Koyukuk River Basin Moose Co-Management Team v. Board of Game

76 P.3d 383, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 87, 2003 WL 21995327
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 22, 2003
DocketS-10513
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 76 P.3d 383 (Koyukuk River Basin Moose Co-Management Team v. Board of 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
Koyukuk River Basin Moose Co-Management Team v. Board of Game, 76 P.3d 383, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 87, 2003 WL 21995327 (Ala. 2003).

Opinion

OPINION

EASTAUGH, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

We consider here whether the Alaska Board of Game violated either the sustained yield principle of article VIII, section 4 of the *385 Alaska Constitution or Alaska's subsistence statutes in managing moose hunting in part of the Koyukuk River Basin. We affirm the superior court decision holding that there was no violation. The Board of Game was within its discretion in adopting a regulation that allowed for the issuance of "up to" 400 permits in a controlled use area that was part of two larger Game Management Units.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

This appeal concerns the validity of moose hunting regulations for an area encompassing the Koyukuk Controlled Use Area (KCUA). The KCUA is located in the lower portion of the Koyukuk River drainage, and was established in 1979 to reduce the participation of non-local hunters by prohibiting the use of aircraft. The Koyukuk River flows through Game Management Units (GMT) 21D and 24. Approximately one half of the KCUA lies within the northern portion of GMU 21D, while the other half lies within the southern portion of GMU 24. Together, GMU 21D and GMU 24 cover roughly 38,000 square miles. The KCUA occupies roughly 4,791 square miles-about thirteen percent of the combined areas of GMU 21D and GMU 24. Despite the controlled use area designation, the abundance and density of moose in the KCUA continued to attract increasing numbers of non-local hunters throughout the 1980s and 1990s.

The Koyukuk River Basin Moose Co-Management Team (the team) represents a coalition of native villages located along the Koyu-kuk River. Villages in the Koyukuk River drainage are heavily dependent on subsistence, and the team contends that the moose population in the area has declined significantly due to increased hunting pressure.

In response to the declining moose population, the Alaska Department of Fish and Game organized the Koyukuk River Moose Hunter's Working Group to advise the department on Koyukuk River moose management. The working group was a citizen-based advisory body composed primarily of representatives from various state fish and game advisory committees. The department and the working group produced a draft management plan for Koyukuk River moose in February 2000. The plan recommended reducing the total moose harvest in the lower Koyukuk River drainage-within the area of the KCUA-by reducing the anterless moose harvest and changing the general hunt in the KCUA to a drawing hunt with separate resident and non-resident drawing pools.

The Board of Game met in Fairbanks March 3-18, 2000 and considered the draft management plan. The board heard public testimony on the proposals, including comments from team members, and written and oral comments from the team's counsel.

The board ultimately adopted, with some amendments, many of the changes proposed in the draft plan. Significant among these was Proposal No. 30, which recommended changing the portion of 5 Alaska Administrative Code (AAC) 85.045 pertaining to the general moose hunt in the KCUA. The general hunt in the KCUA had been a general registration hunt, but Proposal No. 80 recommended replacing it with a permit drawing hunt. 1 The draft proposed a drawing hunt in the KCUA with an allowance for "up to" 820 resident permits and "up to" 80 non-resident permits in the combined portions of GMU 21D and GMU 24 that are within the KCUA. This proposal allowing for the issuance of "up to" 400 permits in the KCUA was adopted as part of 5 AAC 85.045 2 and is the focus of the team's appeal in this court. The subsistence registration hunt remained unlimited within the KCUA, as did the general hunt in GMU 21D outside the KCUA, and within portions of GMU 24 outside the KCUA. "Unlimited" here refers to a lack of numerical restrictions on the number of permits issued. 3 And although the non-KCUA remainder of GMU 21D was regulated uniformly under 5 AAC 85.045, the non-KCUA remainder of GMU 24 *386 was further subdivided so that different provisions applied to different geographical regions within that game management unit. 4

The subsections of 5 AAC 85.045 set permit limits for a drawing hunt in the KCUA, but the board does not manage moose in the KCUA as a distinct animal population. Rather, the board made findings under Alaska's subsistence laws 5 and managed moose populations for the larger game management units. 6

The team filed suit against the Board of Game, Commissioner Frank Rue, and the state April 12, 2000. 7 The complaint challenged the validity of 5 AAC 85.045, claiming that (1) the board made subsistence determinations using inconsistent populations; (2) the board failed to limit the moose harvest outside the KCUA; (8) the regulation allowing "up to" 400 general hunt permits in the KCUA violated the subsistence statute and sustained yield requirements of Alaska law; and (4) the board failed to consider predator harvest rates in determining intensive game management goals. The team sought declaratory and injunctive relief. The parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment, and the superior court granted summary judgment in favor of the defendants.

The team appeals the grant of summary judgment, arguing that 5 AAC 85.045 violates the principles of sustained yield management and that the board failed to make findings required under Alaska's subsistence statutes. The team does not appeal the board's actual findings. 8 Rather, it argues that 5 AAC 85.045 exceeds the Board of Game's estimated sustained yield harvest rate.

III. DISCUSSION

A. -Standard of Review

We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. 9 We substitute our judgment for that of the board when interpreting the Alaska Constitution and issues of law. 10 We interpret the constitution and legal issues "according to reason, practicality, and common sense, taking into account the plain meaning and purpose of the law as well as the intent of the drafters." 11

We review the board's application of law to a particular set of facts for reasonableness. 12 Under this standard, we "merely determine whether the agency's determination is supported by the facts and is reasonably based in law." 13 We will not substitute our judgment for that of the board or alter its policy choice when the board's decision is based on its expertise. 14

Regulations adopted under Alaska's administrative procedure statute are presumptively valid,"

Related

Manning v. State, Department of Fish & Game
355 P.3d 530 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2015)
Manning v. State, Dept. of Fish & Game
Alaska Supreme Court, 2015
Alaska Fish & Wildlife Conservation Fund v. State
347 P.3d 97 (Court of Appeals of Alaska, 2015)
West v. STATE, BD. OF GAME
248 P.3d 689 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2010)
State, Department of Fish & Game v. Manning
161 P.3d 1215 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2007)
State, Alaska Board of Fisheries v. Grunert
139 P.3d 1226 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2006)
State v. Grunert
139 P.2d 1226 (Alaska Supreme Court, 2006)

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Bluebook (online)
76 P.3d 383, 2003 Alas. LEXIS 87, 2003 WL 21995327, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/koyukuk-river-basin-moose-co-management-team-v-board-of-game-alaska-2003.