condition, as highways for commerce, over which trade and travel

are or may be conducted in the customary modes of trade and travel on water,” 132 S. Ct.

at 1228 (quoting The Daniel Ball, 77 U.S. (10 Wall.) at 563) — the district court

concluded that the relevant segment was not navigable at statehood.




                                            16
       North Carolina challenges the manner in which the district court segmented the

river and, in any event, contends that its findings of fact were clearly erroneous. We

address each argument in turn.


                                            A

      On the issue of segmentation, North Carolina’s complaint described the entire

contested stretch of river as the “Relevant Segment” and alleged that it was navigable in

fact. North Carolina now claims that it did not intend its use of the term “Relevant

Segment” to serve as a concession that the entire segment should be considered as a

whole for purposes of determining navigability. But even as it now challenges whether

the district court should have considered the relevant segment as a whole, it does not

propose any alternative segmentation that might have been more appropriate.

      In response, Alcoa claims that North Carolina waived its argument challenging

treatment of the relevant segment as a whole because it failed to raise the issue in the

district court. It notes that North Carolina never objected when Alcoa referred to the

relevant segment as “a single continuous segment” and explained the question as being

whether the segment was navigable in fact at statehood “from one end to the other.” Nor

did North Carolina disagree at trial when Alcoa stated that the parties had stipulated that

the contested area should be considered as one segment.

       Consistent with Alcoa’s observations, the district court’s rulings indicate its

understanding that North Carolina was not challenging the consideration of the segment

as a whole for purposes of resolving the navigability issue. In any event, on the merits of


                                            17
whether the district court erred in treating the entire segment as a single unit for purposes

of determining navigability, we conclude that it did not.

        In PPL Montana, the Supreme Court explained that navigability for title is

determined “on a segment-by-segment basis to assess whether the segment of the river,

under which the riverbed in dispute lies, is navigable or not.” 132 S. Ct. at 1229. In

explaining how an appropriate segment may be selected, the Court stated that a segment

should be “both discrete, as defined by physical features characteristic of navigability or

nonnavigability, and substantial, as a matter of administrability for title purposes.” Id. at

1231.

        While the district court assumed that there was no dispute about the appropriate

segment for consideration, it nonetheless had sufficient evidence before it to support its

treatment of the entire segment as a single entity. One of the experts presented by Alcoa,

Dr. Michael Harvey, a fluvial geomorphologist, specifically testified that the 45-mile

contested area was a proper segment.        In his report, he explained that the geology

supports a division of the Yadkin-Pee Dee River into four segments, one of which is the

contested area. The Upper Yadkin, upstream of the contested area, is underlain by

granitic and metaigneous rocks. The contested area, separated by a fall line from the

Upper Yadkin, is characterized primarily by metavolcanic rocks, which are harder and

more erosion resistant. The Upper Pee Dee River, immediately downstream from the

contested area, contains igneous and metasedimentary rocks. The geology of the river is,

therefore, a physical feature of navigability that supports the segmentation assumed by

the district court.

                                             18
       The evidence also showed that the relevant segment was also appropriately

substantial. Indeed, the fact that Alcoa has now spent decades controlling, developing,

and administering the entire contested area as its own property and as a unit establishes

that the segment is demonstrably administrable for title purposes.

       In disagreeing with the district court’s conclusion that the 45-mile segment should

be considered as a single segment under the standard set forth in PPL Montana, the

dissenting opinion fails to address PPL Montana’s standard for segmentation and the

facts in the record that support the district court’s finding that the segmentation was

appropriate, particularly the testimony on this issue given by Dr. Harvey.               Its

consideration of these facts would make clear that the district court’s segmentation

finding was supported by substantial evidence in the record.

       In short, we conclude that the district court’s treatment of the 45-mile segment as a

single segment was not in error, as the record evidence supports that finding.


                                             B

       As to the district court’s finding that the relevant segment was in fact navigable at

statehood, North Carolina argues that the district court’s findings of fact were clearly

erroneous.

       When reviewing for clear error, we reverse only when we possess a “definite and

firm conviction that a mistake has been committed.” United States v. Hall, 664 F.3d 456,

462 (4th Cir. 2012) (quoting United States v. U.S. Gypsum Co., 333 U.S. 364, 395

(1948)). Moreover, we “should be especially reluctant to set aside a finding based on the


                                            19
trial court’s evaluation of conflicting expert testimony,” as was the case here.         Id.

(quoting Hendricks v. Cent. Reserve Life Ins. Co., 39 F.3d 507, 513 (4th Cir. 1994)).

        When used for title purposes, navigability is determined at the time of statehood

based on the natural and ordinary condition of the body of water. PPL Montana, 132 S.

Ct. at 1228. Thus, courts seeking to determine navigability for title must determine

whether, at statehood, the relevant segment of the river could have been used as a

highway for commerce, by the “customary modes of trade and travel” available at that

time.   Id. at 1233.   The PPL Montana Court explained that portages are generally

sufficient to defeat a finding of navigability because they require transportation over land

rather than over water. Id. at 1231.

        Alcoa presented three expert witnesses who testified as to the nonnavigability of

the relevant segment at the time of North Carolina’s statehood in 1789. Dr. Harvey, a

fluvial geomorphologist, described the river’s geological profile and the challenges this

profile would have presented for navigation.           He explained that the dominant

characteristic of the relevant segment is the Carolina Slate Belt underlying it, which is

composed of rocks that are very hard and very difficult to erode.           The hard and

unerodable nature of the riverbed, he explained, allowed for the river to be steeper than

rivers with softer underlying materials. And this steepness, in turn, contributed to a

greater flow speed of the river, which reached up to 7 feet per second or nearly 5 miles

per hour. Dr. Harvey noted that this speed is considered high velocity for a river and

creates white water.



                                            20
         Dr. Harvey also explained that the relevant segment was characterized by shoals

(or shallow areas) extending over much of its area. Some of the shoals extended for as

long as two miles. And the steep grade of these shoals again increased the velocity of the

river, adversely affecting navigation. Moreover, the shoals contained waterfalls, ledges,

and boulders, and avoiding these obstacles would have been difficult, especially because

of the high speed of the river, which decreased the amount of time that navigators had to

react.

         In addition to shoals, the relevant segment contained at least five named

waterfalls, representing vertical drops of five to seven feet. Dr. Harvey explained that

traveling down these waterfalls would have been extremely difficult and traveling

upstream would have been essentially impossible. And, in another part of the relevant

segment, called the Narrows, Dr. Harvey explained that the river contracted from 1,800

feet in width to 60 feet at its narrowest, where the flow was influenced by sharp rocks and

characterized as turbulent, which would have made traversal extremely difficult and

perhaps impossible even with portages.

         In addition to these structural characteristics, navigation at statehood would also

have been made difficult by the unpredictability of weather conditions. Dr. Harvey

explained that, because of the nature of precipitation in the relevant area of the Yadkin,

flooding could occur at any time without warning, making navigation even more difficult.

         Alcoa also presented Dr. Mark Newell as an expert in marine archaeology, who

testified that the vessels that would have been used in commerce in 1789 were not

suitable for commercial navigation in the relevant segment. He first discussed the dugout

                                             21
canoes used by Native American communities of the region, which were made by

digging out the interior of a tree. He pointed out that these canoes were very unstable and

would have capsized if carrying a heavy load. He also discussed the pole boat, which, he

explained, was also unsuited to commercial navigation of the relevant segment in 1789.

Pole boats ranged from 30 to 70 feet long while only six to seven feet wide and could

carry up to 20,000 pounds of cargo. But they were unable to make the turns needed to

navigate around large obstacles. Moreover, presenting the length of such a vessel to the

current would cause it to capsize. Dr. Newell also explained that, because these boats

could not navigate upriver, they were ill-suited for commerce.

       Finally, Alcoa presented Professor Dan Morrill as an expert on North Carolina

history during the relevant period. Much of his testimony derived from records kept by

the Moravians, a religious group that lived in a tightly knit community in the area of the

relevant segment. The Moravians kept remarkably complete records as an aspect of their

faith, including those of their commercial activity. From those records, Dr. Morrill was

able to gain insight into the facts of contemporary navigation of the Yadkin River. He

stated that in the hundreds of pages that he reviewed, he saw absolutely no reference to

the relevant segment’s use in commerce. Rather, he found that the Moravians transported

their goods to market using wagons, which, according to the records, would often be

taken to the heads of other rivers that the Moravians did use for navigation.          The

Moravians also noted explicitly that there were no navigable waters in the area of the

relevant segment and, more particularly, that the Yadkin was “useless for commerce”

because of its “terrible falls and numerous rocks.”

