Master The Supreme Court upheld the Army Corps of Engineers' authority under the Clean Water Act to require permits for filling wetlands adjacent to navigable waters. with this comprehensive case brief.
United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes is a foundational Supreme Court decision interpreting the scope of the Clean Water Act (CWA), particularly the meaning of the term "waters of the United States." In a unanimous opinion, the Court validated the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers' regulatory approach to wetlands adjacent to navigable waters, concluding that such wetlands fall within the CWA's permitting jurisdiction. The decision emphasized the ecological interdependence of wetlands and adjacent waters, and it endorsed a broad, functional understanding of "waters" consistent with the statute's restorative and protective purposes.
This case is also a touchstone for administrative law. Decided shortly after Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, it embodies deference to an expert agency's reasonable construction of an ambiguous statute, particularly on technical, scientific matters. Riverside Bayview therefore anchors two key themes for law students: the CWA's expansive environmental objectives and the judiciary's deferential posture toward agency expertise in complex regulatory domains.
474 U.S. 121 (U.S. Supreme Court 1985)
Riverside Bayview Homes, Inc. owned approximately 80 acres of low-lying, marshy land in Macomb County, Michigan, near the mouth of Black Creek, a tributary that flows into Lake St. Clair, an interstate navigable water. In the mid-1970s, the company began placing fill material on portions of the property to prepare it for residential development, without first obtaining a Clean Water Act § 404 permit from the U.S. Army Corps of Engineers. The Corps asserted jurisdiction on the ground that the property constituted wetlands "adjacent" to navigable waters and therefore qualified as "waters of the United States" under the Corps' regulations. After Riverside Bayview declined to apply for a permit and continued filling activities, the United States sought injunctive relief and civil penalties. The district court found that the property was wetlands hydrologically connected to and bordering on navigable waters and enjoined further filling without a permit. The Sixth Circuit reversed, holding that the Corps lacked authority to regulate wetlands unless they were actually navigable or covered by open water. The Supreme Court granted certiorari.
Does the Clean Water Act permit the Army Corps of Engineers to require a § 404 permit for the discharge of fill material into wetlands that are adjacent to navigable waters, by interpreting "waters of the United States" to include such adjacent wetlands?
Under the Clean Water Act, "navigable waters" are defined as "the waters of the United States" (33 U.S.C. § 1362(7)). Where statutory language is ambiguous and the agency charged with implementation adopts a reasonable interpretation consistent with the statute's text, purposes, and legislative history, courts defer to that interpretation. The Corps' regulations defining "waters of the United States" to include wetlands adjacent to navigable waters—characterized by saturation or inundation supporting hydrophytic vegetation—are a permissible construction of the statute, and activities discharging dredged or fill material into such wetlands require a § 404 permit (33 U.S.C. § 1344; then-33 C.F.R. § 323.2).
Yes. The Clean Water Act authorizes the Corps to regulate discharges of fill into wetlands adjacent to navigable waters by requiring § 404 permits; the Corps' interpretation of "waters of the United States" to include adjacent wetlands is reasonable and entitled to deference.
The Court began by recognizing that the CWA's definition of "navigable waters" as "the waters of the United States" is broader than traditional notions of navigability. Congress chose expansive language to effectuate the Act's objective to restore and maintain the chemical, physical, and biological integrity of the Nation's waters. Because the term "waters" is ambiguous as to the inclusion of adjacent wetlands, the Court examined whether the Corps' interpretation was reasonable. First, the ecological relationship between adjacent wetlands and open waters supports the Corps' approach. Adjacent wetlands are "inseparably bound up" with the waters they border: they filter pollutants, reduce flooding, and provide habitat, thereby directly affecting the quality and integrity of navigable waters. Given this functional interdependence, the Corps reasonably concluded that regulating discharges into adjacent wetlands furthers the Act's core purposes. Second, the Court found that the Corps' scientific judgments and technical expertise warranted deference. Drawing lines in hydrologically complex systems is difficult; adjacency provides a workable, administrable criterion that aligns with the statute's goals. Requiring permits for fill in adjacent wetlands is thus a rational means to prevent degradation of downstream navigable waters. Third, the Court rejected arguments that the Corps' jurisdiction must be confined to areas of open water or constantly inundated lands. The statutory term "waters" need not be limited to surface water bodies, especially in light of Congress's broad definition and the Act's protective aims. Nor did the Court accept due process or takings concerns as a basis to narrow the statute: the permitting scheme is flexible, case-by-case, and includes opportunities for variances and mitigation; any takings claim would be better addressed if and when a permit is denied and the regulatory effect is clear. Finally, legislative history and the structure of the CWA—including § 404's focus on dredged and fill material—support the Corps' comprehensive approach to wetlands closely associated with navigable waters. The Court therefore reversed the Sixth Circuit and upheld the Corps' jurisdiction over adjacent wetlands.
