(Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2021 1
Syllabus
NOTE: Where it is feasible, a syllabus (headnote) will be released, as is
being done in connection with this case, at the time the opinion is issued.
The syllabus constitutes no part of the opinion of the Court but has been
prepared by the Reporter of Decisions for the convenience of the reader.
See United States v. Detroit Timber & Lumber Co., 200 U. S. 321, 337.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
Syllabus
MISSISSIPPI v. TENNESSEE ET AL.
ON EXCEPTIONS TO REPORT OF SPECIAL MASTER
No. 143, Orig. Argued October 4, 2021—Decided November 22, 2021
Mississippi brought an original action against Tennessee for damages
and other relief related to the pumping of groundwater by the City of
Memphis from the Middle Claiborne Aquifer, a valuable water re-
source that lies beneath eight States. Mississippi argues that Tennes-
see’s pumping—using wells Mississippi concedes are located entirely
in Tennessee—siphons water away from Mississippi and amounts to a
tortious taking of groundwater owned by Mississippi. Mississippi ex-
pressly disclaims any equitable apportionment remedy, arguing that
the “fundamental premise of this Court’s equitable apportionment ju-
risprudence—that each of the opposing States has an equality of right
to use the waters at issue—does not apply to this dispute.” Complaint
¶49. The Special Master appointed by the Court to assess Mississippi’s
claims determined that the aquifer is an interstate water resource and
that equitable apportionment is the exclusive judicial remedy. Be-
cause Mississippi’s complaint did not seek equitable apportionment,
the Special Master recommended that the Court dismiss the complaint
but grant Mississippi leave to amend. Mississippi challenges the rec-
ommendation to dismiss; Tennessee objects to the recommendation to
grant Mississippi leave to file an amended complaint.
Held: The waters of the Middle Claiborne Aquifer are subject to the ju-
dicial remedy of equitable apportionment; Mississippi’s complaint is
dismissed without leave to amend. Pp. 7–12.
(a) The doctrine of equitable apportionment aims to produce a fair
allocation of a shared water resource between two or more States, see
Colorado v. New Mexico, 459 U. S. 176, 183, based on the principle that
States have an equal right to reasonable use of shared water resources.
Florida v. Georgia, 592 U. S. __, __. The Court has applied the doctrine
to interstate rivers and streams, see South Carolina v. North Carolina,
MISSISSIPPI v. TENNESSEE
Syllabus
558 U. S. 256, to disputes over interstate river basins, see Florida v.
Georgia, 585 U. S. __, __, and in situations where the pumping of
groundwater has affected the flow of interstate surface waters, see Ne-
braska v. Wyoming, 515 U. S. 1, 14. The Court has also applied the
doctrine to anadromous fish that migrate between the Pacific Ocean
and spawning grounds in the Columbia-Snake River system,
“travel[ing] through several States during their lifetime.” Idaho ex rel.
Evans v. Oregon, 462 U. S. 1017, 1018–1019, 1024.
The Court has not before addressed whether equitable apportion-
ment applies to interstate aquifers. Equitable apportionment of the
Middle Claiborne Aquifer is “sufficiently similar” to past applications
of the doctrine to warrant the same treatment, for several reasons. Id.,
at 1024. First, the Court has applied equitable apportionment when
transboundary water resources were at issue. Here the Middle
Claiborne Aquifer’s “multistate character” seems beyond dispute.
Sporhase v. Nebraska ex rel. Douglas, 458 U. S. 941, 953. Second, the
Middle Claiborne Aquifer contains water that flows naturally between
the States, and the Court’s equitable apportionment cases have all con-
cerned such water, Kansas v. Colorado, 206 U. S. 46, 98, or fish that
live in it, Idaho ex rel. Evans, 462 U. S., at 1024. While Mississippi
contends the natural transboundary flow of the Middle Claiborne Aq-
uifer is slower than some streams and rivers, the Court has applied
equitable apportionment even to streams that run dry from time to
time. See Kansas, 206 U. S., at 115. The speed of the flow does not
place the aquifer beyond equitable apportionment. Finally, actions
taken in Tennessee to pump water from the aquifer clearly have effects
on the portion of the aquifer that underlies Mississippi. Tennessee’s
pumping has contributed to a cone of depression that extends miles
into northern Mississippi, and Mississippi itself contends that this
cone of depression has reduced groundwater storage and pressure in
northern Mississippi. Such interstate effects are a hallmark of the
Court’s equitable apportionment cases, see, e.g., Florida, 592 U. S., at
__. For all these reasons, the Court holds that the judicial remedy of
equitable apportionment applies to the waters of the Middle Claiborne
Aquifer. Pp. 7–9.
