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(Slip Opinion) OCTOBER TERM, 2009 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 ALABAMA ET AL. v. NORTH CAROLINA ON EXCEPTIONS TO THE PRELIMINARY AND SECOND REPORTS OF THE SPECIAL MASTER No. 132, Orig. Argued January 11, 2010âDecided June 1, 2010 In 1986, Congress granted its consent to the Southeast Interstate Low- Level Radioactive Waste Management Compact (Compact), which was entered into by Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. The Compact is administered by a Commission, which was required, inter alia, to âidentif[y] a host State for the development of a [new] regional disposal facility,â and to âseek to ensure that such facility is licensed and ready to operate . . . no . . . later than 1991.â Art. 4(E)(6), 99 Stat. 1875. The Commission designated North Carolina as a host State in 1986, thereby obligating North Carolina to take âappropriate steps to ensure that an application for a license to construct and op erate a [low-level radioactive waste storage facility] is filed with and issued by the appropriate authority.â Art. 5(C), id., at 1877. In 1988, North Carolina asked the Commission for assistance with the costs of licensing and building a facility. The Commission adopted a resolution declaring it âappropriate and necessaryâ to pro vide financial assistance, and ultimately paid almost $80 million to North Carolina from 1988 through 1997. North Carolina also ex pended $34 million of its own funds. Yet by the mid 1990s, North Carolina was still many yearsâand many tens of millions of dol larsâaway from obtaining a license. In 1997, the Commission notified North Carolina that absent a plan for funding the remaining licensing steps, it would not disburse additional funds to North Carolina. North Carolina responded that it could not continue without additional funding. After the parties failed to agree on a long-term financing plan, in December 1997 the Commission ceased its financial assistance to North Carolina, and North Carolina subsequently began an orderly shutdown of its pro 2 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Syllabus ject. In June 1999, Florida and Tennessee filed a complaint with the Commission seeking monetary sanctions against North Carolina. In July 1999, North Carolina exercised its right under Article 7(G) to withdraw from the Compact. In December 1999, the Commission concluded that North Carolina had failed to fulfill its obligations un der the Compact and adopted a sanctions resolution demanding that the State repay approximately $80 million in addition to other mone tary penalties. North Carolina did not comply. In 2003, this Court granted Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, Virginia, and the Commission (Plaintiffs) leave to file a bill of complaint against North Carolina under this Courtâs original jurisdiction, U. S. Const., Art. II, §2, cl. 2; 28 U. S. C. §1251(a). The complaint sets forth claims of violation of Plaintiffsâ rights under the Compact (Count I), breach of contract (Count II), unjust enrichment (Count III), promissory estoppel (Count IV), and money had and received (Count V), and requests monetary and other relief, including a decla ration that North Carolina is subject to sanctions and that the Com missionâs sanctions resolution is valid and enforceable. The Court assigned the case to a Special Master, who has con ducted proceedings and has filed two reports. The Preliminary Re port recommends denying without prejudice North Carolinaâs motion to dismiss the Commissionâs claims on sovereign immunity grounds; denying Plaintiffsâ motion for summary judgment on Count I, which sought enforcement of the Commissionâs sanctions resolution; grant ing North Carolinaâs cross-motion to dismiss Count I and other por tions of the complaint seeking such enforcement; and denying North Carolinaâs motion to dismiss the claims in Counts IIâV. The Masterâs Second Report recommended denying Plaintiffâs motion for summary judgment and granting North Carolinaâs motion for summary judg ment on Count II; and denying North Carolinaâs motion for summary judgment on Plaintiffsâ remaining claims in Counts IIIâV. The par ties filed a total of nine exceptions to the Masterâs Reports. Held: 1. Plaintiffsâ seven exceptions are overruled. Pp. 7â21. (a) The terms of the Compact do not authorize the Commission to impose monetary sanctions against North Carolina. The Courtâs con clusion is confirmed by a comparison of the Compactâs terms with three other interstate compacts concerning low-level radioactive waste storage approved by Congress contemporaneously with the Compact, all of which expressly authorize their commissions to im pose monetary sanctions against their party States. Pp. 7â9. (b) Plaintiffsâ exception that North Carolina could not avoid monetary sanctions by withdrawing from the Compact is moot, be Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 3 Syllabus cause the Compact does not permit the Commission to impose mone tary sanctions in any event. The Court deems their exception that North Carolina forfeited its right to object to a monetary penalty by failing to participate at the sanctions hearing both abandoned and meritless. P. 10. (c) Because the express terms of the Compact do not make the Commission the âsole arbiterâ of disputes arising under the Compact, Texas v. New Mexico, 462 U. S. 554, 569â570, the Court is not bound by the Commissionâs conclusion that North Carolina breached its ob ligations under the Compact. Nor does the Court apply deferential administrative-law standards of review to the Commissionâs conclu sion, but instead exercises its independent judgment as to both fact and law in executing its role as the âexclusiveâ arbiter of controver sies between the States, 28 U. S. C. §1251(a). Pp. 10â12. (d) North Carolina did not breach its contractual obligation to take âappropriate stepsâ toward the issuance of a license. Pp. 12â19. (1) The Compact requires North Carolina to take only those li censing steps that are âappropriate.â The partiesâ course of perform ance establishes that it was not appropriate for North Carolina to proceed with the very expensive licensing process without external financial assistance. Nothing in the Compactâs text or structure re quires North Carolina to cover all licensing and building costs on its own. Plaintiffsâ assertion that it was understood that the host State would bear the up-front licensing and construction costs, but recoup those costs through its regional monopoly on radioactive waste dis posal, is not reflected in the Compact. Pp. 13â18. (2) Plaintiffsâ alternative argument that North Carolina repu diated its obligation to take appropriate steps when it announced it would take no further steps to obtain a license fails for the same rea sons their breach theory fails. Pp. 18â19. (e) North Carolina did not breach an implied duty of good faith and fair dealing when it withdrew from the Compact. The Compact by its terms imposes no limitation on North Carolinaâs right to exer cise its statutory right under Article 7(G) to withdraw from the Com pact. A comparison between the Compact and other contemporane ously enacted compacts confirms the absence of a good-faith limitation in the Compact. Pp. 19â21. 2. North Carolinaâs two exceptions are overruled. Pp. 21â26. (a) It was reasonable for the Special Master to deny without prejudice North Carolinaâs motion for summary judgment on the mer its of Plaintiffsâ equitable claims in Counts IIIâV. The Special Master concluded that those claims require further briefing, argument, and, possibly, discovery. The Court approves of the Special Masterâs rea sonable exercise of his discretion to manage the proceedings. Pp. 21â 4 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Syllabus 22. (b) Under Arizona v. California, 460 U. S. 605, 614, the Commis sionâs claims are not barred by sovereign immunity so long as the Commission asserts the same claims and seeks the same relief as the plaintiff States. Nothing in the Courtâs subsequent cases suggests that Arizona v. California has been implicitly overruled, and North Carolina does not ask the Court to overrule that decision. At least with respect to Counts I and II, the Commissionâs claims under those Compact-related Counts are wholly derivative of the plaintiff Statesâ claims. The summary judgment disallowing the claims in Counts I and II on their merits renders the sovereign immunity question with regard to any relief the Commission alone might have on those claims moot. Counts IIIâV are on a different footing. The Special Master concluded that further factual and legal development was necessary to determine whether the Commissionâs claims under these Counts were identical to those of the plaintiff States. The Special Masterâs case-management decision was reasonable. Pp. 22â26. Exceptions to Special Masterâs Reports overruled, and Masterâs recom mendations adopted; North Carolinaâs motions to dismiss Count I and for summary judgment on Count II granted; Plaintiffsâ motions for judgment on Counts I and II denied; and North Carolinaâs mo tions to dismiss the Commissionâs claims on sovereign immunity grounds and for summary judgment on Counts IIIâV denied without prejudice. SCALIA, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which STEVENS, GINSBURG, and ALITO, JJ., joined, in which ROBERTS, C. J., joined in all but Parts IIâD and IIIâB, in which KENNEDY and SOTOMAYOR, JJ., joined in all but Part IIâE, in which THOMAS, J., joined in all but Part IIIâB, and in which BREYER, J., joined in all but Parts IIâC, IIâD, and IIâE. KENNEDY, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and concurring in the judgment, in which SOTOMAYOR, J., joined. ROBERTS, C. J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part, in which THOMAS, J., joined. BREYER, J., filed an opinion concurring in part and dissent ing in part, in which ROBERTS, C. J., joined. Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 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. 132, Orig. _________________ STATE OF ALABAMA, STATE OF FLORIDA, STATE OF TENNESSEE, COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, AND SOUTHEAST INTERSTATE LOW-LEVEL RADIO- ACTIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT COMMISSION, PLAINTIFFS v. STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA ON EXCEPTIONS TO THE PRELIMINARY AND SECOND REPORTS OF THE SPECIAL MASTER [June 1, 2010] JUSTICE SCALIA delivered the opinion of the Court. In this case, which arises under our original jurisdiction, U. S. Const., Art. III, §2, cl. 2; 28 U. S. C. §1251(a), we consider nine exceptions submitted by the parties to two reports filed by the Special Master. I In 1986, Congress granted its consent under the Com pact Clause, U. S. Const., Art. I, §10, cl. 3, to seven inter state compacts providing for the creation of regional facili ties to dispose of low-level radioactive waste. Omnibus Low-Level Radioactive Waste Interstate Compact Consent Act, 99 Stat. 1859. One of those compacts was the South east Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Compact (Compact), entered into by Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. Id., at 1871â1880. That Com pact established an âinstrument and framework for a cooperative effortâ to develop new facilities for the long 2 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court term disposal of low-level radioactive waste generated within the region. Art. 1, id., at 1872. The Compact was to be administered by a Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Commission (Commis sion), composed of two voting members from each party State. Art. 4(A), id., at 1874. A pre-existing facility in Barnwell, South Carolina was to serve as the initial facility for regional generators to dispose of their low-level radioactive waste. Art. 2(10), id., at 1873. That facility was scheduled to close as the re gional-disposal facility for the Compact by the end of 1992, ibid., and so the Compact required the Commission to develop âprocedures and criteria for identifying . . . a host [S]tate for the development of a second regional disposal facility,â and to âseek to ensure that such facility is li censed and ready to operate as soon as required but in no event later than 1991,â Art. 4(E)(6), id., at 1875. The Compact authorized the Commission to âdesignateâ a party State as a host State for the facility. Art. 4(E)(7), ibid. In September 1986, the Commission designated North Carolina as the host for the second facility. North Caro lina therefore became obligated to âtake appropriate steps to ensure that an application for a license to construct and operate a [low-level radioactive waste storage facility] is filed with and issued by the appropriate authority.â Art. 5(C), id., at 1877. In 1987, North Carolinaâs General Assembly created the North Carolina Low-Level Radioac tive Waste Management Authority (Authority) to fulfill the Stateâs obligation. N. C. Gen. Stat. §104G (1987), 1987 N. C. Sess. Laws ch. 850. Although â[t]he Commission is not responsible for any costs associated with,â among other things, âthe creation of any facility,â Art. 4(K)(1), 99 Stat. 1876, North Carolina asked the Commission for financial assistance with build ing and licensing costs. The Commission responded by Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 3 Opinion of the Court adopting a resolution, which declared it was both âappro priate and necessaryâ for the Commission âto provide financial assistanceâ to North Carolina. App. 63. To that end, the Commission created a âHost States Assistance Fundâ to help North Carolina with the âfinancial costs and burdensâ of âpreliminary planning, the administrative preparation, and other pre-operationalâ activities. Id., at 64. The estimate in 1989 was that it would cost approxi mately $21 million and take two years to obtain a license for North Carolinaâs regional-disposal facility. That proved to be wildly optimistic. By 1990, the cost estimate had ballooned to $45.8 million, and the estimated date for obtaining a license now extended far into 1993. At the beginning of 1994 there still was no license, and the esti mated cost had grown to $87.1 million. By end of 1994 the estimate was $112.5 million, and issuance of a license was not anticipated until 1997. And by December 1996 the estimated cost had increased by another $27 million and the projected date to receive a license had become August 2000. North Carolinaâs own appropriationsâapproximately $27 million from Fiscal Year 1988 through Fiscal Year (FY) 1995âdid not cover the costs of the licensing phase. But during the same time period, the Commission pro vided North Carolina with approximately $67 million. The funds came from surcharges and access fees collected for that purpose from generators disposing of low-level radioactive waste at the pre-existing Barnwell facility. Id., at 71â74, 145. In July 1995, however, South Carolina withdrew from the Compact, thereby depriving the Commission of contin ued revenues from the Barnwell facility. In 1996, the Commission accordingly informed North Carolina that it would no longer be able to provide financial support for licensing activities. The Governor of North Carolina 4 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court responded that the State was not prepared to assume a greater portion of the projectâs costs, and would not be able to proceed without continued Commission funding. Shortly thereafter the Commission adopted a resolution declaring that it was willing and able to provide additional funds, but calling on North Carolina to work with it to develop long-term funding sources for the facility. From FY 1996 through FY 1998, the Commission provided North Carolina approximately an additional $12.27 mil lion in financial assistance. North Carolina, for its part, continued to provide its own funds toward licensing activi tiesâanother $6 million during the same time period. In August 1997, the Commission notified North Caro lina that absent a plan for funding the remaining steps of the licensing phase, it would not disburse additional funds to North Carolina after November 30, 1997. North Caro lina responded that it would not be able to continue with out additional guarantees of external funding. On Decem ber 1, 1997, the parties having failed to agree upon a long term financing plan, the Commission ceased financial assistance to North Carolina. By then it had provided almost $80 million. On December 19, 1997, North Carolina informed the Commission it would commence an orderly shutdown of its licensing project, and since that date has taken no further steps toward obtaining a license for the facility. But it did continue to fund the Authority for several more years, in the hope that the project would resume upon the restora tion of external financial assistance. North Carolina maintained the proposed facility site, preserved the work it had completed to date, and retained the Authorityâs books and records. It also participated in discussions with the Commission, generators of low-level radioactive waste, and other stakeholders regarding options to resolve the financing shortfall. From FY 1988 through FY 2000, North Carolina had expended almost $34 million toward Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 5 Opinion of the Court obtaining a license. In June 1999, after attempts to resolve the funding impasse had failed, Florida and Tennessee filed with the Commission a complaint for sanctions against North Carolina. It alleged that North Carolina had failed to fulfill its obligations under the Compact, and requested (among other things) return of the almost $80 million paid to North Carolina by the Commission, plus interest, as well as damages and attorneyâs fees. The next month, North Carolina withdrew from the Compact by enacting a law repealing its status as a party State, see 1999 N. C. Sess. Laws ch. 357, as required by Article 7(G) of the Compact. More than four months later, in December 1999, the Commission held a sanctions hearing. North Carolina did not participate. After the hearing, the Commission con cluded that North Carolina had failed to fulfill its obliga tions under the Compact. It adopted a resolution demand ing that North Carolina repay approximately $80 million, plus interest, to the Commission; pay an additional $10 million penalty to compensate the Commission for the loss of future revenue (surcharges and access fees) it would have received had a facility been completed in North Carolina; and pay the Commissionâs attorneyâs fees. North Carolina did not comply. In July 2000, seeking to enforce its sanctions resolution, the Commission moved for leave to file a bill of complaint under our original jurisdiction. Southeast Interstate Low- Level Radioactive Waste Management Commission v. North Carolina, No. 131, Orig. North Carolina opposed the motion on the grounds that the Commission could not invoke this Courtâs original jurisdiction, and we invited the Solicitor General to express the views of the United States. 531 U. S. 942 (2000). The Solicitor General filed a brief urging denial of the Commissionâs motion on the grounds that the Commissionâs bill of complaint did not 6 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court fall within our exclusive original jurisdiction over âcontro versies between two or more States.â §1251(a). We denied the Commissionâs motion. 533 U. S. 926 (2001). In June 2002, the States of Alabama, Florida, Tennes see, and Virginia, joined by the Commission (collectively Plaintiffs), moved for leave to file a bill of complaint against North Carolina. North Carolina opposed the motion, and we again sought the views of the Solicitor General. 