Riverside Bayview is a cornerstone of wetlands regulation and administrative deference. Substantively, it validated the federal government's authority to require permits for filling wetlands adjacent to navigable waters, anchoring decades of wetlands protection under the CWA. Doctrinally, it reflects Chevron-style deference to an agency's reasonable interpretation of ambiguous statutory terms, particularly on technical environmental questions. The decision provided the baseline for later Supreme Court cases that refined the scope of "waters of the United States." In Solid Waste Agency of Northern Cook County (SWANCC) (2001), the Court curtailed federal jurisdiction over isolated, non-adjacent waters. In Rapanos v. United States (2006), a fractured Court further narrowed coverage, debating the significance of hydrological connections; and in more recent cases, including Sackett v. EPA (2023), the Court imposed additional constraints on what counts as jurisdictional wetlands. For law students, Riverside Bayview offers enduring lessons on statutory purpose, ecological reasoning, and agency deference, even as the precise boundaries of federal wetlands jurisdiction continue to evolve.
The case centered on Clean Water Act §§ 301 and 404 (33 U.S.C. §§ 1311, 1344), which prohibit discharges of pollutants, including dredged or fill material, into "navigable waters" without a permit, and on the definition of "navigable waters" as "waters of the United States" (33 U.S.C. § 1362(7)). The Corps' regulations defining "waters of the United States" to include adjacent wetlands, and its wetlands definition based on saturation and hydrophytic vegetation, were the focal regulatory provisions.
No. The Court rejected a surface-water-only or open-water requirement. It held that adjacent wetlands—wetlands bordering, contiguous, or neighboring navigable waters—may be regulated because their ecological and hydrological connections make them part of the waters they adjoin for CWA purposes.
Although not framed as a formal Chevron analysis, Riverside Bayview applies Chevron-like reasoning: faced with ambiguous statutory text, the Court deferred to the Corps' reasonable, expertise-driven interpretation of "waters of the United States." The opinion underscores that technical judgments about ecological systems merit judicial deference when consistent with statutory purposes.
The Court did not decide a takings issue. It noted that the permitting process is flexible and that a takings claim would be better evaluated if a permit were denied and a concrete record established. Thus, potential Fifth Amendment concerns did not justify narrowing the statute or invalidating the Corps' regulations on their face.
Developers and landowners with property containing wetlands adjacent to navigable waters must obtain § 404 permits before discharging fill. The decision emphasizes site-specific analysis and encourages early engagement with the permitting process, mitigation planning, and potential variances to avoid enforcement actions and penalties.
SWANCC (2001) limited federal jurisdiction by excluding isolated, non-adjacent waters; Rapanos (2006) produced competing tests for when wetlands and tributaries are covered; and Sackett (2023) further constrained jurisdiction to wetlands with a close, surface-level connection to covered waters. While Riverside Bayview's core rationale—deference to the Corps' ecological judgment about adjacent wetlands—remains influential, subsequent decisions have narrowed the outer bounds of what qualifies as "waters of the United States."
United States v. Riverside Bayview Homes established that wetlands adjacent to navigable waters fall within the ambit of the Clean Water Act's permitting regime. By affirming the Corps' scientific and regulatory judgment, the Court tied statutory interpretation to ecological reality, ensuring that the Act's remedial purpose—preserving the integrity of the Nation's waters—cannot be defeated by artificial distinctions between open water and intimately connected wetlands.
For law students, the case is an essential reference point in both environmental and administrative law. It demonstrates how statutory purpose, scientific expertise, and deference interact to shape regulatory outcomes, and it sets the stage for understanding the doctrinal shifts that followed as the Court grappled with the limits of federal authority over wetlands and other waters.
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