Kjarstad v. State

703 P.2d 1167, 1985 Alas. LEXIS 289
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 9, 1985
DocketS-198
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 703 P.2d 1167 (Kjarstad v. State) 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
Kjarstad v. State, 703 P.2d 1167, 1985 Alas. LEXIS 289 (Ala. 1985).

Opinions

OPINION

RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.

The Alaska Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission (CFEC or Commission) revoked Arnie Kjarstad’s Southeastern Alaska herring purse seine entry permit pursuant to AS 16.43.960 (formerly AS 16.43.-355). Revocation was based on a finding that Kjarstad had knowingly submitted false information relating to domicile on his application for the limited entry permit.

Kjarstad contends that AS 16.43.960 was applied in violation of statutory and constitutional prohibitions against retroactive and ex post facto laws. Kjarstad also argues that even if the statute is applicable, revocation of his permit was improper because he did not violate its terms. We reverse on the ground that Kjarstad did not, within the meaning of AS 16.43.960, submit false information in connection with his application.

BACKGROUND

The CFEC began accepting Southeast herring permit applications in February, 1977. Kjarstad applied for his permit one month later.

The application process for Southeast permits is governed by the Limited Entry Fishing Act, AS 16.43.010-.990, which directs the Commission to issue permits only to qualified applicants. Applicants qualify under a point system designed to measure the degree of hardship they would suffer if excluded from the fishery. One factor used to allocate points is the “availability of alternative occupations.” AS 16.43.-250(a)(1); 20 AAC 05.620(3). The point system assumes that applicants who live in less populated areas have fewer alternative occupations available to them than applicants from larger cities.1

[1169]*1169Six points were needed to qualify for a Southeast herring permit. Kjarstad received the sixth point for “availability of alternative occupations” by listing Ketchi-kan, Alaska as his domicile on his permit application.

Kjarstad’s application was sent to him with his pre-printed Mt. Vernon, Washington mailing address on it. The instructions explained the “availability of alternative occupations” factor as follows:

If your permanent home (domicile) on December 31, 1976 was in Alaska or Washington, consult the maps on the next two pages to see if you qualify for zero or one point ... Complete the reverse side of the application.

All of Alaska, except Anchorage and Fairbanks, qualified for one point. Mt. Vernon, Washington did not.

The instructions also stated:

REQUIRED EVIDENCE FOR PROOF OF DOMICILE (YOUR PERMANENT HOME) on December 31, 1976 must be submitted unless points are pre-printed to claim it. Submit at least three kinds of evidence for proof of domicile as follows:
a. Voter registration
b. Driver’s license
c. Bank statements from local bank
d. Local union or trade receipts for dues paid
e. Charge card receipt
f. Rent, mortgage, property tax or telephone or other utility receipt from the nonfishing portion of the year
g. School registration
h. Local fraternal organization receipt for dues paid
i. An affidavit

Additional evidence may be required if the evidence submitted is not sufficient.

The form instructed applicants to “claim all the additional points for which you have evidence.” On the reverse side of the application was a section for certification of the applicant’s domicile claim. The certification section instructed the applicant to list his address and left space for him to do so.

Kjarstad supported his claim for one point under the “availability of alternative occupations” factor by submitting an Alaskan resident certification card which he had obtained on March 11, 1977 from the Department of Labor. He also crossed out the pre-printed Washington address and wrote in a post office box address in Ket-chikan, Alaska. He did not fill out the domicile certification section on the reverse side of the application.

The CFEC approved Kjarstad’s application in March, 1978. Subsequently, the CFEC initiated fraud investigations of entry permit applications, in the course of which it reviewed Kjarstad’s domicile claim. The Commission discovered that Kjarstad had claimed Washington residency from 1976 through 1979 and had applied for a Washington resident fishing license in April, 1978. The Commission found no evidence that Kjarstad had attempted to correct his claim of Ketchikan domicile made on his herring permit application. In August, 1979, the CFEC issued Kjarstad a notice to show cause why his permit should not be revoked under AS 16.43.960(a). This statute provides in pertinent part:

The Commission may revoke an entry permit ... if a person knowingly supplies, assists in supplying, or fails to correct false information provided to the commission for the purpose of
(1) permit application; ...

A revocation hearing was held and Kjar-stad asserted that he moved to Ketchikan in the spring of 1976 and considered it his home. After hearing Kjarstad’s testimony [1170]*1170and considering a variety of documentary evidence, the hearing officer concluded that the information Kjarstad supplied to the Commission on the permit application form, “while incomplete at best,” was not false.2 He also found that the Commission had failed to show that Kjarstad had knowingly failed to correct false information in his permit application. However, the hearing officer found that, since the application was incomplete, the Commission’s issuance of a permit to Kjarstad was “administrative error,” and therefore recommended reducing Kjarstad’s awarded points from six to five, effectively revoking his permit.

Subsequently, the CFEC voted to reject the hearing officer’s recommended findings and to revoke Kjarstad’s permit for failure to correct false information in his application. Specifically, the Commission found that:

Falsification occurred through the combination of applicant Kjarstad’s changing pre-printed address and claiming, on the strength of that change the point accruing to Ketchikan but not to Mount Vernon ... and, through his omitting entries in the domiciliary section of the application form, his setting the stage for commission acceptance of Ketchikan and its point entitlement.

The superior court affirmed the CFEC’s decision and this appeal followed.

RETROSPECTIVITY

Kjarstad submitted his application on March 22, 1977. It was approved on March 28, 1978. The CFEC seeks to revoke his permit under AS 16.43.960, which did not become effective until July 9, 1978. Under AS 01.10.090, “[n]o statute is retrospective unless expressly declared therein.” Because AS 16.43.960 contains no express ret-rospectivity provision, Kjarstad claims that it cannot be applied to activity occurring before its effective date. Furthermore, Kjarstad asserts that the statute was applied in violation of state and federal constitutional prohibitions on ex post facto laws. Alaska Const, art. I, § 15; U.S. Const, art. I, § 10.

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Kjarstad v. State
703 P.2d 1167 (Alaska Supreme Court, 1985)

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703 P.2d 1167, 1985 Alas. LEXIS 289, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kjarstad-v-state-alaska-1985.