Kingman Reef Atoll v. United States ( 2008 )


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  •                   FOR PUBLICATION
    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
    KINGMAN REEF ATOLL INVESTMENTS,         
    L.L.C.,
    Plaintiff-Appellant,
    v.
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA;                     No. 07-16817
    UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF THE
    INTERIOR; GALE A. NORTON,                      D.C. No.
    CV-05-00151-JMS
    Secretary of the Interior; UNITED
    OPINION
    STATES FISH AND WILDLIFE SERVICE;
    STEVEN A. WILLIAMS, in his official
    capacity as Director of the US
    Fish & Wildlife Service,
    Defendants-Appellees.
    
    Appeal from the United States District Court
    for the District of Hawaii
    J. Michael Seabright, District Judge, Presiding
    Argued and Submitted
    June 20, 2008—Honolulu, Hawaii
    Filed September 4, 2008
    Before: Alfred T. Goodwin, Pamela Ann Rymer, and
    Sandra S. Ikuta, Circuit Judges.
    Opinion by Judge Ikuta
    12201
    KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES           12205
    COUNSEL
    Therese Y. Cannata (argued), Michael M. Ching, and Carolyn
    A. Johnston of Cannata, Ching & O’Toole LLP, San Fran-
    cisco, California, Christian P. Porter and Donna H. Yama-
    moto of Brooks Tom Porter & Quitquit LLP, Honolulu,
    Hawaii, and Jon M. Van Dyke, Honolulu, Hawaii, for the
    plaintiff-appellant.
    Allen M. Brabender (argued), David C. Shilton, and Donna
    Fitzgerald, Attorneys, Environmental and Natural Resources
    Division, United States Department of Justice, and Ronald J.
    Tenpas, Assistant Attorney General, for the defendants-
    appellees.
    OPINION
    IKUTA, Circuit Judge:
    Kingman Reef Atoll Investments, LLC (KRAI), filed this
    action against various United States departments and officers
    12206            KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES
    in their official capacities (collectively, the “United States”),
    pursuant to the Quiet Title Act (QTA), 28 U.S.C. § 2409a.
    KRAI seeks to quiet title to Kingman Reef, a small, low-lying
    coral reef atoll located approximately 930 miles south of
    Honolulu, Hawaii. The district court dismissed KRAI’s claim
    for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. We affirm, because
    KRAI’s predecessor knew or should have known of the claim
    of the United States more than twelve years prior to KRAI’s
    filing of the complaint in this case, and KRAI has failed to
    demonstrate that the United States has clearly and unequivo-
    cally abandoned its claim of interest in Kingman Reef.
    I
    “Kingman Reef is a low-lying, coral reef atoll comprised of
    small emergent land spits and partially exposed coral reefs
    that surround a deep central lagoon, located approximately
    930 miles south of Honolulu, Hawaii.” Kingman Reef Atoll
    Invs., L.L.C. v. United States, 
    545 F. Supp. 2d 1103
    , 1105 (D.
    Haw. 2007). Kingman Reef’s only dry land consists of coral
    rubble and marine shells sitting less than two meters above
    sea level at its highest point, making it unfit for human habita-
    tion. See 
    id.
    The first reported Western contact at Kingman Reef was by
    an American whaler in 1798; eponymous Captain W.E. King-
    man later visited the reef in 1853. 
    Id.
     The U.S. Guano Com-
    pany claimed the reef in 1860, although there is no evidence
    that guano existed or was ever mined there.
    KRAI’s interest in Kingman Reef dates to 1922, when an
    employee of the Island of Palmyra Copra Company claimed
    Kingman Reef in the name of the United States for his
    employer to use as a fishing base. 
    Id.
     The Palmyra Copra
    Company purported to cede Kingman Reef to the Fullard-Leo
    family that same year.1 On October 5, 1932, a member of the
    1
    The Fullard-Leo family transferred its interest in Kingman Reef to
    KRAI on November 17, 2000.
    KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES                  12207
    Fullard-Leo family approached United States officials in
    Oahu to inquire whether he could sell various islands includ-
    ing Kingman Reef to foreign buyers and whether the United
    States wished to purchase the islands instead. Thereafter, the
    United States, by the Navy and State Department, began to
    investigate whether Kingman Reef was a sovereign territory
    of the United States and, if so, whether it was owned by the
    United States or by the Fullard-Leo family. By a memoran-
    dum of November 7, 1934, a legal advisor of the State
    Department advised that “it might be well for this Govern-
    ment to take some affirmative action to show definitely that
    [Kingman Reef] is a part of the territory of the United States.
    The mere mention of it in an Act of Congress as American
    territory would be sufficient.”
    President Roosevelt issued Executive Order 6935 on
    December 29, 1934. Kingman Reef, 
    545 F. Supp. 2d at 1105
    .
