[From the U.S. Government Printing Office, www.gpo.gov]






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               I    -  i


                       WASHINGTON STATE
                       DO E P A R T M E N T  OF
                       ECOLOGY





             The Public Trust Doctrine
          and Coastal Zone Management
                 in Washington State

                       October 1991












KFW       '',
451.8
.A75                           July 1993
P83                         Publication #93-54
1991
                        printed on recycled paper













             WASHINGTON STATE
             D  E P A  R T M  E N T  0 F
             E C 0 L 0 G Y





   The Public Trust Doctrine
and Coastal Zone Management
       in Washington State

             October 1991













                  July 1993
                Publication #93-54
              printed on recycled paper

















       The Public Trust Doctrine
   and Coastal Zone Management
           in Washington State






                    October 1991





           U.S. DEPARTMENT OF COMMERCE NOAA
           COASTAL SERVICES CENTER
           2234 SOUTH HOBSON AVENUE
           CHARLESTON, SC 29405-2413



Ralph W. Johnson, Craighton Goepple, David Jansen, & Rachael Paschal



                Property of CSC Library



                  Publication 93-54
       WASHINGTON DEPARTMENT OF ECOLOGY
               Olympia, WA 98504-7600









                                        ACKNOWLEDGEMENTS

The preparation of this legal analysis paper funded in part through a cooperative agreement with the National
Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration with funds appropriated for the Coastal Zone Management Act of
1972, through a grant to the Shorelands and Coastal Zone Management Program of the Washington Department
of Ecology. The views expressed herein are those of the authors and do not necessarily reflect the views of
NOAA or any of its subagencies.







  '~l,~-~ rjal~                                                                              ^     I T    I T I IF
     EC 0 L 0 G 6Y





About the authors:
Ralph W. Johnson is professor of law at the University of Washington Law School, and is a recognized
authority on various aspects of the public trust doctrine. Craighton Goepple and Rachael Paschal were law
students at the University of Washington. David Jansen was a graduate student at the School of Marine Affairs,
University of Washington.


This report was prepared by the authors under contract to the Shorelands and Coastal Zone Management
Program, Washington Department of Ecology, as an analysis of the public trust doctrine vis-a-vis coastal zone
management in Washington state. To a degree, this study is based upon and follows up on the Coastal States
Organization's national public trust study which is referenced throughout the present study. The intent was to
sensitize the general information in the national study report to the specifics of Washington state case law. The
opinions expressed in is report do not represent State of Washington, Washington Department of Ecology, or
University of Washington policy. This paper was subsequently published under the same title (with minor
revisions) in the July 1992 issue of Washington Law Review (Volume 67, Number 3, pages 521 - 597).


The Department of Ecology is an Equal Opportunity and Affirmative Action employer and shall not discriminate
on the basis of race, creed, color, national origin, sex, marital status, sexual orientation, age, religion or
disability as defined by applicable state and/or federal regulations or statutes.

If you have special accommodation needs, please contact the Washington Department of Ecology at (206) 459-
6000). Ecology's telecommunications device for the deaf (TDD) number is (206) 438-8721.






        Recommended bibliographic citation:
        Johnson, Ralph W., Craighton Goepple, David Jansen & Rachael Paschal. 1991. The public
        trust doctrine and coastal zone management in Washington state. Washington Department of
        Ecology, Olympia.

        Recommended keywords: Public Trust Doctrine; Coastal Zone Management; Washington State.








    I                                  ~~~~TABLE OF CONTENTS



         I.Introduction and Executive Summary ...................
            A. Introduction ..1............I......
            B. Scope of Study.....................4
5               ~~~~~C. General Observations .....................6
         I.History of the Public Trust Doctrine....................9
5               ~~~~~A.  Origins and Early History ....................9
            B.      Chronological Development of the Public Trust Doctrine in Washington          . ..14
 3                     ~~~~~~~1. Constitution                   ......................15
                  2. Cases                           ......................16
 5                     ~~~~~~~3. Legislation                   ......................22
                        a.  Judicial Review Function                  ................22
                       b. Statutes                       ......................23

                             (1) Harbor Line System...............23
                             (2) Shoreline Management Act ............25

                             (3) Water Resources Act ..............27
                             (4) State Environmental Policy Art...........29

                             (5) Aquatic Lands Act ...............30
                             (6) Seashore Conservation Act ............31
I               ~~~~~C. Summary.....................32
         II. Description, Analysis and Potential Application of the Public Trust Doctrine .      .     ...33
I               ~~~ ~~A.   The Public Trust Doctrine--Primarily a State Law Doctrine ........33
            B.  The Geographical Scope of the Doctrine...............38
 5                     ~~~~~~~1.   The Established Geographical Scope in Washington........38
                  2.      Does the Doctrine apply to Lands Other than those Under
  3                           ~~~~~~~~~Navigable-for-Title Waters or Beneath Tidal Waters........40
                       a.  Non-Navigable for Title Tributaries...........40
  5                           ~~~~~~~~~b.  Related Wetlands and Uplands.............41
                       C. The Dry Sand Area.................42
                       d.      State Legislation also Supports a Broad Geographic
    I                               ~~~~~~~~~~~~Scope for the Public Trust Doctrine...........46



                                           iii








             e.      Rights of Riparians and the Public to Use the Surfaces
                    of Non-navigable-for-title Waters ..................... 48
      3.  Other Issues Affecting the Geographical Scope ................. 50
             a.     Additions and Losses of Public Trust Land and Waters Due
                    to Natural and Artificial Changes ..................... 50
                    (1) Accretions/Reliction ........................ 52
                    (2) Avulsion ................................. 53
                    (3) Artificial Changes .......................... 54
             b.   Lands Exempt from the Public Trust Doctrine ............ 58
C. Interests Protected by the Doctrine ............................... 58
       1.  Interests Protected Under Washington Law ..................... 60
      2.  Interests Potentially Protected in Washington .................. 60
             a.      Right of Public to Walk and/or Harvest shellfish on
                    Privately Owned Tidelands ......................... 60
             b.      Rights of Riparians and the Public to Boat and Fish
                    on the Surfaces of Non-navigable for Title Waters ........ 65
             c. Aesthetic Beauty ................................. 65
             d.      The Future for Recognizing New Interests Protected by
                    the Doctrine .................................... 66
D.  Public Trust Restrictions on State Power ........................... 67
       1. State Projects ....................................... 70
      2.     Application of the public trust doctrine in State and Local
             Land Use Planning ..................................... 70
      3.  Licensees and Lessees of the State .74
      4.     State obligation to abide by public trust principles on state
             owned land ....................................... 76
E.     Private actions that are inconsistent with the Public Trust Doctrine ........ 77
F.     Judicial Remedies for conduct inconsistent with the Public Trust Doctrine ... 79
       1.  Enforcement by the Attorney General......................... 79
      2.   Enforcement by Private Citizens and Private Groups ............. 79
      3.      Other Ways for Public Trust Issues to Come Before the Court ...... 80
G.     Interface of the Public Trust Doctrine with the Takings Clause
      of the Washington and Federal Constitutions ........................ 81
       1.     Application of the Public Trust Doctrine to Avoid Takings Claims ...  81




                                    iv








             2.     Takings Claims That May Be Raised by the Extension of the
                    Trust Doctrine ....................................... 83

             3.  Banishing the Spectre of the Nollan Decision .................. 85
      H.  Federal/State Powers and the Public Trust Doctrine ................... 86
             1.     Limitations on State Power: Supremacy, Preemption, and Federal
                    Sovereign Immunity .................................... 86
             2.     A Self-Imposed Limitation on Federal Power: The Consistency
                    Requirement of the Coastal Zone Management Act .............. 89


IV. Conclusions and Recommendations ..................................... 92



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         I.     Introduction and Executive Summary

                 A.     Introduction

 3             ~~~~The use and management of Washington state's coastal resources is a subject of intense

         interest to many different groups: state and local government agencies responsible for shoreline

         management, courts adjudicating policy and administrative issues, and of course, the public that

I        ~~owns and utilizes the tidelands, shorelands, and waters of Washington's rivers, lakes, and coast-

5        ~~line.  Statutes and regulations proliferate as governments attempt to regulate and protect the

         coastal environment. One state statute in particular, the Shoreline Management Act of 1971,'

I        ~~attempts a comprehensive approach to managing the coastal area, and implicates local, state and

5        ~~federal actions in its implementation.

                 In recent years, an ancient legal concept has been rediscovered as a renewed tool for

I        ~~coastal resource management. The public trust doctrine is rooted in Roman tradition, but courts

3        ~~throughout the United States have recently shown great interest in the doctrine as a flexible

         method for judicial protection of public interests in coastal lands, waters and water beds. Simply

         stated, the public trust doctrine provides protection of public ownership interests in certain uses

3        ~~of navigable waters and underlying lands, including navigation, commerce, fisheries, recreation

         and environmental quality. While tidelands may be sold into private ownership through convey-

         ance of the jus privatum, the public trust doctrine reserves a public property interest, the ju~s

3       ~~publicum, in these lands and the waters flowing over them. Indeed, the public trust interests in

3        ~~these lands and waters is so strong that government can defeat the public right only by express

         legislation, and then only to promote other public rather than private values. The doctrine also





             'Wash. Rev. Code ch. 90.58 (1989).1






applies to state owned lands, and imposes duties on state government and state agencies with

respect to uses that can be made of these lands.

       The public trust doctrine differs from regulatory schemes for coastal management in 

several respects. First, the doctrine is created, developed and enforced by the judiciary. While 

the doctrine is fully binding law on state government, it stems from the courts rather than the

legislature. The doctrine also contains several features not generally found in statutes. Its scopeI

is flexible, and courts may expand or limit it on a case-by-case basis. When properly invoked,

the doctrine can limit private property rights while avoiding claims of unconstitutional takings.

Unlike statutes, the doctrine has a quasi-constitutional nature. The legislature may extinguishI

the doctrine, but only in limited, explicitly-stated circumstances, and only for other public

purposes.

       The public trust doctrine arises out of the universally recognized need to protect publicI

access to and use of such unique resources as navigable waters, beds, and adjacent lands.' This3

public need is met through recognition of a burden akin to an easement, a burden that is owned

by the state and subject to state control for the benefit of the public interest in navigation,

commerce, environmental quality, recreation, etc. This public interest is a property right, like

an easement. If the state wishes to control the use of this burden, including use by either the






   'The law has long recognized special public rights for navigable waterways. The public has a clear 
right of navigation and fishery in such waters. Even on non-navigable-for-title waters an appropriator
is prohibited in Washington from pumping water out and lowering the lake level to the damage of other
lakeside owners. We accept the existence of state and federal navigation servitudes with their respectiveI
implications for private property. We accept without reservation that a local or state government can
zone navigable waters for "natural'" uses or open space only. In Washington we accept the rule illustrated
by Bach v. Sarich, 74 Wash. 2d 575 (1968) that all riparians have rights to prohibit nonriparian (non-I
water-dependent) fills or construction out into lakes. Such activity is presumed to be unreasonable if it
is not riparian.21






private owner or by the public, the state is merely controlling a right that it already owns.3 It

is not regulating private property. The exercise of these state management or ownership rights

do not therefore raise "takings" questions under the federal or state constitution because no

regulation of private property is involved.

       This Article considers several elements of the public trust doctrine. First, the public trust

is a state law doctrine, and its geographic scope and the interests it protects vary from state to

state.4 Second, the doctrine is a product of judicial decisionmaking; it was initially recognized

in the courts of the United States and England as an incident of sovereignty and is explained and

implemented in these courts. The courts continue to determine its scope and usage.' A member

of the public has legal standing to bring suit to protect public trust resources.' The suit can be

brought against a private landowner who threatens to interfere with or destroy public trust





   3A distinction should be made here. We consider three kinds of ownership; (1) where the state has
title to the beds of navigable waters or other land subject to the public trust easement, (2) where title to
the land has been conveyed into private ownership, but the land is still subject to the public trust
easement, and (3) where the state "owns" the public trust easement on privately owned land. With regard
to (1) and (2) the state does not "regulate" the use of these property interests under the police power,
rather it manages these interests as an owner on behalf of the public.
       Some early cases and statutes assumed the states "owned" the fish and waters and could therefore
regulate fishing, and the allocation and use of waters. Current jurisprudence rejects the ownership
concept for wild fish and waters in lakes and streams, saying that these resources are "unowned." The
current trend is to hold that the state power to regulate fisheries and water allocation is based on retained
sovereign state police power. The ownership concept simply does not fit this relationship. See Hughes
v. Oklahoma, 441 U.S. 322 (1979). States need not own waterbeds, or waters, or fish, in order to
exercise regulatory authority.

   4Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Mississippi, 481 U.S. 469, 475 (1988); Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U.S. 1,
26 (1893).

   5See, e.g., Owsichek v. State, Guide Licensing and Control Board, 763 P.2d 488 (Alaska, 1988);
CWC Fisheries, Inc. v. Bunker, 755 P. 2d 1115 (Alaska, 1988); Wilbour v. Gallagher, 77 Wash. 2d
306, 462 P.2d 232 (1969), cert. denied, 400 U.S. 878 (1970).

   6Marks v. Whitney, 6 Cal. 3d 251, 491 P.2d 374, 98 Cal. Rptr. 790 (1971); Wilbour v. Gallagher,
77 Wash. 2d 306, 462 P.2d 232, (1969), cert. denied, 400 U.S. 878 (1970).

                                                 3






resources, or against a state agency where it fails to protect public trust interests in the

management of state-owned land.

      Third, the public trust is a true common law doctrine -- it is flexible, and courts enlargeI

and diminish it according to changing public needs on the one hand, and legitimate private

expectations on the other. The doctrine defines both the public interest in private property and

the uses that can be made of such property consistent with the doctrine. It also determines theI

policies that control management of publicly owned lands.' In sum, it determines the3

intersection of private ownership and public trust rights, as well as the intersection of public

ownership and public trust duties.I

      B.     Scope of StudyI

      This Article examines the relationship of the public trust doctrine with legislatively

promulgated coastal resource management laws. The Shoreline Management Act and other state

environmental statutes rely on a combination of the public trust doctrine and the state "police"3

or regulatory power that governs the use of private property. The interrelationship of the public

trust doctrine with the regulatory power expressed in these statutes is an important part of this

Article.3

      Part 11 presents a history of the development of the public trust doctrine. Roman jurists

first eludicated the doctrine, and courts imported it into the United States by way of English

common law. Part II presents a brief history of the doctrine's origins and early history, then 

traces the chronological development of the public trust doctrine in Washington.  The state3

constitution contains several articles that embody public trust principles. The doctrine has also

been developed by the Washington courts.  In early cases the Washington Supreme CourtI


   'See Orion Corporation v. State, 109 Wash. 2d 621, 747 P.2d 1062 (1987), cert. denied, 108 S. Ct.
1996 (1988).1


                                                      4~~~~~~~~






recognized certain public rights, such as the right of navigation, but did not explicitly label these

decisions as public trust doctrine cases.  The 1969 case of Wilbour v. Gallaahers is such an

example.. Two 1987 cases explicitly identified the doctrine as part of Washington law.9

       Part II continues with an examination of several state statutes that express the values of

the doctrine. The harbor area system,"ï¿½ the Seashore Conservation Act, the Shoreline Manage-

ment Act,"  and the Water Resources Act"2 each regulate either public or private lands and

waters subject to the public trust. The Aquatic Lands Act"3 has set forth proprietary goals and

standards for management of state lands. This section identifies congruities found between the

regulatory goals of these statutes and the values expressed by the public trust doctrine.  This

section also analyzes the obligations placed on state government for management of state-owned

lands that are subject to the public trust doctrine.

       Part III examines the practical elements of the doctrine, including its geographic scope

and the variety of interests it protects. The doctrine is not extensively developed in Washington,

but the state Supreme Court has indicated it may be expanded to cover new interests and areas.

This Article therefore examines decisions from state courts around the country that address

relevant coastal management issues, and that may provide guidance to Washington courts and

practitioners in predicting the future scope of the doctrine. Part III also sets forth the ways in




   877 Wash. 2d 306, 462 P.2d 232 (1969), cert. denied, 400 U.S. 878 (1970).

   9Caminiti v. Boyle, 107 Wash. 2d 662, 732 P.2d 989 (1987); Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash. 2d
621, 747 P.2d 1062 (1987).

    "ï¿½Wash. Const., art. XV; Wash. Rev. Code 79.90.010-.070.

    "Wash. Rev. Code ch. 90.58.

    "2Wash. Rev. Code ch. 90.54.

    "3Wash. Rev. Code chs. 79.90 - 79.96.

                                              5






which the public trust may be defeated, both by state and private action, and describes the

various remedies available for conduct inconsistent with the public trust. Part III concludes with

an analysis of the interrelationship of the public trust doctrine as a state law doctrine with federal

legal principles, including takings doctrine, supremacy and preemption, and the consistency

requirements of the federal Coastal Zone Management Act (CZMA), the federal counterpart of

the state Shoreline Act.3

      Part IV concludes with observations about the possible future direction and use of the

public trust doctrine in this state.

       C.     General ObservationsI

      The public trust doctrine is part of Washington law. Its complete geographic scope and3

the interests it protects are, however, not yet known. Many of the interests protected by the

public trust doctrine can also be protected by state exercise of its regulatory power.  AlthoughI

constitutional takings questions may be raised when regulations are used, there is ample evidenceI

that these challenges will ordinarily be rejected if the regulations are designed properly. Why

then do we need the public trust doctrine?  Or, to put it another way, what are the significantI

differences between reliance on the public trust doctrine and reliance on the regulatory power3

of the state?

      The public trust doctrine is a judicial doctrine, with ancient common law roots. HistoryI

tells us that the interests protected by this doctrine are so important that their protection cannotI

be entrusted entirely to unfettered control by state legislatures."4 Some courts speak about the

public trust doctrine as if it were a constitutional clause. In fact it lies somewhere between an

ordinary rule of law, and a constitutional requirement.  It is more powerful than the ordinaryI




   "4See Illinois Central Railway v. Illinois, 146 U.S. 387 (1892).

                                            6







I        ~~rule of law, but not quite so powerful as a constitutional clause that justifies striking down
          inconsistent legislation. It might be labelled a "quasi"-constitutional doctrine.

 I              ~~~~Police power regulation is a product of the legislative process. This process can be slow,

I        ~~unwieldy, and costly, and in the meantime permanent damage may be done to public trust
          interests. Once navigable waters have been filled, or buildings built, they are seldom removed.

          The loss of open space, wetlands, navigable capacity, fish and wildlife, is often permanent. The

          public trust doctrine is premised on the belief that these interests are so profoundly important

          that they justify judicial review of legislation adversely impacting them, involving both the courts

          and the legislature in coastal management.

 3              ~~~~As a practical matter, successful reliance on the public trust doctrine means that the

I        ~~takings issue is significantly diminished, if not avoided altogether.   In addition, whereas

          individual citizens often have no standing in court to enforce environmental regulations, they

3        ~~generally do have standing to file suit under the public trust doctrine.  Also, legislation may

3        ~~provide only partial protection for the interests involved, contain "loopholes," and may become

          out-of-date. Enforcement of legislation may be spotty, or inadequate. The public trust doctrine

I        ~~~is premised on the theory that these limitations in the legislative approach justify continuation

3        ~~~and indeed expansion of the public trust doctrine.

                 The decisions of other state courts suggest future directions for consideration by

          Washington courts in interpreting the scope of the public trust doctrine. Other courts have, for

3        ~~~example, applied the doctrine to cover the dry sand area of beaches, non-navigable tributaries,

          related wetlands, and the surfaces of non-navigable waters. Other state courts have also

          recognized evolving public trust values, such as aesthetic beauty and the right of the public to





           I                                           ~~~~~~~~~~~~~7







walk over privately owned tidelands. These cases suggest possible applications of the doctrineI

that may be accepted by the Washington courts, and are examined in detail below.

      The public trust doctrine initially applied to all state owned beds of navigable rivers,

lakes, and salt waters when the state of Washington entered the Union in 1889. Subsequent to

statehood, about 60% of the tidelands on Puget Sound were conveyed into private ownership.

Nothing was said in these conveyances about abolishing the public trust doctrine. In other states

when such "bare legal title" conveyances have occurred, the public trust burden was not

destroyed."5 The Washington court has also supported this view. The Washington Supreme3

Court has described the public trust doctrine as similar to a covenant running with the land.

Unlike other burdens on private property, however, landowners need receive no express noticeI

of the public trust burden on their lands.3

      State and local officials must consider the public trust doctrine and its values when

issuing permits or making administrative decisions affecting public trust resources. State statutesI

often incorporate or reflect public trust values. If the state law appear to be inconsistent with3

public trust values, the law should be implemented only when that inconsistency is clearly

intended by the legislation.I















   "5See, e.g., Berkeley v. Superior Court of Alameda Co., 162 Cal Rptr. 327, 606 P.2d 362 (1980);
People v. California Fish Co., 166 Cal. 576, 138 P. 79 (1913).







H1.    History of the Public Trust Doctrine

       A.     Origins and Early History

       The public trust doctrine originated from the widespread public practice, since ancient

times, of using navigable waters as public highways for navigation, commerce, and fisheries.

The earliest articulation of the doctrine is sometimes attributed to the Institutes of Justinian of

533 A.D."6 which provided that the doctrine applied to the air, running water, the sea, and the

seashores.

       In England the doctrine was well established by the time of the Magna Charta.17

Leading English court decisions" recognized that the Crown held the beds of navigable waters

in trust for the people for navigation,'9 commerce, and fisheries."  Even the Crown could not

destroy this trust.2"







    "6J. Inst. 2.1.1. The Institutes of Justinian, a general textbook of Roman law, was issued around 533
A.D. B. Nicholas, An Introduction to Roman Law 41 (1962). See Lazarus, Changing Conceptions
of Property and Sovereignty in Natural Resources: Questioning the Public Trust Doctrine, 71 Iowa
L.Rev. 631 at 633-34 (1986).

    "TClause 33, Magna Charta.  See U.S. Fish & Wildlife Service Region 1, Ecological Services,
"Public Trust Rights," (1978) (prepared by Helen F. Althaus) for a comprehensive analysis of Roman,
civil law, and common law development of the public trust doctrine.