                                            22
      North Carolina presented one expert, Dr. Larry Tise, who concluded that the

historical evidence showed that the river had in fact been navigated for commerce at

statehood. To reach that conclusion, he relied on records referencing attempts shortly

after statehood to improve the navigability of the relevant segment, but he acknowledged

that, without improvement, the relevant segment was “not passable with safety.” He also

relied on individual accounts of travelers moving along the Yadkin, but those accounts

explicitly noted that their journeys required the use of portages. For instance, Richmond

Pearson, a resident of the area who sought to improve the navigability of the Yadkin,

reported that he “portaged around the Narrows.” And a rumor from that time referred to

the use of the Yadkin to transport tobacco, involving “only seven miles land carriage

round the Narrows of the Yadkin.” Dr. Tise acknowledged that the river at North

Carolina’s statehood was “shoally” and that portage was required. Indeed, he described

the Yadkin River as a “barrier” to navigation.

      Taken in its entirety, the expert testimony about navigability in 1789 amply

supports the district court’s finding that the relevant segment was not navigable at

statehood under PPL Montana.

       Again, as to this finding of fact, the dissenting opinion simply announces its view

of the evidence, without addressing the evidence of record that supports the court’s

finding. In particular, the dissenting opinion fails to acknowledge the testimony of any of

the three expert witnesses that noted that numerous and various portions of the 45-mile

segment were not navigable, where any non-navigable portion would prevent the segment

from satisfying the PPL Montana test. Were it to acknowledge all of the evidence before

                                            23
the district court, the dissenting opinion could hardly conclude that the district court

clearly erred in its relevant factual findings.


                                                  IV

         Because the district court did not clearly err in finding that the relevant segment

was not navigable at statehood, North Carolina cannot claim title to the relevant

segment’s riverbed as an aspect of its sovereignty. In determining the actual titleholder,

N.C. Gen. Stat. § 146-79 assigns the burden of proving title to the contested segment to

Alcoa.     Alcoa undertook to meet its burden in two ways — by relying on North

Carolina’s Real Property Marketable Title Act, id. § 47B-2, to claim title to 99% of the

contested property and by claiming adverse possession as to the remaining 1%.

         North Carolina’s Real Property Marketable Title Act (“MTA”) provides that any

“person . . . who, alone or together with his predecessors in title, shall have been vested

with any estate in real property of record for 30 years or more, shall have a marketable

record title.” N.C. Gen. Stat. § 47B-2(a). The district court found and North Carolina

concedes that Alcoa demonstrated satisfaction of its burden of proof under the statutory

requirements of the MTA. Nonetheless, North Carolina argues that three exceptions

vitiate the proof adduced by Alcoa and vest title in the State, even though none of those

exceptions are included in the MTA’s long list of exceptions.

         First, it argues that the MTA cannot be used with respect to land to which North

Carolina obtained title when acquiring sovereignty. While the legal validity of this

argument is dubious — because North Carolina could have conveyed any such land and


                                                  24
thereafter become subject to the MTA, as “the force” of navigability for title would be

“spent” and the State would be free to convey title, see Corvallis Sand & Gravel Co., 429

U.S. at 371 — it can have no force here. As the district court correctly concluded, North

Carolina did not obtain title to the riverbeds of the relevant segment by virtue of

sovereignty because the relevant segment was not navigable at statehood. Accordingly,

this argument fails.

       Second, North Carolina argues that the MTA does not apply to land subject to

public trust rights. But North Carolina fails to identify any basis for such an exception.

While the text of the MTA does contain a fulsome list of exceptions, none makes mention

of public trust rights. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 47B-3. This is telling, especially since the

Act provides that it is subject “only to such limitations” as listed in the statute and should

be “liberally construed” to ease property owners’ burden in showing good title. Id.

§ 47B-9. Moreover, North Carolina points to no previous case recognizing or applying

such an exception. Finding no support for this argument, we conclude that it too fails.

       Finally, North Carolina argues that the MTA cannot be used against North

Carolina because it is a sovereign. Again, this exception finds no support in the text of

the MTA. Nor would such an exception be consistent with the purposes of the Act. If

the MTA did not apply against North Carolina, the State could simply make a claim to

any real property in the State and rely on § 146-79 to place the burden of showing

ownership on the landowner. For most, this would be impossible, especially when

records have been destroyed, such as by the fire in a Montgomery County courthouse that

consumed some early deeds after statehood.          The real property scheme that North

                                             25
Carolina proposes would thus run directly counter to the purposes of the MTA and to all

norms of real property law. It is therefore not surprising that the North Carolina Supreme

Court, in applying the MTA in a dispute over a State Commission’s ownership of real

property, implicitly assumed that the MTA applies to the State. See Taylor v. Johnston,

224 S.E.2d 567, 579 (N.C. 1976).

       In sum, we affirm the district court’s conclusion that Alcoa proved its title to 99%

of the relevant segment’s riverbed under the MTA.

       The remaining 1% consists of land for which Alcoa, when it began acquiring title

to the riverbed, could find no owner. The district court found that Alcoa met its burden

of proving title to this remaining 1% under adverse possession.

       North Carolina’s law of adverse possession requires a claimant to show “actual,

open, hostile, exclusive, and continuous possession of the land claimed for the

prescriptive period [of 30 years] . . . under known and visible lines and boundaries.”

Merrick v. Peterson, 548 S.E.2d 171, 176 (N.C. Ct. App. 2001); see also N.C. Gen. Stat.

§ 1-35(1) (“The State will not sue any person for . . . any real property . . . by reason of

the right or title of the State to the same . . . [w]hen the person in possession thereof . . .

has been in the adverse possession thereof for thirty years . . .”). Here, there can be little

dispute that Alcoa has satisfied these requirements. For more than 50 years, Alcoa has

openly acted as the sole owner of the riverbed in every respect, controlling access to it

and constructing and maintaining facilities on it.

       Nonetheless, North Carolina argues that Alcoa cannot rely on adverse possession

here because, under N.C. Gen. Stat. Ann. § 1-45.1, “[t]itle to real property held by the

                                              26
State and subject to public trust rights may not be acquired by adverse possession.” As

the district court recognized, however, this statute is not applicable here because North

Carolina cannot show that it held title to the land in question during the time that Alcoa

openly asserted ownership to it. This is not a case in which the State owns land subject to

public trust rights that a private entity is attempting to obtain by adverse possession.

Instead, North Carolina seeks to disrupt a facially valid adverse possession without any

basis for asserting that it was in fact the landowner during the relevant period. Indeed,

there is nothing in the record to preclude the inference that the land Alcoa obtained by

means of adverse possession was privately owned when Alcoa began to occupy it, and

North Carolina would, in such a circumstance, be inserting itself into a property dispute

between private parties with the hope of obtaining property to which it has no legitimate

claim. Such an intervention, unsupported by North Carolina law, would undermine the

valuable role adverse possession plays in settling the ownership of property that has no

clear chain of title.

                                         * * *

       At bottom, we conclude that the district court did not err in concluding that “Alcoa

has title to the bed of the Relevant Segment.” The judgment of the district court is

accordingly

                                                                             AFFIRMED.




                                            27
KING, Circuit Judge, dissenting:

       Unlike my friends in the panel majority and on the district court, I am satisfied that

the disputed 45-mile segment of the majestic Yadkin River belongs to the people of

North Carolina.     I therefore write separately in dissent.    The district court and the

majority — in ruling against the State of North Carolina — have erred in several respects.

To start, the federal court system should not be resolving the garden-variety land title

issues that are presented here. Put succinctly, this declaratory judgment action should be

a state court proceeding and is wanting of a sufficient federal question. Moreover, if

federal jurisdiction exists — as the majority today rules — my good colleagues have

erred in their resolution of the merits, particularly with respect to North Carolina’s

navigability test and its public trust doctrine.

                                               A.

       My disagreement with the majority begins with its ruling that the district court

possessed federal question jurisdiction. A federal civil action can arise under § 1331 of

Title 28 in either of two ways: it can be created under federal law, or it may arise under

state law and yet involve a federal ingredient of sufficient import. The State of North

Carolina’s lawsuit — a quiet title proceeding — is simply a state law claim that fails to

arise under § 1331.

       The basis for federal court jurisdiction has been somewhat of a moving target in

these proceedings. In its notice of removal, Alcoa Power asserted that North Carolina’s

complaint contained a federal constitutional question, i.e., that the State’s title to the


                                               28
Yadkin River and its beds depends on the sovereign interests North Carolina retained at

statehood. Alcoa Power also raised a jurisdictional contention predicated on the Grable

factors — that is to say, North Carolina’s right to relief necessarily depends upon the

resolution of a substantial question of federal law. 1

       In all, three theories of federal question jurisdiction have been propounded and

litigated here.   First, Alcoa Power argued in the district court the proposition that

jurisdiction is provided under the Supreme Court’s decision in Martin v. Waddell’s

Lessee, 41 U.S. 367 (1842). Although the district court mentioned Waddell’s Lessee in

declining to remand, it did not anchor its jurisdictional ruling on that decision. On

appeal, Alcoa Power again maintains that Waddell’s Lessee provides a federal

jurisdictional hook for this litigation, while North Carolina argues to the contrary. The

majority now adopts Waddell’s Lessee as the sole basis for federal jurisdiction.

