Gillis v. ALEUTIANS EAST BOROUGH

258 P.3d 118, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 84, 2011 WL 3652429
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 19, 2011
DocketS-13620
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 258 P.3d 118 (Gillis v. ALEUTIANS EAST BOROUGH) 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
Gillis v. ALEUTIANS EAST BOROUGH, 258 P.3d 118, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 84, 2011 WL 3652429 (Ala. 2011).

Opinion

OPINION

WINFREE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

The superior court interpreted a statutory preference for the purchase of state land in a manner disqualifying an applicant. Because the superior court correctly interpreted the statute, we affirm its decision.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In accordance with article VIII, section 10 of the Alaska Constitution, the legislature enacted the Alaska Land Act shortly after statehood, providing in part "for the selection, acquisition, management, and disposal of Alaska lands and resources. 1 In 1984 the legislature amended the Act, adding a provision granting those meeting certain requirements a preference right to purchase or lease state land. 2 The provision, codified at AS 38.05.035(f), provides in relevant part:

*120 The director shall grant a preference right to the purchase or lease without competitive bid of up to five acres of state land to an individual who has erected a building on the land and used the land for bong fide business purposes for five or more years under a federal permit or without the need for a permit and, after selection by the state, under a state use permit or lease, if the business produced no less than 25 percent of the total income of the applicant for the five years preceding the application to purchase or lease the land.

In 1985 the State of Alaska, Department of Natural Resources (DNR) promulgated the final regulation interpreting this preference right, which remains unchanged and provides in relevant part:

Upon a written finding under AS 38.05.035(e) that the interests of the state will best be served, the director will grant a preference right to lease without competitive bid, or purchase at appraised fair market value, up to five acres of state land to an applicant who submits written proof
(1) of entering the land while the land was under federal jurisdiction;
(2) of erecting and using, for at least five years while the land was under federal jurisdiction, a building erected under any authorization required under federal law. ... 3

Melvin Gillis, a professional sport hunting and fishing guide, obtained a 25-year lease of five acres of state land in April 1989. Gillis built a lodge on the land, and the operation of the lodge and his guiding business provide his principal source of income.

In June 2005 DNR conveyed lands, including the land Gillis leased, to Aleutians East Borough. DNR also transferred its interest in CGillis's lease to the Borough. Gillis offered to purchase the land in November 2005. The Borough Assembly rejected Gil-lis's offer but proposed a new lease agreement. Gillis did not execute the proposed lease, and in 2007 he claimed he was eligible to purchase the land under AS 88.05.0835(f). The Borough maintained Gillis did not qualify for a preference right under subsection .035(f) because his lease commenced after the federal government transferred the land to the state. In 2008 Gillis reiterated his preference-right claim.

The Borough then filed a declaratory judgment action, asking the superior court to determine whether Gillis qualified for a preference right to purchase the land under subsection .035(F). Gillis counterclaimed against the Borough, filed a third-party complaint against DNR, and moved for partial summary judgment against both parties The Borough and DNR crosg-moved for summary judgment. At issue was whether subsection .035(f) required an applicant to enter land while it was under federal ownership as a condition of the preference right. 4

The superior court concluded that the plain meaning of subsection .085(f) required an applicant to enter land when it was under federal ownership before the federal government conveyed the land to the state. The court noted the legislative history indicated subsection .085(f) was remedial and intended "for a limited class of people." The court also noted DNR's implementing regulation tracked subsection .085(f)'s plain meaning. The court entered summary judgment in favor of the Borough and DNR.

Gillis appeals.

III. STANDARD OF REVIEW

We review an agency's interpretation of a statute using our independent judgment when "the agency's specialized knowledge and experience would not be particularly probative on the meaning of the statute." 5 "We will adopt the rule of law *121 that is most persuasive in light of precedent, reason, and policy after considering the plain meaning of the statute, the legislative purpose of the statute, and the intent of the statute." 6

IV. DISCUSSION

A. Plain Meaning And In Pari Materia

Gillis argues that AS 88.05.085(F)'s plain meaning does not require an applicant to enter land while it is under federal ownership to qualify for the preference right. According to Gillis subsection .085(F) fails to "statle] that entry under federal tenure is required whereas [it] does say that entry under a state use permit or lease is required." He asserts that subsection .085(f) "deals with federal permitting only and does not address the underlying land status." Gil-lis maintains that because he entered state land and otherwise met the conditions of subsection .035(f), he is eligible for the preference right.

We disagree. The plain language of AS 38.05.035(f) requires an applicant to have entered land while it was under federal ownership to qualify for the preference right. Subsection .085(f)'s crucial language is: "erected a building on the land and used the land ... under a federal permit or without the need for a permit and, after selection by the state, under a state use permit or lease." Because the federal government owned and administered all land available for state selection, land remained under federal ownership until selected by the state. 7 The legislature's use of the conjunction "and," combined with the phrase "after selection by the state," indicates that the subsection applies to an applicant who, along with obtaining the necessary federal permits, erected a building on and used what was then federal land and continued using that land after state selection. (Gillis's interpretation ignores the subsection's conjunction before the temporal requirement; his interpretation would be more appropriate if the statute said "or, after selection by the state" instead of "and, after selection by the state."

Gillis next argues that AS 38.05.035(f) should be interpreted in pari materia with the Alaska Land Act's other preference-right provisions 8

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Bluebook (online)
258 P.3d 118, 2011 Alas. LEXIS 84, 2011 WL 3652429, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gillis-v-aleutians-east-borough-alaska-2011.