    The order states:
    By virtue of and pursuant to the authority vested in
    me by the act of June 25, 1910 [the Pickett Act], and
    as President of the United States, it is ordered that
    . . . Kingman Reef . . . [is] hereby, reserved, set
    aside, and placed under the control and jurisdiction
    of the Secretary of the Navy for administrative pur-
    poses . . . . This order shall continue in full force and
    effect unless and until revoked by the President or by
    act of Congress.
    Exec. Order No. 6935. The Pickett Act, referenced in the
    order, permitted the President, “at any time in his discretion,
    [to] temporarily withdraw from settlement, location, sale, or
    entry any of the public lands of the United States . . . and
    reserve the same for . . . public purposes to be specified in the
    orders of withdrawals.” Pickett Act of June 25, 1910, Ch. 421,
    
    36 Stat. 847
    .2
    2
    Although the Pickett Act has been repealed, all withdrawals effected
    under the act “remain in full force and effect until modified” under the
    12208             KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES
    Following President Roosevelt’s issuance of Executive
    Order No. 6935 in 1934, Leslie and Ellen Fullard-Leo wrote
    to Samuel Wilder King, who was then serving in the United
    States House of Representatives as a delegate from the terri-
    tory of Hawaii. In their April 20, 1937 letter, the Fullard-Leos
    acknowledged that Kingman Reef’s “ownership presumably
    rests with the State or Navy Department,” and requested com-
    pensation only for the cost of sending their boat to Kingman
    Reef “together with taxes and accrued interest over a period
    of fifteen years.” Samuel Wilder King forwarded this request
    to Claude A. Swanson, Secretary of the Navy, who replied in
    a letter dated May 29, 1937 that “[t]he records of the Navy
    Department do not indicate that there were any vested rights
    on Kingman Reef in favor of private interests on the date of
    the issuance of th[e] Executive Order [6935].” On March 29,
    1938, attorneys representing the Fullard-Leos sent a letter to
    Secretary Swanson, acknowledging the Navy’s position that
    the family did not own Kingman Reef, and threatening legal
    action to establish such ownership. See Kingman Reef, 
    545 F. Supp. 2d at 1107
    . By letter of April 26, 1938, G. J. Rowcliff,
    the Judge Advocate General of the Navy, rebuffed the fami-
    ly’s claim of ownership over Kingman Reef. Rowcliff stated:
    It will be noted that the island, including its reefs and
    tide and submerged lands, was under the control and
    jurisdiction of the United States long before the
    claim of Mrs. Fullard-Leo arose, and by Executive
    Order No. 6935, dated December 29, 1934, it was
    placed under the control and jurisdiction of the Navy
    Department. Under the circumstances, the showing
    made is not sufficient to uphold the claim of Mrs.
    Fullard-Leo.
    
    Id.
    Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976 or some other law. See
    Pub. L. No. 94-579 §§ 701(c), 704(a), 
    90 Stat. 2743
    , 2786, 2792; Kingman
    Reef, 
    545 F. Supp. 2d at 1106
    .
    KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES             12209
    On February 14, 1941, President Roosevelt issued another
    executive order establishing a “Kingman Reef Naval Defen-
    sive Sea Area.” Exec. Order No. 8682, amended by Exec.
    Order 8729. This Executive Order established that “[a]t no
    time shall any person, other than persons on public vessels of
    the United States, enter [the Kingman Reef area],” and dele-
    gated enforcement of the order to the Secretary of the Navy.
    
    Id.
     The Navy subsequently promulgated regulations restrict-
    ing access to Kingman Reef. See 
    32 C.F.R. § 761.3
    (a)(2)(v),
    (b)(2).
    In the fifty years after World War II, both the United States
    Navy and representatives of the Fullard-Leo family purported
    to grant third party requests to visit or fish at Kingman Reef.
    See Kingman Reef, 
    545 F. Supp. 2d at 1107-08
    . For example,
    KRAI submitted a declaration from a private citizen stating
    his impression that “the community of sailors and fishermen
    in Honolulu . . . . knew that . . . Kingman Reef belonged to
    the Fullard-Leo family because of the way they took care of
    [it] and protected [it] at their expense,” and that only the
    Fullard-Leo family could grant permission to travel to and
    fish at Kingman Reef. The record contains several other dec-
    larations of similar import.
    At the same time, the Navy also asserted its authority to
    grant access to Kingman Reef. A July 27, 1973 letter from
    Senator Hiram Fong, and a Navy memorandum of August 2,
    1973, both in response to the request of a private citizen seek-
    ing “permission to fish on and about Kingman Reef,” indicate
    that permission to travel to and fish at Kingman Reef could
    be granted only by the Navy.
