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No. 10657420
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
United States of America v. State of Alaska
No. 10657420 · Decided August 20, 2025
No. 10657420·Ninth Circuit · 2025·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
August 20, 2025
Citation
No. 10657420
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, No. 24-2251
D.C. No.
Plaintiff - Appellee,
1:22-cv-00054-
SLG
KUSKOKWIM RIVER INTER-
TRIBAL FISH COMMISSION;
ASSOCIATION OF VILLAGE
COUNCIL PRESIDENTS; BETTY OPINION
MAGNUSON; IVAN M. IVAN;
AHTNA TENE NENE; AHTNA,
INC.; ALASKA FEDERATION OF
NATIVES,
Intervenor-Plaintiffs -
Appellees,
v.
STATE OF ALASKA; ALASKA
DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND
GAME; DOUG VINCENT-LANG,
in his official capacity as
Commissioner of the Alaska
Department of Fish & Game,
Defendants - Appellants.
2 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of Alaska
Sharon L. Gleason, Chief District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted June 23, 2025
Seattle, Washington
Filed August 20, 2025
Before: Consuelo M. Callahan, Roopali H. Desai, and Ana
de Alba, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Callahan
SUMMARY *
Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act
The panel affirmed the district court’s summary
judgment in favor of the United States and Intervenors
(“Plaintiffs”), and permanent injunction, in Plaintiffs’ action
seeking to preclude the State of Alaska from taking actions
that interfere with federal efforts to implement a rural
subsistence priority established by the Alaska National
Interest Lands Conservation Act (“ANILCA”).
Title VIII of ANILCA established the rural subsistence
priority, which generally provides that rural Alaska residents
who fish and hunt for subsistence purposes are given priority
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 3
over others in fishing and hunting on “public lands”
whenever it is necessary to restrict fishing and hunting to
protect the rural subsistence users’ ability to continue their
subsistence uses. The Ninth Circuit resolved the meaning of
“public lands” as used in Title VIII, and the geographic
scope of the rural subsistence priority, in a series of decisions
dubbed the Katie John Trilogy. Subsequently, the Supreme
Court considered the meaning of “public lands” as used in
Title I of ANILCA, and declined to interpret the term to
include navigable waters in which the United States holds
reserved water rights, in Sturgeon v. Frost (Sturgeon II), 587
U.S. 28, 42-45 (2019). Pursuant to 1999 Rules upheld in
Katie John III, the United States implemented ANILCA’s
rural subsistence priority on the stretch of the Kuskokwim
River within the Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge. In
the wake of Sturgeon II, Alaska, apparently deciding it was
no longer bound by the Katie John Trilogy, asserted
authority over the entire River.
The panel rejected Alaska’s argument that the Katie John
Trilogy was wrongly decided and was overruled by Sturgeon
II. The panel held that the decisions can be reasonably
harmonized on the ground that the distinct context and
statutory objective of Title VIII calls for an interpretation of
“public lands” that includes navigable waters, where
subsistence fishing has traditionally taken place. In
addition, immediately after Katie John I, Congress passed
appropriations acts that signaled its approval of Katie John
I’s interpretation of “public lands” for purposes of Title
VIII. Finally, the panel rejected Alaska’s argument that the
Katie John Trilogy was clearly irreconcilable with Sackett v.
Environmental Protection Agency, 598 U.S. 651, 679
(2023), because Sackett did not constitute “intervening”
authority sufficient to revisit the Katie John Trilogy.
4 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
COUNSEL
Daniel Halainen (argued), Paul A. Turcke, and Kevin W.
McArdle, Attorneys, Environment & Natural Resources
Division; Todd Kim, Assistant Attorney General; United
States Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.; for
Plaintiff-Appellee.
Nathaniel Amdur-Clark (argued), Whitney A. Leonard, and
Lloyd B. Miller, Sonosky Chambers Sachse Miller
Monkman LLP, Anchorage, Alaska; Jahna M. Lindemuth
(argued) and Scott M. Kendall, Cashion Gilmore &
Lindemuth, Anchorage, Alaska; Wesley J. Furlong, Megan
R. Condon, Sydney A. Tarzwell, Kirsten D. Gerbatsch, Erin
C. Dougherty Lynch, and Heather R. Kendall Miller, Native
American Rights Fund, Anchorage, Alaska; Ambriel
Sandone and Nicholas P. Ostrovsky, Ahtna Inc., Anchorage,
Alaska; Andrew B. Erickson, John M. Sky Starkey, Anna C.
Crary, and River E.M. Sterne, Landye Bennett Blumstein
LLP, Anchorage, Alaska; for Intervenor-Plaintiffs-
Appellees.
J. Michael Connolly (argued), Steven C. Begakis, and
Zachary P. Grouev, Consovoy McCarthy Park PLLC,
Arlington, Virginia; Margaret Paton-Walsh and Aaron C.
Peterson, Assistant Attorneys General; Treg Taylor, Alaska
Attorney General, Office of the Alaska Attorney General,
Anchorage, Alaska; for Defendants-Appellants.
Lane Kisonak, Association of Fish & Wildlife Agencies,
Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae Association of Fish &
Wildlife Agencies.
Regina Lennox and Jeremy E. Clare, Safari Club
International, Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae Safari
Club International.
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 5
Thomas A. Berry and Alexander R. Khoury, Cato Institute,
Washington, D.C., for Amicus Curiae Cato Institute.
OPINION
CALLAHAN, Circuit Judge:
The Alaska National Interest Lands Conservation Act
(“ANILCA”), Pub. L. No. 96-487, 94 Stat. 2371 (1980), has
multiple purposes, including to “provide the opportunity for
rural [Alaska] residents engaged in a subsistence way of life
to continue to do so.” 16 U.S.C. § 3101(c). To fulfill this
purpose, Title VIII of ANILCA (codified at 16 U.S.C.
§§ 3111-26) establishes the “rural subsistence priority,”
which generally provides that rural Alaska residents who
fish and hunt for subsistence purposes are given priority over
others in fishing and hunting on “public lands” whenever it
is necessary to restrict fishing and hunting to protect the rural
subsistence users’ ability to continue their subsistence uses.
See id. §§ 3111-15.
We resolved the meaning of the term “public lands” as
used in Title VIII—and, therefore, the geographic scope of
the rural subsistence priority—more than a decade ago in a
series of decisions dubbed the Katie John Trilogy. In Katie
John I, we held that “public lands” includes navigable waters
in which the United States holds reserved water rights.
Alaska v. Babbitt (Katie John I), 72 F.3d 698, 704 (9th Cir.
1995), cert. denied, 517 U.S. 1187 (1996), and cert. denied
sub nom., Alaska Fed’n of Natives v. United States, 517 U.S.
1187 (1996). Then, sitting en banc in Katie John II, we
maintained the holding of Katie John I. John v. United
States (Katie John II), 247 F.3d 1032 (9th Cir. 2001) (en
6 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
banc) (per curiam). Finally, in Katie John III, we upheld
regulations identifying the navigable waters that constitute
“public lands” because the United States holds reserved
water rights in them. John v. United States (Katie John III),
720 F.3d 1214, 1245 (9th Cir. 2013), cert. denied sub nom.,
Alaska v. Jewell, 572 U.S. 1042 (2014).
Recently, the Supreme Court considered the meaning of
“public lands” as used in another part of ANILCA—Section
103(c) in Title I (codified at 16 U.S.C. § 3103(c))—and
declined to interpret the term to include navigable waters in
which the United States holds reserved water rights.
Sturgeon v. Frost (Sturgeon II), 587 U.S. 28, 42-45 (2019).
In Sturgeon II, Alaska changed its prior course and defended
the Katie John Trilogy, arguing that “public lands” has a
different meaning in 16 U.S.C. § 3103(c) than in Title VIII,
that the Katie John Trilogy’s reserved water rights
interpretation is proper in the latter context, and that the
Katie John Trilogy should be preserved because rural
Alaskans rely on it. Br. of Amicus Curiae State of Alaska in
Support of Pet’r at 29-35, Sturgeon II, 587 U.S. 28 (No. 17-
949), 2018 WL 4063284, at *29-35. In response, the
Supreme Court, citing Alaska’s amicus brief, included a
footnote in Sturgeon II stating that “[Title VIII’s
subsistence-fishing] provisions are not at issue in this case,
and we therefore do not disturb the Ninth Circuit’s holdings
[in the Katie John Trilogy] that the Park Service may
regulate subsistence fishing on navigable waters.” 587 U.S.
at 45 n.2.
