Nebraska v. Rural Electrification Administration

23 F.3d 1336
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit
DecidedMay 4, 1994
DocketNo. 93-2084
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 23 F.3d 1336 (Nebraska v. Rural Electrification Administration) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Eighth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nebraska v. Rural Electrification Administration, 23 F.3d 1336 (8th Cir. 1994).

Opinion

HEANEY, Senior Circuit Judge.

The State of Nebraska petitioned the district court to limit the participation of the Platte River Whooping Crane Maintenance Trust in various environmental litigation. The district court denied the petition, finding that the Trustees were acting within the scope of their authority under the trust instrument. We affirm.

The Platte River Whooping Crane Maintenance Trust was established pursuant to a 1978 settlement agreement following litigation between the State of Nebraska and the Basin Electric Power Cooperative of Bismarck, North Dakota, the project manager of [1338]*1338the Missouri Basin Power Project.1 The purpose of the Trust is to “financ[e] programs, activities, and acquisitions to protect and maintain the migratory bird habitat in the so-called Big Bend area of the Platte River between Overton and Chapman, Nebraska.” Trust Declaration, § II. Such “programs, activities, and acquisitions ... shall be formulated to protect and maintain, consistent with the provisions hereof, the physical, hydrological, and biological integrity of the Big Bend area so that it may continue to function as- a life-support system for the whooping crane and other migratory species which utilize it.” Id. The Trust now has title to 7,000 acres of Platte River riverbed and riparian land and conservation easements over an additional 1,600 acres.

The Trust is administered by three Trustees, one each designated by the Missouri Basin Power Project, the Governor of Nebraska, and the National Wildlife Federation. Each Trustee may be removed at any time by the organization or person who designated him or her. Id. § III. The Trustees must establish and implement a written habitat monitoring plan and regularly distribute monitoring reports to the public. Id. § IV(A)(1). Other “projects and activities which the Trustee may fund include, but are not limited to, management of the critical crane habitat, the acquisition of land or interests in land, the conduct of scientific studies of Whooping Cranes and of critical crane habitat on the Platte River, as well as the acquisition of all types of rights in or to water or water storage.” Id.

Among the operational prohibitions of the Trust is the directive that “[n]o substantial part of the activities of this Trust shall be the carrying on of propaganda, or otherwise attempting to influence legislation. No part of the activities of the Trust shall be the participation in, or intervention in (including the publication or distribution of statements) any political campaign on behalf of any candidate for public office, or in any litigation other than litigation directly related to the administration of the Trust.” Id. § IV(C)(2).

In 1992 two' corn growers associations wrote letters to the Nebraska Governor alleging possible violations of the Trust Declaration, including impermissible litigation and lobbying. After hearing the Trust’s response and investigating the matter, the Attorney General of Nebraska found no violation of the prohibition on lobbying activities. The Attorney General concluded, however, that the Trust’s intervention in Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (FERC) relicensing proceedings for Kingsley Dam (FERC Project No. 1417) and its participation in Nebraska v. Wyoming2 violated the Trust Declaration and should cease immediately. The State also objected to the Trust’s intervention in relicensing proceedings for the North Platte/Keystone Diversion Dam Project (FERC Project No. 1835). In response to the Trust’s continued involvement in the FERC and Nebraska v. Wyoming proceedings, the State filed a petition in district court requesting an interpretation of the Trust Declaration that would prohibit the Trust from participating in’ those proceedings. The State now appeals the denial of that petition.

Resolution of this dispute requires an interpretation of the Trust Declaration in light of Nebraska law, which governs this trust instrument. See Trust Declaration, § X. We review de novo the district court’s determination that the Trustees did not exceed the scope of their powers under the trust instrument and Nebraska law. See In re Trust of Criss, 213 Neb. 379, 329 N.W.2d 842, [1339]*1339848 (1983) (construing de novo a trust instrument). We thus take a fresh look at whether the Trust’s involvement in litigation was proper under the Trust Declaration.

The State of Nebraska asserts that the Trust’s participation in the FERC proceedings and Nebraska v. Wyoming violates the Trust Declaration’s prohibition on' litigation that is not “directly related to the administration of the Trust.” Although the State suggested in its brief that this clause should be construed to permit only litigation involving the internal workings of the Trust, at oral argument the State conceded that the clause necessarily permits litigation directly affecting the powers and duties of the Trustees — but not the broad purposes of the Trust.

The Trustees’ powers and duties are defined to include the following:

The projects and activities which the Trustee may fund include, but are not limited to, management of the critical crane habitat, the acquisition of land or interests in land, the conduct of scientific studies of Whooping Cranes and of critical crane habitat on the Elatte River, as well as the acquisition of all types of rights in or to water or water storage..

Trust Declaration, § IV(A)(1). Acting pursuant to these powers, the Trustees have acquired land and undertaken habitat studies and management activities in the Big Bend area. Thus, the State concedes, as it must, that litigation seeking to preserve water flows into the Big Bend habitat is “directly related to the administration of the Trust.” The State argues, however, that the Trustees are impermissibly seeking to enhance water flows by engaging in “aggressive, policy-oriented litigation.” Like the district court, we conclude this is a distinction without a difference. In our view, participation in litigation that bears directly on the supply of water flowing to the critical crane habitat is within the powers and duties of the Trustees and directly related to the administration of the Trust.

We first examine the nature of the Trust’s involvement in the two FERC relicensing proceedings. The fifty-year licenses for projects 1417 and 1835 were due to expire in 1987. In 1984 the operators submitted relicense applications to FERC, which found them deficient. Platte River Whooping Crane Critical Habitat Maintenance Trust v. FERC, 876 F.2d 109, 111 (D.C.Cir.1989). Upon expiration in 1987, the two projects were able to receive interim annual licenses to operate pending completion of the formal relicensing process. See generally 16 U.S.C. § 808(a). In May 1987 the Trust petitioned FERC to impose environmental protection conditions on those annual licenses. Platte River Whooping Crane, 876 F.2d at 112.

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23 F.3d 1336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nebraska-v-rural-electrification-administration-ca8-1994.