    "'See 2 H. Bracton, On the Laws and Customs of England, 16-17, 39-40 (S. Thorne, trans. 1968).

    "9Attorney General v. Parmeter, 10 Price 378, 147 Eng. Rep. 345 (Ex. 1811) affd by the House of
Lords, under the name of Parmeter v. Gibbs, 10 Price 412, 147 Eng. Rep. 356 (H.L. 1813).

    MThe Royal Fishery of the River Banne, Davis 55, 80 Eng. Rep. 540 (K.B. 1610).  Carter v.
Murcot, 4 Burr. 2162, 98 Eng.Rep. 127 (K.B. 1768). See 1 Water and Water Rights at 179-80 (Clark,
Ed. (1970)).

    "2See "Public Trust Rights," supra note 17. The author summarizes the English authorities, saying
that the king had a private right (jus privatum) which could be granted to others but the public right (Jus
publicurn was held by the Crown for his subjects and "could not be alienated."

                                               9







      In the United States cases as early as Arnold v. Mundv,22 decided in 1821, recognized3

and upheld the doctrine. In Mundy the New Jersey court declared the trust as we know it today.

The dispute concerned an oyster bed which was part of a pre-statehood conveyance from the

King of England. Conveyances eventually led to Arnold's ownership and use as a private oyster 

bed. This exclusive use was challenged by Mundy, who insisted the public had a right to take

oysters in this area as it had done for many years. The court ruled in favor of Mundy, giving

the first clear formulation to the doctrine.  It said that under the natural law, civil law, and 

common law, the navigable rivers in which the tide ebbs and flows, and the beds and waters of

the seacoast are held by the sovereign in trust for the people."3

      The court said that the states, being sovereign governments, had succeeded to the EnglishI

trust which was held by the Crown and that a grant purporting to divest the citizens of these

common rights was void. The people, through their government, may regulate public trust

resources, by building ports, basins, docks and wharves, reclaiming land, building dams, locksI

and bridges, and improving fishing places, but the sovereign power itself "cannot . . . make a3

direct and absolute grant of the waters of the state, divesting all the citizens of their common

right. 124I

      Seventy years later, in Illinois Central Railway v. Illinois, the United States Supreme3

Court built upon the principles articulated in Mundy and used the public trust doctrine to

invalidate one of the more outrageous land giveaways of the 19th century    I  189th




   226 N.J.L. 1 (1821).I

   131d. at 76-77.

   241d. at 78.I

   25146 U.S. 387 (1892).3

                                         10







3        ~~Illinois legislature deeded the bed of Lake Michigan along the entire Chicago waterfront to the

         Illinois Central Railroad. In 1873 the legislature, suffering pangs of conscience, repealed the

         grant. Ten years later the state sued in state court to establish the invalidity of the railroad's

         continued assertion of ownership over the harbor bed."6 The Supreme Court held the

         revocation valid, saying that a grant of all the lands under navigable waters of a state was "if

         not void on its face, [then] subject to revocation." The state cannot "abdicate its trust over

3        ~~property in which the whole people are interested... [any more than it can]... .abdicate its police

i        ~~powers. "

                 Mundy and Illinois Central establish the public trust doctrine as part of the common law

I        ~~adopted by the various States. These cases hold that legislatures will be held to a high standard,

3        ~~a trust-like standard, with regard to public trust resources.  The language of the two opinions

          suggests that the doctrine may even limit legislative power. At the least, the doctrine establishes

I        ~~a potent rule of construction, requiring that legislatures conveying away or changing the status

3        ~~of public trust resources must do so explicitly.

                 In England the doctrine was applied primarily to the bed of the sea and to tidelands."8

I        ~~The United States, in contrast, has large navigable rivers, such as the Mississippi and the

          Columbia, flowing inland for hundreds of miles. Not surprisingly the United States courts

          extended the doctrine to cover navigable fresh waters."9 Thus in this country the doctrine



             2The company removed the case to federal court, raising the issue whether the repeal offended the
          contracts clause and the fourteenth amendment due process clause of the federal constitution. Id. at 433.


 ~~~~'I l    lni C e n dtral5-4  Railroad Co. v. Illinois, 146 U.S. 387 (1892). More contemporary authors contend
          the public trust doctrine applied to navigable fresh waters in England too. 4 Waters and Water Rights
          105 (R. Clark, ed. 1970); "Public Trust Rights," supra note __, at 29 (1978).
             'Oregon ex rel. State Land Board v. Corvallis Sand and Gravel Co., 429 U.S. 363 (1977).







covers all waters "navigable in fact," whether fresh or salt.  Under the equal footing doctrine3

the title to the beds of all navigable waters, fresh or salt, automatically went to each state at

statehood."0 As the original thirteen states held title to the beds of navigable waters, so must

each new state hold such title if they are to be on an equal footing with the original thirteen.

Accordingly, analysis of navigability for title determines what lands left the federal domain and

passed to the states at statehood. Because state law cannot control the disposition of the federal

domain, the test of navigability for title is necessarily a federal test,"' and is determined as of3

the date the state entered the union."2 The subsequent disposition of these lands is a matter

solely of state law. Prior to statehood the federal government held title to these lands, which

were chiefly valuable for "commerce, navigation, and fisheries . ..in trust for the future3

states."33  The government could convey these beds away only in case of some "internationalI

duty or public exigency."3"

       At a minimum  the public trust doctrine protects the public interest in the beds ofI

navigable waters, up to mean high tide on the ocean, and mean high water mark on fresh3




   'The equal footing doctrine arises by implication from the United States Constitution, and provides
that new states must be admitted on an equal footing with the original thirteen states.  New states3
therefore have the same governing powers, including the power of governance over federal lands, as the
original states. New states also acquire, as of the instant of statehood, the title to the beds of navigable
rivers and lakes, because the original thirteen states held such titles. Martin v. Waddell, 41 U.S. (16
Pet.) 367 (1842).
   3'United States v. Utah, 283 U.S. 64 (1931); United States v. Holt State Bank, 270 U.S. 49 (1926);
and Brewer-Elliott Oil & Gas Co. v. United States, 260 U.S. 77 (1922).
    "2United States v. Appalachian Elec. Power Co., 311 U.S. 377 (1941); United States v. Utah, 283
U.S. 64, 75 (1931).
   `3Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U.S. 1, 49-50 (1894).

    'Id. at 50. These duties include performance of international obligations, improvements to facilitate
commerce with foreign nations or among the states. Id. at 48.

                                               12





 I~~~~~~~3
          waters.3  No use can be made of the beds of such waters without meeting conditions imposed

          by the doctrine. Beyond this, other states have interpreted the doctrine as applying to waters

K        ~~that are only navigable for recreational uses, even though the beds are privately owned. In other

          words, in some courts the public trust doctrine is not limited to those waters and beds which the

          state owns, or once owned, under the equal footing doctrine.

                 Federal courts have had little occasion to speak about the parameters of the doctrine, with

3 ~~the exception of Illinois Central Railway v. Illinois,"6 and recently, Phillins Petroleum Co. v.

          Mississippi.." The task of defining the scope of the doctrine has been left largely to state
          courts. California and Massachusetts have developed the doctrine more extensively than most

I        ~~states, with Wisconsin, Minnesota, New Jersey, Michigan, and a few other states not far behind.

3        ~~The doctrine has not been totally rejected in any state, although its application varies state by

          state and its application to particular facts has been denied."8

 I              ~~~~Courts around the country have employed the public trust doctrine in literally hundreds

3 ~~of cases in recent years."9 Several trends are apparent. First, courts are applying the doctrine

          in new geographical contexts in order to reach and promote new interests. In particular, courts




I            35~~~Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Mississippi, 484 U.S. 469 (1988). Most states extend public trust rights
          from the seaward limit of the territorial sea to the mean high tide line. A handful of states, however,
          only recognize full public trust protection seaward of the low tide line. These states include Delaware,
          Maine, Massachusetts, Pennsylvania, and Virginia. See D. Slade, et al., Putting the Public Trust
          Doctrine to Work 59 (1990).

I           ~~~~3146 U.S. 387 (1892).

~~~~3 7 ~      484 U.S. 469 (1988).
             3ISee. e.g.. Bell v. Town of Wells, 557 A.2d 168 (Me. 1989); MacGibbon v. Bd. of Appeals of
          Duxbury, 369 Mass. 512, 340 N.E.2d 487 (1976); O'Neill v. State Highway Dep't, 50 N.J. 307, 235
I      ~ ~A.2d 10 (1967).
             'See D. Slade, et al., supra note 35.       1


           I~~~~~~~~~~~~~1







are finding and preserving public access to coast and shorelines."  A second important trend

is the use of the doctrine as a method of environmental protection.

       Finally, coastal resource managers and state agencies are beginning to incorporate the

public trust doctrine into the administrative decision making process. State officials must

identify both known and potential parameters of the doctrine, and determine the extent to which

current regulatory decisions should be scrutinized for adherence to public trust values. Officials

must also determine whether any past decisions are subject to public trust review as well.43

       B.     Chronological Development of the Public Trust Doctrine in Washington Law

       Washington courts have only recently explicitly addressed the public trust doctrine in

state cases. Nonetheless, the public trust has existed in Washington since statehood, and burdens

all public trust resources, including tidelands, shorelands, and beds of navigable waters as well

as the waters themselves. Certain uses of these resources are specially protected by the doctrine,

including navigation, commercial fisheries, and "incidental rights of fishing, boating, swimming,

water skiing, and other related interests.""3 Because the public trust doctrine is dynamic and

may change with contemporary needs, the scope of the doctrine will probably expand in the

future.' This section traces the development and current status of the doctrine in Washington

law, constitutional, judicial, and statutory.



   4See, eg., Owsichek v. State, 763 P.2d 488 (Alaska 1988); Matthews v. Bay Head Improvement
Assoc., 95 N.J. 306, 471 A.2d 355 (1984).

   4"See infra Section III.C.1.

   42See. e.g., National Audubon Society v. Sup'r Court of Alpine County, 33 Cal.3d 419 (1983).

   'Mentor Harbor Yacht Club v. Mentor Lagoons, 170 Ohio St. 193, 199, 163 N.E.2d 373, 377
(1959) (holding that if waters were naturally navigable, then an artificial extension of a channel brought
the extended waters under the public trust doctrine).

    'See infra Section III for a detailed analysis of the current scope of the public trust doctrine.

                                               14







              1.     Constitution

       Prior to and at the time of statehood, tidelands and shorelands fronting harbor areas were

areas of intensive economic development and interest. Following much lobbying and debate,

the state constitutional convention approved three articles addressing ownership and management

of the new state's tidelands and shorelands.45 Each of these articles has direct bearing on the

scope of the state's public trust powers and obligations.

       First, the state Constitution declares state ownership of the beds and shores of all

navigable waters, except where a federal patent was perfected prior to statehood.' Second,

the Constitution invalidated prior acts of the territorial legislature granting tidelands to railroad

companies and establishing riparian rights.47 Finally, the Constitution established harbor

boundaries, and placed a restraint on disposition of beds underlying navigable waters outside of

certain harbor lines.48 This article directed the legislature to provide for the appointment of

a commission to draw harbor lines in the navigable waters that lie within or in front of the

corporate limits of any city, or within one mile on either side. The state may not alienate any

rights whatever in the waters beyond such harbor lines. Areas lying between harbor lines and

the line of ordinary high water, within specified limits, are reserved for landings, wharves,

streets, and other conveniences of navigation and commerce.49




   'K. Conte, The Disposition of Tidelands and Shorelands, Washington State Policy 1889-1982, at 10-
20 (unpublished master's thesis, 1982).

   'Wash. Const. art. XVII.

   4"Wash. Const. art. XXVII, ï¿½ 2.

   'Wash. Const. art. XV.

   4'Wash. Const. art. XV, ï¿½ï¿½ 1, 2. See also Johnson & Cooney, Harbor Lines and the Public Trust
Doctrine in Washington Navigable Waters, 54 Wash. L. Rev. 275 (1978).






       The public policy expressed in these constitutional provisions is generally consistent with3

public trust principles, the state reserving complete ownership in the beds and shores of navig-

able waters."0 The Constitution did not, however, prohibit the sale of tidelands and shorelands.

Instead, the state was permitted to dispose of first class tide5' and shore5' lands, which it did3

under statutory authorization until 1971.1 Second class tide' and shore55 lands continue to

be eligible for sale only to public entities.5"

              2.    'Cases3

       Early Washington cases, although not relying explicitly on the public trust doctrine,3

recognized, legally protectable public interests in the state's navigable waters and underlying






   'See Section II.B.3.6.(1) infra for further discussion of the interrelationship between the statutory
harbor line system and the public trust doctrine.I
   "1The term "first class tidelands" means the shores of navigable tidal waters belonging to the state,
lying within or in front of the corporate limits or any city, or within one mile thereof upon either sideI
and between the line of ordinary high tide and the inner harbor line; and within two miles of the
corporate limits on either side and between the line of ordinary high tide and the line of extreme low tide.
Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 79.90.030.
   5"'First class shorelands" means the shores of a navigable lake or river belonging to the state, not
subject to tidal flow, lying between the line of ordinary high water and the line of navigability, or innerI
harbor line where established and within or in front of the corporate limits of any city or within two miles
thereof upon either side. Id. ï¿½ 79.90.040.

   "See Hughes v. State, 67 Wash. 2d 799, 410 P.2d 20 (1966) for additional historical information.U

   "'Second class tidelands" means the shores of navigable tidal waters belonging to the state, lying
outside of and more than two miles from the corporate limits of any city, and between the line ofI
ordinary high tide and the line of extreme low tide. Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 79.90.035.

   "5"Second class shorelands" means the shores of a navigable lake or river belonging to the state, notI
subject to tidal flow, lying between the line of ordinary high water and the line of navigability, and more
than two miles from the corporate limits of any city. Id. ï¿½ 79.90.045.3

   'Id ï¿½ 9.94.150(2). See Conte, sup~ra note 45, at 170-84, for an account of the controversy
surrounding the enactment of this statute.

                                              16







beds.57 In Hill v. Newell,5" the court explicitly approved the reasoning of the leading

California public trust case.   In State v. Sturtevant.60 the court acknowledged that the state

held the right of navigation "in trust for the whole people of this state."61 The court did not

expressly use the term "public trust" in Wilbour v. Gallagher,62 but it gave strong protection

to the public right of navigation, one of the interests traditionally protected under the public trust

doctrine.

       More explicit judicial recognition of the public trust doctrine in Washington occurred in

1987, in Caminiti v. Boyle.6 Principles and policies of the doctrine are evident in our state

law, however, going back as far as 1891. One line of early cases examined the nature of the

state's ownership of tidelands and the beds of navigable waters.  The state Supreme Court

concluded in a series of decisions over several decades that the state owned these lands in fee,

and that entry into statehood extinguished all riparian rights of adjacent landowners to navigable

waters.'  This proprietary ownership, as contrasted with sovereign trusteeship, enabled the







   5?Madson v. Spokane Valley Land & Water Co., 40 Wash. 414, 82 P. 718 (1905); Dawson v.
McMillan, 34 Wash. 269, 75 P. 807 (1904).

   5886 Wash. 227, 149 P. 951 (1915).

    "5People v. California Fish Co., 166 Cal. 576, 138 P. 79 (1913). The court noted that the reasoning
of the California court expressed its own views. 86 Wash. at 231.

    I  ï¿½ 76 Wash. 158, 135 P. 1035 (1913)

    611d. at 165, 135 P. at 1037.

    6277 Wash. 2d 306, 462 P.2d 1232, cert. denied, 400 U.S. 878 (1969).

    '107 Wash. 2d 662, 732 P.2d 989 (1987).

    'Eisenbach v. Hatfield, 2 Wash. 236, 26 P. 539 (1891).

                                              17







state to dispose of tidelands, in fee, as provided by statute.65 But, the state conveyed only the

bare legal title, leaving the public trust in place.

       A parallel line of cases at this time examined both the nature of the state's disposition

of tidelands and the remaining public interests in the lands and waters above them. In

Eisenbach, the Court cited public interests in preservation of navigation and fishing as a

necessary basis for the state's power to grant lands into private hands.' New Whatcom v.

Fairhaven Land Co. analogized the state's ownership of lands to that exercised by the king of

England, and described the public's interest as "an easement in [all navigable waters] for the

purposes of travel."I7 Seauim Bay Canning Co. v. Bugge68 acknowledged a public right to

navigable waters and fisheries, but denied a public right of clamming on privately leased lands

between the high and low water marks."

       In State v. Sturtevant the state Supreme Court commented that the state was charged only

with preserving the public interest in navigation following grant of shorelands into private

ownership.7' On rehearing, the court left open the question whether a public right to fisheries

was reserved out of tideland grants.71 Concurrently, the Court decided two cases explicitly





   'Grays Harbor Boom Co. v. Lownsdale, 54 Wash. 83, 89, 102 P. 1041 (1909); Lownsdale v. Grays
Harbor Boom Co., 54 Wash. 542, 551, 103 P. 833 (1909).

   '2 Wash. 236, 253, 102 P. 1041 (1891).

   6724 Wash. 493, 504, 64 P. 735 (1901).

   '49 Wash. 127, 94 P. 922 (1908).

   'See infra Section III.C.2.a for a discussion of the current state of this issue.

   7o76 Wash. 158, 165, 138 P. 650 (1913).

   7186 Wash. 1, 149 P. 33 (1915).







discussing the public interests remaining in tidelands'7 and an abandoned navigable riverbed73

conveyed into private ownership. The court found all public interests to have been extinguished.

       Two important points emerge from these cases.  First, the Washington legislature early

followed a strong public policy encouraging private ownership of tidelands and concomitant

development and industrial expansion. The state Supreme Court implicitly approved this policy

in its decisions.'

       Second, although the Court did not use the term "public trust doctrine" when analyzing

these cases, it did invoke the leading public trust doctrine cases of the day, including Illinois

Central75 and California Fish,76 as authority for its analysis. The Court did not, however,

apply the presumption against destruction of public trust interests that is the hallmark of the

contemporary cases on the public trust doctrine. Instead, particularly with Palmer7' and

Hill,"7 the court engaged in perfunctory review of the statutes enabling the grants at issue, and

their negative impact on public trust interests."





   'Palmer v. Peterson, 56 Wash. 74, 105 P. 179 (1909).

    '8Hill v. Newell, 86 Wash. 227, 149 P. 951 (1915).

    '74See. e.g.. Harris v. Hylebos Industries, Inc., 87 Wash. 2d 770, 505 P.2d 457 (1974); Grays Harbor
Boom Co., supra note 65.

    "Illinois Central R.R. v. Illinois, 146 U.S. 387 (1892), cited in Palmer v. Peterson, 56 Wash. at 76.

    '6People v. California Fish Co., 166 Cal. 576, 138 P. 79 (1913), cited in Hill v. Newell, 86 Wash.
at 231-32.

    '756 Wash. 74, 105 P. 179.

    '86 Wash. 227, 149 P. 951.

     'Mhis problem continues. Recently, Division I of the Washington State Court of Appeals failed to
analyze the extinguishment of public trust interests in tidelands, despite its review obligations. See, Reed
v. State (unpublished opinion), Dkt. No. 25106-6-1 (5-21-90).

                                               19







       Wilbour v. Gallaghersï¿½ marks the modern genesis of public trust doctrine decisions in

Washington. The Court found that a shoreland owner's right to develop intermittently submerged

property was circumscribed by the public interest in navigation at high water. The thirteenth

footnote is particularly significant where the Court encouraged a more systematic method of

permitting fill." This footnote is generally thought to have inspired the Shoreline Management

Act of 1971.82

       Nevertheless, doctrinal development of the public trust remained inconsistent even after

Wilbour. The court in Harris v. Hvlebos Industries. Inc.8? found that the "legislative intent

regarding use of tidelands in harbors of cities is manifestly that . .  such harbors . . . shall

consist of commercial waterways, and that the filling and reclaiming of the tidelands  ... shall










   8D77 Wash. 2d 306, 462 P.2d 232 (1969).

   "Id. at 316. Footnote 13 of the opinion states:

       We are concerned at the absence of any representation in this action by the Town or
       County of Chelan, or of the State of Washington, all of whom would seem to have some
       interest and concern in what, if any, and where, if at all, fills and structures are to be
       permitted (and under what conditions) between the upper and lower levels of Lake
       Chelan. There undoubtedly are places on the shore of the lake where developments, such
       as those of the defendants, would be desirable and appropriate. This presents a problem
       for the interested public authorities and perhaps could be solved by the establishmentof
       harbor lines in certain areas within which fills could be made, together with carefully
       planned zoning by appropriate authorities to preserve for the people of this state the
       lake's navigational and recreational possibilities. Otherwise there exists a new type of
       privately owned shorelands of little value except as a place to pitch a tent when the lands
       are not submerged.

   'Laws of 1971, ch. 286, p. 1496 (now codified at Wash. Rev. Code Ch. 90.58).

   '81 Wash. 2d 770, 786, 505 P.2d 457.

                                               20







3       ~~be encouraged." I   The Court did note that the recently enacted Shoreline Act was not argued

         in the case as evidence of legislative policy reversal."5

                 More recently, the state Supreme Court has explicitly addressed the role of the public

3 ~~trust doctrine in Washington's coastal management in two cases. In Caminiti v. Bovle,86 the

         Court found that the public trust doctrine had always existed in Washington law."7 While

         acknowledging the power and extent of the public trust doctrine the Court nevertheless found

I        ~~the legislative act at issue, a revocable license to waterside owners to build private recreational

I ~~docks on state-owned tidelands and shorelands,88 not inconsistent with public trust interests in

         navigable waters.

 I             ~~~~The Court in Orion Coro. v. State89 made affirmative use of the public trust doctrine

         in curtailing development of privately owned land where the fills and housing would conflict

         with public interests in navigable waters. While the state clearly had the power to dispose of

I        ~~tidelands and shorelands, that disposition was not unqualified. Rather, it was limited by public

3        ~~trust concepts of public access for navigation and fisheries. Orion is particularly noteworthy for

         its analysis of a constitutional "takings" claim. The tidelands owner argued that its property had

1       ~~been taken without just compensation as required by the state and federal constitutions.  The


             "Ild. at 786.