Alaska now claims that the Katie John Trilogy was
wrongly decided and has been overruled by Sturgeon II.
More specifically, because three-judge panels of this court
are bound by circuit precedent unless it is “clearly
irreconcilable” with intervening higher authority, see Miller
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 7
v. Gammie, 335 F.3d 889, 893 (9th Cir. 2003) (en banc),
Alaska argues that the Katie John Trilogy is clearly
irreconcilable with Sturgeon II.
We hold that it is not. As explained below, the decisions
can be reasonably harmonized on the ground that the distinct
context and statutory objective of Title VIII call for an
interpretation of “public lands” that includes navigable
waters, where subsistence fishing “has traditionally taken
place.” Katie John I, 72 F.3d at 702. Additionally,
immediately after Katie John I, Congress passed
appropriations acts that signaled its approval of Katie John
I’s interpretation of “public lands” for purposes of Title VIII.
Although Katie John, the Ahtna woman who advocated for
subsistence fishing rights on behalf of Alaska Natives, has
since passed away, the precedent that bears her name lives
on.
I.
To put it mildly, we do not write on a clean slate.
Therefore, we begin with the relevant legal background.
A.
In 1980, Congress passed ANILCA, which “set aside
104 million acres of federally owned land in Alaska for
preservation purposes.” Sturgeon II, 587 U.S. at 36 (citation
omitted). In doing so, Congress created or expanded a
number of “conservation system units”—ANILCA’s term
for national parks, refuges, preserves, and the like. Id. at 37
(citations omitted); see 16 U.S.C. § 3102(4).
Title I of ANILCA includes three sections: one setting
forth ANILCA’s purposes, 16 U.S.C. § 3101; another
providing its definitions, id. § 3102; and a third concerning
the boundaries of its conservation system units and the
8 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
application of regulations within them, id. § 3103. As
previously noted, one of Act’s purposes is “to provide the
opportunity for rural residents engaged in a subsistence way
of life to continue to do so,” “consistent with management
of fish and wildlife in accordance with recognized scientific
principles and the purposes for which each conservation
system unit is established, designated, or expanded by or
pursuant to this Act.” Id. § 3101(c).
This is the purpose of Title VIII, in particular, id.
§ 3112(1), which includes its own declaration of supporting
Congressional findings, id. § 3111. Title VIII establishes the
“rural subsistence priority,” Katie John III, 720 F.3d at 1219,
which provides that with respect to “the taking on public
lands of fish and wildlife,” “nonwasteful subsistence uses”
by rural Alaska residents “shall be accorded priority over . . .
other purposes” whenever “it is necessary to restrict the
taking of populations of fish and wildlife on such lands for
subsistence uses in order to protect the continued viability of
such populations, or to continue such uses.” 1 16 U.S.C.
§ 3114; see id. §§ 3113-15. Such restrictions are to be
implemented based on “(1) customary and direct
dependence upon the populations as the mainstay of
livelihood; (2) local residency; and (3) the availability of
alternative resources.” Id. § 3114.
Title VIII charges the Secretary of the Interior and the
Secretary of Agriculture (collectively, “Secretaries”) with
1
“[S]ubsistence uses” are “the customary and traditional uses by rural
Alaska residents of wild, renewable resources for direct personal or
family consumption as food, shelter, fuel, clothing, tools, or
transportation; for the making and selling of handicraft articles out of
nonedible byproducts of fish and wildlife resources taken for personal or
family consumption; for barter, or sharing for personal or family
consumption; and for customary trade.” 16 U.S.C. § 3113.
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 9
implementing the rural subsistence priority. Id. § 3115; see
id. § 3102(12). However, Title VIII also provides that if
Alaska “enacts and implements laws of general applicability
which are consistent with” ANILCA’s rural subsistence
priority, then the Secretaries “shall not” implement it. Id.
§ 3115(d). “In other words, ANILCA expresses a preference
for state management of the rural subsistence priority . . . but
provides that [the Secretaries] may step in where the State
fails to act.” Katie John III, 720 F.3d at 1219 (citing 16
U.S.C. § 3202(a)).
B.
In 1978, in anticipation of the enactment of ANILCA,
the Alaska Legislature enacted a statutory subsistence
priority. Id. State agencies subsequently adopted
regulations to establish a preference for rural residents, and
the Secretary of the Interior certified Alaska’s law as
consistent with ANILCA’s rural subsistence priority. Id.
But in 1985, the Alaska Supreme Court struck down the state
regulations on the ground that their rural preference was
inconsistent with the state statute. Madison v. Alaska Dep’t
of Fish & Game, 696 P.2d 168, 178 (Alaska 1985).
In response, the Alaska Legislature amended the state
statute to limit its subsistence priority to rural residents. See
McDowell v. State, 785 P.2d 1, 3 (Alaska 1989). But in
1989, the Alaska Supreme Court struck down the amended
statute on the ground that the rural preference violated state
constitutional provisions that protect equal access to fish and
game. Id. at 5-9.
Although the Alaska Supreme Court temporarily stayed
its decision to give the Alaska Legislature “an opportunity to
amend the constitution or otherwise bring its program into
compliance with ANILCA,” the Alaska Legislature failed to
10 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
do so. Katie John I, 72 F.3d at 701. “Implementation of
ANILCA’s rural subsistence priority accordingly fell back
to the federal government in July 1990.” Katie John III, 720
F.3d at 1221.
C.
In connection with the federal government assuming
management of ANILCA’s rural subsistence priority, the
Secretaries promulgated temporary regulations in 1990 and
then permanent regulations in 1992 (“1992 Rules”). See
Temporary Subsistence Management Regulations for Public
Lands in Alaska, 55 Fed. Reg. 27114 (June 29, 1990);
Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in
Alaska, 57 Fed. Reg. 22940 (May 29, 1992). Among other
things, the rules addressed the geographic scope of the rural
subsistence priority by interpreting the term “public lands”
as used in Title VIII. 57 Fed. Reg. at 22942, 22951; see also
55 Fed. Reg. at 27115, 27118.
ANILCA’s definitions section defines “public lands” as
follows:
(1) The term “land” means lands, waters, and
interests therein.
(2) The term “Federal land” means lands the
title to which is in the United States after
December 2, 1980.
(3) The term “public lands” means land
situated in Alaska which, after December 2,
1980, are Federal lands, except--
(A) land selections of the State of Alaska
which have been tentatively approved or
validly selected under the Alaska
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 11
Statehood Act and lands which have been
confirmed to, validly selected by, or
granted to the Territory of Alaska or the
State under any other provision of
Federal law;
(B) land selections of a Native
Corporation made under the Alaska
Native Claims Settlement Act which have
not been conveyed to a Native
Corporation, unless any such selection is
determined to be invalid or is
relinquished; and
(C) lands referred to in section 19(b) of
the Alaska Native Claims Settlement Act.
16 U.S.C. § 3102. Thus, “public lands” generally includes
“lands, waters, and interests therein” “situated in Alaska”
“the title to which is in the United States.” Id. § 3102(1)-(3).
The 1992 Rules interpreted “public lands” to generally
exclude navigable waters because “the United States does
not generally own title to the submerged lands beneath
navigable waters in Alaska.” 57 Fed. Reg. at 22942. For
context, Alaska generally holds title to the submerged lands
because the Alaska Statehood Act, Pub. L. No. 85-508,
§ 6(m), 72 Stat. 339, 343 (1958), incorporated the
Submerged Lands Act, which granted states “title to and
ownership of the lands beneath navigable waters within
[their] boundaries,” Pub. L. No. 83-31, § 3(a), 67 Stat. 29,
30 (1953) (codified at 43 U.S.C. § 1311(a)). Also, such title
generally “brings with it regulatory authority over
‘navigation, fishing, and other public uses.’” Sturgeon II,
12 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
587 U.S. at 35 (quoting United States v. Alaska, 521 U.S. 1,
5 (1997)).