537 U. S. 806 (2002). The United States urged that we grant Plaintiffsâ motion, which we did. 539 U. S. 925 (2003). The bill of complaint contains five counts: violation of the party Statesâ rights under the Compact (Count I); breach of contract (Count II); unjust enrichment (Count III), promissory estoppel (Count IV); and money had and received (Count V). Plaintiffsâ prayer for relief requests a declaration that North Carolina is subject to sanctions and that the Commissionâs sanctions resolution is valid and enforceable, as well as the award of damages, costs, and other relief. We assigned the case to a Special Master, 540 U. S. 1014 (2003), who has conducted proceedings and now has filed two reports. The Masterâs Preliminary Report ad dressed three motions filed by the parties. He recom mended denying without prejudice North Carolinaâs mo tion to dismiss the Commissionâs claims against North Carolina on the grounds of sovereign immunity. Prelimi nary Report 4â14. He recommended denying Plaintiffsâ motion for summary judgment on Count I, which sought enforcement of the Commissionâs sanctions resolution. Id., at 14â33. He recommended granting North Carolinaâs cross-motion to dismiss Count I and other portions of the bill of complaint that sought enforcement of the sanctions resolution. Id., at 33â34. And he recommended denying North Carolinaâs motion to dismiss the claims in Counts IIâV. Id., at 34â43. After the Special Master issued his Preliminary Report, Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 7 Opinion of the Court the parties engaged in partial discovery and subsequently filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The Special Masterâs Second Report recommended denying Plaintiffsâ motion for summary judgment on Count II, Second Report 8â35, and granting North Carolinaâs motion for summary judgment on Count II, id., at 35â40. Finally, he recom mended denying North Carolinaâs motion for summary judgment on Plaintiffsâ remaining claims in Counts IIIâV. Id., at 41â45. II Plaintiffs present a total of seven exceptions to the Special Masterâs two reports. We address them in turn. A Their first exception challenges the Special Masterâs conclusion that the Commission lacked authority to im pose monetary sanctions upon North Carolina. The terms of the Compact determine that question. Article 4(E) of the Compact sets forth the Commissionâs âduties and powers.â Among its powers are the authority â[t]o revoke the membership of a party [S]tate that will fully creates barriers to the siting of a needed regional facility,â Art. 4(E)(7), 99 Stat. 1875, and the authority â[t]o revoke the membership of a party [S]tate in accordance with Article 7(f),â Art. 4(E)(11), ibid. Conspicuously ab sent from Article 4, however, is any mention of the author ity to impose monetary sanctions. Plaintiffs contend that authority may be found elsewhereâin the first paragraph of Article 7(F), which provides in relevant part: âAny party [S]tate which fails to comply with the provisions of this compact or to fulfill the obligations incurred by becoming a party [S]tate to this compact may be subject to sanctions by the Commission, in cluding suspension of its rights under this compact and revocation of its status as a party [S]tate.â Id., at 8 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court 1879. The sanctions expressly identified in Article 7(F)â âsuspensionâ of rights and ârevocationâ of party-state statusâflow directly from the Commissionâs power in Articles 4(E)(7) and (11) to revoke a party Stateâs member ship. That can fairly be understood to include the lesser power to suspend a party Stateâs rights. There is no simi lar grounding in Article 4(E) of authority to impose mone tary sanctions, and the absence is significant. According to Plaintiffs, however, the word âsanctionsâ in Article 7(F) naturally âinclud[es]â monetary sanctions. Since the Compact contains no definition of âsanctions,â we give the word its ordinary meaning. A âsanctionâ (in the sense the word is used here) is â[t]he detriment loss of reward, or other coercive intervention, annexed to a viola tion of a law as a means of enforcing the law.â Websterâs New International Dictionary 2211 (2d ed. 1957) (herein after Websterâs Second); see Blackâs Law Dictionary 1458 (9th ed. 2009) (âA penalty or coercive measure that results from failure to comply with a law, rule, or orderâ). A monetary penalty is assuredly one kind of âsanction.â See generally Department of Energy v. Ohio, 503 U. S. 607, 621 (1992). But there are many others, ranging from the withholding of benefits, or the imposition of a nonmone tary obligation, to capital punishment. The Compact surely does not authorize the Commission to impose all of them. Ultimately, context dictates precisely which âsanctionsâ are authorized under Article 7(F), and nothing in the Compact suggests that these include monetary measures. The only two âsanctionsâ specifically identified as being included within Article 7(F) are âsuspensionâ of a Stateâs rights under the Compact and ârevocationâ of its status as a party State. These are arguably merely examples, and may not exhaust the universe of sanctions the Commission Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 9 Opinion of the Court can impose. But they do establish âillustrative applica tion[s] of the general principle,â Federal Land Bank of St. Paul v. Bismarck Lumber Co., 314 U. S. 95, 100 (1941), which underlies the kinds of sanctions the Commission can impose. It is significant that both these specifically authorized sanctions are prospective and nonmonetary in nature. Moreover, Article 3 of the Compact provides: âThe rights granted to the party [S]tates by this compact are addi tional to the rights enjoyed by sovereign states, and noth ing in this compact shall be construed to infringe upon, limit, or abridge those rights.â 99 Stat. 1873. Construing Article 7(F) to authorize monetary sanctions would violate this provision, since the primeval sovereign right is im munity from levies against the government fisc. See, e.g., Alden v. Maine, 527 U. S. 706, 750â751 (1999). Finally, a comparison of the Compactâs terms with those of â[o]ther interstate compacts, approved by Congress contemporaneously,â Texas v. New Mexico, 462 U. S. 554, 565 (1983), confirms that Article 7(F) does not authorize monetary sanctions. At the same time Congress consented to this Compact, it consented to three other interstate compacts that expressly authorize their commissions to impose monetary sanctions against the parties to the compacts. See Northeast Interstate Low-Level Radioac tive Waste Management Compact, Art. IV(i)(14), 99 Stat. 1915 (hereinafter Northeast Compact); Central Midwest Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact, Art. VIII(f), 99 Stat. 1891 (hereinafter Central Midwest Com pact); Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact, Art. VII(e), 99 Stat. 1870 (hereinafter Central Compact). The Compact âclearly lacks the features of these other compacts, and we are not free to rewrite itâ to empower the Commission to impose monetary sanctions. Texas v. New Mexico, 462 U. S., at 565. 10 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court B Because the Compact does not authorize the Commis sion to impose monetary sanctions, Plaintiffsâ second exceptionâthat North Carolina could not avoid monetary sanctions by withdrawing from the Compactâis moot. The third exception also pertains to the Commissionâs sanctions resolution: that North Carolina forfeited its right to object to a monetary penalty by failing to partici pate at the sanctions hearing. Plaintiffs have failed to argue this exception. They have merely noted that North Carolina refused to participate at the sanctions hearing, and have cited no law in support of the proposition that this was a forfeit. We deem the exception abandoned. It was wisely abandoned, because it is meritless. North Carolina opposed the sanctions resolution and denied that the Commission had jurisdiction to impose sanctions against it. C Plaintiffs next take exception to the Special Masterâs recommendation that no binding effect or even deference be accorded to the Commissionâs conclusion that North Carolina violated Article 5(C) of the Compact. We are bound by the Commissionâs conclusion of breach only if there is âan explicit provision or other clear indicatio[n]â in the Compact making the Commission the âsole arbiter of disputesâ regarding a party Stateâs compliance with the Compact. Id., at 569â570. Plaintiffs assert there is such a provision, the second sentence of Article 7(C), which states: âThe Commission is the judge of the qualifications of the party [S]tates and of its members and of their com pliance with the conditions and requirements of this com pact and the laws of the party [S]tates relating to the enactment of this compact.â 99 Stat. 1879. Plaintiffs greatly overread this provision. The limited nature of the authority to âjudgeâ that it confers upon the Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 11 Opinion of the Court Commission is clear from its context. The first sentence of Article 7(C) states that an eligible State âshall be de claredâ a party State âupon enactment of this compact into law by the [S]tate and upon [the] payment ofâ a $25,000 fee, as ârequired by Article 4(H)(1).â Ibid. The second sentence makes the Commission the âjudgeâ of four mat ters, all of which concern status as a party State or Com mission member. First, the Commission is the judge of the âqualificationsâ of a State to become a party State (the qualifications set forth in Article 7(A) for the initial party States and in Article 7(B) for States that subsequently petition to join). Second, the Commission is the judge of the qualifications of the members of the Commission, which are specified in Article 4(A). Third, the Commission is the judge of a party Stateâs compliance with the âcondi tionsâ and ârequirementsâ of the Compact. The former term is an obvious reference to Article 7(B): âThe Commis sion may establish such conditions as it deems necessary and appropriate to be met by a [S]tate wishing . . . to become a party [S]tate to this [C]ompact.â Id., at 1878. The accompanying term ârequirementsâ also refers to Article 7âs prescriptions for prospective party States, such as paying the âfees requiredâ under Article 7(C), id., at 1879, and obtaining, as Article 7(B) requires, a two-thirds vote of the Commission in favor of admission. Finally, the Commission is the judge of the âlaws of the party [S]tates relating to the enactment of this compact.â Art. 7(C), ibid. Again, that concerns status as a party State, which re quires that the State âenac[t] . . . this compact into law,â ibid. The Commission is the âjudgeâ of only these specific matters. This is not to say the Commission lacks authority to interpret the Compact or to say whether a party State has violated its terms. That is of course implicit in its power to sanction under Article 7(F). But because âthe express terms of the [Southeast] Compact do not constitute the 12 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court Commission as the sole arbiterâ regarding North Caro linaâs compliance with its obligations under the Compact, Texas v. New Mexico, 462 U. S., at 569, we are not bound to follow the Commissionâs findings. Plaintiffs argue that we nonetheless owe deference to the Commissionâs conclusion. But unless the text of an interstate compact directs otherwise, we do not review the actions of a compact commission âon the deferential model of judicial review of administrative action by a federal agency.â Id., at 566â567. The terms of this Compact do not establish that âthis suit may be maintained only as one for judicial review of the Commissionâsâ determination of breach. Id., at 567. Accordingly, we do not apply ad ministrative-law standards of review, but exercise our independent judgment as to both fact and law in executing our role as the âexclusiveâ arbiter of controversies between the States, §1251(a). D Plaintiffsâ next two exceptions are to the Special Mas terâs recommendations to deny their motion for summary judgment on their breach-of-contract claims, and to grant North Carolinaâs motion for summary judgment on those claims. In resolving motions for summary judgment in cases within our original jurisdiction, we are not techni cally bound by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, but we use Rule 56 as a guide. This Courtâs Rule 17.2; Ne braska v. Wyoming, 507 U. S. 584, 590 (1993). Hence, summary judgment is appropriate where there âis no genuine issue as to any material factâ and the moving party is âentitled to a judgment as a matter of law.â Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 56(c); see Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U. S. 317, 322 (1986); Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U. S. 242, 248 (1986). Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 13 Opinion of the Court 1 Plaintiffs claim North Carolina breached the Compact in December 1997, when (as it admits) it ceased all efforts toward obtaining a license. At that point, in their view, North Carolina was no longer âtak[ing] appropriate steps to ensure that an application for a license to construct and operate a [low-level radioactive waste storage facility] is filed with and issued by the appropriate authority,â Art. 5(C), 99 Stat. 1877. North Carolina says that once the Commission ceased providing financial assistance on December 1, and once it became clear there was insuffi cient funding to complete the licensing phase, there were no more âappropriateâ steps to take. The Special Master concluded that the phrase âappropriate stepsâ in Article 5(C) was ambiguous, and that the partiesâ course of per formance established that North Carolina was not re quired to take steps toward obtaining a license once it was made to bear the remaining financial burden of the licens ing phase. Second Report 10â24, 35â36. Plaintiffs take exception to that conclusion. Article 5(C) does not require North Carolina to take any and all steps to license a regional-disposal facility; only those that are âappropriate.â Plaintiffs contend that this requires North Carolina to take the steps set forth in the regulations of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission govern ing the filing and disposition of applications for licenses to operate radioactive waste disposal facilities, 10 CFR pt. 61 (1997). Those regulations set forth some, but certainly not all, of the âstepsâ the State would have to take to obtain a license. But Article 5(C) does not incorporate the regula tions by reference, much less describe them as the appro priate steps. We could accept Plaintiffsâ contention if âappropriateâ meant ânecessaryâ (the steps set forth in the regulation are assuredly necessary to obtaining a license). But it does not. Whether a particular step is âappropriateââ 14 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court â[s]pecially suitable; fit; proper,â Websterâs Second 133â could depend upon many factors other than its mere in dispensability to obtaining a license. It would not be appropriate, for example, to take a step whose cost greatly exceeded whatever benefits the license would confer, or if it was highly uncertain the license would ever issue. In determining whether, in terminating its efforts to obtain a license, North Carolina failed to take what the parties considered âappropriateâ steps, the partiesâ course of performance under the Compact is highly significant. See, e.g., New Jersey v. New York, 523 U. S. 767, 830â831 (1998) (SCALIA, J., dissenting); Restatement (Second) of Contracts §§202(4), 203 (1979) (hereinafter Restatement). That firmly establishes that North Carolina was not ex pected to go it aloneâto proceed with the very expensive licensing process without any external financial assis tance. The history of the Compact consists entirely of shared financial burdens. From the beginning, North Carolina made clear that it required financial assistance to do the extensive work required for obtaining a license. The Commission promptly declared it was âappropriate and necessaryâ to assist North Carolina with the costs. App. 63. It provided the vast majority of funding for li censing-related activitiesâ$80 million, compared to North Carolinaâs $34 million. The Commission repeatedly noted the necessity (and propriety) of providing financial assis tance to North Carolina, and reiterated its dedication to sharing the substantial financial burdens of the licensing phase. See, e.g., id., at 63, 71, 145. There is nothing to support the proposition that the other States had an obli gation under the Compact to share the licensing costs through the Commission; but we doubt that they did so out of love for the Tarheel State. They did it, we think, because that was their understanding of how the Compact was supposed to work. One must take the Commission at its word, that it was âappropriateâ to share the costâ Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 15 Opinion of the Court which suggests that it would not have been appropriate to make North Carolina proceed on its own. Nor was North Carolina required after December 19, 1997, to continue to expend its own funds at the same level it had previously (which Plaintiffs concede had satis fied North Carolinaâs obligation to take âappropriate stepsâ). Once the Commission refused to provide any further financial assistance, North Carolina would have had to assume an unlimited financial commitment to cover all remaining licensing costs. Even if it maintained its prior rate of appropriations going forward, it would not have come close to covering the at least $34 million needed for the last steps of the licensing phase. And since the income from the South Carolina facility had been termi nated, there was no apparent prospect of funding for the construction phase (expected to cost at least $75 million). In connection with its August 1997 refusal to provide further assistance, the Commission itself had said, â[I]t will be imprudent to continue to deplete Commission resources for this purpose if a source of funds is not estab lished soon for the ultimate completion of the project.â Id., at 306, 307; Joint Supp. Fact Brief App. 36, 37. And in March 1998, the Commission âstronglyâ reiterated that âit would be imprudent to spend additional funds for licens ing activities if funds will not be available to complete the project.â Id., at 59. What was imprudent for the Commis sion would surely have been imprudent (and hence inap propriate) for North Carolina as well. The State would have wasted millions of its taxpayersâ dollars on what seemed to be a futile effort. JUSTICE BREYER would uphold Plaintiffsâ challenge on this point. He believes that the Compact obligated North Carolina to fund and complete the licensing and construc tion of a nuclear waste facility. Post, at 2, 4â6 (opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part). In fact, how ever, North Carolina was not even contractually required 16 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court to âsecur[e] a license,â post, at 2, but only to take âappro priate stepsâ to obtain one, Art. 5(C), 99 Stat. 1877. And nothing in the terms of the Compact required North Caro lina either to provide âadequate fundingâ for or to âbeg[i]n constructionâ on a regional facility, post, at 2. Other con temporaneously enacted interstate compacts expressly provide that the host State is âresponsible for the timely developmentâ of a regional facility, Central Midwest Com pact, Art. VI(f), 99 Stat. 1887; Midwest Compact, Art. VI(e), id., at 1898, or âshall . . . [c]ause a regional facility to be developed on a timely basis,â Rocky Mountain Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact, Art. III(d)(i), id., at 1903â1904. But the compact here before us has no such provision, and the contrast is telling.1 Texas v. New Mex ico, 462 U. S., at 565. Moreover, the Commissionâs state ments described in the preceding paragraph, that it would be imprudent to commit additional resources â âif a source of funds is not established soon for the ultimate comple tion of the project,â â or â âif funds will not be available to complete the project,â â surely suggest that North Carolina is not committed to the funding by contract. JUSTICE BREYER asserts, post, at 4â5, that the rotating ââââââ 1 The Compact provides only that the host State is âresponsible for the availability . . . of their regional facilities in accordance withâ Article 5(B). Art. 3(C), 99 Stat. 1873â1874. The latter section makes clear that responsibility for âavailabilityâ does not mean that the host State will fund construction of the facility, but that it will keep it open and not impose unreasonable restrictions on its use. JUSTICE BREYER is correct that the Compact says the Commission is not âresponsibleâ for the costs of âthe creationâ of a regional facility. Art. 4(K)(1), id., at 1876. But what is important here is that it does not say that the host State is responsibleâwhich (if it were true) would almost certainly have been joined with saying who was not responsible. What JUSTICE BREYER overlooks is the possibility that no one is responsible, and the licensing and construction of the facility is meant to depend upon voluntary funding by interested parties, such as the party States, the Commission, and low-level radioactive waste generators. Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 17 Opinion of the Court host requirement in the Compact, see Art. 5(A), 99 Stat. 1873, necessarily implies that North Carolina is solely responsible for the licensing and construction costs of its facility. But all that requirement entails is that a party State âshall not be designatedâ as a host State for a second time before âeach [other] party [S]tateâ has taken a turn. Ibid. It can perfectly well envision that the States will take turns in bearing the lead responsibility for getting the facility licensed, supervising its construction, and operating the facility on its soil. In fact, that is just what its text suggests, since it describes the responsibility that is to be rotated as the host Stateâs âobligation . . . to have a regional facility operated within its borders.â Ibid. Not to construct it, or pay for its construction, but to âhave [it] operated within its borders.â As noted above, other con temporaneously enacted compacts do spell out the obliga tion of the host State to construct the facility. Still others at least provide that the host State will recoup its costs through disposal feesâwhich arguably suggests that the host State is to bear the costs. See, e.g., Central Compact, Art. III(d), 99 Stat. 1865; Northeast Compact, Art. III(c)(2), id., at 1913. The compact before us here does not even contain that arguable suggestion. What it comes down to, then, is JUSTICE BREYERâs intui tion that the whole point of the Compact was that each designated host State would bear the up-front costs of licensing and construction, but would eventually recoup those costs through its regional monopoly on the disposal of low-level radioactive waste. Post, at 5â6. He can cite no provision in the Compact which reflects such an under standing, and the behavior of the parties contradicts it.2 It ââââââ 2 The course-of-dealing evidence that JUSTICE BREYER identifies, post, at 6â7, is not probative. The Commissionâs statements that it is not legally responsible for costs and that at some point Commission funds will no longer be available, and North Carolinaâs assurances that it will keep its commitments and honor its obligations, are perfectly compati 18 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court would, moreover, have been a foolish understanding, since the regional monopoly to recoup construction costs would not be a monopoly if South Carolina withdrew and contin ued to operate its facilityâwhich is exactly what hap pened in 1995.3 Even leaving aside the principle, dis cussed infra, at 21, that implied obligations are not to be read into interstate compacts, JUSTICE BREYERâs intuition fails to reflect the reality of what was implied. 2 Plaintiffs take exception to the Special Masterâs rejec tion of their alternative argument that North Carolina repudiated the Compact when it announced it would not take further steps toward obtaining a license. They argue that North Carolinaâs announcement that it was shutting down the project constituted a refusal to tender any fur ther performance under the contract. Plaintiffsâ repudiation theory fails for the same reasons their breach theory fails. A repudiation occurs when an obligor either informs an obligee âthat the obligor will ââââââ ble with the proposition that North Carolina did not have to provide all funding for licensing the facility, and that it would be âinappropriateâ to proceed toward obtaining a license for a facility that would never be needed or built. 3 South Carolinaâs withdrawal from the Compact not only âcouldâ affect North Carolinaâs ability to recoup its facility costs, as JUSTICE BREYER grudgingly concedes, post, at 5; it unquestionably would. With a regional competitor in the Barnwell facility and declining demand for waste disposal facilities due to technological and other factors, App. 261, 263â264, North Carolina would receive significantly lower reve nues from its facility, id., at 261â262, 265. The document attached to a 1996 letter from North Carolina to the Commission trumpeting â$600 million in cost savingsâ that would come from a new facility, post, at 5, proves precisely the opposite of what JUSTICE BREYER thinks. The cost savings were to accrue âto all generatorsâ of waste, App. 266 (emphasis added)âthat is, those who would use North Carolinaâs facility. Those savings would come, of course, from lower costs for waste disposal, which means that North Carolina would be charging lower rates than the Barnwell facility (and thus receiving lower revenues). Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 19 Opinion of the Court commit a breach that would of itself give the obligee a claim for damages for total breach,â Restatement §250(a), or performs âa voluntary affirmative act which renders the obligor unable or apparently unable to perform without such a breach,â id., §250(b). Neither event occurred here. North Carolina never informed the Commission (or any party State) that it would not fulfill its Article 5(C) obliga tion to take appropriate steps toward obtaining a license. Rather, it refused to take further steps that were not appropriate. Nor did North Carolina take an affirmative act that rendered it unable to perform. To the contrary, it continued to fund the Authority for almost two years; it maintained the records of the Authority; and it preserved the work completed to date while waiting for alternative funding sources that would enable resumption of the project. Plaintiffs further argue that a repudiation was effected by North Carolinaâs refusal to take further steps toward licensing âexcept on conditions which go beyondâ the terms of the Compact, Restatement §250, Comment b (internal quotation marks omitted)âi.e., the provision of external-financial assistance. But, as we have discussed, external-financial assistance was contemplated by the Compact. E Plaintiffsâ final exception is to the Special Masterâs recommendation to deny their motion for summary judg ment, and to grant North Carolinaâs cross-motion for summary judgment, on their claim that North Carolina violated the implied duty of good faith and fair dealing when it withdrew from the Compact in July 1999. Plain tiffs concede that North Carolina could withdraw from the Compact, but contend it could not do so in âbad faith.â And, they assert, its withdrawal after accepting $80 mil lion from the Commission, and with monetary sanctions pending against it, was the epitome of bad faith. 20 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court We have never held that an interstate compact approved by Congress includes an implied duty of good faith and fair dealing. Of course â[e]very contract imposes upon each party a duty of good faith and fair dealing in its performance and enforcement.â Restatement §205. But an interstate compact is not just a contract; it is a federal statute enacted by Congress. If courts were authorized to add a fairness requirement to the implementation of federal statutes, judges would be potent lawmakers in deed. We do notâwe cannotâadd provisions to a federal statute. See, e.g., Connecticut Nat. Bank v. Germain, 503 U. S. 249, 254 (1992). And in that regard a statute which is a valid interstate compact is no different. Texas v. New Mexico, 462 U. S., at 564, 565. We are especially reluctant to read absent terms into an interstate compact given the federalism and separation-of-powers concerns that would arise were we to rewrite an agreement among sovereign States, to which the political branches consented. As we have said before, we will not â âorder relief inconsistent with [the] express termsâ â of a compact, âno matter what the equities of the circumstances might otherwise invite.â New Jersey v. New York, 523 U. S., at 811 (quoting Texas v. New Mexico, supra, at 564). The Compact imposes no limitation on North Carolinaâs exercise of its statutory right to withdraw. Under Article 7(G), which governed North Carolinaâs withdrawal,4 âany party [S]tate may withdraw from the compact by enacting a law repealing the compact.â 99 Stat. 1879. There is no restriction upon a party Stateâs enactment of such a law, ââââââ 4 After North Carolina was designated as a host State, the Compact was amended to add Article 7(H), which restricted the ability of a party State to withdraw to within 30 days after a second regional-disposal facility opened. Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact Amendments Consent Act of 1989, Pub. L. 101â171, §2, 103 Stat. 1289. That provision did not apply when North Carolina with drew, because its facility had not been opened. Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 21 Opinion of the Court and nothing in the Compact suggests the parties under stood there were âcertain purposes for which the expressly conferred power . . . could not be employed.â Tymshare, Inc. v. Covell, 727 F. 2d 1145, 1153 (CADC 1984) (opinion for the court by Scalia, J.). Moreover, Article 3 ensures that no such restrictions may be implied, since it provides that the Compact shall not be âconstrued to infringe upon, limit or abridgeâ the sovereign rights of a party State. A comparison of the Compact with other, contemporane ously enacted, compacts confirms there is no such limita tion on North Carolinaâs right to withdraw. See Texas v. New Mexico, supra, at 565. In contrast to the Compact, several other compacts concerning the creation of regional facilities for the disposal of low-level radioactive waste contain express good-faith limitations upon a Stateâs exercise of its rights. See, e.g., Central Compact, Art. III(f), 99 Stat. 1865; Central Midwest Compact, Art. V(a), id., at 1886; Midwest Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Compact, Art. V(a), id., at 1897. III North Carolina submits two exceptionsâone to the Special Masterâs Second Report and one to his Preliminary Report. A North Carolina takes exception to the recommendation of the Second Report to deny without prejudice its motion for summary judgment on the merits of Plaintiffsâ equita ble claims in Counts IIIâV. North Carolinaâs motion was based on the ground that, as a matter of law, its obliga tions are governed entirely by the Compact. The Special Master recommended denying the motion without preju dice, because the claims in Counts IIIâV ârequir[e] further briefing and argument, and possibly further discovery.â 22 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court Second Report 41. A threshold question for all claims in those Counts, for example, is whether they âbelong to the Commission, the Plaintiff States, or both.â Ibid. Perhaps the States can bring them in their capacity as parens patriae, but as the Special Master noted âthe parties have not adequately briefed this issue, and its resolution in this case is unclear.â Id., at 42â43. We think it was reasonable for the Special Master to defer ruling. We granted the Special Master discretion to âdirect subsequent proceedingsâ and âto submit such re ports as he may deem appropriate.â 540 U. S., at 1014. He could have deferred filing any report until full factual discovery had been completed and all of the legal issues, many of which are novel and challenging, had been fully briefed, considered, and decided. Instead, he concluded that our immediate resolution of Counts I and II would facilitate the efficient disposition of the case; and in agree ing to hear exceptions to his Preliminary Report and Second Report we implicitly agreed. His deferral of ruling on the merits of Counts IIIâV is part and parcel of the same case management, and we find no reason to upset it. B North Carolina takes exception to the Special Masterâs recommendation in his Preliminary Report to deny with out prejudice its motion to dismiss the Commissionâs claims on the ground that they are barred by the Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution and by structural princi ples of state sovereign immunity. The Special Master assumed for the sake of argument that a State possesses sovereign immunity against a claim brought by an entity, like the Commission, created by an interstate compact,5 ââââââ 5 We have held that an entity created through a valid exercise of the Interstate Compact Clause is not entitled to immunity from suit under the Eleventh Amendment, see Hess v. Port Authority Trans-Hudson Corporation, 513 U. S. 30 (1994), but we have not decided whether such Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 23 Opinion of the Court Preliminary Report 5. But he recommended denying North Carolinaâs motion to dismiss âat this point in the proceedings.â Ibid. The Special Master relied upon our decision in Arizona v. California, 460 U. S. 605 (1983), which held that the Eleventh Amendment did not bar the participation of several Indian Tribes in an original action concerning the allocation of rights to the waters of the Colorado River. The United States had already intervened, in its capacity as trustee for several Indian Tribes; but the Tribes moved to intervene as well, and the States opposed. We granted the Tribesâ motion, stating that the States do not enjoy sovereign immunity against the United States, and â[t]he Tribes do not seek to bring new claims or issues against the States, but only ask leave to participate in an adjudi cation of their vital water rights that was commenced by the United States.â Id., at 614. Thus, âour judicial power over the controversy is not enlarged by granting leave to intervene, and the Statesâ sovereign immunity protected by the Eleventh Amendment is not compromised.â Ibid. Relying on this holding, the Special Master held that sovereign immunity does not bar the Commissionâs suit, so long as the Commission asserts the same claims and seeks the same relief as the other plaintiffs. Whether that is so, he said, âcannot be resolved without further factual and legal development[s],â Preliminary Report 6, and so North Carolina is free to renew its motion at a later point, id., at 13â14. See Second Report 45â48. Assuming (as the Special Master did) that the Commis sionâs claims against North Carolina implicate sovereign immunity, we agree with his disposition. North Carolina contends that making application of the Constitutionâs waiver of sovereign immunity turn upon whether a nonsovereign party seeks to expand the relief sought is ââââââ an entityâs suit against a State is barred by sovereign immunity. 24 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court inconsistent with our decisions construing state sovereign immunity as a âpersonal privilege.â College Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Postsecondary Ed. Expense Bd., 527 U. S. 666, 675 (1999) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Alden, 527 U. S., at 758. But nothing in those cases suggests that Arizona v. California has been implic itly overruled.6 See Shalala v. Illinois Council on Long Term Care, Inc., 529 U. S. 1, 18 (2000). Neither of them arose under our original jurisdiction, and neither cited Arizona v. California or discussedâat allâthe sovereign immunity issue that case addressed. That sovereign immunity is a personal privilege of the States says noth ing about whether that privilege âis not compromised,â Arizona v. California, supra, at 614, by an additional, nonsovereign plaintiffâs bringing an entirely overlapping claim for relief that burdens the State with no additional defense or liability.7 North Carolina contends that Arizona v. California cannot apply to the Commissionâs claims, because the Commission does notâindeed, cannotâassert the same claims or seek the same relief as the plaintiff States. We disagree. In the bill of complaint, the States and the Commission assert the same claims and request the same relief. Bill of Complaint ¶¶62â86 and Prayer for Relief. Their claim for restitution of $80 million cannot, given the ââââââ 6 North Carolina has not asked us to overrule Arizona v. California, 460 U. S. 605 (1983). We decline to do so on our own motion and without argument. We therefore do not address the merits of THE CHIEF JUSTICEâs dissent. 7 North Carolina also asserts that our decisions in Pennhurst State School and Hospital v. Halderman, 465 U. S. 89 (1984), and County of Oneida v. Oneida Indian Nation of N. Y., 470 U. S. 226 (1985), under mine Arizona v. California, supra, at 614. They do not. In neither case were there entirely overlapping claims for relief between sovereign and nonsovereign plaintiffs. See Pennhurst, supra, at 103, n. 12. Indeed, in County of Oneida there was no sovereign plaintiff. Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 25 Opinion of the Court other allegations of the complaint, be thought to be $80 million payable to each of the four plaintiff States and the Commission. North Carolina argues, however, that summary judg ment in its favor is appropriate because it is clear that the Commission, and not the plaintiff States, provided $80 million to North Carolinaâwherefore, as a matter of law, only the Commission can claim entitlement to $80 million, either as a measure of damages for breach of the Compact under Counts I and II of the bill of complaint, see Re statement §370, Comment a, and §373, or under the un just enrichment, promissory estoppel, and money-had-and received theories of recovery in Counts III, IV, and V, see, e.g., Restatement of Restitution §1, Comment a (1936). And, it contends, a stand-alone suit by the Commission is barred by sovereign immunity. With regard to Counts I and II, at least, we disagree. The Commissionâs claims under those Compact-related Counts are wholly derivative of the Statesâ claims. See Arizona v. California, supra, at 614. The Commission is âa legal entity separate and distinct fromâ the States that are parties to the Compact. Art. 4(M)(1), 99 Stat. 1877. Since it is not a party it has neither a contractual right to performance by the party States nor enforceable statutory rights under Article 5 of the Compact, see Bennett v. Spear, 520 U. S. 154, 162â163 (1997). The Compact does, however, authorize the Commission to âact or appear on behalf of any party [S]tate or [S]tates . . . as an intervenor or party in interest before . . . any court of law,â Art. 4(E)(10), 99 Stat. 1875, and it is obviously in this capacity that the Commission seeks to vindicate the plaintiff Statesâ statutory and contractual rights in Counts I and II. Its Count I and Count II claims therefore rise or fall with the claims of the States. While the Commission may not bring them in a stand-alone action under this Courtâs original jurisdiction, see §1251(a), it may assert them in 26 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of the Court this Court alongside the plaintiff States, see Arizona v. California, 460 U. S., at 614. The summary judgment disallowing the underlying claims on their merits renders the sovereign immunity question with regard to any relief the Commission alone might have on those claims moot. Counts IIIâV, which do not rely upon the Compact, stand on a different footing. As to them, while the Com mission again seemingly makes the same claims and seeks the same relief as the States, it is conceivable that as a matter of law the Commissionâs claims are not identical. The Commission can claim restitution as the party that paid the money to North Carolina; the other plaintiffs cannot claim it on that basis. Whether this means that the claims are not identical for Arizona v. California pur poses, and that the Commissionâs Counts IIIâV claims must be dismissed on sovereign immunity grounds, is a question that the Special Master declined to resolve until the merits issues were further clarified. We have ap proved his deferral of those issues, and we likewise ap prove his deferral of the related sovereign immunity issue. * * * We overrule the exceptions of Plaintiffs and North Carolina to the Special Masterâs Reports, and we adopt the recommendations of the Special Master. We grant North Carolinaâs motion to dismiss Count I. We grant North Carolinaâs motion for summary judgment on Count II. We deny Plaintiffsâ motions for judgment on Counts I and II. And we deny without prejudice North Carolinaâs motion to dismiss the Commissionâs claims on the grounds of sover eign immunity and its motion for summary judgment on Counts IIIâV. It is so ordered. Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 1 Opinion of KENNEDY, J. SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES _________________ No. 132, Orig. _________________ STATE OF ALABAMA, STATE OF FLORIDA, STATE OF TENNESSEE, COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, AND SOUTHEAST INTERSTATE LOW-LEVEL RADIO- ACTIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT COMMISSION, PLAINTIFFS v. STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA ON EXCEPTIONS TO THE PRELIMINARY AND SECOND REPORTS OF THE SPECIAL MASTER [June 1, 2010] JUSTICE KENNEDY, with whom JUSTICE SOTOMAYOR joins, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment. The Court is correct, in my view, to conclude that we may not âadd provisions to a federal statute.â Ante, at 20. Plaintiffs do not request as much, however, in contending that North Carolina was required by the Compact to carry out its obligations in good faith. Rather, plaintiffsâ argu ment is that the Compactâs terms, properly construed, speak not only to the specific duties imposed upon the parties but also to the manner in which those duties must be carried out. This is an interpretive argument familiar to contract disputes. See, e.g., Restatement (Second) of Contracts §205 (1979) (hereinafter Restatement). As the opinion for the Court notes, congressional con sent to an interstate compact gives it the status of a fed eral statute. See ante, at 20. This is an apt and proper way to indicate that a compact has all the dignity of an Act of Congress. And that is surely what was meant in New Jersey v. New York, 523 U. S. 767, 811 (1998), where it was stated that the Court may not â âorder relief incon sistent with [the] express termsâ â of a compact. Ante, at 20 (quoting New Jersey; alteration in original; some inter 2 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of KENNEDY, J. nal quotation marks omitted); see also Cuyler v. Adams, 449 U. S. 433, 438 (1981) (â[C]ongressional consent trans forms an interstate compact . . . into a law of the United Statesâ). From this principle, however, it simply does not follow that a lawâs nature and origin as a compact must be dis missed as irrelevant. Like a treaty, a compact represents an agreement between parties. See New Jersey, supra, at 831 (SCALIA, J., dissenting) (â[T]he Compact here is of course a treatyâ). The Courtâs duty in interpreting a com pact involves ascertaining the intent of the parties. See Sullivan v. Kidd, 254 U. S. 433, 439 (1921) (â[T]reaties are to be interpreted upon the principles which govern the interpretation of contracts . . . with a view to making effective the purposes of the high contracting partiesâ); Wright v. Henkel, 190 U. S. 40, 57 (1903) (âTreaties must receive a fair interpretation, according to the intention of the contracting partiesâ). Carrying out this duty may lead the Court to consult sources that might differ from those normally reviewed when an ordinary federal statute is at issue. That much is surely implicit in the Courtâs refer ence to contract law principles elsewhere in its opinion in the instant case. See, e.g., ante, at 14 (â[T]he partiesâ course of performance under the Compact is highly signifi cantâ); ibid. (citing the Restatement); id., at 18â19 (same); see also New Jersey, supra, at 830â831 (SCALIA, J., dis senting) (construing a compact in light of âhornbook con tracts law that the practical construction of an ambiguous agreement revealed by later conduct of the parties is good indication of its meaningâ). That said, it is quite correct to hold here that the rea sonable expectations of the contracting States, as mani fested in the Compact, do not reveal an intent to limit North Carolinaâs power of withdrawal. For purposes of rejecting this argument, it is sufficient to noteâas the Court doesâthat the Compact permits any State to with Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 3 Opinion of KENNEDY, J. draw; imposes no limitation on this right; and explicitly provides that the Compact shall not be construed to abridge the sovereign rights of any party State. See ante, at 20â21. Federalism concerns also counsel reluctance to find that a State has implicitly restricted its sovereignty in such a manner. The Court is therefore correct to reject plaintiffsâ final exception. With these observations, I join the Courtâs opinion with the exception of Part IIâE. Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 1 Opinion of ROBERTS, C. J. SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES _________________ No. 132, Orig. _________________ STATE OF ALABAMA, STATE OF FLORIDA, STATE OF TENNESSEE, COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, AND SOUTHEAST INTERSTATE LOW-LEVEL RADIO- ACTIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT COMMISSION, PLAINTIFFS v. STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA ON EXCEPTIONS TO THE PRELIMINARY AND SECOND REPORTS OF THE SPECIAL MASTER [June 1, 2010] CHIEF JUSTICE ROBERTS, with whom JUSTICE THOMAS joins, concurring in part and dissenting in part. The parties to this case are Alabama, Florida, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and the Southeast Inter state Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Commis sion. One of these things is not like the others: The Com mission is not a sovereign State. The Court entertains its suitâdespite North Carolinaâs sovereign immunityâ because the Commission âasserts the same claims and seeks the same relief as the other plaintiffs.â Ante, at 23. Our Constitution does not countenance such âno harm, no foulâ jurisdiction, and I respectfully dissent. The Court has made this mistake before. In Arizona v. California, 460 U. S. 605 (1983), we allowed Indian Tribes that could not sue sovereign States to piggyback on the claims of the United States, which could. We reasoned that once the United States had initiated suit, the state defendants could âno longer . . . assert [their] immunity with respect to the subject matter of [the] action,â so the Tribes were free to pile on and join the suit. Id., at 614. Today the Court retraces Arizonaâs steps, quoting that case for the proposition that when private plaintiffs â âdo 2 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of ROBERTS, C. J. not seek to bring new claims or issues, . . . our judicial power over the controversy is not enlarged . . . , and the Statesâ sovereign immunity protected by the Eleventh Amendment is not compromised.â â Ante, at 23 (quoting Arizona, supra, at 614). That statement is contrary to the language of the Con stitution. The Eleventh Amendment provides: âThe Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.â The immunity conferred is against the âcommence[ment] or prosecut[ion]â of âany suit in law or equity.â There is no carve-out for suits âprosecutedâ by private parties so long as those parties â âdo not seek to bring new claims or is sues.â â Ante, at 23 (quoting Arizona, supra, at 614). Understandably, the Courtâs opinion leans heavily on Arizona, which has never been squarely overruled. Ante, at 23â24. But Arizona itself is built on sand. The relevant portion of that opinion is almost wholly unreasoned. It cites only a footnote in a prior case, the pertinent para graph of which failed even to discuss the Stateâs immunity from private suit. See 460 U. S., at 614 (citing Maryland v. Louisiana, 451 U. S. 725, 745, n. 21 (1981)). That para graph addressed only intervention, not sovereign immu nity, and the two issues are distinct. See South Carolina v. North Carolina, 558 U. S. ___, ___, n. 5 (2010) (slip op., at 10, n. 5). Most importantly, the subsequent development of our sovereign immunity jurisprudence has only undermined Arizonaâs already weak foundations. We recognized in Alden v. Maine, 527 U. S. 706, 718 (1999), that the Consti tution left intact the Statesâ pre-existing âimmunity from private suitsâ; as the Eleventh Amendment confirms, the Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 3 Opinion of ROBERTS, C. J. States did not â âsurrender . . . this immunity in the plan of the convention.â â Id., at 717 (quoting The Federalist No. 81, p. 487 (C. Rossiter ed. 1961) (A. Hamilton)); see also Alden, supra, at 718â722, 755â756. There is no reason to suppose that the States, at the founding, made an excep tion for private suits that happen to mimic other plaintiffsâ claimsâand neither Arizona nor the Court today suggests otherwise. Whether or not a plaintiff âseeks the same reliefâ or imposes any âadditional defense or liability,â ante, at 23â 24, simply does not matter in light of our recognition that sovereign immunity provides an âimmunity from suit,â not a âdefense to . . . liability.â Federal Maritime Commân v. South Carolina Ports Authority, 535 U. S. 743, 766 (2002). As we have explained, âthe relief sought by a plaintiff suing a State is irrelevant to the question whether the suit is barred.â Seminole Tribe of Fla. v. Florida, 517 U. S. 44, 58 (1996). Indeed, we have suggested that private parties may not sue even if a court is âprecluded . . . from award ing them any relief.â Federal Maritime Commân, supra, at 766 (emphasis added) (dictum). It is the fact that a pri vate party is allowed to sue a sovereign Stateânot the burden of litigation or the relief soughtâthat infringes the immunity of the State. âThe Eleventh Amendment is concerned not only with the Statesâ ability to withstand suit, but with their privilege not to be sued.â Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., 506 U. S. 139, 147, n. 5 (1993). It is therefore impossible for the Court to hear private claims against a nonconsenting State without expanding âour judicial power over the controversy.â Arizona, supra, at 614. Sovereign immunity is a limitation on that power. The similarity of claims may be relevant to joinder or intervention, but those are procedural means of processing claims, not fonts of judicial authority. See Henderson v. United States, 517 U. S. 654, 664 (1996). 4 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of ROBERTS, C. J. Nor may the Court entertain private claims without âcompromis[ing]â âthe Statesâ sovereign immunity.â Ari zona, 460 U. S., at 614. As a party, the Commission enjoys legally enforceable rights against the defendant State: It may object to settlement, seek taxation of costs, advance arguments we are obliged to consider, and plead the judgment as res judicata in future litigation. If the Com mission truly sought nothing for itselfâother than âa full exposition of the issues,â Preliminary Report of the Special Master 14âit could have participated as an amicus. The Commission and North Carolina know that more is at stake if the Commission is allowed to sue the State. It is precisely the Commissionâs status as a party, its attempt to âprosecut[e]â a âsuit in law or equity . . . against one of the United States,â U. S. Const., Amdt. 11, that sovereign immunity forbids. I would sustain North Carolinaâs first exception to the Special Masterâs reports.* ââââââ * I also join JUSTICE BREYERâs opinion and all of the Courtâs opinion save Parts IIâD and IIIâB. JUSTICE THOMAS joins all but Part IIIâB of the Courtâs opinion. Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 1 Opinion of BREYER, J. SUPREME COURT OF THE UNITED STATES _________________ No. 132, Orig. _________________ STATE OF ALABAMA, STATE OF FLORIDA, STATE OF TENNESSEE, COMMONWEALTH OF VIRGINIA, AND SOUTHEAST INTERSTATE LOW-LEVEL RADIO- ACTIVE WASTE MANAGEMENT COMMISSION, PLAINTIFFS v. STATE OF NORTH CAROLINA ON EXCEPTIONS TO THE PRELIMINARY AND SECOND REPORTS OF THE SPECIAL MASTER [June 1, 2010] JUSTICE BREYER, with whom THE CHIEF JUSTICE joins, concurring in part and dissenting in part. I join Parts I, IIâA, IIâB, and III of the Courtâs opinion. Unlike the Court, however, I believe that North Carolina breached the Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Compact (Compact) when it sus pended its efforts toward building a waste disposal facility. (THE CHIEF JUSTICE joins all but Parts IIâD and IIIâB of the Courtâs opinion.) Article 5(C) is the critical term of the Compact. It states: âEach party state designated as a host state for a re gional facility shall take appropriate steps to ensure that an application for a license to construct and op erate a facility . . . is filed with and issued by the ap propriate authority.â Omnibus Low-Level Radioactive Waste Interstate Compact Consent Act (Consent Act), 99 Stat. 1877. In September 1986, North Carolina was âdesignated as a host state for a regionalâ low-level nuclear waste disposal âfacility.â Ibid.; see also App. 417, 432. Soon thereafter, North Carolinaâs General Assembly enacted legislation 2 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of BREYER, J. authorizing a state agency to âsite, finance, [and] buildâ a waste disposal facility. N. C. Gen. Stat. §104Gâ4 (1987) (repealed 2000). Pursuant to this legislation, a new facil ity was to be completed by January 1, 1993. Ibid. From August 1987 until December 1997, North Carolina took a series of steps to prepare for the construction of the storage facility. See Brief for North Carolina in Support of Exceptions to Reports of the Special Master 6â8. And while doing so it continually assured its Compact partners that it âremain[ed] committed to fulfilling its obligations to the Compact to serve as the next host state.â App. 92 (Letter from James G. Martin, Governor of North Caro lina, to Carroll R. Campbell, Jr., Governor of South Caro lina (October 25, 1990)); Statement of Undisputed Mate rial Facts ¶¶24â26, 28, 33, 37, 39 (detailing press releases, gubernatorial letters, and other statements made by North Carolina expressing its commitment to its Compact obligations). But North Carolina never secured a license, never ob tained adequate funding, and never began construction on a new facility. See Second Report of Special Master 2â3 (hereinafter Second Report). Eventually, the State simply stopped trying: On December 19, 1997, North Carolina informed its fellow member States that it would âcom mence the orderly shutdownâ of the waste disposal âpro ject.â App. 319. After this point, North Carolina admit tedly took no further steps toward obtaining a license or building a facility before withdrawing from the Compact in July 1999. Id., at 460 (North Carolina Admissions ¶11 (North Carolina âdid not [after 1997] take additional steps to . . . license a waste disposal facilityâ)); Second Report 10 (âThe parties do not dispute that North Carolina did not take additional steps to pursue a license for a waste facil ityâ after December 1997). Whatever one might think of the sufficiency of North Carolinaâs activities during the previous decade, I do not Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 3 Opinion of BREYER, J. see how the Court can find that a year and a half of doing nothingâwhich North Carolina admits it did between December 1997 and July 1999âconstitutes âtak[ing] appropriate steps.â If a student promises to âtake appro priate steps to ensureâ that he will pass the bar and then refuses to study, has he not broken his promise? More to the point, if a builder promises that he will âtake appro priate steps to ensureâ that a customer will be able to move into a new home in two years, and then does nothing at all, has the builder not broken his promise? As the majority notes, â[o]ther contemporaneously en acted interstate compactsâ delineated a host Stateâs obli gations in more detail than the Southeast Compact does. Ante, at 16â17. But this fact may just as easily be read to indicate what the parties here intended, rather than, as the majority argues, what they did not intend. Regard less, the language of the Compact and the context in which it was enactedâas part of a congressional effort to en courage regional solutions to this Nationâs low-level radio active waste problem, see Consent Act, 99 Stat. 1859; Low- Level Radioactive Waste Policy Act, §4(a)(1), 94 Stat. 3348âboth indicate that North Carolina was supposed to take âappropriate stepsâ to build a low-level radioactive waste disposal facility. And North Carolinaâs General Assembly passed a state statute recognizing and accepting this responsibility. See N. C. Gen. Stat. §104Gâ4 (creating a state agency to âsite, finance, [and] buildâ a waste dis posal facility). How can it be that two years of inactivity followed by withdrawal satisfies this promise? The answer, says the Court, is that any further âappro priate stepsâ would have cost a significant amount of money. Ante, at 14â15. In 1997, the Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Commission (Commission), the entity responsible for administering the Compact, made clear that it would not advance North Carolina any more money toward building a facility. See 4 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of BREYER, J. App. 315. In response, North Carolina concluded that it was unwilling to fund the rest of the project itself. See id., at 317â319. And the Court agrees that it would have been âimprudentâ for North Carolina to spend further funds, in light of the Commissionâs refusal to do so also. Ante, at 15â16. But this is an odd excuse. If a builder promises to âtake appropriate stepsâ to build me a house, the fact that he runs out of funds would not normally excuse his breaking his promiseâat least if it is he, and not I, who is responsi ble for financing the project. See 2 E. Farnsworth, Con tracts §9.6, p. 638 (3d ed. 2004) (Farnsworth) (courts âgenerallyâ conclude that âadditional expenseâ âdoes not rise to the level of impracticabilityâ so as to excuse a party from performance). And here it is North Carolina, and not anyone else, who bears ultimate responsibility for finding the funds. The text, structure, and purpose of the Compact all demonstrate this fact. As the Court recognizes, ante, at 2, the Compact expressly provides that the Commission âis not responsible for any costs associated with . . . the crea tion of any facility,â Art. 4(K)(1), 99 Stat. 1876. Rather, the Compact States determined that each âparty stateâ should take a turn as the âhost state,â during which time that State would be obligated to build a facility and then operate it for 20 years. See Art. 3(A), id., at 1873; Art. 5(A), id., at 1877; Art. 5(C), ibid.; Art. 5(E), 103 Stat. 1289; see also Art. 3(C), 99 Stat. 1873â1874 (âHost states are responsible for the availability, the subsequent post closure observation and maintenance, and the extended institutional control of their regional facilitiesâ). The host State would then recover its upfront construction expenses from the considerable fees and surcharges charged to the waste generators served by the facility. N. C. Gen. Stat. §§104Gâ15(a)â(b) (repealed 2000) (âIt is the intent of the General Assembly that the cost of all activities [toward Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 5 Opinion of BREYER, J. siting, building, and operating a facility] be borne by the waste generatorsâ who use it); Brief for Plaintiffs in Sur reply to North Carolinaâs Reply 1, n. 1 (noting that a dis posal facility in South Carolina collected over $47 million in fees in 2008). Of course, as the majority notes, South Carolinaâs with drawal from the Compact could have affected North Caro linaâs ability to ârecoupâ its âconstruction costs.