 3           851~~~'-d. at n.lIl.

             '107 Wash. 2d 662, 732 P.2d 989 (1987).

 I          ~~~~'Caminiti involved state-owned land, and focused on management of state land consistent with the
         doctrine rather than regulation of private land.

I           ~~~~Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 79.90.105. Abutting residential owners may maintain docks without charge
          if such docks are used exclusively for private recreational purposes and the area is not subject to prior
          rights. Permission is subject to local regulation and may be revoked by the state upon a finding of public
         necessity.
             89109 Wash. 2d 621, 642, 747 P.2d 1062, 1073 (1987).

                                                        21







Court remanded the case to the trial court for consideration of the relation of the public trust to

the burden it placed on the property.

       These cases indicate that the public trust doctrine has been adopted into Washington law,

but has not been fully delineated. They do suggest direction for the future development of the

doctrine and provide analytic foundations for that development.

              3.     Legislation

       To what extent do legislative enactments, addressing coastal resource management,I

embody and even supplant the public trust doctrine? The public trust doctrine represents two

distinct concepts: first, the judicial function is expanded, from its usual rational basis review,

to scrutinize legislative and administrative acts. Second, when engaged in this review, the courtsI

compare challenged laws or governmental actions with specific values, i.e., public interests in

navigation, commerce, fisheries, and other uses of trust resources.

                     a.     Judicial Review FunctionI

       Usually the judiciary will defer to legislative judgment when reviewing statutes. If a

court can find a "rational basis" for a challenged statute, it will decline to substitute its own

judgment for that of the legislature."0 The courts make an exception to this deferential review,1

however, when certain constitutional issues are implicated.  Courts will, for example, strictlyI

scrutinize statutes that violate principles of equal protection and certain fundamental rights.9"







   'Duke Power v. Carolina Environmental Study Group, 438 U.S. 59 (1978); Williams v. Lee OpticalI
Co., 348 U.S. 483 (1955); State v. Brayman, I110 Wash. 2d 183, 751 P.2d. 294 (1988).

   "1Washington v. Seattle School Dist. No. 1, 458 U.S. 457 (1982); Moore v. East Cleveland, 431
U.S. 494 (1977); Myrick v. Board of Pierce Cy. Comm'rs, 102 Wash. 2d 698, 677 P.2d 140, 687 P.2d
1152 (1984).3

                                            22







                The public trust doctrine invites another form of heightened judicial scrutiny, not

         necessarily based on constitutional foundations"2 but on historical common law traditions and

         the unique value and importance of navigable waters and coastlines."3 Thus, the courts have

5       ~~used the public trust doctrine to carefully examine statutes for consistency with public trust

         principles. Rather than deferring to legislative judgment about coastal management, the doctrine

         enables courts to compare that judgment with public trust values.'~

 5             ~~~~Can a statute preclude the traditional heightened scrutiny that the public trust doctrine

         requires? Presumably, because the public trust doctrine is a judicially created law that may be

         invoked by judicial notice, the legislature cannot divest the courts of their responsibility to

U       ~~consider the public trust doctrine.  Neither can the judiciary relinquish its public trust doctrine

5       ~~obligations. In other words, while the public trust doctrine may not direct the outcome of any

         given case, it does reuire courts to take a stronger than usual look at legislation that may

I       ~~negatively impact public trust interests.

     3                        ~~~~~~~~b.  Statutes

                                       (1)    Harbor Line System

  I             ~~~~The constitutionally mandated harbor line system9" gave rise to the first state statutes

I       ~~addressing public trust interests. The harbor line system provides for state ownership and


 I          ~~~~Although courts in other states have so implied. See H. Dunning, Instream Flows, The Public
         Trust, and the Future of the West, presented at Instream Flow Protection in the Western United States:
         A Practical Symposium (Mar. 31-Apr. 1, 1988) (conference proceedings available from Natural
         Resources Law Center, University of Colorado).
 5          ~~~~See supra Section II.A.

             'Caminiti v. Boyle, 107 Wash. 2d 662, 732 P.2d 989 (1987); People v. California Fish Co., 166
         Cal. 576, 138 P. 79 (1913); Sax, The Public Trust Doctrine in Natural Resources Law: Effective Judicial
         Intervention, 68 Mich. L. Rev. 471 (1970).
             '5Wash. Const. art. XV, ï¿½ 1.

                                                        23







management of all lands lying outside of established harbor lines. The proprietary interest

reflected in the constitutional articles providing for the system,"6 and the implementing

statutes, 9 clearly embody the public trust interest in these lands. The geographic scope of the

public trust doctrine exceeds that of the harbor line system, but where they correlate, they are

the same. As Johnson & Cooney noted-

        ".  . The existence of the [public trust] doctrine in Washington is important
      becuse ... harbor lines have been established in only a small percentage of the
       state's waters, and even where harbor lines do exist, they do not perfectly reflectI
       contemporary public values in navigation and in the beds of navigable waters.
       The public trust doctrine may be available to protects these values in a proper
       case.`9
       The purposes of the harbor line system and the public trust doctrine also correlate. The3

harbor line system serves to limit the uses of harbor areas to "landings, wharves, streets, and

other conveniences of navigation and        c     omre"' These purposes mandate public use of theI

harbor area and in fact embody historic public trust uses.I

       "Nothing in the Washington harbor line system ... should be taken to negate the
       public trust doctrine in this state.... .The harbor line system has reduced the need
       for reliance on the public trust doctrine and has, at least until recently, given
       adequate protection to many of the same public interests which otherwise would
       have received public trust doctrine protection.""t~

While the harbor line system seeks to reserve and retain public control and access over important

commercial waterfronts, it is not clear how other public trust interests, such as fisheries and

recreation, would fare in conflict with the harbor line system.3



    'Wash. Const. art. XVIL. See supra Section II.B.l.I

    'Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ï¿½ 79.90.010 - .090.

    "'Johnson & Cooney, supra note 49, at 287.

    'Wash. Const. art XV, ï¿½ 1. 

    "~Johnson & Cooney, supra note 49, at 286.

                                            24







       State policy during the first eight decades of statehood clearly favored disposition of

tidelands and shorelands into private ownership,1ï¿½1 a policy contemplated and advanced by the

harbor line system. Several statutes delineated the functions of the Harbor Line Commission and

established programs for the sale of tidelands and leases of navigable water beds.?  In 1971,

the state legislature halted further sales of tidelands and shorelands into private ownership.s

By that time, however, 60% of all tidelands and 30% of all shorelands were, and remain,

privately owned."ï¿½   Importantly, this private ownership does not extinguish public trust

interests.

                     (2)    The Shoreline Manaaement Act

       In 1971, the state legislature enacted the Shoreline Management Act."ï¿½s The Shoreline

Act establishes a management scheme and ethic for local"ï¿½6 comprehensive planning and land

use control for all shorelines of the state, extending from extreme low tide inland 200 feet, for

all streams and rivers with flows greater than twenty cubic feet per second, for all lakes twenty

acres and larger, and for all associated wetlands. "07 Many of these waters and underlying lands

are public trust resources. Whether the doctrine extends to cover all of the lands and waters





   "'1See Conte, supra note 45.

   "See Wash. Rev. Code Titles 43, 53, and 79.

   "ï¿½3Wash. Laws 1971, Ex. Sess., ch. 217, ï¿½ 2 (now codified Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 79.94.150).

   'ï¿½Conte, supra note 45, at Introduction, p. x.

   3ï¿½ 'Wash. Rev. Code Ch. 90.58.

   ""'he state retains power of approval over local master programs to insure consistency with the
policies of the Act. Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.090.

   1ï¿½07Id. ï¿½ 90.58.030(2).

                                             25







subject to the jurisdiction of the Shoreline Act is a question yet unanswered by the WashingtonI


      The Shoreline Act reflects a legislative intent to protect public trust resources. The


statute designs a land use program that governs both state-owned and private lands that fall under3

its jurisdiction.'"I The Act emphasizes preservation of these waters for public access and

water-related or water-dependent uses, and promotes environmental and aesthetic values.

      As a multi-purpose planning statute, the Shoreline Act's goals and functions are far

broader than those of the public trust doctrine. Nevertheless, certain public trust values are

reflected in the Act's legislative findings, use preferences, and guidelines for master program

contents. The Orion Court observed that the Shoreline Act reflects public trust principles in its3

underlying policy, that is, "protecting against adverse effects to the public health, the land and3

its vegetation and wildlife, and the waters of the state and their aquatic life, while protecting

generally public rights of navigation and corollary rights incidental thereto.""~9 

       While the Shoreline Act represents an exercise of state regulatory power, the public trust3

doctrine supplements execution of the Act. When regulatory power is applied to trust resources,

limiting them to specific trust uses, no takings issue arises. Private land is subject to the trust 

burden, which pre-dates virtually all private ownership. A takings issue can arise if regulationsI

exceed public trust protections. For example, the Orion court found that the public trust ease-

ment on the tidelands at issue precluded their fill and residential development. The tidelands

could, however, be used for aquacultural activities under the public trust burden, but not under3



   "'8This authority may be contrasted with that of other statutes and departments, which exercise
authority only over state-owned lands.3

   "O~rion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash. 2d 621, 641 (1987)(citing Portage Bay-Roanoke Park Comm'ty
Coun. v. Shorelines Hearings Bd., 92 Wash. 2d at 641 n. 10, 747 P.2d at 1073 n. 10. (1979)).

                                             26







the Shoreline Act. Hence, Orion Corporation could claim a regulatory taking of its tidelands

equal to their value as an aquaculture site, but not for other development."' The public trust

doctrine effectively shields the state's regulatory actions from takings claims, where those actions

mirror the scope of the doctrine.

       Although the Orion court clearly distinguished between the public trust doctrine and the

Shoreline Act, earlier cases indicate the doctrine was nearly merged into the Act. The Court

in Caminiti noted that "the requirements of the "public trust doctrine" are fully met by the

legislatively drawn controls imposed by the Shoreline Act of 1971."i"  Previously, the court

observed that ". . . any common-law public benefit doctrine this state may have had prior to

1971 . . . has been superseded and the Shoreline Act is the present declaration of that

doctrine.""2 In Orion, however, the public trust doctrine made a strong appearance in contrast

to the Shoreline Act. Thus, while the Shoreline Act may reflect elements and policies of the

public trust doctrine, it does not supersede it.

                      (3)    The Waters Resources Act

       The Water Resources Act of 197l1"  (WRA) promulgates state policy governing the

"utilization and management of the waters of the state," providing guidelines and priorities for

allocation and use of primarily freshwater bodies, especially rivers.  This statute represents an






    ï¿½ "Id. at 660-62. The Court remanded for factfinding on this issue.

    "'Caminiti, at 670 (quoting Portage Bay).  Nevertheless, the residential preference cited as
authoritative in Portage Bay is, arguably, in conflict with public access goals of the public trust doctrine,
even though the Shoreline Act cites residential preference as facilitating public access.

    1l2d_._ at 4 (citation omitted).

    "'Wash. Rev. Code ch. 90.54.

                                              27







intersection between the prior appropriation"'  and public trust doctrines, and is explicitly

binding on local governments and agencies."' While the statute does not address navigation

interests, it does cite environmental quality, particularly with respect to wildlife, as a priority

in water allocation."'   The statute also implies a requirement of base flows to support

navigation. "7

        The geographic scope of the WRA covers all waters contained in lakes and streams in

Washington, and groundwater resources, most of which are public trust resources. Waters in

navigable lakes and streams are clearly protected by the public trust doctrine. Waters that are

only recreationally navigable may also be subject to the doctrine. Underground waters are not

protected by the doctrine, unless their use affects the quantity or quality of surface water

resources.

       The WRA's function is to provide policy guidance on the use of state waters, such that

they are "protected and fully utilized for the greatest benefit to the people of the state.""' A

number of the Act's administrative guidelines are clearly congruent with public trust values,

although important exemptions exist. For example, the Act seeks to protect water quality and

explicitly requires consideration of base flows in lakes and streams in order to protect environ-

mental quality and fish and wildlife resources."' The WRA also, however, provides for a




    4A common law system of water allocation based on the principle of "first in time, first in right."

    "'Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.54.090.

    16Id. ï¿½ 90.54.020(3).

    1171d.

    81d. ï¿½ 90.54.010.

    19Id. ï¿½ 90.54.120(2).

                                              28







         variety of other uses, private and public, and exempts existing water rights from the policies of

         the Act."2 Public trust values are in fact only a few of many interests to be considered.

                 The Water Code of 1917121 is the basic water appropriation code in Washington, and

3        ~~created the process for establishing priorities among various diverters.  The Water Code is

         potentially inconsistent with the public trust doctrine in that it purports to issue water

         consumptive use rights that sometimes damage and destroy public trust interests. The public

         trust doctrine, or the interests protected by that doctrine, were not discussed or considered when


         the code was adopted. Because no explicit intent to abolish the public trust doctrine is evident
         in the 1917 Code, or permits issued thereunder, the public trust doctrine should still be

I        ~~applicable to prior appropriation water rights."22

     3                         ~~~~~~~(4)    The State Environmental Policy Act

                 The State Environmental Policy Act of 1971 (SEPA)"2 was the third in the trilogy of

I        ~~environmental statutes enacted in that year.  SEPA is designed to achieve a balance between

3        ~~resource utilization and  environmental protection through  evaluation  of state and  local

         governmental activities. This evaluation provides a comprehensive analysis of development

I        ~~activities and their impacts in light of potential environmental impacts. The use of and impacts

         on public trust resources are only one element to be considered in environmental evaluations
          under SEPA. Nevertheless, the statute substantively guarantees aesthetic and environmental

          quality to the state's residents. These rights are congruent with those protected by the public


             '2Id. ï¿½ 90.54.900.

I            121~~"Wash. Rev. Code Ann. ï¿½ 90.44.010-.900 (1962 and Supp. 1990).

             "~See infra Section III.B.2.a for a discussion of the retroactive effect of the public trust doctrine on
I     ~      ~~water diversion permits issue in California.
             "~Wash. Rev. Code ch. 43.21C.

           I                                           ~~~~~~~~~~~29







trust doctrine, and public trust jurisprudence may support claims to environmental quality of

trust resources made through the SEPA process.

                     (5)    The Aauatics Land Act

       In 1982, the legislature enacted the Aquatic Lands Act (ALA), consolidating a number

of separate statutes relating to the lease and sale of state-owned tidelands and shorelands.?4

The ALA was further revised in 1984.

       The ALA covers a significant portion of public trust lands.  Aquatic lands are defined

as "all state-owned tidelands, shorelands, harbor areas, and the beds of navigable waters.""2s

The scope of the common law public trust doctrine differs in that it also embraces privately-

owned aquatic lands, and may extend further inland than the line of high water and high

tide. 126

       The policies and administration of the ALA have important implications for the public

trust doctrine, and the ALA is a prime example of legislation providing for management of state-

owned public trust resources in a manner consistent with the doctrine. The ALA recites the

great value of aquatic lands and requires that they be managed to benefit the public." The

Act provides guidelines prioritizing use of aquatic lands: public use and access, water-dependent

use, environmental protection, and renewable resource use are the most important public benefits

to be promoted. '8 State-wide interests are preferred over local interests. Non-water-dependent




    "2Id. chs. 79.90 - 79.96.

    12,51d. ï¿½ 79.90.010.

    "2See infra Section III.B.

    "'Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 79.90.450.

    12Id. ï¿½ 79.90.455.

                                              30







uses are permitted only under exceptional circumstances, where compatible with water-dependent

uses. When evaluating tideland lease proposals, the managing agency, the state Department of

Natural Resources, is instructed to consider the natural values of the land as wildlife habitat,

natural area preserve, representative ecosystem, or spawning area, and it may withhold leasing

where it finds the lands have significant natural values. 129

       A specific provision of the ALA was at issue in Caminiti v. Boyle.ï¿½ the first case in

which the state Supreme Court explicitly acknowledged the public trust doctrine as a part of

Washington law. The court found a harmony between the challenged statute and the Shoreline

Act, which it cited as a legislative manifestation of the public trust doctrine. The court upheld

the ALA provision at issue, finding it was not in conflict with public trust values.

                     (6)    The Seashore Conservation Act

       The most recent legislative protection for public trust resources was enacted in the 1988

amendments to the Seashore Conservation Act (SCA).TM1 Originally enacted in 1967, the SCA

explicitly dedicates Washington state ocean beaches to public recreation.  The function of the

statute is to preserve this public trust resource for public use in perpetuity. The SCA declares

that "[tihe ocean beaches within the Seashore Conservation Area are . . . declared a public

highway and shall remain forever open to the use of the public..  "I"  The legislature based

this policy on the increasing public pressure for recreational use of the ocean beaches,m3




   I. 1291.. ï¿½ 79.90.460.

   13ï¿½107 Wash. 2d 662, 732 P.2d 989 (1987).

   "3'Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ï¿½ 43.51.650-.765.

   i d 132._  ï¿½ 43.51.760.

   i331d_ ï¿½ 43.51.650.

                                             31






including swimming, surfing, hiking, hunting, fishing, clamming and boating.  General public3

recreational use is anticipated, but choices and priorities are also expressed, e.g., that most of

the beaches shall be available only for pedestrians, not motor vehicles.134 Management of

these lands is vested under the jurisdiction of the Washington State Parks and Recreation1

Commission.

      The Seashore Conservation Act expresses the policies of the public trust doctrine, and

provides rules and a system for management of these important state lands for the public benefit.3

      C.   Summaryg

      The public trust doctrine has burdened all pertinent lands in Washington since statehood.

Early cases referenced trust interests without explicitly calling them such.  Recently, the state 

Supreme court has explicitly recognized the doctrine and adopted it into the law. The state

Constitution also identifies and promotes the state's interests in public trust resources, and

provides a basis for legislative manifestations of the doctrine. Congruence between public trustI

values and several statutes governing use of the state's natural resources is common.  These3

statutes have become increasingly important resource management tools, and the extent to which

they embody or reflect public trust values has increased over time as well.I
















   1341d. ï¿½ 43.51.710.                        3 

                                                       32~~~~~~~







         MI.   Description, Analysis and Potential Application of the Public Trust Doctrine.


 i             ~~~~This section begins with a discussion of the fact that the public trust doctrine is primarily
         a state law doctrine with varying degrees of development from state to state. The following

I        ~~subsections describe the geographical scope of the doctrine, the interests protected by the

         doctrine, and actions by the state and by individuals that are inconsistent with the public trust

         doctrine. Each of these subsections begins with a discussion of what can clearly be discerned

I        ~~from Washington case law.  The scope of the discussion in each subsection then expands to

3        ~~consider how Washington courts might develop the doctrine in light of cases from other j urisdic-

          tions, state legislative policies, and academic commentary. This approach is supported by the

I        ~~Washington Supreme Court's reference to all of these sources in discussing the public trust

3        ~~~doctrine.1"I

                 Next, this section turns to several other matters that can impact the effectiveness of the

ï¿½        ~~public trust doctrine.  First, there is a subsection which discusses who can bring an action for

3        ~~activities that are inconsistent with the public trust doctrine.  Second, there is a subsection

          discussing how the public trust doctrine affects takings claims under both the federal and

          Washington State Constitutions. Finally, there is a subsection on the interplay of federal and

3        ~~~state powers, and its effects on the public trust doctrine.

 1              ~~~~A.  The Public Trust Doctrine--Primiarily a State Law Doctrine

                 Although the United States Supreme Court has articulated many of the basic public trust

3        ~~principles in a few Supreme Court decisions, the public trust doctrine remains primarily a state

3        ~~law doctrine.  The Court's description in Shivelev v. Bowlbv of the variation among state

          assertions of title to tidelands is equally applicable to the public trust doctrine:



              "'S5ee, ejg.. Orion Cowp., 109 Wash. 2d at 639-42, 747 P.2d at 1072-72.

                                                        33







       inhere is no universal and uniform law on the subject; . each State has dealt5
      with the lands under the tide waters within its borders according to its own views
      of justice and policy     . ...Great caution, therefore, is necessary in applying
      precedents in one State to cases arising in another.""'3

Thus one could say that there is not one, but many, public trust doctrines in America, or at least

many different forms of that doctrine.

      Variations in the doctrine from state to state are the product of decisions made afterI

statehood. Under the equal footing doctrine, each state entered the Union with the same owner-3

ship rights as the original states possessed in lands beneath navigable waters and waters affected

by the ebb and flow of the tides."3  The federal government held those lands in trust for theI

state, and upon statehood the state gained title to those lands. Federal law controls whether3

waters are navigable for title, i.e. navigable so that the state acquired title at statehood under the

equal footing doctrine."'3 Subsequent developments in state law, however, control the scopeI

of the doctrine in each state."'3 Some states have conveyed much of these lands into private
















   "~Shively v. Bowlby, 152 U.S. 1, 26 (1894).1

   "3Martin v. Waddell, 41 U.S. (16 Pet.) 367 (1842).1

   "'8Under federal law, navigability for title is determined by considering the condition of the waters
at the time the state was admitted to the Union. See Utah v. United States, 403 U.S. 9, 10 (1971);
United States v. Oregon, 295 U.S. 1, 14 (1935).
   "3'Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Mississippi, 484 U.S. 469 (1988).1

                                            34







          hands, and recognize fairly limited public trust interests in them. 140  Other states, such as

          California and New Jersey, have been at the forefront in expanding the doctrine.