(b) The Court rejects Mississippi’s contention that it has a sovereign
ownership right to all water beneath its surface that precludes appli-
cation of equitable apportionment. The Court has “consistently de-
nied” the proposition that a State may exercise exclusive ownership or
control of interstate “waters flowing within her boundaries.” Hinder-
lider v. La Plata River & Cherry Creek Ditch Co., 304 U. S. 92, 102.
Although the Court’s past equitable apportionment cases have gener-
ally concerned streams and rivers, no basis exists for a different result
Cite as: 595 U. S. ____ (2021) 3
Syllabus
in the context of the Middle Claiborne Aquifer. To the contrary, Mis-
sissippi’s ownership approach would allow an upstream State to com-
pletely cut off flow to a downstream one, a result contrary to the
Court’s equitable apportionment jurisprudence. The Court’s decision
in Tarrant Regional Water Dist. v. Herrmann, 569 U. S. 614, does not
support Mississippi’s position. Tarrant concerned whether one State
could cross another’s boundaries to access a shared water resource un-
der the terms of an interstate compact. The Court did not consider
equitable apportionment, because the affected States had negotiated a
compact that determined their respective rights to the resource. To
the extent Tarrant stands for the broader proposition that one State
may not physically enter another to take water in the absence of an
express agreement, that principle is not implicated here. The parties
have stipulated all of Tennessee’s wells are drilled straight down and
do not cross the Mississippi-Tennessee border. While the origin of an
interstate water resource may be relevant to the terms of an equitable
apportionment, that feature alone cannot place the resource outside
the doctrine itself. Because the waters contained in the Middle
Claiborne Aquifer are subject to equitable apportionment, the Court
overrules Mississippi’s exceptions and adopts the Special Master’s rec-
ommendation to dismiss the bill of complaint. Pp. 9–11.
(c) Mississippi has neither sought leave to amend its complaint nor
tendered a proposed complaint seeking equitable apportionment. The
Court does not address whether Mississippi should be granted such
leave and sustains Tennessee’s objection to the Special Master’s rec-
ommendation to grant Mississippi leave to amend. Pp. 11–12.
Exceptions overruled in part and sustained in part, and case dismissed.
ROBERTS, C. J., delivered the opinion for a unanimous Court.
Cite as: 595 U. S. ____ (2021) 1
Opinion of the Court
NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in the
preliminary print of the United States Reports. Readers are requested to
notify the Reporter of Decisions, Supreme Court of the United States, Wash-
ington, D. C. 20543, of any typographical or other formal errors, in order that
corrections may be made before the preliminary print goes to press.
SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES
_________________
No. 143, Orig.
_________________
STATE OF MISSISSIPPI, PLAINTIFF v. TENNESSEE,
CITY OF MEMPHIS, TENNESSEE, AND MEMPHIS
LIGHT, GAS & WATER DIVISION
ON EXCEPTIONS TO REPORT OF SPECIAL MASTER
[November 22, 2021]
CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS delivered the opinion of the
Court.
The City of Memphis sits on the banks of the Mississippi
River in the southwest corner of Tennessee. Arkansas
marks the City’s western border, and Mississippi its south-
ern. Hundreds of feet beneath Memphis lies one of the
City’s most valuable resources: the Middle Claiborne Aqui-
fer. Workers discovered the aquifer in 1886 while drilling
a well for the Bohlen-Huse Ice Company. Ever since, water
pumped from the aquifer has provided Memphis with an
abundant supply of clean, affordable drinking water.
