Alaska Survival v. State, Department of Natural Resources

723 P.2d 1281, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 376
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 29, 1986
DocketS-996
StatusPublished
Cited by43 cases

This text of 723 P.2d 1281 (Alaska Survival v. State, Department of Natural Resources) 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 Survival v. State, Department of Natural Resources, 723 P.2d 1281, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 376 (Ala. 1986).

Opinion

OPINION

MOORE, Justice.

This appeal challenges a state land disposal of thirty-two agricultural homesteads near Talkeetna. A group of local residents sued to block the 3,530-acre offering. The superior court upheld the decision of the State Department of Natural Resources (DNR) to dispose of the land in a September 1984 lottery. We conclude that the disposal was invalid because DNR failed to comply with the land use planning process mandated by statute. We reverse the superior court judgment and remand DNR’s disposal decision for reconsideration by the agency. We also conclude that the court erred in denying the plaintiffs status as public interest litigants for purposes of awarding attorney’s fees.

I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

The land disposal at issue, referred to as “Chase III,” is located approximately five miles north of Talkeetna, near the community of Chase. The state first proposed to offer land in this area for agricultural development in 1979. Between 1979 and 1983 *1284 DNR held several public hearings in Tal-keetna to discuss what it initially proposed to be a commercial agriculture project involving disposal of parcels ranging in size to 560 acres.

Local residents repeatedly objected that increased settlement would threaten their subsistence-type lifestyle and overtax area resources. Many Chase-area residents rely on the use of surrounding state land to gather firewood, set traplines, hunt and fish. Besides threatening their lifestyle, local residents argued that the area is not suited for commercial farms due to steep slopes, drainage problems and poor soils.

In response, DNR made several changes in its disposal plan, including a reduction in the amount of land to be offered from 7,000 acres to approximately 4,500 acres. In February 1983 DNR issued a written finding, pursuant to former AS 38.05.-035(a)(14), 1 that the Chase III commercial agriculture disposal was in the state’s best interests. However, the Commissioner of DNR subsequently “postponed” the scheduled April land sale in response to local opposition.

The commercial disposal was never implemented. Instead, in late 1983 DNR revised the disposal to meet the objectives of a newly enacted homestead program. Alaska Statute 38.09, enacted in 1983, authorizes the disposal of smaller, noncommercial agricultural homesteads to applicants who agree to meet certain requirements. DNR’s new plan called for disposal of about 6,000 acres in parcels ranging from 40 to 160 acres each. The plan focused on subsistence-type farming rather than commercial agriculture development.

DNR published a legal notice stating that a written best interests finding had been made regarding the agricultural homestead disposal, and a public meeting was scheduled for January 27, 1984. In a January 13 letter to DNR, Judy Price, one of the appellants here, requested a copy of the finding. She did not receive a copy by mail nor was the finding made available to her or other people when they attended the meeting.

During the meeting local residents questioned why DNR was proceeding with the Chase disposal prior to completion of the Susitna Area Plan, a statutorily mandated land use plan for the region. They also reiterated concerns raised regarding the commercial disposal, including their view that the area is not suitable for farm development. Following the meeting DNR officials took a brief field trip to the Chase area and subsequently made several changes to the site plan. The final version called for a smaller disposal of 3,530 acres and a reduction in the number of parcels to thirty-two, with four more scheduled for a later offering.

In April 1984 the director of DNR’s Division of Forest, Land and Water Management signed an amendment to the previous best interests finding for the commercial disposal. The amendment concluded that the revised agricultural homestead disposal was in the state’s best interests. DNR issued an order classifying 1,286 acres of Chase-area land for agricultural use. Other Chase lands had been classified in 1980. A September 14 lottery was scheduled.

Several individuals and an organization of local residents known as Alaska Survival appealed the director’s best interests determination to the Commissioner of DNR. DNR held a hearing at the appellants’ request and the Commissioner subsequently affirmed the director’s decision to proceed with the agricultural homestead disposal.

In mid-August, less than a month before the scheduled lottery, DNR received new information that the soils in the Chase area were of poorer quality than initial surveys indicated. Throughout its planning process DNR had relied on soils information provided by the United States Soil Conservation Service (SCS), based on a preliminary 1980 SCS soils survey. This survey showed that *1285 88.7 percent of the acreage ultimately included in the homestead disposal contained class II or III soils. 2 In March 1984 DNR requested SCS to update its survey. The revised data showed that none of the thirty-two parcels contained class I or II soils and that twelve of the parcels contained little or no class III soils. Overall, the disposal area contains predominantly class IV or worse soils. 3

Some DNR officials were concerned that the new data represented a major deviation from the soils information upon which the Chase disposal was premised. When the director of DNR’s Division of Agriculture received preliminary word of the new data he wrote the SCS requesting a report as soon as possible. His letter stated: “We have been informed ... that some of the parcels in the Chase III agricultural homestead area may not have any class II or III soils. The political and public policy problems associated with offering [such] land for agricultural homesteading ... are obvious.”

After receiving the SCS report, DNR officials met to consider the new information and decided to proceed with the disposal without any changes. The lottery was held and DNR notified the winners that the soils information in the State Land Disposal Brochure had been revised.

A week before the lottery, Alaska Survival and four individuals (hereafter referred to collectively as Alaska Survival) filed a complaint in superior court appealing from the Commissioner’s decision and seeking injunctive relief to halt the lottery. 4 The trial court denied a temporary restraining order and allowed the lottery to proceed after the state agreed to delay staking of the land pending a decision on the merits of the suit. The trial court subsequently affirmed DNR’s decision to offer Chase land for agricultural homesteading, and awarded the state $10,420 in attorney’s fees. The court issued a stay closing the area to entry by the lottery winners pending this appeal.

II. DISCUSSION

Alaska Survival appeals the decision upholding the Chase III disposal and the award of attorney’s fees.

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Bluebook (online)
723 P.2d 1281, 1986 Alas. LEXIS 376, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-survival-v-state-department-of-natural-resources-alaska-1986.