                  There is some support for a federal public trust doctrine which requires the federal

3         ~~government to act in accordance with trust principles.  This may be important in states where


          the federal government owns large areas of coastal property. After tracing the growing
          preservationist attitude in public land law, one academic authority said that a federal public trust

3         ~~may exist which places several limits on federal power by 1) constraining congressional action,

          2) constraining administrative action, 3) providing a rule of construction for federal legislation
          that protects trust interests, and 4) forcing the federal government to undertake actions to protect

I         ~~trust resources. 14'  Court decisions have reached varying conclusions about the existence of

3         ~~~a federal public trust doctrine that would constrain management of federal                 reore.142

                  There is a federal doctrine, the navigation servitude, that closely parallels the public trust

I         ~~doctrine.   The federal navigation servitude, though not denominated a federal public trust



              "~Delaware, Pennsylvania, and Virginia recognize that an upland grant from the state extends seaward
          to the low water mark. Massachusetts and Maine give upland owners the right to tidelands out to the low
          water mark, or to 100 rods from the high water mark, whichever is less. D. Slade et al., supra note 35,
          at 48 n.60 (1990). Consistent with the preference for private property, states like Massachusetts and
          Maine have construed public rights to lands between the high and low water marks narrowly. See, e.g..
          Bell v. Town of Wells, 557 A.2d 168 (Me. 1989) (holding that state legislation giving the public a right
          to use privately owned intertidal lands for recreation was an unconstitutional taking under both the U.S.
          and Maine constitutions); In re Opinion of the Justices 313 N.E. 2d 561 (Mass. 1974) (finding a public
          right to fish, fowl and navigate, but no public right of passage on foot). See infra, Section III.C.2.a.
 3            ~~~~14'Wilkinson, The Public Trust Doctrine in Public Land Law. 14 U.C. Davis L.Rev. 269 (1980).

                 12ee.eg. United States v. 1.58 Acres of Land, 523 F. Supp. 120 (D. Mass. 1981) (finding dual
          sovereign nature of public trust when Coast Guard condemned land near Boston Harbor); City of
I       ~    ~Alameda v. Todd Shipyards Corp. 632 F. Supp. 333 (N.D. Cal. 1986) and 635 F. Supp. 1447 (N.D.
          Cal. 1986) (holding that clause in original conveyance from state to city barring transfer of the trust lands
          to private ownership also prohibited the federal government from transferring the land to private
I       ~    ~~ownership after it had exercised eminent domain); but cf U.S. v. 11.037 Acres, 685 F. Supp. 214 (N.D.
          Cal 1988) (holding that when the federal government exercises its power of eminent domain, the state
          public trust easement is extinguished).


            I~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~.







doctrine, shares common features with the state doctrine. The navigation servitude imposes a

dominant easement on navigable waters and beds. 143 One of its primary functions is to justify

nonpayment of compensation to private persons who claim their property interests have been

damaged or destroyed by a government project on navigable waters in aid of navigation.1"4I

The navigation servitude protects the public interest in navigation and commerce. It derives

from the fact that at statehood the federal government was delegated a servitude under the

constitu-tion's commerce clause which applies to federal projects in aid of navigation on all3

navigable waters. Navigability, for purposes of the navigation servitude, is considerably broader3

than navigation for the equal footing doctrine.'145  States also have navigation servitudes,

having delegated to the federal government only a portion of their reserved sovereign power overI

navigation.  Some state navigation servitudes, as in Alaska, 146 require that the state project be3






   '"The navigation servitude, however, applies to waters that are navigable in fact. This is a broader3
definition, covering more waters, than are covered in the navigable for title test.

    '"See, e.g.. United States v. Rands, 389 U.S. 121 (1967); see also Johnson, Public Trust Protection5
for Stream Flows and Lake Levels. 14 U.C. Davis 233, 246-48 (1980).

    '"As United States v. AD~nalachian Elec. Power Co., 311 U.S. 377, 408-09 (1940), made clear, the
class of waters that are navig able for purposes of Congress' commerce power are much broader than the 
class of waters that are navigable for title. Congress' commerce power extends not only to those waters
navigable at statehood, but also those that are capable of being navigable. Therefore, the federal
navigation servitude, based on Congress' commerce power, extends to more waters than the equal footing
doctrine does.
       The U.S. Supreme Court has even held that the federal navigation servitude applies to non-
navigable tributaries of navigable waters, where the purpose of a project was to aid navigation on theI
lower, navigable part of a river. United States v. Grand River Dam Auth., 363 U.S. 229 (1960). In
Grand River Dam the U.S. Supreme Court held that the U.S. government owed no compensation for
waterpower values in a darn site it had condemned as part of a flood control and navigation project. But _ 
cf. United States v. Kansas City Life Ins., Co., 339 U.S. 799 (1950) (granting compensation to farmer
whose farm was ruined when the United States raised the level of the Mississippi, thereby backing up
water on the non-navigable tributary on which the farm lay).
    '"Wernberg v. State, 516 P.2d 1191 (AK 1974).

                                               36







in aid of navigation to trigger the servitude.  Others, such as California,m apply the servitude

even though the state project damages or destroys navigation. The state navigation servitude is

closely related to the public trust doctrine, and may, in fact, be considered a special branch of

that doctrine. All three of these doctrines, the federal navigation servitude, the state navigation

servitude, and the public trust doctrine, reduce the government's obligation to pay damages for

taking or damaging private property. Federal management of navigable waters and their beds

constitutes management of the federal government's own servitude, and is not regulation of

private property."48 In all three situations the relevant doctrine imposes a pre-existing burden

on private property. When the government applies or regulates this burden it is managing its

own property rather than that of a private owner.

       A federal public trust doctrine, if found to exist, would presumably apply only to federal

lands. It would not override state public trust doctrines as applied to state or private lands, or

the interpretation of the doctrine by state courts.  Theoretically, Congress could enact explicit

legislation preempting this field of law, but it has not done so, and is unlikely to do so in the

future. 149

       If there is a federal public trust doctrine, it might mean that the federal government has

an obligation to protect public trust interests in federal lands."5'  The federal consistency





    "Colberg, Inc. v. State ex rel. Dept. of Public Works, 67 Cal. 2d 408, 62 Cal. Rptr. 401, 432 P.2d
3 (1967), cert. denied, 390 U.S. 949 (1968).

    3"8See infra Section III.H. 1.

    "'4See infra notes Section III.H. 1.

    I'NWilkinson, supra note 141, citing Sierra Club v. Department of the Interior, 376 F. Supp. 90
(N.D. Cal. 1974); Sierra Club v. Department of the Interior, 398 F. Supp. 284 (N.D. Cal. 1975); Sierra
Club v. Department of the Interior, 424 F. Supp. 172 (N.D. Cal. 1976).

                                               37







requirement of the Coastal Zone Management Act151 may diminish the significance of a federal

public trust doctrine. The consistency requirement shows Congress' explicit intent to leave

coastal management under state control. It obligates federal agencies and federal permittees to

comply with state coastal management programs.  State coastal management programs include

relevant state judicial and administrative decisions that define and apply state property law."2

This includes the public trust doctrine. The federal government must act consistent with this

aspect of the state coastal management program, as with other aspects of the state's program.

Therefore, the discussion which follows focuses on the definition and application of

Washington's public trust doctrine.

       B.     The Geographical Scope of the Doctrine

               1.     The Established GeoeraDhical Score in Washington

       As mentioned earlier, under the equal footing doctrine each state obtained title to the beds

of its navigable waters and waters subject to the ebb and flow of the tides.  At statehood

Washington asserted in its state constitution all possible rights under the equal footing doctrine:

"The state of Washington asserts its ownership to the beds and shores of all navigable waters

in the state up to and including the line of ordinary high tide, in waters where the tide ebbs and

flows, and up to and including the line of ordinary high water within the banks of all navigable

rivers and lakes . . .""153 The state constitution, however, was silent on the issue of the use



    15116 U.S.C. ï¿½ 1456 (198); see infra notes Section III.H.2.

    15216 U.S.C.A. ï¿½ 1453 (6a) (Supp. 1991).

    '53Wash. Const. art. XVII, ï¿½ 1. In Huahes v. State. the Washington Supreme Court defined the line
of ordinary high tide: "[W]e deem the word 'ordinary' to be used in its everyday context. The 'line of
ordinary high tide' is not to be fixed by singular, uncommon, or exceptionally high tides, but by the
regular, normal, customary, average, and usual high tides.... Thus the line of 'ordinary high tide' is
the average of all high tides during the tidal cycle." 67 Wash. 2d 799, 810, 410 P.2d 20, 26, (1966)
rev'd on other grounds. 389 U.S. 290 (1967). The language of the opinion and the diagram the court

                                              38







and sale of state-owned shorelands and tidelands, leaving that issue to the politics of future

legislatures and to the interpretation to be given Article 17 by the Washington Supreme

Court."i4 Washington State was eager to encourage growth and development, so it transferred

approximately sixty-one percent of its tidelands and thirty percent of its shorelands into private

hands between 1889 and 1979.l55 Those transfers, however, did not in themselves extinguish

the jus publicum, or public interest, in tidelands and shorelands. Public and private interests co-

exist in those parcels conveyed into private hands,"56 so long as these lands are still usable for

public trust purposes.

       Washington's Supreme Court has not expressly addressed the geographical scope of the

public trust doctrine. The Washington Supreme Court's opinions in Orion and Caminiti suggest,

however, that the geographical scope of the public trust doctrine extends at least to the tidelands




provided in the opinion, further suggest that the line of ordinary high tide is synonymous with the line
of vegetation. Id. at 803, 410 P.2d at 22. As Professor Corker noted, the court's decision to fix the
boundary between tidelands and uplands at the vegetation line lacked both significant legal precedent and
practical justification. Corker, Where Does the Beach Beein. and to What Extent is This a Federal
Ouestion, 42 Wash. L. Rev. 33, 43-54 (1966). The Washington Court's fixing the boundary between
uplands and tidelands at the vegetation line differs from the federal test announced in Borax Consolidated.
Ltd. v. Los Angeles. 296 U.S. 10 (1935) which adopted a boundary of the mean high tide established
by the average elevation of all tides as observed at a location through a tidal cycle of 18.6 years.
Professor Corker's assertion that in case of divergence between these two lines, the vegetation line will
always be inland, appears sound. Corker, supra. at 41 n.29. Thus, the Washington Supreme Court's
interpretation of the term "ordinary high tide" means that through its constitution the state of Washington
asserted ownership up to the level of vegetation, creating a broad area of publicly owned intertidal lands.
As the discussion below indicates, however, natural and man-made changes may affect the state's
ownership rights. See infra, notes Section.H.3.a.
       Significantly, the United States Supreme Court recently confirmed a state's right to claim any
lands subject to the ebb and flow of the tides, rejecting the argument that public trust lands are only those
beneath navigable waters. Phillips Petroleum Co. v. Mississippi, 484 U.S. 469 (1988).

    3  'Hughes., 67 Wash. 2d at 805, 410 P.2d at 23.

    155K. Conte, supra note 45, at Introduction, p. x.

    '56Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash. 2d 621, 639, 747 P.2d 1062, 1072 (1987); Caminiti v. Boyle,
107 Wash. 2d 662, 668-69, 732 P.2d 989, 993-94 (1987).

                                                39







and shorelands that the state held title to at the time of statehood."7 In Caminiti, the court

may have applied the doctrine up onto upland owners' lands for limited purposes when it said

that the public must be able to get around docks built on state-owned tidelands and

shorelands.1s8  These cases should not, however, be read as strictly limiting the geographic

scope of the doctrine in Washington. No cases have tested how far the Washington Supreme

Court will extend the scope of the doctrine. In deciding the scope of the doctrine, the court

would likely consider precedents from other jurisdictions, state legislative policies, and academic

commentary.

              2.     Does the Doctrine atDlv to Lands Other than those Under Navigable-for-
                     Title Waters or Beneath Tidal Waters

                     a.     Non-naviable for Title Tributaries

       The California Supreme Court applied the public trust doctrine to cover non-navigable

tributaries in National Audubon Society v. Sunerior Court of Alt)ine County (the Mono Lake

case).159 Mono Lake is a large, navigable, scenic lake that sits at the base of the Sierra

Nevadas in California. While this saline lake contains no fish, it does contain brine shrimp,

which are a source of food for large numbers of migratory and nesting birds.  Small islands in

the middle of the lake serve as nesting grounds for many of these birds. In 1940, the California

Division of Water Resources granted Los Angeles a permit to divert water from the non-

navigable tributaries of Mono Lake. Since that time, Los Angeles had been diverting virtually



   "5'Orion, 109 Wash. 2d at 639, 747 P.2d at 1072; Caminiti, 107 Wash. 2d at 666-67, 732 P.2d at
992.

   "'SThe court should logically extend the application of the doctrine so as to allow portages over
private lands to get around obstacles or dangerous rapids in streams. See Montana Coalition for Stream
Access v. Hildreth, 684 P.2d 1088 (Mont. 1984); Montana Coalition for Stream Access v. Curran, 682
P.2d 163 (Mont. 1984).
   15S33 Cal.3d 419, 658 P.2d 709, 189 Cal. Rptr. 346, cert. denied, 464 U.S. 977 (1983).

                                             40







the entire flow of four of the five non-navigable tributaries that originally fed the lake. In this

hot, arid, region those diversions had a devastating impact on the lake. By the time the

California court heard the case, the surface area of the lake had shrunk by a third and many of

the islands in the lake became linked to the mainland, exposing the birds to predators.'6ï¿½

       The plaintiffs in Mono Lake filed suit to enjoin the diversions on the theory that the

public trust protects the shores, bed and waters of Mono Lake. Thus, the California Supreme

Court squarely faced the issue of whether public trust principles covered activities on non-navi-

gable tributaries that affected navigable waters. The court concluded that the public trust doctrine

"protects navigable waters from harm caused by diversion of nonnavigable tributaries."161 It

follows from the logic of the Mono Lake case that California might regulate other types of

upland activities that cause harmful spillover effects on public trust resources.'62  Under this

interpretation upstream pollution and appropriations of water which reduce the volume, and

therefore the assimilative capacity of the public trust resources, would be subject to state control

under the public trust doctrine. The Washington Supreme Court has not had occasion to address

this issue. Other states have cited the Mono Lake decision favorably,'63 and academics have









    36ï¿½33 Cal.3d at 425, 658 P.2d at 711, 189 Cal.3d at 348.

    "6sld. at 437, 658 P.2d at 721, 189 Cal. Rptr. at 357.

    '62Admittedly, one could just as easily denominate the result of Mono Lake an extension of the public
trust doctrine to upland uses rather than an extension of the aeogranhic scote of the doctrine.

    16 'See, e.g., State v. Central Vermont Railway, 571 A.2d 1128 (Vt. 1989); CWC Fisheries, Inc. v.
Bunker, 755 P.2d 1115, 1118, 1121 n. 15 (Alaska 1988); Kootenai Environmental Alliance, Inc., v.
Panhandle Yacht Club, Inc., 671 P.2d 1085, 1093-94 (Idaho 1983).

                                              41







generally praised the decisionl" but no public trust decisions have actually applied (or rejected)

the Mono Lake principle to prior appropriation rights."'

                      b.     Related Wetlands and UDlands

       Recognizing the interconnectedness of water systems and the importance of wetlands to

water quality and wildlife preservation, courts in some states have extended the public trust

doctrine to cover wetlands and even uplands related to navigable water bodies. For example,

the high court of Massachusetts extended the doctrine to cover state parks"c and swamps. 167

The Wisconsin Supreme Court in Just v. Marinette County 168 considered a case in which

landowners had filled wetlands without obtaining the necessary permit. The court recognized

that Wisconsin had an active duty under the doctrine to preserve water quality, and it noted that

wetlands serve a vital role in purifying the waters in the state's lakes and streams.169  The

Wisconsin Supreme Court therefore concluded that filling of wetlands implicated the state's





   '"See, e.g., Wilkinson, The Headwaters of the Public Trust: Some Thoughts on the Source and
Score of the Traditional Doctrine, 19 Envtl. L. 425, 466 (1989); Sax, The Limits of Private Rights in
Public Waters, 19 Envtil. L. 473, 474 (1989); Dunning, The Public Trust: A Fundamental Doctrine of
American Property Law, 19 Envtl. L. 515, 518 (1989).

   "aSubsequent California appellate decisions have touched on the relation between the public trust
doctrine and the prior appropriation system. Golden Feather Community Assoc. v. Thermalito Irrigation
District, 199 Cal. App. 3d 422, 244 Cal. Rptr. 830 (1988), reh'g granted, 209 Cal. App. 3d 1276, 257
Cal Rptr. 836 (1989) (declining to apply public trust doctrine to prevent appropriators from a non-
navigable tributary of an artificial lake from lowering the level of the lake); United States v. State Water
Resources Control Bd., 182 Cal. App. 3d 82, 150, 227 Cal. Rptr. 161, 201 (1986) (confirming the water
board's authority under the public trust doctrine to supervise appropriators to protect fish and wildlife).

    "Gould v. Greylock Reservation Comm., 350 Mass. 410, 215 N.E.2d 114 (1966).

    "67Robbins v. Department of Public Works, '355 Mass. 328, 244 N.E.2d 577 (1969).

    16856 Wis.2d 7, 201 N.W.2d 761 (1972).

    169201 N.W.2d at 769.

                                               42







duties under the public trust doctrine."7'  The Washington Court has not addressed this issue

directly."7' If the Washington court follows Wisconsin it might rule that the doctrine covers

wetlands and related uplands that affect public trust interests.

       It should be remembered, as stated earlier, that regulation can accomplish many of the

same objectives as the public trust doctrine. Frequently police power regulations and the public

trust doctrine can be considered as alternatives to the same goal.

                     c.      The Dry Sand Area

       Courts have employed numerous legal doctrines, including the public trust doctrine, and

"custom" to recognize public rights in the dry sand area of ocean beaches (i.e. those areas above

ordinary high tide)."'   For example, in Matthews v. Bay Head Improvement Assoc.173 the

New Jersey Supreme Court recognized that in order for the public to fully exercise its right to

swim and bathe below the mean high water mark, the public must also have both a right of

access and a right to use the dry sand area of beaches. In other words, in New Jersey the public

is not only entitled to cross private dry sand areas; it also has the right to sunbathe and generally

enjoy recreational activities. The court, however, stopped short of saying that all dry sand areas

will be subject to public rights, by saying that the extent of the public's rights under the doctrine

will depend on the circumstances.'74



    '7ï¿½Id..

    I?'The Court did, however, cite Just in Orion. Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash.2d 621, 641 n.10,
747 P.2d 1062, 1073 n.10 (1987).

    "7Other legal theories, such as implied dedication (Gion v. Santa Cruz, 2 Cal.3d 29, 465 P.2d 50,
84 Cal. Rptr. 162 (1970)) and prescriptive easements have also been used to find public rights, but these
are generally applied only to site-specific locations.

    31395 N.J. 306, 471 A.2d 355 (1984).

    174471 A.2d at 365.

                                               43







       The Oregon Supreme Court recognized public rights in the dry sand area of all state

beaches through the ancient doctrine of custom in State ex rel Thornton v. Hav.'75 The Oregon

Court listed a seven-part test to determine whether the public had acquired a customary right to

Oregon's ocean beaches.  First, the public's use must be ancient and used "so long 'that the

memory of man runneth not to the contrary.""76 Second, the customary right must be

exercised without interruption."77 Third, the customary use must be peaceable and free from

dispute."'   The fourth requirement is that the customary right be reasonable."79  The fifth

requirement, certainty, was satisfied by the visible boundaries of the dry sand area and the

character of the land."' Sixth, the custom must be obligatory; "that is ... not left to the option

of each owner whether or not he will recognize the public's right to go upon the sand area for

recreational purposes.""'8  Finally, custom must not be repugnant, or inconsistent, with other

customs or with other laws."' The Oregon Supreme Court found that all seven requirements

of the doctrine of custom had been satisfied and declared the public's customary right to the dry







   "'5254 Or. 584, 462 P.2d 671 (1969). The Oregon relied in part on Native Americans' ancient use
to establish customary public rights.

   1761d. 462 P.2d at 677 (quoting 1 Blackstone, Commentaries 75-78).

   ""'Id., 462 P.2d at 677.

   1781d.._


   1Il~d.

   181Id_.l

   '214d.4


                                                          44~~~~~~~







sand area of beaches.  Courts in other states have also recognized the doctrine of custom as a

way to protect public rights."'

       Other states have recognized the public's rights in the dry sand area through statutes and

state constitutional provisions.  For example, under a Texas statute, all parts of the Gulf of

Mexico beach between the vegetation line and the mean low tide line are subject to the public's

right of ingress and egress regardless of private ownership where the public has acquired a right

through prescription, dedication, or continuous right."   California's Constitution recognizes

the public's right of access to tidelands and shorelands.185

       Once again, the Washington Supreme Court has never had the opportunity to directly

address the issue of whether public trust rights exist in the dry sand areas of beaches in this

state."'   The Shoreline Management Act of 1971 clearly favors uses which promote public

access to and recreation along tidelands and shorelands.is7  A  Washington State attorney

general's opinion concludes that the public has the right to use and enjoy the dry sand area of







   "Matcha v. Mattox, 711 S.W. 2d 95, 98-99 (Tex. App. 1986); State ex rel. Haman v. Fox, 100
Idaho 140, 594 P.2d 1093, 1101 (1979); City of Daytona Beach v. Tona-Rama, Inc., 294 So.2d 73, 78
(Fla. 1974); County of Hawaii v. Sotomura, 517 P.2d 57, 61 (Haw. 1973); but cf Graham v. Walker,
78 Conn. 130, 133-34, 61 A. 98, 99 (1905).

    "Tex. Nat. Res. Code Ann. ï¿½ 61.011 (1978).

    "85CA Const. art. X, ï¿½ 4. California courts have recognized this section of California's Constitution
as a codification of the public trust doctrine. Carstens v. California Coastal Commission, 182 Cal. App.
3d 277, 289, 227 Cal. Rptr. 135, 143 (1986); see also Golden Feather Community Assoc. v. Termalite
Irrigation Dist., 209 Cal. App. 3d 1284, 257 Cal. Rptr. 836, 842 (1989) (looking to Cal. Const., art X,
ï¿½ 4, to define the scope of the public trust doctrine).

    "SFor a discussion of the public's right to walk over privately held tidelands, see infra Section
1I   .C.2.a.

    '"Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.020 (1989).

