State v. Weiss

706 P.2d 681, 1985 Alas. LEXIS 313
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 4, 1985
DocketS-653, S-678
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 706 P.2d 681 (State v. Weiss) 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. Weiss, 706 P.2d 681, 1985 Alas. LEXIS 313 (Ala. 1985).

Opinion

OPINION

COMPTON, Justice.

The State of Alaska (“state”) appeals from a judgment of the superior court holding that the state breached its duty as trustee of federal mental health grant lands when the legislature redesignated the property as “general grant land.” For the reasons set forth below, we affirm the holding to this extent, but reverse the superior court’s conclusion that the redesig-nation legislation was valid.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

In 1956 the United States Congress passed the Alaska Mental Health Enabling Act (AMHEA) which, insofar as it concerns this case, granted the Territory of Alaska one million acres of federal land to be held in public trust to help effectuate the creation and operation of mental health care facilities in Alaska. Pub.L. No. 84-830, 70 Stat. 709 (1956). Section 202(e) of the Act specifically provides:

All lands granted to the Territory of Alaska under this section, together with the income therefrom and the proceeds from any dispositions thereof, shall be administered by the Territory of Alaska as a public trust and such proceeds *682 and income shall first be applied to meet the necessary expenses of the mental health program of Alaska. Such lands, income and proceeds shall be managed and utilized in such manner as the Legislature of Alaska may provide. Such lands, together with any property acquired in exchange therefor or acquired out of the income or proceeds therefrom, may be sold, leased, mortgaged, exchanged, or otherwise disposed of in such manner as the Legislature of Alaska may provide in order to obtain funds or other property to be invested, expended or used by the Territory of Alaska. The authority of the Legislature of Alaska under this subsection shall be exercised in a manner compatible with the conditions and requirements imposed by other provisions of this Act. (emphasis added)

The state managed these lands without maintaining a separate account until 1978. The Alaska State Legislature made its practice law in 1978 when it passed the following statutory provision:

REDESIGNATION AND DISPOSAL OF MENTAL HEALTH LAND
(a) Land granted to the state under the Mental Health Enabling Act of 1956, 70 Stat. 709, and patented to or approved for patent to the state on July 1, 1978 and land designated as mental health land which was received by the state in exchange for land granted under that federal land grant is redesignated as general grant land and shall be managed and disposed of by the Department of Natural Resources under applicable provisions of law.

Ch. 181, § 3(a), SLA (1978).

Alaska has provided continuous mental health care since statehood. The record indicates that between 1959 and 1982 the state spent over $222,000,000 on mental health care. Generally speaking, there has been a constant increase from 1959 to the present in mental health expenditures: slightly less than $1,200,000 was expended in 1959, and slightly more than $29,000,000 was expended in 1982. The record does not indicate how much of the trust land at issue has been disposed of, nor the total value of such disposed land. In the state’s answer to the complaint, it alleges that “state expenditures for mental health purposes exceeded revenues from mental health grant lands in all years for which revenues from those lands were tabulated separately.” The record does indicate that as of 1973, total revenues from these mental health trust lands amounted to $19,555,-582. The state’s total expenditures to that point amounted to $66,726,176.

Weiss et al. filed a class action in 1982 alleging that the state breached the public trust by 1) failing to account for revenues realized, 2) using revenues for purposes other than mental health care and 3) passing legislation redesignating the property “general grant land.” Plaintiffs sought declaratory relief invalidating the redesig-nation legislation; injunctive relief compelling the state to administer the trust according to the law; general relief establishing a trust account “for the receipt of funds generated from all lands selected by the State of Alaska under the aforesaid mental health land grant....”

The superior court ruled that invalidation of the redesignation legislation was not an available remedy, based on State v. University of Alaska, 624 P.2d 807, 815 (Alaska 1981). However, the court did hold that the state breached its duties as trustee by removing the federal grant lands from the trust. As a remedy, the court ordered that

[t]he public trust established by P.L. 84-830, 70 Stat. 709, shall recover from the defendant State of Alaska an amount equal to the fair market value of all lands conveyed from the trust as of the date of conveyance, plus prejudgment interest from the date of each conveyance. For the purposes of this judgment, all lands remaining in the trust as of July 19, 1978, shall be considered as having been removed from trust status by the State of Alaska on that date....

The court also ordered a set-off for all monies spent by the state on mental health care.

*683 The state appeals from the judgment, except the holding that the redesignation legislation was valid. Weiss et al. cross-appealed the trial court’s failure to rule the legislation invalid.

II. DID THE STATE BREACH THE PUBLIC TRUST CREATED BY CONGRESS WHEN IT REDESIGNATED PROPERTY IN THE TRUST AS “GENERAL GRANT LAND?”

A. Nature of the Trust.

The state argues, essentially, that the redesignation is of no legal consequence because the state has always provided public mental health programs in the past and, implicitly, will provide them in the future. The state maintains that providing such programs fulfills its obligations according to AMHEA, freeing the grant lands for other public purposes. Textual support for this position comes from the portion of Section 202(e) which states that “proceeds and income shall first be applied to meet the necessary expenses of the mental health program of Alaska.” It is suggested that this language means Congress intended that the land grant serve as a revenue base guarantee. Great emphasis is placed on the legislative history of AM-HEA which establishes that Congress did not wish to limit the use of grant lands exclusively to mental health programs. 1

Despite these observations, we think it irrefutable that Congress intended to create a trust, to be based on a corpus of one million acres of federal land. It is a commonplace of the law that without trust property there can be no trust. Restatement (Second) of Trusts § 74 (1959). 2 When the state, through the legislature, altered the status of the property grant the trust was thereby effectively terminated. The state, as trustee, had no power to do this and consequently breached its duty to preserve the corpus. 3

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
706 P.2d 681, 1985 Alas. LEXIS 313, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-v-weiss-alaska-1985.