    The issue of rightful ownership of Kingman Reef came into
    greater focus in the 1990s, when the United States Fish and
    Wildlife Service (an agency within the Department of the
    Interior) began to consider acquiring Kingman Reef and
    nearby Palmyra Atoll (owned by the Fullard-Leo family) for
    the purpose of establishing a National Wildlife Refuge. See
    12210              KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES
    
    id. at 1108-09
    . The Fish and Wildlife Service’s preliminary
    investigations into acquiring the reef indicated its initial
    understanding that the Fullard-Leos owned the reef. For
    example, an internal Fish and Wildlife Service document
    from August 1997 states:
    Kingman Reef was annexed on behalf of the United
    States in 1922, by the Palmyra Copra Company
    (Fullard-Leo Family), and the family claims owner-
    ship. It is an unincorporated U.S. possession admin-
    istered by the U.S. Department of the Navy. The
    Service is proposing to study fee title acquisition of
    Kingman Reef from the center of the atoll to the 3-
    nautical mile limit.
    Consistent with this understanding, Fish and Wildlife Service
    employees obtained the Fullard-Leos’ permission to access
    the reef, and signed indemnity and waiver agreements
    requested by the Fullard-Leo family. However, an August 6,
    1998 confidential internal memorandum from a high-ranking
    Department of the Interior staff member to the Secretary indi-
    cated uncertainty as to who owned Kingman Reef. The mem-
    orandum noted that “[t]he owners of Palmyra also claim
    ownership of Kingman Reef, but the United States disputes
    this claim,” and raised the possibility that the Department of
    the Interior could obtain ownership over Kingman Reef
    through “an agreement [to transfer the island from] the
    Department of Defense.”3 On August 25, 2000, the Fish and
    3
    In addition to these communications from the Department of Interior,
    KRAI notes several other documents indicating various government
    employees’ understanding that the Fullard-Leos claimed ownership to
    Kingman Reef. For example, a letter dated August 12, 1997, from a Con-
    gressional staffer to the House Resources Committee to an agent of the
    Fullard-Leos, thanked the agent for “sending the information clarifying the
    rightful title of the Fullard-Leo’s [sic] to Palmyra and Kingman Reef” and
    stated that “[t]he brief is well documented regarding the basis for clear
    title to the entire area of Palmyra and Kingman, including surrounding
    reefs.” In addition, the General Counsel of National Oceanic and Atmo-
    KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES                    12211
    Wildlife Service obtained control and jurisdiction over King-
    man Reef through a no-cost transfer from the Department of
    the Navy. The Secretary of the Interior established the King-
    man Reef National Wildlife Refuge on January 18, 2001. See
    Kingman Reef, 
    545 F. Supp. 2d at 1109
    .
    On March 4, 2005, KRAI brought this action to quiet title
    to Kingman Reef under 28 U.S.C. § 2409a. On June 4, 2007,
    the United States filed a motion for dismissal for lack of sub-
    ject matter jurisdiction and for failure to state a claim, Fed. R.
    Civ. P. 12(b)(1), (6), and for summary judgment. Fed. R. Civ.
    P. 56. Holding that the action was untimely under the twelve-
    year limitations period established by 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(g),
    the district court dismissed the complaint for lack of subject
    matter jurisdiction pursuant to Fed. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(1). This
    appeal followed.
    II
    The question whether subject matter jurisdiction exists is
    one of law that we review de novo. United States v. Peninsula
    Commc’ns, Inc., 
    287 F.3d 832
    , 836 (9th Cir. 2002). Unless
    the jurisdictional issue is inextricable from the merits of a
    case, the court may determine jurisdiction on a motion to dis-
    miss for lack of jurisdiction under Rule 12(b)(1) of the Fed-
    eral Rules of Civil Procedure. Roberts v. Corrothers, 
    812 F.2d 1173
    , 1177 (9th Cir. 1987). Under Rule 12(b)(1):
    the district court is free to hear evidence regarding
    jurisdiction and to rule on that issue prior to trial,
    resolving factual disputes where necessary. In such
    spheric Administration indicated in a letter dated October 17, 1997 to the
    Executive Director of the Western Pacific Regional Fishery Management
    Council (in the context of discussing the jurisdiction of the Department of
    the Interior over commercial bottom fishing activities) that the Fullard-
    Leo family owned Kingman Reef.
    12212           KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES
    circumstances, no presumptive truthfulness attaches
    to plaintiff’s allegations, and the existence of dis-
    puted material facts will not preclude the trial court
    from evaluating for itself the merits of jurisdictional
    claims.
    
    Id.
     (internal quotation marks and alterations omitted). A dis-
    trict court’s findings of fact relevant to its determination of
    subject matter jurisdiction are reviewed for clear error. Penin-
    sula Commc’ns, 
    287 F.3d at 836
    . When “the accrual of the
    statute of limitations in part turns on what a reasonable person
    should have known, we review this mixed question of law and
    fact for clear error.” Rose v. United States, 
    905 F.2d 1257
    ,
    1259 (9th Cir. 1990); see also Shultz v. Dep’t of Army, 
    886 F.2d 1157
    , 1159 (9th Cir. 1989). Because estoppel is an equi-
    table concept requiring the exercise of the district court’s dis-
    cretion, we review “the district court’s rejection of appellants’
    equitable estoppel argument under the abuse of discretion
    standard.” Hoefler v. Babbitt, 
    139 F.3d 726
    , 727 (9th Cir.