The Middle Claiborne Aquifer underlies other States too,
including Mississippi. This case began in 2014 when Mis-
sissippi invoked our original jurisdiction and sought leave
to file a bill of complaint against Tennessee. Mississippi
alleges that Tennessee’s pumping has taken hundreds of
billions of gallons of water that were once located beneath
Mississippi. It seeks at least $615 million in damages, as
well as declaratory and injunctive relief. We granted Mis-
sissippi leave to file its complaint and appointed a Special
Master to oversee proceedings. The Special Master has now
2 MISSISSIPPI v. TENNESSEE
Opinion of the Court
issued his report, which recommends that this Court dis-
miss Mississippi’s complaint with leave to amend. Both
Mississippi and Tennessee have filed exceptions.
I
A
Layers of rock, clay, silt, sand, and gravel exist below the
Earth’s surface. Groundwater percolates through the
spaces in and around these materials, sometimes forming
underground reservoirs of water known as aquifers. Some
aquifers are small, while others span tens of thousands of
square miles. The Middle Claiborne Aquifer is one of the
latter. It underlies portions of eight States in the Missis-
sippi River Basin: Alabama, Arkansas, Illinois, Kentucky,
Louisiana, Mississippi, Missouri, and Tennessee. See Re-
port of Special Master 16; Hearing Tr. 278–279. Many of
these States, including Mississippi and Tennessee, draw
significant amounts of groundwater from the aquifer. Id.,
at 660–662, 1038–1040; Joint Exh. J–71.
To extract water from an aquifer, people drill wells.
Pumps then draw water to the surface, where it is processed
and piped to customers. Pumping does not just bring water
to the surface; it also lowers water pressure at the site of
the well. Water is naturally drawn to this area of lower
pressure. This, in turn, “causes a pattern of lower or de-
pressed water levels around the wells.” Report of Special
Master 13. Hydrogeologists call such areas “cones of de-
pression.” These cones of depression can be local—say, the
size of a backyard. Or they can be regional, stretching out
for many miles from a pumping site. See id., at 21–23;
Hearing Tr. 176, 188, 435.
The City of Memphis, through its public utility, the Mem-
phis Light, Gas and Water Division (MLGW), pumps ap-
proximately 120 million gallons of groundwater from the
Middle Claiborne Aquifer each day. Id., at 186, 200; Pl.
Exh. P–157. It does so using more than 160 wells located
Cite as: 595 U. S. ____ (2021) 3
Opinion of the Court
in and around Memphis. Joint Statement of Stipulated and
Contested Facts 101. Some of these wells are located just a
few miles from the Mississippi-Tennessee border, though
all are drilled straight down such that none crosses the
physical border between the States. Id., at 101–102, 106.
MLGW’s pumping contributes to a cone of depression that
underlies both the City of Memphis and DeSoto County,
Mississippi. Report of Special Master 21–23; Hearing Tr.
206, 435–436, 525.
Mississippi argues that MLGW’s pumping has altered
the historic flow of groundwater within the Middle
Claiborne Aquifer. Mississippi concedes that some water
naturally flows from the part of the aquifer beneath Missis-
sippi to the part beneath Tennessee. But only to the extent
of some 30 to 60 feet per year. See Exceptions Brief for Mis-
sissippi 8; see also Report of Special Master 24 (“Mississippi
does not dispute the expert consensus that at least some
quantity of groundwater . . . crossed the border under nat-
ural conditions.”). Mississippi contends that MLGW’s
pumping has substantially hastened this existing flow, al-
lowing Memphis to take billions of gallons of groundwater
that otherwise would have remained under Mississippi for
thousands of years.
B
In 2005, prior to the present litigation, the Attorney Gen-
eral of Mississippi sued the City of Memphis and MLGW in
Federal District Court. The suit alleged that Memphis had
wrongfully appropriated groundwater belonging to Missis-
sippi through its pumping activities. Mississippi sought
hundreds of millions of dollars in damages.
The District Court dismissed the suit for failure to join
Tennessee, which it determined was an indispensable
party. Hood ex rel. Miss. v. Memphis, 533 F. Supp. 2d 646,
651 (ND Miss. 2008). The Fifth Circuit then affirmed.
