State v. A. J. Industries, Inc.

397 P.2d 280, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 257
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 9, 1964
Docket477
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 397 P.2d 280 (State v. A. J. Industries, Inc.) 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
State v. A. J. Industries, Inc., 397 P.2d 280, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 257 (Ala. 1964).

Opinion

NESBETT, Chief Justice.

The question to be decided is whether the appellee is entitled to a preference right from the State of Alaska to obtain title to approximately 98.76 acres of real property located in Gastineau Channel near Juneau, Alaska. The property was created over a period of twenty-five years by the dumping of rock and tailings on the tidal and submerged lands of the channel, the rock and tailings being produced by appel-lee’s nearby mining operation.

From 1914 until the declining price of gold forced a closure of the mine in 1944, appellee and its predecessor engaged in a hard rock gold mining operation on and in a mountain which rises steeply from the shoreline of Gastineau Channel adjacent to the land in question.

The low gold content of the ore required an operation of great magnitude. It therefore became necessary to find a means of ■disposing of as much as thirteen thousand tons per day of crushed rock and mill tail-ings. Disposal was accomplished over the years by dumping the rock and tailings on the tidelands adjacent to the mining property. After the tidelands had been filled, the rock disposal was then dumped onto the submerged lands under Gastineau Channel where the water depth ranged from 140 feet upward. Tide and submerged land dumping was done under the authority of permits from the War Department which supervised the disposal to some extent and renewed the permits from time to time. In time a considerable acreage of real property was created well above high water which came to be in some demand for industrial uses.

Since the decision in this case will be determined to a large extent by the uses made of the property after its creation, we shall recount the facts pertaining to usage in some detail.

In 1937 appellee leased portions of the property to Union Oil Company for docking purposes and a tank farm. Another portion of the area was leased to radio station KINY in 1948. During World War II approximately twelve acres were leased to the Corps of Army Engineers for ten dollars per acre per year. Between 1946 and 1951 an Alaska Coastal Airlines beam station occupied a portion of the property under lease. In 1947 part of the area was leased by ap-pellee to the Juneau Spruce Corporation for storage and shipping purposes. From time to time portions of the premises were leased to persons who worked the tailings to reclaim gold on a royalty basis. In 1948 warehouses which were left on the property by the Army Engineers were leased to a construction company. The warehouses and surrounding area were later leased by appellee to Juneau Motors for the storage of automobiles. Another part of the area was rented by the Lemon Creek Sand & Gravel Company as a storage area. Appel-lee had regularly used a portion of the property for the storage of mining and electrical distribution equipment. On occasion, rock and sand from the fill were sold. Another portion was leased for boat storage and a boat ramp. Still another portion was leased to Southeastern Salvage Company for the loading and unloading of barges at a barge ramp. Many of the above uses, which are the subject of this appeal, were still in effect as of the date of the hearing.

Alaska attained statehood on January 3, 1959. Section 6(m) of the Alaska State *282 hood Act 1 provided that the Submerged Lands Act of 1953 2 should be applicable to Alaska, which meant that Alaska was given the same ownership of tidelands and lands beneath navigable waters as other states of the Union. 3

During the first session of the Alaska Legislature it was officially declared to be the policy of the state to allow preference rights for the acquisition of tidelands and submerged lands to those who occupied or developed for municipal business, residential or other beneficial purposes on or before the date of admission of Alaska into the Union. AS 38.05.320(a) states:

“It is the policy of the state to allow preference rights for the acquisition of tidelands and submerged lands occupied or developed for municipal business, residential or other beneficial purposes on or before the date of admission of Alaska into the Union. Nothing in this section vests the right in a person to acquire the lands until a conveyance from the state is delivered to the grantee.”

The legislation which declared this policy established several classes of preference rights. Appellee applied for a Class I preference right under AS 38.05.320(c) which states:

“An occupant of tide or submerged land which is not seaward of a municipal corporation, who occupied or developed it on and prior to September 7, 1957, has a class I preference right to the lands from the state. * * * ” (Emphasis supplied.)

AS 38.05.320(d) (5) defines this right as follows:

“ ‘class I preference right’ means the right of an occupant to acquire tidelands and submerged lands for a consideration not exceeding the costs of surveying, transferring and conveying the title to it.”

“Occupant” is defined in AS 38.05.320(d) (1) as follows:

“(d) For the purposes of this section unless the context otherwise requires
“(1) ‘occupant’ means a person or his successor in interest, who actually occupied for business, residential or other beneficial purpose, tidelands, or tidelands and submerged lands contiguous to tidelands, in the state, on and before January 3, 1959, with substantial permanent improvements. The holder of a permit or clearance in respect to interference of navigation, or of a special use permit from a government agency does not qualify as an ‘occupant’ unless entry on the land had, through exercise of reasonable diligence, resulted in occupancy and substantial permanent improvements; no' person is an occupant by reason of having (A) placed a fish trap in position for operation or upon the tide or submerged land for storage, (B) placed a set net or piling for a set net, or any other device or facility for taking fish, (C) placed pilings or dolphins for log storage or other moorage, (D) placed floats or vessels upon the tide or submerged land, (E) placed telephone, power or other transmission facilities, roads, trails or other improvements not requiring exclusive use or possession of tide or submerged lands, or (F) claimed the land by virtue of some form of constructive occupancy; where land is occupied by a person other than the owner of the improvements on it, the owner of the improvements is, for the purposes of this section, the occupant of the lands.”

Lastly, the phrase “occupied or developed” is defined by AS 38.05.320(d) (4) as follows :

“ ‘occupied or developed’ means the use, occupancy and control of tidelands or *283 submerged land by the establishment on it of substantial permanent improvements other than those uses, facilities and improvements not qualifying a person to be an occupant.”

Since an occupant of the tide and sub•merged lands for which he is seeking a preference right must have improved the land, Section 120.214 of the Alaska Administrative Code 4

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Bluebook (online)
397 P.2d 280, 1964 Alas. LEXIS 257, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-a-j-industries-inc-alaska-1964.