Payton v. State

938 P.2d 1036, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 81, 1997 WL 314432
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 1997
DocketS-7557
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 938 P.2d 1036 (Payton v. State) 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
Payton v. State, 938 P.2d 1036, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 81, 1997 WL 314432 (Ala. 1997).

Opinion

OPINION

FABE, Justice.

I. INTRODUCTION

Tom and Diane Payton seek to have a subsistence fishery created in the upper Yentna River area. The Board of Fisheries (Board) denied the Paytons’ repeated proposals for such a fishery, and the Paytons appealed to the superior court. The superior court granted summary judgment against the Paytons, concluding that (1) the Board correctly interpreted statutory and regulatory provisions relating to subsistence and (2) there was ample evidentiary support for the Board’s finding that current uses of salmon in the upper Yentna River area were not sufficiently customary and traditional to qualify as subsistence uses. On appeal, the Paytons challenge both of these conclusions. We reverse the superior court’s decision with directions to remand this case to the Board for further proceedings.

II. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

The Paytons moved to Skwentna near the upper Yentna River in 1975. Since then, they have submitted to the Board several proposed regulations that would establish a subsistence fishery in the upper Yentna River area.

The Board considered the Paytons’ first proposal, Proposal 405, at its March 1988 meeting. During its deliberations, the Board recognized that to consider Proposal 405, it had to determine whether current uses of salmon in the upper Yentna River area were *1038 “customary and traditional.” 1 Therefore, it proceeded to apply the criteria for identifying customary and traditional subsistence uses set forth in a regulation of the Joint Boards of Fisheries and Game. 2 The Board heard reports and statements from several individuals. Near the end of this testimony, Board members expressed particular interest in how long residents of the Skwentna area had been taking salmon and whether current residents’ methods of handling, preparing, and sharing salmon reflected knowledge that had been handed down by prior generations.

The Board learned that the population of the upper Yentna River area had fluctuated radically throughout history. During the 19th century “several hundred” Alaska Natives occupied villages in the area. However, following the departure of many residents and the onslaught of a devastating influenza epidemic, the population dwindled. The area continued to experience extreme population swings until the 1980s, when the population steadily rose to approximately 150-200 persons in 1987.

Due to this fluctuation, research presented to the Board by the Division of Subsistence indicated that 20% of the population of the upper Yentna River area had been there for more than twenty years, while 63.6% had been there less than ten years. The research also showed that the average length of residency in the area was about eight years. However, testimony revealed that this population study did not reflect “a number of households” that had been there since the 1920s and 1930s but whose members had died or moved away just prior to the study.

The Board also learned that historically the Alaska Native residents of the area dried, smoked, and fermented salmon and that “much of the fish and game harvest taking place in the area today [is] preserved by methods not requiring electricity such as smoking, canning, jarring, [and] freezing out of doors.” Upon specific inquiry by the Board, the division compared preservation methods in the upper Yentna River area to those in Tyonek, English Bay, and Port Graham, where the Board had already established subsistence fisheries. It explained that people in those villages smoke, dry, and can salmon as well as freeze it in electric freezers.

The Board received little testimony about the extent to which upper Yentna River area residents shared salmon. The division reported that “we know that sharing and distribution of resources is common, mostly at the *1039 sub-community level.” The division explained that several households in the upper Yentna River area share salmon with each other. However, it apparently did not have sufficient information to respond to the Board’s questions about whether the pattern of sharing in Tyonek, English Bay, and Port Graham was significantly different.

Based upon this testimony, the Board concluded that there was insufficient evidence that current uses of upper Yentna River area salmon were customary and traditional. Although the Board did not make written findings in March 1988, some members orally expressed why they voted the way they did. The Chair, Gary Slaven, explained:

I don’t hear any talk of traditional fish camps, smoke house areas, traditional fishing areas. I note that many of these communities from the information we’ve been given are land lottery communities which aren’t even the same communities that people lived in prior to the 1950’s. I note that the population dynamics of the area seem to be very mobile and it seems to be a transient population that comes and goes so I can’t — I can’t find anywhere in the information I’ve been given or in the public testimony that — that there’s any sort of large proportion of people who’ve lived here for long enough to even have established a generation to generation customary and traditional use, and for those reasons and for the reasons that the population is increasing dramatically there since 1980 ... I just can’t vote to find that there are customary and traditional use of the fish stocks by the people....

Other members appeared to agree with Sla-ven, and all of them voted against a motion to find that the uses were customary and traditional. 3

After the Board rejected Proposal 405, the Paytons submitted a second proposal, Proposal 7, which the Board considered in December 1988. The first individual to testify, Dr. Jim Fall of the Division of Subsistence, indicated that Proposal 7 was “virtually iden-tieal” to Proposal 405. He stated that the division possessed no research or data that had not already been presented to the Board during the March 1988 hearings relating to Proposal 405.

The "Board agreed that Proposal 7 was substantially similar to Proposal 405 and rejected the proposal for the same reasons. The Board subsequently drafted written findings to record its basis for rejecting the proposals. These written findings contained eight items, each of which related to one of the eight criteria for determining whether uses of salmon are “customary and traditional.” Of particular relevance to this case, the Board found that

(1) although there was evidence that the area in question had a long-term use pattern by a variety of people, that pattern has been significantly interrupted as different groups of people moved in and out of the area....
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(5) public testimony and information from the Subsistence Division indicated that most people can, smoke, or freeze salmon. There is ho evidence that local fishermen split or dry salmon, a common practice in other subsistence fisheries in the Cook Inlet region.

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Bluebook (online)
938 P.2d 1036, 1997 Alas. LEXIS 81, 1997 WL 314432, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/payton-v-state-alaska-1997.