Manning v. State, Department of Fish & Game

355 P.3d 530, 2015 WL 5061353
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 28, 2015
Docket7036 S-15121
StatusPublished
Cited by21 cases

This text of 355 P.3d 530 (Manning v. 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
Manning v. State, Department of Fish & Game, 355 P.3d 530, 2015 WL 5061353 (Ala. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION ON REHEARING

WINFREE, Justice.'

1. INTRODUCTION

The Alaska Board of Game promulgated regulations managing caribou hunting in Game Management Unit 13. The regulations allow hunting under three types of permits: a community harvest subsistence permit, an individual subsistence permit, or a non-subsistence drawing permit. A hunter challenged the regulations on constitutional and statutory grounds, arguing that they wrongfully interfered with his subsistence hunting rights, and also sought a judicially imposed public reprimand of an assistant attorney general representing the Board. The superior court dismissed the claim against the attorney, granted summary judgment upholding the regulations, and awarded partial attorney’s fees to the State and an interve-nor defendant. The hunter appeals. We affirm the dismissal and summary judgment orders, but vacate the attorney’s fees awards and remand for further proceedings.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

This case involves a challenge to the Board of Game’s 2010 amendments to regulations for subsistence caribou hunting in Game Management Unit 13, known as the Nelchina basin. 1 Under the governing statute, if a game population can be harvested consistent with sustained yield principles, the Board must “determine the amount of the harvesta-ble portion that is reasonably necessary for subsistence uses.” 2 (This is commonly called the “amount reasonably necessary for subsistence,” or “ANS.” 3 ) Subsistence uses are managed at either the Tier I or Tier II level. 4 Tier I management is appropriate when the Board concludes that the allowable harvest is sufficient to provide a reasonable opportunity for all subsistence uses; otherwise Tier II management is appropriate. 5 *533 Subsistence hunting under Tier II is more limited, with permits allocated based on specific eligibility criteria. 6

In 1998 the Board determined that the ANS for Nelchina caribou was "100% of the allowable harvest" because the demand for subsistence hunting "exceed[ed] supply." The Board therefore managed the Nelcehina caribou hunt under Tier II. Following a stream of complaints that the Tier II system did not provide sufficient subsistence opportunity for Nelehina caribou, the Board began developing new regulations in 2006. The Board made new findings 'about the customary and traditional uses of Nelchina caribou and adopted regulations requiring that hunters conform to identified practices. In March 2009 the Board determined the ANS to be 600-1,000 animals, accounting for the demand of only those hunters following the customary and traditional use practices identified in its findings. Based on the revised ANS and that year's estimated allowable harvest of 1,000 animals, the Board transitioned management of the Nelchina caribou hunt from a Tier II to a Tier I system. The regulations created two types of subsistence hunting permits: a community harvest permit and an individual permit. 7 The regulations were challenged in superior court and invalidated on the grounds that (1) they were unconstitutional and (2) the Board's decision to change the caribou hunt from Tier II to Tier I was arbitrary and unreasonable and violated the Alaska Administrative Procedure Act's notice requirement. 8

The Board addressed the invalidated regulations at its October 2010 meeting. After reviewing extensive evidence on population and hunting trends for Nelchina caribou, the Board again calculated the ANS at 600-1,000 animals. Because the estimated allowable harvest of 2,800 caribou was greater than the ANS, the Board concluded that the Nelchina caribou subsistence hunt must be managed under Tier I. The Board then reinstated the bifurcated community/individual subsistence hunt system, with revisions, and also allowed issuance of non-subsistence hunt drawing permits. 9

The regulations establish that any group of 25 or more persons may apply for a community harvest subsistence permit entitling each group member to harvest one caribou during the regulatory year. 10 The group must follow the customary and traditional use pattern identified by the Board for community subsistence hunts. 11 Individual subsistence permit holders also are entitled to harvest one caribou per household during the regulatory year, but are not subject to the community harvest hunt's customary and traditional use restrictions. 12 Up to 800 caribou may be taken each year under community harvest permits, while no cap is placed on the total number of caribou that may be taken under individual permits. 13 All subsistence permit holders are subject to the same hunting regulations and their hunting seasons and areas are the same. 14 And all subsistence permits prohibit taking more than one caribou per household and hunting caribou in any other location during the permit year. 15

In April 2011 Kenneth Manning filed suit against the Alaska Department of Fish and Game (Department) and Assistant Attorney General Kevin Saxby. Manning sought an injunction preventing the Department from implementing the Nelehina caribou community subsistence hunt regulations on various constitutional and statutory grounds, and sought a judicially imposed reprimand of Saxby for alleged violations of law while he *534 was representing the Board. Ahtna Tene Nené (Ahtna) was permitted to intervene as a defendant. Shortly thereafter the superior court dismissed the claim against Saxby, concluding that he was entitled to discretionary and qualified immunity and that the court could not grant the specific relief Manning sought.

In late October 2011 the Department issued an emergency order closing the Nelcehi-na caribou hunt to non-subsistence drawing permit holders. Manning, who held an individual subsistence hunt permit, moved for an "emergency expedited ex parte preliminary injunction" enjoining the closure, but the superior court denied the motion because Manning lacked standing. In early December 2011 the Department closed the individual subsistence hunt, and three days later the Department closed the community harvest subsistence hunt.

Manning filed a summary judgment motion in June 2012, and the Department and Ahtna filed cross-motions for summary judgment. In April 2018 the superior court denied Manning's motion and granted the Department's and Ahtna's eross-motions, concluding that the Board's decision to change the Nelchina caribou hunt from a Tier II hunt to a Tier I hunt was reasonable and consistent with statute 16

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
355 P.3d 530, 2015 WL 5061353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manning-v-state-department-of-fish-game-alaska-2015.