                                              45







ocean beaches through the doctrine of "custom" recognized by the Oregon Supreme Court in

Thornton.'88

       Whether the court would go beyond recognizing the public's right of ingress and egress

and recognize public rights in sunbathing and recreating in the dry sand area, as the court did

in New Jersey, is unclear. Alternatively, the Washington Supreme Court might follow those

courts reluctant to expand public access at the expense of private property."9

                      d.     State Legislation Also Supports a Broad GeoprarDhic Scone for the
                              Public Trust Doctrine

       In defining the geographic scope of the public trust doctrine, Washington courts might

also look to the Shoreline Act for legislative policy support. The coverage of the Shoreline Act

is extremely broad, covering all navigable salt water, all navigable-for-title fresh water, and most

waters that are navigable only for pleasure craft. The Act's coverage extends to all uplands lands

lying within two hundred feet of the high water mark of all navigable waters and most non-navi-

gable for title waters, both rivers and lakes.'9ï¿½ It also covers flood plains, flood ways, bogs,

swamps and river deltas.'9' Because of an expansive definition of shorelines, the Act covers

shorelines on lakes and streams which could not meet the test for navigability for title,'92 and


   '88AGO 1970 No. 27.

   "8Maine and Massachusetts probably would not recognize public rights in the dry sand area. Those
states even refuse to recognize a public right to recreate or walk over privately owned intertidal lands.
Bell v. Town of Wells, 557 A.2d 168 (Me. 1989); In re Opinion of the Justices, 313 A.2d 561 (Mass.
1974).

   "WVash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.030 (f) (1989). The "ordinary high water mark" itself extends all the
way up to the vegetation line. Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.030 (b) (1989).

   "'9Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.030 (f), (g) (1989); Wash. Admin Code ï¿½ 173.22 (1989).

   "ï¿½Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.030 (d) (1989) provides that shorelines "means all of the water areas
of the state, including reservoirs, and their associated wetlands, together with the lands underlying them
except (i) shorelines of state-wide significance; (ii) shorelines on segments of streams upstream of a point
where the mean annual flow is twenty cubic feet per second or less and the wetlands associated with such

                                               46







thus covers lands that were never owned by the state under the equal footing doctrine.  The

Shoreline Act and the public trust doctrine are distinctly different, though symbiotically

related."3  Recently the court found it worth noting that public trust principles are reflected

in the Shoreline Act's underlying policies."9 This suggests that the legislature is both aware

of the public trust doctrine, and willing to enact legislation in furtherance of the goals of the

doctrine.

       This legislative expression of policy could lend encouragement to the Washington Court,

as Wisconsin and other courts have done, to rule that the public trust doctrine applies to waters

navigable only for recreational purposes, where title to the beds are privately owned and never

passed through state ownership.  Extension of the public trust doctrine to the areas covered by

the Shoreline Act could conceivably help control harmful spillover effects from many non-

navigable tributaries and uplands and assure public access--values which other state courts have

considered important when extending the geographic scope of the public trust doctrine.

       All state owned lands within the coverage of the public trust doctrine are also subject to

state management regulations. The Seashore Conservation Act'95 is an example. Under this

Act all state-owned ocean beaches between ordinary high tide and extreme low tide are declared

public highways, forever open to the use of the public.  These lands are managed by the




upstream segments; and (iii) shorelines on lakes less than twenty acres in size and wetlands associated
with such lakes  ..... (emphasis added).

    "ï¿½See supra Section II.B.3.b.(2).

    3" 4For example, in Orion the court noted that "We have also observed that trust principles are
reflected in the SMA's underlying policy  ..... Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash.2d 621, 641 n.1, 747
P.2d 1062, 1073 (1987) citing Portage Bay-Roanoke Park Comm'ty Council v. Shorelines Hearings Bd.,
92 Wash.2d 1, 4, 593 P.2d 151 (1979).

    "9SWash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 43.51.650 et seq.

                                              47







Washington parks and recreation commission for public recreational purposes.   A  second3

example is the extensive Aquatic Lands Act,'96 covering all state-owned tidelands, shorelands,

harbor areas, and the beds of navigable waters."~ This Act contains detailed instructions for

management of these lands by the state, primarily through the Department of Natural Resources.

Presumably the geographic scope of the public trust doctrine could be extended to protect lands

subject to these regulations from harmful upland uses.

                     e.     Rialhts of Rinarians and the Public to Use the Surfaces of Non-3
                            navizable-for-title Waters

       Although public and riparian rights to use the surface of non-navigable-for-title waters 

are not always denominated as public trust interests, recognition of these rights illustrates an

important application of the concept of public rights, nearly identical in function if not in name,

with public trust rights. As the state's population and the public interest in recreation continue 

to grow, rights to use the surface of non-navigable streams and lakes will continue to increase3

in importance.

       Washington cases on riparian and public rights to non-navigable streams are neitherI

recent nor logically consistent. In Griffith v. Holman,"'9 decided in 1900, the court took a3

dim view of public rights to boat and fish on non-navigable streams. The plaintiff sued for

trespass because the defendant had cut a wire fence the plaintiff had put across the Little

Spokane River and caught fish while floating across plaintiff's property. The State Supreme1

Court upheld the trial court's award of $250 for damaging the fence, and $250 for the fish--no



                           "Wash. Rev. Code ch. 79.90I

    "~Wash. Rev. Code ch 79.90.01


    `~23 Wash. 347, 63 P. 239 (1900).

                                            48







small award in those days.199 Paradoxically, a year later the court recognized the right of

loggers to float their logs down non-navigable streams in Watkins v. Dorris.2ï¿½ In a relatively

more recent case, Snivelv v. JaberTM the court held that riparians and their licensees have the

right to use the entire surface of non-navigable-for-title lakes.2"2 This sounds, at first blush,

different than saying that the "public" has a right to use the surface of these waters. But the

difference is more apparent than real. Other riparians, and their licensees, can use these lake

surfaces. Licensees include anyone who has the riparian's permission, whether that permission

is obtained by fee, or for free. The state is a riparian if it acquires an access road to a lake.

The state can allow the public as licensees to use this access. By comparison, if the law said

the "public" has a right to use these waters, this public right would only be available to those

who could get onto the lake without trespassing on private property.ï¿½'  That is, the public

must, in effect, be licensees of a riparian.

       These differences in Washington law between lakes and streams can best be explained

in terms of the social and economic needs of the time."o  Supporting logging operations has



   "Later, in Snivelv v. Jaber. 48 Wash. 2d 815, 296 P.2d 1015 (1956), the court said that the Griffith
decision was based on a fencing statute.

   :=24 Wash. 636, 64 P. 840 (1901).

   20148 Wash. 2d 815, 296 P.2d 1015 (1956).

   'For a long while the state's Department of Wildlife followed a policy of obtaining waterfront lots
along non-navigable lakes, thereby becoming riparians and opening up lakes to public use. But there are
limits to this practice, as the court indicated in Botton v. State, 69 Wash. 2d 751, 420 P.2d 352 (1966).
There the court held that although the state may admit the public to use the lake, the state's failure to
control public use of the lake was an unreasonable interference with the riparian rights of private lakefront
owners.

   'A float plane could land on a non-navigable-for-title lake without trespassing. But the number of
such incidents is so small as to be virtually irrelevant.

   'Johnson, Rioarian and Public Riahts to Lakes and Streams. 35 Wash. L. Rev. 580, 612-14 (1960).

                                               49







been important since the earliest days in Washington's history.  Recreation on non-navigable

lakes was also deemed important, whereas irrigation appropriations from lakes is relatively less

significant. With the growing social and economic importance of recreational uses of small

streams, it is likely that the Washington Supreme Court would either distinguish or overrule

Griffith today. As the population of the state grows, the public demand for recreational uses of

small streams will continue to increase. Several other western states have recognized public

rights of navigation on streams that are not commercially navigable but are navigable for

pleasure craft only.2"5 Washington may follow the example set by those other states for

streams. It has already done so for lakes.

       3.     Other Issues Affectina the GeozrarDhical Scope

                     a.     Additions and Losses of Public Trust Land and Waters Due to
                             Natural and Artificial Chances

                             (1)    Accretions/Reliction

       The natural world, always dynamic, pays little heed to the boundaries set by humans.

Coasts and shores change. The Long Beach Peninsula, located in Pacific County in southwestern

Washington State, is a good example.  In historical times, large accretions have extended the

ocean beaches along this peninsula hundreds of feet to the west.2" Thus, the question of






   'ï¿½See Montana Coalition for Stream Access v. Curran, 682 P.2d 163 (Mont. 1984); People ex rel.
Younger v. County of El Dorado, 96 Cal. App. 3d 403, 157 Cal. Rptr. 815 (1979); Hitchings v. Del
Rio Woods Recreation & Park Dist., 55 Cal. App. 3d 560, 127 Cal. Rptr. 830 (1976); People v. Mack,
19 Cal. App. 3d 1040, 97 Cal. Rptr. 448 (1971); Day v. Armstrong, 362 P.2d 137 (Wyo. 1961); but
cf. People v. Emmert, 597 P.2d 1025 (Colo. 1979) (holding that the public has no right to use waters
overlying private lands for recreational purposes). In 1987, the Oregon Legislature enacted two statutes
that apply the public trust doctrine to all waters of the state. Or. Rev. Stat. ï¿½ï¿½ 537.336, .460 (1987).

    'Washington State Parks and Recreation Commission, The Evolution of Accreted Lands OwnershirD
on the Ocean Beaches of the Lone Beach Peninsula. 3 (Unpublished Report, 1981).

                                              50







ownership of accretions in our state is not just an academic one; it implicates very real, and

valuable, public and private interests.

       The general rule in most states is that gradual changes by accretion or reliction change

the boundaries of privately owned uplands and public trust lands. Washington follows this rule

for shorelines along fresh water rivers and lakes.2"

       The state does, however, assert ownership to accretions to ocean beaches that occurred

after 1889 statehood.   In Huahes v. State.2"' the Washington Supreme  Court held that

accretions to ocean beaches that occurred after statehood in 1889 belonged to the State of

Washington, not the upland owner. Mrs. Hughes appealed the case to the U.S. Supreme Court.

The high court held that because Mrs. Hughes' predecessor in title had received the property

from the U.S. prior to Washington statehood, her right to accretions to her land was governed

by federal, not state law. According to the Court, under federal common law Mrs. Hughes was

entitled to the accretions to her property."ï¿½  After a brief flirtation with expanding the role

of federal common law in determining the rights of federal patentees, the Court limited the

application of federal law to cases like Hughes where ocean front property was involved on the

ground that international relations were implicated.2"'


   :ï¿½?Ghione v. State, 26 Wash. 2d 635 , 644, 175 P.2d 955, 961 (1946); Spinning v. Pugh, 65 Wash.
490, 118 P. 635 (1911).

   `g67 Wash. 2d 799, 410 P.2d 20, 29 (1966) rev'd 389 U.S. 290 (1967); see also Wash. Rev. Code
ï¿½ 79.94.310 (1989).

   "  lThe Court in Hughes did not address the question of whether the federal rule applied to accretions
to property where the title was acquired from the federal government after statehood. Description of the
Hughes holding in California ex rel. State Lands Commission, 457 U.S. 273, 280 (1982), suggests that
this federal rule on accretion ownership applies to all federal patents along oceanfronts, not just pre-
statehood patents.

   '21Oregon ex rel. State Land Bd. v. Corvallis Sand & Gravel Co., 429 U.S. 363, 377 n.6 (1977).
In a more recent decision, California States Lands Commission v. United States. 457 U.S. 273, 279-82
(1982), the United States Supreme Court reaffirmed the application of federal law to accretions along the







       The Seashore Conservation ActTM provides that all accretions along the ocean shores

owned by the state are declared public highways the same as ocean tidelands. The Washington

State Parks and Recreation Commission, however, has established a negotiation system to try

and solve the management issues for these accreted lands.212

                             (2)    Avulsion

       Under Washington law, the addition or loss of land due to avulsion or sudden catastrophe

does not affect the seaward boundary.21   Most other states adhere to this fixed boundary rule

for avulsive changes."'   Thus if a navigable river changed its course suddenly by avulsion,

title to the original bed would remain in the state, and would still be subject to the public trust

doctrine.  The new location of the river would also be subject to the public trust doctrine,

although the bed would be privately owned.






ocean when it held that federal law dictates that accretions to federal lands belong to the federal
government.

   "'Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 43.51.650.

   21'In April, 1968, negotiations between private landowners and WSPRC [Washington State Parks and
       Recreation Commission] led to the establishment of a Seashore Conservation Line [SCL],
       and a program to secure dedications west of this line from persons who had clear title up
       to the Pacific Ocean. As a result, the boundary of the SCA [Seashore Conservation
       Area] has changed -- where applicable -- to this new coordinate line, established by
       WSPRC, approximately 150 feet east of the line of vegetation on the peninsula. The
       agreement also required the SCA to be reestablished in 1980 and every ten years
       thereafter to insure it remains the same distance from the line of mean high tide.

       T. Terich & S. Snyder, The Evolution of Accreted Land Claims on the Long Beach Peninsula
of Washington State. 59 (Western Washington University).

   2"3Harper v. Holston, 119 Wash. 436, 442, 205 P. 1062, 1064 (1922).

   214 See ., Cinque Bambini Partnership v. State, 491 So.2d 508, 520 (Miss. 1986), aff'd 484 U.S.
469 (1988) ("By way of contrast to our law regarding accretion and reliction, boundaries and titles are
not affected by avulsions.").                                                                                3

                                               52







                              (3)    Artificial Changes

       States generally treat artificial changes in the shoreline the same as avulsive changes--i.e.

boundaries remain fixed. This is particularly true if the owner of the upland property brings

about the change to add to his/her property."' Where the owner of property is not involved

in, or is a "stranger" to, the cause of the change, several courts have held that title will vest in

the upland owner.2"6 Such changes in the shoreline often occur where a neighboring owner

or the state has erected a seawall, pier, or breakwater.

       Artificial changes along coastlines and shorelines may also raise other issues besides title.

For example, if a waterside owner fills or alters tidelands, will they still be subject to the public

trust? The California Supreme Court in Berkeley v. SuDerior Court balanced the interests of the

public and of landowners when it stated that the trust still applies to tidelands "still physically

adaptable for trust uses" but not to lands "rendered substantially valueless for those

purposes."2I7 The Washington Supreme Court quoted Berkeley on this point in Orion,QM

and might follow a similar rule."9






   "2"See, e.g., Menominee River Lumber Co. v. Seidl, 149 Wis.2d 316, 320, 135 N.W. 854 (1912).

   2"6See, e.g., State Dept. of Natural Resources v. Pankratz, 538 P.2d 984, 989 (Alaska, 1975).

   21726 Cal.3d 515, 606 P.2d 362, 162 Cal. Rptr. 327, cert. denied, Santa Fe Land Improvement Co.
v. Berkeley, 449 U.S. 840 (1980). In applying this test, the court said that tidelands that have been
filled, whether or not they have been substantially improved, are free from the trust to the extent that they
are no longer subject to tidal action. The court noted that parcels which no longer have Bay frontage
were obvious examples of where the trust had been extinguished. Id. at 534, 162 Cal. Rptr. at 338-39.

   218109 Wash. 2d 621, 640 n.9, 747 P.2d 1062, 1072 n.9 (1987).

   "Me Washington Supreme Court's decision in Wilbour v. Gallaaher, 77 Wash. 2d 306, 462 P.2d
232 (1969), cert. denied. 400 U.S. 878 (1970) suggests that our Court will have little tolerance for those
who fill public trust lands. In that case, the court required that fill be removed from Lake Chelan.

                                               53







       Yet another issue is whether the public trust doctrine applies to artificially created

tidelands, shorelands, bottomlands or submerged lands. Some states courts have held that the

trust does not apply to such lands,220 but another court held that it does.221

                     b.     Lands Exempt from the Public Trust Doctrine

       There are also several categories of land that may be exempt from the public trust

doctrine. These fall under three categories: 1) lands conveyed prior to statehood, 2) federal

acquisitions of state public trust lands and 3) lands covered by Indian treaties.

       First, it is possible that tidelands and shorelands conveyed prior to statehood may not be

subject to the public trust. Extinguishment of the trust could only occur where the words of the

original grant expressly and unequivocally expressed that intent.2"  Given the federal govern-

ment's responsibility to hold lands in trust, the amount of federal grants that extinguish the

public trust interest is likely to be small.

       The history of federal grants in Washington, however, indicates that the public trust

continues to apply to pre-statehood grants in this state. Many pre-statehood grants to private

parties suggest that the boundary of their lands extended out to the meander line. The govern-

ment meander line, when compared to the line of mean high tide, is often far out in the water.

Government surveyors in the 1870s and 1880s were paid by the mile, and often did not adhere





    'See, e.g., Cinque Bambini Partnership v. State, 491 So.2d 508, 520 (Miss. 1986); O'Neill v. State
Highway Dept., 50 N.J. 307, 235 A.2d 10 (1967).

    "1Mentor Harbor Yacht Club v. Mentor Lagoons, 170 Ohio St. 193, 199, 163 N.E.2d 373, 377
(1959) (holding that if waters were naturally navigable, then an artificial extension of a channel brought
the extended waters under the public trust doctrine).

    'East Haven v. Hemingway, 7 Conn. 186, 199 (1828) (A pre-statehood grant could convey public
rights into private hands, but only with "words so unequivocal, as to leave no reasonable doubt
concerning the meaning.")

                                              54







to the actual contours of the shoreline, but followed the path of least resistance."3 The federal

government, however, generally had no right to convey lands below the high water mark, but

held those lands in trust for future states under the equal footing doctrine.

       Nevertheless, the Washington State Constitution provided that

       this section [declaring public ownership] shall not be construed so as to debar any
       person from asserting his claim to vested rights in the courts of the state.'M

While on its face, this phrase appears to be only a disclaimer of ownership to lands that the

federal government validly conveyed into private hands, the Washington Supreme Court early

in its history held that this provision of the Constitution was a present grant of the State's

interest in lands that had been previously patented.225 As the court wrote in Scurry v. Jones:

       And as the state, in the section immediately preceding this, had asserted its title
       to all such lands, whether occupied or unoccupied, which had not been thus
       patented, it seems clear to us that the evident intent of the disclaimer was to ratify
       the action of the United States in the issuance of such patents. In our opinion, the
       interest of the state passed as fully to the grantees in such patents, or to those
       holding under them, as it would have done had there been express words of grant
       used in the constitution. Any other interpretation of the language used would
       deprive it of any beneficial force whatever.226

Thus it was the state, not the federal government, that actually gave these lands to private

parties. The state is bound by the public trust doctrine, and any conveyances of tidelands that








   '2K. Conte, supra note 45.

   'Was. Const. art. xvii, ï¿½ 1.

   'See, e.g., Cogswell v. Forest, 14 Wash. 1, 43 P. 1098 (1896); Scurry v. Jones, 4 Wash. 468, 30
P. 726 (1892). Subsequent cases following Scurry include Smith Tug & Barge v. Columbia-Pac.. 78
Wash. 2d 975, 978-79, 482 P.2d 769 (1971); Bleaklev v. Lake Washineton Mill Co.. 65 Wash. 215,
221-23, 118 P. 5 (1911); Washougal Transn. Co. v. Dalles. etc. Nay. Co.. 27 Wash. 490, 68 P. 74
(1902).

   'Scurry, 4 Wash. at 470.

                                             55







the disclaimer clause did make to private parties would not have destroyed the public trust

interest in those land.27

       Congress may also convey public trust lands prior to statehood in accordance with inter-

national obligations.  In Shivelv v. Bowlbv the Supreme Court stated that "Congress has the

power to make grants of lands below high water mark of navigable waters in any Territory of

the United States, whenever it becomes necessary to do so in order to perform international

obligations...."228   Second,  when the federal government exercises its power of eminent

domain to acquire trust burdened lands, those lands may become exempt from the trust.  The

few case precedents on this issue, however, are conflicting.229






   'Recently, there was a dispute over the waterward boundary between uplands owned by a private
landowner and tidelands owned by Washington State. See State's Memorandum in Support of Summary
Judgment and in Opposition to Defendant's Request for a Preliminary Injunction, State v. Lund, No.
249864 (Pierce County, filed Aug. 4, 1989). Although the case ultimately settled, the state's memo
raises several interesting issues, such as whether post-statehood patentees also had a waterward boundary
of the meander line, and whether such a boundary is a moving boundary so that as erosion occurred along
the Lunds' property, their property line moved landward.

    228152 U.S. 1, 48 (1894). The United States Supreme Court's decision in Summa Corn. v. California
Land Commission, 466 U.S. 198 (1984) comes closest to an example of an extinguishment of the public
trust doctrine in accordance with the federal government's international obligations. The Summa case
involved the question of whether a lagoon near Los Angeles was subject to the public trust doctrine.
Summa Corporation's title dated back to an 1839 Mexican title. Pursuant to the 1848 Treaty of
Guadalupe Hidalgo, Congress set up a Board of Land Commissioners in 1851 to decide the rights of those
claiming title to lands under the Spanish or Mexican governments. Id. at 203.  Summa Corporation's
predecessors in title finally had their rights in the land at issue confirmed in 1873. While the Court
acknowledged that ordinary federal patents purporting to convey tidelands located within a states are
invalid because the federal government holds such tidelands in trust for states, the situation was different
with patents confirmed under the 1851 Act, because the United States was discharging its international
obligations.  The Court held that California's failure to assert its public trust interest during the
confirmation process precluded it from claiming a public trust easement applied at the present time.

    "9See. e.g.. U.S. v. 1.58 Acres, 523 F. Supp. 120, 124 (D. Mass. 1981) (noting that the federal
government is as restricted in its ability as states are in abdicating its sovereign ius publicum to private
individuals); but cf. United States v. 11.037 Acres, 695 F.Supp. 214 (N.D. Cal. 1988) (holding that
where the federal government exercises its powers of eminent domain, the state public trust doctrine is
extinguished).  See also supra Section III.A. for a discussion of the existence of a federal public trust
doctrine.