â Ante, at 18. But, as far as I am aware, North Carolina did not seriously seek to amend the Compact when South Caro lina departed (even though the State had sought and obtained an amendment previously, see ante, at 20, n. 4; Brief for North Carolina in Reply to Exceptions By Plain tiffs to Reports of the Special Master 27), nor has it argued to this Court that South Carolinaâs departure voided its contractual obligations. Indeed, there is evidence in the record indicating that, even after South Carolina left the Compact, North Carolina continued to believe that the operation of a waste disposal facility presented a substan tial financial opportunity. App. 255, 266 (Attachment to Letter from John H. MacMillan, Executive Director, North Carolina Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Authority, to Richard S. Hodes, M. D., Chairman, South east Compact Commission (Dec. 13, 1996) (enclosing a business plan identifying $600 million in cost savings that could provide a âsubstantial returnâ on the âinvestment needed to put the North Carolina facility into operationâ)). I thus cannot conclude, as the majority does, that the Compactâs rotational design, as I understand it, is âfool ish.â Ante, at 18. Rather, the Compactâs structure repre sents what, in my view, was a understandable decision by the contracting States, all of whom needed a waste dis posal facility, to bind themselves together so that each would take a turn âbear[ing] the cost of buildingâ the necessary facility. Preliminary Report of Special Master 21 (citing Art. 4(K), 99 Stat. 1876â1877); see Brief for 6 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of BREYER, J. Rocky Mountain Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact Board et al. as Amici Curiae 16â18. This rotational ap proach is surely a sensible solution to the problems caused by the widespread existence of low-level nuclear waste and the political unpopularity of building the necessary facili ties to house it. See id., at 13â16; New York v. United States, 505 U. S. 144, 149â151 (1992). The only contrary evidenceâi.e., that indicates that North Carolina did not bear ultimate funding responsibil ityâconsists of the fact that the Commission voluntarily advanced North Carolina nearly $80 million between 1988 and 1998 in order to help it defray its costs. Second Re port 16. The Court believes that this âcourse of perform anceâ demonstrates that, once the Commission turned off its monetary spigot, North Carolina was no longer re quired to do anything further. Ante, at 14â15. But why? If I advance my builder half the cost of a building, I have not thereby promised to advance him the whole cost. This is particularly true when the contract says I am responsi ble for none of the cost of the building. At the very least, something more in the circumstances would have to show that additional expenditure had become a reasonable expectation. In this case, nothing suggests that North Carolina could reasonably expect further financing assistance. Indeed, I can find nothing in the majorityâs opinion, or the record, that suggests that the Commission or the other Compact States intended to let North Carolina off the hook. And numerous documents indicate precisely the oppositeâthat despite the Commissionâs funding assistance, North Caro lina was still responsible for funding the project. See, e.g., App. 63 (Resolution (Feb. 9, 1988) (âThe Commission, although not obligated to do so under the Compact,â pro vides funding for North Carolina)); id., at 215 (Letter from Richard S. Hodes, M. D., Chairman, Southeast Compact Commission, to James B. Hunt, Governor of North Caro Cite as: 560 U. S. ____ (2010) 7 Opinion of BREYER, J. lina (Jan. 5, 1996) (âAt some point, Commission funds will no longer be available to North Carolina . . . , and North Carolina will need to make alternate plans . . .â)); id., at 75 (Press Release by James G. Martin, Governor of North Carolina (Nov. 8, 1989) (â âThe task of siting and operating a low-level radioactive waste disposal facility is a com mitment the state of North Carolina has made and one which I am personally committed to keepingâ â)); id., at 92 (Letter from Governor of North Carolina, to Governor of South Carolina (âNorth Carolina remains committed to fulfilling its obligations to the Compact to serve as the next host stateâ); id., at 183 (Letter from James B. Hunt, Jr., Governor of North Carolina, to David M. Beasley, Governor of South Carolina (Mar. 14, 1995) (âLet me assure you that North Carolina is committed to honoring its obligation to the Compactâ)); Statement of Undisputed Material Facts ¶¶28, 33, 39 (other public statements about North Carolinaâs commitment to building a facility). Without better evidence of a reallocation of funding responsibility, I can only conclude that North Carolina remained under an obligation to âtake appropriate stepsâ at all times relevant to this case. And North Carolina admittedly took no steps towards building a disposal facil ity from December 1997 and July 1999: It did no in-depth study of the further financing that might be necessary; it made no serious effort to look for alternative funding; the Executive of the State did not ask its legislature for any appropriation. Rather, North Carolina simply withdrew from the Compact. Ante, at 5. Of course, North Carolina was free to withdraw from the Compact. Art. 7(G), 99 Stat. 1879â1880. But that fact does not repair what, in my view, was a breach of a key contractual provision. See Franconia Associates v. United States, 536 U. S. 129, 142â143 (2002) (âFailure by the promisor to perform . . . establishes an immediate breachâ); Restatement (Second) of Contracts §235(2) (1979) (âWhen 8 ALABAMA v. NORTH CAROLINA Opinion of BREYER, J. performance of a duty under a contract is due any non performance is a breachâ (emphasis added)); 2 Farnsworth §8.8, at 471. With respect, I dissent. [by Scalia] Justice Scalia delivered the opinion of the Court. In this case, which arises under our original jurisdiction, U. S. Const., Art. Ill, §2, cl. 2; 28 U. S. C. § 1251 (a), we consider nine exceptions submitted by the parties to two reports filed by the Special Master. I In 1986, Congress granted its consent under the Compact Clause, U. S. Const., Art. I, §10, cl. 3, to seven interstate compacts providing for the creation of regional facilities to dispose of low-level radioactive waste. Omnibus Low-Level Radioactive Waste Interstate Compact Consent Act, 99 Stat. 1859 . One of those compacts was the Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Compact (Compact), entered into by Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, North Carolina, South Carolina, Tennessee, and Virginia. Id., at 1871-1880 . That Compact established an âinstrument and framework for a cooperative effortâ to develop new facilities for the long-term disposal of low-level radioactive waste generated within the region. Art. 1, id., at 1872 . The Compact was to be administered by a Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Commission (Commission), composed of two voting members from each party State. Art. 4(A), id., at 1874 . A pre-existing facility in Barnwell, South Carolina, was to serve as the initial facility for regional generators to dispose of their low-level radioactive waste. Art. 2(10), id., at 1873 . That facility was scheduled to close as the regional-disposal facility for the Compact by the end of 1992, ibid., and so the Compact required the Commission to develop âprocedures *335 and criteria for identifying... a host [S]tate for the development of a second regional disposal facility,â and to âseek to ensure that such facility is licensed and ready to operate as soon as required but in no event later than 1991,â Art. 4(E)(6), id., at 1875 . The Compact authorized the Commission to âdesignateâ a party State as a host State for the facility. Art. 4(E)(7), ibid. In September 1986, the Commission designated North Carolina as the host for the second facility. North Carolina therefore became obligated to âtake appropriate steps to ensure that an application for a license to construct and operate a [low-level radioactive waste storage facility] is filed with and issued by the appropriate authority.â Art. 5(C), id., at 1877 . In 1987, North Carolinaâs General Assembly created the North Carolina Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Authority (Authority) to fulfill the Stateâs obligation. N. C. Gen. Stat. § 104G, 1987 N. C. Sess. Laws ch. 850. Although â[t]he Commission is not responsible for any costs associated with,â among other things, âthe creation of any facility,â Art. 4(K)(1), 99 Stat. 1876 , North Carolina asked the Commission for finĂĄncial assistance with building and licensing costs. The Commission responded by adopting a resolution, which declared it was both âappropriate and necessaryâ for the Commission âto provide financial assistanceâ to North Carolina. App. 63. To that end, the Commission created a âHost States Assistance Fundâ to help North Carolina with the âfinancial costs and burdensâ of âpreliminary planning, the administrative preparation, and other pre-operationalâ activities. Id., at 64 . The estimate in 1989 was that it would cost approximately $21 million and take two years to obtain a license for North Carolinaâs regional-disposal facility. That proved to be wildly optimistic. By 1990, the cost estimate had ballooned to $45.8 million, and the estimated date for obtaining a license now extended far into 1993. At the beginning of 1994 there still was no license, and the estimated cost had grown *336 to $87.1 million. By end of 1994 the estimate was $112.5 million, and issuance of a license was not anticipated until 1997. And by December 1996 the estimated cost had increased by another $27 million and the projected date to receive a license had become August 2000. North Carolinaâs own appropriations â approximately $27 million from Fiscal Year 1988 through Fiscal Year (FY) 1995 â did not cover the costs of the licensing phase. But during the same time period, the Commission provided North Carolina with approximately $67 million. The funds came from surcharges and access fees collected for that purpose from generators disposing of low-level radioactive waste at the pre-existing Barnwell facility. Id., at 71-74, 145 . In July 1995, however, South Carolina withdrew from the Compact, thereby depriving the Commission of continued revenues from the Barnwell facility. In 1996, the Commission accordingly informed North Carolina that it would no longer be able to provide financial support for licensing activities. The Governor of North Carolina responded that the State was not prepared to assume a greater portion of the projectâs costs, and would not be able to proceed without continued Commission funding. Shortly thereafter the Commission adopted a resolution declaring that it was willing and able to provide additional funds, but calling on North Carolina to work with it to develop long-term funding sources for the facility. From FY 1996 through FY 1998, the Commission provided North Carolina approximately an additional $12.27 million in financial assistance. North Carolina, for its part, continued to provide its own funds toward licensing activities â another $6 million during the same time period. In August 1997, the Commission notified North Carolina that absent a plan for funding the remaining steps of the licensing phase, it would not disburse additional funds to North Carolina after November 30, 1997. North Carolina *337 responded that it would not be able to continue without additional guarantees of external funding. On December 1, 1997, the parties having failed to agree upon a long-term financing plan, the Commission ceased financial assistance to North Carolina. By then it had provided almost $80 million. On December 19,1997, North Carolina informed the Commission it would commence an orderly shutdown of its licensing project, and since that date has taken no further steps toward obtaining a license for the facility. But it did continue to fund the Authority for several more years, in the hope that the project would resume upon the restoration of external financial assistance. North Carolina maintained the proposed facility site, preserved the work it had completed to date, and retained the Authorityâs books and records. It also participated in discussions with the Commission, generators of low-level radioactive waste, and other stakeholders regarding options to resolve the financing shortfall. From FY 1988 through FY 2000, North Carolina had expended almost $34 million toward obtaining a license. In June 1999, after attempts to resolve the handing impasse had failed, Florida and Tennessee filed with the Commission a complaint for sanctions against North Carolina. It alleged that North Carolina had failed to fulfill its obligations oonder the Compact, and requested (among other things) return of the almost $80 million paid to North Carolina by the Commission, plus interest, as well as damages and attorneyâs fees. The next month, North Carolina withdrew from the Compact by enacting a law repealing its status as a party State, see 1999 N. C. Sess. Laws ch. 357, as required by Article 7(G) of the Compact. More than four months later, in December 1999, the Commission held a sanctions hearing. North Carolina did not participate. After the hearing, the Commission concluded that North Carolina had failed to fulfill its obligations under the Compact. It adopted a resolution demanding that North Carolina repay approximately $80 million, plus interest, to *338 the Commission; pay an additional $10 million penalty to compensate the Commission for the loss of future revenue (surcharges and access fees) it would have received had a facility been completed in North Carolina; and pay the Commissionâs attorneyâs fees. North Carolina did not comply. In July 2000, seeking to enforce its sanctions resolution, the Commission moved for leave to file a bill of complaint under our original jurisdiction. Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Commission v. North Carolina, No. 131, Orig. North Carolina opposed the motion on the grounds that the Commission could not invoke this Courtâs original jurisdiction, and we invited the Solicitor General to express the views of the United States. 531 U. S. 942 (2000). The Solicitor General filed a brief urging denial of the Commissionâs motion on the grounds that the Commissionâs bill of complaint did not fall within our exclusive original jurisdiction over âcontroversies between two or more States.â § 1251(a). We denied the Commissionâs motion. 533 U. S. 926 (2001). In June 2002, the States of Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, and Virginia, joined by the Commission (collectively Plaintiffs), moved for leave to file a bill of complaint against North Carolina. North Carolina opposed the motion, and we again sought the views of the Solicitor General. 537 U. S. 806 (2002) . The United States urged that we grant Plaintiffsâ motion, which we did. 539 U. S. 925 (2003). The bill of complaint contains five counts: violation of the party Statesâ rights under the Compact (Count I); breach of contract (Count II); unjust enrichment (Count III); promissory estop-pel (Count IV); and money had and received (Count V). Plaintiffsâ prayer for relief requests a declaration that North Carolina is subject to sanctions and that the Commissionâs sanctions resolution is valid and enforceable, as well as the award of damages, costs, and other relief. We assigned the case to a Special Master, 540 U. S. 1014 (2003) , who has conducted proceedings and now has filed two *339 reports. The Masterâs Preliminary Report addressed three motions filed by the parties. He recommended denying without prejudice North Carolinaâs motion to dismiss the Commissionâs claims against North Carolina on the grounds of sovereign immunity. Preliminary Report 4-14. He recommended denying Plaintiffsâ motion for summary judgment on Count I, which sought enforcement of the Commissionâs sanctions resolution. Id., at 14-33. He recommended granting North Carolinaâs cross-motion to dismiss Count I and other portions of the bill of complaint that sought enforcement of the sanctions resolution. Id., at 33-34. And he recommended denying North Carolinaâs motion to dismiss the claims in Counts II-V. Id., at 34-43. After the Special Master issued his Preliminary Report, the parties engaged in partial discovery and subsequently filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The Special Masterâs Second Report recommended denying Plaintiffsâ motion for summary judgment on Count II, Second Report 8-35, and granting North Carolinaâs motion for summary judgment on Count II, id., at 35-40. Finally, he recommended denying North Carolinaâs motion for summary judgment on Plaintiffsâ remaining claims in Counts III-V. Id., at 41-45. II Plaintiffs present a total of seven exceptions to the Special Masterâs two reports. We address them in turn. A Their first exception challenges the Special Masterâs conclusion that the Commission lacked authority to impose monetary sanctions upon North Carolina. The terms of the Compact determine that question. Article 4(E) of the Compact sets forth the Commissionâs âduties and powers.â 99 Stat. 1874 . Among its powers are the authority âto revoke the membership of a party [Sjtate that willfully creates barriers to the siting of a needed re *340 gional facility,â Art. 4(E)(7), id., at 1875 , and the authority âto revoke the membership of a party [S]tate in accordance with Article 7(f),â Art. 4(E)(11), ibid. Conspicuously absent from Article 4, however, is any mention of the authority to impose monetary sanctions. Plaintiffs contend that authority may be found elsewhere â in the first paragraph of Article 7(F), which provides in relevant part: âAny party [S]tate which fails to comply with the provisions of this compact or to fulfill the obligations incurred by becoming a party [S]tate to this compact may be subject to sanctions by the Commission, including suspension of its rights under this compact and revocation of its status as a party [S]tate.â Id., at 1879 . The sanctions expressly identified in Article 7(F) â âsuspensionâ of rights and ârevocationâ of party-state status â flow directly from the Commissionâs power in Articles 4(E)(7) and (11) to revoke a party Stateâs membership. That can fairly be understood to include the lesser power to suspend a party Stateâs rights. There is no similar grounding in Article 4(E) of authority to impose monetary sanctions, and the absence is significant. According to Plaintiffs, however, the word âsanctionsâ in Article 7(F) naturally âinclud[es]â monetary sanctions. Since the Compact contains no definition of âsanctions,â we give the word its ordinary meaning. A âsanctionâ (in the sense the word is used here) is â[t]he detriment loss of reward, or other coercive intervention, annexed to a violation of a law as a means of enforcing the law.