       The second jurisdictional theory relied on by Alcoa Power is the equal footing

doctrine (the “EFD”). That theory was argued by both sides in the district court and

again on appeal — Alcoa Power in favor of jurisdiction under the EFD, and North

Carolina opposing it. The district court, by order of November 27, 2013, based its

jurisdiction ruling solely on the EFD.        See Jurisdiction Order 3-4.   The majority,

however, has not predicated its jurisdictional ruling on the EFD.


       1
         See Grable & Sons Metal Prods., Inc. v. Darue Eng’g & Mfg., 545 U.S. 308, 314
(2005) (enumerating Grable factors, i.e., that a federal question (1) has been necessarily
raised, (2) is actually disputed, (3) is substantial, and (4) is capable of resolution in
federal court without disrupting federal-state balance).


                                              29
       The third jurisdictional theory espoused by the parties relies on the so-called

Grable factors — briefed and argued by Alcoa Power and contested by North Carolina in

the district court proceedings. The Grable theory was also fully briefed by the parties on

appeal. That theory, however, has not been addressed by either the district court or the

panel majority. Because I dissent on the jurisdictional issue, it is necessary to assess each

of the jurisdictional theories.

                                              1.

       According to the majority, the federal courts possess jurisdiction in this

declaratory judgment quiet title action pursuant to the Supreme Court’s 1842 decision in

Waddell’s Lessee. A state’s ownership of its navigable waters, the majority maintains, is

constitutional in nature — and thus governed by the so-called federal navigability test

(explained further in Part B infra). According to the majority, the Waddell’s Lessee

decision relied “on the post-Constitution sovereignty of a State in treating navigability for

title as a federal question,” rendering North Carolina’s pre-Constitution sovereignty

irrelevant. See supra 12. That contention, however, is incorrect. Writing for the Court

in Waddell’s Lessee, the Chief Justice observed that the Original States became sovereign

“when the revolution took place” — i.e., before ratification of the Constitution — and as

sovereigns those States held an “absolute right to all their navigable waters, and the soils

under them . . . subject only to the rights since [i.e., later or thereafter] surrendered by the

constitution to the general government.” See 41 U.S. at 410 (emphasis added).




                                              30
       In Waddell’s Lessee, the Court did not rely on or even mention a federal

navigability test. Furthermore, the Court did not apply any federal legal principles to its

assessment of the issues. Even more notable is that Waddell’s Lessee has not been relied

upon by any court — at least until today — to support the proposition that, when issues

of land title are presented, the navigability of waters within the Original States must be

solely assessed under a federal navigability test, creating federal jurisdiction. Nor has

that decision been utilized by any tribunal to conclude that the Constitution gave unto the

Thirteen Original States any land titles. That proposition is entirely contrary to those

States having gained land titles as a matter of sovereignty upon cession from the Crown.

       As explained further below, the Constitution has nothing to do with the land

holdings of the Original States. And the only right the Original States surrendered with

respect to navigable waters under the Constitution was a limited navigational servitude.

The Supreme Court has explained that servitude, which is predicated on the Commerce

Clause, in the following terms:

       All navigable waters are under the control of the United States for the
       purpose of regulating and improving navigation, and although the title to
       the shore and submerged soil is in the various states, and individual owners
       under them, it is always subject to the servitude in respect of navigation
       created in favor of the federal government by the constitution.

See Gibson v. United States, 166 U.S. 269, 271-72 (1897); see also U.S. Const. art. I § 8

cl. 3 (empowering Congress “[t]o regulate Commerce . . . among the several States”). 2


       2
         Pursuant to the limited navigational servitude acquired by the federal
government from North Carolina by way of the Constitution, the Federal Power
(Continued)

                                            31
       North Carolina’s fee simple title to its lands — and thus to the waters and

riverbeds of the Yadkin River — did not come from the Constitution or the federal

government. North Carolina has owned the Yadkin River free and clear since 1776 —

before the Revolution — when North Carolina declared its independence from the British

Crown. As a matter of sovereignty, the people of North Carolina acquired title in 1776 to

“all the territories, seas, waters, and harbours, with their appurtenances,” upon declaring

independence from the Crown. See N.C. Const. of 1776, Declaration of Rights para. 25.

And the courts of North Carolina have consistently recognized this proposition as settled,

in fact and in law. The North Carolina Court of Appeals explained the controlling point

in 1983, specifying that, “[u]pon the Declaration of Independence, the people of the

original thirteen states succeeded to all rights of the Crown and became the owners of all

lands within the limits of the state which had not been granted to others.” See State v.

Taylor, 304 S.E.2d 767, 770 (N.C. Ct. App. 1983) (quoting 72 Am. Jur. 2d, States,

Territories, and Dependencies § 66 (1974)).

       The majority, however, has today announced that the fifty States could only have

acquired their titles to navigable waters and the beds beneath those waters by way of the

Constitution.   See supra 10-12.     With respect to the Thirteen Original States, this


Commission — the predecessor of the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission —
authorized the construction of seven dams on the Yadkin River. From north to south,
those are the W. Kerr Scott Dam, operated by the Army’s Corps of Engineers; the High
Rock Dam, the Tuckertown Dam, the Narrows Dam, and the Falls Dam, operated by
Alcoa Power and located within the disputed 45-mile segment; and finally, the Tillery
Dam and the Blewett Falls Dam, licensed to a Duke Energy company.


                                            32
pronouncement is erroneous. The Thirteen Original States — including North Carolina

— gained fee simple titles to their lands and waters by usurping the Crown, years before

forming the Union and ratifying the Constitution. And the Constitution itself is silent

with respect to — and had no adverse impact on — the land titles of the Thirteen Original

States.

          Importantly, our own precedent provides additional support for North Carolina’s

ownership of the Yadkin River and its riverbeds. In 1954, we affirmed a decision of the

Eastern District of North Carolina that had recognized North Carolina’s ownership of its

waters and their beds. As the district court related therein:

          Originally the State of North Carolina was the owner of soil covered by
          water within its boundaries, whether that water be navigable or non-
          navigable.

See Swan Island Club, Inc. v. White, 114 F. Supp. 95, 99 (E.D.N.C. 1953), aff’d sub nom.

Swan Island Club, Inc. v. Yarbrough, 209 F.2d 698 (4th Cir. 1954). The astute district

judge explained in his Swan Island decision that “lands held by the State in trust for all its

citizens . . . could in no way be obtained by an individual, by grant, deed, judgment, or

otherwise.” Id. And Chief Judge Parker’s affirmance, in our Swan Island decision,

supports the land ownership proposition enunciated in North Carolina’s Declaration of

1776 — North Carolina is the owner of its waters and the lands beneath them. On this

record, North Carolina has never surrendered or conveyed its ownership of the disputed

45-mile segment of the Yadkin River and the riverbeds beneath it to anyone — including

Alcoa Power and its predecessors — and the State yet holds those ownership rights.


                                             33
                                              2.

                                              a.

       Surprisingly, the majority today has entirely abandoned the district court’s reliance

on the EFD as the jurisdictional hook in this litigation. In its Jurisdiction Order, the

district court concluded as follows with respect to the EFD:

       Because the later-admitted states are in fact co-equal sovereigns under the
       Constitution to the original thirteen . . . there is no basis upon which to
       suppose that the [EFD] requires any difference in treatment as between the
       states when deciding questions of navigability for determining riverbed
       title.

See Jurisdiction Order 3-4. Additionally, the federal navigability test is inextricably

intertwined with the EFD for the purpose of land title determinations. See PPL Mont.,

LLC v. Montana, 565 U.S. 576, 592 (2012) (“[The federal navigability test] has been

used as well to determine questions of title to water beds under the [EFD].”).

Importantly, Alcoa Power has consistently relied on the EFD to support the applicability

of the federal navigability test in this litigation, arguing that “the [EFD] could not operate

coherently if . . . the 13 original states were each free to develop their own rules as to

what rivers were navigable for title purposes at statehood.” See Resp. Br. of Alcoa Power

28.   In these circumstances, a more comprehensive discussion of the EFD and its

inapplicability as a jurisdictional hook is mandated.




                                             34
       The EFD arises from the New States Clause of Article IV of the Constitution. 3 It

was initially discussed in the Supreme Court in 1831 in a concurring opinion in Cherokee

Nation v. Georgia, 30 U.S. 1, 31 (1831) (Baldwin, J., concurring). Four years later, the

EFD was first addressed there in a majority opinion.           See Mayor, Aldermen, and

Inhabitants of City of New Orleans v. De Armas, 34 U.S. 224, 235 (1835). Pursuant to

the EFD, a newly admitted state comes “into the union on an equal footing with the rest.”