The 1992 Rules led to the Katie John I litigation. “At
one extreme,” Alaska defended the rules’ position that
“public lands” generally excludes navigable waters because
the United States “does not hold title to them.” Katie John
I, 72 F.3d at 702. “At the other extreme,” Alaska Natives
took the position that “public lands” includes all navigable
waters in Alaska because the United States holds an
“interest” in those waters—its navigational servitude. Id.
“[I]n the middle,” the United States adopted a new position:
that “public lands” includes some navigable waters—those
in which the United States holds an “interest” pursuant to the
reserved water rights doctrine. Id. at 701-02. That doctrine
generally provides that “[w]hen the Federal Government
withdraws its land from the public domain and reserves it for
a federal purpose, the Government, by implication, reserves
appurtenant water then unappropriated to the extent needed
to accomplish the purpose of the reservation.” Sturgeon II,
587 U.S. at 43 (quoting Cappaert v. United States, 426 U.S.
128, 138 (1976)).
In Katie John I, we rejected Alaska’s interpretation. In
doing so, we explained that we had “no doubt that Congress
intended that public lands include at least some navigable
waters,” because “ANILCA’s language and legislative
history” “clearly indicate that subsistence uses include
subsistence fishing,” and “subsistence fishing has
traditionally taken place in navigable waters.” Katie John I,
72 F.3d at 702 (citing 16 U.S.C. § 3113). Thus, Alaska’s
interpretation would “undermine congressional intent to
protect and provide the opportunity for subsistence fishing.”
Id. at 704. We also rejected the Alaska Natives’ preferred
interpretation, including on the ground that the navigational
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 13
servitude is “‘a concept of power, not of property’” and not
an “interest” to which the United States holds “title” in the
relevant sense. Id. at 702-03 (quoting United States v.
Certain Parcels of Land, 666 F.2d 1236, 1238 (9th Cir.
1982)); see also City of Angoon v. Hodel, 803 F.2d 1016,
1027 n.6 (9th Cir. 1986). We further concluded that
ANILCA did “not support” a “complete assertion of federal
control” over all navigable waters in Alaska. Katie John I,
72 F.3d at 704.
Finally, applying Chevron, we adopted the United
States’ reserved water rights interpretation. Id. at 703-04.
We reasoned that the United States holds “interests in some
navigable waters” because when the United States “reserved
vast parcels of land in Alaska for federal purposes through a
myriad of statutes” (including ANILCA), it “also implicitly
reserved appurtenant waters, including appurtenant
navigable waters, to the extent needed to accomplish the
purposes of the reservations.” Id. at 703. Given that the
1992 Rules included a different interpretation of “public
lands,” we expressed “hope” that the Secretaries would
“determine promptly” the navigable waters in which the
United States holds reserved water rights such that the
waters are “public lands subject to federal subsistence
management.” Id. at 704.
D.
In April 1996, just months after the Katie John I decision
was published, the Secretaries issued an advance notice of
proposed rulemaking to identify the navigable waters in
which the United States holds reserved water rights.
Subsistence Management Regulations for Public Lands in
Alaska, 61 Fed. Reg. 15014, 15015, 15018 (proposed April
4, 1996). Meanwhile, Congress passed an appropriations act
14 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
(“1996 Appropriations Act”) that included a provision
preventing the Secretaries from using appropriated funds to
implement the rural subsistence priority on navigable waters
where Alaska held title to the submerged lands. Omnibus
Consolidated Rescissions and Appropriations Act of 1996,
Pub. L. No. 104-134, § 336, 110 Stat. 1321, 1321-210
(1996). Later that year, Congress passed another
appropriations act (“1997 Appropriations Act”) with a
similar provision. Omnibus Consolidated Appropriations
Act, 1997, Pub. L. No. 104-208, § 317, 110 Stat. 3009, 3009-
222 (1996). Thus, in effect, Congress temporarily delayed
federal implementation of Katie John I’s holding that
“public lands” includes navigable waters in which the United
States holds reserved water rights, even where Alaska holds
title to the submerged lands.
A year later, in November 1997, Congress passed
another appropriations act (“1998 Appropriations Act”) that
did two things. Department of the Interior and Related
Agencies Appropriations Act, 1998, Pub. L. No. 105-83, 111
Stat. 1543 (1997). First, like the previous acts, it prevented
the Secretaries from using appropriated funds prior to
December 1, 1998, to implement the rural subsistence
priority on navigable waters where Alaska held title to the
submerged lands. Id. § 316(a). Second, it made
amendments to Title VIII, which would be repealed if
Alaska failed to amend state law to bring it into compliance
with the rural subsistence priority by December 1, 1998. Id.
§ 316(d).
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 15
Specifically, the 1998 Appropriations Act amended Title
VIII’s declaration of Congressional findings to read as
follows:
(b) The Congress finds and declares further
that . . .
(4) in accordance with title VIII of this
Act, the Secretary of the Interior is
required to manage fish and wildlife for
subsistence uses on all public lands in
Alaska because of the failure of State law
to provide a rural preference;
(5) the Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
determined in 1995 in State of Alaska v.
Babbitt (73 F.3d 698) that the subsistence
priority required on public lands under
section 804 of this Act applies to
navigable waters in which the United
States has reserved water rights as
identified by the Secretary of the Interior;
(6) management of fish and wildlife
resources by State governments has
proven successful in all 50 States,
including Alaska, and the State of Alaska
should have the opportunity to continue
to manage such resources on all lands,
including public lands, in Alaska in
accordance with this Act, as amended;
and
(7) it is necessary to amend portions of
this Act to restore the original intent of
Congress to protect and provide for the
16 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
continued opportunity for subsistence
uses on public lands for Alaska Native
and non-Alaska Native rural residents
through the management of the State of
Alaska.
Id. § 316(b)(3). Additionally, the act amended part of the
definition of “public lands” by adding a second sentence to
the definition of “Federal lands”: “The term ‘Federal land’
means lands the title to which is in the United States after
December 2, 1980. ‘Federal land’ does not include lands the
title to which is in the State, an Alaska Native corporation,
or other private ownership.” Id. § 316(b)(2). Around the
same time, the Secretaries issued a notice of proposed
rulemaking consistent with the advance notice of proposed
rulemaking they had previously published. Subsistence
Management Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska, 62
Fed. Reg. 66216 (proposed Dec. 17, 1997).
The following year, in October 1998, Congress passed
another appropriations act (“1999 Appropriations Act”) that
again delayed federal implementation of Katie John I and
gave Alaska yet another chance to bring state law into
compliance with ANICLA’s rural subsistence priority.
Omnibus Consolidated and Emergency Supplemental
Appropriations Act, Pub. L. No. 105-277, Div. A, sec.
101(e), § 339, 112 Stat. 2681, 2681-251-52, 2681-271,
2681-295-96 (1998). The act appropriated a total of
$11,000,000 for implementation of the rural subsistence
priority and provided that the funds would go to Alaska if
the Alaska Legislature passed a proposal to amend the state
constitution by October 1, 1999. Id. But if the Alaska
Legislature failed to do so, the funds would go to the
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 17
Secretaries, and the restriction on their ability to use the
funds would be lifted. Id.
The Secretaries then published their final rule (“1999
Rules”), which interpreted “public lands” to include “all
navigable and non-navigable water” within and appurtenant
to more than 30 federal land units. Subsistence Management
Regulations for Public Lands in Alaska, 64 Fed. Reg. 1276,
1287 (Jan. 8, 1999). Consistent with the 1999
Appropriations Act, the 1999 Rules provided that they
would take effect on October 1, 1999, if the Alaska
Legislature failed to pass the requisite constitutional
proposal by then. Id. at 1276.
The Alaska Legislature failed to pass the proposal. 2 As
a result, the 1999 Rules took effect, and the Secretaries were
free to use the appropriated funds to implement Katie John
I.
E.
The Katie John I district court, “which had retained
jurisdiction over the consolidated challenges to the 1992
Rules on remand from Katie John I, concluded that the
action should not serve as the vehicle for challenges to the
1999 Rules.” Katie John III, 720 F.3d at 1222. After the
district court entered a final judgment, Alaska appealed, and
we granted initial hearing en banc. Id. at 1223. In a decision
known as Katie John II, we issued a short opinion holding
that Katie John I “should not be disturbed or altered by the
2
Days before the deadline, the Alaska House of Representatives passed
a proposal to amend the constitution. See H.R.J. Res. 202, 21st Leg., 2d
Spec. Sess. (Alaska 1999); Alaska H.R.J., 21st Leg., 2d Spec. Sess., at
1854-55 (1999). But it fell just shy of the requisite two-thirds vote
needed to pass the Senate. See Alaska S.J., 21st Leg., 2d Spec. Sess., at
1881-82 (1999).
