Johnson v. Alaska State Department of Fish & Game

836 P.2d 896, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 153
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 29, 1991
DocketS-3000, S-3001
StatusPublished
Cited by55 cases

This text of 836 P.2d 896 (Johnson v. Alaska State Department of Fish & Game) 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
Johnson v. Alaska State Department of Fish & Game, 836 P.2d 896, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 153 (Ala. 1991).

Opinion

OPINION

BURKE, Justice.

The appellants, all Alaska Native fishermen, began their action in superior court alleging that emergency orders issued by the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (Department) and regulations promulgated by the Alaska Board of Fisheries (Board) *900 discriminated against them because of their race. After a bench trial, the superior court entered judgment against the state, finding that the Department and Board had violated AS 18.80, the Alaska Human Rights Act. The superior court, however, awarded the plaintiffs only declaratory relief.

The plaintiffs have appealed three aspects of the superior court’s decision: (1) the court’s finding that they did not prove compensatory damages with reasonable certainty; (2) the court’s ruling that punitive damages are not available against the state for violations of AS 18.80, the Alaska Human Rights Act; and (3) the superior court’s refusal to accord issue preclusive effect to the findings and conclusions in an order of the Alaska Human Rights Commission. We reverse the superior court’s decision on compensatory damages and remand for a redetermination of damages on the present record. We affirm the court’s ruling on punitive damages. We reverse the court’s decision on issue preclusion and modify the judgment accordingly.

Finally, the superior court decided that sovereign immunity does not bar actions for compensatory damages against the state under AS 18.80. The state appeals that decision. We affirm.

I

A

Alaska Native fishermen from the Tlingit community of Yakutat, in southeast Alaska, fish for salmon in the rivers of their region and in the ocean surf. 1

At the mouths of the Alsek and East Alsek rivers, fifty miles south of Yakutat, surf fishing is especially hazardous. As a result, the inriver sites on the Alsek and East Alsek are distinctly preferable. The Yakutat fishermen, however, rarely venture far upstream on either of these rivers. On the Alsek and East Alsek, the better inriver sites are the territory of white fishermen. Several factors contribute to the racial division at the Alsek and East Alsek, but the most important of these is the territorial hostility shown by some white fishermen. Evidence indicates that the white fishermen began driving the Native fishermen downstream early in this century. By 1931, the Native fishermen rarely fished further upstream than the rivers’ mouths. There is no doubt that over the years the inriver fishermen have resorted to violence, including use of firearms, to maintain control of the inriver sites.

Two agencies share the main responsibility for managing the Alsek and East Alsek salmon fisheries: the Department of Fish and Game and the Board of Fisheries. 2 The primary concern of both agencies is insuring that sufficient numbers of migrating salmon escape the gear of fishermen and continue on to spawn each year. Measuring escapement on the Alsek River presents especially difficult problems. To begin with, the Alsek is well over one hundred miles long, but only the last twenty miles flows within Alaska. The remainder of the river and its headwaters are in Canada. Additionally, the Alsek water in Alaska is heavy with silt, and early estimates of escaping salmon are often inaccurate. By contrast, escapement in the East Alsek River is much easier to measure, because the river is only three and one-half miles long, clear and entirely within Alaska. Not surprisingly, the state employs different management techniques at each of the rivers: Regulators may respond quickly to local indications of poor escapement on the East Alsek, but they generally must wait until definitive data on total escapement *901 arrives from Canada at the end of the fishing seasons before they can adjust limits on the Alsek.

The Board is a policy-making agency; 3 it promulgates regulations that, among other things, designate areas and times for fishing, size and type of gear, and minimum distances between units of gear. 4 The Department is more of a policy-implementing agency, providing specific, on-site management of salmon stocks during the fishing season. 5 For example, the Department conducts ongoing studies of salmon escapement during fishing season, and, to protect the salmon stocks, may issue emergency orders that restrict the area and the time within which fishing may occur at any given fishery. Several Department officials share the power to issue such orders in any particular fishing area. The hierarchy of Department officials with this power in the Yakutat area includes a Regional Supervisor, a Finfish Management Coordinator for Southeastern Alaska, and an Area Management Biologist for the Juneau Management Area. These officials are based in Juneau. The area management biologist occasionally visits the Yakutat area during fishing season. Otherwise, for on-site information and recommendations regarding regulation of the Yakutat fisheries, the Department officials in Juneau are mainly dependent upon a fourth official: the person who has been fishery technician in the Yakutat area since 1961, Alex Brogle.

Throughout his tenure in Yakutat, Alex Brogle openly despised the Yakutat surf fishermen. The superior court concluded after trying this case:

Brogle displayed a reservation mentality that led him to the view that the Yakutat natives should stay in fisheries close to town and not venture to the Alsek and East rivers where they would interfere with the commercial harvesting activities of people for whom Brogle had higher regard. Unquestionably Brogle was not disposed to manage the Alsek and East river fisheries in such a way as to preserve, to the extent possible, equality of opportunity to catch fish.

The “people for whom Brogle had higher regard,” of course, were the white, inriver fishermen.

Brogle’s supervisors at the Department clearly knew of Brogle’s racist and discriminatory bent; Brogle’s weekly and seasonal reports to Juneau typically contained racist slurs, especially slurs attacking the Yaku-tat natives. Nonetheless, by all accounts, Brogle exercised significant influence over the Department’s management of the Al-sek and East Alsek rivers. Brogle’s influence was especially apparent in the Department’s response to the crisis in the Alsek fishery that followed the 1978 and 1979 salmon runs.

In 1978 and 1979, the number of persons fishing in the surf and at inriver sites on the Alsek and East Alsek increased dramatically. 6 For example, eighteen people fished the Alsek in 1977, twenty-nine in 1978, and thirty-eight in 1979. Not surprisingly, 1979 saw a record catch of red salmon in the area. Five years earlier, in the 1974 season, the number of fishermen in the area had reached a previous all-time *902 high. 7 This suggested that there might be a repercussive effect in 1979, among salmon returning to their spawning waters five years after hatching there.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Yvonne Ito v. Copper River Native Association
547 P.3d 1003 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2024)
Quarterman v. City of Springfield
Massachusetts Appeals Court, 2017
Burton v. Fountainhead Development, Inc.
393 P.3d 387 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2017)
Welton v. State, Department of Corrections
315 P.3d 1196 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2014)
Welton v. State, Dept. of Corrections
Alaska Supreme Court, 2014
Kennedy v. Municipality of Anchorage
305 P.3d 1284 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2013)
McAlpine v. PACARRO
262 P.3d 622 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2011)
Hoendermis v. Advanced Physical Therapy, Inc.
251 P.3d 346 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2011)
Luper v. City of Wasilla
215 P.3d 342 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2009)
Psenak v. Allely
328 F. App'x 495 (Ninth Circuit, 2009)
Parson v. STATE, DEPT. OF REVENUE
189 P.3d 1032 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2008)
Larson v. Benediktsson
152 P.3d 1159 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2007)
City of Saint Paul v. State, Department of Natural Resources
137 P.3d 261 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2006)
Jones v. State, Department of Corrections
125 P.3d 343 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2005)
Alaska Inter-Tribal Council v. State
110 P.3d 947 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2005)
State, Department of Revenue v. Municipality of Anchorage
104 P.3d 120 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2004)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
836 P.2d 896, 1991 Alas. LEXIS 153, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/johnson-v-alaska-state-department-of-fish-game-alaska-1991.