See Pollard v. Hagan, 44 U.S. 212, 216 (1845). 4 The EFD thus imbues the newly

admitted states with the same “political rights and sovereignty” enjoyed by the other

States, ensuring that the States remain “alike in power, dignity, and authority.” See 81A

C.J.S. States § 8, Westlaw (database updated Dec. 2016). But the EFD did not — and

could not — divest North Carolina of its land titles. That is because North Carolina is not

a newly admitted state, it is an Original State. And that distinction is of great significance

with respect to our jurisdictional inquiry.

       When a new state comes into the Union, the title to the navigable waters therein,

and the lands beneath those waters, pass from the United States to the newly admitted

state. See PPL Mont., 565 U.S. at 591 (“Upon Statehood, the State gains title within its


       3
        The New States Clause provides that “[n]ew States may be admitted by the
Congress into this Union.” See U.S. Const. art. IV, § 3, cl. 1.
       4
         It appears that the phrase “equal footing” — which is not found in the
Constitution — may have had its genesis in the Northwest Ordinance of 1787. Pursuant
thereto, new states formed out of the Northwest Territory and admitted to the Union
would be entitled to “share in the federal councils on an equal footing with the original
States.” See 1 Stat. 50, ch. 8 n.(a) (1789).


                                              35
borders to the beds of waters then navigable . . . .”). For example, when one sovereign (a

new state) replaces another (the United States), the new sovereign (the new state) gains

title only to those lands therein that the former sovereign (the United States) held in that

capacity. As a result, the federal navigability test has been used to determine whether

title to waters — and the lands beneath those waters — remains with the United States or

passes to the newly admitted state. Accordingly, if the federal navigability test applies

here, a federal question may exist. As the Supreme Court explained in 1935,

       Since the effect upon the title to such lands is the result of federal action in
       admitting a state to the Union, the question, whether the waters within the
       state under which the lands lie are navigable or nonnavigable, is a federal,
       not a local, one.

See United States v. Oregon, 295 U.S. 1, 14 (1935). As explained below, however, the

federal navigability test is inapplicable here.

                                              b.

       Pursuant to the foregoing, the applicability of the EFD to North Carolina is

undermined by one controlling fact — North Carolina is an Original State. The EFD — a

creature of the federal judiciary — did not exist until nearly sixty years after the State of

North Carolina obtained its title to the Yadkin River. And the EFD was not even

identified by the judiciary until forty-two years after North Carolina joined the federal

Union. In those circumstances, the EFD does not apply to North Carolina’s ownership

rights in its waters and riverbeds.

       To further emphasize the proposition that the EFD does not give rise to a federal

question, it is uncontroverted that the State of North Carolina replaced the English Crown

                                              36
in 1776 as the sovereign within its borders. And the United States did not exist until

1789. Apart from the navigational servitude, the United States has never held any rights

to the waters or riverbeds in dispute. Resultantly, the commentators have consistently

endorsed the proposition that the EFD “has no application in the thirteen original states.”

See Peter N. Davis, State Ownership of Beds of Inland Waters — A Summary and

Reexamination, 57 Neb. L. Rev. 665, 667 n.10 (1978); see also, e.g., David C. Slade et

al., Putting the Public Trust Doctrine to Work 18 (2d ed. 1997) (“Because the Federal

government never had original jurisdiction over the trust lands and waters of the Thirteen

Original States, it never conveyed these lands to any of [those States]. Thus, no Federal

question arises as to what lands were held in trust by any of the original States when they

formed the Union.”). 5 In fact, one of the commentators sponsoring that conclusion was

relied upon by Justice Kennedy in his PPL Montana opinion. See 565 U.S. at 603 (citing

Slade, supra, at 3-8, 15-24).

       Nevertheless, the Jurisdiction Order of the district court ploughed an entirely new

furrow by concluding that the EFD applies to the waters and riverbeds of North Carolina.




       5
         Commentator Peter N. Davis has explained further that, in addition to being
inapplicable to the Original Thirteen States, the EFD would not apply “in their
derivatives (Maine and West Virginia), in states which formerly were independent
nations (Hawaii and Texas), or in present federal territories (District of Columbia).” See
Davis, supra at 667 n.10. As the Supreme Court has recognized, however, the EFD
nevertheless applies to Texas because the Lone Star State consented to its admission to
the Union “on an equal footing with the original States in all respects.” See United States
v. Texas, 339 U.S. 707, 713 (1950) (internal quotation marks omitted).


                                            37
See Jurisdiction Order 3-4. I readily reject that proposition, and I am pleased that my

good colleagues in the majority have also declined to support it.

                                             c.

       In response to my discussion of the EFD, the majority opines that I am sponsoring

a “bizarre state of affairs” where the Thirteen Original States assess navigability for title

purposes under their own laws, while the later admitted states must apply the federal

navigability test. See supra 14. The majority deems it unacceptable that the Original

States are entitled to resort to state law and state courts to answer questions of

navigability for title, but that the later admitted states answer the same questions by

applying federal law, which may result in the exercise of federal jurisdiction. In the

majority’s view, this distinction creates an impermissible jurisdictional inequality.

       That outcome, however, simply flows from how the Original States and the newly

admitted states came into the Union. Acknowledging the different paths of the several

states into the Union, the Supreme Court has recognized that “[s]ome States when they

entered the Union had within their boundaries tracts of land belonging to the Federal

Government; others were sovereigns of their soil.” See United States v. Texas, 339 U.S.

707, 716 (1950). As a result — and as explained above — the transfer of land titles from

the federal government to newly admitted states is governed by the federal navigability

test as it relates to the EFD. See Oregon ex rel. State Land Br. v. Corvallis Sand &

Gravel Co., 429 U.S. 363, 371 (1977). That principle does not apply to the Original

Thirteen States, however, because those States did not receive land titles from the federal


                                             38
government — they “were sovereigns of their soil” from the very beginning. Texas, 339

U.S. at 716.   By ruling otherwise, however, the majority has today divested North

Carolina of land titles it has owned since 1776.

       After land titles pass from the federal government to a newly admitted state,

questions relating to those titles turn on the application of state law — a proposition the

Supreme Court recognized in its Corvallis decision. The Court therein explained that the

EFD does not “provide a basis for federal law to supersede the State’s application of its

own law in deciding title to the [contested] land” because it does “not operate after [the

date of entry into the Union] to determine what effect on titles the movement of [a] river

might have.” See Corvallis, 429 U.S. at 371. Any inequality is thus dispelled, as the

newly admitted states are afforded the same “political standing and sovereignty” afforded

the Original Thirteen States. See Texas, 339 U.S. at 716.

       Nevertheless, according to the majority, the foregoing principles result in a “legal

paradigm in which the courts of Georgia [an Original State] can hear questions of a sort

forbidden to the courts of Florida [a newly admitted state].” See supra 15 (emphasis

added). That is simply not the case. The only “inequality” resulting from the application

of these principles is that an Original State may possess a land title that a newly admitted

state could never inherit from the United States. Such an outcome, however, does not

offend the EFD. The Supreme Court has concluded that “[t]here has never been equality

among the States” with respect to economic standing or stature. See Texas, 339 U.S. at

716. In fact, “the United States has the power to divest a future State of its equal footing


                                            39
title to submerged lands.” See United States v. Alaska, 521 U.S. 1, 5 (1997). 6 Simply

put, the Supreme Court has determined that the EFD does not mandate equality of the

several States in the manner posited by the majority.

                                             d.

       Also of concern today are other issues that lurk in the background of the

majority’s ruling. Without question, the Thirteen Original States usurped the British

Crown and gained title to those lands that George III then held in sovereignty. But the

majority today rules that the federal navigability test applies retroactively — in an ex post

facto fashion (from at least 1842 back to 1789) — and divests North Carolina of the fee

simple titles to the Yadkin River and its riverbeds that the State acquired in 1776. The

Supreme Court has never ruled that the federal navigability test applies in such a context,

and I am convinced that it would never do so.

       Today’s panel majority — and Alcoa Power as well — would have the federal

navigability test determine title to all navigable waters and their riverbeds. Yet several

judicial decisions from the Original States show that some of those States have created

and applied their own tests for navigability, undermining the notion that the federal



       6
           Similarly, in its 1926 decision in United States v. Holt State Bank, the Supreme
Court recognized that, “under the constitutional principle of equality among the several
states the title to the bed of Mud Lake [in Minnesota] then passed to the state, if the lake
was navigable, and if the bed had not already been disposed of by the United States.”
See 270 U.S. 49, 55 (1926) (emphasis added). Methods of such disposal include, for
example, “reserving lands for a particular national purpose such as a wildlife refuge or
. . . an Indian reservation.” See Idaho v. United States, 533 U.S. 262, 273 (2001).