    1998).
    III
    [1] The Quiet Title Act of 1972, 28 U.S.C. § 2409a, waives
    the federal government’s sovereign immunity to certain civil
    actions by plaintiffs seeking to quiet title to property in which
    the United States claims an interest. Section 2409a(a) pro-
    vides, in pertinent part:
    The United States may be named as a party defen-
    dant in a civil action under this section to adjudicate
    a disputed title to real property in which the United
    States claims an interest, other than a security inter-
    est or water rights.
    [2] The QTA’s waiver of sovereign immunity is subject to
    numerous exceptions and restrictions, including a statute of
    limitations. Section 2409a(g) provides:
    KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES              12213
    Any civil action under this section, except for an
    action brought by a State, shall be barred unless it is
    commenced within twelve years of the date upon
    which it accrued. Such action shall be deemed to
    have accrued on the date the plaintiff or his pre-
    decessor in interest knew or should have known of
    the claim of the United States.
    In this case, KRAI argues that the district court erred in dis-
    missing KRAI’s civil action on the ground that the action was
    time barred, and in holding that such time bar deprived the
    court of subject matter jurisdiction to hear KRAI’s action.
    A
    [3] KRAI argues first that the QTA’s limitations period is
    not a jurisdictional limitation on a court’s authority. We dis-
    agree. The running of the twelve-year limitations period
    deprives the federal courts of “jurisdiction to inquire into the
    merits” of an action brought under the QTA. Block v. North
    Dakota, 
    461 U.S. 273
    , 292 (1983); Fidelity Exploration and
    Prod. Co. v. United States, 
    506 F.3d 1182
    , 1186 (9th Cir.
    2007). KRAI contends that Block’s jurisdictional ruling has
    been superceded by subsequent decisions of the Supreme
    Court holding that statutes of limitation and other require-
    ments for bringing a claim under certain federal statutes (not
    including the QTA) are not jurisdictional and therefore waiv-
    able. See generally Arbaugh v. Y&H Corp., 
    546 U.S. 500
    ,
    511-14 (2006) (holding that a statutory requirement in 42
    U.S.C. §§ 2000e, 2000e-5(f) was an element of a cause of
    action rather than a jurisdictional requirement); Scarborough
    v. Principi, 
    541 U.S. 401
    , 413-14, 420-21 (2004) (holding that
    a pleading requirement in the Equal Access to Justice Act was
    not jurisdictional and was therefore curable through subse-
    quent amendment); Irwin v. Dep’t of Veterans Affairs, 
    498 U.S. 89
    , 95-96 (1990) (holding that the time limits established
    by 42 U.S.C. § 2000e-16(c) for suits by federal employees
    against their government employers are not jurisdictional
    12214           KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES
    because “the same rebuttable presumption of equitable tolling
    applicable to suits against private defendants should also
    apply to suits against the United States.”). KRAI’s reliance on
    these cases is to no avail, because we are bound by our more
    recent decision in Fidelity Exploration and Prod. Co. v.
    United States, 
    506 F.3d 1182
    , 1186 (9th Cir. 2007), which
    reaffirmed Block’s jurisdictional holding in the QTA context.
    As we noted in Fidelity, in the absence of any Supreme Court
    decision overruling Block, “we must follow the Supreme
    Court precedent that directly controls, leaving to the Court the
    prerogative of overruling its own prior decisions.” 
    506 F.3d at
    1186 (citing Rodriguez de Quijas v. Shearson/Am. Express,
    Inc., 
    490 U.S. 477
    , 484 (1989)).
    Moreover, the Supreme Court’s recent decisions have also
    upheld “[j]urisdictional treatment of statutory time limits.”
    Bowles v. Russell, 
    127 S. Ct. 2360
    , 2364-66 (2007). Bowles
    held that the provisions of 
    28 U.S.C. § 2107
     governing the
    deadline for filing notices of appeal are “jurisdictional” and
    cannot be tolled. 
    Id.
     More recently, John R. Sand & Gravel
    Co. v. United States rejected the argument that Irwin permits
    equitable tolling of all statutes of limitation on suits against
    the government, and held that the Federal Court of Claims’
    timeliness requirements were jurisdictional. 
    128 S. Ct. 750
    ,
    753-56 (2008). Thus, Gravel Co. forecloses KRAI’s argument
    that Irwin created a general rule superceding Block’s holding
    as to the jurisdictional nature of the QTA’s twelve-year limi-
    tations period. Nor can we accept KRAI’s argument that Irwin
    and its progeny require us to reexamine Congress’s intent in
    creating the twelve-year limitations period. The Supreme
    Court has already held that Congress intended the QTA’s lim-
    itations period to serve interests of finality, and therefore it
    may not be tolled. See Block, 
    461 U.S. at 283-85
    ; United
    States v. Beggerly, 
    524 U.S. 38
    , 49 (1998).
