Delaware Bay Waterman's Ass'n v. New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection

709 A.2d 192, 153 N.J. 345, 1998 N.J. LEXIS 248
CourtSupreme Court of New Jersey
DecidedApril 7, 1998
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 709 A.2d 192 (Delaware Bay Waterman's Ass'n v. New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of New Jersey primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Delaware Bay Waterman's Ass'n v. New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection, 709 A.2d 192, 153 N.J. 345, 1998 N.J. LEXIS 248 (N.J. 1998).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

This appeal concerns a ban on the harvesting of horseshoe crabs imposed by the New Jersey Department of Environmental Protection (DEP) on July 29, 1997. This ungainly creature is one of nature’s marvels.

Ugliness is nature’s great gift to the horseshoe crab. It looks like a cross between a lobster and a Sherman tank, with a steel helmet of a shell and enough barbs and spikes to deter most predators. Get past the armor and there’s little to eat; fishermen long viewed the crabs as a nuisance, barely worth the few pennies they’d fetch at the fertilizer plant.
This singular unattractiveness, wrapped in a remarkably sturdy biological package, enabled the crab to survive for 300 miUioiTyears. Ice ages and meteor explosions that wiped out dinosaurs rolled off its armor-plated back.
[Joby Warrick, Ugly Horseshoe Crab May Have a Future to Match on Delaware Bay, Washington Post, Aug. 4, 1997, at A3.]

Despite the crab’s durability, humankind today poses a serious threat to the survival of the horseshoe crab.

Fishermen have discovered a market for the crabs as bait for a growing eel fishery, and suddenly one of [the] ocean’s great survivors is floundering. In the Delaware Bay, home of the largest concentration of Atlantic horseshoe crabs, its numbers on some beaches are down 90 percent in five year's.
[347]*347The drop is coinciding with a new awareness of the creature’s ecological value. In the bay, .fewer horseshoe crabs means fewer horseshoe crab eggs, a dietary staple for migratory shore birds that flock to local beaches each springy ... [endangering] the $30 million-a-year bird-watching industry that has grown up around it. “You pull at one thread,” observes [the] ... refuge manager for Cape May National Park, “and everything starts to come undone.”
Ironically, the crab is becoming imperiled just as scientists are fully realizing its potential for improving human health. The horseshoe crab’s unique blue blood is the world’s only source of a compound called limulus amoebocyte lysate, which is used widely to test for bacterial contaminants in drugs. The nearly pure form of a substance in the crab’s shell — chitin—is being explored as a possible dressing for bums that promotes faster healing.
[IWd]

The DEP’s action took the form of an emergency rule regulating the commercial harvesting of horseshoe crabs, N.J.A.C. 7:25-18.16. The effect of the July 29, 1997 rule was to create a sixty-day extension to a complete ban on the taking of horseshoe crabs imposed by a prior emergency rule adopted sixty days earlier, on May 30, 1997. The July emergency rule completely banned the taking of horseshoe crabs until May 1, 1998. In addition, the emergency rule eliminated a previously existing, year-long horseshoe crab harvest allowing, instead, horseshoe crabs to be taken by hand on two days per week in May and June to the extent of one hundred crabs per person, per day. Trawling for crabs was prohibited.

Plaintiff, Delaware Bay Waterman’s Association (DBWA), represents individuals engaged in the harvesting and taking of horseshoe crabs for commercial gain. DBWA contended that the July 29, 1997 emergency rule was the functional equivalent of the May emergency rule and impermissibly extended the May emergency regulation for an additional sixty days. It contended that DEP adopted the emergency rule in violation of section 4(c) of the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), N.J.S.A. 52:14B-4(c), which provides that an emergency rule or regulation may be effective for a period of not more than sixty days, unless each house of the Legislature passes a resolution concurring in its extension for a [348]*348period of not more than sixty days. Neither house passed such a resolution. DBWA contended that DEP’s failure to comply with the APA requirement rendered the July rule invalid.

On August 14,1997, DBWA sought, in the Appellate Division, a temporary stay of the July 29, 1997 emergency rule. Following a hearing on the stay application, the Appellate Division concluded that because of the fleeting nature of the issues, the court had to accelerate the substantive appeal. 304 N.J.Super. 20, 23-24, 697 A.2d 957 (1997). On August 20, 1997, the Appellate Division invalidated the ban, finding that the emergency regulation violated section 4(c) because DEP had failed to obtain the necessary approval of both houses of the Legislature. Id. at 25, 697 A.2d 957.

DEP sought a stay of the Appellate Division’s decision pending certification in and further order of this Court. On September 4, 1997, we granted DEP’s petition for certification, 151 N.J. 469, 700 A.2d 881 (1997), and stayed the Appellate Division’s judgment. DBWA sought expedited consideration of this matter or, in the alternative, to vacate the stay of the judgment of the Appellate Division. DBWA’s motion was denied. The net effect of the Supreme Court actions was that the emergency ban on harvesting of horseshoe crabs remained in place for an additional sixty days until it would expire by its own terms on September 27, 1997.

Concurrently with its adoption of the emergency regulation on July 29, 1997, DEP proposed a permanent regulation for the harvesting of horseshoe crabs. Following notice and opportunity to be heard, DEP adopted the permanent rule on September 25, 1997. Provisions of the new regulation reduce the harvesting season to two months a year, eliminate trawling or dredging as a means of harvest, and limit hand-harvest during the two-month season to two days a week. N.J.A.C. 7:25-18.16.

Following the adoption of the permanent rule, with some matters reserved, DEP moved to dismiss this appeal on grounds of mootness and to vacate the August 20, 1997 judgment of the [349]*349Appellate Division. We reserved decision on that motion pending argument of the appeal before us. DBWA opposed the grant of the motion reasoning that the issue before the Court was one of significant public policy that was likely to occur again and would evade review in the future. The Appellate Division had recognized that “in light of the normal length of time required for the appellate process, the dispositive issue here could forever evade review.” 304 N.J.Super. at 23-24, 697 A.2d 957. Because an emergency regulation may be in effect for only sixty days, the time period may be insufficient in the normal course for a challenge to the back-to-back adoption of emergency rules to work its way through the courts to the Supreme Court.

At oral argument, the parties were in agreement on the substantive principle of law involved, namely that an executive agency of government may not adopt, without the concurrence of the Legislature, back-to-back emergency regulations in excess of sixty days. The point on which the parties differed was whether the two emergency regulations, the May 1997 regulation and the July 1997 regulation, were, in fact, the same.

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Bluebook (online)
709 A.2d 192, 153 N.J. 345, 1998 N.J. LEXIS 248, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/delaware-bay-watermans-assn-v-new-jersey-department-of-environmental-nj-1998.