18 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
en banc court.” Katie John II, 247 F.3d at 1033. This time,
Alaska declined to file a petition for certiorari, with Alaska’s
Governor announcing that he had decided to “stop a losing
legal strategy that threatens to make a permanent divide
among Alaskans.” Alaska Governor Won’t Fight
Subsistence Fishing Ruling, L.A TIMES (Aug. 28, 2001),
https://perma.cc/YT9H-68BX.
But the litigation continued, with Alaska and Alaska
Natives both challenging the 1999 Rules. Katie John III, 720
F.3d at 1223-24. Alaska argued that the rural subsistence
priority should have narrower application, and the Alaska
Natives argued that it should have broader application. Id.
In Katie John III, we rejected both sides’ challenges,
concluding that “in the 1999 Rules, the Secretaries have
applied Katie John I and the federal reserved water rights
doctrine in a principled manner.” Id. at 1245.
F.
Several years later, the Supreme Court was presented
with a case concerning the meaning of “public lands” as the
term is used in 16 U.S.C. § 3103(c), within Title I of
ANILCA. As noted above, that section concerns the
boundaries of ANILCA’s conservation system units and the
application of regulations within them. By way of
background, when Congress “sketch[ed]” the “boundary
lines” of ANILCA’s conservation system units, it “made an
uncommon choice—to follow ‘topographic or natural
features,’ rather than enclose only federally owned lands.”
Sturgeon II, 587 U.S. at 37 (quoting 16 U.S.C. § 3103(b)).
This is in part because Congress’s “prior cessions of
property to the State and Alaska Natives had created a
‘confusing patchwork of ownership’” that was “all but
impossible to draw one’s way around.” Id. (citation
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 19
omitted). As a result, “more than 18 million acres of state,
Native, and private land”—known as “inholdings”—
“wound up inside” the conservation system units. Id. at 38
(citation omitted). To limit the geographic scope of
regulations “applicable solely to public lands within such
units,” 16 U.S.C. § 3103(c) provides that “[o]nly those lands
within the boundaries” of a unit “which are public lands (as
such term is defined in this Act) shall be deemed to be
included as a portion of such unit” and that State, Native, or
private lands shall not be subject to such regulations.
John Sturgeon was a hunter who wished to use his
hovercraft on a portion of the Nation River within a
conservation system unit to reach remote areas to hunt
moose. Sturgeon II, 587 U.S. at 31-32. But a National Park
Service (“NPS”) regulation banned hovercrafts on waters
“located within the boundaries of the National Park System,
including navigable waters . . . without regard to the
ownership of submerged lands. . . .’” 36 C.F.R. § 1.2(a).
Relying on 16 U.S.C. § 3103(c), Sturgeon argued that NPS
could not apply its regulatory hovercraft ban on the Nation
River on the ground that the Nation River does not fall
within the meaning of “public lands” as the term is used in
that section.
The Supreme Court agreed with Sturgeon and rejected
the United States’ argument that, under the reserved water
rights doctrine, it holds “title to” an “interest” in the relevant
stretch of the Nation River. Sturgeon II, 587 U.S. at 42-45.
First, the Court observed that reserved water rights “are
‘usufructuary’ in nature, meaning that they are rights for the
[United States] to use—whether by withdrawing or
maintaining—certain waters it does not own.” Id. at 43
(citation omitted). Although the United States “ha[d] found
a couple of old cases suggesting that a person can hold ‘title’
20 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
to such usufructuary interests,” the Court explained that “the
more common understanding . . . is that ‘reserved water
rights are not the type of property interests to which title can
be held’; rather, ‘the term “title” applies’ to ‘fee ownership
of property’ and (sometimes) to ‘possessory interests’ in
property like those granted by a lease.” Id. at 43-44
(citations omitted). The Court “[saw] no evidence that the
Congress enacting ANILCA meant to use the term in any
less customary and more capacious sense.” Id. at 44.
Second, “even assuming” it was possible for the United
States to hold “title to” a reserved water right, the Court
declined to adopt the United States’ reserved water rights
interpretation. Id. As the Court explained, the term “public
lands” only includes the United States’ “specific ‘interest’”
in the relevant body of water. Id. (citations omitted). And a
reserved water right “by its nature” “merely enables the
Government to take or maintain the specific ‘amount of
water’—and ‘no more’—required to ‘fulfill the purpose of
[its land] reservation.’” Id. (quoting Cappaert, 426 U.S. at
141). Because the regulatory hovercraft ban was not
intended to prevent “depletion or diversion” of the water or
to otherwise “safeguard[] the water,” it exceeded the United
States’ interest and therefore the river did not constitute
“public lands” for purposes of 16 U.S.C. § 3103(c). Id. at
45.
Although Alaska had previously fought the Katie John
Trilogy’s reserved water rights interpretation of “public
lands” for purposes of Title VIII, Alaska adopted a new
position in Sturgeon II. In an amicus brief in support of
Sturgeon, Alaska argued that while the Supreme Court
should adopt Sturgeon’s interpretation of “public lands” for
purposes of 16 U.S.C. § 3103(c), the Court “need not and
should not disturb the Katie John circuit precedents”
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 21
interpreting “public lands” for purposes of Title VIII. Br. of
Amicus Curiae State of Alaska at 29, 2018 WL 4063284, at
*29 (citation modified). Alaska contended that “public
lands” has a different meaning in Title VIII, id. at 34; that
the Katie John Trilogy’s interpretation of “public lands” is
“proper[]” in that context, id.; and that the Court “should
preserve the Katie John precedents” for “prudential and
policy reasons,” including because “in the nearly twenty
years since the federal government assumed management
of subsistence activities on federal lands in Alaska, rural
Alaskans have depended on this subsistence priority to
effectuate [the important values embodied by subsistence]
and [to] preserve their way of life,” id. at 31-32.
Citing Alaska’s amicus brief, the Supreme Court
included the following footnote 2 in its opinion:
As noted earlier, the Ninth Circuit has held in
three cases—the so-called Katie John
trilogy—that the term “public lands,” when
used in ANILCA’s subsistence-fishing
provisions, encompasses navigable waters
like the Nation River. See Alaska v. Babbitt,
72 F.3d 698 (1995); John v. United States,
247 F.3d 1032 (2001) (en banc); John v.
United States, 720 F.3d 1214 (2013); supra,
at 1078. Those provisions are not at issue in
this case, and we therefore do not disturb the
Ninth Circuit’s holdings that the Park Service
may regulate subsistence fishing on
navigable waters. See generally Brief for
State of Alaska as Amicus Curiae 29-35
(arguing that this case does not implicate
22 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
those decisions); Brief for Ahtna, Inc.,
as Amicus Curiae 30-36 (same).
Sturgeon II, 587 U.S. at 45 n.2.
II.
That brings us to the present case. Before flowing into
the Bering Sea, the Kuskokwim River (“River”) runs for
approximately 180 miles through the Yukon Delta National
Wildlife Refuge (“Refuge”). Within the Refuge, the River
is navigable, and Alaska holds title to the submerged lands.
Pursuant to the 1999 Rules upheld in Katie John III, the
Secretaries have implemented ANILCA’s rural subsistence
priority on the stretch of the River within the Refuge. See
Katie John III, 720 F.3d at 1232-33 & n.107; see 36 C.F.R.
§ 242.3(b); 43 C.F.R. § 51.3(b). But in the wake of Sturgeon
II, Alaska’s Department of Fish & Game (“ADF&G”)—
apparently deciding that it was no longer bound by the Katie
John Trilogy—asserted authority over the entire River,
notwithstanding efforts by the Refuge Manager to
implement the rural subsistence priority. 3
The River is home to five types of salmon—Chinook,
chum, sockeye, coho, and pink—all of which follow the
same life cycle. The salmon hatch from fertilized eggs in
freshwater, then migrate to the ocean to feed for several
years, and later return to the freshwater to spawn. Upon their
return, the females deposit eggs, the males fertilize them, and
the cycle begins anew.