â Websterâs New International Dictionary 2211 (2d ed. 1954) (hereinafter Websterâs Second); see Blackâs Law Dictionary 1458 (9th ed. 2009) (âA penalty or coercive measure that results from failure to comply with a law, rule, or orderâ). A monetary penalty is assuredly one kind of âsanction.â See generally Department of Energy v. Ohio, 503 U. S. 607, 621 (1992). But there are many others, ranging from the withholding of ben *341 efits, or the imposition of a nonmonetary obligation, to capital punishment. The Compact surely does not authorize the Commission to impose all of them. Ultimately, context dictates precisely which âsanctionsâ are authorized under Article 7(F), and nothing in the Compact suggests that these include monetary measures. The only two âsanctionsâ specifically identified as being included within Article 7(F) are âsuspensionâ of a Stateâs rights under the Compact and ârevocationâ of its status as a party State. These are arguably merely examples, and may not exhaust the universe of sanctions the Commission can impose. But they do establish âillustrative application[s] of the general principle,â Federal Land Bank of St. Paul v. Bismarck Lumber Co., 314 U. S. 95, 100 (1941), which underlies the kinds of sanctions the Commission can impose. It is significant that both these specifically authorized sanctions are prospective and nonmonetary in nature. Moreover, Article 3 of the Compact provides: âThe rights granted to the party [Sjtates by this compact are additional to the rights enjoyed by sovereign [Sjtates, and nothing in this compact shall be construed to infringe upon, limit, or abridge those rights.â 99 Stat. 1873 . Construing Article 7(F) to authorize monetary sanctions would violate this provision, since the primeval sovereign right is immunity from levies against the government fisc. See, e.g., Alden v. Maine, 527 U. S. 706, 750-751 (1999). Finally, a comparison of the Compactâs terms with those of â[ojther interstate compacts, approved by Congress contemporaneously,â Texas v. New Mexico, 462 U. S. 554, 565 (1983), confirms that Article 7(F) does not authorize monetary sanctions. At the same time Congress consented to this Compact, it consented to three other interstate compacts that expressly authorize their commissions to impose monetary sanctions against the parties to the compacts. See Northeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Compact, Art. IV(i)(14), 99 Stat. 1915 (hereinafter *342 Northeast Compact); Central Midwest Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact, Art. VIII(f), id., at 1891 (hereinafter Central Midwest Compact); Central Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact, Art. VII(e), id., at 1870 (hereinafter Central Compact). The Compact âclearly lacks the features of these other compacts, and we are not free to rewrite itâ to empower the Commission to impose monetary sahctions. Texas v. New Mexico, 462 U. S., at 565 . B Because the Compact does not authorize the Commission to impose monetary sanctions, Plaintiffsâ second exceptionâ that North Carolina could not avoid monetary sanctions by withdrawing from the Compact â is moot. The third exception also pertains to the Commissionâs sanctions resolution: that North Carolina forfeited its right to object to a monetary penalty by failing to participate at the sanctions hearing. Plaintiffs have failed to argue this exception. They have merely noted that North Carolina refused to participate at the sanctions hearing, and have cited no law in support of the proposition that this was a forfeit. We deem the exception abandoned. It was wisely abandoned, because it is meritless. North Carolina opposed the sanctions resolution and denied that the Commission had jurisdiction to impose sanctions against it. C Plaintiffs next take exception to the Special Masterâs recommendation that no binding effect or even deference be accorded to the Commissionâs conclusion that North Carolina violated Article 5(C) of the Compact. We are bound by the Commission's conclusion of breach only if there is âan explicit provision or other clear indieatio[n]â in the Compact making the Commission the âsole arbiter of disputesâ regarding a party State's compliance with the Compact. Id., at 569-570 . Plaintiffs assert there is such a provision, the second sentence of Article 7(C), which states: âThe Commission is the *343 judge of the qualifications of the party [S]tates and of its members and of their compliance with the conditions and requirements of this compact and the laws of the party [S]tates relating to the enactment of this compact.â 99 Stat. 1879 . Plaintiffs greatly overread this provision. The limited nature of the authority to âjudgeâ that it confers upon the Commission is clear from its context. The first sentence of Article 7(C) states that an eligible State âshall be declaredâ a party State âupon enactment of this compact into law by the [SJtate and upon [the] payment ofâ a $25,000 fee, as ârequired by Article 4(H)(1).â Ibid. The second sentence makes the Commission the âjudgeâ of four matters, all of which concern status os a party State or Commission member. First, the Commission is the judge of the âqualificationsâ of a State to become a party State (the qualifications set forth in Article 7(A) for the initial party States and in Article 7(B) for States that subsequently petition to join). Seeond, the Commission is the judge of the qualifications of the members of the Commission, which are specified in Article 4(A). Third, the Commission is the judge of a party Stateâs compliance with the âconditionsâ and ârequirementsâ of the Compact. The former term is an obvious reference to Article 7(B): âThe Commission may establish such conditions as it deems necessary and appropriate to be met by a [S]tate wishing... to become a party [S]tate to this [C]ompact.â Id., at 1878 . The accompanying term ârequirementsâ also refers to Article 7âs prescriptions for prospective party States, such as paying the âfees requiredâ under Article 7(C), id., at 1879 , and obtaining, as Article 7(B) requires, a two-thirds vote of the Commission in favor of admission. Finally, the Commission is the judge of the âlaws of the party [S]tates relating to the enactment of this compact.â Art. 7(C), ibid. Again, that concerns status as a party State, which requires that the State âenac[t]... this compact into law,â ibid. The Commission is the âjudgeâ of only these specific matters. *344 This is not to say the Commission lacks authority to interpret the Compact or to say whether a party State has violated its terms. That is of course implicit in its power to sanction under Article 7(F). But because âthe express terms of the [Southeast] Compact do not constitute the Commission as the sole arbiterâ regarding North Carolinaâs compliance with its obligations under the Compact, Texas v. New Mexico, 462 U. S., at 569 , we are not bound to follow the Commissionâs findings. Plaintiffs argue that we nonetheless owe deference to the Commissionâs conclusion. But unless the text of an interstate compact directs otherwise, we do not review the actions of a compact commission âon the deferential model of judicial review of administrative action by a federal agency.â Id., at 566-567 . The terms of this Compact do not establish that âthis suit may be maintained only as one for judicial review of the Commissionâsâ determination of breach. Id., at 567 . Accordingly, we do not apply administrative-law standards of review, but exercise our independent judgment as to both fact and law in executing our role as the âexclusiveâ arbiter of controversies between the States, § 1251(a). D Plaintiffsâ next two exceptions are to the Special Masterâs recommendations to deny their motion for summary judgment on their breach-of-contract claims, and to grant North Carolinaâs motion for summary judgment on those claims. In resolving motions for summary judgment in cases within our original jurisdiction, we are not technically bound by the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure, but we use Rule 56 as a guide. This Courtâs Rule 17.2; Nebraska v. Wyoming, 507 U. S. 584, 590 (1993). Hence, summary judgment is appropriate where there âis no genuine issue as to any material factâ and the moving party is âentitled to judgment as a matter of law.â Fed. Rule Civ. Proc. 56(c)(2); see Celotex Corp. v. Catrett, 477 U. S. 317, 322 (1986); Anderson v. Liberty Lobby, Inc., 477 U. S. 242, 248 (1986). *345 1 Plaintiffs claim North Carolina breached the Compact in December 1997, when (as it admits) it ceased all efforts toward obtaining a license. At that point, in their view, North Carolina was no longer âtak[ing] appropriate steps to ensure that an application for a license to construct and operate a [low-level radioactive waste storage facility] is filed with and issued by the appropriate authority,â Art. 5(C), 99 Stat. 1877 . North Carolina says that once the Commission ceased providing financial assistance on December 1, and once it became clear there was insufficient funding to complete the licensing phase, there were no more âappropriateâ steps to take. The Special Master concluded that the phrase âappropriate stepsâ in Article 5(C) was ambiguous, and that the partiesâ course of performance established that North Carolina was not required to take steps toward obtaining a license once it was made to bear the remaining financial burden of the licensing phase. Second Report 10-24, 35-36. Plaintiffs take exception to that conclusion. Article 5(C) does not require North Carolina to take any and all steps to license a regional-disposal facility; only those that are âappropriate.â Plaintiffs contend that this requires North Carolina to take the steps set forth in the regulations of the Nuclear Regulatory Commission governing the filing and disposition of applications for licenses to operate radioactive waste disposal facilities, 10 CPR pt. 61 (1997). Those regulations set forth some, but certainly not all, of the âstepsâ the State would have to take to obtain a license. But Article 5(C) does not incorporate the regulations by reference, much less describe them as the appropriate steps. We could accept Plaintiffsâ contention if âappropriateâ meant ânecessaryâ (the steps set forth in the regulation are assuredly necessary to obtaining a license). But it does not. Whether a particular step is âappropriateâ â â[specially suitable; fit; proper,â Websterâs Second 133 â could depend upon many factors other than its mere indispensability to obtaining a license. It would not be appropriate, for exam- *346 pie, to take a step whose cost greatly exceeded whatever benefits the license would confer, or if it was highly uncertain the license would ever issue. In determining whether, in terminating its efforts to obtain a license, North Carolina failed to take what the parties considered âappropriateâ steps, the partiesâ course of performance under the Compact is highly significant. See, e. g., New Jersey v. New York, 523 U. S. 767, 830-831 (1998) (Scalia, J., dissenting); Restatement (Second) of Contracts §§ 202(4), 203 (1979) (hereinafter Restatement). That firmly establishes, that North Carolina was not expected to go it alone â to proceed with the very expensive licensing process without any external financial assistance. The history of the Compact consists entirely of shared financial burdens. From the beginning, North Carolina made clear that it required financial assistance to do the extensive work required for obtaining a license. The Commission promptly declared it was âappropriate and necessaryâ to assist North Carolina with the costs. App. 63. It provided the vast majority of funding for licensing-related activities â $80 million, compared to North Carolinaâs $34 million. The Commission repeatedly noted the necessity (and propriety) of providing financial assistance to North Carolina, and reiterated its dedication to sharing the substantial financial burdens of the licensing phase. See, e. g., id., at 63, 71,145. There is nothing to support the proposition that the other States had an obligation under the Compact to share the licensing costs through the Commission; but we doubt that they did so out of love for the Tarheel State. They did it, we think, because that was their understanding of how the Compact was supposed to work. One must take the Commission at its word, that it was âappropriateâ to share the cost â which suggests that it would not have been appropriate to make North Carolina proceed on its own. Nor was North Carolina required after December 19,1997, to continue to expend its own funds at the same level it had *347 previously (which Plaintiffs concede had satisfied North Carolinaâs obligation to take âappropriate stepsâ). Once the Commission refused to provide any further financial assistance, North Carolina would have had to assume an unlimited financial commitment to cover all remaining licensing costs. Even if it maintained its prior rate of appropriations going forward, it would not have come close to covering the at least $34 million needed for the last steps of the licensing phase. And since the income from the South Carolina facility had been terminated, there was no apparent prospect of funding for the construction phase (expected to cost at least $75 million). In connection with its August 1997 refusal to provide further assistance, the Commission itself had said, â[I]t will be imprudent to continue to deplete Commission resources for this purpose if a source of funds is not established soon for the ultimate completion of the project.â Id., at 306, 307; App. to Joint Supp. Fact Brief 36, 37. And in March 1998, the Commission âstronglyâ reiterated that âit would be imprudent to spend additional funds for licensing activities if funds will not be available to complete the project.â Id., at 59. What was imprudent for the Commission would surely have been imprudent (and hence inappropriate) for North Carolina as well. The State would have wasted millions of its taxpayersâ dollars on what seemed to be a futile effort. Justice Breyer would uphold Plaintiffsâ challenge on this point. He believes that the Compact obligated North Carolina to fund and complete the licensing and construction of a nuclear waste facility. Post, at 364, 366-368 (opinion concurring in part and dissenting in part). In fact, however, North Carolina was not even contractually required to âse-eur[e] a license,â post, at 364, but only to take âappropriate stepsâ to obtain one, Art. 5(C), 99 Stat. 1877 . And nothing in the terms of the Compact required North Carolina either to provide âadequate fundingâ for or to âbeg[i]n constructionâ on a regional facility, post, at 364. Other contempora *348 neously enacted interstate compacts expressly provide that the host State is âresponsible for the timely developmentâ of a regional facility, Central Midwest Compact, Ant. VI(f), 99 Stat. 1887 ; Midwest Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Compact, Art. VI(e), id., at 1898 (hereinafter Midwest Compact), or âshall... [clause a regional facility to be developed on a timely basis,â Rocky Mountain Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact, Art. III(d)(i), id., at 1903-1904 . But the Compact here before us has no such provision, and the contrast is telling. 1 Texas v. New Mexico, 462 U. S., at 565 . Moreover, the Commissionâs statements described in the preceding paragraph, that it would be imprudent to commit additional resources âif a source of funds is not established soon for the ultimate completion of the project,â or âif funds will not be available to complete the project,â surely suggest that North Carolina is not committed to the funding by contract. Justice Breyer asserts, post, at 366-367, that the rotating-host requirement in the Compact, see Art. 5(A), 99 Stat. 1877 , necessarily implies that North Carolina is solely responsible for the licensing and construction costs of its facility. But all that requirement entails is that a party State âshall not be designatedâ as a host State for a second *349 time before âeach [other] party [S]tateâ has taken a turn. Ibid. It can perfectly well envision that the States will take turns in bearing the lead responsibility for getting the facility licensed, supervising its construction, and operating the facility on its soil. In fact, that is just what its text suggests, since it describes the responsibility that is to be rotated as the host Stateâs âobligation ... to have a regional facility operated within its borders.â Ibid. Not to construct it, or pay for its construction, but to âhave [it] operated within its borders.â As noted above, other contemporaneously enacted compacts do spell out the obligation of the host State to construct the facility. Still others at least provide that the host State will recoup its costs through disposal fees â which arguably suggests that the host State is to bear the costs. See, e.g., Central Compact, Art. 111(d), id., at 1865 ; Northeast Compact, Art. 111(c)(2), id., at 1913 . The Compact before us here does not even contain that arguable suggestion. What it comes down to, then, is Justice Breyerâs intuition that the whole point of the Compact was that each designated host State would bear the upfront costs of licensing and construction, but would eventually recoup those costs through its regional monopoly on the disposal of low-level radioactive waste. Post, at 366-367. He can cite no provision in the Compact which reflects such an understanding, and the behavior of the parties contradicts it. 2 It would, moreover, have been a foolish understanding, since the regional monopoly to recoup construction costs would not be a *350 monopoly if South Carolina withdrew and continued to operate its facility â 'which is exactly what happened in 1995. 3 Even leaving aside the principle, discussed infra, at 351-352, that implied obligations are not to be read into interstate compacts, Justice Breyerâs intuition fails to reflect the reality of what was implied. 2 Plaintiffs take exception to the Special Masterâs rejection of their alternative argument that North Carolina repudiated the Compact when it announced it would not take further steps toward obtaining a license. They argue that North Carolinaâs announcement that it was shutting down the project constituted a refusal to tender any further performance under the contract. Plaintiffsâ repudiation theory fails for the same reasons their breach theory fails. A repudiation occurs when an ob-ligor either informs an obligee âthat the obligor will commit a breach that would of itself give the obligee a claim for damages for total breach,â Restatement § 250(a), or performs âa voluntary affirmative act which renders the obligor unable or apparently unable to perform without such a breach,â id., § 250(b). Neither event occurred here. North Carolina *351 never informed the Commission (or any party State) that it would not fulfill its Article 5(C) obligation to take appropriate steps toward obtaining a license. Rather, it refused to take further steps that were not appropriate. Nor did North Carolina take an affirmative act that rendered it unable to perform. To the contrary, it continued to fund the Authority for almost two years; it maintained the records of the Authority; and it preserved the work completed to date while waiting for alternative funding sources that would enable resumption of the project. Plaintiffs further argue that a repudiation was effected by North Carolinaâs refusal to take further steps toward licensing âexcept on conditions which go beyondâ the terms of the Compact, id., §250, Comment b (internal quotation marks omitted) â ! e., the provision of external financial assistance. But, as we have discussed, external financial assistance was contemplated by the Compact. E Plaintiffsâ final exception is to the Special Master's recommendation to deny their motion for summary judgment, and to grant North Carolinaâs cross-motion for summary judgment, on their claim that North Carolina violated the implied duty of good faith and fair dealing when it withdrew from the Compact in July 1999. Plaintiffs concede that North Carolina could withdraw from the Compact, but contend it could not do so in âbad faith.