Grunert v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission

735 P.2d 118, 1987 Alas. LEXIS 244
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 3, 1987
DocketS-1091
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 735 P.2d 118 (Grunert 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
Grunert v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission, 735 P.2d 118, 1987 Alas. LEXIS 244 (Ala. 1987).

Opinions

OPINION

MOORE, Justice.

Clemens Grunert, Jr. applied for a limited entry permit pursuant to the Limited Entry Act, AS 16.43.010-.990. Under AS 16.43.260(a), only a person who has fished commercially as a gear license holder is eligible to apply for a limited entry permit. Grunert claimed that he had fished as a gear license holder in 1972. The Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission (CFEC) rejected Grunert’s application, finding that it was untimely and that he did not hold a gear license in 1972. The superior court affirmed this decision and Grunert appeals. We affirm the decision below because we find that Grunert did not hold a gear license and the state is not estopped to deny that he did.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Clemens Grunert, Jr. has lived all his life in Chignik, Alaska. Since boyhood, Gru-nert has assisted his father in the commercial salmon purse seine fishery. Grunert crewed for his father as skiffman from 1965 until 1973 and then crewed for his uncle for the next five years. Following that, he fished from his father’s older boat, then from a leased boat, and finally from his own boat, pursuant to interim-use permits issued pending a final decision on his limited entry permit application. He was unable to obtain an interim-use permit for 1985.

In July 1972, while Grunert was crewing on his father’s boat, his father became ill, requiring medical treatment in Anchorage. Only a gear license holder could legally operate the gear, and it was too late in the season to get a new license for someone else. Anxious that the boat not remain idle during his absence, the father radioed an official of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game for advice.

The father claims that Fish and Game official Paul Pedersen advised him over the radio “that it would be alright for Clemens Grunert, Jr. to operate [the] vessel, ... and that it would not be necessary for the time being to work a gear license transfer.” Grunert testified his father told Pedersen “that he was going to have to be- leaving for awhile and that I would be running .the boat and Paul said it would be okay.” Gru-nert claims that Pedersen never indicated that any paperwork would be required. The record contains no written documentation of this conversation or of any gear license transfer.

The father was absent for a week. Gru-nert fished as captain of the boat for two days during this period. Upon his return from Anchorage, the father resumed control of the boat and gear while Grunert went back to crewing. No one attempted to notify Fish and Game that the father was resuming the role of gear license holder.

On several other occasions during the 1972 season, Grunert took command of the boat and gear when his father went home early for health reasons.

Grunert applied for a limited entry permit in 1977 and requested an administrative hearing. The hearing officer issued a recommended decision finding that 1) Gru-[120]*120nert was ineligible to apply for a limited entry permit because he had never held a gear license, and 2) the application was untimely without excuse. Grunert requested an oral presentation before the CFEC. After hearing testimony and argument, the CFEC voted to adopt the hearing officer’s recommended decision with additional comment on the timeliness issue. The CFEC refused to reconsider its decision and Gru-nert appealed to the superior court. The superior court stayed the appeal pending our decision in Commercial Fisheries Entry Comm’n v. Apokedak, 680 P.2d 486, 490 (Alaska 1984) (Apokedak II). After we held in Apokedak II that “gear license holder” means named licensee, the superior court lifted the stay and affirmed the CFEC decision against Grunert. Grunert now appeals to this court.

The only question presented on appeal is whether Grunert has satisfied the threshold eligibility requirement of AS 16.43.-260(a) by harvesting fishery resources commercially while participating in the fishery as the holder of a gear license.1

Grunert argues that (1) the case must be remanded because the CFEC did not consider the eligibility question; (2) he was the transferee of his father’s gear license pursuant to the emergency transfer provision of former AS 16.05.670(a); and (3) the state is estopped to deny that he was a gear license holder.

DISCUSSION

A. The CFEC determined the eligibility issue

Grunert’s first argument before this court is that the CFEC based its decision only on the timeliness issue and did not consider the eligibility question. Since the timeliness issue is now moot, Grunert asks that his case be remanded to the CFEC so it can consider and decide the eligibility issue.

The hearing officer carefully analyzed Grunert’s gear license argument and concluded that Grunert is not eligible to apply for a limited entry permit. He also concluded that any advice Grunert received as to his ineligibility was entirely correct, and since there was no misadvice, there was no excuse for the late application. The CFEC voted to “adopt” this recommended decision. Grunert contends that since the CFEC offered additional comment only on the timeliness issue, it chose to rely on only one of the two grounds underlying the hearing officer’s decision.

In our view, by adopting the hearing officer’s recommended decision, the CFEC accepted as its own everything in that decision. See AS 44.62.500(b). The CFEC did not indicate that it was adopting only part of a recommended decision. The fact that the CFEC offered additional comments to clarify the analysis of the timeliness issue suggests that it was content with the hearing officer’s treatment of the eligibility question. We will therefore proceed to a review of the eligibility issue, treating the hearing officer’s recommended decision as if it were issued by the CFEC.

B. Grunert was not a gear license holder

Grunert argues that the CFEC incorrectly interpreted former AS 16.05.670(c)2 in concluding that he was not the holder of a gear license in 1972. He suggests that the failure to send the required written statement within 10 days of the radio conversation does not invalidate the attempted license transfer. As explained in his brief, “Mr. Grunert asserts that the proper inter[121]*121pretation of the statute is that radio notice is sufficient to allow a transferee to legally fish for a 10-day period. If written notification is not provided within those 10 days, the transfer lapses.” Accordingly, Mr. Grunert asserts that during the 10-day period he was the lawful gear operator because radio notification was provided.

The CFEC, however, adopted a different interpretation of the statute. The hearing officer’s decision stated:

The failure of the applicant or his father to send such written statement within the 10-day period results in the failure to complete the legal transfer of the father’s gear license. Since a legal transfer did not occur, the applicant did not harvest fishery resources while holding a gear license issued under AS 16.05.536 through AS 16.05.670. His participation as a gear operator during his father’s absence was simply illegal. Based upon the application of AS 16.43.260(a), he is ineligible to apply.

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Related

Lapp v. State
220 P.3d 534 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2009)
Grunert v. State
109 P.3d 924 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2005)
Grunert v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission
735 P.2d 118 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1987)

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Bluebook (online)
735 P.2d 118, 1987 Alas. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grunert-v-state-commercial-fisheries-entry-commission-alaska-1987.