Alaska Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission v. Russo

833 P.2d 7, 1992 Alas. LEXIS 59
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 5, 1992
DocketNo. S-4408
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 833 P.2d 7 (Alaska Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission v. Russo) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Alaska Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission v. Russo, 833 P.2d 7, 1992 Alas. LEXIS 59 (Ala. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

Salvatore Russo, a long-time participant in the Bristol Bay Red Salmon Fishery, applied for and was denied a Bristol Bay Drift Gill Net Entry Permit. The Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission (CFEC) found that Russo was entitled to only thirteen points under applicable regulations. Seventeen were necessary for a permit. Russo appealed the CFEC’s decision to the superior court which found that Russo was entitled to receive past participation points under the unavoidable circumstances clause of 20 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 05.630(5). The court reasoned that because Russo was a partner of a gear license holder, it was arbitrary and unjustly discriminatory not to treat him as a gear license holder. The CFEC appeals this decision. We reverse.

Russo has fished in Bristol Bay since 1947. Initially he was a partner with his older brother Anthony in whose name the annual gear license was issued. In 1962 Anthony retired and sold his half interest in the Russos’ boat to a nephew, Horace. Horace and Russo were equal partners. Russo held the gear license in 1962, 1963, and 1964. Horace was the gear license [8]*8holder from 1965 through 1972. The partners relied on the cannery which purchased their fish to file the license renewal paperwork. The cannery chose to name Horace as the license holder because it dealt with him in various business matters.

This case involves past participation points under 20 AAC 05.630(a).1 Under this regulation, a crewmember, that is, a fisherman who is not a gear license holder, can earn only eight participation points unless he is entitled to unavoidable circumstance points under part (a)(5). 20 AAC 05.630(a)(4).

Russo argues that he is entitled to sixteen points under the unavoidable circumstances clause because it was fortuitous that he was not named as the gear license holder while his nephew was. The CFEC, on the other hand, argues that the term “unavoidable circumstances” has been generally applied to allow licensed applicants to obtain additional past participation points for years when circumstances beyond their control prevented them from fishing. It has not been applied to cases like Russo’s where an equal partner who was not a gear license holder sought additional past participation points. In such cases, the CFEC contends, business decisions, not random external forces that would amount to unavoidable circumstances, are responsible for the non-licensee status of the applicant.

Relying on Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission v. Templeton, 598 P.2d 77 (Alaska 1979), the trial court held that the CFEC had too narrowly construed 630(a)(5). Russo should have been considered for unavoidable circumstances past participation points and not doing so resulted in “arbitrarily distinguishing between named gear licensees and their equal partners in the award of past participation points,” a violation of the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment of the United States Constitution and the equal rights clause of the Alaska Constitution.

Templeton involved income dependence points under 20 AAC 05.630(b)(2) which provides:

[I]f special circumstances exist such that an applicant’s income dependence is not realistically reflected by his income dependence percentage for the years 1971 and 1972, the commission may award an applicant up to a maximum of 10 points based on a special showing of income dependence[.]

Templeton was in partnership with his brother from 1969 to 1974. During the years 1971 and 1972, his brother was the named licensee. The CFEC denied Temple-ton income dependence points under the [9]*9special circumstances provision because Templeton lacked a gear license for those years. On appeal the superior court reversed. We affirmed the decision of the superior court on the grounds that it would be unjust discrimination to bar Templeton from eligibility for income dependence points “solely on the fortuitous circumstances of which one [of the two partners] held the gear license in two given years_” Templeton, 598 P.2d at 81.

In Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission v. Apokedak, 606 P.2d 1255 (Alaska 1980) and 680 P.2d 486 (Alaska 1984), we declined to extend the unjust discrimination rationale of Templeton. At issue was the statutory requirement that entry permit applicants must have fished as gear license holders before a given qualification date. Apokedak had been an equal partner in a fishing venture before the qualification date but he had never held a gear license. In the first Apokedak decision we held that the requirement that applicants be holders of gear licenses does not violate the equal protection clause of the Fourteenth Amendment to the United States Constitution or the equal protection provisions of Article I, section 1 of the Alaska Constitution. Apokedak I, 606 P.2d at 1264-68. We remanded the case for the lower court to consider Apokedak’s contention that he was in fact a holder of a gear license because he was an equal partner with a gear licensee before the qualification date. The superior court, finding Apokedak’s case to be essentially the same as that of Templeton, concluded that it would be unfair discrimination to not treat Apokedak as a gear licensee. Apokedak II, 680 P.2d at 486, 487 n. 2. On appeal we reversed, holding that only named holders of gear licenses were license holders within the meaning of the applicable statute and that it was not unjustly discriminatory to deny entry permits to partners who were not named licensees. Id. at 488.

We revisited the subject of how far to extend the Templeton rationale in Sublett v. Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission, 773 P.2d 952 (Alaska 1989). Sublett sought past participation points for a year in which he was a partner of a gear license holder. He claimed unavoidable circumstance points under 20 AAC 05.630(a)(5). This claim was denied by the CFEC and no timely appeal was taken. However, Sub-lett sought to reopen his case following our decision in Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission v. Byayuk, 684 P.2d 114 (Alaska 1984), which applied Templeton retroactively to non-gear licensee partners seeking income dependence points. The CFEC refused to extend Templeton to Sub-lett’s claim for past participation points. On appeal, we agreed with the CFEC and specifically limited Templeton to claims for income dependence points:

[T]he rationale of Templeton and Bya-yuk was, in any case, limited to claims for economic dependence points by partners of gear license holders....
... We have indirectly approved of the differential treatment of partners in this context. Cf. Commercial Fisheries Entry Comm’n v. Apokedak, 680 P.2d 486

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ALASKA COM. FISHERIES ENTRY COM'N v. Russo
833 P.2d 7 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1992)

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833 P.2d 7, 1992 Alas. LEXIS 59, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-commercial-fisheries-entry-commission-v-russo-alaska-1992.