Harris v. United States

820 F. Supp. 1026, 23 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 21434, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6052, 1993 WL 147926
CourtDistrict Court, N.D. Mississippi
DecidedFebruary 18, 1993
DocketWC 91-47-B-D
StatusPublished

This text of 820 F. Supp. 1026 (Harris v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, N.D. Mississippi primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Harris v. United States, 820 F. Supp. 1026, 23 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 21434, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6052, 1993 WL 147926 (N.D. Miss. 1993).

Opinion

MEMORANDUM OPINION

BIGGERS, District Judge.

The court conducted a bench trial of this cause and requested post-trial memoranda. Having duly considered the testimony and exhibits admitted at trial and the parties’ memoranda, the court will set forth findings of fact and conclusions of law pursuant to Rule 52 of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.

The land at issue in this case, approximately 1,900 acres of land previously owned by plaintiff W.L. Harris, entered the Farmers Home Administration [“FmHA”] on September 1, 1987 and was assigned Advice No. 86216 1 [“86216”]. Based upon the advice of the Fish and Wildlife Service [“FWS”], the FmHA declared 1,004 of those acres as either wetlands or wetland buffer. 2 After notification of his lease-back/buy-back rights, Harris repurchased the property in April of 1989 with the conservation easements in place. Subsequently, alleging that the restrictions would prevent him from farming enough of the property to generate the revenue sufficient to make his payments on the land, Harris filed the present suit.

The court has previously granted summary judgment for the defendant in part, finding that the Agricultural Credit Act of 1987 did not prohibit the defendant’s imposition of conservation easements on the plaintiffs property while the same was in government inventory after acquisition by the agency through foreclosure. 3 Accordingly, the case was tried before the court on the plaintiffs claim for review under the Administrative Procedure Act. The plaintiff contends that the agencies responsible for the conservation easements restricting his property acted arbitrarily by improperly designating the property as wetlands when in fact employment of the proper methodology would have resulted in less of his land being placed under easement and, on some portions of his property, no wetland conservation easements. Restated, the sole remaining issue tried before *1028 the court was whether or not the agency’s wetland delineation was properly performed. 4

1. Lack of Soil Samples

Pointing to his lack of field notes and soil samples, the plaintiff alleges that the FWS biologist making the delineation, Charles McCabe, neither consulted nor followed any recognized methodology for wetland delineation but rather arbitrarily performed a cursory “windshield tour” of the property. The plaintiffs expert in the field of wetland delineation, Dr. Thomas Heineke, testified that to be properly classified as “wetlands,” the land so considered must possess three characteristics, known in the field as “parameters”: hydric soils, hydrophytic vegetation, and wetland hydrology. 5 The delineation made by FWS was done without the benefit of on-site soil samples. The plaintiffs expert opined that by not physically taking soil samples on the property, the defendant’s delineation was deficient, not the product of “reasoned decisionmaking essential to informed and evenhanded implementation of public policy,” Arizona Public Service Co. v. U.S., 742 F.2d 644, 649 (D.C.Cir.1984), and must be set aside. The court finds this position untenable.

The record that the agency has compiled on this particular delineation indicates that the following actions were taken: On February 11 1988, the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service Vicksburg Field Office was requested by FmHA to assist that agency in determining whether or not wetlands existed on the property. The FWS assigned McCabe, an experienced biologist, 6 to inspect the property. McCabe testified that prior to the field inspection of 86216, he consulted the applicable Soil Conservation Service [“SCS”] soil surveys, 7 and compared the soils listed therein to a hydric soil list. On March 22-28, 1988 McCabe, accompanied by two other biologists (one from the Mississippi Fish and Wildlife Service and the other with the Yazoo National Wildlife Refuge), made a field inspection. McCabe testified that the team spent approximately 30 minutes inspecting Tract I; one and one-half hours inspecting Tract II; one *1029 hour inspecting Tract III; and three to four hours inspecting Tract IV. While on site, McCabe took few field notes and no soil samples. Upon returning to the FWS office, McCabe discussed the proposed wetland delineations with the state biologists and his supervisor, Robert Barkley.

McCabe and Barkley. returned to the tracts on April 27, 1988 ■ and reviewed McCabe’s recommendation for conservation easements at the behest of the FmHA. In reviewing his work, Barkley consulted additional material, including flood data gathered from the Corps of Engineers. 8 Finding no problem with the McCabe delineation, a draft report was submitted to the regional office which also approved the delineation, resulting ultimately in the conservation easements challenged in this case.

It is the policy of FWS in delineating wetlands that a finding of a positive indicator in one or more of the three parameters— soils, hydrology, and vegetation — would satisfy the agency that the property in question was properly wetlands. Thus, for instance, were the biologist making the delineation able through visual observation of the property to identify the prevalent vegetation and additionally found further evidence of wetland hydrology, the presence of hydric soil could be assumed. In this case, McCabe consulted the applicable soil surveys prior to touring the tracts in issue. Those soil surveys indicated the presence of hydric soils oh each of the tracts considered except one. 9 His supervisor, Robert Barkley, also reviewed those surveys and gathered flood data where necessary to confirm the correctness of McCabe’s wetland recommendation prior ■to intra-agency review. Although the plaintiffs expert opined that the lack of soil samples made this delineation substandard, the court finds this testimony lacking in persuasiveness, both for the lack of clear disciplinary support for that conclusion and, more to the point, because the plaintiffs own expert also made similar assumptions when making his own determinations. 10 .Properly viewed, the plaintiffs contentions on this point essentially boil down to the proposition that while it is permissible in some instances for his expert to rely upon visual observation alone, the agency’s biologist could not. While the plaintiffs expert has more experience than the agency’s biologist in terms of the sheer number of wetland delineations made, this court will not engage in a comparative weighing of the relative expertise of each party’s experts where it is not necessary to do so. Here it is not.

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820 F. Supp. 1026, 23 Envtl. L. Rep. (Envtl. Law Inst.) 21434, 1993 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 6052, 1993 WL 147926, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harris-v-united-states-msnd-1993.