Cleaver v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission

48 P.3d 464, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 75, 2002 WL 1291363
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 7, 2002
DocketS-9689
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 48 P.3d 464 (Cleaver v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission) 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
Cleaver v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission, 48 P.3d 464, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 75, 2002 WL 1291363 (Ala. 2002).

Opinion

OPINION

CARPENETI, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

In his first attempt at participating in the Northern Southeast Inside Sablefish Long-line fishery, John Cleaver "called it a season" after only two days because his homemade wooden bait chute was too dangerous, his equipment for fishing halibut proved inadequate for sablefish, and his line got tangled in the gear of other fishers. To qualify for skipper participation points towards a permanent limited entry permit, Cleaver characterized his problems as an "extensive mechanical - breakdown." The - Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission did not accept that characterization, and denied Cleaver the points he needed for a permit. The superior court affirmed the commission's decision and awarded attorney's fees to the state. We affirm in all respects.

II FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In 1973 the Alaska legislature enacted the Limited Fisheries Entry Act. 1 The act established the Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission and charged it with the duties of "regulat[ing] entry into the commercial fisheries for all fishery resources in the state" and "establish[ing] priorities for the application of the provisions of this chapter to the various commercial fisheries of the state." 2 The legislature required that the prioritization of fishery applicants be based on a reasonable balance of an applicant's degree of economic dependence on. the fishery and extent of past participation in the fishery. 3

The commission determined that the Northern Southeast Inside Sablefish Long-line fishery could sustain a maximum of seventy-three commercial fishers. 4 The commission developed regulations to prioritize applicants for fishery permits using a one-hundred point seale with points awarded for economic dependence, vessel investment, and past participation. 5 The commission decided that all applicants with eighty-one to one hundred points would be given permanent entry permits because they would suffer significant economic hardship by exclusion from the fishery. 6 The permits remaining after the "hardship" applicants received permits would be awarded to those applicants with the highest point totals. As the applicants' *466 point claims were verified,. the commission periodically calculated the minimum points required.for a permit based on the remaining number of permits and the point totals of the remaining applicants. Applicants who fell below this "denial point level" became ineligible for a permit. The remaining applicants-those with less than the eighty-one points but more than the current denial point level-received interim permits while their applications were being verified and processed. 7

In 1972 John Cleaver began commercial fishing in Alaska as a troller. In 1979 Cleayer bought the F/V DrEp Sma and fished for salmon and halibut. During the spring of 1983, he attempted to longline 8 for sablefish 9 for the first time in the Northern Southeast Inside Sablefish Longline fishery. Cleaver assumed that longlining for sablefish would be similar to the fishing at shallower depths that he had done previously.

Cleaver had several problems during his first attempt at longlining for sablefish in April 1983. First, the halibut anchors that Cleaver used were not heavy enough to get to the depths of sablefish. Second, the bait chute that he built was dangerous. Cleaver's makeshift wooden bait chute allowed the lines to bounce up and down to the extent that he feared for the safety of his crew. Third, Cleaver's depth sounding equipment gave readings in meters instead of fathoms, which Cleaver said gave him trouble judging the depth. As Jana Sushy, one of Cleaver's two deckhands who was on her first longline trip, admitted, "none of us really knew the proper details or overall concept." Cleaver's gear got tangled with the gear of another fisher, and Cleaver gave up longlining for sablefish after two days. Cleaver landed only 385 pounds of sablefish. Although the fishery was opened later that year between September 1-7 and October 10-14, Cleaver did not attempt to longline for sablefish again in 1983 because he did not have enough money to correct the problems with his equipment.

After the 1983 season, Cleaver bought the necessary equipment for longlining sablefish. In 1984 Cleaver successfully participated in the fishery.

In 1987 Cleaver applied for a permanent entry permit to the Northern Southeast Inside Sablefish Longline fishery. He claimed a total of sixty-five points: eighteen skipper participation points for the 1984 fishing season, seventeen skipper participation points for the 1983 fishing season, fifteen points for income dependence, and fifteen points for vessel investment. 10 The commission originally found that Cleaver qualified for only forty and one-half points. The commission allowed only seven and one-half points for vessel investment because Cleaver's wife was a co-owner of the F/V DEEp Sma, and it disallowed any points for skipper participation in 1988, presumably because Cleaver's participation that year was so minimal. Cleaver timely requested an administrative hearing. At the hearing, Cleaver argued that he should get all fifteen points for vessel investment and seventeen points for skipper participation in 1983 based on extraordinary cireumstances.

In 1991 a hearing officer decided that Cleaver was entitled to the full fifteen points for vessel investment because the Cleavers purchased the F/V DeEp Sga as joint tenants to satisfy the financing bank's requirements and because Wendy Cleaver was not applying for a permit in the fishery. But as to skipper participation in 1983, the hearing officer found that Cleaver failed to prove that he was entitled to skipper participation points based on extraordinary cireumstances because he abandoned his intent to participate, because his loss of financial ability to continue in the fishery did not constitute an extraordinary cireumstance, and because he failed to demonstrate that he made all reasonably possible efforts to participate in the *467 fishery. The commission adopted the hearing officer's decision as a final decision after sixty days.

Cleaver filed a petition for administrative review, a request to accept a late-filed petition, and a request for an interim permit. The commission declined to accept Cleaver's late petition to reopen his application because he "failed to demonstrate due diligence from the time of his actual notice of the hearing officer and final commission decisions" and because his "underlying substantive claim fail{ed] to present a genuine issue that would warrant further administrative proceedings." The commission also denied Cleaver an interim use permit. 11

Cleaver appealed to the superior court. Superior Court Judge Patricia A.

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Bluebook (online)
48 P.3d 464, 2002 Alas. LEXIS 75, 2002 WL 1291363, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cleaver-v-state-commercial-fisheries-entry-commission-alaska-2002.