3
The Refuge Manager exercises authority delegated by the Federal
Subsistence Board (“FSB”), which administers the rural subsistence
priority. 36 C.F.R. § 242.10; 43 C.F.R. § 51.10.
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 23
As the Refuge Manager has explained, the residents of
the local villages within the Refuge along the River and its
tributaries “are almost entirely federally qualified
subsistence users, both native and nonnative, who are highly
dependent on salmon as a source of food.” Also, for these
communities, subsistence fishing is more than a source of
food; it is deeply engrained in their culture and identity.
In recent years, the populations of Chinook and chum
have declined, causing concern among the federal and state
authorities, as well as the Kuskokwim River Inter-Tribal
Fish Commission. In response, the Refuge Manager issued
emergency special actions for the 2021 and 2022 fishing
seasons to ensure that Chinook escapement targets 4 would
be met, while also “allowing at least some opportunity for
federally qualified local residents to address their
subsistence needs.”
In 2021, the Refuge Manager closed parts of the River to
gillnet fishing starting on June 1 but provided exceptions for
federally qualified rural subsistence users to use gillnets on
specified days. ADF&G issued conflicting orders, including
orders that purported to authorize gillnet fishing by all
subsistence users (i.e., including non-rural subsistence users)
on a different set of days. (Recall that Alaska’s subsistence
law, unlike ANILCA, does not provide preference for rural
subsistence users. See generally State v. Kenaitze Indian
Tribe, 894 P.2d 632 (Alaska 1995); McDowell, 785 P.2d at
1, 5-9.)
4
Per the Refuge Manager, “escapement” refers to “the number of fish
that are allowed to reach the spawning grounds with the goal of ensuring
the continuation of healthy populations into the future.”
24 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
In 2022, the Refuge Manager once more closed parts of
the River to gillnet fishing starting on June 1 but provided
exceptions for federally qualified rural subsistence users to
use gillnets on specified days. Again, ADF&G issued
conflicting orders that purported to authorize fishing by all
subsistence users.
III.
On May 17, 2022, the United States sued the State of
Alaska, ADF&G, and the Commissioner of ADF&G
(collectively, “Alaska”), seeking declaratory and injunctive
relief to preclude Alaska from taking actions that interfere
with federal efforts to implement ANILCA’s rural
subsistence priority. The district court granted motions to
intervene in support of the United States by the Kuskokwim
River Inter-Tribal Fish Commission; the Association of
Village Council Presidents; Betty Magnuson and Ivan Ivan;
Ahtna Tene Nené and Ahtna, Inc.; and the Alaska Federation
of Natives.
After initially granting a preliminary injunction in the
summer of 2022, United States v. Alaska, 608 F. Supp. 3d
802 (D. Alaska 2022), the district court granted summary
judgment to the United States and the Intervenors
(collectively, “Plaintiffs”) and entered a permanent
injunction in the spring of 2024, United States v. Alaska, No.
1:22-cv-00054-SLG, 2024 WL 1348632 (D. Alaska Mar. 24,
2024). As is relevant here, the district court concluded that
the Katie John Trilogy was not clearly irreconcilable with
Sturgeon II and therefore remained binding law. Alaska,
2024 WL 1348632, at *8.
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 25
Alaska timely appealed. 5
IV.
“[W]here the reasoning or theory of our prior circuit
authority is clearly irreconcilable with the reasoning or
theory of intervening higher authority, a three-judge panel
should consider itself bound by the later and controlling
authority, and should reject the prior circuit opinion as
having been effectively overruled.” Miller, 335 F.3d at 893.
However, “we are bound by our prior precedent if it can be
reasonably harmonized with the intervening authority.” Lair
v. Bullock, 697 F.3d 1200, 1206 (9th Cir. 2012) (citation
omitted). Clear irreconcilability is a “high standard.” Id. at
1207 (citation omitted). “It is not enough for there to be
‘some tension’ between the intervening higher authority and
prior circuit precedent, or for the intervening higher
authority to ‘cast doubt’ on the prior circuit precedent.” Id.
(citations omitted).
We review the district court’s order de novo. Zellmer v.
Meta Platforms, Inc., 104 F.4th 1117, 1121 (9th Cir. 2024).
V.
Alaska’s primary argument is that the Katie John Trilogy
is clearly irreconcilable with Sturgeon II. Assuming that
Sturgeon II’s footnote 2 does not resolve this argument 6 and
5
In the proceedings below, Alaska also challenged the constitutionality
of the FSB under the Appointments Clause. The district court rejected
those arguments. Alaska, 2024 WL 1348632, at *8-12. Alaska initially
raised them again on appeal, but it has since withdrawn them.
6
Plaintiffs read Sturgeon II’s footnote broadly, arguing that because the
Supreme Court apparently adopted the “do not disturb” language from
the cited amicus briefs (including Alaska’s), the Supreme Court agreed
with the amici’s argument that “public lands” has a different meaning in
26 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
that this argument is not barred by judicial estoppel or issue
preclusion, we conclude that the cases are not clearly
irreconcilable.
A.
1.
To begin, the definition of “public lands” applies to both
16 U.S.C. § 3103(c) and to Title VIII. See 16 U.S.C. § 3102.
Thus, the Katie John Trilogy and Sturgeon II may only be
reconciled on the basis that the term as defined may be given
different meanings in the two different parts of ANILCA.
And, as Alaska stresses, according to the presumption of
consistent usage, a word “is presumed to bear the same
meaning throughout a text.” Meza-Carmona v. Garland,
113 F.4th 1163, 1167 (9th Cir. 2024) (citations omitted).
However, this presumption “‘readily yields’ to context,
and a statutory term—even one defined in the statute—‘may
take on distinct characters from association with distinct
statutory objects calling for different implementation
strategies.’” Util. Air Regul. Grp. v. EPA, 573 U.S. 302, 320
(2014) (quoting Env’t Def. v. Duke Energy Corp., 549 U.S.
Title VIII than it does in 16 U.S.C. § 3103(c). See Br. of Amicus Curiae
State of Alaska at 29, 2018 WL 4063284, at *29 (arguing that “[The
Supreme] Court Need Not and Should Not Disturb the Katie John Circuit
Precedents”); Amicus Curiae Br. for Ahtna, Inc. in Support of Neither
Party at 30, Sturgeon II, 587 U.S. 28 (No. 17-949), 2018 WL 3952032,
at *30 (arguing that “The Katie John Doctrine Effectuates the ANILCA
Balance and Should Not Be Disturbed”). At a minimum, Plaintiffs
contend, the footnote means that the Katie John Trilogy and Sturgeon II
are not clearly irreconcilable. Alaska reads footnote 2 narrowly—as the
Supreme Court merely clarifying that it was not expressing any view on
whether the Katie John Trilogy’s interpretation of “public lands” is
correct for purposes of Title VIII. We assume without deciding that
Alaska reads the footnote correctly.
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 27
561, 574 (2007)). For example, the Supreme Court has
given a defined term different meanings in different sections
of a statute when “the term standing alone is necessarily
ambiguous and each section must be analyzed to determine
whether the context gives the term a further meaning that
would resolve the issue.” Robinson v. Shell Oil Co., 519
U.S. 337, 343-44 (1997). The Court has also “declined to
apply a statutory definition that ostensibly governed where
doing so would have been ‘incompatible with . . . Congress’
regulatory scheme,’ or would have ‘destroy[ed] one of the
[statute’s] major purposes.’” Digital Realty Tr., Inc. v.
Somers, 583 U.S. 149, 163-64 (2018) (first quoting Util. Air
Regul. Grp., 573 U.S. at 322; and then quoting Lawson v.
Suwannee Fruit & S.S. Co., 336 U.S. 198, 201 (1949)).
Here, Plaintiffs argue that the presumption against consistent
usage is rebutted because the distinct context and objective
of Title VIII call for an interpretation of “public lands” that
is broader than Sturgeon II’s interpretation of the term in 16
U.S.C. § 3103(c).
Again, “public lands” is generally defined as “lands,
waters, and interests therein” “situated in Alaska” “the title
to which is in the United States.” 16 U.S.C. § 3102(1)-(3).