                                                56







                 Third, lands may be exempt from the public trust doctrine because of an Indian treaty

         or agreement" entered into prior to statehood. Presumably the trust would not apply to

         Indian country because of the rule that state law does not apply to Indian reservations unless

I        ~~Congress clearly expresses such an intent."3'  Whether a treaty gives a tribe title to the beds

          underlying navigable waters, involves conflicting presumptions. On the one hand, a fundamental
         principle in interpreting Indian treaties is that they are to be interpreted in the way the Indians

          would have understood them." Most Indians presumably believed they were receiving the

          water bodies and beds within or alongside their reservations. On the other hand, under the equal

          footing doctrine, the federal government held the lands underlying navigable waters in trust for

I        ~~each future state until they entered the Union.  These two legal principles collided directly in

          Montana v. United States."3 The Court there found that the Crow treaty language did not

          overcome the presumption that the beds of navigable waters remain in trust for future states and

I        ~~pass to the new states when they assume sovereignty. The Court noted that the Crow Tribe had

          historically depended on buffalo and other upland game rather than on fishing. Therefore, it

          concluded that the state, not the tribe, held title to the bed of the Big Horn River. Whether an

I        ~~~Indian tribe or the state holds title to the bed of navigable waters is likely to turn on the

I        ~~language of the treaty or agreement, and on whether the tribe has historically depended on




              'No treaties were signed with Indian tribes after 1871. However, reservations were created
          thereafter, usually by agreement between the tribe and the Executive, approved by Congress. Additional
          reservations were created by Executive Order and by congressional legislation. F. Cohen, Federal
          Indian Law 103 (1982 ed.).

              "'For a general discussion of federal preemption of state law, see Cohen, supra at 270-79.

              "2United States v. Winans, 198 U.S. 371 (1905).

              233450 U.S. 544 (1981).


           I~~~~~~~~~~~~5







resources located in the water or on submerged land.TM  If the tribe has title then the public

trust interest under state law is probably extinguished, on the theory that state law does not

generally apply on an Indian reservation unless Congress clearly expresses such an intents3

       C.     Interests Protected by the Doctrine

               1.     Interests Protected Under Washington Law

       The classic list of interests protected by the public trust include commerce, navigation,

and  fisheries.36   The  Washington  Supreme  Court  has  followed the general  trend by

recognizing a broad range of public interests. The court noted in Orion that it had extended "the

doctrine beyond navigational and commercial fishing rights to include 'incidental rights of

fishing, boating, swimming, water skiing, and other related recreational purposes. ' 237

       Under Washington law, environmental quality and water quality are probably also

protected interests. The public's interest in fishing can only be realized if water quality and

quantity are adequate to support fish.238 Moreover, the Washington Supreme Court indicated

in Orion that it would look favorably on a claim that protecting the environment is a public trust



   :'For a recent case where the court found that a tribe had title to the water beneath a navigable
waterway, see PuvalluD Indian Tribe v. Port of Tacoma, 717 F.2d 1251 (9th Cir. 1983), cert. denied,
465 U.S. 1049 (1984). See also Note, Not on Clams Alone: Determining Indian Title to Intertidal
Lands, 65 Wash. L. Rev. 713 (1990).

   "5Cohen, supra note 230, at 270-79.

   'Johnson, Water Pollution and the Public Trust Doctrine. 19 Envtl. L. 485, 495 (1989). Even early
cases like Arnold v. Mundv. 6 N.J.L. 1, 12 (1821) recognized a broad spectrum of public interests that
included "fishing, fowling, sustenance and all other uses of the water and its products."

   "3Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash. 2d 621, 641, 747 P.2d 1062, 1073 (1987), Guoting Wilbour v.
Gallagher, 77 Wash. 2d 306, 316, 462 P.2d 232 (1969) cert. denied, 400 U.S. 878 (1970).

   "8United States v. State Water Resources Board, 182 Cal. App. 3d 150, 227 Cal. Rptr. 161, 201
(1986) (holding that Water Board had authority to supervise appropriators under the public trust doctrine
to protect fish and wildlife); Johnson, Water Pollution and the Public Trust Doctrine. 19 Envtl. L. 485,
488 (1989).

                                              58







interest. The court noted how it has found trust principles embodied in Shoreline Act underlying

policy, "which contemplates 'protecting against adverse effects to the public health, the land and

its vegetation and wildlife, and the waters of the state and their aquatic life .    ,5239

Moreover, in another footnote, the court cited Marks v. Whitney. a California case which

recognized the public interest not only in ecological values, but also in preserving tidelands in

their natural state.24" Therefore, given the proper case, the Washington Supreme Court may

well follow several other states by recognizing water quality and environmental preservation as

public trust interests. " If water quality is a protected interest, then the public trust doctrine

might affect activities which degrade water quality, including discharges of wastes into public

waters, activities which cause erosion and thus silting of waterbodies, and prior appropriations

which reduce the assimilative capacity of waterbodies and thus result in quality degradation.242

Needless to say, any application of the public trust doctrine in these areas would have to take

account of existing federal and state laws on water pollution, the prior appropriation code, and

the legitimate economic expectations of those affected.


   5  ï¿½QOion. 109 Wash. 2d at 641 n.11, 747 P.2d at 1073 n. 11, quoting Portage Bay-Roanoke Park
Comnim'ty Council v. Shorelines Hearings Bd., 92 Wash. 2d 1, 4, 593 P.2d 151 (1979).

   3ï¿½Orion  109 Wash. 2d at 641 n. 10, 747 P.2d at 1073 n.1O.

   "Several courts have recognized environmental quality as a public trust interest. See, e. g.. National
Audubon Society v. Superior Court of Alpine County, 33 Cal.3d 419, 658 P.2d 709, 189 Cal. Rptr. 346
(1983); Marks v. Whitney, 6 Cal.3d 251, 259-60, 491 P.2d 374, 380, 98 Cal. Rptr. 790, 796 (1971);
Kootenai Environmental Alliance v. Panhandle Yacht Club, 105 Idaho 622, 632, 671 P.2d 1085, 1095
(1983) (extending the doctrine to cover "navigation, fish and wildlife habitat, aquatic life, recreation,
aesthetic beauty, and water quality"); Treuting v. Bridge and Park Commission of Biloxi, 199 So.2d 627
(Miss. 1967); Just v. Marinette, 56 Wis. 7, 17, 201 N.W. 761, 768-69 (1972) (finding a public right to
preserve wetlands because "they serve a vital role in nature"). In 1987 the Oregon Legislature enacted
two statutes indicating that the public trust doctrine covers water quality. Or. Rev. Stat. ï¿½ï¿½ 537.336,
.460 (1987). See also Johnson, supra note 235, at 496-98. But cf. MacGibbon v. Board of Appeals of
Duxbury, 369 Mass. 512, 517-18, 340 N.E.2d 487, (1976) (holding that preservation of ocean food chain
and tidelands in natural state was not as "practical" or "productive" as dredging and filling wetlands).

   "2Johnson, supra note 236, at 505.

                                               59







      Early courts did not often expressly address environmental quality as a protected public

trust right. It was widely thought that nature's bounty was limitless. More recent experience

has shown that pollution can limit or destroy public enjoyment of trust resources just as much

as filling or committing tidelands and shorelands to private, monopoly uss2            In the past,3

the public trust doctrine did not allow such monopolization; now that the threat to public

environmental rights is in the form of pollution and environmental degradation, the courts are

expanding their interpretation of the public trust doctrine to protect the public rights from that

threat.I

             2.     Interests Potentially Protected in Washiniaton

                    a.     Risht of Public to Walk and/or Harvest shellfish on Privately v
                           Owned Tidelands

      The Washington Supreme Court has not had an opportunity to consider whether theI

public has a right to walk across privately owned tidelands, or whether the public may dig clams3

on those tidelands. One commentator notes that nearly all states recognize that the public trust

doctrine provides the public a right to pass and repass over public trust tidelands.'" While 

states' courts have issued opinions which generally lend support to the public's right of access,3

precious few have directly addressed the issue of whether the public has a right to walk across

privately owned tidelands.

       For example, the Rhode Island Supreme Court in Jackvonv v. Powel345 looked to

Rhode Island's Constitution which guarantees to the people "all the privileges of the shore," and



       'D.__                             Sldelsprnt 5 t13

   '3D. Slade, et al., supra note 35, at 162.


   ~2l5 A.2d 554 (R.I. 1941).                 6


                                                         60~~~~~~~







concluded that one of those privileges included the right to pass along the shore.6 The case

did not, however, involve the public's rights to pass along a privately held beach. It involved

an attempt by a beach commission to fence off a beach owned by the city of Newport.

Similarly, in Tucci v. Salzhauer,247 a New York court held that the public had a right to pass

and repass over lands owned by the Town of Hempstead. Thus, Tucci, like Jackvony,

recognized a public right of passage, but did not specifically address the question of whether the

public would have a right to pass over privately held tidelands.

       New Jersey Supreme Court decisions suggest that the public would have a right to walk

over privately held tidelands. The public's rights to use tidal lands and water "encompasses

navigation, fishing and recreational uses, including bathing,  swimming and other shore

activities."24"  Presumably, "other shore activities" would include the right to walk along

tidelands. Also significant is the fact that New Jersey has recognized the public's right to use

the dry sand area of privately owned beaches under the public trust doctrine.249 Because the

New Jersey Supreme Court was willing to go so far as to recognize public's right to use

privately owned dry sand areas of beaches, it probably would not have a problem recognizing

the public's right to walk over privately held tidelands.







   'Id. at 558. See also Nixon, Evolution of Public and Private Riehts to Rhode Island's Shore. 24
Suffolk U.L. Rev. 313, 325-26 (1990) (discussing a recent amendment to the Rhode Island Constitution
that listed a right to pass along the shore as a public right).

   24740 A.D. 2d 712, 336 N.Y.S.2d 721 (1972). The court noted that the public's right of passage even
included the right to push a baby carriage along the shore. Id., 336 N.Y.S.2d at 724.

   'aMatthews v. Bay Head Improvement Association. 471 A.2d 355 (N.J. 1984).

   249Id..

                                             61







       California would also probably recognize the public's right to walk along privately held

tidelands. In Marks v. Whitneyv.'5 the California Supreme Court noted that the public trust

easement on privately held lands includes the public's "right to fish, hunt, bathe, swim, to use

for boating and general recreation purposes the navigable waters of the state. . . . The public

uses to which tidelands are subject are sufficiently flexible to encompass changing public

needs."251 This language suggests that California would recognize a public right to walk over

privately held tidelands.

       In Massachusetts and Maine, however, the public's rights do not include the right to pass

over privately held tidelands. In In re Ooinion of the Justices,252 the Massachusetts Supreme

Court considered the constitutionality of a proposed statute that would have given the public a

right of passage over privately held tidelands.  In determining the scope of public rights

remaining in privately held tidelands, the court considered the colonial ordinance of 1641-47.

In that ordinance the Massachusetts colony extended the titles of upland owners to encompass

land as far as the mean low water line or 100 rods from the mean high water line, whichever

was less. The court found that the original ordinance had only reserved the public's rights in

fishing, fowling, and navigation, and it refused to take a more expansive view of public rights

which would include the right to pass along, or enjoy recreation on, privately held tidelands.3

Therefore, it found the proposed ordinance to be an unconstitutional taking of private property

without compensation.



   26 Cal. 3d 251, 98 Cal. Rptr. 790, 491 P.2d 374 (1971).

   211ld. at 259, 98 Cal. Rptr. at 796, 491 P.2d at 380.

   252313 N.E.2d 561, 566-67 (1974).

   '-3Id. at 567.

                                             62







 3             ~~~~The Supreme Court of Maine recently followed Massachusetts's course in a close 4-3


         opinion, Bell v. Town of Wells."~ Maine, which was originally a district of Massachusetts,
         shares a common legal history with that state. The majority in Bell found that Maine's

3        ~~constitution had confirmed the seventeenth century Massachusetts statute giving upland owners


         title to tidelands.   The court traced the description of public rights through cases from
         Massachusetts and Maine. Its conclusion mirrored that of the Massachusetts court: the public's

I        ~~rights are limited to those of navigation, fishing and fowling."5   The court specifically

         mentioned "recreational walking" as a right that it refused to recognize.""6

                 The results of the Massachusetts and Maine decisions are somewhat anomalous. As one

I        ~~commentator noted, Massachusetts's approach does not in fact preclude the public from walking

3        ~~on the foreshore. Instead, it simply requires that a person desiring to stroll along the shore carry

         a fishing line or net."7

 I             ~~~~Washington has no ordinances similar to Massachusetts' 1641-47 ordinance which gave

I        ~~upland owners title to tidelands.  Our court has also recently recognized a broad range of
         recreational rights under the public trust doctrine."'8 These facts suggest that the Washington



3          ~~~~557 A.2d 168 (Me. 1989).

             115Id. at 175-76.

 I   ~~~~~2I6d. at 175.

             "'Commnent, Coastal Recreation: Leeal Methods for Securina Public Rights in the Seashore. 33 Me.
I     ~      ~L.Rev. 69, 83 (1981).

             '8The public's rights include "'incidental rights of fishing, boating, swimming, water skiing, and
         other related recreational purposes .. . "' Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash. 2d 621, 641, 747 P. 2d 1062,
          1073 (1987) (quoting Wilbour v. Gallagher, 77 Wash. 2d 306, 316, 462 P.2d 232 (1969), cert. denied,
         400 U.S. 878 (1970)). Moreover, on ocean beaches, a Washington State Attorney General's Opinion has
I      ~ ~~recognized the public's customary rights, and those rights would presumably include the public's right
         to walk along tidelands. AGO 1970 No. 27. The public might also resort to other legal theories, such
          as dedication and prescription.

                                                        63






Supreme Court might support the public's right to walk over privately held tidelands, but the3

eventual outcome on this issue remains uncertain.i

       Similarly, the public's right to gather shellfish on privately held lands also remains

uncertain in Washington.  An early Washington case, Sequim Bay Canningz Co. V. Bun-e, 29j

favored private rights to shellfish over public rights.  The plaintiff canning company leased 

tidelands from the state, and raised local and eastern clams on them. The defendants were a

competing cannery and had its employees, who happened to be Indians, go on to the plaintiffsI

tidelands and collect shellfish. The court held that plaintiffs were entitled to injunctive relief

prohibiting the defendant or his employees from trespassing and digging clams. The court

reasoned that because clams live in the soil under the waters, they belong to private owners orI

lessees of the tidelands. 2603

       Seauim Bay Canning,. however, is not solid authority against a public trust right to

harvest shellfish.  First, the plaintiff in that case leased lands for the specific purpose of 

artificially raising clams."6 Without a secure right to raise clams on those lands, the

company's lease would have been worthless.262 Where a party owns or leases tidelands for a

purpose other than raising shellfish, it is unclear that the court would find such a compellingI


   "~49 Wash. 127, 94 P. 922 (1908).

   149 Wash. at 13 1. Similarly, in Palmer v. Peterson. 56 Wash. 74, 105 P. 179 (1909), the
Washington Supreme Court held that when the state deeded oyster lands to a private party, that party
received a right to exclusive possession of those tidelands. A later decision, State v. Van VMack. 101
Wash. 503, 505-06, 172 P. 563 (1918), also described shellfish as private property. The appellant in that
case claimed that the state could not prohibit private owners of tidelands from harvesting shellfishI
between April I and September I (which is when shellfish reproduce) because the shellfish were their
property. The court acknowledged the public's interest in shellfish by upholding the state's efforts to
limit the harvesting of shellfish as a valid exercise of the state's police power.
   "6The Department of Natural Resources still issues leases to private parties for raising oysters,
geoducks, shellfish and other agricultural uses. Wash. Rev. Code ch. 79.96.
   26249 Wash. at 129.                          6


                                                          64~~~~~~~







private property interest in shellfish located on that land. Second, Seauim Bay Canning did not

involve the general public's right to gather clams. It involved hostile efforts by one cannery to

destroy another.  Therefore, if the Washington Supreme Court faced the issue of whether the

public has a right to gather shellfish on privately owned tidelands, Seouim Bay Canning might

not be controlling. Significantly, even states like Maine and Massachusetts, which have been

very conservative about expanding the public's rights to privately owned tidelands, have

recognized the public's right to gather shellfish on privately held tidelands.263

                      b.     Rights of Rioarians and the Public to Boat and Fish on the
                             Surfaces of Non-naviable for Title Waters

       This subject was previously discussed as an extension of the geographic scope of the

public trust doctrine.2"  Alternatively, one may view it as a public interest.

                     c.      Aesthetic Beautv

       Extension of the list of protected public trust interests to include preservation of aesthetic

or scenic beauty is rather unproblematic. Indeed, for the sightseer, the enjoyment of natural

beauty is a form of recreation, which the court has already recognized as a protected











   'See Bell v. Town of Wells, 557 A.2d 168, 173 (Me. 1989) (Broadly construing the public's right
to fish to include "digging for worms, clams and shellfish"); Town of Wellfleet v. Glaze, 525 N.E. 2d
1298, 1301 (Mass. 1988). "While the public clearly has the right to take shellfish on tidal flats, there
is no general right in the public to pass over the land, or use it for bathing purposes." Other states, such
as North Carolina and Florida have decisions which strongly support the public's right to shellfish. State
ex rel. Rohrer v. Credle, 369 S.E.2d 825, 831-32 (N.C. 1988); State v. Gerbing, 47 So. 353, 356 (Fla.
1908).

   'See supra Section III.B.2.e.

                                              65







interest.265 Several other states have recognized aesthetic beauty as a legitimate public trust

interest."M  Aesthetic beauty is also a value mentioned in the Shoreline Act.'

                      d.     The  Future for Recognizin2 New  Interests Protected by  the
                             Doctrine.

       As a "dynamic common law principle" courts will likely continue to shape the public

trust doctrine to fit the ever-evolving public interest."' The Washington Supreme Court has

explicitly stated that it has not defined the total scope of the doctrine,269 thus suggesting that

it might extend the doctrine even further in the future to meet evolving public needs, especially

where those needs were not taken into account when private rights were acquired.

       As the list of protected public trust uses grows, new questions arise. Conflicts will arise

between two or more public trust interests.2    For example, what should happen when the



   morion, 109 Wash. 2d at 641 n.10 (citing In re Stevart Transp. Co., 495 F.Supp. 38 (E.D. Va.
1980).

   'See. e.g., National Audubon Society v. Superior Court of Alpine County, 33 Cal.3d 419, 658 P.2d
709, 189 Cal. Rptr. 346 (1983) (holding that protection of the scenic views of Mono Lake and its shore
are covered by the public trust); Marks v. Whitney, 6 Cal.3d 251, 491 P.2d 374, 98 Cal. Rptr. 790
(1971); Kootenai Environmental Alliance v. Panhandle Yacht Club, 105 Idaho 622, 632, 671 P.2d 1085,
1095 (1983) (including the protection of "aesthetic beauty" under the public trust doctrine); State v.
Trudeau 139 Wis. 2d 91, 104, 408 WN.W.2d 337 (1987) (rights of citizens in bodies of water held in
trust by the state include the enjoyment of natural scenic beauty).

   "Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.020 (1989).

   'Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash.2d 621, 640-41, 747 P.2d 1062, 1073 (1987) ("Recognizing
modern science's ability to identify the public need, state courts have extended the doctrine beyond its
navigational aspects."); Marks v. Whitney, 6 Cal. 3d 251, 259, 98 Cal. Rptr. 790, 796, 491 P.2d 374
(19871) ("The public uses to which tidelands are subject are sufficiently flexible to encompass changing
public needs.") But cf. Lazarus, Changing Conceptions of Prornertv and Sovereientv in Natural
Resources: Ouestioning the Public Trust Doctrine. 71 Iowa L. Rev. 631, 656 (1986) (describing the
public trust doctrine as a convenient legal fiction used by courts to avoid judicially perceived limitations
or consequences of existing rules of law).

    'Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash. 2d 621, 641, 747 P.2d 1062, 1073 (1987).

    2'See, e.g.. Carstens v. California Coastal Commission, 182 Cal. App. 3d 277, 227 Cal Rptr. 135
(1986).

                                               66







interests of commerce or recreation conflict with the interest in preserving the environmental

integrity of trust resources? It is unlikely that courts will or even should set up a rigid hierarchy

of public trust uses. Perhaps the best answer is balancing competing uses. Currently, the

Shoreline Management Act balances competing uses, while giving priority to certain values and

uses, such as water dependent uses, and furthering public access and enjoyment of the states

waters.Y2

       D.     Public Trust Restrictions on State Power

       When Washington became a state, it asserted ownership over tidelands and shorelands.

Seeking to foster economic development, however, the state has sold 60% of tidelands and 30%

of shorelands prior to 1971. Early Washington cases recognized an almost unfettered power of

the legislature to dispose of those lands.2

       More recently, in Carniniti, the Washington Supreme Court dealt with the application of

the public trust doctrine to public lands. Preliminarily, the court discussed the origin and back-

ground of the doctrine, as well as its application to private property, saying that while the state

could convey private interests in tidelands and shorelands, it could never "sell or otherwise

abdicate state sovereignty" over them.'7 According to the court, "The state can no more

convey or give away this jus publicum interest than it can 'abdicate its police powers in the

administra-tion of government and the preservation of the peace.""'24 In adopting this position



   "71Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.020 (1989).

   rEisenbach v. Hatfield, 2 Wash. 236, 244-45, 26 P. 539, 541 (1891) (stating that tidelands "belong
to the state in actual proprietary, and that the state has full power to dispose of the same, subject to no
restrictions, save those imposed upon the legislature by the constitution of the state and the constitution
of the United States. . .").

    3Caminiti v. Boyle, 107 Wash. 2d 662, 666, 732 P.2d 989, 992 (1987).

    r4Id. at 669, 732 P.2d at 994, quoting Illinois Central R.R. v. Illinois, 146 U.S. 387, 453 (1892).

                                              67







the Court adopted a role as reviewer of state conveyances to assure they are consistent with

public trust obligations.75

       The Washington Supreme Court in Caminiti adopted a test for determining when state

legislation modifies the public trust doctrine as applied to state lands. The court relied heavily

on the U.S. Supreme Court's seminal opinion in Illinois Central Railroad v. Illinois."   First,

the court must inquire whether the state, by reason of the legislation, has given up its right to

control the jus publicum.27 If the court finds that it has, then the court must determine

whether by doing so the state has promoted the interests of the public in the jus publicum or has

not substantially impaired the jus publicum.?

