Hayden v. Md. Dept. of Natural Resources

CourtCourt of Special Appeals of Maryland
DecidedSeptember 3, 2019
Docket2434/17
StatusPublished

This text of Hayden v. Md. Dept. of Natural Resources (Hayden v. Md. Dept. of Natural Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Special Appeals of Maryland primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Hayden v. Md. Dept. of Natural Resources, (Md. Ct. App. 2019).

Opinion

George M. Hayden v. Maryland Department of Natural Resources, No. 2434, September Term 2017 Opinion by Kehoe, J.

STATUTORY INTERPRETATION – NATURAL RESOURCES LAW

Section 4-1210 of the Natural Resources Article of the Maryland Code requires the Department of Natural Resources to revoke an individual’s authorization to engage in commercial oyster harvesting activities if an administrative law judge concludes after a hearing that the individual violated one or more of five enumerated offenses listed in subsection (a)(2) of that statute.

In order to revoke the person’s authorization to engage in oystering activities, the administrative law judge must find that that the person “knowingly” committed one of the enumerated offenses in § 4-1210(a)(2). For purposes of the statute, “knowingly” means “intentionally” or “deliberately.” Thus, in order to revoke a person’s authorization to engage in commercial oyster activity, the Department must demonstrate that the person intentionally or deliberately committed one of the offenses enumerated in subsection (a)(2). There is no requirement that the Department demonstrate that the person knew his or her activities were in violation of the law. Circuit Court for St. Mary’s County Case No. C-18-CV-17-000046

REPORTED

IN THE COURT OF SPECIAL APPEALS

OF MARYLAND

No. 2434

September Term, 2017

____________________________________

GEORGE M. HAYDEN

v.

MARYLAND DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES

Wright, Kehoe, Leahy,

JJ. ____________________________________

Opinion by Kehoe, J. ____________________________________

Filed: September 3, 2019 Maryland has regulated the harvesting of oysters in the Chesapeake Bay and its

tributaries since 1868. The era when the law was enforced by Maryland’s “Oyster Navy”—

ships armed with cannon and, later, machine guns, and crewed by men more than willing

to use them—has passed.1 Nonetheless, the State’s regulations are strict and the sanctions

for violations can be severe.

In this appeal from a judgment of the Circuit Court for St. Mary’s County, George M.

Hayden challenges a decision of an administrative law judge that permanently revoked his

ability to harvest oysters in Maryland’s tidal waters. The administrative law judge did so

pursuant to Md. Code § 4-1210 of the Natural Resources Article, which requires the

Maryland Department of Natural Resources to revoke an individual’s authorization to

conduct commercial oyster harvesting if an administrative law judge finds that the

individual “knowingly” violated any of the five offenses enumerated in the statute. He

raises two issues, which we have reworded:

1. In a revocation of authorization action brought pursuant to Nat. Res. § 4- 1210, is the Department required to prove that the licensee knew that he or she was violating the law when committing the predicate offense?

1 The tumultuous and often violent story of Maryland’s early efforts to regulate its oyster industry is told in John R. Wennersten, OYSTER WARS OF CHESAPEAKE BAY (1981). Some of the legal aspects of this history are analyzed in Garrett Power, More About Oysters Than You Wanted To Know, 30 MD. L. REV. 199, 202–10 (1970). Professors Wennersten and Powers are emeriti professors at, respectively, the University of Maryland and the University of Maryland Francis King Carey School of Law. An informative perspective on the challenges faced by prosecutors, defense attorneys, and judges in criminal cases arising out of violations of Maryland’s oyster laws may be found in Joyce R. Lombardi, Modern Oyster Wars: Off the Water and Into Court, 47 MD. BAR JOURNAL 50 (March-April 2014). 2. Was the administrative law judge’s finding that Mr. Hayden “willfully disregarded and failed to learn the laws and requirements of oyster harvesting” supported by substantial evidence?

Because our answer is “no” to the first question, and “yes” to the second, we will

affirm the decision of the administrative law judge.

Background

A Regulatory Overview

The Department of Natural Resources (the “Department”) regulates and enforces

Maryland’s fishing laws, which includes the authority to grant or deny tidal fish licenses.

A tidal fish license authorizes the licensee “to guide fishing parties, catch fish for

commercial purposes and buy, sell, process, transport, export or otherwise deal in fish

which were caught in the tidal waters of Maryland.” Nat. Res. § 4-101(r). In the statutory

scheme, the meaning of the word “fish” is very broad: it includes finfish, e.g. striped bass

a/k/a rockfish, blue fish, perch, etc.; crustaceans, e.g., blue crabs; and mollusks, e.g.,

oysters and clams. Nat. Res. § 4-101(j). Tidal fish licenses have a term of one year and are

renewed on September 1 of each year. Nat. Res. § 4-701(c).

Possession of a tidal fish license does not, by itself, permit a licensee to harvest oysters.

In order to engage in the commercial harvesting of oysters, an individual must also pay an

annual surcharge of $300 and, what is significant to the issues raised in this appeal, certify

to the Department that he or she has received certain publications that we will now describe.

Nat. Res. § 4-701(g)(1)(i).

The Department is required by law to prepare maps and coordinates showing the

locations of areas that are off-limits to oyster harvesting and to distribute copies of those

-2- maps to licensees on an annual basis. Nat. Res. § 4-1006.2.2 For their part, licensees must

sign a receipt stating that they have received the information. Section 4-1006.2(b)(2)

requires the Department to prepare a form by which the licensee acknowledges receipt of

the information provided by the Department when a license is renewed. The form in use in

2016, when Mr. Hayden last renewed his license, stated in relevant part:

I hereby acknowledge my responsibility as a licensed shellfish harvester to know and comply with all laws governing shellfish including harvesting, reporting requirements, and restrictions relating to shellfish harvesting gear.

I hereby certify under penalty of perjury that I have received from the Department of Natural Resources maps and coordinates of . . . areas closed to shellfish harvest by the Department of the Environment[.]

There is another layer of regulations pertaining to oyster harvesting. The Maryland

Department of the Environment (the “MDE”) administers programs concerning the public

health of the Chesapeake Bay. Specifically, the MDE is authorized to close areas of the

Chesapeake Bay and its tributaries to oyster harvesting when the MDE determines that

those areas are polluted and that the shellfish from the polluted areas are hazardous to

2 Nat. Res. § 4-1006.2 states: (a) The Department annually shall publish maps and coordinates of oyster sanctuaries, closed oyster harvest reserve areas, and areas closed to shellfish harvest by the Department of the Environment. (b)(1) The Department shall provide the publications required under this section to each tidal fish licensee who pays the oyster surcharges required under § 4-701(g) of this title. (2) Before a person may catch oysters under a tidal fish license that has an oyster authorization and for which the oyster surcharges have been paid, the person shall certify to the Department on a form the Department prescribes that the person received the publications required under this section.

-3- public health. Nat. Res. § 4-742. Harvesting oysters from a closed area is prohibited by

statute. Nat. Res. § 4-1006(b)(1). Areas closed by the MDE are designated on the maps

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Bluebook (online)
Hayden v. Md. Dept. of Natural Resources, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hayden-v-md-dept-of-natural-resources-mdctspecapp-2019.