    [4] KRAI next argues that the district court erred in dis-
    missing the action on statute of limitations grounds under
    Rule 12(b)(1) because the statute of limitations issue was
    KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES              12215
    intermeshed with the ownership issue. We disagree. In gen-
    eral, a district court is permitted to resolve disputed factual
    issues bearing upon subject matter jurisdiction in the context
    of a Rule 12(b)(1) motion unless “the jurisdictional issue and
    the substantive issues are so intermeshed that the question of
    jurisdiction is dependent on decision of the merits.” Thornhill
    Publ’g Co. v. Gen. Tel. & Elecs. Corp., 
    594 F.2d 730
    , 735
    (9th Cir. 1979); accord Augustine v. United States, 
    704 F.2d 1074
    , 1077 (9th Cir. 1983).
    [5] Here, the question whether this action was timely was
    not inextricably intertwined with the ultimate merits issue of
    ownership. As the district court correctly noted, “[t]he crucial
    issue in the statute of limitations inquiry is whether the plain-
    tiff had notice of the federal claim, not whether the claim
    itself is valid.” Kingman Reef, 
    545 F. Supp. 2d at 1111
     (inter-
    nal quotation marks omitted). Thus, the district court properly
    addressed the jurisdictional issue of timeliness in the context
    of Rule 12(b)(1).
    Finally, KRAI argues that the district court erred by requir-
    ing KRAI to carry the burden of establishing that its claim
    was timely. To support its argument that the United States
    bore the burden to establish an absence of jurisdiction in this
    case, KRAI cites to legislative history, in particular, a House
    of Representatives committee report recounting the Justice
    Department’s statement that “if the United States wished to
    assert that the statute of limitation had run, it would then have
    the burden of establishing this fact.” H.R. Rep. No. 92-1559
    (1978), reprinted in 1972 U.S.C.C.A.N. 4547, 4551. Although
    ordinarily the defendant bears the burden of proving an affir-
    mative statute of limitations defense, here the statute of limi-
    tations is jurisdictional, and, “[w]hen subject matter
    jurisdiction is challenged under Federal Rule of Procedure
    12(b)(1), the plaintiff has the burden of proving jurisdiction
    in order to survive the motion.” Tosco Corp. v. Comtys. for
    a Better Env’t, 
    236 F.3d 495
    , 499 (9th Cir. 2001). However,
    we need not determine who bears the burden of proving time-
    12216           KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES
    liness for purposes of the QTA, because, as discussed below,
    the evidence overwhelmingly establishes that more than
    twelve years elapsed since the Fullard-Leos’ claim accrued.
    See Intel Corp. v. Hartford Accident & Indem. Co., 
    952 F.2d 1551
    , 1558 (9th Cir. 1991).
    B
    [6] An action brought under the QTA “accrues when the
    landowner or his predecessors-in-interest knew or should
    have known of the United States’ claim.” Shultz, 
    886 F.2d at 1158
    ; see 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(g). The QTA’s “statute of limita-
    tions applies retroactively,” so it is irrelevant whether KRAI’s
    predecessors in interest, the Fullard-Leo family, was put on
    notice of the United States’s interest before or after the enact-
    ment of the QTA. Donnelly v. United States, 
    850 F.2d 1313
    ,
    1318 (9th Cir. 1988) (citing Block, 
    461 U.S. at 284
    ).
    [7] The record makes clear that the Fullard-Leos had actual
    notice that the United States claimed an interest in Kingman
    Reef more than twelve years prior to the filing of the com-
    plaint in this case. As noted above, in their April 20, 1937 let-
    ter, the Fullard-Leos acknowledged that Kingman Reef’s
    “ownership presumably rests with the State or Navy depart-
    ment.” Kingman Reef, 
    545 F. Supp. 2d at 1106
    . When the
    Fullard-Leos subsequently threatened the Navy with legal
    action to establish their ownership interest, the Navy
    expressly rejected their claim by letter of April 26, 1938, con-
    cluding that the evidence was “not sufficient to uphold the
    claim of Mrs. Fullard-Leo” to Kingman Reef. 
    Id. at 1107
    .
    These communications between the Fullard-Leos and the
    Navy Department demonstrate conclusively that KRAI’s
    “predecessor in interest knew or should have known of the
    claim of the United States” by April 26, 1938, at the latest.
    § 2409a(g); see Michel v. United States, 
    65 F.3d 130
    , 132 (9th
    Cir. 1995).
    KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES                 12217
    [8] KRAI argues that the Fullard-Leos’ correspondence
    with the United States Navy did not cause its claim to accrue
    for purposes of § 2409a(g) because “[a]ny claim that the gov-
    ernment derived ownership of Kingman from either the
    Guano Act4 or the 1934 [Executive] Order would have made
    no sense to any person.” KRAI’s attack upon the ultimate
    validity of the United States’s claim does not overcome the
    fact that its QTA claim “accrued on the date the plaintiff or
    his predecessor in interest knew or should have known of the
    claim of the United States.” § 2409a(g). It is irrelevant
    whether the United States’s justifications for rebuffing the
    Fullard-Leos’ claims of ownership and rejecting requests for
    compensation were meritorious; the QTA limitations period
    accrues as soon as the United States makes a “claim that
    creates even a cloud on” a plaintiff’s ownership interest. See
    Michel, 
    65 F.3d at 132
    ; California ex rel. State Land Comm’n
    v. Yuba Goldfields, Inc., 
    752 F.2d 393
    , 396 (9th Cir. 1985);
    see also Spirit Lake Tribe v. North Dakota, 
    262 F.3d 732
    , 738
    (8th Cir. 2001) (“The government’s claim need not be clear
    and unambiguous. . . . All that is necessary is a reasonable
    awareness that the Government claims some interest adverse
    to the plaintiff’s.”) (internal quotation marks omitted).
    Regardless of the merits of the United States’s claim to King-
    man Reef, the Fullard-Leos’ acknowledgment that the United
    States claimed ownership of the reef is sufficient for their
    claim to accrue under the QTA.
    [9] Because KRAI’s claim accrued as of April 26, 1938, the
    federal court would lack subject matter jurisdiction as of April
    27, 1950, absent some exception to the statute of limitations
    in § 2409a(g). See Block, 
    461 U.S. at 284
    ; Donnelly, 
    850 F.2d at 1318
    .
    4
    The Guano Islands Act authorizes the President to “consider[ ] as
    appertaining to the United States” any unclaimed island “[w]henever any
    citizen of the United States discovers a deposit of guano” thereon. 
    48 U.S.C. § 1411
    .
    12218           KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES
    C
    KRAI argues that even if its predecessors in interest should
    have known that the United States had claimed an interest in
    Kingman Reef at one time, the United States subsequently
    abandoned that interest and the statute of limitations under the
    QTA has not run on any new claim to Kingman Reef asserted
    by the United States. In support of its argument that the
    United States abandoned its interest in Kingman Reef during
    the period between 1938 and December 11, 2000 (the date the
    United States established the Kingman Reef National Wildlife
    Refuge), KRAI relies on two types of evidence: evidence that
    the United States did not restrict access to Kingman Reef, see
    Shultz, 
    886 F.2d at 1159
    , and evidence that government
    employees agreed that the Fullard-Leos owned the reef, see
    Michel, 
    65 F.3d at 132-33
    .
    First, KRAI notes that Navy employees did not restrict the
    public’s access to Kingman Reef. For example, Navy employ-
    ees obtained the Fullard-Leos’ permission to access the reef,
    instructed members of the public to contact the Fullard-Leos
    for permission to enter, and indicated a belief that the regula-
    tions restricting access to the reef area had been suspended.
    KRAI relies on Shultz for the proposition that these actions
    constituted abandonment of the United States’s claim of inter-
    est in Kingman Reef. In Shultz, we held that the plaintiffs’
    claim under the QTA to quiet title to plaintiffs’ easement over
    a road adjacent to a federal military base originally accrued
    when Shultz had reasonable notice that the government
    denied Shultz’s right of access to the road. If this denial had
    occurred more than twelve years before Shultz brought his
    claim, Shultz’s action would have been time barred unless,
    after the claim accrued, “the government’s failure to restrict
    access to the base . . . led Shultz or his predecessors-in-
    interest reasonably to believe that the government did not
    continue to claim an interest in the roadway.” 
    886 F.2d at 1161
    . In other words, if the United States stopped denying
    KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES            12219
    Shultz access to the use of the road, Shultz could have reason-
    ably believed that the United States had abandoned its claim
    to exclusive use of the road. In such a case of abandonment,
    Shultz’s claim would accrue “when the government reasserted
    a claim,” not when the government originally denied Shultz’s
    access. 
    Id.
    [10] As the district court noted, however, Shultz does not
    apply directly to this case, because KRAI is asserting an own-
    ership interest over government property, which is different
    from a plaintiff’s claim of an easement. See, e.g., McFarland
    v. Norton, 
    425 F.3d 724
    , 726-27 (9th Cir. 2005); Warren v.