                                             40
navigability test must always govern the inquiry.        On one hand, New York and

Pennsylvania have actually elected to use the federal navigability test.         See, e.g.,

Fairchild v. Kraemer, 11 A.D.2d 232, 235 (N.Y. App. Div. 1960); Cleveland &

Pittsburgh R.R. Co. v. Pittsburgh Coal Co., 176 A. 7, 9 (Pa. 1935). But even then, New

York diverges somewhat from the federal test, adopting the position that, “[i]n order to be

navigable, it is not necessary that [a river] should be deep enough to admit the passage of

boats at all portions of the stream.” See Danes v. State, 113 N.E. 786, 787 (N.Y. 1916).

On the other hand, Maryland, Massachusetts, and New Jersey continue to use the colonial

era ebb-and-flow test, which finds its genesis in English common law. See, e.g., Wagner

v. City of Balt., 124 A.2d 815, 820 (Md. 1956); Brosnan v. Gage, 133 N.E. 622, 624

(Mass. 1921); Cobb v. Davenport, 32 N.J.L. 369, 378 (N.J. 1867).

       I am also concerned that the majority’s ruling will result in a sea change with

respect to judicial decisions that have already recognized North Carolina’s ownership of

its waters and the lands thereunder. From my viewpoint, the majority’s ruling could

cloud land titles in North Carolina. And, of course, such land title concerns should be

addressed in the state courts of North Carolina. A similar result was avoided in 1988 by

the Supreme Court’s decision in Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Mississippi, 484 U.S. 469

(1988). Writing for the majority, Justice White declined to strictly apply the federal

navigability test, deciding instead that title to non-navigable tidewaters passed to

Mississippi — a newly admitted state — when it entered the Union. Explaining the

Court’s receptiveness of reasoned flexibility, Justice White acknowledged that titles


                                            41
“have been adjudicated based on the ebb-and-flow rule for tidelands.” Id. at 483. But his

opinion then recognized the settled expectations of the State, commenting that

       [W]e cannot know how many titles would have to be adjusted if the scope
       of the public trust [is] now found to be limited to lands beneath navigable
       tidal waters only. If States do not own lands under nonnavigable tidal
       waters, many state land grants based on our earlier decisions might now be
       invalid.

Id.

       Simply put, the majority has approved an approach that is contrary to the Phillips

Petroleum decision.      By so doing, the majority may well upset the reasonable

expectations of the people of North Carolina, who have been heretofore entitled to rely

on their State’s legal principles and on our precedent in Swan Island.

                                              3.

       Assuming, however, that Waddell’s Lessee or the EFD provides a federal

ingredient for jurisdiction in the district court, this civil action would still have to fall

within that small category of “arising under” cases contemplated by the Grable decision

and its progeny. That is, the federal ingredient can provide a basis for jurisdiction if that

ingredient satisfies four requirements: (1) it has been necessarily raised, (2) it is actually

disputed, (3) it is substantial, and (4) it is capable of resolution in federal court without

disrupting the federal-state balance approved by Congress. See Gunn v. Minton, 133 S.

Ct. 1059, 1065 (2013). Again, each of the Grable factors must be satisfied in order for a

federal court to possess jurisdiction over what is otherwise a state law claim. See, e.g.,

Flying Pigs, LLC v. RRAJ Franchising, LLC, 757 F.3d 177, 182-83 (4th Cir. 2014).


                                             42
       Neither the district court nor the majority have grappled with the Grable decision

and its jurisdictional principles. Alcoa Power and the State of North Carolina — along

with the amici Yadkin Riverkeeper, Inc., and American Whitewater — have nevertheless

briefed those principles. Having carefully assessed the Grable factors, I am satisfied that

an exercise of federal court jurisdiction would yet be inappropriate. 7

                                             4.

       In these circumstances, there is a lack of federal question jurisdiction in this

litigation under either Waddell’s Lessee or the EFD. And federal question jurisdiction

plainly does not flow — in my view — from the Grable factors. The federal court in

eastern North Carolina therefore lacked jurisdiction to resolve this quiet title dispute.

This lawsuit should thus be returned to the state courts of North Carolina, to be decided

on the basis of the applicable law of the Old North State.

                                             B.

       Before turning to the merits of this appeal, it is appropriate to briefly discuss the

background of the federal navigability test for waterways, as well as North Carolina’s

comparable navigability test. As the majority would have it, the federal navigability test


       7
         If either the district court or the majority had assessed the Grable factors, they
would also have found federal court jurisdiction wanting. Briefly put, none of the Grable
factors are satisfied by this litigation: (1) the federal issue is not necessarily raised here
because several other legal theories support the State of North Carolina’s quiet title
action; (2) the federal question is not actually disputed in this litigation because the
parties do not contest the validity, construction, or effect of any federal law; (3) there is
no substantial federal interest implicated by this matter; and (4) the exercise of
federal court jurisdiction would seriously disrupt the federal-state balance.


                                             43
with respect to riverbed title in the newly admitted states, as explained in PPL Montana,

is also applicable to the Thirteen Original States. The federal navigability test, as spelled

out by the Supreme Court in 1870 in The Daniel Ball, is as follows:

       Those rivers must be regarded as public navigable rivers in law which are
       navigable in fact. And they are navigable in fact when they are used, or are
       susceptible of being used, in their ordinary condition, as highways for
       commerce, over which trade and travel are or may be conducted in the
       customary modes of trade and travel on water.

See 77 U.S. 557, 563 (1870). Generally, the federal navigability test has been used to

determine whether a river is within the scope of congressional regulatory authority under

the Commerce Clause. See, e.g., Gibson, 166 U.S. at 271-72 (“All navigable waters are

under the control of the United States for the purpose of regulating and improving

navigation . . . .”). That test also applies, however, to an assessment of riverbed title

under the EFD, as the Court explained in PPL Montana.              In utilizing the federal

navigability test for such a title assessment, PPL Montana requires consideration of a

river and its riverbeds “on a segment-by-segment basis to assess whether the segment . . .

under which the riverbed in dispute lies, is navigable or not.” See 565 U.S. at 593.

       But PPL Montana has specifically reserved to the States, in the words of Justice

Kennedy, the “residual power to determine the scope of the public trust over waters

within their borders.” See 565 U.S. at 604. The Court thereby explicitly authorized the

States to develop their own navigability tests for purposes of the public trust doctrine.

North Carolina has long since developed its own navigability test for public trust




                                             44
purposes, and the distinctions between the North Carolina’s test and the federal test are

important here.

       Under North Carolina law, as the Supreme Court of North Carolina has explained,

a river’s navigability has been assessed — since at least 1886 — “by a more practical test

of [its] capacity to float boats used as instruments of commerce, in the interchange of

commodities, and large enough for the purpose.” See Broadnax v. Baker, 55 Am. Rep.

633, 681 (N.C. 1886). More than a century later, in 1995, the high court of North

Carolina further explained the State’s navigability test:

       [I]f a body of water in its natural condition can be navigated by watercraft,
       it is navigable in fact and, therefore, navigable in law, even if it has not
       been used for such purpose.

See Gwathmey v. State ex rel. Dep’t of Envtl., Health, & Nat. Res., 464 S.E.2d 674, 682

(N.C. 1995).

       On its face, North Carolina’s navigability test is somewhat similar to the federal

navigability test, in that both tests weigh the question of whether waters have been or can

be used by watercraft. Two important distinctions exist, however, between those tests.

First, although the federal navigability test requires navigation for commercial purposes,

the North Carolina test only requires some use by watercraft, which may include

“pleasure boating.” See Gwathmey, 464 S.E.2d at 682 (quoting State v. Twiford, 48 S.E.

586, 588 (N.C. 1904)). Second, the federal test assesses the navigability of discrete

segments of a waterway, thus permitting minor interruptions in a river’s navigability to

render a specific segment non-navigable.          Under the North Carolina test, however,


                                             45
navigable waters, according to the State’s high court in 1886, “lose not their navigability,

because intercepted by falls, when above and below them, the waters can be thus used for

the purpose of commerce for long distances.” See Broadnax, 55 Am. Rep. at 681.

       The federal navigability test — the only test utilized by the district court and the

majority — favored Alcoa Power’s position in this litigation because minor interruptions

in navigability were deemed to render non-navigable the entirety of the disputed 45-mile

segment. Further, in assessing the navigability of the Yadkin River, the lower court only

evaluated the commercial uses of that splendid River.          On the other hand, North

Carolina’s navigability test strongly favors the State’s position in these proceedings

because, under that test, minor interruptions in navigability will not undermine the

proposition that the entirety of a river is navigable. And if the district court had utilized

North Carolina’s navigability test, it would have considered the non-commercial uses of

the River instead of confining its analysis to commercial uses only.

       The district court thus fatally erred in resorting solely to the federal navigability

test to assess North Carolina’s title to the Yadkin River and its riverbeds. In the context

of this quiet title action, the federal navigability test is not applicable to the rivers of

North Carolina. Rather, the federal test, as explained further below, applies only in the

newly admitted states. North Carolina’s own navigability test and the related state law

principles apply here.