Hood ex rel. Miss. v. Memphis, 570 F. 3d 625 (2009).
4 MISSISSIPPI v. TENNESSEE
Opinion of the Court
Both decisions turned in large part on what is known as
“equitable apportionment.” Under that doctrine, this Court
allocates rights to a disputed interstate water resource af-
ter one State sues another under our original jurisdiction.
See Kansas v. Colorado, 206 U. S. 46, 97–98 (1907). Tradi-
tionally, equitable apportionment has been the exclusive ju-
dicial remedy for interstate water disputes, unless a stat-
ute, compact, or prior apportionment controls. This Court
has never before held that an interstate aquifer is subject
to equitable apportionment, so Mississippi’s suit implicated
a question of first impression.
The Court of Appeals, affirming the District Court, held
that interstate aquifers are comparable to interstate rivers
and are thus subject to equitable apportionment. It rea-
soned that an aquifer “flows, if slowly.” Hood ex rel. Miss.,
570 F. 3d, at 630. And it said the fact that an aquifer is
“located underground, as opposed to resting above ground,”
was of “no analytical significance.” Ibid. Because deter-
mining “Mississippi and Tennessee’s relative rights to the
Aquifer” brought the case within the equitable apportion-
ment doctrine, the Court of Appeals affirmed the District
Court’s holding that Tennessee was an indispensable party.
Id., at 630–631; see also Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 19(a). Joinder
of Tennessee in the lower federal courts was not possible,
however, because this Court has exclusive jurisdiction over
suits between States. See U. S. Const., Art. III, §2; 28
U. S. C. §1251(a). So the Fifth Circuit held that the District
Court had properly dismissed the suit. Hood ex rel. Miss.,
570 F. 3d, at 632–633; Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 19(b).
Mississippi then petitioned for a writ of certiorari. It also
sought leave to file a bill of complaint against Tennessee,
Memphis, and MLGW under our original jurisdiction. The
proposed complaint requested over $1 billion in damages for
the alleged taking of Mississippi’s water. In the alterna-
tive, it sought equitable apportionment of the aquifer, with
a damages award for past diversions of groundwater. We
Cite as: 595 U. S. ____ (2021) 5
Opinion of the Court
declined to grant certiorari, 559 U. S. 904 (2010), and de-
nied without prejudice Mississippi’s request for leave to file
a bill of complaint, 559 U. S. 901 (2010).
C
In 2014, Mississippi again sought leave from this Court
to file a bill of complaint against Tennessee, Memphis, and
MLGW. That is the basis of this suit. Mississippi’s com-
plaint alleges that MLGW “has forcibly siphoned into Ten-
nessee hundreds of billions of gallons of high quality
groundwater owned by Mississippi.” Complaint ¶23. It
says that MLGW’s “mechanical pumping” is to blame and
that the “groundwater taken by Defendants from within
Mississippi’s borders would have never under normal, nat-
ural circumstances been drawn into Tennessee.” Id., ¶24.
This “wrongful taking,” the State contends, “is evidenced by
a substantial drop in pressure and corresponding draw-
down of stored groundwater” in northwest Mississippi, and
by a cone of depression extending miles into its territory.
Id., ¶25. As a result, Mississippi says, it has to drill its own
wells deeper to access the aquifer, and use more electricity
to pump water to the surface. Id., ¶54(b).
Mississippi claims an absolute “ownership” right to all
groundwater beneath its surface—even after that water
has crossed its borders. See id., ¶¶8–12, 39. It argues that
Tennessee’s pumping thus amounts to a tortious taking of
property, and it seeks at least $615 million in damages. See
id., ¶¶55–56. Mississippi expressly disclaims equitable ap-
portionment, arguing that the “fundamental premise of this
Court’s equitable apportionment jurisprudence—that each
of the opposing States has an equality of right to use the
waters at issue—does not apply to this dispute.” Id., ¶49.
We granted Mississippi leave to file its complaint and ap-
pointed Judge Eugene E. Siler, Jr., of the Sixth Circuit to
serve as Special Master. He has ably discharged his duties.