    United States, 
    234 F.3d 1331
    , 1337 (D.C. Cir. 2000) (citing
    Michel, 
    65 F.3d at 132
    ). Even if a reasonable plaintiff could
    believe that the United States had abandoned its claim that the
    plaintiff did not have an easement over government property
    by allowing the plaintiff access to the property, see Shultz,
    
    886 F.2d at 1161
    , a reasonable plaintiff could not believe that
    the United States had abandoned its claim of a possessory
    interest in public lands merely because it failed to enforce
    restrictions upon public access. See Warren, 
    234 F.3d at 1337-38
    . It is well established that the United States does not
    abandon its claims to property by inaction. See United States
    v. California, 
    332 U.S. 19
    , 40 (1947). As the Supreme Court
    explained:
    The Government, which holds its interests here as
    elsewhere in trust for all the people, is not to be
    deprived of those interests by the ordinary court
    rules designed particularly for private disputes over
    individually owned pieces of property; and officers
    who have no authority at all to dispose of Govern-
    ment property cannot by their conduct cause the
    Government to lose its valuable rights by their acqui-
    escence, laches, or failure to act.
    
    Id.
     Nor can the United States lose property rights through
    adverse possession. See United States v. Pappas, 
    814 F.2d 12220
               KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES
    1342, 1343 n.3 (9th Cir. 1987) (“One cannot gain title to land
    of the United States through adverse possession.”); see also
    § 2409a(n) (precluding QTA “suits against the United States
    based upon adverse possession”). In light of these settled prin-
    ciples, the Fullard-Leos could not have reasonably construed
    the United States’s failure to exclude the public from King-
    man Reef as an abandonment of its claim of interest. See
    Kingman Reef, 
    545 F. Supp. 2d at
    1114 n.10. We must there-
    fore reject KRAI’s first argument that the failure of Navy
    employees to restrict the public’s access to Kingman Reef
    evidences an abandonment of the government’s claim.
    Second, KRAI notes actions by various government
    employees that are consistent with KRAI’s claim of owner-
    ship. For example, a number of Navy and Fish and Wildlife
    Service employees either acknowledged the Fullard-Leos’
    ownership explicitly or implied such ownership through
    offers to purchase the reef. KRAI relies on Michel for the
    argument that government employees’ acknowledgment that
    the Fullard-Leos owned Kingman Reef constituted an aban-
    donment of the United States’s claim. See 
    65 F.3d at 133
    . In
    Michel, we considered the Michels’ claimed access easement
    through a national wildlife refuge and held that the Michels’
    claim accrued when “the Michels knew or should have known
    the government claimed the exclusive right to deny their his-
    toric access to the trails and roads across the refuge.” 
    Id. at 132
    . Although the district court concluded that the Michels
    knew of the governments’ denial of access more than twelve
    years before the Michels brought their claim, we concluded
    there was evidence that the government had abandoned and
    then reasserted its claim. Specifically, we held a letter from
    the government to the Michels acknowledging their “ ‘historic
    right of access’ appears to abandon any previously asserted
    claim of exclusive control of that right.” 
    Id. at 133
    . We also
    held that an agreement between the Michels and the govern-
    ment that allowed access by the Michels as agreed to in the
    earlier letter “could be construed as an abandonment of the
    KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES              12221
    government’s claim that it had the exclusive right to control
    access.” 
    Id.
    KRAI argues that the actions and communications by gov-
    ernment employees evidencing their belief that the Fullard-
    Leo family owned Kingman Reef are analogous to the letter
    and agreement in Michel, and “could be construed as aban-
    donment of the government’s claim” of a property interest in
    Kingman Reef. We disagree. As we explained in Shultz, the
    key inquiry is whether these actions and communications
    would give KRAI or its predecessors in interest “reason to
    believe the government did not continue to claim an interest”
    in the property. 
    886 F.2d at 1161
    . In Michel, the property
    interest at stake was not the government’s ownership interest
    in the property, but merely the right to deny the Michels’
    claimed access easement. Moreover, the government had
    issued the Michels both a letter and a signed agreement
    expressly recognizing their “historic right of access.” Michel,
    
    65 F.3d at 133
    . Under these circumstances, a reasonable per-
    son could believe that the United States had abandoned its
    denial of the plaintiffs’ easement right.
    [11] By contrast, where the United States’s claim of interest
    in property stems from formal actions of the legislative or
    executive branch, a person could not reasonably conclude that
    informal remarks of agency personnel or internal agency
    memoranda could eliminate the cloud upon the property’s
    title. See Spirit Lake Tribe, 
    262 F.3d at 741-42
     (holding that
    an informal opinion memorandum by an Associate Solicitor
    in the Department of Interior did not establish abandonment
    because “intra-office memoranda do not bind the govern-
    ment”). In a real estate transaction, a reasonable prospective
    purchaser intending to buy property free of any clouds on the
    title would require clear evidence that all adverse claims of
    ownership had been relinquished, as documented by a person
    with appropriate authority, and would not rely on informal let-
    ters and memos from low-level employees.
