Owsichek v. State, Guide Licensing & Control Board

627 P.2d 616, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 469
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 24, 1981
Docket5134
StatusPublished
Cited by37 cases

This text of 627 P.2d 616 (Owsichek v. State, Guide Licensing & Control Board) 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
Owsichek v. State, Guide Licensing & Control Board, 627 P.2d 616, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 469 (Ala. 1981).

Opinions

OPINION

Before RABINOWITZ, C. J., CONNOR, BURKE and MATTHEWS, JJ., and DIMOND, Senior Justice.

DIMOND, Senior Justice.

This appeal arises from an action Kenneth Owsichek filed against the Alaska Guide Licensing and Control Board after it partially denied his 1978 application for an exclusive use guide area permit. The superior court concluded that Owsichek’s action was in effect an appeal from the administrative order of the Guide Board, and the court dismissed the action as being filed untimely. The only issue before us is whether this dismissal was proper.

Owsichek became a guide for big game hunts in the Lake Clark area in February, 1976. In November of that year, the Guide Board began issuing exclusive and joint use guide area permits. The most important criterion informally adopted by the board was that applicants had to establish use, occupancy or financial investment in the [618]*618area for three of the five years preceding their application. Owsichek applied for an exclusive use guide area permit in November, 1976, but it was denied because he did not meet this criterion.

Owsichek reapplied in 1978, when he was eligible for a temporary permit because he had then used the area for two years. The board considered his application at a hearing in 1979. It concluded that the bulk of the area for which Owsichek wanted an exclusive permit was unavailable because it had already been assigned to other guides for their exclusive use. The board decided to give Owsichek an exclusive use permit for a peripheral, undesirable area that had not been assigned to other guides. This area is inaccessible by Owsichek’s aircraft and is not near the lodge Owsichek built at Port Alsworth, Lake Clark, for use in his guide business.

On February 5, 1979, the Guide Board sent a short letter to Owsichek. It summarized the board’s decision and then stated, “If you have any questions, please do not hesitate to write or call us.” Pursuant to this suggestion, Owsichek called the board and asked what he could or should do. The board suggested that he talk to the guides with the exclusive use permits and see if they would agree to his joint use of the areas. Accordingly, Owsichek talked to the guides, but they objected to his use of their areas.

Owsichek then filed his complaint on April 6, 1979. It alleges that the Guide Board did not have authority in 1976 to issue exclusive guide area permits; only the amendment to AS 08.54.040,1 which became effective in 1978, and the regulations adopted pursuant to it,2 could provide the necessary authority. The complaint further alleges that the amended statute and the regulations adopted pursuant to it are invalid for various reasons. The relief the complaint seeks is an award of damages and a declaratory judgment that AS 08.54.-040(a)(8) and the relevant regulations are unconstitutional or, alternatively, an injunction compelling the board to issue Owsichek a guide area permit for the areas he requested in his 1978 application.

The Guide Board filed a motion to dismiss the action on the basis that it was in essence an untimely challenge to the board’s administrative proceedings concerning Ow-sichek’s 1978 application. The board argued that, pursuant to former Appellate Rule 45,3 Owsichek’s only remedy was to have appealed from its administrative order [619]*619within thirty days of the date it mailed notice of the order. Owsichek did not file his action until almost two months after the board’s letter was mailed to him. The superior court granted the Guide Board’s motion.

Owsichek appeals from the judgment dismissing his action. He argues that his complaint should not be treated as an appeal from the board’s order because it is a permissible independent action. Any applicable limitation period for the action is much longer than the thirty days within which an appeal must be brought. Thus, Owsichek claims his action was timely filed. Owsi-chek further argues that if his action must be characterized as an appeal from the board’s order, it was an abuse of discretion for the superior court to dismiss it as untimely.

I.

We first consider Owsichek’s argument that the superior court erred in treating his complaint as an appeal from the Guide Board’s decision rather than as an independent action. In Winegardner v. Greater Anchorage Area Borough, 534 P.2d 541 (Alaska 1975), we formulated a test to determine when former Appellate Rule 45 applied to an action that involved the same issues considered in an earlier administrative proceeding. We stated:

Whether Appellate Rule 45 applies is not determined by labeling a case an appeal or a new proceeding. The essential question is a functional one: does the claim before the superior court challenge a pri- or administrative decision. If the answer is affirmative, Appellate Rule 45 applies.

534 P.2d at 545 (footnote omitted).

Owsichek’s complaint sets forth three separate claims; one for declaratory relief, another for injunctive relief, and a third for damages. Using the Winegardner test, we conclude that former Appellate Rule 45 does not apply to Owsichek’s request for declarator^ relief, but does apply to the requests for injunctive relief and damages.

The declaratory relief Owsichek seeks is a judgment declaring that AS 08.54.040(a)(8) is unconstitutional because it delegates authority to the Guide Board without adequate standards, and declaring that the regulations adopted pursuant to this section are unconstitutional because they permit arbitrary action by the Guide Board. As we noted in Moore v. State, 553 P.2d 8, 29 (Alaska 1976), “[Jjudicial review from non-adjudicatory legislative action is provided in the Alaska [Administrative Procedure Act] under AS 44.62.300, which section specifically provides for declaratory relief, but not for a statute of limitations on actions.”4

Owsichek’s request for declaratory relief requires the superior court to review only the statute and regulations and not the Guide Board’s decision. Because this part of Owsichek’s action does not challenge the board’s decision, it is not governed by former Appellate Rule 45.

The same is not true of Owsichek’s request for injunctive relief. Owsichek seeks an order compelling the Guide Board to issue to him an exclusive use guide area permit for the same areas that he requested in his 1978 application. AS 44.62.560(e), which governs the judicial review of administrative orders, provides as follows:

The superior court may enjoin agency action in excess of constitutional or statutory authority at any stage of an agency proceeding. If agency action is unlawful[620]*620ly withheld or unreasonably withheld, the superior court may compel the agency to initiate action.

When recently interpreting this section in United States v. RCA Alaska ‘Communications, Inc., 597 P.2d 489, 508-09 (Alaska 1979), we held that a complaint for injunc-tive relief is distinct from an appeal of an administrative order.

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Bluebook (online)
627 P.2d 616, 1981 Alas. LEXIS 469, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/owsichek-v-state-guide-licensing-control-board-alaska-1981.