       The court nonetheless held that the statute at issue in Caminiti did not violate the public

trust doctrine.9 In Carniniti, the plaintiffs had challenged the validity of a statute which

granted private landowners the right to build recreational docks out onto abutting public shore-

lands and tidelands without paying money to the state.ï¿½ The court began its discussion by

commenting on the interrelationship of the public trust doctrine and the Shoreline Act. It noted

that the requirements of the public trust are met by the legislatively drawn controls of the

Shoreline Act. The Shoreline Act lists among its preferred uses single family residences and




    '7For the crucial role of the judiciary in enforcing the public trust, see Sax, The Public Trust
Doctrine in Natural Resources Law: Effective Judicial Intervention. 68 Mich. L. Rev. 471 (1970).

    271546 U.S. 387 (1892).

    'Caminiti, 107 Wash. 2d at 670, 732 P.2d at 994.

    278Id. at 670, 732 P.2d at 994-95.

    "For a critique of the Caminiti case, see Allison, The Public Trust Doctrine in Washington. 10 U.
Puget Sound L. Rev. 633, 671-73 (1987).

    'Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 79.90.105 (1989).

                                               68







piers.  Therefore, the court concluded that the statute at issue in Caminiti was consistent with

the Shoreline Act, and, by implication, with the public trust doctrine."'

       The court found that the state did not give up its right of control over the jus publicum

by allowing private landowners to build docks on public shorelands and tidelands, supporting

its position by several arguments, including that: the statute did not allow for private docks in

harbor areas; private docks were only to be used for recreational purposes; the Department of

Natural Resources has the authority to revoke a property owner's right to maintain such a dock;

and these residential private docks are subject to local regulations governing construction, size

and length.2" Thus the government retained adequate control over the docks to satisfy the

requirements of the public trust doctrine.

       Next, the court found that the construction of private docks on public tidelands and

shorelands actually promoted the public's interest in the jus publicurn as defined in the Shoreline

Act.83 Finally, the court concluded that such docks do not impair the public interest.

       Although the court set forth a test indicating that it would seriously scrutinize legislative

actions affecting trust property, in actual practice it barely scrutinized the legislation at issue in

Caminiti. As a result, the outcome of future cases is unclear. Will the court give real substance

to the test it enunciated, or will it continue to defer to the legislature?










    2"Caminiti, 107 Wash. 2d at 670, 732 P.2d at 995.

    =iId. at 672, 732 P.2d at 996.

    m3Id. at 673-74, 732 P.2d at 996.

                                               69







              1.     State Projects

       The Shoreline Act applies to all shorelines owned and administered by the state and local

governments."' Therefore, under Caminiti, state projects that fall within the Shoreline Act

list of preferred uses would likely be consistent with the public trust doctrine.25

              2.     Application of the Public Trust Doctrine in State and Local Land Use
                     Planning

       Washington state policy strongly encourages comprehensive planning.286  In general,

comprehensive planning helps to coordinate administrative decisions involving the physical

development and use of land, air, and water resources.  The time at which planners balance

alternatives and develop recommendations may be an opportune time for consideration of public

trust values. Significantly, the Washington Supreme Court's Orion decision involved the

legitimacy of two comprehensive plans, and the court implicitly approved comprehensive

planning as a method of protecting public trust resources and uses.7

       The scope and scale of planning varies, depending on the resource, the purpose,

jurisdictional authority, and the need for coordination. Planning efforts may be state-wide and

quite complex in organization.  However, the fundamentals of the planning process--assessing

needs, determining relative costs and benefits, and presenting alternatives--remain basically the


   'Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.280 (1989).

   'Of course, the state project would also have to pass under other state environmental regulation,
such as the State Environmental Policy Act. Wash. Rev. Code ch. 43.21c (1989).

   'With the passage of the Growth Management Act in 1990, the emphasis on comprehensive planning
in Washington is stronger than ever before. For example, the 1990 Growth Management Act requires
that more populous counties that have recently experienced growth (this includes all twelve Puget Sound
counties and the cities within them) adopt comprehensive plans by July 1, 1993. Wash. Rev. Code Ann.
ï¿½ 36.70A.040 (1991). Zoning consistent with those plans must be adopted within a year thereafter.
Wash. Rev. Code Ann. ï¿½ 36.70A. 120 (1991).

   'The two comprehensive plans in Orion were the Skagit County Shoreline Master Program and the
Padilla Bay National Estuarine Research Reserve Management Plan.

                                             70






3        ~~same. Accordingly, comprehensive planning is done at both the state and local levels. The state

         generally assumes responsibility for ensuring coordination, technical assistance, policy

         compliance, and consistency.

 I             ~~~~Authority for regional planning is delegated principally to counties, but extends to all

         levels of government through the Planning Enabling Act."'8 The Act describes planning as an

         essential process to insure multiple uses of environmental resources."'9 On both the state and

         local levels, comprehensive plans serve a wide variety of functions, including state agency

         operating plans, port and harbor improvement districts, aquatic lands leasing and utility

         operations. Each comprehensive plan must promote the public interest, where appropriate, and

I       ~~include both mandatory and optional elements.29"  The planning process delineates resources

         and uses traditionally found under the public trust doctrine, designing standards that allow them
         to coexist with surrounding uses. Despite their acknowledged importance, comprehensive plans

I       ~~do not directly regulate property rights or land uses.2"'  Traditionally, comprehensive plans

3       ~~have been a kind of "blueprint" which influence regulatory regimes such as local zoning codes

         and environment designations. They have also guided political decision-making. The 1990



             "Wash. Rev. Code ch. 36.70; see also Wash. Rev. Code ch. 35A.63 (providing for planning and
I      ~    ~~zoning in code cities).

             'According to the Act, the purpose of planning is "...assuring the highest standards of
         environment for living, and the operation of commerce, industry, agriculture, and recreation, and
         assuring the maximum economies and conserving the highest degree of public health, safety, morals, and
         welfare." Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 36.70.010 (1989). The language of the Act clearly aligns planning with
         the regulatory police powers of government.
             'See Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 36.70.470 regarding promotion of the public interest. Under Wash. Rev.
I     ~     ~Code ï¿½ 36.70.340 and .350, required elements include land use, circulation, and supporting materials
         such as maps, diagrams and charts. Optional elements include conservation, recreation, rights of way,
         ports, harbors and public use. An analysis of these elements would entail consideration of public trust
         lands, waters and uses if they are present in the geographic area under review.
             "'Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 35A.63.080 (1989).

           I                                           ~~~~~~~~~~~~71







Growth Management Act, however, further enhances the importance of comprehensive plans in

those counties and cities covered by the Act by requiring that development regulations be

consistent with their plans."'

       Some forms of comprehensive planning bear directly on preserving elements of the public

trust. The Shoreline Management Act which requires a combination of state and local planning,

is an example. The SMA clearly states the need for comprehensive planning to allow multiple

uses of the state's shorelines while protecting the public interest."'  Such planning is essential

to the creation of local shoreline master programs (SMP)9'  which implement the plans.  In

general SMPs regulate use in, on, or over shorelines. This feature appears in zoning

classifications including natural, conservation, rural, and urban which specify appropriate,

conditional, and prohibited uses for each environment.  SMPs may also incorporate any other

element deemed appropriate or necessary to effectuate the policy of the SMA."5 This clause

is an open invitation for local SMPs to incorporate explicitly public trust doctrine principles.

Finally, SMPs, unlike other comprehensive plans, are adopted as WACs and become part of the


   'Wash. Rev. Code Ann. ï¿½ 36.70A.120 (1991). The Act requires counties which adopt plans under
the Act to designate wetlands, steep slopes, and flood plains, and adopt critical area protection
regulations. Counties and cities that are not required or do not choose to regulate under the provisions
of the Growth Management Act must also develop regulations to protect critical areas by March 1, 1992.
Washington Act Relating to Growth Strategies, Reengrossed Substitute House Bill 1025 (July 16, 199 1).
This may provide additional opportunities to consider public trust values.

   'Wash. Rev. Code 90.58, and WAC  173-14 through 28. Language from 90.58.020 specifically
states, ". . . coordinated planning is necessary in order to protect the public interest associated with the
shorelines of the state while, at the same time, recognizing and protecting private property rights
consistent with the public interest." Broadly stated, the public interest is to be held superior to private
rights when planning.

   IWAC 173. SMPs are defined as comprehensive plans in RCW ï¿½ 90.58.03(3)(a). These plans are
developed locally and must be consistent with the policies of RCW 90.58 before approval by the
Department of Ecology. For the most part, the state functions in an advisory capacity but has the
authority to revise, amend, or reject SMPs until they are compliant.

   'ï¿½Wash. Rev. Code 90.58.100(2)(h).

                                              72






state's Shoreline Master Program. As such, all local SMP rules, regulations, designations and

guidelines become state law and are enforceable.96 In this manner, protection of public trust

resources and uses becomes binding.

       Comprehensive  planning  also  coordinates  environmental  review.            The  State

Environmental Policy Act of 1971 (SEPA) established a state-wide review process for evaluation

and decision-making on land use proposals.29  The intent of SEPA is to ascertain the proper

balance between development and environmental protection.  In reality, SEPA review is made

effective only through comprehensive planning. As part of its review criteria, SEPA does

establish a "trustee" responsibility;298 it seeks the widest range of beneficial uses; and looks

to preserve important cultural, and natural aspects of our national heritage.299 This invites

consideration of the public trust doctrine. In practice, however, SEPA reviews are handled in

a generic fashion, rarely (if ever) explicitly referring to the public trust doctrine.  But because

many proposals fall under SEPA, and because this review may be linked to more stringent

reviews such as shoreline substantial development permits,3" it is important to note that

opportunities to apply public trust doctrine principles exist.

       From a land management perspective, area management programs should reflect both

public trust principles and comprehensive planning.3"' Balancing appropriate uses to provide


   I._ ï¿½ 98.59. 100.

   'Id. ch. 43.21C and WAC 197.

   3'SWash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 43.21C.020(2)(a).

   2d_._. ï¿½ 43.21C.020 (2)(d).

   I3ï¿½d. 90.58.030(e) and WAC 173-14-064. In general, the projects over $2,500 dollars in value, or
for projects that may substantially effect the public's use and interests in the shoreline.

   3 ï¿½ "There are numerous examples of area management programs which protect and preserve public
trust rights and lands including: DNR multiple use management (Wash. Rev. Code 79.68.90); Natural
area preserves (Wash. Rev. Code 79.70); Natural resource conservation area (Wash. Rev. Code 79.92);

                                             73






the greatest public benefit or interest is a commonly stated goal of both management and the

public trust. Area management programs diverge primarily in matters of detail. However,

when viewed cumulatively, they embody most of the principles found under the public trust

doctrine.2

       In summary, comprehensive planning implemented on both state and local levels allows

for consideration of public trust principles, resources, and uses.  Zoning in the local SMPs

implements these principles.

              3.     Licensees and Lessees of the State

       By licensing and leasing public trust resources, states can control their use and receive

revenue. In this section we are explicitly concerned with state management of state-owned land,

which was the central issue in Caminiti. In other words, what duties are imposed on the state

by the public trust doctrine in the management of state-owned lands that are covered by the

Seashore Conservation Act, and Aquatic Lands Act?

       First, a court will inquire whether the legislature has relinquished control of the trust

resource. Caminiti indicated that if the state imposes conditions in state licenses, and the rights

of the licensee are subject to revocation, then a court may find that the state has not relinquished

control of the resource. As a practical matter, however, if a state tries to maintain too much

control over shorelands and tidelands, it may discourage all development. For example, if a

state agency attempted to lease tidelands subject to too many conditions, for a short term with


Scenic Rivers System (Wash. Rev. Code 79.92); Aquatic lands leasing (Wash. Rev. Code 79.90, WAC
332-30); Shellfish harvesting areas (Wash. Rev. Code 75.08.080; Habitat preserves (Wash. Rev. Code
77.12.650); Integrated transportation systems (Wash. Rev. Code 47.01.071); Seashore conservation area
(Wash. Rev. Code 43.51.660); and State park system (Wash. Rev. Code 43.51, WAC 352).

    'One observer has even argued that the Department of Natural Resources Aquatic Land
Enhancement Account (ALEA) is a direct application of the public trust doctrine in management. Snow,
"The Aquatic Land Enhancement Account: Operationalizing the Public Trust in Washington Submerged
land Management" (Masters Thesis, 1989).

                                              74






no right of renewal, private investors would not likely undertake development. Prospects for

a return on investment would be too uncertain, and financing would be difficult. In

Washington, DNR leases generally may not exceed fifty-five years for tidelands and

shorelands;3ï¿½3 thirty years for the beds of navigable waters;3ï¿½4 and ten years for leases for

mariculture.3ï¿½5 DNR has various other ways to strengthen state control, such as cancelling the

leases of those out of compliance and refusing renewals.

       State relinquishment of control over a trust resource will be upheld only if it promotes,

or does not substantially impair that interest. The Washington Supreme Court decision in

Caminiti indicates that it may look to the Shoreline Act for guidance on whether a given use

promotes the public interest.  Even though the Shoreline Act has dubious preferences such as

the one for single family residences, it nonetheless provides some protection for the public

interest. For example, one of the stated preferences in the Shoreline Act is for water uses that

are "unique to or dependent upon use of the state's shoreline."3"6

       In defining the scope of the public interest, the court could also look to its list of public

trust interests in Orion, as well as interests recognized by other courts.3?  The whole idea of

"promoting the public interest" raises several other issues as well.  For example, would it be

inconsistent with the public trust doctrine to allow leasing or licensing of uses which are neither

within the Shoreline Act's list of preferred uses nor within the judicially recognized list of public



    'Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 79.94.150(3) (1989). Interestingly, however, the state recently issued a 99
year lease of Smith Cove, site of Pier 9 1.

    'Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 79.95.020 (1989).

    Iï¿½ ' Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 79.96.010 (1989).

    'Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.020 (1989).

    "ï¿½For a discussion of the public trust interests which the court has recognized or might recognize in
Washington, see supra Section III.C.2.d.

                                             75






interests, but which are accessory or incidental to permitted uses? Could the state lease or

license land for a use that would not further the public trust if the developer agreed to take

measures, such as public accessways that would promote the public interest?"'8 

             4.     State obligation to abide by Dublic trust tfrinciffles on state owned land.

      Because Caminiti is the only major Washington case in which state action has been

challenged on the theory that it was inconsistent with the public trust doctrine, state law is not3

well developed in this area. The Washington Supreme Court could, however, derive some

valuable principles and learn some valuable lessons by looking at cases from other states.

      First, the California Supreme Court's decision in National Audubon Society (the Mono 

Lake case) indicated that the state had an on-going duty to uphold public trust values.  The3

original Water Board decision allocating the waters in the Mono Basin had not taken public trust

interests into account when it approved Los Angeles's appropriation permit. In Mono Lake theI

court remanded the case to the Water Board to reconsider the allocation of water in the basin5

in light of public trust values. Similarly, the Washington Supreme Court could require the state

to re-evaluate permits, licenses and leases made in the past in light of evolving public trust

doctrine principles.3

       Some courts have allowed legislatures to convey trust lands for purposes that have

nothing to do with public trust uses, only requiring some advancement of the general public

interest, as opposed to a public trust interest. For example, courts have found conveyances of3

land valid for offshore oil production,"~ marketability of title for structures,""0 construction


   '8See D. Connors & J. Archer, The Public Trust Doctrine: Its Role in Managing America's
Coasts 48 n. 100 (Aug. 2, 1990 Draft) (suggesting that a state agency might be able to lease or licenseI
land under both of these circumstances).

   'Boone v. Kingsbury, 206 Cal. 148, 189-93, 273 P.2d 797, 815-16 (1928).3

   "'0Opinion of the Justices, 383 Mass. 972 (1981).

                                            76






of a YMCAT3  a restaurant, a bar and a shopping complex,312 because they were in the

public interest. It is unlikely that the Washington Supreme Court would take such an approach

if it continues to look to the Shoreline Act for policy guidance.  Generally, the Shoreline Act

has a preference for water-related uses, so the court will likely limit the scope of the public

interest in a more principled manner.

       E.     Private actions that are inconsistent with the Public Trust Doctrine.

       Even where the state has conveyed tidelands and shorelands to private individuals, those

lands generally continue to be burdened by the public trust doctrine."'    One way  the

Washington Supreme Court has conceptualized this is by saying that the ownership of tidelands

and shorelands has two different aspects, the jus privatum or proprietary interest which may be

conveyed by the state, and the jus publicum, or public authority interest which cannot be

conveyed."'   Thus, when the state conveys tidelands and shorelands to a private individual,

it conveys only the jus privatum, and retains the jus publicum, or public authority interest, for

itself. The court has also likened the trust to "'a covenant running with the land (or lake or

marsh or shore) for the benefit of the public and the land's dependent wildlife."'"31  Private

citizens or the attorney general"' may bring suits to enjoin private landowners from damaging

public trust interests.



   "'People v. City of Long Beach, 51 Cal.2d 875, 879-80, 338 P.2d 177, 179 (1959).

   3"2Martin v. Smith, 184 Cal. App. 2d 571, 578, 7 Cal. Rptr. 725, 728 (1960).

   3'3Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash. 2d 621, 640, 747 P.2d 1062, 1072 (1987).

   3141d. at 639, 747 P.2d at 1072.

   315Id. at 640, 747 P.2d at 1072-73, quoting Reed, The Public Trust Doctrine: Is it Amnhibious? 1
Envtl. L. & Litigation 107, 118 (1986).

   3"6For a discussion of who can bring an action to enforce the public trust doctrine, see infra Section
III.F.

                                             77






       Tidelands and shorelands in private hands are not, however, invariably burdened by the

public trust. As has already been mentioned, where land is no longer adaptable to trust uses,

then it is no longer burdened by the trust."17 It should not follow, however, that the public

trust burden should be applied less stringently to tidelands which are still usable for trust

purposes, but are surrounded by built-up tidelands.3"'

       Although the Washington Supreme Court has not had the opportunity to address the issue,

it could find that prior appropriators, who significantly reduce the flow of rivers or dry up

waterbodies, are acting inconsistently with the public trust."9 The California Supreme Court

in National Audubon Society (the Mono Lake case) found that Los Angeles appropriations from

the tributaries of Mono Lake were damaging public trust resources by lowering the level of the

lake. This increased the salinity (pollution) of the lake and endangered the brine shrimp that

were a major source of food of the bird population.  Therefore, the court required the Water

Board to reconsider Los Angeles's appropriation permit in light of the public trust doctrine.

Although the Washington Supreme Court has not had occasion to hold that appropriative rights

are subject to the public trust doctrine, it has held that appropriations of water from lakes that

lower lake levels can unreasonably interfere with riparian rights. In In re Martha Lake,"'  the




   3"7Orion, 109 Wash. 2d at 640 n.9, 747 P.2d at 1072, quoting Berkeley v. Superior Court, 26 Cal.3d
515, 606 P.2d 362, 162 Cal. Rptr. 327, cert. denied, 449 U.S. 840 (1980).

   3181n State Detartment of Ecoloav v. Ballard Elks Club. the court suggested that part of the reason
the Elks Club could build its non-water-dependent lodge over tidelands was because the site was located
in a densely developed portion of Shilshole Bay, where other non-water-dependent structures extended
out over tidelands. Now that the court has more firmly committed itself to the public trust doctrine, it
seems less likely that the court would allow a non-water-dependent use such as this, considering the
overall cumulative impact.

   3"'See Johnson, Public Trust Protection for Stream Flows and Lake Levels. 14 U.C. Davis L.Rev.
233, 257-58 (1980).

   ï¿½152 Wash. 53, 277 P. 382 (1929).

                                              78






Washington Supreme Court held that appropriators could not damage riparian rights by lowering

the level of the lake by twelve inches, thus exposing eight to fifty feet of muddy lake bottom in

front of the riparian lands.  The court might also limit appropriations which adversely affect

public trust rights."' The state's strong policy of preserving minimum instream flows would

add further support for protection of public trust resources from damage by prior

appropriators.322

       F.     Judicial Remedies for Conduct Inconsistent with the Public Trust Doctrine

              1.     Enforcement bv the Attorney General

       The attorney general has the power to protect state and public interests by bringing suit

to enforce the public trust doctrine.3" Also the attorney general has authority to enforce the

Shoreline Act.24

              2.     Enforcement by Private Citizens and Private Groups

       The issue of standing should not pose a serious obstacle to suits by private citizens and

private groups. In Carniniti, the plaintiffs were an individual, Ms. Caminiti, and the members

of the Committee for Public Shorelines Rights.3" They challenged a state statute which

allowed private upland owners to build docks on public tidelands and shorelands without paying

any rent to the state. The plaintiffs contended that they had an interest in the amount of revenue

collected by the state, and they contended that the presence of private recreational docks affected




   32"See Johnson, Public Trust Protection for Stream Flows and Lake Levels. 14 U.C. Davis L. Rev.
233, 244-45 (1980).

   '3ZSee Wash. Rev. Code ch. 90.22, ch. 90.54 (1989).

   3"Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 43.10.030 (1989).

   "32Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.210 (1989).

   32sl07 Wash. 2d 662, 732 P.2d 989 (1987).

                                             79






their access to use public lands."'6 These uses included, but were not limited to, their ability

to fish, swim, navigate, water ski, beachcomb, procure shellfish, sunbathe, observe natural and

undisturbed wildlife, play on open beaches, and enjoy seclusion."2   There appears to have3

been no serious issue over standing, because the court in Camniniti never addressed the matter.

Therefore, if private citizens or citizens groups can allege that their interests in public trust

resources are affected by state or private action, and can specifically list their personal interests,1

then standing should not be a barrier to a suit. In doctrinal terms, this would be adequate to

establish that there was an injury in fact and that the plaintiffs are among the injured parties.

This liberal standard for standing is in accord with the national trend toward loosening standing 

requirements in environmental suits.12' 

             3.     Other Ways for Public Trust Issues to Come Before the Court

      Yet another way that the courts will have to address public trust issues is when a privateI

property owner takes the initiative by claiming that state regulation has caused the inverse1

condemnation of his or her property. As the following section will demonstrate, the public trust

doctrine must be considered in determining whether a taking by excessive regulation hasI

occurred.3











   326Id. at 665, 732 P.2d at 992.3

   3271d.