As Sturgeon II recognized, the words “title to” at times have
been used broadly to apply to “usufructuary interests,”
which are rights to use property that one does not own, such
as reserved water rights. 587 U.S. at 43-44 (citing Fed.
Power Comm’n v. Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., 347 U.S.
239, 246 (1954); Crum v. Mt. Shasta Power Corp., 30 P.2d
30, 36 (Cal. 1934); Radcliff’s Ex’rs v. Mayor of Brooklyn, 4
N.Y. 195, 196 (1850)). But “title to” is more commonly
understood to apply only to fee interests and “possessory
interests.” Id. at 44 (citations omitted). Seeing “no evidence
that the Congress enacting ANILCA meant to use” these
28 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
words in the less common, broader sense, id. at 44, Sturgeon
II did not find 16 U.S.C. § 3103(c) to be ambiguous, id. at
46 n.3.
But that is not the end of the matter. “[O]ftentimes the
‘meaning—or ambiguity—of certain words or phrases may
only become evident when placed in context.’” King v.
Burwell, 576 U.S. 473, 486 (2015) (quoting FDA v. Brown
& Williamson Tobacco Corp., 529 U.S. 120, 132 (2000));
accord Robinson, 519 U.S. at 341. Accordingly, “when
deciding whether the language is plain,” we “must read the
words ‘in their context and with a view to their place in the
overall statutory scheme.’” King, 576 U.S. at 486 (quoting
Brown & Williamson, 529 U.S. at 133). Under Sturgeon II’s
interpretation of “title to,” the term “public lands” generally
excludes navigable waters. That is because no one can own
“running waters,” Sturgeon II, 587 U.S. at 42 (citing
Niagara Mohawk Power, 347 U.S. at 247, n.10), or “acquire
anything more than a mere usufructuary right” in them,
Niagara Mohawk Power, 347 U.S. at 247, n.10 (citation
omitted). In Sturgeon II, that did not pose a problem,
because the context of 16 U.S.C. § 3103(c)—which
concerns the scope of “regulations applicable solely to
public lands within [conservation system units]”—did not
indicate that the term “public lands” as used in that section
includes navigable waters. But Sturgeon II did not consider
Title VIII. Id. at 45 n.2.
2.
Title VIII contains a number of contextual clues that
“public lands”—and, therefore, “title to”—carries a broader
meaning in Title VIII, and they are sufficient to rebut the
presumption of consistent usage.
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 29
The Title begins with a declaration of Congressional
findings, including that “the continuation of the opportunity
for subsistence uses by rural residents of Alaska, including
both Natives and non-Natives, on the public lands . . . is
essential,” 16 U.S.C. § 3111(1), and “threatened,” including
by the “taking of fish and wildlife in a manner inconsistent
with recognized principles of fish and wildlife
management,” id. § 3111(3). Congress also found that, “in
most cases, no practical alternative means are available to
replace the food supplies and other items gathered from fish
and wildlife which supply rural residents dependent on
subsistence uses,” id. § 3111(2). “[I]nvok[ing] its
constitutional authority over Native affairs and its
constitutional authority under the property clause and the
commerce clause,” id. § 3111(4), Title VIII then establishes
the rural subsistence priority, id. §§ 3113-15, the purpose of
which “is to provide the opportunity for rural residents
engaged in a subsistence way of life to do so,” “in
accordance with . . . the purposes for each unit established,
designated, or expanded by or pursuant to titles II through
VII of this Act,” id. § 3112(1); accord id. § 3101(c)
(emphasis added).
In turn, these cross-referenced titles provide that many
of ANILCA’s conservation system units shall offer the
opportunity for rural residents to continue to engage in
subsistence uses. In particular, Title III, which established
and added to 16 national wildlife refuges, provides that each
“is established and shall be managed” “to conserve fish and
wildlife populations” and “to provide . . . the opportunity for
continued subsistence uses by local residents.” 7
7
ANILCA, §§ 302(1)(B)(i) & (iii) (Alaska Peninsula National Wildlife
Refuge), (2)(B) (i) & (iii) (Becharof National Wildlife Refuge), (3)(B)(i)
30 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
Additionally, Title II, which established and added to 13
national parks, provides that most of them either “shall be
managed” “to protect the viability of subsistence resources” 8
or that “[s]ubsistence uses by local residents shall be
permitted” within them “where such uses are traditional in
accordance with the provisions of title VIII.” 9
Collectively, the foregoing provisions make clear that
Congress intended the rural subsistence priority to apply to
the waters and to the fish populations that rural subsistence
users have traditionally fished and depended upon within
conservation system units. In particular, the sections setting
forth Title VIII’s purpose and findings explain that the rural
subsistence priority was established “to assure the continued
viability of . . . fish population[s]” and “the continuation of
subsistence uses of such population[s],” id. § 3112(2)
(emphases added); accord id. §§ 3111(1), (3), (4), (5), and
& (iii) (Innoko National Wildlife Refuge), (4)(B)(i) & (iii) (Kanuti
National Wildlife Refuge), (5)(B)(i) & (iii) (Koyukuk National Wildlife
Refuge), (6)(B)(i) & (iii) (Nowitna National Wildlife Refuge), (7)(B)(i)
& (iii) (Selawik National Wildlife Refuge), (8)(B)(i) & (iii) (Tetlin
National Wildlife Refuge), (9)(B)(i) & (iii) (Yukon Flats National
Wildlife Refuge), 303(1)(B)(i) & (iii) (Alaska Maritime National
Wildlife Refuge), (2)(B)(i), (iii) (Arctic National Wildlife Refuge),
(3)(B)(i) & (iii) (Izembek National Wildlife Range), (4)(B)(i) & (iii)
(Kenai National Wildlife Refuge), (5)(B)(i) & (iii) (Kodiak National
Wildlife Refuge), (6)(B)(i) & (iii) (Togiak National Wildlife Refuge),
(7)(B)(i) & (iii) (Yukon Delta National Wildlife Refuge).
8
ANILCA, § 201(2) (Bering Land Bridge National Preserve), (3) (Cape
Krusenstern National Monument), (6) (Kobuk Valley National Park).
9
ANILCA, § 201(1) (Aniakchak National Monument), (3) (Cape
Krusenstern National Monument), (4)(a) (Gates of the Arctic National
Park), (6) (Kobuk Valley National Park), (7)(b) (Lake Clark National
Park), (9) (Wrangell-Saint Elias National Park), ANILCA, § 202(3)
(Mount McKinley National Park).
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 31
that it shall be managed with the input from rural subsistence
users who have “personal knowledge of local conditions and
requirements,” id. § 3111(5); accord § 3115. And the
section that establishes the rural subsistence priority states
that it shall be applied to “populations of fish” based on rural
subsistence users’ “customary and direct dependence upon
the [fish] populations as the mainstay of livelihood.” Id.
§ 3114.
As Katie John I recognized, “subsistence fishing has
traditionally taken place in navigable waters.” 72 F.3d at
702; see also, e.g., Native Village of Quinnagak v. United
States, 35 F.3d 388, 393 (9th Cir. 1994) (“Most subsistence
fishing (and most of the best fishing) is in the large navigable
waterways rather than in the smaller non-navigable
tributaries upstream and lakes where [fishermen] have
access to less fish.”). Accordingly, it follows that Title
VIII’s provisions indicate that “public lands” includes
navigable waters within conservation system units, as Katie
John I held.
The facts of this case help illustrate why that is so. The
rural subsistence communities here—like many others
throughout Alaska—have long lived and fished on a
navigable river. That is unsurprising because these
communities depend on salmon. 10 And, as explained above,
10
See Kuskokwim River Inter-Tribal Fish Comm’n, Kuskokwim River:
Salmon Situation Report 3 (2021), https://perma.cc/8SD3-23KC (by
weight, fish comprises up to 85% and salmon up to 53% of subsistence
harvests by village residents in the Kuskokwim region); see also Alaska
Dep’t of Fish and Game: Div. of Subsistence, Food Production and
Nutritional Values of Noncommercial Fish and Wildlife Harvests in
Alaska 3-4 (2019), https://perma.cc/G7GL-GF3F (by weight, fish
comprises 56.8 percent and salmon 32.3% of wild food harvests by
communities outside nonsubsistence areas).
