Shepherd v. State, Department of Fish & Game

897 P.2d 33, 1995 Alas. LEXIS 56
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedMay 19, 1995
DocketS-5668, S-5698
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 897 P.2d 33 (Shepherd v. State, Department of Fish & Game) 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
Shepherd v. State, Department of Fish & Game, 897 P.2d 33, 1995 Alas. LEXIS 56 (Ala. 1995).

Opinions

OPINION

MOORE, Chief Justice.

This case involves a challenge to the constitutionality of AS 16.05.255(d), which states that regulations adopted by the Alaska Board of Game (the Board) “must provide that ... the taking of moose, deer, elk, and caribou by residents for personal or family consumption has preference over taking by nonresidents.” Pursuant to this statute, the Board adopted regulations restricting the hunting of moose by nonresidents in certain game management units. Two Alaska resident big game guides challenged the constitutionality of AS 16.05.255(d) and its related regulations under the state and federal constitutions. One of the guides, Peter Shepherd, now appeals the superior court’s decision upholding these provisions. Shepherd also appeals the superior court’s resolution of certain nonconstitutional aspects of the suit. Finally, both Shepherd and the State appeal the superior court’s conclusion that neither side was a prevailing party for attorney’s fees purposes. We affirm the superior court’s decision in its entirety except on the issue of attorney’s fees.

I. FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Peter Shepherd and Jim Bailey do business as big game hunting guides, catering principally to nonresident moose hunters. Shepherd operates primarily in Game Management Unit (GMU) 19B, while Bailey conducts a substantial amount of his guiding business in GMU 13. Both Shepherd and Bailey are Alaska residents.

At a three-day meeting in July 1990, the Board adopted a number of emergency regulations restricting the hunting of moose in certain GMUs, including units 13 and 19B. In particular, the Board closed GMU 13 to moose hunting by nonresidents and established a fifty-inch antler limitation on the taking of moose by nonresidents in GMU 19B.

According to the State, these changes were prompted by this court’s holding in McDowell v. State, 785 P.2d 1 (Alaska 1989) (holding unconstitutional the rural resident preference provisions of Alaska’s former subsistence law), and by depressed moose populations after the harsh winter of 1989-90. Anticipating increased subsistence hunting pressure on certain moose populations because the numbers of potential subsistence hunters had been increased as a consequence of McDowell, the Board concluded that these moose populations could not sustain the demand for moose by both residents and nonresidents.

The Board subsequently authorized the Commissioner of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game to make these emergency [36]*36regulations permanent. See AS 16.05.270 (providing that the Board may delegate its authority to adopt regulations to the Commissioner). In November 1990 the Commissioner exercised this delegated authority and adopted permanent regulations identical to the emergency regulations adopted by the Board in August 1990. At its spring 1991 meeting, the Board then adopted regulations substantially identical to those adopted by the Commissioner.1

In August 1990 Shepherd filed suit, challenging the validity of the emergency regulations.2 He alleged that the regulations had been “automatically repealed” when the Board failed to publish notice of the regulations within ten days of their adoption as required under AS 44.62.250. Shepherd also alleged that the regulations “and the statutes upon which they are apparently based, AS 16.05.255(d) and AS 16.10.256,” invidiously discriminated between Alaska residents and nonresidents and between the guides of residents and the guides of nonresidents, thereby violating, inter alia, the Privileges and Immunities Clause, the Commerce Clause, and the Equal Protection Clause of the United States Constitution. Shepherd and Bailey (the guides) later amended their complaint to include allegations that the regulations and statutes violated the Equal Protection and Equal Application Clauses of the Alaska Constitution.

After filing suit, the guides moved for a preliminary injunction prohibiting enforcement of the emergency regulations. The superior court denied the motion. Subsequently, the guides moved for partial summary judgment on their claim that the emergency regulations were improperly noticed and therefore automatically repealed under AS 44.62.250. The superior court granted this motion.

The guides then filed a second motion for partial summary judgment, requesting that the court declare that AS 16.05.255(d) violated the federal and state constitutions. The motion also requested that the court declare that the regulations in effect prior to the Board’s July 1990 meeting were still in effect on the grounds that the permanent regulations had not been properly adopted. The State opposed the motion and filed a cross-motion for summary judgment dismissing the constitutional claims. The State also moved to strike the guides’ arguments concerning the permanent regulations as being outside the scope of the guides’ complaint. The court granted this latter motion. The guides immediately amended their complaint to encompass the new claim.

In June 1992 the superior court denied the guides’ second motion for partial summary judgment and granted the State’s cross-motion for summary judgment. Ruling from the bench, the court dismissed the Commerce Clause claim, finding that unharvested game is not an article of interstate commerce and that the statute’s impact on the guides’ interstate business was de minimus. The court also dismissed the guides’ privileges and immunities challenge, finding that the guides had insufficient standing to assert the claim and that, in any event, the United States Supreme Court decision in Baldwin v. Fish & Game Commission, 436 U.S. 371, 98 S.Ct., 1852, 56 L.Ed.2d 354 (1978), was dis-positive of the claim.

Applying minimal rational basis scrutiny, the court also dismissed the federal equal protection challenge. The court found that the statute’s preference for personal and consumptive use over trophy use was a legitimate state goal. The court further concluded that the statute was rationally related to that goal. Finally, the court concluded that the statute did not violate Alaska’s Equal Protection Clause. In so holding, the court applied the sliding scale of scrutiny set forth in State v. Anthony, 810 P.2d 155 (Alaska 1991).

Finally the court denied the guides’ motion for summary judgment with respect to the permanent regulations adopted subsequent to the July 1990 meeting of the Board. The [37]*37court ruled that the guides had presented no evidence to challenge the presumption of validity of the regulations. The court further noted that summary judgment was improper, since “the State would have an opportunity to fill in some of the missing facts as to notice public hearing [sic] and whether or not the commissioner’s authority had expired.”

The guides subsequently filed a third motion for partial summary judgment, alleging that the emergency regulations had never been validly re-adopted as permanent regulations. The State then filed its third cross-motion for summary judgment. In October 1992 the court granted the State’s motion, finding that the guides had presented no evidence to overcome the presumption of validity.

The parties then entered into a stipulation, with the court’s approval, dismissing with prejudice all of the guides’ remaining claims.

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Bluebook (online)
897 P.2d 33, 1995 Alas. LEXIS 56, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/shepherd-v-state-department-of-fish-game-alaska-1995.