   '~Seee    Duke Power Co. v. Carolina Envt'l Study Group, Inc., 438 U.S. 59 (1978); United
States v. S.C.R.A.P., 412 U.S. 669 (1973); see also L. Tribe, American Constitutional Law 107-29
(2d ed. 1988). 

                                         80






                 G.     Interface of the Public Trust Doctrine with the Takings Clause of the
   3                   ~~~~~Washington and Federal Constitutions.


                        1.     ADDlication of the Public Trust Doctrine to Avoid Takinps Claims
                 Even where the state has conveyed tidelands and shorelands to private individuals, those

3        ~~lands are still burdened by the public trust. The trust resembles a "covenant running with the


         land" for the benefit of the public.329 As a result, private property owners never had the right
            tdoanything that was inconsistent with the public trust.

 3             ~~~~Private landowners cannot claim a taking has occurred when regulations prevent them

I        ~~from doing things that would adversely affect public trust interests.  Whether or not the

         landowner had notice of the burden the public trust doctrine imposed on the land is irrelevant;

I        ~~no restrictions need to be in the original conveyance by the state."'0  Instead, courts impose

3        ~~the public trust doctrine as a matter of law.  The U.S. Supreme Court's recent opinion in

         Phillips Petroleum Co. v. MississiDnil33 illustrates the fact that explicit notice about the public

I        ~~trust to private landowners is unnecessary.  In Phillips Petroleum the Court held that lands

3        ~~beneath non-navigable streams which were influenced by the ebb and flow of tides from the Gulf

         of Mexico were public trust lands and passed to Mississippi upon statehood under the equal

I        ~~footing doctrine.  The Court rejected the equitable arguments of the landowners, who insisted

I        ~~that they were entitled to the land because they held the lands under a pre-statehood grant, and

         they had paid taxes on the lands. The Court insisted that earlier Mississippi cases had made the



I            3~~~~Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash. 2d 621, 640, 747 P.2d 1072 (1987).

             311By contrast, Washington state requires all other encumbrances and liens to be registered so as to
         protect purchasers. Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 58.19.010 (1989). At least one commentator has suggested that
         public rights such as access ought to be similarly registered. J. Scott, An Evaluation of Access to
         Washington's Shorelines Since Passage of the Shoreline Management Act of 1971, Washington State
I     ~      ~Department of Ecology, Shorelands Division (Sept. 1983).
             331484 U.S. 469 (1988).                    8


           I~~~~~~~~~~~~~8






state's claim to private tidelands clear."'2 If the Court considers such notice adequate to allow

states to take possession of tidelands, a fortiori such notice should be adequate to apprise private

land owner's of the public trust easement covering their property.3

      In Orion"'3 the Washington Supreme Court explored the relationship between takings

claims and the public trust doctrine. Orion Corporation owned a large part of the tidelands in

Padilla Bay, an ecologically important estuary that is navigable at high tide. Orion planned to 

dredge and fill the bay in order to create a residential, Venetian-style community.  In 1971 the3

Shoreline Act identified the bay as a shoreline of statewide significance, and declared that state

policy required preservation and protection of the area. The Skagit County Shoreline Manage-I

ment Master Program (SCSMMP) was later approved by the state, and it designated Orion's3

lands as "aquatic," thus prohibiting dredging and filling. The only possible uses of any value

were nonintensive recreation and aquaculture, the latter of which required a conditional useI

permit.3"3

      In Orion the court decided that the tidelands of Padilla Bay were burdened by the public

trust doctrine. The court concluded that "Orion never had the right to dredge and fill its

tidelands, either for a residential community or farmland.  Since a 'property right must exist 

before it can be taken,' [citation omitted) neither the Shoreline Act nor the SCSMMP effected

a taking by prohibiting Orion's dredge and fill project.""' Thus, the public trust doctrine can

largely preclude a successful takings claim because private property owners never had a right

to act in a manner inconsistent with public trust interests.3


   ... But cf. Justice O'Connor's spirited dissent. 484 U.S. at 485.3

   "3Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash. 2d 621, 641, 747 P.2d 1062, 1073 (1987).

   334Id. at 626-29, 747 P.2d at 1065-67.1

   3311d. at 641-42, 747 P.2d at 1073.1

                                         82






                The court in Orion indicated, however, that a takings issue might still be present if the

U        ~~regulation of Orion's land unduly burdened uses that would be consistent with the public trust

3 ~~doctrine. Under the SCSMiMP, Orion was strictly limited to using the bay for non-intensive

         aquaculture and recreation. Orion claimed that its property might be usable for other purposes

         that were consistent with the public trust. Because the trial court record did not disclose whether

3        ~~Orion's property was adaptable to any of these other uses, the court remanded the case for

         further proceedings at the trial court level.

                The public trust doctrine does not bar all takings challenges. If state and local regulation

I        ~~significantly burden uses that would be consistent with the public trust, then private landowners

         may have a takings action. As the Washington Supreme Court's opinion in Orion indicates, the
         test for whether a regulatory taking has occurred is somewhat unclear, but presumably the legiti-

I        ~~macy of the state's interest, and the impact on the landowner's reasonable, investment-backed

I ~~expectations would be factors in determining whether a takcing has occurred.133 The

         Washington Supreme Court has indicated that although the state's analytical approach may be

I        ~~different, the breadth of constitutional protection against takings without compensation is

3       ~~virtually the same under both the state and federal constitutions.3"'

                        2.     Takinas Claims That May Be Raised by the Extension of the Trust
     3                         ~~~~~~~Doctrine

                While it is true that application of the public trust doctrine to lands traditionally within

         the trust will successfully prevent most takings challenges, extension of the public trust doctrine

3        ~~to tributaries, uplands and related lands may raise more serious takings issues.  The U.S.





3           ~~~~336d. at 655-56, 747 P.2d at 1080-81.

             3371d. at 657, 747 P.2d at 1082.           8


           I~~~~~~~~~~~~~8






Supreme Court in PhilliDs Petroleum v. Mississippi33 indicated that there are no constitutional

limits on states from recognizing preexisting public trust rights, for example, to lands subject

to the ebb and flow of the tide and lands under navigable for title waterways.  As indicated

above, however, the geographic scope of the public trust doctrine has been expanded by some

courts to regulate appropriations on non-navigable tributaries, regulate related wetlands,

guarantee public access to the dry sand areas of beaches, and extend the public's right to use

non-navigable lakes and streams."9

       Those extensions of the doctrine could raise takings issues.   For example,  one

commentator has suggested that the Wisconsin court's extension of the doctrine to wetlands may

be constitutionally suspect.-' Another commentator, Professor Lazarus, insists that where the

state tries to extend the doctrine beyond those lands that it acquired at statehood, landowners

should have a valid takings claim against the state."M  Several courts, however, have looked

to the practical and environmental realities of preserving public rights in extending the scope of

the doctrine. For example, the New Jersey Supreme Court recognized the practical problem that

inadequate access poses to the full exercise of public rights, and extended the doctrine to the

privately owned dry sand area of beaches. Other courts, such as the Supreme Court of

Wisconsin, have recognized the interconnectedness of water resources, and extended the scope

of the doctrine to prevent indiscriminate filling of wetlands. In extending the doctrine to cover




   339484 U.S. 469 (1988).

   339See supra Section III.C.2.

   ï¿½Note, The Public Trust Doctrine: Accommodating the Public Need Within Constitutional Bounds.
63 Wash. L. Rev. 1087, 1106-07 (1988) (discussing the Wisconsin court's opinion in Just v. Marinette.
56 Wis. 2d 7, 201 N.W.2d 761 (1972).

    Z"Lazarus, supra note 268, at 648-49.

                                              84






these areas, courts have sought to preserve and effectuate public rights, not to adhere to

inflexible legal doctrine.

              3.     Banishina the Sp)ectre of the Nollan Decision

       Armed  with  the  Supreme  Court's  decision  in  Nollan  v.  California  Coastal

Commission,42 many owners of land along beaches and shores claim a taking has occurred

whenever the state seeks to provide public access to and along beaches.   In Nollan, the

California Coastal Commission tried to condition its grant of permission to rebuild a house on

the transfer of an easement across private beachfront property. The easement would have

secured lateral public passage along the beach, across the Nollan's property in the dry sand area,

i.e. a strip of sand between the mean high tide line and a seawall.  The U.S. Supreme Court

found that a taking had occurred because there was no nexus between the governmental purpose

of the permit condition and the development ban.

       The Nollan decision does not, however, limit the application of the public trust doctrine.

First, the parties did not raise the public trust doctrine as an issue.343 If, as some courts have

held, the public trust doctrine covers the dry sand area,   a state would not need to obtain

such an easement.  It would simply state what is already law.  Similarly, if the doctrine of

"custom" provides the public a right to the dry sand area of beaches, then public access does not

constitute a taking of private property. Second, even if we apply the Nollan reasoning, a state

may be able to meet the nexus requirement by adequately showing that a permit condition such

as a lateral access easement is related to legitimate state interests affected by the development.



   342483 U.S. 825 (1987).

   3'In dissent, Justice Blackmun specifically stated that Nollan did not implicate in any way the public
trust doctrine. Id. at 865.

   'See. e.g.. Matthews v. Bay Head Improvement Assoc., 95 N.J. 306, 471 A.2d 355 (1984).

                                             85






Perhaps if a state raised the public trust doctrine and the multitude of public interests protected

by the doctrine, a court would be more likely to realize that beachfront and shorefront

development does affect a substantial, legally recognized, public interest.

       H.    Federal/State Powers and the Public Trust Doctrine

              1.     Limitations on  State Power:  Sunremacv. PreemDtion. and Federal
                     Sovereign Immunity

       State attempts to use the public trust doctrine can run up against federal power. Under

the Supremacy Clause of the federal Constitution, the "Constitution, and the Laws of the United

States which shall be made in pursuance thereof; and all treaties made,... shall be the Supreme

Law  of the Land."3'4   Accordingly, the courts have developed the doctrine of federal

preemption to determine when federal legislation prevents states from enacting laws.  The

Supreme Court has succinctly described its preemption analysis:

       [S]tate law can be pre-empted in either of two general ways. If Congress evidences an
       intent to occupy a given field, any state law falling within that field is pre-empted. If
       Congress has not entirely displaced state regulation over the matter in question, state law
       is still pre-empted to the extent it actually conflicts with federal law, that is, when it is
       impossible to comply with both state and federal law, or where the state law stands as
       an obstacle to the accomplishment of the full purposes and objectives of Congress.316

Congress may also preempt state law by expressly stating its intention to do so in a federal

statute. Generally, however, Congress does not expressly address the preemption issue, so

courts must look to legislative history to determine Congress's intent.

       In general, state attempts to protect public trust resources are not likely to run up against

too many preemption problems?' The Court maintains a presumption against federal



   'U.S. Const. art. VI, cl. 2.

   'Silkwood v. Kerr-McGee Corp., 464 U.S. 238, 248 (1984) (citations omitted).

   '?For a discussion of federal preemption and state efforts to control oil pollution, see Johnson, Oil
and the Public Trust Doctrine in Washington, 14 U.P.S.L. Rev. 671 (1991).

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preemption when federal legislation enters an area of traditional state power.? The public

trust doctrine, which protects local public interests and the environment, is clearly in an area

traditionally governed by the states.  Furthermore, the federal government's efforts to protect

the environment have generally stressed the importance of a collaborative effort between the

states and the federal government?9 The U.S. Supreme Court has found that some state laws,

however, such as bans on supertankers over a certain size, and standards for vessel design,

construction, and navigational equipment, were preempted by the federal Ports and Waterways

Safety Act."' The Court found that the federal legislation demonstrated congressional intent

that there be national uniformity in tanker design standards.35' Nevertheless, the Court's most

recent case involving the issue of preemption of a state environmental law, California Coastal

Commission v. Granite Rock Co.,"52 indicates the court's continued reluctance to find

preemption of state laws that protect the environment.

       In addition, state public trust activities may be precluded as an encroachment upon

Congress's commerce power.353 Congress's power over navigation under the commerce clause





   'Rice v. Santa Fe Elevator, 331 U.S. 218, 230 (1947).

   '9See, e.g., The Federal Water Pollution Prevention and Control Act (The Clean Water Act) 33
U.S.C. ï¿½ 1251 (b) (1988); Askew v. American Waterways Operators, Inc., 411 U.S. 325 (1973).

   "3Ray v. Atlantic Richfield Co., 435 U.S. 151 (1978); but cf. Chevron U.S.A., Inc., v. Hammond,
726 F.2d 483 (9th Cir 1984) (holding that Alaska's deballasting statute covering tankers was not
preempted because it was covered tanker operations that could affect the environment, not a design
feature).

   351fRy, 435 U.S. at 165-68.

   352480 U.S. 572 (1987) (upholding California's right to review and require a permit for a private
mining project on U.S. Forest Service lands, despite federal legislation such as the Federal Land Policy
and Management Act, the National Forest Management Act, and the Coastal Zone Management Act).

   3"3U.S. Const. art. I, ï¿½ 8, cl.3.

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extends primarily to waterbodies that are navigable in fact.3" Although Congress has

paramount power over state law in the area of interstate navigation, state regulation of navigation

is given substantial leeway where there is no applicable congressional act, no need for national

uniformity, and no evidence that state action impedes interstate commerce."'

       The federal government's sovereign immunity may also prohibit states from enforcing

the public trust doctrine against federal projects. Federal projects "are subject to state regulation

only when and to the extent that Congressional authorization is clear and unambiguous."356

In practice, however, state regulation of federal projects has often been allowed because of the

policies Congress has  set forth that suggest that federal  and  state governments  share

responsibility in environmental protection and natural resource management."7

       In Friends of the Earth v. U.S. Navy?" the Ninth Circuit recently rejected the Navy's

claim that Washington's Shoreline Act could not regulate its project because of sovereign

immunity. The Clean Water Act, however, waives federal sovereign immunity with respect to

state programs to control the discharge of dredged or fill material and to control and abate water

pollution.39 The court reasoned that Washington's Shoreline Act was such a program, and


   3"Waterbodies are navigable in fact if "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." Daniel Ball, 10 Wall. 577, 563. Waterbodies need
not be navigable in their original state, but only need to be made navigable by reasonable improvements
in order to be navigable in fact. United States v. Appalachian Power Co., 311 U.S. 377 (1940).

   355D. Connors & J. Archer, The Public Trust Doctrine: Its Role in Managing America's Coasts,
282-83 (Aug. 2, 1990 Draft).

   35ï¿½Environmental Protection Agency v. California ex rel. State Water Resources Control Bd., 426
U.S. 200, 211 (1976).

   3"'See, e.g., California Coastal Commission v. Granite Rock, 107 S.Ct. 1419, 1425 (1987); Kleppe
v. New Mexico, 426 U.S. 529, 543 (1976); Hancock v. Train, 426 U.S. 167, 179 (1977).

   358841 F.2d 927 (9th Cir. 1988).

   3591d. at 934-35.

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therefore the Navy could not assert sovereign immunity to avoid the Act's requirements."

The Friends of the Earth decision indicates that courts are likely to have little tolerance for the

antiquated doctrine of sovereign immunity in light of states' legitimate interests in preserving

their coastal environments.

              2.     A   Self-Imposed  Limitation  on  Federal  Power:  The  Consistency
                     Recuirement of the Coastal Zone Management Act

       Under their coastal zone management programs, states can limit, modify or prohibit

activities of federal agencies and private actions requiring federal permits under the consistency

provisions of the federal Coastal Zone  Management  Act."'    By  including public trust

principles in their coastal zone management programs, states can effectively influence federal

activities and avoid federal preemption questions.

       Under the consistency requirement, federal agency activities directly affecting the coastal

zone must be consistent "to the maximum extent practicable" with the enforceable policies of

approved state management programs.3?2 "Enforceable policies" include not only state policies

contained in constitutional provisions, laws, regulations, land use plans and ordinances, but also

judicial or administrative decisions.3   Therefore, federal agency activity must be consistent

not only with legislative and regulatory expressions of the public trust doctrine; federal agency

activity must also be consistent with the public trust doctrine as expressed by state courts. The

National Oceanic and Atmospheric Administration's regulations have interpreted the phrase "to




   3d._

   36116 U.S.C.A. ï¿½ 1456 (Supp. 1991).

   36216 U.S.C.A. ï¿½ 1456(c)(1)(A) (Supp. 1991). The term "federal activity" means any functions
performed by or on behalf of a federal agency in the exercise of its statutory responsibilities. 15 C.F.R.
ï¿½ 930.31 (1991).

   `16 U.S.C.A. ï¿½ 1453(6a) (Supp. 1991).

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the maximum extent practicable" to require "full consistency" unless federal law prevents the

federal agency from meeting this requirement.2    Although  the regulations provide for

mediation of disputes between the states and federal agencies, in practice the states have

generally gone to federal court to get injunctions against federal agencies.365

       If private activity affects the land or water of the coastal zone, an applicant for a federal

permit must certify to the relevant federal agency that the activity or project is consistent with

the state's enforceable policies.3   Once again, "enforceable policies" means not only state

laws and regulations, but also judicial opinions such as Orion367 and Caminiti368 which

recognize the public trust doctrine in Washington.  If the state objects to the proposed project,

the only way for the project to get approved is for the Secretary of Commerce to override the

state's objection. The Secretary of Commerce, however, can only override a state objection if

the project is consistent with the national objectives of the federal Coastal Zone Management Act

or the activity is necessary for national security.369

       The state of Washington has clearly indicated in the Shoreline Act that it will enforce the

federal consistency requirement:  "Where  federal or interstate agency plans, activities or

procedures conflict with state policies, all reasonable steps available shall be taken by the state

to preserve the integrity of its policies."37ï¿½ In addition to following the Shoreline Act, federal



   615 C.F.R. ï¿½ 930.32 (1990).

   'Connors & Archer, supra note 355, at 296.

   166 U.S.C.A. ï¿½ï¿½ 1456(c)(3)(A), (B) (Supp. 1991).

   "7Orion Corp. v. State, 109 Wash.2d 621, 747 P.2d 1062 (1987).

   'Caminiti v. Boyle, 107 Wash.2d 662, 732 P.2d 989 (1987).

   36916 U.S.C.A. ï¿½ï¿½ 1456(c)(3)(A), (B) (Supp. 1991); 15 C.F.R. ï¿½ï¿½ 930.120 -.134 (1990).

   3"Wash. Rev. Code ï¿½ 90.58.260 (1989).

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         agency activity and federal permittees must also follow several other state legislative

I        ~~programs. 371  The Department of Ecology, which manages the state coastal management

3        ~~program, conducts the federal consistency reviews for the state of Washington. The geographic

         scope of the coastal zone is very large in Washington state, covering all fifteen Pacific Ocean

         and Puget Sound Coastal counties. The Department of E-cology even reviews federal activities

         outside of the coastal zone, but west of the crest of the Cascade Range, to avert potential

         spillover effects that directly affect the coastal zone.372

                Therefore, the consistency requirement of the Coastal Zone Management Act provides

         an important mechanism for protecting public trust resources from federal agency activity or

3        ~~federally permitted activity.  Those activities must not only be consistent with state laws,

         regulations and plans which protect public trust resources; they must also be consistent with

I       ~~judicial pronouncements of the doctrine.











 ~~~~"eSttofWsingo   eea ossee rcdrs hs nld h tt niomna










 3           371See"State of Washington Federal Consistency Procedures. TeeicueteSate Enirnena



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IV.    Conclusions and Recommuendations

      The public trust doctrine is now firmly established in Washington law.  its complete 

geographic, scope and the interests it will protect are, however, not yet known. Several findings3

are pertinent.

      State statutes such as the Shoreline Act and Aquatic Lands Act use public trust values to

express and reach regulatory goals. These statutes do not supplant the doctrine, but reflect it 

in part. As a consequence, when considering the geographic extent of the public trust doctrine,u

or whether it protects a given interest, courts may look to these statutes for guidance in

recognizing public values.I

      The decisions of other state courts may also provide guidance for Washington's courts

in developing the public trust doctrine. Other courts have applied the doctrine to cover the dry

sand area of beaches, non-navigable-for-title waters tributaries, related wetlands, and the surfacesI

of recreationally navigable waters. Other state courts have also recognized new public trust

values, such as aesthetic beauty and the right of the public to walk over and harvest shellfish on

privately owned tidelands.U

      The public trust doctrine applied to state lands upon entry into the Union, and predates3

most private ownership of trust resources. When considering whether property has been "taken"

by regulatory action, the public trust doctrine effectively shields government from such a claim

if, in fact, trust resources and interests are at issue. Thus, the public trust doctrine diminishes

the impact of the U.S. Supreme Court decision in Nollan v. California Coastal Commission,"'

which found a taking of beachfront property by California coastal zone regulations. The public

trust doctrine was not posed as a defense or otherwise considered in that case. The WashingtonI




   `~483 U.S. 825 (1987).

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          Supreme Court has described the public trust doctrine as a covenant running with the land.

U        ~~Unlike other burdens on private property, however, landowners need receive no express notice

          of the public trust burden on their lands.

                 When considering and developing the public trust doctrine, courts distinguish between

          the property-based concepts of the public trust doctrine, and the police power basis of regulatory

          statutes. Each may influence the other, but they remain separate, the public trust doctrine

          providing a substantive review function over governmental activity that purports to advance

          public interests.

 I              ~~~~While the doctrine contains a degree of flexibility, to accommodate changing public

I        ~~priorities, past jurisprudence provides guidelines to courts when incrementally developing new

          public trust protected interests.

 I              ~~~~When confronted with choices between competing public trust values, a balancing process

3        ~~~can be anticipated. It is not possible to compile a set hierarchy of public trust values; priorities

          must be determined on a case-by-case basis.

 I              ~~~~Regulators should consider the public trust doctrine and its values when making decisions

3        ~~affecting public trust resources.  State statutes incorporate or reflect public trust values, but

          agency administrators must ensure that statutes and regulations are strictly congruent with those

          values and that activities do in fact consider and promote the public trust.














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