                                             46
                                              C.

       Because the panel majority has resolved the jurisdictional issue in favor of Alcoa

Power, I turn to the majority’s resolution of the merits. Put succinctly, its assessments

thereof are erroneous in multiple respects. Those errors find their genesis in the two

primary orders of the district court that underlie the merits of this appeal: (1) the court’s

Navigability Order of May 6, 2015; and (2) the court’s Summary Judgment Order of

September 28, 2015. I will assess those orders in some depth, beginning with the

Navigability Order.

                                              1.

       After concluding that it possessed jurisdiction, the district court conducted a two-

day hearing — on April 21 and 22, 2015 — on the question of whether the Yadkin River

was navigable at statehood. During that hearing, the parties presented evidence with

respect to the navigability of the disputed 45-mile segment of the River.              At the

conclusion of the hearing, the court ruled from the bench that, under the federal

navigability test, the entirety of the disputed segment was not navigable at statehood. 8


       8
           By way of geographical and historical background, I recite the following:

       The Yadkin River rises in western North Carolina on the eastern slope of the Blue
Ridge Mountains near Blowing Rock, at approximately river mile 433 (with the mouth of
the Pee Dee River — located at the Atlantic Ocean near Georgetown, South Carolina —
being river mile 0). The Yadkin is part of the Yadkin Pee Dee River Basin, the second
largest river basin in North Carolina. That River Basin contains approximately 5800
miles of streams and 23,000 acres of lakes, spans 21 counties and 93 municipalities, and
covers more than 7000 square miles of the Tar Heel State. The disputed 45-mile segment
begins near river mile 280, about 10 miles north of where the Yadkin River meets the
(Continued)

                                              47
       Two weeks later, on May 6, 2015, the district court issued its Navigability Order,

wherein the court explained the bases for its navigability ruling against North Carolina.

The Navigability Order is fatally flawed for three primary reasons, that is:

       •      The district court should have applied North Carolina’s navigability
              test to assess whether the Yadkin River and its riverbeds in the
              disputed 45-mile segment were within the scope of the public trust
              doctrine;

       •      The court failed to conduct a segment-by-segment analysis of the
              disputed segment, consistent with the Supreme Court’s PPL
              Montana decision; and

       •      The court erred in its assessment of the navigability of the disputed
              segment.

We review a district court’s factual findings for clear error, and we assess its legal

conclusions de novo. See United States v. Hall, 664 F.3d 456, 462 (4th Cir. 2012).

                                             a.

       The Navigability Order and our panel majority have focused solely on whether the

Yadkin River is navigable under the federal navigability test. By utilizing the federal test


South Yadkin River, and ends at river mile 233, shortly before the Yadkin joins the Pee
Dee. Within the disputed segment are four dams and related reservoirs that were, for the
most part, constructed in the first half of the twentieth century to power aluminum
smelters and electric utilities. At river mile 253 is High Rock Lake — the largest of the
reservoirs and the site of the High Rock Dam, which was completed in 1927. Nine miles
downstream, at river mile 244, is the Tuckertown Reservoir, the site of the Tuckertown
Dam and the newest of the reservoirs, having been completed in 1962. Next, at river
mile 235, lies Badin Lake, contained by the Narrows Dam and opened in 1917, making it
the oldest of these reservoirs. At river mile 233 is the smallest of the four reservoirs —
the Falls Reservoir — and the home of the Falls Dam, which was completed in 1919. In
claiming the disputed segment, Alcoa Power purports to own those four dams and
reservoirs and the riverbeds and lands thereunder.


                                            48
only, the majority and the lower court have been able to ignore North Carolina’s public

trust doctrine, which turns on an application of the State’s navigability test. In failing to

recognize and apply the public trust doctrine — and thereby subjecting the Yadkin River

and its riverbeds to private ownership — the majority and the lower court have

necessarily concluded that the Yadkin is not subject to the public trust.

       The public trust doctrine places upon the fifty States a duty to safeguard the rights

of their citizens, both current and future, to certain resources contained therein —

including their navigable waters and the lands thereunder. In 1894, the Supreme Court

explained the public trust doctrine in these terms:

       [T]he navigable waters and the soils under them . . . shall not be disposed of
       piecemeal to individuals, as private property, but shall be held for the
       purpose of being ultimately administered and dealt with for the public
       benefit by the state.

See Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U.S. 1, 49-50 (1894).

       Of great importance, the Supreme Court of North Carolina has adopted and

consistently applied the public trust doctrine. In 1995, that court recognized that

       the public trust doctrine operates as a rule of construction creating a
       presumption that the General Assembly did not intend to convey lands in a
       manner that would impair public trust rights.

See Gwathmey, 464 S.E.2d at 684. Because of the public trust doctrine, Alcoa Power

could not have acquired title to the Yadkin River and its riverbeds except by an express

conveyance made by the General Assembly. Id. And it is elementary that a State cannot

shirk its responsibility under the public trust doctrine to protect trust properties such as

the Yadkin and its riverbeds. See Ill. Cent. R. Co. v. Illinois, 146 U.S. 387, 453 (1892);

                                             49
see also, e.g., United States v. 1.58 Acres of Land, 523 F. Supp. 120, 124 (D. Mass. 1981)

(“The trust is of such a nature that it can be held only by the sovereign, and can only be

destroyed by the destruction of the sovereign.”).

       The Supreme Court has long recognized that the States “have the authority to

define the limits of the lands held in public trust and to recognize private rights in such

lands as they see fit.” See Phillips Petroleum, 484 U.S. at 475. As a result, for purposes

of the public trust doctrine, a river’s navigability should be assessed under the state’s own

navigability test:

       Application of the federal title test does not completely determine which
       natural resources are subject to the public trust doctrine. . . . [T]o
       determine whether the public trust doctrine applies to a waterway, states
       may use their own navigability tests.

See 1 State Envtl. L. § 4:11, Westlaw (database updated Jan. 2016). As explained

heretofore, North Carolina’s navigability test strongly favors the State’s position in this

litigation.

       Importantly, the General Assembly explicitly declared in 1885 that the Yadkin

River is a public highway of the State under the public trust doctrine:

       That the Yadkin river from the northern boundary line of the county of
       Davidson to its junction with the Great Pee Dee river, and the Great Pee
       Dee from said junction to the boundary line of the State of South Carolina,
       be and the same are hereby declared public highways for the free passage of
       boats, flats, rafts and other means of transportation.

See 1885 N.C. Sess. Laws ch. 212 § 1, reproduced at J.A. 140-41.              That statutory

declaration confirms beyond peradventure that the Yadkin River — and thus the disputed

45-mile segment thereof — is yet a public highway protected by North Carolina’s public

                                             50
trust doctrine. As a result, the Yadkin and its riverbeds could only have been acquired by

Alcoa Power through “a special grant from the General Assembly expressly conveying

lands underlying navigable waters in fee simple and without reservation of any public

trust rights.”   See Gwathmey, 464 S.E.2d at 684 (emphasis omitted).             The General

Assembly has never made such a special grant with respect to the disputed segment —

and that fact is controlling here.

       By ignoring the public trust doctrine, the lower court and the majority have

allowed private interests to usurp the public trust rights of the people of North Carolina.

In the amicus submission of the interested law professors, we have been implored to

uphold the rights of the public:

       This Court should not permit private interests in vital public resources to
       trump the rights of public beneficiaries in this sovereign trust . . . . There is
       much more at stake in this case than title to one stretch of river.

See Amicus Curiae Br. of Law Professors 19.            To ensure the protection of North

Carolina’s public trust rights with respect to the Yadkin River, the district court was

obliged to apply North Carolina’s navigability test and to assess the applicability of the

public trust doctrine to the disputed 45-mile segment thereof. By failing to make that

assessment, the Navigability Order — as a matter of law — is fatally flawed. 9


       9
         To the extent Alcoa Power contends on appeal that North Carolina has somehow
conceded in certain court and administrative proceedings that Alcoa Power owns lands
protected by the public trust, we should readily reject that contention as well. Again,
public trust lands can only be conveyed by a special grant of the General Assembly. As a
result, any purported concessions by representatives of the State — before any tribunal or
administrative agency — cannot and do not constitute the special grant mandated by
(Continued)

                                              51
                                            b.

         Assuming the Supreme Court’s PPL Montana decision applies here, the

Navigability Order erred in failing to conduct a segment-by-segment analysis of the

disputed 45-mile segment of the Yadkin River. This error also fatally undermines — as a

matter of law — the Navigability Order. In PPL Montana, the Supreme Court explained

that a court should analyze “the river on a segment-by-segment basis.” See 132 S. Ct. at

1229. Accordingly, a court conducting a navigability analysis must determine “the exact

point at which navigability may be deemed to end.” Id. (quoting United States v. Utah,

283 U.S. 64, 90 (1931)).      As Justice Kennedy recognized in PPL Montana, “[t]he

segment-by-segment approach to navigability for title is well settled, and it should not be

disregarded.” Id.

