Pacifica Marine, Inc. v. Solomon Gold, Inc.

356 P.3d 780, 2015 Alas. LEXIS 97, 2015 WL 4965989
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 21, 2015
Docket7035 S-15619
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 356 P.3d 780 (Pacifica Marine, Inc. v. Solomon Gold, Inc.) 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
Pacifica Marine, Inc. v. Solomon Gold, Inc., 356 P.3d 780, 2015 Alas. LEXIS 97, 2015 WL 4965989 (Ala. 2015).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Chief Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

A bidder for mineral leases failed to turn in a required form that would have demonstrated that he was a citizen older than 18 and thus qualified to bid. The Director of the Department of Natural Resources' Division of Mining, Land & Water later allowed the bidder to remedy the omission, but on appeal the Department's Commissioner determined that the bidder's omission was not immaterial or due to excusable inadvertence and reversed the Director. As a result, the bidder lost his leases. The bidder unsue-cessfully appealed to the superior court and now appeals to this court. Because the Commissioner's factual findings were based on substantial evidence in the record, his interpretations of regulations were not legally erroneous, and his application of law to facts was not arbitrary, unreasonable, or an abuse of discretion, we affirm. We also conclude that the superior court did not abuse its discretion by declining to order a trial de novo.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

A. Background

In 2011 the Department of Natural Resources (Department) decided to auction mining leases for 20,000 acres of tide and submerged lands offshore of Nome. Public notice was published in newspapers and on the Department's website in August,. The online notice stated that the auction was happening "[in accordance with AS 38.05.250 and the attendant regulations in 11 AAC 86 and 11 AAC 82" The notice specifically provided that "[ulnder 11 AAC 82.485 each bidder at the sale must also provide a statement of their qualifications to aequire and hold mineral rights in the State of Alaska."

Alaska Administrative Code, title 11, seetion 82.§135 provides that "[elach bidder at a sale by 'public auction shall deposit with the commissioner or other officer conducting the sale the deposit and information required by 11 AAC 82. 425-11 AAC 82.480." The referenced range of regulations includes 11 AAC 82.428, which provides that "[blefore the date of a competitive lease sale, a bidder must comply with 11 AAC 82.200 and 11 AAC 82.205." Section 82,200 limits lease ownership to persons who have reached the age of majority and corporations. 1 Section 82.205 provides that "(aln individual, in order to be qualified to apply for, obtain, or transfer an interest in a [mineral lease], shall submit to the department ... a signed, dated statement including the applicant's name, address, telephone number, and a certification that the applicant is of the age of majority, ... [and] a signed, dated statement including the applicant's name, address, telephone number, *783 and certification that the applicant is a citizen of the United States, or is an alien qualified under AS 38.05.190. 2

The online notice of the auction included links to several forms, including the outery bid form and the statement of qualifications form. The outery bid form was one page. In the middle of the page, the following appeared: .

* *IMPORTANT INFORMATION-PLEASE READ
Submit this form and the minimum bid amount in the enclosed envelope immedi-, ately following winning the bid....
[[Image here]]
You must submit at least one completed copy of the Statement of Qualification[s] form for any tract or tracts bid upon. You may attach the Statement of Qualifications form to this Bid Form, or submit it immediately prior to the auction on September 28th.

The statement of qualifications form was three pages; one was the actual form a bidder fills out to certify his age and citizenship, while the other two provided instructions. Under the heading "How To File," the instructions read, in part:

If you are submitting this statement in support of an outery bid, you must provide all documents at the time of bidding.

B. The Auction

The auction was held in Nome on September 28, 2011. Blank copies of the bid and statement of qualifications forms that had been identified in the notice were available. The sign-in sheet had three columns, one for bid number, another for bidder name and address, and a third that read "Qualification Statement Filed? (yes/no)" Two of the bidders relevant to this appeal, Scott Meister-heim and Ken Kerr, wrote "Yes" in the third column next to their names on the sign-in sheet. Mike Benchoff, the appellant here, left that space blank.

Two Department employees, Kerwin Krause and Bill Cole, were present at the auction. According to the agenda of the auction, Krause announced that "[alll bidders must sign in; submit their qualification form and receive a bidder # eard prior to bidding," and that "[ylou must have a bidder #in order to bid." Krause also explained that the outery auction would record the three highest bids for each tract, and that "[in the event that the highest bidder does not fulfill their bid obligations, the tract will be offered to the second and/or third highest bidders, successively." Although bidders were not supposed to receive a bid card until they had submitted a statement of qualifications form, Department officials did not follow this protocol, and Benchoff, Meisterheim, and Kerr all received bid cards.

Benchoff was the high bidder on ten tracts in the outery auction and the second-highest bidder on three. Meisterheim was the high bidder on two tracts and the second-highest bidder on one. Kerr was the second-highest bidder on two tracts and the third-highest bidder on four.

C. Post-Auction

Shortly after the auction the Department determined that Benchoff, Meisterheim, and Kerr had not submitted statement of. qualifications forms. They were notified. that they had been disqualified. Krause contacted Meisterheim and Benchoff and reported that "both told me they had fil[lled one out but neglected to turn it in.". The Department also held a public meeting in Nome on October 19, at which participants stated that "the auction process changed over three times, creating confusion," and that "[it seemed that the bidding process was casual with nobody responsible for checking documents and qualifications and that there was lots of confusion in the process."

D. The Director's Determination On ._ Incomplete Bids -

Director Brent Goodrum of the Department's Division of Mining, Land & Water issued the first adjudication in this case, the Director's Determination on Incomplete Bids, in October 2011. The Director's Deter *784 mination applied to the twelve tracts on which either Benchoff or Meisterheim was the high bidder, the three tracts on which Benchoff was the second-highest bidder, and one tract on which the Director mistakenly listed Benchoff as the high bidder. Kerr was the second-highest bidder on that last tract, Tract 8. The Director's Determination did not purport to apply to the other tract on which Kerr was the second-highest bidder, the four tracts on which Kerr was the third-highest bidder, or the tract on which Meist-erheim was the second-highest bidder.

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356 P.3d 780, 2015 Alas. LEXIS 97, 2015 WL 4965989, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pacifica-marine-inc-v-solomon-gold-inc-alaska-2015.