32 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
salmon run in navigable rivers in order to get from the ocean
to their spawning grounds. 11 See Katie John II, 247 F.3d at
1036 (Tallman, J., concurring) (“Fishing Alaska’s
navigable, salmonid-bearing waters has sustained Alaska’s
native populations since time immemorial.” (citations
omitted)); Metlakatla Indian Cmty. v. Egan, 369 U.S. 45, 46
(1962) (“Long before the white man came to Alaska, the
annual migrations of salmon from the sea into Alaska’s
rivers to spawn served as a food supply for the natives.”
(emphasis added)). Further, when fish populations are
threatened, these communities draw on their longstanding
knowledge of local conditions to advise the federal
authorities on implementation of the rural subsistence
priority, including through the Kuskokwim River Inter-
Tribal Fish Commission, an inter-tribal consortium that
represents the interests of 33 federally recognized tribes in
the Kuskokwim drainage area.
Alaska does not dispute that subsistence fishing has
traditionally occurred on navigable waters. Instead, it insists
that its interpretation of “public lands” would still include
some non-navigable bodies of water to which the United
States holds “title.” But it has not shown that subsistence
fishing traditionally occurred in those waters. 12 Therefore,
11
It is also unsurprising that these communities live on a navigable river
because they are unconnected to the road system, and the River therefore
serves as their road. See Sturgeon II, 587 U.S. at 57 (“[R]ivers function
as the roads of Alaska, to an extent unknown anyplace else in the
country. Over three-quarters of Alaska’s 300 communities live in
regions unconnected to the State’s road system.” (citation omitted)).
12
At most, Alaska’s citations merely indicate that the FSB currently
manages subsistence fishing on “lakes and ponds” affiliated with the
Kasilof River and the Kenai River. See Dep’t of Interior: Off. of
Subsistence Mgmt., Management Regulations for the Harvest of Fish
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 33
it has failed to persuasively explain how its interpretation—
which excludes the waters and fish populations that rural
subsistence users have traditionally fished and depended
upon—can be harmonized with Title VIII’s provisions that
establish a rural subsistence priority to protect subsistence
fishing as traditionally practiced.
Accordingly, in light of Title VIII’s subsistence fishing
provisions, which Sturgeon II did not consider, Alaska has
not shown that the presumption of consistent usage does not
“yield to” the distinct context and objective of Title VIII,
Util. Air Regul. Grp., 573 U.S. at 320 (citation modified),
such that “public lands” may have a broader meaning within
that title that includes navigable waters.
B.
Alaska additionally argues that the Katie John Trilogy’s
reserved water rights interpretation is clearly irreconcilable
with the second part of Sturgeon II’s reasoning that “even
assuming” the United States may hold “title to” a reserved
water right, the term “public lands” only includes the United
States’ interest in the body of water, which is limited to
preserving the volume or quality of water needed to fulfill
the purposes of a land reservation. See Sturgeon II, 587 U.S.
at 44. In Alaska’s view, just as the river in Sturgeon II did
not constitute “public lands” in 16 U.S.C. § 3103(c) because
the regulation banning hovercrafts was “not related to” the
United States’ interest in “safeguarding the water,” id. at 45
(citation omitted), so too the navigable waters within and
appurtenant to conservation system units do not constitute
“public lands” in Title VIII because the rural subsistence
and Shellfish on Federal Public Lands and Waters in Alaska 60, 67
(2021), https://perma.cc/BK3Z-KFDU.
34 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
priority is not related to the United States’ interest in
safeguarding the water. 13 Plaintiffs counter that the Katie
John Trilogy’s reserved water rights interpretation is
nevertheless reconcilable with Sturgeon II because Congress
ratified that interpretation through the 1998 and 1999
Appropriations Acts. See Katie John I, 72 F.3d at 703-04.
According to the ratification canon, “Congress is
presumed to be aware of an administrative or judicial
interpretation of a statute and to adopt that interpretation
when it re-enacts a statute without change.” Fla. Dep’t of
Revenue v. Piccadilly Cafeterias, Inc., 554 U.S. 33, 47
(2008) (quoting Lorillard v. Pons, 434 U.S. 575, 580-81
(1978)). Thus, we begin with the observation that Congress
was aware of Katie John I’s reserved water rights
interpretation when it passed the 1998 and 1999
Appropriations Acts. 14 Indeed, when amending Title VIII’s
13
To be clear, Alaska does not dispute that Congress has the power to
regulate fishing on navigable waters where Alaska holds title to the
submerged lands. Alaksa argues only as a matter of statutory
interpretation that Congress did not do so in Title VIII of ANILCA.
14
Alaska claims that the 1998 and 1999 Appropriations Acts cannot shed
any light on the meaning of “public lands” because Katie John I’s
interpretation was not sufficiently “settled” at the time. As Alaska notes,
the ratification canon does not apply when the “supposed judicial
consensus” was not “so broad and unquestioned” that courts “must
presume Congress knew of and endorsed it.” Jama v. Immigr. &
Customs Enf’t, 543 U.S. 335, 349 (2005). But here Congress was aware
of Katie John I’s interpretation, and there is no evidence that Congress
deemed the interpretation “unsettled.” The 1998 and 1999
Appropriations Acts were passed after the Ninth Circuit—the only
circuit likely to interpret the provision, given its geographic scope
limited to Alaska—had issued a precedential opinion and after the
Supreme Court had denied certiorari. See Alaska, 517 U.S. 1187; Alaska
Fed’n of Natives, 517 U.S. 1187. In short, this is not an instance where
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 35
declaration of Congressional findings in the 1998
Appropriations Acts, Congress expressly recognized that:
[T]he Ninth Circuit Court of Appeals
determined in 1995 in State of Alaska v.
Babbitt (73 F.3d 698) that the subsistence
priority required on public lands under
section 804 of this Act applies to navigable
waters in which the United States has
reserved water rights as identified by the
Secretary of the Interior . . . .
1998 Appropriations Act, § 316(b)(3). Additionally, the
temporary restrictions on the use of appropriated funds in the
1996, 1997, 1998, and 1999 Appropriations Acts were
undoubtedly responses to Katie John I, as those provisions
temporarily prevented the Secretaries from implementing
Katie John I’s holding. See 1996 Appropriations Act, § 336;
1997 Appropriations Act, § 317; 1998 Appropriations Act,
§ 316(a); 1999 Appropriations Act, § 339; see also H.R.
REP. NO. 104-537, at 428 (1996) (Conf. Rep.).
The 1998 and 1999 Appropriations Acts also provide
“convincing support for the conclusion that Congress
accepted and ratified” Katie John I’s reserved water rights
interpretation. Tex. Dep’t of Hous. & Cmty. Affairs v.
Inclusive Cmtys. Project, Inc., 576 U.S. 519, 536 (2015). In
the 1998 Appropriations Act, Congress recognized Katie
John I’s interpretation while amending Title VIII’s
subsistence fishing provisions and the definition of “public
lands,” but it left Katie John I’s interpretation in place. 1998
Congress may have declined to act while waiting to see if a judicial
interpretation would be overturned upon further judicial review.
36 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
Appropriation Act, § 316(b). Subsequently, in the 1999
Appropriations Act, Congress appropriated $11 million to
implement the rural subsistence priority and set a deadline
by which the temporary restriction on using appropriated
funds to carry out Katie John I’s holding would be lifted.
