South Carolina Department of Natural Resources v. McDonald

626 S.E.2d 816, 367 S.C. 531, 2006 S.C. App. LEXIS 31
CourtCourt of Appeals of South Carolina
DecidedFebruary 13, 2006
Docket4081
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 626 S.E.2d 816 (South Carolina Department of Natural Resources v. McDonald) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of South Carolina primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
South Carolina Department of Natural Resources v. McDonald, 626 S.E.2d 816, 367 S.C. 531, 2006 S.C. App. LEXIS 31 (S.C. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

GOOLSBY, J.:

Andy McDonald, Jason Martin, and Jonathan Corn (Defendants) were convicted in magistrate’s court of hunting deer over bait in Abbeville County. The circuit court affirmed the convictions, rejecting Defendants’ argument that the regulation they allegedly violated was ineffective on the date in question because the statute on which it was based had been repealed. Defendants appeal to this court. We reverse. 1

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

On May 26, 1995, Regulation 2.9 was published in Volume 19, Issue 5 of the South Carolina State Register. The South Carolina Wildlife and Marine Resources Department (now the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources) enacted Regulation 2.9 as part of 27 S.C.Code Ann. Regs. 123-40 *533 (1982). Specifically, Regulation 2.9 prohibits (1) “baiting or hunting over a baited area or taking wildlife over a baited area” on all wildlife management area lands 2 ; and (2) baiting, hunting over bait, or taking over bait “Big Game” on “other lands within the Central Piedmont, Western Piedmont and Mountain Hunt Units.” 3

When the Department promulgated Regulation 2.9, it incorrectly cited only South Carolina Code section 50-9-150 as the enabling statutory authority. Section 50-9-150 granted the Department authority to prescribe methods for taking game; however, this authority was limited to activity on wildlife management areas. 4 Although South Carolina Code section 50-11-310 authorized the Department to regulate deer hunting on land other than wildlife management areas, 5 the Department did not cite this section when it promulgated Regulation 2.9.

The time limit to challenge the procedural validity of Regulation 2.9 expired without incident on May 26, 1996. 6 On May 30, 1996, the South Carolina General Assembly passed Act 372, which amended Chapter 9 of Title 50 of the South Carolina Code. 7 Although section 50-9-150 was not listed among the statutes expressly repealed by Act 372, the legislature significantly revised many of its provisions and ineorpo *534 rated them elsewhere within Title 50. 8 Act 372 took effect July 1,1996. 9

On November 10, 2001, Eddie Monts, an officer with the South Carolina Department of Natural Resources observed Defendants hunting deer over bait in Abbeville County. Monts arrested Defendants and charged them under South Carolina Code section 50-11-350 for violating Regulation 2.9. 10 From the briefs and record on appeal, it appears Defendants were not hunting in a wildlife management area when Monts apprehended them.

After denying a motion by Defendants to dismiss the charges for lack of subject matter jurisdiction, the magistrate conducted a trial and convicted Defendants as charged. Defendants appealed to the Court of Common Pleas for Abbeville County, which heard the matter on March 4, 2004. On April 15, 2004, the circuit court issued an opinion affirming the convictions.

LAW/ANALYSIS

The dispositive issue in this appeal is whether the repeal of a statute given as the authority for the promulgation of an administrative regulation bars a prosecution for a violation of that regulation. We hold it does, notwithstanding the presence of other statutory authority that arguably could have supported the regulation but was not cited when the agency promulgated the regulation.

“An administrative agency has only such powers as have been conferred by law and must act within the authority granted for that purpose.” 11 With regard to rulemaking, the *535 South Carolina Administrative Procedures Act requires an agency to give notice of the proposed action in the State Register 12 and to include in the notice “the agency’s statutory authority for promulgating the regulation.” 13

“The general rule is that the repeal of a statute operates retrospectively, and has the effect of blotting it out as completely as if it had never existed and of putting an end to all proceedings under it.” 14 Although an administrative agency may have the power to enforce a repealed statute, this authority exists only if there is an applicable savings clause and the violation at issue precedes the expiration date of the statute. 15

The circuit court characterized the Department’s failure to list the correct statutory authority for Regulation 2.9 as “merely a procedural error” and held that, under South Carolina Code section l-23-110(D), a challenge had to have been made by May 26,1996, one year after the effective date of the regulation. 16 The court concluded that “the statute of limitations has run on [Regulation 2.9]” and that “[bjecause statutory authority for the regulation continued to exist after the repeal of S.C.Code § 50-9-150, the regulation remained in force.”

We find the circuit court’s analysis troubling for a number of reasons.

Initially, we had some concern as to whether section 50-9-150 had in fact been repealed. Although the 2005 supplement to Title 50 of the South Carolina Code indicates section 50-9-150 had been “Repealed by 1996 Act No. 372, § 2, eff. July 1, 1996,” it was not among those statutes expressly repealed by this legislation, all of which were listed in section 5 of Act 372. *536 In addition, the general presumption against the legislative intention to repeal a statute when express terms of repeal are not used 17 and the fact that the General Assembly has not yet adopted the 2004 supplement 18 have prompted us to review the history of section 50-9-150 for the limited purpose of determining whether, in the present appeal, it can support Defendants’ convictions.

Notwithstanding our initial concern, we hold that, for the purpose of deciding this appeal, it was correct to rely on the premise that section 50-9-150 had been repealed, at least to the extent that this statute cannot support the convictions at issue. The preamble to section 2 of Act 372, entitled “Hunting, fishing, and trapping licenses revised,” states that the purpose of the section is to “further amend[ ]” Chapter 9, Title 50 of the South Carolina Code to read in a particular way, rather than to simply add or delete certain provisions. 19

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626 S.E.2d 816, 367 S.C. 531, 2006 S.C. App. LEXIS 31, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/south-carolina-department-of-natural-resources-v-mcdonald-scctapp-2006.