         Pursuant to PPL Montana, the disputed 45-mile segment was erroneously assessed

by the district court in its entirety — as one single segment. That is, the Navigability

Order incorrectly evaluated the disputed segment as a whole.         This single-segment

method was plainly erroneous — as a matter of law — and a proper segment-by-segment

approach would have found the discrete points where navigability ended and then again

began.




North Carolina law. Put another way, Alcoa Power cannot predicate its ownership of
public trust lands on alleged concessions by North Carolina’s counsel or other
representatives. That contention should be summarily rejected as frivolous and
immaterial.


                                            52
       The Navigability Order was also erroneously based on the proposition that the

parties had stipulated that the navigability of the disputed 45-mile segment was an all-or-

nothing proposition. See Navigability Order 2 (“The parties stipulated that the relevant

segment for purposes of navigability is the 45-river-mile segment of the historic riverbed

lying between River Miles (RM) 233.1 and 279.7, with the mouth of the Pee Dee being

RM 0.”). No such stipulation exists in the record, however, further undermining the

court’s navigability ruling. Although the parties sometimes referred to the disputed

segment of the Yadkin River as the “Relevant Segment,” that reference was clearly a

term of convenience for the parties and the court. That fact is evidenced by the district

court’s Final Pretrial Order of February 2, 2015, which identified the “Relevant Segment”

as follows:

       The Relevant Segment of the Yadkin River is the approximately 45-river-
       mile segment (37 miles as the crow flies) of the historic riverbed now
       within the Yadkin Hydroelectric Project . . . .

See Final Pretrial Order ¶ 4. That provision of the Final Pretrial Order was obviously

definitional. It was not a stipulation of the parties that would in any way relieve the court

of its obligation to adhere to applicable legal principles and conduct the segment-by-

segment analysis mandated by the Supreme Court.

       By using the all-or-nothing approach, however, the Navigability Order

erroneously concluded that the disputed 45-mile segment was not navigable in any

respect because minor portions thereof — specifically the 3.2 mile portion historically

known as the Narrows and the Falls — were considered as subject to short interruptions


                                             53
in navigability.   I agree with the proposition emphasized by the amicus American

Whitewater, however, that,

       [i]n so concluding, the district court contravened the primary holding of
       PPL Montana that analysis of a river’s navigability for purposes of
       riverbed title must examine each topographically-distinct reach separately,
       in order to determine “the exact point at which navigability may be deemed
       to end.”

See Amicus Curiae Br. of Am. Whitewater 17-18 (quoting PPL Montana, 132 S. Ct. at

1229). The Navigability Order thus fatally erred — again as a matter of law — in its

failure to apply PPL Montana’s segment-by-segment analysis. 10

                                             c.

       Third, even if the federal navigability test applies here, the Navigability Order

failed to properly apply that test. In assessing the navigability of the Yadkin River, that

Order failed to accept compelling evidence showing that the Yadkin was navigable at

statehood, regardless of which navigability test is applied.



       10
          According to the majority, the Navigability Order found that the disputed 45-
mile segment should be considered as a single segment of the Yadkin River, a
proposition supported by Dr. Michael Harvey — one of Alcoa Power’s experts. The
Navigability Order does not feature any findings on the segmentation issue, however. It
wholly relies on the so-called stipulation — rejected by North Carolina — that the
disputed segment must be considered as a whole. Nor would Harvey’s evidence support
a finding that the disputed segment should be assessed as a single segment of the Yadkin
under PPL Montana. Harvey merely opined that Alcoa Power’s segmentation contention
was proper because “[t]he state defined it as such, but there is [a] geologic basis for it.”
J.A. 361. Harvey’s statement in that regard, however, does not comport with the mandate
of PPL Montana, because he fails to identify the discrete points where navigability
begins and ends.



                                             54
      Waters that are legally navigable are also factually navigable, “[a]nd they are

navigable in fact when they are used, or are susceptible to being used, in their

ordinary condition, as highways for commerce, over which trade and travel are or may be

conducted in the customary modes of trade and travel on water.” Utah, 283 U.S. at 76.

In its Utah decision in 1931, the Supreme Court explained that the federal navigability

test is not concerned with the extent to which the waters are used for commerce. Instead,

that test is concerned with evidence that shows actual use, which the Court characterized

as the “most persuasive” evidence of navigability. Id. at 82. Even infrequent or limited

use of waterways may be sufficient evidence of navigability. 11

      North Carolina presented evidence at the April 2015 hearing of the actual historic

use of the Yadkin River, the type of evidence that the Utah decision identified as being

“most persuasive.” See 283 U.S. at 82. First, the State’s evidence was that, in the 1790s,

Richmond Pearson — a hero of the American Revolution and a merchant — navigated

the entirety of the Yadkin River beginning at Wilkesboro (downriver from the Yadkin’s

origins near Blowing Rock). See, e.g., J.A. 555. Wilkesboro is more than 100 miles

      11
         In its Utah decision, the Supreme Court explained that “[t]he extent of existing
commerce is not the test” to be applied when assessing a waterway’s navigability. See
Utah, 283 U.S. at 82. Instead, the Court explained the applicable inquiry as follows:

      The evidence of the actual use of streams, and especially of extensive and
      continued use for commercial purposes may be most persuasive, but, where
      conditions of exploration and settlement explain the infrequency or limited
      nature of such use, the susceptibility to use as a highway of commerce may
      still be satisfactorily proved.

Id.


                                            55
upstream from the disputed segment. Pearson was able to navigate well into South

Carolina, several miles downstream from the disputed segment, with minimal need for

portage. See, e.g., id. at 288-90.

       The State’s evidence also proved that Henry Deberry — a member of the General

Assembly — reported to the Assembly in 1796 that the Yadkin River “[h]as been

Navigated by Boats.” See J.A. 757. Additionally, the State’s evidence proved that part

of the disputed 45-mile segment was used to transport tobacco in the 1790s, as observed

by Spruce Macay — a North Carolina judge who had tutored Andrew Jackson. Id. at

761-62.

       Most importantly, however, Alcoa Power’s own expert provided compelling

evidence that the Yadkin River was navigated and used for commercial purposes prior to

statehood.   Alcoa’s expert Mark Newell admitted that Native Americans and early

settlers had regularly used the Yadkin to travel and transport hides and other goods for

barter. Newell, however, opined that such uses of the Yadkin were non-commercial. See

J.A. 408. In his view, the Native Americans had not engaged in commerce, but were

only involved in bartering.      Id.   That proposition is ridiculous, however, because

bartering is commerce. “Barter” is defined as the “exchange (goods or services) for other

goods or services without using money.” See Barter, New Oxford American Dictionary

(3d ed. 2010). In fact, our own government recognizes that bartering is “the oldest form

of commerce.” See Four Facts About Bartering (IRS Tax Tip 2011-33), IRS (Feb. 16,

2011). Those multiple instances of actual navigation and use of the Yadkin River —


                                            56
shown by the evidence of record — are more than sufficient to prove its navigability

under the federal test. See Utah, 283 U.S. at 82. 12

       The Navigability Order rested its outcome in large part on marginal evidence

provided by another expert for Alcoa Power, a Dr. Morrill. For example, the Order

deemed it relevant that records of the Moravians — a religious community that settled in

the Piedmont area of North Carolina — failed to discuss or show navigability of the

Yadkin, despite the Moravian settlements’ purported proximity to the disputed 45-mile

segment. But Morrill’s testimony does not at all prove the Yadkin River was never used

for commerce, rendering his Moravian references hardly pertinent to the navigability

inquiry.    In any event, the closest Moravian settlements, near present-day Winston-

Salem, were well east of the Yadkin and nearly twenty miles north of where the disputed

segment begins. 13


       12
         Despite the foregoing evidence of actual use of the disputed 45-mile segment,
the Navigability Order rejected and ignored that evidence in favor of Alcoa Power’s
experts. The Navigability Order also ignored Newell’s concession that the Yadkin had
been used by Native Americans and settlers for commerce. And the Order relied on
Harvey’s opinions about the geology of the Yadkin in the eighteenth century, even
though those opinions were undermined by the evidence of actual use of the disputed
segment.
       13
          Additionally, the Navigability Order misapprehended evidence concerning
General Nathanael Greene’s directive that his troops affix wheels to boats as the
Continental Army travelled overland prior to the Battle of Guilford Courthouse (in the
Cape Fear River Basin). Although interesting, General Greene’s innovative use of his
wagons and boats against Charles Cornwallis and the British had nothing to do with
whether the Yadkin River was navigable. In fact, General Greene was primarily
interested in reaching and crossing the Dan River (in the Roanoke River Basin) — not
navigating or fording the Yadkin.


