Gambee v. Department of Forestry

81 P.3d 734, 191 Or. App. 241, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1743
CourtCourt of Appeals of Oregon
DecidedDecember 17, 2003
Docket98-KL018A-O, 98-KL019, 98-KL020; A112287
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 81 P.3d 734 (Gambee v. Department of Forestry) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Oregon primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Gambee v. Department of Forestry, 81 P.3d 734, 191 Or. App. 241, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1743 (Or. Ct. App. 2003).

Opinion

*243 LANDAU, P. J.

Petitioner Kent Gambee seeks judicial review of a final order on reconsideration of the Board of Forestry (board). In that order, the board determined that Gambee, who is a landowner and lumber broker, had conducted a timber harvest operation within the meaning of the Oregon Forest Practices Act, ORS 527.610 to 527.770, ORS 527.990(1), and ORS 527.992, and that he was liable for violations of administrative rules pertaining to the retention and protection, during timber harvest operations, of bald eagle nesting sites. The board imposed civil penalties totaling $40,737.50. On review, Gambee argues that he was not an operator of a timber harvest operation within the meaning of the applicable statutes and rules and that, even assuming that he was subject to a penalty for the violations, the board erred in imposing a separate penalty for each of 15 trees cut. Reviewing for substantial evidence and errors of law, ORS 183.482(8), we affirm.

I. FACTUAL BACKGROUND

The relevant facts are not in dispute. Gambee is a lumber broker. He buys and manages timberland, finds operators to cut timber, and then sells the land. Gambee was the principal of Alpine Logging, Inc., Alpine Management, Inc., and Alpine Investors, Inc. (collectively Alpine). In 1995, Alpine purchased property in Klamath County known as the Algoma property. In early 1996, Alpine notified the State Forester 1 of its plan to harvest timber on the Algoma property. ORS 527.670(6). 2 The notification was signed by Dan Phillips, who worked for Alpine.

*244 In response to the notification, the Department of Forestry (department) informed Alpine in writing that there were bald eagle nest sites within or adjacent to the area of the proposed operation, including nest trees identified as tree number 670, which was within the western boundary of the property, and tree number 431, which was just outside the southern boundary of the property. The department informed Alpine of requirements applicable to an operation involving bald eagle nest sites, including submission of a written plan. See ORS 527.670(3)(a); ORS 527.710(3)(a). 3 The department listed Gambee as the emergency contact person for the property.

Meanwhile, Gambee hired a wildlife ecologist, Opps, to assess the property. Following each of three visits to the property, Opps submitted written reports to Gambee, in which Opps made observations and recommendations pertaining to nest trees number 670 and 431 and other “key components” of the nest sites. 4

In early August 1996, Phillips submitted a written plan on behalf of Alpine. On August 20, the department rejected Alpine’s plan on the ground that it did not adequately address the protection of the nest trees and other components of the nest site. At Phillips’s request, the department sent him an explanation of the requirements for written plans for operations conducted within 300 feet of bald eagle nest sites, including a copy of the applicable rules. Phillips did not resubmit a written plan for the property.

*245 The following year, in August 1997, Gambee met with a logger, Paul Kanna, in Ashland. After discussing the Algoma property with Kanna — including the fact that there were bald eagle nest sites on the property — Gambee hired Kanna’s company, Kanna Logging, to log the property. That same month, Kanna filed a notification of operation, listing Kanna Logging as the operator and Alpine as the landowner and timber owner.

Also in August 1997, Gambee asked Opps to update the status of the nest sites. In a written report dated August 19, 1997, Opps informed Gambee that one of the nest trees, tree number 431, had been active that year, resulting in one fledgling eagle, but that nesting season had concluded and that “it should be safe for logging activity in the area as per the Oregon Forest Practice Rules.” Opps noted that his earner observations and recommendations regarding the site remained in force, including his recommendations for retaining various trees associated with the nest trees. 5

On September 4, the department informed Kanna and Gambee in writing of the existence of the bald eagle nest sites. The department also informed them of the requirement of a written plan for operations during nesting season, January 1 through August 31, and for operations at any time of year that are conducted within 300 feet of such sites. The department requested a meeting to discuss the required preoperation inspection and evaluation of the property.

No written plan was submitted in regard to the Algoma property. In early December 1997, a local resident reported to the department that a logging operation was occurring on the property. A forest practices forester, Townsend, went to the property and discovered that Kanna had begun cutting on the southern boundary near nest tree number 431. Townsend attempted to locate tree number 431 but was unable to do so. Several days later, Townsend returned to the site with Opps and discovered that tree number 431 had been cut down. A week later, Townsend returned *246 to the site with Opps and a United States Fish and Wildlife Service officer, Harrington. At that time, they discovered that all merchantable trees around nest tree number 670 had been cut. In addition, a skid road was present within 155 feet of tree number 670, and skidder tracks were visible within 32 feet of the tree.

As pertinent here, the department issued to Gambee three “Notices of Violation/Citation” and “Orders to Cease Further Violation.” 6 The first citation alleged that Gambee had failed to protect a bald eagle nest resource site from damage during a forest operation, resulting in the destruction of 15 trees that were key components of nest tree number 670, in violation of OAR 629-665-0220(2)(a). 7 The second citation alleged that Gambee had failed to obtain approval of a written plan before conducting operations within 300 feet of a bald eagle nest site, in violation of OAR 629-605-0170(1)(c). 8 *247

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
81 P.3d 734, 191 Or. App. 241, 2003 Ore. App. LEXIS 1743, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gambee-v-department-of-forestry-orctapp-2003.