6 MISSISSIPPI v. TENNESSEE
Opinion of the Court
Following motions practice, discovery, and a five-day evi-
dentiary hearing, the Special Master issued a report recom-
mending that we dismiss Mississippi’s complaint, but with
leave to amend. He first determined that the Middle
Claiborne Aquifer is an interstate water resource. He found
that the aquifer is a “single hydrogeological unit,” that Ten-
nessee’s pumping affects groundwater beneath Mississippi,
and that prior to such pumping, “groundwater flowed be-
tween Mississippi and Tennessee”—a fact Mississippi “does
not dispute.” Report of Special Master 15–24.
The Special Master then concluded that, because the aq-
uifer is an interstate water resource, equitable apportion-
ment is the appropriate remedy. He recognized that equi-
table apportionment “stands alone as the federal common-
law principle for disputes over interstate water,” id., at 31,
and saw “no compelling reason to chart a new path for
groundwater resources,” id., at 26. Because Mississippi’s
complaint did not seek equitable apportionment, the Spe-
cial Master recommends that we dismiss it. But he also
recommends that we grant Mississippi leave to file an
amended complaint seeking equitable apportionment,
though the State has not yet sought such leave.
Mississippi and Tennessee both filed exceptions to the
Special Master’s report. Mississippi objects to the Special
Master’s recommendation that we dismiss the suit. It ar-
gues that the Special Master erred in finding the water in
the Middle Claiborne Aquifer subject to equitable appor-
tionment. Tennessee objects only to the Special Master’s
recommendation that we grant Mississippi leave to amend
its complaint.
We “conduct an independent review of the record, and as-
sume the ultimate responsibility for deciding all matters.”
Kansas v. Nebraska, 574 U. S. 445, 453 (2015) (internal
quotation marks omitted). Based on that review, we dis-
miss Mississippi’s complaint and decline to grant leave to
amend.
Cite as: 595 U. S. ____ (2021) 7
Opinion of the Court
II
A
Equitable apportionment aims to produce a fair alloca-
tion of a shared water resource between two or more States.
See Colorado v. New Mexico, 459 U. S. 176, 183 (1982). The
doctrine’s “guiding principle” is that States “have an equal
right to make a reasonable use” of a shared water resource.
Florida v. Georgia, 592 U. S. ___, ___ (2021) (slip op., at 4)
(internal quotation marks omitted).
We pioneered the doctrine in Kansas v. Colorado, 206
U. S. 46. Since then, we have often applied it to interstate
rivers and streams. See South Carolina v. North Carolina,
558 U. S. 256 (2010); Colorado v. New Mexico, 459 U. S.
176; Nebraska v. Wyoming, 325 U. S. 589 (1945); Wyoming
v. Colorado, 259 U. S. 419 (1922). We have also applied the
doctrine to disputes over interstate river basins, see Florida
v. Georgia, 585 U. S. ___, ___–___ (2018) (slip op., at 2–3),
and in situations where the pumping of groundwater has
affected the flow of interstate surface waters, see Nebraska
v. Wyoming, 515 U. S. 1, 14 (1995). We have even applied
the doctrine to anadromous fish—such as Chinook salmon
and steelhead trout—that migrate between the Pacific
Ocean and spawning grounds in the Columbia-Snake River
system, “travel[ing] through several States during their
lifetime.” See Idaho ex rel. Evans v. Oregon, 462 U. S. 1017,
1018–1019, 1024 (1983).
Mississippi correctly observes that we have never consid-
ered whether equitable apportionment applies to interstate
aquifers. See Exceptions Brief for Mississippi 28. Con-
fronted as we are with this matter of first impression, we
resist general propositions and focus our analysis on
whether equitable apportionment of the Middle Claiborne
Aquifer would be “sufficiently similar” to past applications
of the doctrine to warrant the same treatment. Idaho ex rel.
Evans, 462 U. S., at 1024 (adopting such an approach in ex-
tending the doctrine to anadromous fish). We conclude that
8 MISSISSIPPI v. TENNESSEE
Opinion of the Court
it would.
