Southeast Alaska Conservation Council, Inc. v. State

665 P.2d 544, 19 ERC (BNA) 1098, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 434
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedApril 29, 1983
Docket5855
StatusPublished
Cited by56 cases

This text of 665 P.2d 544 (Southeast Alaska Conservation Council, Inc. 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
Southeast Alaska Conservation Council, Inc. v. State, 665 P.2d 544, 19 ERC (BNA) 1098, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 434 (Ala. 1983).

Opinions

OPINION

MATTHEWS, Justice.

This action by the Southeast Alaska Conservation Council (SEACC) against the Commissioner of Natural Resources and the Schnabel Lumber Company (Schnabel) involves constitutional and statutory challenges to a timber sale contract entered into between the Commissioner on the State’s behalf and Schnabel on August 2, 1979. The trial court found for the defendants on the merits and awarded Schnabel attorney’s fees against SEACC. SEACC appeals both rulings. We affirm on the merits but reverse the award of attorney’s fees.

On June 8,1979, pursuant to Alaska law,1 the Commissioner adopted the Haines-Skag-[546]*546way Area Land Use Plan “as policy of the Department of Natural Resources for state lands within the planning area.” The Plan, which covers some 400,000 acres of state-owned or selected land, consists of management guidelines and land classifications that apply to state land and its resources.2 It was prepared by the Planning and Classification section of the Department of Natural Resources “with the assistance of resource persons, economic and planning consultants and representatives from the Departments of Fish and Game and Marine Transportation and Natural Resource Divisions of Forest Land and Water Management, Parks, and Minerals and Energy Management” and only after several series of public meetings were held in Haines, Skagway and Juneau.

The Plan estimates that there are 84,000 acres of state-owned commercial forest land within the Plan area, not all of which are open to timber harvest. The Plan designates 18 management units classified as “Forest Land” that

will be managed for multiple use of the forest resources, including commercial timber harvesting. Logging must be conducted in a manner consistent with maintenance of soil stability and productivity, watershed, fish, wildlife, subsistence, recreation, and scenic values, and regeneration of the timber resources. Where necessary, reforestation practices will be used.

Within these 18 management units, the Plan states that there are 54,008 acres of state-owned harvestable commercial spruce and hemlock, after deducting estimated retention factors for slopes over 70%, and wildlife and fishery habitat.3 In addition, the Plan states that on state-selected lands open to timber harvest there are 16,913 acres of harvestable commercial spruce and hemlock.4 The Plan estimates that an annual allowable timber cut of 9 to 11 million board feet (mmbf) for state-owned lands, or 12 to 14 mmbf if state-selected lands are included, would be consistent with its provisions.5

On August 2,1979, on behalf of the State the Commissioner entered into a long-term timber sale contract with Schnabel pursuant to AS 38.05.118.6 The contract requires [547]*547Schnabel to reopen and maintain its manufacturing facility in Haines, where all of the timber purchased must be processed. The State in turn must make available to Schnabel 10.2 mmbf (Puget Sound Scale)7 of merchantable spruce and hemlock net sawlog timber per year from the “Haines Timber Unit” for a period of 15 years. If state selected lands later do not become tentatively approved or patented, the contract volume will be redetermined and may be set as low as 8.2 mmbf per year.8

The contract provides that the sale shall be managed in accordance with the Plan’s provisions. The contract specifically states that “land reserved from timber harvest under the 1979 Haines Land Use Plan ... is not available for harvest during the term of this contract.” Existing state timber sale regulations, subsequently promulgated timber sale regulations, and State Forest Resources and Practices Act regulations are made part of the contract. Under contract section 1(c), “[t]he State may reserve from cutting strips and blocks of timber that (a) have or may subsequently develop special scenic value in connection with water courses, recreation sites and highways, or (b) cannot be logged without violating” certain Alaska statutes that protect natural resources.9 Such reservations may include areas “requiring special forest practices in order that biological minimums necessary to sustain fish, wildlife, soils, water or other fundamental renewable resources are observed since the State is under an obligation to provide for a sustained yield of all renewable resources.... ” In a protocol appended to the contract, the parties recognize that forest practices may change during the contract term to insure that timber harvest and wildlife survival will be compatible.10

Rather than designating specific areas in which logging will occur, the contract states that the State is in the process of preparing a map which, when agreed to by the parties, shall become part of the contract. That map will show where logging activities are to be conducted during the initial operating period of the contract. The contract then calls for five year operating periods for which “the Purchaser may nominate and the State shall determine the areas within which cutting shall be conducted.... ” Schnabel must submit an annual operations plan to the State for review and approval. With respect to the proposed operations, the State is required to furnish Schnabel with a map “showing locations of work.”

Seven days after the contract was signed, SEACC filed an appeal with the Commissioner pursuant to AS 41.17.140(a)11 asserting that the contract was illegal on numerous grounds. The Commissioner declined to hold a hearing, however, stating that since the challenged administrative action of entering into the contract was taken pursuant to AS 38.05.110-120, there was no jurisdiction for SEACC’s appeal. SEACC then filed a complaint against the Commissioner [548]*548and Schnabel for declaratory and injunctive relief in the superior court in Juneau.

The basic issue at the trial was whether the contract volume of 10.2 mmbf per year was arrived at in violation of Alaska constitutional and statutory requirements that timber be harvested on a sustained yield basis.12 SEACC directed its case principally at an allowable cut calculation13 performed by the Haines Area Forester, Gary Saupe. Mr. Saupe had calculated that the Haines area could sustain harvesting of 11.9 to 13.9 mmbf per year (Scribner Scale), which roughly equals 10.1 to 11.8 mmbf (Puget Sound Scale).14

In its Memorandum of Decision the trial court noted that SEACC’s experts lacked Gary Saupe’s “years of experience” in the Haines area. The court found that Saupe’s allowable cut calculation was “if anything on the conservative side.” Noting that Sa-upe’s calculations were not the only factors considered by the Department in setting the timber sale volume,15 the court concluded that “[t]he decision made by the Commissioner, acting through his duly authorized representatives, was neither unreasonable, arbitrary or capricious.”16 Accordingly, on December 31, 1980, the trial court entered judgment against SEACC and in favor of the State and Schnabel. The court ordered SEACC to reimburse Schnabel for attorney’s fees and costs of $25,058.74. This appeal followed.

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Bluebook (online)
665 P.2d 544, 19 ERC (BNA) 1098, 1983 Alas. LEXIS 434, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southeast-alaska-conservation-council-inc-v-state-alaska-1983.