Manning v. State, Dept. of Fish & Game

420 P.3d 1270
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 22, 2018
Docket7252 S-16511/S-16531
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 420 P.3d 1270 (Manning v. State, Dept. 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, Dept. of Fish & Game, 420 P.3d 1270 (Ala. 2018).

Opinion

BOLGER, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

This appeal is the latest in a series of successive appeals brought by Kenneth Manning challenging the moose and caribou subsistence hunt regulations that govern a portion of southcentral Alaska. Manning filed *1274 this lawsuit in 2013 challenging the eligibility criteria for subsistence hunt permits, the point system for allocating Tier II subsistence permits, and the criteria for establishing nonsubsistence hunting areas. While these claims were pending in the superior court, we issued a 2015 decision resolving similar claims brought by Manning in an earlier suit. Manning then moved to amend his complaint in this case and to add an individual official as a defendant. The superior court denied both motions, concluding that amendment would be futile because all of Manning's claims would fail under our precedent. The superior court also denied the State's motion for attorney's fees, concluding that Manning was exempt from an adverse attorney's fees award under the constitutional litigant exception.

Manning appeals the denial of his motion to amend; he also raises various allegations of deprivation of due process. The State cross-appeals the denial of its motion for attorney's fees. We affirm the denial of the motion to amend because Manning failed to adequately brief-and thus forfeited-his arguments on some of the counts, and the remaining counts would have been futile. And we affirm the denial of attorney's fees to the State because none of Manning's claims are frivolous. 1

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Regulatory Background

Manning challenges several aspects of the regulations governing the moose and caribou community subsistence hunt in Game Management Unit 13 (GMU 13), an area that encompasses 23,000 square miles known as the Nelchina basin. 2 Our prior opinions have discussed at length the subsistence hunt permitting system for this area; we provide a synopsis here. 3

Alaska's subsistence statute governs the allocation of game in subsistence areas. 4 It requires the Board of Game to determine the amount of the harvestable game population in a subsistence area "that is reasonably necessary for subsistence uses" and to adopt regulations providing "a reasonable opportunity" for such subsistence uses. 5 The Board recognizes two separate patterns of subsistence use of moose and caribou within GMU 13. 6 The first pattern is a community-based pattern of subsistence hunting that originated within Ahtna Athabascan communities and was later adopted by other Alaskans. 7 The community-based pattern is characterized by use of the entire caribou or moose (except the antlers), cooperation amongst community members, and widespread sharing after the harvest. 8 The second pattern is an individual-use pattern, which is similarly widespread but, unlike the community-based pattern, does not necessarily involve cooperation and sharing. 9 Those who engage in the individual-use pattern tend to hunt primarily in the fall season, travel farther to hunt, and hunt in areas accessible from the road system.

*1275 10 And these individual hunters generally do not use the entire moose or caribou. 11

The Board manages subsistence hunting permits at either a Tier I or Tier II level. 12 It manages the hunt using Tier I permits when the game population is sufficient to satisfy all subsistence uses. 13 Generally, under Tier I, all applicants who are Alaska residents and meet the criteria of one of the two patterns of subsistence use of moose and caribou within GMU 13 will be able to obtain a permit. 14

If the harvestable portion is insufficient to satisfy all subsistence uses, the Board manages the subsistence hunt using Tier II permits. 15 Tier II permits are more limited and thus have stricter eligibility criteria. 16 The Board determines a subsistence hunter's eligibility for a Tier II permit based on (1) the user's "customary and direct dependence on the game population ... for human consumption as a mainstay of livelihood" and (2) the user's "ability ... to obtain food if subsistence use is restricted or eliminated." 17

The Board uses a multi-factor point system to assess how each applicant satisfies these criteria and to allocate Tier II permits among applicants. 18 It assesses the first criterion, the user's customary and direct dependence, based in part on "the amount of time during the year the applicant spends in the noncommercial harvesting of wild fish and game within the hunt area boundary" (the "annual hunting factor"). 19 And the Board assesses the second criterion, the user's ability to obtain food through nonsubsistence means, based on the cost of gasoline and food "in the community where most of the applicant's household's store-bought food [and gasoline were] purchased during the past year." 20

The moose and caribou subsistence hunt in GMU 13 is currently managed under a Tier I permitting system. 21 In accordance with the two recognized subsistence use patterns, the Board issues two different types of Tier I subsistence hunt permits for GMU 13: a community harvest permit and an individual hunt permit. 22 The community harvest permit is available to an applicant who is a member of a group or community of at least 25 individuals, provided that the applicant "make efforts to ensure that the ... customary and traditional use pattern ... is observed" (e.g., meat sharing and organ salvage). 23 The community harvest permit application contains a certification statement that requires a certification that an applicant will "observe the customary and traditional use patterns" of *1276 the community subsistence hunt. 24 The individual subsistence hunt permit for caribou is available annually to each eligible Alaska resident who applies. 25

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Bluebook (online)
420 P.3d 1270, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/manning-v-state-dept-of-fish-game-alaska-2018.