1999 Appropriations Act, Div. A, sec. 101(e), § 339, 112
Stat. at 2681-251-52, 2681-271, 2681-295-96. 15
Alaska contends that the 1998 and 1999 Appropriations
Acts were intended to give Alaska time to amend state law,
not to endorse Katie John I. But that poses a false
dichotomy. Congress certainly hoped that Alaska would
conform state law to ANILCA’s rural subsistence priority in
a timely manner. To this end, in the 1998 Appropriations
Act, Congress extended the temporary restriction on the
Secretaries’ implementation of Katie John I through
December 1, 1998, determining that Alaska “should have the
opportunity” to resume management of the rural subsistence
priority. See 1998 Appropriations Act § 316(a), (b). And in
the 1999 Appropriations Act, Congress again extended the
15
In light of the 1998 Appropriations Act’s statutory amendments
regarding the meaning of “public lands” and the 1999 Appropriations
Act’s provision lifting the restriction on the use of appropriated funds to
implement Katie John I’s holding regarding the scope of “public lands,”
we are not persuaded by Alaska’s reliance on cases where Congress
passed legislation that did not include any provisions relevant to the
interpretive issue, e.g., AMG Cap. Mgmt., LLC v. FTC, 593 U.S. 67, 81-
82 (2021); Alexander v. Sandoval, 532 U.S. 275, 291-92 (2001). See
Tex. Dep’t of Hous. & Cmty. Affairs, 576 U.S. at 521 (holding that
amendments “that would have been superfluous” absent the prior judicial
interpretation “signal[ed] that Congress ratified” the interpretation);
Forest Grove Sch. Dist. v. T.A., 557 U.S. 230, 244, n.11 (2009) (“When
Congress amended [the Act] without altering the text of [the relevant
provision], it implicitly adopted [the judicial] construction of the
statute”).
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 37
temporary restriction on the Secretaries’ implementation of
Katie John I to October 1, 1999. See 1999 Appropriations
Act, § 339. Congress also provided that if Alaska took the
necessary action to amend its law by that deadline, it would
not only get to manage ANILCA’s rural subsistence priority
but also receive $11,000,000 to do so. See id. at Div. A, sec.
101(e), 112 Stat. at 2681-251-52, 2681-271. But if Alaska
failed to take the necessary action, the funds would go to the
Secretaries, and they could implement Katie John I. See
Div. A, sec. 101(e), § 339, 112 Stat. at 2681-251-52, 2681-
271, 2681-295-96. In sum, after four years of delaying
implementation of Katie John I, Congress decided that
enough was enough and that in either scenario—whether it
be state management or federal management—the rural
subsistence priority would be implemented as interpreted by
Katie John I come October 1, 1999, including on navigable
waters in which the United States holds reserved water
rights.
Alaska also contends that the legislative history does not
support this conclusion. But the legislative history indicates
that the 1998 Appropriations Act was a compromise between
Alaska, which opposed federal implementation of
ANILCA’s rural subsistence priority with respect to fishing,
and President Clinton’s Administration, which opposed any
further delay in federal implementation. See 143 Cong. Rec.
23453 (1997) (statement of Sen. Slade Gorton); 143 Cong.
Rec. 23459 (1997) (statement of Sen. Frank Murkowski).
That compromise—which was extended in the 1999
Appropriations Act—gave Alaska additional time to amend
its law, but it also decidedly left Katie John I’s interpretation
regarding the scope of the rural subsistence priority in place.
Further, the legislative history of the 1998 Appropriations
Act specifically provides that its amendments of Title VIII
38 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
did not “overturn[]” and shall not be “construed to overturn
the decision of the Ninth Court of Appeals in State of Alaska
v. Babbitt (73 F.3d 698) (commonly known as the Katie John
case).” H.R. REP. NO. 105-337, at 94-95 (1997) (Conf.
Rep.). 16
In sum, because we find Plaintiffs’ ratification argument
persuasive, we conclude that the Katie John Trilogy is not
clearly irreconcilable with the second part of Sturgeon II’s
reasoning regarding the scope of any reserved water rights
interpretation of “public lands” as used elsewhere in
ANILCA. See Sturgeon II, 587 U.S. at 44-45. 17
16
Alaska asserts that “the mere appropriation of funds cannot change
substantive law,” citing cases that concern whether appropriations acts
may overcome the presumption against implied repeals. See Tenn.
Valley Auth. v. Hill, 437 U.S. 153, 189-91 (1978); Firebaugh Canal Co.
v. United States, 203 F.3d 568, 574-75 (9th Cir. 2000). But this case
does not concern the presumption against implied repeals. Rather than
impliedly repealing any provision of ANILCA, the 1998 and 1999
Appropriations Acts signal Congressional approval of a judicial
interpretation of ANILCA. Moreover, the 1998 Appropriations Act
made substantive amendments to ANILCA, and we held that the same
appropriations acts supported a Congressional ratification argument in
Alaska Department of Fish & Game v. Federal Subsistence Board, 139
F.4th 773, 786-87 (9th Cir. 2025).
17
Alaska also contends that Loper Bright Enterprises v. Raimondo, 603
U.S. 369 (2024), supports the conclusion that the Katie John Trilogy “is
no longer good law.” In its reply brief, Alaska clarifies that it does not
argue that Katie John I is clearly irreconcilable with Loper Bright;
instead, it argues that the Katie John Trilogy cannot be reconciled with
Sturgeon II on the basis that Katie John I deferred to an agency
interpretation under Chevron, while Sturgeon II did not. We do not
reconcile the cases on this basis.
USA V. STATE OF ALASKA 39
VI.
Finally, Alaska claims that the Katie John Trilogy is
clearly irreconcilable with Sackett v. Environmental
Protection Agency, 598 U.S. 651, 679 (2023), which applied
the canon of statutory interpretation that Congress must
“enact exceedingly clear language if it wishes to
significantly alter the balance between federal and state
power.” Id. at 679 (citations omitted). But this canon pre-
dates Katie John I, and Alaska already unsuccessfully raised
an argument based on it in Katie John II. See Katie John II,
247 F.3d at 1042-44 (Tallman, J., concurring); id. at 1044-
50 (Kozinski, J., dissenting). Thus, Sackett does not
constitute “intervening” authority sufficient for us to revisit
the Katie John Trilogy. See Silva v. Garland, 993 F.3d 705,
717 (9th Cir. 2021) (“a three-judge panel must apply binding
precedent even when” that precedent was “clearly wrong” in
its application of the law at the time it was decided (citation
omitted)), abrogated on other grounds by Loper Bright, 603
U.S. 369, as recognized in Lopez v. Garland, 116 F.4th
1032, 1039 (9th Cir. 2024); accord Sierra Forest Legacy v.
Sherman, 646 F.3d 1161, 1189 (9th Cir. 2011) (per curiam)
(“[Miller’s] rule makes sense because we cannot continually
re-litigate issues that our court has already decided simply
because a party puts forth a new argument about why we
should rule differently.”).
VII.
We acknowledge that there is some tension between the
Katie John Trilogy and Sturgeon II. 18 But for purposes of
18
We also appreciate that judges of this court have expressed
reservations about Katie John’s interpretation of “public lands,”
including by referring to it as “shov[ing] a square peg into a hole we
acknowledge is round.” Sturgeon v Frost, 872 F.3d 927, 938 (9th Cir.
40 USA V. STATE OF ALASKA
Miller, “[n]othing short of ‘clear irreconcilability’ will do.”
Close v. Sotheby’s, Inc., 894 F.3d 1061, 1074 (9th Cir.
2018). Because Alaska has not met this high standard, our
precedent remains binding, and we affirm the judgment
below.
AFFIRMED.
2017) (Nguyen, J., concurring); see also Katie John I, 72 F.3d at 704; id.
at 706 (Hall, J., dissenting); Katie John II, 247 F.3d at 1034, 1038-40
(Tallman, J., concurring); id. at 1044-50 (Kozinski, J., dissenting); Katie
John III, 720 F.3d at 1245. But for purposes of Title VIII, Alaska’s
alternative interpretation has never been a round peg itself. See supra
Section V(A)(2); see also Katie John I, 72 F.3d at 704; Katie John II,
247 F.3d at 1034-44 (Tallman, J., concurring); see also Katie John I, 72
F.3d at 706 (Hall, J., dissenting); Sturgeon, 872 F.3d at 938 (Nguyen, J.,
concurring).
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, No.
02Plaintiff - Appellee, 1:22-cv-00054- SLG KUSKOKWIM RIVER INTER- TRIBAL FISH COMMISSION; ASSOCIATION OF VILLAGE COUNCIL PRESIDENTS; BETTY OPINION MAGNUSON; IVAN M.
03IVAN; AHTNA TENE NENE; AHTNA, INC.; ALASKA FEDERATION OF NATIVES, Intervenor-Plaintiffs - Appellees, v.
04STATE OF ALASKA; ALASKA DEPARTMENT OF FISH AND GAME; DOUG VINCENT-LANG, in his official capacity as Commissioner of the Alaska Department of Fish & Game, Defendants - Appellants.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, No.
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This case was decided on August 20, 2025.
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