Alaska Trademark Shellfish, LLC v. State

91 P.3d 953, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 51, 2004 WL 817778
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 16, 2004
DocketS-10308
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 91 P.3d 953 (Alaska Trademark Shellfish, LLC v. State) 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 Trademark Shellfish, LLC v. State, 91 P.3d 953, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 51, 2004 WL 817778 (Ala. 2004).

Opinion

OPINION

BRYNER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

This case requires us to determine whether Alaska law gives shellfish farmers the exclusive right to harvest wild stocks already growing on their farm sites. Several applicants asked the Alaska Department of Fish and Game for aquatic farm permits allowing them to grow and commercially harvest geo-duck clams in Alaska waters. When the Department of Fish and Game declined to give them exclusive rights to the wild geo-ducks on their proposed farm sites, the applicants appealed to the superior court. The superior court upheld the department’s decision, concluding that the Alaska Constitution bars the department from giving geoduek farmers exclusive rights to commercially har-vestable stocks already on their farms. The applicants filed this appeal. We affirm the superior court’s ruling but rest our decision on narrower grounds, holding that, no matter what the constitution might permit, the department lacked statutory authority to give aquatic farmers exclusive rights to the existing wild stocks. ■

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

■ Alaska’s Aquatic Farming Act 1 sets out procedures for obtaining permits to start aquatic farms in Alaska waters. The act puts the Department of Fish and Game in charge of the permitting process, which includes the issuance of a coastal zone consistency certification, an aquatic farm lease, a special area permit, an aquatic farm operation permit, and a stock acquisition permit. In the case at issue here, Alaska Trademark Shellfish, LLC, applied to the Department of Fish and Game for aquatic farm permits to allow the company to raise geoducks — an unusually large, slow-growing species of clam that commands high market prices — on several proposed farm sites in Southeastern Alaska waters; at about the same time, several other applicants requested permits in various different locations. In prior communications with prospective shellfish farmers, the department had suggested that applicants who received permits would be given the right to take all wild stocks already on their farms when the permits were issued. Thus, in the present case, most of the applicants proposed to harvest and sell the wild geoducks already growing on their selected sites.

After reviewing the applications, the department notified the applicants that it would conditionally approve their permits: each applicant would be required to develop a practical method of distinguishing their farmed geoducks from the wild, “common property,” geoducks already on their property; and each applicant would have to agree to use their proposed method when they started farming. The department explained that it believed these conditions to be necessary “[bjeeause the density of geoducks on your site may exceed that necessary to provide seed stock for propagation.” Specifically, the department stated, “it is likely that a portion of the wild geoducks at your proposed sites would remain a common property resource, *955 which should be made available for other uses.” The department asserted that the Aquatic Farming Act allowed aquatic farmers to take wild resources from their sites only if they were issued a stock acquisition permit under AS 16.40.120, which, in the department’s view, allowed farmers to use existing stocks solely to “further growth” and for “propagation.” According to the department, allowing aquatic farmers a broader right to harvest standing stocks might violate the Alaska Constitution:

It is important to clarify that an aquatic farm permit does not, in itself, give a farmer the exclusive right to harvest, for a commercial purpose, the wild fishery resources that are located at the farm site. A contrary conclusion is inconsistent with the laws that govern aquatic farming, and it may contradict the Alaska Constitution’s prohibition against exclusive rights in fisheries.

The applicants responded that they found the department’s conditions of approval to be unreasonable. They proposed several alternative arrangements. After holding a teleconference to discuss these and other options, the department sent the applicants a letter summarizing the general principles that it proposed to use to “guide the department’s actions on your pending permit applications.” 2 For present purposes, the most important principle was that the department would permit the applicants to use existing geoducks only for brood stock or for active cultivation:

Pertinent statutes do not authorize a farmer to use standing, wild stocks of geo-ducks for harvest and sale without having first “propagated, farmed, or cultivated” the wild geoducks. The statutes define an “aquatic farm” as “a facility that grows, farms, or cultivates aquatic farm products in captivity under positive control.” It would not be consistent with those statutes to allow a farmer to harvest wild geoducks without first having done anything to improve their abundance, growth rate, or any other aspect of productivity. Therefore, tive department will issue stock acquisition permits only for the purposes of providing brood or seed stock or for growing-out under controlled, enhanced cultivation.

The applicants replied that the department’s proposal to condition approval of their applications on these principles would preclude them from operating successfully: They demanded an unconditional decision on their pending applications. In response, the Commissioner of Fish and Game issued a final decision denying the permits, ruling that the applicants had no right to claim wild geoducks already on their proposed sites:

The practical difficulties of choosing to operate an aquatic farm where there [is] an abundance of wild stocks of geoducks do[ ] not provide a basis for circumventing state law with regard to a common property resource. An aquatic farmer cannot, under state law, harvest wild geoducks that [the applicant] has done nothing to cultivate under the auspices of an aquatic farm permit. The Alaska Constitution and statutes that govern aquatic farm operational permits prohibit the harvest of standing stocks of wild geoducks, unless the farmer has a valid stock acquisition permit (which can be obtained under limited circumstances) or if the farmer has cultivated the wild geoducks.

The applicants appealed the commissioner’s decision to the superior court, insisting that the department had violated the Aquatic Farming Act by conditioning their farm operation permits on their willingness to make wild geoduck stocks available for common use. Alternatively, the applicants argued, the department should be estopped from prohibiting them from harvesting their standing stocks, since its earlier communications had promised that all successful applicants for shellfish farming permits would automatically receive the right to harvest wild stock.

Superior Court Judge Michael A. Thompson affirmed the commissioner’s ruling, relying on a constitutional theory. Finding that “[t]he real question ... is not whether the legislature intended to allow [stock acquisi *956 tion permit] holders to harvest wild stock, but whether the legislature is permitted

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Bluebook (online)
91 P.3d 953, 2004 Alas. LEXIS 51, 2004 WL 817778, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/alaska-trademark-shellfish-llc-v-state-alaska-2004.