State v. Morry

836 P.2d 358, 1992 Alas. LEXIS 87, 1992 WL 158378
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 10, 1992
DocketS-4632, S-4660
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 836 P.2d 358 (State v. Morry) 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. Morry, 836 P.2d 358, 1992 Alas. LEXIS 87, 1992 WL 158378 (Ala. 1992).

Opinion

OPINION

Before RABINOWITZ, C.J., and BURKE, MATTHEWS, COMPTON, and MOORE, JJ.

RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.

INTRODUCTION

Alaska’s big game tag regulation requires a brown bear hunter to purchase a numbered, nontransferable tag before hunting and then, after taking a bear, affix and keep the tag on the animal until it is stored, consumed, or exported from the state. 5 AAC 92.012(c). Brown bear sealing regulations require that a hunter keep the skin and skull of a bear if taken in certain game management units, and within thirty days, have a state official stamp a seal on these parts. At sealing, the official obtains a tooth from the skull, and the hunter signs a sealing certificate. 5 AAC 92.165. 1 At issue in this appeal is the validity of these regulations under Alaska’s subsistence preference law.

In July 1985, appellee/cross-appellant, Riley T. Morry, an Inupiat subsistence hunter, was charged with shooting a brown bear without complying with the above regulations. As a result of a criminal prosecution brought against him for failure to comply with the regulations (later dismissed), Morry filed for declaratory relief and damages against the State of Alaska and Trooper Don Wilson, challenging the validity of 5 AAC 92.012 and 5 AAC 92.165 under both federal and state subsistence laws.

Kwethluk IRA Council is the governing body for the Yup’ik Eskimos of the Native Village of Kwethluk which is located in the Lower Kuskokwim area of Southwest Alaska. Kwethluk intervened in this case following unsuccessful rule-making proposals it had made to the Board of Game seeking changes in various regulations which were being applied to the subsistence hunting of brown bears by the people of Kwethluk.

FACTS & PROCEEDINGS:

On June 30, 1984, Morry obtained a $25 Alaska brown/grizzly bear tag and a “Gates of the Arctic National Park Grizzly Bear Hunting Permit No. 6 from Alaska Division of Fish and Game’s (ADF & G) designated agent in Anaktuvuk Pass,” The $25 bear tag expired on December 31, 1984; however, it did not state that it expired less than 12 months after purchase. The Gates of the Arctic permit stated that it was valid from July 1, 1984 through June 30, 1985.

In May 1985, Morry killed a grizzly bear and distributed the meat to various households. Morry also notified the ADF & G agent that he had taken the bear. Subsequently, the agent went to Morry’s house and “sealed” the bear hide with a metal tag, and filled out an ADF & G “sealing certificate” form. The agent did not “seal” the bear skull with a metal tag because it needed cleaning.

Upon learning of this bear harvest, Trooper Don Wilson initiated an investigation and proceeded to file a criminal complaint against Morry charging him with four misdemeanors — failure to obtain a “locking tag,” failure to affix such a tag, failure to obtain a permit, and failure to seal the skull — and recommending punishment of 30 days in jail and a $800 fine. The State voluntarily dismissed the criminal charges against Morry on October 16, 1985. Morry continued to challenge the two regulations under federal and state subsistence laws.

Subsequent to the original briefing in the superior court, this court struck down the “rural preference” of the 1986 subsistence law in McDowell v. State, 785 P.2d 1 (Alas *361 ka 1989). After further briefing, the superior court preliminarily invalidated the challenged regulations and granted the board 90 days within which to review the application of the regulations to subsistence uses under Alaska’s subsistence laws as construed in its decision. Judge Jeffery based his decision on a finding that the Board of Game had failed to analyze the applicability of these regulations to subsistence uses under the 1986 subsistence preference law, AS 16.05.258(c), and hence had violated both the subsistence preference law and the Administrative Procedures Act. Of particular significance is the superior court’s conclusion that the board had been applying trophy or general big game hunting regulations to subsistence uses without conducting any analysis of the effect these regulations were having on subsistence uses.

As guidance for the board when reviewing the regulations, the superior court addressed and rejected Morry’s contention that it was impermissible for the board, at the first-tier level, when the resource is sufficiently abundant to satisfy all subsistence uses, to impose any regulatory restrictions upon customary and traditional patterns and practices of resource harvesting. The court rejected this argument on the basis that the 1986 statute specifically states that: “[tjakings authorized under this section are subject to reasonable regulation of seasons, catch or bag limits, and methods and means.” AS 16.05.258(f). However, the superior court found that the manner of such regulating is still subject to special protection for subsistence uses.

If the state is allowed to issue complex regulations for subsistence uses — violation of which can result in substantial fines or jail time — the protection given to subsistence uses can be eroded just as surely as if the numbers of game available for subsistence uses were sharply reduced or eliminated. When the state undertakes such regulation, it must show that the requirements fulfill the goals of ‘conservation, development, and utilization’ of the game resource and that the regulations are the least intrusive means available to accomplish these goals. 2

Thereafter, the state moved for an extension of time of the 90-day deadline for action by the Board of Game and also asked for a stay pending appeal. Morry opposed the state’s motion, and in addition, moved for further relief (as to the board’s adoption and implementation of its “all Alaskans” policy), and for the entry of judgment pursuant to Civil Rule 54(b).

On May 18, 1991, the court granted Kwethluk’s motion for leave to intervene nunc pro tunc to May 24, 1990. On May 23, 1991, the court entered judgment and filed a decision denying the state’s motion for any further extension of time, and granted in part the motions of Kwethluk and Morry for further relief.

In its decision, the superior court permanently invalidated the regulations (subject to the right of the board to conduct the review required by the October 1990 decision) and enjoined application of the regulations to subsistence brown bear hunting in the game management units (GMU) at issue. The court stated:

This court has expected Board of Game compliance so that the court and the public would have had the benefit of the board’s expertise in evaluating the continuing validity of these regulations as applied to subsistence uses of brown/grizzly bear in the particular game management units at issue in this case. October 16th Decision at 24-25. Since the Board of Game apparently finds it impossible to undertake this review until its March, 1992, meeting, the court has no alternative but to craft an interim order regulating subsistence hunting of brown/grizzly bear in Game Management Units 17A, 17B, 18, 19A, 19B, 24, and 26, pending board action and court review, as discussed later in this memorandum.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
836 P.2d 358, 1992 Alas. LEXIS 87, 1992 WL 158378, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-morry-alaska-1992.