First, we have applied equitable apportionment only
when transboundary resources were at issue. See Virginia
v. Maryland, 540 U. S. 56, 74, n. 9 (2003); Colorado v. New
Mexico, 459 U. S., at 183. The Middle Claiborne Aquifer’s
“multistate character” seems beyond dispute. See Sporhase
v. Nebraska ex rel. Douglas, 458 U. S. 941, 953 (1982). Mis-
sissippi concedes that the “geologic formation in which the
groundwater is stored straddles two states.” Complaint
¶41. Indeed, a core premise of Mississippi’s suit is that Ten-
nessee is pumping water that was once in Mississippi. The
evidence shows that wells in Memphis and wells in north-
west Mississippi are “pumping from the same aquifer.”
Hearing Tr. 492; see Report of Special Master 20 (noting
that the “scientific consensus holds that the Middle
Claiborne Aquifer is a single hydrogeological unit” span-
ning multiple States).
Also pertinent is that the Middle Claiborne Aquifer con-
tains water that flows naturally between the States. All of
our equitable apportionment cases have concerned such wa-
ter, Kansas v. Colorado, 206 U. S., at 98, or fish that live in
it, Idaho ex rel. Evans, 462 U. S., at 1024. Mississippi sug-
gests the Middle Claiborne Aquifer is distinguishable from
interstate rivers and streams because its natural flow is
“extremely slow.” Exceptions Brief for Mississippi 8. But
we have long applied equitable apportionment even to
streams that run dry from time to time. See Kansas v. Col-
orado, 206 U. S., at 115. And although the transboundary
flow here may be a mere “one or two inches per day,” Ex-
ceptions Brief for Mississippi 8, that amounts to over 35
million gallons of water per day, and over ten billion gallons
per year, see Hearing Tr. 532–533. So the speed of the flow,
at least in the context of this case, does not place the aquifer
beyond equitable apportionment.
Finally, it is clear that actions in Tennessee “reach[ ]
through the agency of natural laws” to affect the portion of
Cite as: 595 U. S. ____ (2021) 9
Opinion of the Court
the aquifer that underlies Mississippi. Kansas v. Colorado,
206 U. S., at 97. Tennessee’s pumping has contributed to a
cone of depression that extends miles into northern Missis-
sippi. Hearing Tr. 484–485, 501–502, 926; see also Report
of Special Master 22–23. Mississippi itself contends that
this cone of depression has reduced groundwater storage
and pressure in northern Mississippi. See Complaint ¶¶25,
54. It also alleges that Tennessee’s pumping is “siphoning”
tens of millions of gallons of groundwater each day from
Mississippi’s portion of the aquifer. Id., ¶54. Such inter-
state effects are a hallmark of our equitable apportionment
cases. See, e.g., Florida v. Georgia, 592 U. S., at ___–___
(2021) (slip op., at 2–3) (examining the effects of Georgia’s
water use on Florida’s oyster fisheries and river ecosystem).
For these reasons, we hold that the waters of the Middle
Claiborne Aquifer are subject to the judicial remedy of eq-
uitable apportionment.
B
Mississippi contends that it has sovereign ownership of
all groundwater beneath its surface, so equitable apportion-
ment ought not apply. We see things differently. It is cer-
tainly true that “each State has full jurisdiction over the
lands within its borders, including the beds of streams and
other waters.” Kansas v. Colorado, 206 U. S., at 93. But
such jurisdiction does not confer unfettered “ownership or
control” of flowing interstate waters themselves. Wyoming
v. Colorado, 259 U. S., at 464. Thus, we have “consistently
denied” the proposition that a State may exercise exclusive
ownership or control of interstate “waters flowing within
her boundaries.” Hinderlider v. La Plata River & Cherry
Creek Ditch Co., 304 U. S. 92, 102 (1938). Although our past
cases have generally concerned streams and rivers, we see
no basis for a different result in the context of the Middle
Claiborne Aquifer. When a water resource is shared be-
tween several States, each one “has an interest which
10 MISSISSIPPI v. TENNESSEE
Opinion of the Court
should be respected by the other.” Wyoming v. Colorado,
259 U. S., at 466. Mississippi’s ownership approach would
allow an upstream State to completely cut off flow to a
downstream one, a result contrary to our equitable appor-
tionment jurisprudence.
