Schwenke v. Secretary of the Interior

720 F.2d 571
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedOctober 14, 1983
DocketNos. 82-3132, 82-3175
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 720 F.2d 571 (Schwenke v. Secretary of the Interior) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Schwenke v. Secretary of the Interior, 720 F.2d 571 (9th Cir. 1983).

Opinion

NORRIS, Circuit Judge.

This case involves a series of executive orders and statutes dealing with livestock grazing and wildlife preservation on the Charles M. Russell National Wildlife Range (Russell Range or Range), an area of approximately 823,456 acres in northeastern Montana owned by the United States. We are called upon first to decide the relative priorities of wildlife and livestock in access to the natural forage resources of the Range. Second, we must decide whether livestock grazing on the Russell Range is to be administered under the Taylor Grazing Act or the National Wildlife Refuge System Administration Act (Wildlife Refuge Act).

I

Plaintiffs are ranchers holding permits for grazing on the Russell Range. They brought this action against the Secretary of the Interior and officials of the Department of the Interior’s Fish and Wildlife Service-seeking a declaratory judgment that livestock grazing on the Russell Range should be administered under the Taylor Grazing Act, rather than the Wildlife Refuge Act, as a use entitled to equal status with wildlife preservation, and that the Fish and Wildlife Service had unlawfully subordinated livestock grazing on the Russell Range to wildlife protection.

The district court granted partial summary judgment in favor of the ranchers,1 holding that livestock grazing and wildlife conservation are of coequal priority and that grazing is to be administered under the Taylor Grazing Act. On appeal, the Secretary argues that the land constituting the Russell Range was set aside by the government in Í936 primarily for wildlife preservation and that livestock grazing was to be only an incidental use. Alternatively, the Secretary argues that if the government ever intended to accord livestock grazing and wildlife protection equal status, Congress changed that priority scheme by legislation passed in 1976. Finally, the Secretary contends that legislation passed by Congress in 1976 mandates that grazing on the Russell Range be administered under the Wildlife Refuge Act, not the Taylor Grazing Act.

II

The first important legislation dealing with livestock grazing in the Western States was the Taylor Grazing Act, ch. 865, 48 Stat. 1269 (codified as amended at 43 U.S.C. § 315 (Supp. V 1981)), enacted in 1934. The Act authorized the Secretary of the Interior “in his discretion, by order to establish grazing districts ... [on public lands], which ... in his opinion are chiefly valuable for grazing and raising forage crops.” 43 U.S.C. § 315. The Act also established a system for administering the grazing districts, through the issuance of grazing permits and the collection of graz[573]*573ing fees. Shortly after passage of the Act, several grazing districts were created under the Taylor Grazing Act, including districts on the land that later became the Russell Range.2

In 1936, two years after passage of the Taylor Grazing Act, President Roosevelt issued Executive Order No. 7509, 3 C.F.R. 227 (1936). That order contained several important provisions. First, it created the Fort Peck Game Range on the land that is now the Charles M. Russell Range and ordered that the Range was to be “withdrawn from settlement, location, sale or entry and reserved and set apart for the conservation and development of natural wildlife resources and for the protection and improvement of public grazing land and natural forage resources.” Id.

Second, E.O. 7509 directed that conservation and development of wildlife on the Range were to be under the joint jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Interior and the Secretary of Agriculture and that grazing and natural forage resources on the Range were to be under the sole jurisdiction of the Secretary of the Interior.3

Third, the order specifically provided for a wildlife use. Since it is this part of E.O. 7509 that is at the heart of the present controversy, we set it out in full:

[T]he natural forage resources [on the Range] shall be first utilized for the purpose of sustaining in a healthy condition a maximum of four hundred thousand (400,000) sharptail grouse, and one thousand five hundred (1,500) antelope, the primary species, and such nonpredatory secondary species in such numbers as may be necessary to maintain a balanced wildlife population, but in no case shall the consumption of forage by the combined population of the wildlife species be allowed to increase the burden of the range dedicated to the primary species.

Id. at 228

Finally, the order provided that “all the forage resources within this range or preserve shall be available, except as herein otherwise provided with respect to wildlife, for domestic livestock” under rules and regulations promulgated by the Secretary of the Interior under the authority of the Taylor Grazing Act. Id.

E.O. 7509 can be read in several ways. It is possible, as the Secretary argues, to read the order as establishing an absolute priority for wildlife over livestock. E.O. 7509 specifically provides that “the natural forage resources [of the Russell Range] shall be first utilized” for the purpose of maintaining primary and nonpredatory secondary species of wildlife in such numbers as [574]*574necessary to maintain a balanced wildlife population. While forage resources within the Range are available for livestock grazing, they are available “except as ... otherwise provided [in the order] with respect to wildlife.” The “first utilized” language applies to (1) primary species; (2) secondary species; and (3) a balanced wildlife population. It is not unreasonable to argue that the numbers set out in the order establish priority among types of wildlife and that the first utilized language, referring as it does to both “primary” and “secondary species,” establishes an absolute priority for wildlife over livestock.

It is also possible to read E.O. 7509, as do the ranchers, as making no distinction between wildlife and livestock in terms of access to the resources of the Range. The preamble to E.O. 7509 provides that the Range is withdrawn from settlement and sale “for the conservation and development of natural wildlife resources' and for the protection and improvement of public grazing lands and natural forage resources.” Id. at 227. This passage, at least, does not distinguish between wildlife and livestock. Moreover, it is undisputed that from 1936 until 1976, the Bureau of Land Management and the Fish and Wildlife Service administered the Russell Range on the premise that wildlife and livestock had equal priority in access to the resources of the Range.

Neither the ranchers’ nor the Secretary’s position, however, is ultimately convincing. The ranchers’ position — that grazing and wildlife preservation enjoy equal status on the Range — altogether ignores the language commanding that the resources of the Range shall be “first utilized” for the support of certain types of wildlife. The argument of the Secretary — that wildlife has absolute priority on the Range — ignores forty years of administration of the Range by the Fish and Wildlife Service and the Bureau of Land Management.4

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720 F.2d 571, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schwenke-v-secretary-of-the-interior-ca9-1983.