    12222               KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES
    [12] Our conclusion that some more formal step by the
    United States was necessary to give KRAI “reason to believe
    the government did not continue to claim an interest” in the
    property, Shultz, 
    886 F.2d at 1161
    , is consistent with the QTA
    itself, which established a formal method for the United States
    to disclaim any interest in property, specifically by filing such
    a disclaimer with the court. See 28 U.S.C. § 2409a(e).5 As
    § 2409a(e) makes clear, Congress did not deem unofficial
    statements by government officials to be sufficient to elimi-
    nate the United States’s claim of interest in property and to
    thus deprive the district court of jurisdiction under the QTA.
    Therefore, we agree with the Eighth Circuit that the United
    States cannot be deemed to have abandoned a claim of owner-
    ship for purposes of § 2409a(g) unless it “clearly and
    unequivocally abandons its interest,” Spirit Lake Tribe, 
    262 F.3d at 739
    , as evidenced by documentation from a govern-
    ment official with authority to make such decisions on behalf
    of the United States.
    [13] Here, there is no evidence in the record that an appro-
    priate government official clearly and unequivocally aban-
    doned the United States’s interest in Kingman Reef. The
    district court found that KRAI presented evidence only “of
    confusion and mistake on the part of some government
    employees,” as to whether the United States ultimately pos-
    sessed an ownership interest in Kingman Reef, Kingman Reef,
    
    545 F. Supp. 2d at
    1114 n.11, and this conclusion is not
    clearly erroneous. The government has not rescinded the
    5
    Section 2409a(e) of the QTA provides:
    If the United States disclaims all interest in the real property or
    interest therein adverse to the plaintiff at any time prior to the
    actual commencement of the trial, which disclaimer is confirmed
    by order of the court, the jurisdiction of the district court shall
    cease unless it has jurisdiction of the civil action or suit on
    ground other than and independent of the authority conferred by
    section 1346(f) of this title.
    28 U.S.C. § 2409a(e).
    KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES                   12223
    Executive Orders designating Kingman Reef as public land
    under Navy protection, nor has the regulation establishing the
    Kingman Reef Naval Defensive Sea Area been repealed. See
    
    32 C.F.R. § 761.3
    (a)(2)(v), (b)(2); Exec. Order Nos. 6935,
    8682.6 Neither has any United States official with authority to
    bind the Executive Branch clearly and unequivocally dis-
    claimed the United States’s claim of interest in Kingman
    Reef. Although at various times correspondence and internal
    memoranda from employees and officials of various Execu-
    tive Branch agencies reflect an understanding that the Fullard-
    Leo family owned, or claimed ownership of, Kingman Reef,
    none of the documents in the record indicate an official deter-
    mination that the United States no longer claimed a property
    interest in the reef or intended to disclaim such an interest.
    Therefore, KRAI and its predecessors in interest could not
    reasonably conclude that the recent informal governmental
    communications had eliminated the cloud upon the title to
    Kingman Reef created by official government actions in the
    1930s. Accordingly, we reject KRAI’s theory that the United
    States abandoned its claim.
    D
    [14] Finally, KRAI contends that the United States was
    equitably estopped from raising the twelve-year limitations
    period of § 2409a(g) as a defense to KRAI’s claim. KRAI
    asserts that the United States concealed its intention to annex
    Kingman Reef while negotiating with the Fullard-Leo family
    to purchase Palmyra Atoll, so that it could ensure successful
    purchase of Palmyra (over which it had no plausible claim of
    title) without expending funds to obtain Kingman Reef. We
    reject this argument. As we have noted, § 2409a(g) is jurisdic-
    6
    KRAI notes that the Naval Airspace Reservation over Kingman Reef
    has been suspended. See 
    32 C.F.R. § 761.4
    (d)(1). However, the suspen-
    sion of airspace restrictions did not repeal the Naval Defensive Sea Area
    reservations in their entirety. See 
    id.
     § 761.3(a)(2)(v), (b)(2); Kingman
    Reef, 
    545 F. Supp. 2d at 1106
    .
    12224           KINGMAN REEF v. UNITED STATES
    tional under our precedents, e.g., Fidelity, 
    506 F.3d at 1186
    ,
    and “subject-matter jurisdiction . . . can never be forfeited or
    waived.” Arbaugh, 
    546 U.S. at 514
     (internal quotation marks
    omitted). KRAI notes Justice Stevens’s concurring opinion in
    Beggerly, which states that the Court was “not confronted
    with” and “need not . . . address” the question whether “equi-
    table estoppel might apply if the Government were guilty of
    outrageous misconduct that prevented the plaintiff, though
    fully aware of the Government’s claim of title, from knowing
    of her own claim.” 
    524 U.S. at 49-50
     (Stevens, J., concur-
    ring). We need not address the effect, if any, of Justice Ste-
    vens’s concurrence. As noted above, the district court found
    no evidence of outrageous conduct, and thus did not abuse its
    discretion in holding that KRAI failed to establish the ele-
    ments of a claim of equitable estoppel. See Morgan v. Gon-
    zales, 
    495 F.3d 1084
    , 1092 (9th Cir. 2007).
    AFFIRMED.