Leuthe v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission

20 P.3d 547, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 31, 2001 WL 345125
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 30, 2001
DocketNo. S-9343
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 20 P.3d 547 (Leuthe v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission) 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
Leuthe v. State, Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission, 20 P.3d 547, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 31, 2001 WL 345125 (Ala. 2001).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Chief Justice.

I,. INTRODUCTION

Craig Leuthe applied to the Alaska Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission (CFEC) for an entry permit three years after the 1975 deadline. CFEC accepts late applications if the applicant was misadvised about eligibility prior to the 1975 deadline. CFEC considered Leuthe's claim in several proceedings and rejected his claim on several grounds, including the fact that Leuthe had not been misadvised. Leuthe appealed, and the superior court again rejected his claim. Because Leuthe has not met his burden of showing that he was misadvised about his eligibility, we affirm the superior court's decision.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

In 1978 the Alaska Legislature enacted the Limited Fisheries Entry Act, AS 16.48.010-990.1 The Act established the Commercial Fisheries Entry Commission, and charged it with protecting distressed fisheries by granting a limited number of actess permits to commercial fishers2 Under the Act, only persons who had already held a gear license prior to the Act were eligible for permits.3 CFEC was directed to rank permit applicants based on the degree of hardship they would suffer if excluded from the fishery; this in turn depended on how financially reliant on the fishery an applicant had been in past years4 CFEC established a complex point system for ranking applicants,5 and for the fishery at issue in this case, set up an initial application period of December 19, 1974 through March 18, 1975.6 This deadline was later extended to April 18, 1975,6 with an additional extension to May 18, 1975 for good cause shown.7 The CFEC apparently granted the May 18 "good cause" extension to every applicant who requested it. It also made considerable effort to notify eligible persons of the impending change in the law, using mass mailings, individual phone calls, and television, radio, and newspaper announcements.[549]*5498

Craig Leuthe worked as a drift gill net fisher in Cook Inlet beginning around 1966. He held a gear license from 1967 to 1970, but made no recorded deliveries under those license numbers for two of those years. Leuthe and his partner sold their boat in 1970.

In 1975 Leuthe worked as a teacher in Anchorage. In early May of that year, after the initial permit application deadline, but before the May 18 "good cause extension" deadline, he visited the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to inquire about an entry permit. A Fish and Game employee told him that he did not qualify for enough points under CFEC's ranking system to receive a permit, and advised him not to bother applying. Leuthe did not apply, but later learned that friends with similar fishing experience had received permits. Therefore, in June of 1978, three years after the deadline, Leuthe filed an application for a Cook Inlet salmon drift gill net entry permit. He initially claimed nine points, but amended his application the next day to claim eighteen. Only persons who showed eligibility for at least sixteen points could receive the Cook Inlet entry permits.

CFEC initially denied the application, and Leuthe requested a hearing. After numerous delays, the hearing took place in September of 1981. Leuthe was represented by counsel and presented testimony of a witness, as well as documentary evidence. At his request, the record was kept open through January 7, 1982 so that Leuthe could submit additional evidence relating to his point claims.

Under CFEC's "misadvice policy," CFEC could accept Leuthe's late application only if Leuthe showed that (1) he spoke to the CFEC agent before the deadline, (2) he received bad advice from the agent, and (3) he missed the deadline as a result of this misad-vice. The hearing officer found Leuthe ineligible for this "misadvice policy" exception to the deadline on several grounds. First, he concluded that April 18, 1975 was the applicable deadline. Leuthe was not eligible for the May deadline because he made no showing of good cause-in fact, the hearing officer concluded, Leuthe's lateness was caused by his own lack of due diligence. Even if this problem were set aside, the hearing officer reasoned, Leuthe would not be eligible for the "misadvice policy" exception to the deadline because the agent who spoke to Leuthe correctly advised him that he did not have enough points to obtain an entry permit. The hearing officer reviewed Leuthe's point claims, and found him eligible for only nine of the sixteen points necessary to obtain a permit. He recommended that CFEC deny Leuthe's application.

CFEC notified Leuthe of this recommendation, and of his right to respond and request an oral hearing before CFEC. Leuthe did not respongi.

In 1986 CFEC considered the hearing officer's recommendation and issued a decision denying Leuthe's application. CFEC concluded without discussion that Leuthe's application was barred for late filing. It explicitly declined to consider or adopt the hearing officer's analysis of Leuthe's point claims.

Leuths petitioned for reconsideration of this decision, listing specific grounds that he challenged, and CFEC agreed to review the decision on those grounds.

Twelve years later, in 1998, CFEC issued its decision on reconsideration of Leuthe's claims. The decision reviewed Leuthe's case history in detail. CFEC concluded that, because Leuthe had not alleged any good cause, the applicable deadline was April 18, 1975. Leuthe missed this deadline, it found, because of his own lack of interest in fishing, and not because of any advice received. In addition, CFEC recalculated Leuthe's claimed points and concluded that the agent's advice had been correct: Leuthe was ineligible for a permit. CFEC again denied Leuthe's application.

Leuthe appealed to the superior court. Judge Harold M. Brown affirmed CFEC's [550]*550denial of a permit, holding that because Leuthe was substantively ineligible for a permit, his procedural and timeliness arguments were moot. Leuthe now appeals to this court.

Throughout the pendency of his application, Leuthe has maintained an interim use permit for the Cook Inlet salmon drift gill net fishery.

III STANDARD OF REVIEW

Because the superior court acted in this case as an intermediate court of appeal, we will review the merits of the underlying administrative decision independently, without deferring to the superior court's decision.9 We may affirm the decision below on any ground supported by the record.10

When an agency's interpretation of statutory terms "implicates agency expertise or the determination of fundamental policies within the scope of the agency's statutory functions," we apply the "reasonable basis" standard of review.11 When the agency's specialized knowledge and experience would not be particularly probative of the meaning of the statute, we apply the independent judgment standard and reach our own interpretation of the statute.12 When an agency applies its discretionary power to waive or uphold a deadline, we will overturn its decision only upon a showing of abuse of disceretion.13 Finally, we apply the "substantial evidence" standard to agency findings of fact.14

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Bluebook (online)
20 P.3d 547, 2001 Alas. LEXIS 31, 2001 WL 345125, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/leuthe-v-state-commercial-fisheries-entry-commission-alaska-2001.