â And, they assert, its withdrawal after accepting $80 million from the Commission, and with monetary sanctions pending against it, was the epitome of bad faith. We have never held that an interstate compact approved by Congress includes an implied duty of good faith and fair dealing. Of course â[ejvery contract imposes upon each party a duty of good faith and fair dealing in its performance and its enforcement.â Id., §205. But an interstate compact is not just a contract; it is a federal statute enacted by Congress. If courts were authorized to add a fairness *352 requirement to the implementation of federal statutes, judges would be potent lawmakers indeed. We do not â we cannot â add provisions to a federal statute. See, e. g., Connecticut Nat. Bank v. Germain, 503 U. S. 249, 254 (1992). And in that regard a statute which is a valid interstate compact is no different. Texas v. New Mexico, 462 U. S., at 564, 565 . We are especially reluctant to read absent terms into an interstate compact given the federalism and separation-of-powers concerns that would arise were we to rewrite an agreement among sovereign States, to which the political branches consented. As we have said before, we will not ââorder relief inconsistent with [the] express termsââ of a compact, âno matter what the equities of the circumstances might otherwise invite.â New Jersey v. New York, 523 U. S., at 811 (quoting Texas v. New Mexico, supra, at 564 ). The Compact imposes no limitation on North Carolinaâs exercise of its statutory right to withdraw. Under Article 7(G), which governed North Carolinaâs withdrawal, 4 â[a]ny party [S]tate may withdraw from the compact by enacting a law repealing the compact.â 99 Stat. 1879 . There is no restriction upon a party Stateâs enactment of such a law, and nothing in the Compact suggests the parties understood there were âcertain purposes for which the expressly conferred power . . . could not be employed.â Tymshare, Inc. v. Covell, 727 F. 2d 1145, 1153 (CADC 1984) (opinion for the court by Scalia, J.). Moreover, Article 3 ensures that no such restrictions may be implied, since it provides that the Compact shall not be âconstrued to infringe upon, limit, or abridgeâ the sovereign rights of a party State. *353 A comparison of the Compact with other, contemporaneously enacted, compacts confirms there is no such limitation on North Carolinaâs right to withdraw. See Texas v. New Mexico, supra, at 565 . In contrast to the Compact, several other compacts concerning the creation of regional facilities for the disposal of low-level radioactive waste contain express good-faith limitations upon a Stateâs exercise of its rights. See, e.g., Central Compact, Art. 111(f), 99 Stat. 1865 ; Central Midwest Compact, Art. V(a), id., at 1886 ; Midwest Compact, Art. V(a), id., at 1897 . Ill North Carolina submits two exceptions â one to the Special Masterâs Second Report and one to his Preliminary Report. A North Carolina takes exception to the recommendation of the Second Report to deny without prejudice its motion for summary judgment on the merits of Plaintiffsâ equitable claims in Counts III-V. North Carolinaâs motion was based on the ground that, as a matter of law, its obligations are governed entirely by the Compact. The Special Master recommended denying the motion without prejudice, because the claims in Counts III-V ârequir[e] further briefing and argument, and possibly further discovery.â Second Report 41. A threshold question for all claims in those Counts, for example, is whether they âbelong to the Commission, the Plaintiff States, or both.â Ibid. Perhaps the States can bring them in their capacity as parens patriae, but as the Special Master noted âthe parties have not adequately briefed this issue, and its resolution in this case is unclear.â Id., at 42-48 . We think it was reasonable for the Special Master to defer ruling. We granted the Special Master discretion to âdirect subsequent proceedingsâ and âto submit such reports as he may deem appropriate.â 540 U. S., at 1014. He could have *354 deferred filing any report until fall factual discovery had been completed and all of the legal issues, many of which are novel and challenging, had been fully briefed, considered, and decided. Instead, he concluded that our immediate resolution of Counts I and II would facilitate the efficient disposition of the case; and in agreeing to hear exceptions to his Preliminary Report and Second Report we implicitly agreed. His deferral of ruling on the merits of Counts III-V is part and parcel of the same case management, and we find no reason to upset it. B North Carolina takes exception to the Special Masterâs recommendation in his Preliminary Report to deny without prejudice its motion to dismiss the Commissionâs claims on the ground that they are barred by the Eleventh Amendment to the Constitution and by structural principles of state sovereign immunity. The Special Master assumed for the sake of argument that a State possesses sovereign immunity against a claim brought by an entity, like the Commission, created by an interstate compact, 5 Preliminary Report 5. But he recommended denying North Carolinaâs motion to dismiss âat this point in the proceedings.â Ibid. The Special Master relied upon our decision in Arizona v. California, 460 U. S. 605 (1983), which held that the Eleventh Amendment did not bar the participation of several Indian Tribes in an original action concerning the allocation of rights to the waters of the Colorado River. The United States had already intervened, in its capacity as trustee for several Indian Tribes; but the Tribes moved to intervene as well, and the States opposed. We granted the Tribesâ motion, stating that the States do not enjoy sovereign immunity *355 against the United States, and â[t]he Tribes do not seek to bring new claims or issues against the States, but only ask leave to participate in an adjudication of their vital water rights that was commenced by the United States.â Id., at 614 . Thus, âour judicial power over the controversy is not enlarged by granting leave to intervene, and the Statesâ sovereign immunity protected by the Eleventh Amendment is not compromised.â Ibid. Relying on this holding, the Special Master held that sovereign immunity does not bar the Commissionâs suit, so long as the Commission asserts the same claims and seeks the same relief as the other plaintiffs. Whether that is so, he said, âcannot be resolved without further factual and legal development^],â Preliminary Report 6, and so North Carolina is free to renew its motion at a later point, id., at 13-14. See Second Report 45-48. Assuming (as the Special Master did) that the Commissionâs claims against North Carolina implicate sovereign immunity, we agree with his disposition. North Carolina contends that making application of the Constitutionâs waiver of sovereign immunity turn upon whether a nonsovereign party seeks to expand the relief sought is inconsistent with our decisions construing state sovereign immunity as a âpersonal privilege.â College Savings Bank v. Florida Prepaid Post-secondary Ed. Expense Bd., 527 U. S. 666, 675 (1999) (internal quotation marks omitted); see also Alden, 527 U. S., at 758 . But nothing in those cases suggests that Arizona v. California has been implicitly overruled. 6 See Shalala v. Illinois Council on Long Term Care, Inc., 529 U. S. 1, 18 (2000). Neither of them arose under our original jurisdiction, and neither cited Arizona v. California or discussedâ at all â the sovereign immunity issue that case addressed. That sovereign immunity is a personal privilege of the States *356 says nothing about whether that privilege âis not compromised,â Arizona v. California, supra, at 614 , by an additional, nonsovereign plaintiffâs bringing an entirely overlapping claim for relief that burdens the State with no additional defense or liability. 7 North Carolina contends that Arizona v. California cannot apply to the Commissionâs claims, because the Commission does not â indeed, cannot â assert the same claims or seek the same relief as the plaintiff States. We disagree. In the bill of complaint, the States and the Commission assert the same claims and request the same relief. Bill of Complaint ¶¶ 62-86 and Prayer for Relief Their claim for restitution of $80 million cannot, given the other allegations of the complaint, be thought to be $80 million payable to each of the four plaintiff States and the Commission. North Carolina argues, however, that summary judgment in its favor is appropriate because it is clear that the Commission, and not the plaintiff States, provided $80 million to North Carolina â wherefore, as a matter of law, only the Commission can claim entitlement to $80 million, either as a measure of damages for breach of the Compact under Counts I and II of the bill of complaint, see Restatement § 370, Comment a, and §373, or under the unjust enrichment, promissory estoppel, and money-had-and-received theories of recovery in Counts III, IV, and V, see, e. g., Restatement of Restitution § 1, Comment a (1936). And, it contends, a stand-alone suit by the Commission is barred by sovereign immunity. *357 With regard to Counts I and II, at least, we disagree. The Commissionâs claims under those Compact-related Counts are wholly derivative of the Statesâ claims. See Arizona v. California, 460 U. S., at 614 . The Commission is âa legal entity separate and distinct fromâ the States that are parties to the Compact. Art. 4(M)(1), 99 Stat. 1877 . Since it is not a party it has neither a contractual right to performance by the party States nor enforceable statutory rights under Article 5 of the Compact, see Bennett v. Spear, 520 U. S. 154, 162-163 (1997). The Compact does, however, authorize the Commission to âact or appear on behalf of any party [S]tate or [S]tates ... as an intervenor or party in interest before . . . any court of law,â Art. 4(E)(10), 99 Stat. 1875 , and it is obviously in this capacity that the Commission seeks to vindicate the plaintiff Statesâ statutory and contractual rights in Counts I and II. Its Count I and Count II claims therefore rise or fall with the claims of the States. While the Commission may not bring them in a stand-alone action under this Courtâs original jurisdiction, see § 1251(a), it may assert them in this Court alongside the plaintiff States, see Arizona v. California, supra, at 614 . The summary judgment disallowing the underlying claims on their merits renders the sovereign immunity question with regard to any relief the Commission alone might have on those claims moot. Counts III-V, which do not rely upon the Compact, stand on a different footing. As to them, while the Commission again seemingly makes the same claims and seeks the same relief as the States, it is conceivable that as a matter of law the Commissionâs claims are not identical. The Commission can claim restitution as the party that paid the money to North Carolina; the other plaintiffs cannot claim it on that basis. Whether this means that the claims are not identical for Arizona v. California purposes, and that the Commissionâs Counts III-V claims must be dismissed on sovereign *358 immunity grounds, is a question that the Special Master declined to resolve until the merits issues were further clarified. We have approved his deferral of those issues, and we likewise approve his deferral of the related sovereign immunity issue. * * H* We overrule the exceptions of Plaintiffs and North Carolina to the Special Masterâs Reports, and we adopt the recommendations of the Special Master. We grant North Carolinaâs motion to dismiss Count I. We grant North Carolinaâs motion for summary judgment on Count II. We deny Plaintiffsâ motions for judgment on Counts I and II. And we deny without prejudice North Carolinaâs motion to dismiss the Commissionâs claims on the grounds of sovereign immunity and its motion for summary judgment on Counts III-V. It is so ordered. The Compact provides only that the host State is âresponsible for the availability... of their regional facilities in accordance withâ Article 5(B). Art. 3(C), 99 Stat. 1873 -1874. The latter section makes clear that responsibility for âavailabilityâ does not mean that the host State will fund construction of the facility, but that it will keep it open and not impose unreasonable restrictions on its use. Justice Breyer is correct that the Compact says the Commission is not âresponsibleâ for the costs of âthe creationâ of a regional facility. Art. 4(K)(1), id., at 1876 . But what is important here is that it does not say that the host State is responsibleâ which (if it were true) would almost certainly have been joined with saying who was not responsible. What Justice Breyer overlooks is the possibility that no one is responsible, and the licensing and construction of the facility is meant to depend upon voluntary funding by interested parties, such as the party States, the Commission, and low-level radioactive waste generators. The course-of-dealing evidence that Justice Breyek identifies, post, at 368-369, is not probative. The Commissionâs statements that it is not legally responsible for costs and that at some point Commission funds will no longer be available, and North Carolinaâs assurances that it will keep its commitments and honor its obligations, are perfectly compatible with the proposition that North Carolina did not have to provide all funding for licensing the facility, and that it would be âinappropriateâ to proceed toward obtaining a license for a facility that would never be needed or built. South Carolinaâs withdrawal from the Compact not only âcouldâ affect North Carolinaâs ability to recoup its facility costs, as Justice Breyer grudgingly concedes, post, at 367; it unquestionably would. With a regional competitor in the Barnwell facility and declining demand for waste disposal facilities due to technological and other factors, App. 261, 263-264, North Carolina would receive significantly lower revenues from its facility, id., at 261-262, 265 . The document attached to a 1996 letter from North Carolina to the Commission trumpeting â$600 million in cost savingsâ that would come from a new facility, post, at 367, proves precisely the opposite of what Justice Breyer thinks. The cost savings were to accrue âto all generatorsiâ of waste, App. 266 (emphasis added) â that is, those who would use North Carolinaâs facility. Those savings would come, of course, from lower costs for waste disposal, which means that North Carolina would be charging lower rates than the Barnwell facility (and thus receiving lower revenues). After North Carolina was designated as a host State, the Compact was amended to add Article 7(H), which restricted the ability of a party State to withdraw to -within 30 days after a second regional-disposal facility opened. Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact Amendments Consent Act of 1989, §2, 103 Stat. 1289 . That provision did not apply when North Carolina withdrew, because its facility had not been opened. We have held that an entity created through a valid exercise of the Interstate Compact Clause is not entitled to immunity from suit under the Eleventh Amendment, see Hess v. Port Authority Trans-Hudson Corporation, 513 U. S. 30 (1994), but we have not decided whether such an entityâs suit against a State is barred by sovereign immunity. North Carolina has not asked us to overrule Arizona v. California, 460 U. S. 605 (1983). We decline to do so on our own motion and without argument. We therefore do not address the merits of The Chief Justiceâs dissent. North Carolina also asserts that our decisions in Pennhurst State School and Hospital v. Halderman, 465 U. S. 89 (1984), and County of Oneida v. Oneida Indian Nation of N. Y., 470 U. S. 226 (1985), undermine Arizona v. California, supra, at 614 . They do not. In neither case were there entirely overlapping claims for relief between sovereign and nonsovereign plaintiffs. See Pennhurst, supra, at 103, n. 12 . Indeed, in County of Oneida there was no sovereign plaintiff. [Concurrence by Kennedy] Justice Kennedy, with whom Justice Sotomayor joins, concurring in part and concurring in the judgment. The Court is correct, in my view, to conclude that we may not âadd provisions to a federal statute.â Ante, at 352. Plaintiffs do not request as much, however, in contending that North Carolina was required by the Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Compact (Compact) to carry out its obligations in good faith. Rather, plaintiffsâ argument is that the Compactâs terms, properly construed, speak not only to the specific duties imposed upon the parties but also to the manner in which those duties must be carried out. This is an interpretive argument familiar to contract disputes. See, e. g., Restatement (Second) of Contracts § 205 (1979) (hereinafter Restatement). As the opinion for the Court notes, congressional consent to an interstate compact gives it the status of a federal statute. See ante, at 351. This is an apt and proper way to indicate that a compact has all the dignity of an Act of Con *359 gress. And that is surely what was meant in New Jersey v. New York, 523 U. S. 767, 811 (1998), where it was stated that the Court may not â âorder relief inconsistent with [the] express termsâ â of a compact. Ante, at 352 (quoting New Jersey ; alteration in original; some internal quotation marks omitted); see also Cuyler v. Adams, 449 U. S. 433, 438 (1981) (â[Congressional consent transforms an interstate compact ... into a law of the United Statesâ). From this principle, however, it simply does not follow that a lawâs nature and origin as a compact must be dismissed as irrelevant. Like a treaty, a compact represents an agreement between parties. See New Jersey, supra, at 831 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (â[T]he Compact here is of course a treatyâ). The Courtâs duty in interpreting a compact involves ascertaining the intent of the parties. See Sullivan v. Kidd, 254 U. S. 433, 439 (1921) (â[T]reaties are to be interpreted upon the principles which govern the interpretation of contracts... with a view to making effective the purposes of the high contracting partiesâ); Wright v. Henkel, 190 U. S. 40, 57 (1903) (âTreaties must receive a fair interpretation, according to the intention of the contracting partiesâ). Carrying out this duty may lead the Court to consult sources that might differ from those normally reviewed when an ordinary federal statute is at issue. That much is surely implicit in the Courtâs reference to contract law principles elsewhere in its opinion in the instant case. See, e. g., ante, at 346 (â[T]he partiesâ course of performance under the Compact is highly significantâ); ibid, (citing the Restatement); ante, at 350 (same); see also New Jersey, supra, at 830-831 (Scalia, J., dissenting) (construing a compact in light of âhornbook contracts law that the practical construction of an ambiguous agreement revealed by later conduct of the parties is good indication of its meaningâ). That said, it is quite correct to hold here that the reasonable expectations of the contracting States, as manifested in the Compact, do not reveal an intent to limit North Caroli *360 naâs power of withdrawal. For purposes of rejecting this argument, it is sufficient to note â as the Court does â that the Compact permits any State to withdraw; imposes no limitation on this right; and explicitly provides that the Compact shall not be construed to abridge the sovereign rights of any party State. See ante, at 352. Federalism concerns also counsel reluctance to find that a State has implicitly restricted its sovereignty in such a manner. The Court is therefore correct to reject plaintiffsâ final exception. With these observations, I join the Courtâs opinion with the exception of Part II-E. [Concurrence in Part by Roberts] Chief Justice Roberts, with whom Justice Thomas joins, concurring in part and dissenting in part. The parties to this case are Alabama, Florida, North Carolina, Tennessee, Virginia, and the Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Commission. One of these things is not like the others: The Commission is not a sovereign State. The Court entertains its suit â despite North Carolinaâs sovereign immunity â because the Commission âasserts the same claims and seeks the same relief as the other plaintiffs.