                                             57
      In these circumstances, I am firmly convinced that the district court erred in its

Navigability Order. The court not only legally erred with respect to the applicable

navigability test and the segment-by-segment analysis, it misapplied and ignored

compelling proof that the Yadkin River was historically used by Native Americans and

settlers for commerce. Its ruling that the Yadkin was non-navigable at statehood is, in

my view, clearly erroneous. Upon assessing the entire record, I hold a definite and firm

conviction that a mistake was committed by the district court with respect to its

navigability conclusion. See Hall, 664 F.3d at 462 (explaining that clear error occurs

when “the reviewing court on the entire evidence is left with the definite and firm

conviction that a mistake has been committed” (quoting United States v. U.S. Gypsum

Co., 333 U.S. 364, 395 (1948))).

                                            2.

      After the district court entered its Navigability Order, it authorized the parties to

seek summary judgment in light of those rulings. Alcoa Power thus moved for summary

judgment, arguing that it owned the disputed 45-mile segment, pursuant to North

Carolina’s Marketable Title Act (the “MTA”) and the doctrine of adverse possession.

      On September 28, 2015, the Summary Judgment Order ruled in favor of Alcoa

Power based on the MTA and the doctrine of adverse possession.             The Summary

Judgment Order posited, inter alia, that “any evidence of valid title would outweigh the

presumption [of title] in favor of the State.” See Summ. J. Order 7. The court thus

concluded that, as a matter of law, a fee simple title to the disputed 45-mile segment was


                                           58
vested in Alcoa Power because the evidence proved that the MTA gave Alcoa a valid

title. That Order also rejected the State’s contention that the disputed 45-mile segment

was not subject to acquisition by way of adverse possession, because the Yadkin River

was within the scope of the public trust doctrine. In so ruling, the district court observed

that “the State has not demonstrated that it has title to the Relevant Segment,” and

concluded that Alcoa Power had satisfied the claim of adverse possession as a matter of

law. See Summ. J. Order 8.

       Put succinctly, the Summary Judgment Order erroneously awarded title to the

disputed 45-mile segment to Alcoa Power. Three aspects of that Order warrant further

emphasis:

       •      The court should not have awarded summary judgment to Alcoa
              Power on the basis of the MTA;

       •      The court erroneously shifted the burden of proof with respect to the
              MTA to the State of North Carolina; and

       •      The court erroneously predicated the summary judgment award on
              the doctrine of adverse possession.

We review an award of summary judgment de novo. See Libertarian Party of Va. v.

Judd, 718 F.3d 308, 312 (4th Cir. 2013). Applying this standard, “we are required to

view the facts and all justifiable inferences arising therefrom in the light most favorable

to the nonmoving party [i.e., North Carolina].” Id.

                                             a.

       The MTA cannot, as a matter of law, be used to undermine the public trust

doctrine. The MTA concerns itself only with title rights that are dependent on an “act,

                                            59
title transaction, event or omission.” See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 47B-2(c). North Carolina’s

obligation to hold the Yadkin River and its riverbeds in trust for the people of the Old

North State — pursuant to the public trust doctrine — is an aspect of the State’s

sovereignty as one of the Thirteen Original States. That public trust right is not in any

way dependent on an “act, title transaction, event or omission.” Id. Resultantly, the

MTA cannot be utilized or relied upon to divest North Carolina of its sovereign rights

with respect to the Yadkin River.

       Contrary to the majority’s view, the absence of an explicit public trust exception in

the MTA does not render the public trust doctrine inapplicable here.          The General

Assembly had no reason to include such an exception in the MTA, because the public

trust doctrine has always been part-and-parcel of North Carolina law with respect to its

waters. See State ex rel. Rohrer v. Credle, 369 S.E.2d 825, 828 (N.C. 1988) (“The policy

of the State from 1777 . . . was . . . to preserve its title to the navigable waters, as the

same had been held by the King of England, in trust for the free use of all its citizens.”

(quoting Land Co. v. Hotel, 44 S.E. 39, 44 (N.C. 1903)). In fact, the North Carolina

Court of Appeals recognized in 2007 that there is “nothing in the [MTA] that would

allow the rights of the public to a dedicated right-of-way to be abolished.” See Kraft v.

Town of Mt. Olive, 645 S.E.2d 132, 138 (N.C. Ct. App. 2007). As explained in the

amicus submission of the interested law professors, the MTA is simply “antithetical to

the public trust doctrine.” See Amicus Curiae Br. of Law Professors 14.




                                            60
       Pursuant to the public trust doctrine, the Yadkin River and its riverbeds have not,

on this record, ever been conveyed to a private owner. Any such conveyance could only

be made by a “special grant” of the General Assembly, which unmistakably “convey[ed]

the lands in question free of all public trust rights . . . in the clearest and most express

terms.” See Gwathmey, 464 S.E.2d at 684. Again, the Yadkin and its riverbeds have

never been so conveyed — and the MTA itself does not constitute such a “special grant”

by the General Assembly. Put simply, the MTA can neither abolish nor supersede the

public trust doctrine. Accordingly, the district court erred in relying on the MTA to

award summary judgment to Alcoa Power.

                                             b.

       The Summary Judgment Order also erred by failing to impose the burden of proof

on Alcoa Power with respect to its MTA claim. Under North Carolina law, Alcoa Power

was obliged to shoulder that burden, and the company therefore had to overcome the

statutory presumption that title to the disputed 45-mile segment has been vested in the

State since 1776. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 146-79. The MTA does nothing to defeat that

presumption in favor of North Carolina. See Taylor v. Johnston, 224 S.E.2d 567, 580

(N.C. 1976).

       In a quiet title action such as this, “the party with the burden of proof . . . must

make at least a prima facie showing of title, one method of which is by the offer of a

connected chain of title from the State to [itself].” See State v. Taylor, 304 S.E.2d 767,

770 (N.C. Ct. App. 1983). In its handling of this litigation, the district court initially —


                                            61
and correctly — believed that a full trial would be necessary to resolve the land title

issues.        As the court first observed, “the connected chain of title inquiry is an

extraordinarily fact-intensive one, involving thousands of documents, hundreds of

properties, and decades of history.”       See J.A. 228.    The court thereafter altered its

approach by 180 degrees, advising the parties that it would not be conducting the fact-

intensive chain of title inquiry:

          If you think I’m going to be sitting here for two years going through title
          instruments, I would rather be off this earth than do that. That’s not going
          to happen.

Id. at 514. The court thereby relieved Alcoa Power of its very substantial — and likely

impossible — burden of proof. This legal error mandates a summary vacatur of the

Summary Judgment Order. 14

                                               c.

          Finally, the Summary Judgment Order erroneously awarded judgment to Alcoa

Power on the basis of the doctrine of adverse possession.           The district court erred

because, as explained above, the Yadkin River and its riverbeds are held in trust — under


          14
           Additionally, the Summary Judgment Order erroneously concluded that the
open possession exception of the MTA was inapplicable. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 47B-3(3)
(protecting “[r]ights, estates, interests, claims or charges of any person who is in present,
actual and open possession of the real property so long as such person is in such
possession”). Viewing the evidence in the light most favorable to North Carolina, the
district court erred for two reasons. First, the State never conceded that its interests in the
disputed 45-mile segment was non-possessory. Second, the regulatory authority
continuously exercised by the State over the disputed segment indicates that the State has
been in continuous possession thereof.



                                              62
the public trust doctrine — for the people of North Carolina. And public trust land in

North Carolina simply cannot — under state law — be acquired by way of adverse

possession. See N.C. Gen. Stat. § 1-45.1 (“Title to real property held by the State and

subject to public trust rights may not be acquired by adverse possession.”). Like the

MTA, adverse possession is “antithetical to the public trust doctrine.” See Amicus

Curiae Br. of Law Professors 14. Put simply, the public trust doctrine and the foregoing

statutory mandate readily settle the adverse possession issue. As a matter of law, the

adverse possession ruling also undermines the Summary Judgment Order, which should

be vacated. 15

                                             D.

       In sum, the federal courts lack jurisdiction in this litigation and it should be

remanded to the state courts of North Carolina. If we possess jurisdiction, however (as

the majority today rules), both the majority and the district court have erred on the merits.




       15
          Even if the public trust doctrine did not apply, the adverse possession ruling of
the Summary Judgment Order was erroneous for two additional reasons. First, the
district court again upended the burden of proof, transferring that burden to the State.
Despite the State being entitled to a statutory presumption of title, the Summary
Judgment Order concluded that “the State has not demonstrated that it has title to the
Relevant Segment.” See Summ. J. Order 8. Second, Alcoa Power was not entitled to
judgment on its adverse possession claim because there is a readily apparent dispute
concerning whether it has satisfied the adverse possession elements. Viewing the
evidence in the proper light, Alcoa Power’s use of the disputed 45-mile segment was
never more than a permissive use. Furthermore, Alcoa Power never placed the State on
notice of a hostile use of the disputed segment and Alcoa Power’s use of the segment was
never an exclusive use.


                                             63
In the latter circumstance, we should vacate the judgment and remand for such other and

further proceedings as may be appropriate.

      I most respectfully dissent.




                                             64
