Robbins v. United States Bureau of Land Management

438 F.3d 1074, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 4384, 2006 WL 417721
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedFebruary 23, 2006
Docket05-8087
StatusPublished
Cited by80 cases

This text of 438 F.3d 1074 (Robbins v. United States Bureau of Land Management) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Robbins v. United States Bureau of Land Management, 438 F.3d 1074, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 4384, 2006 WL 417721 (10th Cir. 2006).

Opinion

STEPHEN H. ANDERSON, Circuit Judge.

Plaintiff Harvey Frank Robbins brought this suit challenging the termination by the Bureau of Land Management (“BLM”) of a Settlement Agreement that, if it had remained in effect for two years, would have required the BLM to dismiss sixteen pending administrative actions against Robbins. The district court upheld the BLM’s action. Robbins appeals, arguing, as he did below, that, in voiding the Settlement Agreement, the BLM violated his Fifth Amendment procedural due process rights. The BLM responds that Robbins’ claim is barred by sovereign immunity based on the relationship between the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. §§ 701-706, and the Tucker Act, 28 U.S.C. § 1491. For the reasons set forth below, we reject the BLM’s sovereign immunity argument but affirm the district court’s denial of Robbins’ due process claim.

BACKGROUND

Robbins is the owner of three ranch properties located in Hot Springs County, Wyoming. These three ranches include areas of private land interspersed with public land administered by the BLM. Robbins has held grazing permits, issued by the BLM, which authorize cattle grazing on some of this public land. Between 1997 and 2003, the BLM took sixteen separate administrative actions against Robbins, ten of which alleged that Robbins had engaged in “trespass” by allowing his cattle to graze on public lands for which he did not hold a permit. Robbins appealed these sixteen actions to the BLM Office of Hearings and Appeals or the Department of Interior Board of Land Appeals.

On January 15, 2003, while all sixteen administrative appeals remained pending, Robbins and the BLM executed a Settlement Agreement for the purpose of “im-prov[ing] the working relationship between” Robbins and the BLM such that they would handle any future disputes with each other “in good faith and in a spirit of mutual cooperation.” Settlement Agreement (“SA”) at 1-2, Appellant’s App. at 66-67. The Agreement provided that the parties would jointly request stays of the sixteen appeals and would subsequently jointly move to dismiss the appeals with prejudice provided that “a period of 24 consecutive months transpires after the Effective Date of th[e] Agreement without BLM having initiated a formal administrative or judicial proceeding against Robbins alleging willful trespass, the violation of any regulation, law, or BLM decision where range or resource degradation is at issue.” SA at 8, id. at 73. It further provided that Robbins and the BLM would *1078 engage in an informal dispute resolution (“IDR”) process to attempt to resolve any future disputes before pursuing any legal or administrative remedies but that the BLM “may at any time take action necessary to enforce its regulations or protect public land resources, including a decision that requires Robbins to take action that is the subject of’ a dispute between Robbins and the BLM. SA at 6, id. at 71. Among other things, the Agreement also contained the following provision:

The Parties stipulate and agree that, as soon as practical after the Effective Date of this Agreement, BLM shall conditionally transfer to Robbins the Owl Creek grazing permit. Before the BLM conditionally transfers this grazing permit to Robbins, Robbins shall first submit to the BLM an appropriate and acceptable grazing or pasture plan detailing Robbins’ contemplated uses under this conditional grazing permit. However, if at any time during the 24 months following the conditional transfer of this permit, and after first complying with the [IDR] requirement set forth in Paragraph 3, BLM initiates a formal administrative or judicial proceeding against Robbins alleging willful trespass or the violation of any regulation, law, or BLM decision where range or resource degradation is at issue (regardless of whether such a proceeding directly involves the Owl Creek permit or any other disputed matter between Robbins and the BLM), then without the need for any further consultation, action, or legal recourse, the BLM may cancel the Owl Creek permit.... In this event, Robbins shall be free to file an appropriate pleading with the Federal District Court to pursue his legal remedies in the respect to the Owl Creek permit.

SA at 9-10, id. at 74-75. However, following this twenty-four month period, provided that no IDR proceedings have been concluded adversely to Robbins, and provided that Robbins is “otherwise qualified under the then existing law, regulations, and land use plan,” Robbins “may apply” for the Owl Creek permit, and the BLM “shall issue the permit to Robbins” free of the conditions previously imposed. SA at 10, id. at 75.

In addition, the Agreement provided that, if the BLM initiated a formal proceeding against Robbins that alleged a “willful trespass or the violation of any regulation, law, or BLM decision where range or resource degradation is at issue” within twenty-four months of the effective date of the Agreement, the BLM, “without the need for any further consultation, action, or legal recourse,” may, “in BLM’s sole discretion” declare the stays on the administrative appeals to be “of no further force or legal effect.” SA at 8, id. at 73. In that event, the Agreement itself would become void.

Beginning in May 2003, four months after the Agreement was executed, the BLM on a number of occasions observed unauthorized grazing by Robbins’ cattle on allotments for which Robbins held no permit. The BLM issued one trespass notice to Robbins on December 19, 2003, relating to cattle found in three allotments on December 15 and 16, and a second notice on December 23, 2003, relating to cattle found in two allotments on December 19. The notices indicated that Robbins had allowed unauthorized grazing by his cattle in violation of 43 C.F.R. § 4140.1(b)(l)(iii). 1 Robbins protested the two notices on Decem *1079 ber 29, 2003, and met with BLM local field office officials on January 12, 2004. At that meeting, Robbins criticized the BLM’s practice of issuing notices of trespass for nonwillful violations because, in his view, it was unreasonable to expect cattle to stay on their designated allotments all the time. The BLM officials explained that they based the decision of whether to issue a notice of trespass on the circumstances of each case, and in Robbins’ case there had been a number of previous incidents in the past year involving escaped cattle where no notice of trespass had- been issued. Rdbbins expressed his concern that having trespasses on his record jeopardized his ability to keep or renew his grazing permits. Citing this concern, Robbins refused to agree to a settlement under 43 C.F.R. § 4150.3, which would have required designating the noticed trespasses as nonwillful, willful, or repeated willful. 2 In accord with the IDR provision of the Settlement Agreement, the parties therefore sought review by the BLM Director’s Office.

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438 F.3d 1074, 2006 U.S. App. LEXIS 4384, 2006 WL 417721, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/robbins-v-united-states-bureau-of-land-management-ca10-2006.