Mississippi argues that our decision in Tarrant Regional
Water Dist. v. Herrmann, 569 U. S. 614 (2013), supports its
position. We disagree. Tarrant concerned the interpreta-
tion of an interstate compact. We held that the compact did
not authorize the party States to “cross each other’s bound-
aries to access a shared pool of water.” Id., at 627. Our
decision turned on the language of the compact and back-
ground principles of contract law. We did not consider eq-
uitable apportionment, because the affected States had
taken it upon themselves to negotiate a compact that deter-
mined their respective rights to the resource in question.
To the extent Tarrant stands for the broader proposition
that one State may not physically enter another to take wa-
ter in the absence of an express agreement, that principle
is not implicated here. The parties have stipulated that all
of Tennessee’s wells are drilled straight down and do not
cross the Mississippi-Tennessee border. See Joint State-
ment of Stipulated and Contested Facts 106. When Ten-
nessee pumps groundwater, it is pumping water located
within its own territory. That some of the water was previ-
ously located in Mississippi is of no moment, just as it was
not dispositive that the river at issue in Colorado v. New
Mexico started in Colorado, 459 U. S., at 181, n. 8, or that
certain fish at issue in Idaho ex rel. Evans hatched in Idaho,
462 U. S., at 1028, n. 12. The origin of an interstate water
resource may be relevant to the terms of an equitable ap-
portionment. But that feature alone cannot place the re-
source outside the doctrine itself.
We conclude that the waters contained in the Middle
Claiborne Aquifer are subject to equitable apportionment.
We therefore overrule Mississippi’s exceptions and adopt
Cite as: 595 U. S. ____ (2021) 11
Opinion of the Court
the Special Master’s recommendation to dismiss the bill of
complaint.
III
After recommending that this Court dismiss Mississippi’s
suit, the Special Master went on to recommend that we
grant the State leave to file an amended complaint seeking
equitable apportionment. We decline to decide whether
Mississippi should be granted such leave, because the State
has never sought it. As Mississippi itself emphasizes—lit-
erally—it has “not yet requested equitable apportionment.”
Reply Brief to Defendants’ Exception 7.
Nor can we assume Mississippi will do so. Mississippi’s
initial pleadings in this case disavowed equitable appor-
tionment entirely. See Complaint ¶38 (“This case does not
fall within the Court’s equitable apportionment jurispru-
dence.”). The State instead sought relief under principles
of tort law. And the proceedings below reflected this pos-
ture, focusing on the physical properties of the aquifer and
Tennessee’s pumping. An equitable apportionment case
would require us to consider a broader range of evidence.
Such evidence often includes not only the physical proper-
ties and flow of a water resource, but also existing uses, the
availability of alternatives, practical effects, and the costs
and benefits to the States involved. See Florida v. Georgia,
585 U. S., at ___–___ (2018) (slip op., at 13–14); South Car-
olina, 558 U. S., at 271–272; Colorado v. New Mexico, 459
U. S., at 183, 186–187. A just equitable apportionment
might also require the joinder of additional parties, cf. Fed.
Rule Civ. Proc. 19(a), as Mississippi and Tennessee are not
the only States that rely on the Middle Claiborne Aquifer
for groundwater, see Hearing Tr. 660–662, 1038–1040;
Joint Exh. J–71. Finally, if Mississippi were to seek leave
to amend, its complaint would be subject to our longstand-
ing rule that a “State seeking equitable apportionment un-
12 MISSISSIPPI v. TENNESSEE
Opinion of the Court
der our original jurisdiction must prove by clear and con-
vincing evidence some real and substantial injury or dam-
age.” Idaho ex rel. Evans, 462 U. S., at 1027.
As Mississippi has neither sought leave to amend nor ten-
dered a proposed complaint seeking equitable apportion-
ment, we have no occasion to determine how these and
other pertinent principles might apply.
* * *
Mississippi has failed to show that it is entitled to relief.
We therefore overrule Mississippi’s exceptions to the Spe-
cial Master’s report, sustain Tennessee’s, and dismiss the
case.
It is so ordered.