â Ante, at 355. Our Constitution does not countenance such âno harm, no foulâ jurisdiction, and I respectfully dissent. The Court has made this mistake before. In Arizona v. California, 460 U. S. 605 (1983), we allowed Indian Tribes that could not sue sovereign States to piggyback on the claims of the United States, which could. We reasoned that once the United States had initiated suit, the state defendants could âno longer ... assert [their] immunity with respect to the subject matter of [the] action,â so the Tribes were free to pile on and join the suit. Id., at 614 . Today the Court retraces Arizonaâs steps, quoting that case for the proposition that when private plaintiffs ââdo not seek to bring new claims or issues,. .. our judicial power over the controversy is not enlarged . .., and the Statesâ sovereign immu *361 nity protected by the Eleventh Amendment is not compromised.'â Ante, at 355 (quoting Arizona, supra, at 614 ). That statement is contrary to the language of the Constitution. The Eleventh Amendment provides: âThe Judicial power of the United States shall not be construed to extend to any suit in law or equity, commenced or prosecuted against one of the United States by Citizens of another State, or by Citizens or Subjects of any Foreign State.â The immunity conferred is against the âeommence[ment] or prosecut[ion]â of âany suit in law or equity.â There is no carve-out for suits âprosecutedâ by private parties so long as those parties ââdo not seek to bring new claims or issues.ââ Ante, at 355 (quoting Arizona, supra, at 614 ). Understandably, the Courtâs opinion leans heavily on Arizona , which has never been squarely overruled. Ante, at 354-356. But Arizona itself is built on sand. The relevant portion of that opinion is almost wholly unreasoned. It cites only a footnote in a prior case, the pertinent paragraph of which failed even to discuss the Stateâs immunity from private suit. See 460 U. S., at 614 (citing Maryland v. Louisiana, 451 U. S. 725, 745, n. 21 (1981)). That paragraph addressed only intervention, not sovereign immunity, and the two issues are distinct. See South Carolina v. North Carolina, 558 U. S. 256, 268, n. 5 (2010). Most importantly, the subsequent development of our sovereign immunity jurisprudence has only undermined Arizonaâs already weak foundations. We recognized in Alden v. Maine, 527 U. S. 706, 718 (1999), that the Constitution left intact the Statesâ pre-existing âimmunity from private suitsâ; as the Eleventh Amendment confirms, the States did not ââsurrender . . . this immunity in the plan of the convention,ââ id., at 717 (quoting The Federalist No. 81, p. 487 (C. Rossiter ed. 1961) (A. Hamilton)); see also Alden, supra, at 718-722, 755-756 . There is no reason to suppose that the *362 States, at the founding, made an exception for private suits that happen to mimic other plaintiffsâ claims â and neither Arizona nor the Court today suggests otherwise. Whether or not a plaintiff âseeks the same reliefâ or imposes any âadditional defense or liability,â ante, at 355, 356, simply does not matter in light of our recognition that sovereign immunity provides an âimmunity from suit,â not a âdefense to . . . liability,â Federal Maritime Commân v. South Carolina Ports Authority, 535 U. S. 743, 766 (2002). As we have explained, âthe relief sought by a plaintiff suing a State is irrelevant to the question whether the suit is barred.â Seminole Tribe of Fla. v. Florida, 517 U. S. 44, 58 (1996). Indeed, we have suggested that private parties may not sue even if a court is âprecluded . . . from awarding them any relief.â Federal Maritime Commân, supra, at 766 (emphasis added) (dictum). It is the fact that a private party is allowed to sue a sovereign State â not the burden of litigation or the relief sought â that infringes the immunity of the State. âThe Eleventh Amendment is concerned not only with the Statesâ ability to withstand suit, but with their privilege not to be sued.â Puerto Rico Aqueduct and Sewer Authority v. Metcalf & Eddy, Inc., 506 U. S. 139, 147, n. 5 (1993). It is therefore impossible for the Court to hear private claims against a nonconsenting State without expanding âour judicial power over the controversy.â Arizona, supra, at 614 . Sovereign immunity is a limitation on that power. The similarity of claims may be relevant to joinder or intervention, but those are procedural means of processing claims, not fonts of judicial authority. See Henderson v. United States, 517 U. S. 654, 664 (1996). Nor may the Court entertain private claims without âcom-promis[ing]â âthe Statesâ sovereign immunity.â Arizona, supra, at 614 . As a party, the Commission enjoys legally enforceable rights against the defendant State: It may object *363 to settlement, seek taxation of costs, advance arguments we are obliged to consider, and plead the judgment as res judi-cata in future litigation. If the Commission truly sought nothing for itself â other than âa full exposition of the issues,â Preliminary Report of the Special Master 14 â it could have participated as an amicus. The Commission and North Carolina know that more is at stake if the Commission is allowed to sue the State. It is precisely the Commissionâs status as a party, its attempt to âprosecut[e]â a âsuit in law or equity .. . against one of the United States,â U. S. Const., Arndt. 11, that sovereign immunity forbids. I would sustain North Carolinaâs first exception to the Special Masterâs reports. * 1 also join Justice Breyerâs opinion and all of the Courtâs opinion save Parts II-D and III-B. Justice Thomas joins all hut Part III-B of the Courtâs opinion. [Concurrence in Part by Breyer] Justice Breyer, with whom The Chief Justice joins, concurring in part and dissenting in part. I join Parts I, II-A, II-B, and III of the Courtâs opinion. Unlike the Court, however, I believe that North Carolina breached the Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Compact (Southeast Compact or Compact) when it suspended its efforts toward building a waste disposal facility. (The Chief Justice joins all but Parts II-D and III-B of the Courtâs opinion.) Article 5(C) is the critical term of the Compact. It states: âEach party state designated as a host state for a regional facility shall take appropriate steps to ensure that an application for a license to construct and operate a facility ... is filed with and issued by the appropriate authority.â Omnibus Low-Level Radioactive Waste Interstate Compact Consent Act (Consent Act), 99 Stat. 1877 . *364 In September 1986, North Carolina was âdesignated as a host state for a regionalâ low-level nuclear waste disposal âfacility.â Ibid.; see also App. 417, 432. Soon thereafter, North Carolinaâs General Assembly enacted legislation authorizing a state agency to âsite, finance, [and] buildâ a waste disposal facility. N. C. Gen. Stat. § 104G-4 (1987) (repealed 2000). Pursuant to this legislation, a new facility was to be completed by January 1,1993. Ibid. From August 1987 until December 1997, North Carolina took a series of steps to prepare for the construction of the storage facility. See Brief for North Carolina in Support of Exceptions to Reports of the Special Master 6-8. And while doing so it continually assured its Compact partners that it âremainfed] committed to fulfilling its obligations to the Compact to serve as the next host state.â App. 92 (Letter from James G. Martin, Governor of North Carolina, to Carroll A. Campbell, Jr., Governor of South Carolina (Oct. 25,1990)); Statement of Undisputed Material Facts ¶¶ 24-26, 28, 33, 37, 39 (detailing press releases, gubernatorial letters, and other statements made by North Carolina expressing its commitment to its Compact obligations). But North Carolina never secured a license, never obtained adequate funding, and never began construction on a new facility. See Second Report of Special Master 2-3 (hereinafter Second Report). Eventually, the State simply stopped trying: On December 19, 1997, North Carolina informed its fellow member States that it would âcommence the orderly shutdownâ of the waste disposal âproject.â App. 319. After this point, North Carolina admittedly took no further steps toward obtaining a license or building a facility before withdrawing from the Compact in July 1999. Id., at 460 (North Carolina Admissions ¶ 11) (North Carolina âdid not [after 1997] take additional steps to . . . license a waste disposal facilityâ); Second Report 10 (âThe parties do not dispute that North Carolina did not take additional steps to pursue a license for- a waste facilityâ after December 1997). *365 Whatever one might think of the sufficiency of North Carolinaâs activities during the previous decade, I do not see how the Court can find that a year and a half of doing nothingâ which North Carolina admits it did between December 1997 and July 1999 â constitutes âtak[ing] appropriate steps.â If a student promises to âtake appropriate steps to ensureâ that he will pass the bar and then refuses to study, has he not broken his promise? More to the point, if a builder promises that he will âtake appropriate steps to ensureâ that a customer will be able to move into a new home in two years, and then does nothing at all, has the builder not broken his promise? As the majority notes, â[o]ther contemporaneously enacted interstate compactsâ delineated a host Stateâs obligations in more detail than the Southeast Compact does. Ante, at 347-348. But this fact may just as easily be read to indicate what the parties here intended, rather than, as the majority argues, what they did not intend. Regardless, the language of the Compact and the context in which it was enacted â as part of a congressional effort to encourage regional solutions to this Nationâs low-level radioactive waste problem, see Consent Act, 99 Stat. 1859 ; Low-Level Radioactive Waste Policy Act, § 4(a)(1), 94 Stat. 3348 â both indicate that North Carolina was supposed to take âappropriate stepsâ to build a low-level radioactive waste disposal facility. And North Carolinaâs General Assembly passed a state statute recognizing and accepting this responsibility. See N. C. Gen. Stat. §104G-4 (creating a state agency to âsite, finance, [and] buildâ a waste disposal facility). How can it be that two years of inactivity followed by withdrawal satisfies this promise? The answer, says the Court, is that any further âappropriate stepsâ would have cost a significant amount of money. Ante, at 346, 347. In 1997, the Southeast Interstate Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Commission (Commission), the entity responsible for administering the Com *366 pact, made clear that it would not advance North Carolina any more money toward building a facility. See App. 315. In response, North Carolina concluded that it was unwilling to fund the rest of the project itself. See id., at 317-319. And the Court agrees that it would have been âimprudentâ for North Carolina to spend further funds, in light of the Commissionâs refusal to do so also. Ante, at 347,348. But this is an odd excuse. If a builder promises to âtake appropriate stepsâ to build me a house, the fact that he runs out of funds would not normally excuse his breaking his promise â at least if it is he, and not I, who is responsible for financing the project. See 2 E. Farnsworth, Contracts § 9.6, p. 638 (3d ed. 2004) (hereinafter Farnsworth) (courts âgenerallyâ conclude that âadditional expenseâ âdoes not rise to the level of impracticabilityâ so as to excuse a party from performance). And here it is North Carolina, and not anyone else, who bears ultimate responsibility for finding the funds. The text, structure, and purpose of the Compact all demonstrate this fact. As the Court recognizes, ante, at 335, the Compact expressly provides that the Commission âis not responsible for any costs associated with ... the creation of any facility,â Art. 4(E)(1), 99 Stat. 1876 . Rather, the Compact States determined that each âparty stateâ should take a turn as the âhost state,â during which time that State would be obligated to build a facility and then operate it for 20 years. See Art. 3(A), id., at 1873; Art. 5(A), id., at 1877; Art. 5(C), ibid.; Art. 5(E), 103 Stat. 1289 ; see also Art. 3(C), 99 Stat. 1873 -1874 (âHost states are responsible for the availability, the subsequent post-closure observation and maintenance, and the extended institutional control of their regional facilitiesâ). The host State would then recover its upfront construction expenses from the considerable fees and surcharges charged to the waste generators served by the facility. N. C. Gen. Stat. §§ 104G-15(a), (b) (repealed 2000) (âIt is the intent of the General Assembly that the cost of all activities [toward siting, building, and operating a facility] be *367 borne by the waste generatorsâ who use it); Brief for Plaintiffs in Surreply to North Carolinaâs Reply 1, n. 1 (noting that a disposal facility in South Carolina collected over $47 million in fees in 2008). Of course, as the majority notes, South Carolinaâs withdrawal from the Compact could have affected North Carolinaâs ability to ârecoupâ its âconstruction costs.â Ante, at 349. But, as far as I am aware, North Carolina did not seriously seek to amend the Compact when South Carolina departed (even though the State had sought and obtained an amendment previously, see ante, at 352, n. 4; Brief for North Carolina in Reply to Exceptions by Plaintiffs to Reports of the Special Master 27), nor has it argued to this Court that South Carolinaâs departure voided its contractual obligations. Indeed, there is evidence in the record indicating that, even after South Carolina left the Compact, North Carolina continued to believe that the operation of a waste disposal facility presented a substantial financial opportunity. App. 255, 266 (Attachment to Letter from John H. MacMil-lan, Executive Director, North Carolina Low-Level Radioactive Waste Management Authority, to Richard S. Hodes, M. D., Chairman, Southeast Compact Commission (Dec. 13, 1996)) (enclosing a business plan identifying $600 million in cost savings that could provide a âsubstantial returnâ on the âinvestment needed to put the North Carolina facility into operationâ). I thus cannot conclude, as the majority does, that the Compactâs rotational design, as I understand it, is âfoolish.â Ante, at 349. Rather, the Compactâs structure represents what, in my view, was an understandable decision by the contracting States, all of whom needed a waste disposal facility, to bind themselves together so that each would take a turn âbear[ing] the cos[t] of buildingâ the necessary facility. Preliminary Report of Special Master 21 (citing Art. 4(K), 99 Stat. 1876 ); see Brief for Rocky Mountain Low-Level Radioactive Waste Compact Board et al. as Amici Curiae 16-18. *368 This rotational approach is surely a sensible solution to the problems caused by the widespread existence of low-level nuclear waste and the political unpopularity of building the necessary facilities to house it. See id., at 13-16; New York v. United States, 505 U. S. 144, 149-151 (1992). The only contrary evidence â i. e., that indicates that North Carolina did not bear ultimate funding responsibility â consists of the fact that the Commission voluntarily advanced North Carolina nearly $80 million between 1988 and 1998 in order to help it defray its costs. Second Report 16. The Court believes that this âcourse of performanceâ demonstrates that, once the Commission turned off its monetary spigot, North Carolina was no longer required to do anything further. Ante, at 346-347. But why? If I advance my builder half the cost of a building, I have not thereby promised to advance him the whole cost. This is particularly true when the contract says I am responsible for none of the cost of the building. At the very least, something more in the circumstances would have to show that additional expenditure had become a reasonable expectation. In this case, nothing suggests that North Carolina could reasonably expect further financing assistance. Indeed, I can And nothing in the majorityâs opinion, or the record, that suggests that the Commission or the other Compact States intended to let North Carolina off the hook. And numerous documents indicate precisely the opposite â that despite the Commissionâs funding assistance, North Carolina was still responsible for funding the project. See, e. g., App. 63 (Resolution (Feb. 9, 1988)) (â[T]he Commission, although not obligated to do so under the Compact,â provides funding for North Carolina); id., at 215 (Letter from Richard S. Hodes, M. D., Chairman, Southeast Compact Commission, to James B. Hunt, Governor of North Carolina (Jan. 5, 1996)) (âAt some point, Commission funds will no longer be available to North Carolina ..., and North Carolina will need to make alternate plans . . . â); id., at 75 (Press Release by *369 James G. Martin, Governor of North Carolina (Nov. 8,1989)) (ââThe task of siting and operating a low-level radioactive waste disposal facility is a commitment the state of North Carolina has made and one which I am personally committed to keepingââ); id., at 92 (Letter from James G. Martin, Governor of North Carolina, to Carrol A. Campbell, Jr., Governor of South Carolina (Oct. 25, 1990)) (âNorth Carolina remains committed to fulfilling its obligations to the Compact to serve as the next host stateâ); id., at 183 (Letter from James B. Hunt, Jr., Governor of North Carolina, to David M. Beasley, Governor of South Carolina (Mar. 14, 1995)) (âLet me assure you that North Carolina is committed to honoring its obligation to the Compactâ); Statement of Undisputed Material Facts ¶¶28, 33, 39 (other public statements about North Carolinaâs commitment to building a facility). Without better evidence of a reallocation of funding responsibility, I can only conclude that North Carolina remained under an obligation to âtake appropriate stepsâ at all times relevant to this case. And North Carolina admittedly took no steps towards building a disposal facility from December 1997 to July 1999: It did no indepth study of the further financing that might be necessary; it made no serious effort to look for alternative funding; the Executive of the State did not ask its legislature for any appropriation. Rather, North Carolina simply withdrew from the Compact. Ante, at 337. Of course, North Carolina was free to withdraw from the Compact. Art. 7(G), 99 Stat. 1879 -1880. But that fact does not repair what, in my view, was a breach of a key contractual provision. See Franconia Associates v. United States, 536 U. S. 129, 142-143 (2002) (âFailure by the promisor to perform ... establishes an immediate breachâ); Restatement (Second) of Contracts §235(2) (1979) (âWhen performance of a duty under a contract is due any non-performance is a breachâ (emphasis added)); 2 Farnsworth § 8.8, at 471. With respect, I dissent.
Case Information
- Court
- SCOTUS
- Decision Date
- June 1, 2010
- Status
- Precedential