Commonwealth v. Daley, etc
Case Date: 02/24/1999
Court: United States Court of Appeals
Docket No: 98-1917
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For the First Circuit No. 98-1917 COMMONWEALTH OF MASSACHUSETTS BY ITS DIVISION OF MARINE FISHERIES, Plaintiff, Appellee, v. WILLIAM M. DALEY, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS SECRETARY OF COMMERCE OF THE UNITED STATES; JAMES BAKER, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS UNDER SECRETARY AND ADMINISTRATOR FOR THE NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION; THE NATIONAL OCEANIC AND ATMOSPHERIC ADMINISTRATION; ROLAND A. SCHMITTEN, IN HIS OFFICIAL CAPACITY AS DIRECTOR OF THE NATIONAL MARINE FISHERIES SERVICE; AND THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, Defendants, Appellants. APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS [Hon. Joseph L. Tauro, U.S. District Judge] Before Boudin, Circuit Judge, Campbell, Senior Circuit Judge , and Lipez, Circuit Judge. Robert L. Klarquist, Attorney, Department of Justice, Environment & Natural Resources Division, with whom Lois J. Schiffer, United States Assistant Attorney General, Donald K. Stern, United States Attorney, John A. Capin, Assistant United States Attorney, Andrew C. Mergen, Attorney, Department of Justice, Environment & Natural Resources Division, and Joel G. MacDonaldwere on brief for appellants. Daniel J. Hammond, Assistant Attorney General, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, with whom Scott Harshbarger, Attorney General, Commonwealth of Massachusetts, was on brief for appellees. February 24, 1999 BOUDIN, Circuit Judge. The Commonwealth of Massachusetts ("the Commonwealth") brought this action in the district court to review a decision of the Secretary of Commerce ("the Secretary") adopting a revised quota for catching scup off the East Coast of the United States. The district court held the quota unlawful insofar as it allocated the summer catch of scup on a state-by- state basis. The Secretary now appeals. Scup, also known as porgy, are small migrating fish that school off the Atlantic coast from North Carolina to Massachusetts. In the winter, they swim off-shore from New Jersey southward and are fished primarily with big trawlers in the ocean; in the summer, they migrate northward and swim closer inshore to spawn; at the northern end of the range (Massachusetts, Rhode Island, New York), much of the commercial catching of scup is done inshore with smaller vessels, weirs, and pots. It is common ground that scup stocks are seriously depleted. For this reason, in March 1996, the National Marine Fisheries Service ("the Fisheries Service"), an agency within the Commerce Department, issued emergency regulations to govern scup fishing within the exclusive economic zone or "EEZ." The EEZ, created by the Magnuson-Stevens Act, 16 U.S.C. 1801, et seq., extends 200 nautical miles offshore of the United States; within its borders, the federal government claims exclusive management of resources, see id. 1811. Landward, the zone ends at state boundaries, see id., which, on the East Coast, are three nautical miles offshore. Emergency regulations bypass the ordinary scheme of the Magnuson-Stevens Act, a scheme that depends upon management of EEZ fisheries through Regional Fishery Management Councils comprising state representatives. See 16 U.S.C. 1852-54, 1855. Such Councils propose conservation measures--called fishery management plans or "FMPs"--for fisheries under their jurisdiction and submit the FMPs to the Fisheries Service, which may then adopt them through notice and comment rulemaking. Id. 1853-54. The measures must comply with certain national standards set forth in the statute and are subject to judicial review in the district courts. Although the Magnuson-Stevens Act does not govern fishing in state waters, save for statutory exceptions not invoked in this case, 16 U.S.C. 1856(b), (c), state-waters fishing is subject to the Atlantic Coastal Fisheries Cooperative Management Act adopted in 1993, 16 U.S.C. 5101 et seq. The East Coast states participate through the Atlantic States Marine Fisheries Commission ("the Atlantic Commission"), which prepares coastal fishery management plans or "CFMPs"; the plans do not require separate federal approval but the states themselves are required to enforce them, see id. 5104(b), in default of which the Secretary of Commerce can regulate directly, see id. 16 U.S.C. 5106. The March 1996 emergency regulations were designed to fill the gap while a full-fledged FMP was developed by the Commission and the Council responsible for scup, which is the Mid- Atlantic Fishery Management Council ("Mid-Atlantic Council"). The latter, in cooperation with the Commission, had proposed a scup FMP in November 1995, but the Fisheries Service did not propose the resulting regulation until June 1996. After notice and comment, regulations to implement the scup FMP were adopted by the Fisheries Service in August 1996 and made effective on September 23, 1996, when the emergency regulations expired. See 61 Fed. Reg. 43420; 50 C.F.R. 648.1 et seq. The new permanent regulations imposed various scup conservation measures including a moratorium on new entry into scup fishing in the EEZ, permitting and reporting requirements, gear limitations, and exploitation schedules. See 50 C.F.R. 648.4- 648.6, 648.14, 648.120-648.125. The schedule for 1997 through 1999 permitted recovery of only 47 percent of the scup; this limit is enforced by an annual coastwide commercial quota, to be expressed by the Fisheries Service as a poundage limit for scup. See 61 Fed. Reg. 43420, 43426-27. The regulations provided that the Atlantic Commission and the Mid-Atlantic Council might refine the overall quota--through further federal rulemaking--by use of vessel trip limits, regional and "state-by-state" quotas, and subdivision of the fishing year into segments. See id. Federal action taken under this option to refine the coastwide quota provoked the present litigation. During early 1997, while the Fisheries Service was adopting a coastwide commercial quota of 6 million pounds for 1997, the Atlantic Commission and the Mid-Atlantic Council proposed an amendment to subdivide the scup fishing year into segments, each with its own quota, and for state-by-state quotas for the summer segment. This proposal, developed after extensive Council proceedings, was published as a proposed regulation by the Fisheries Service in February 1997 and offered for public comment. See 62 Fed. Reg. 5375. The proposal--later adopted and challenged in part in the district court--divided the scup quota into three seasons: a winter I period, from January through April; a summer period, from May through October, and a winter II period, for November and December. The percentages, based on historical shares as computed from existing data, were roughly 45 percent, 39 percent, and 16 percent for winter I, summer, and winter II, respectively. See 62 Fed. Reg. 5375, 5378. The winter quotas, largely captured offshore in the EEZ by vessels from any of the states, were not further subdivided. See id. However, the summer quota, with which we are primarily concerned, was further allocated among the states based on alleged historical shares. The great preponderance of this summer quota was allocated for 1997 as follows: Massachusetts (15.49% or 362,029 pounds), Rhode Island (60.57% or 1,415,425 pounds), and New York (17.05% or 398,527 pounds). See 62 Fed. Reg. 5375, 5378; 62 Fed. Reg. 27978, 27980. The quota included fish caught within state waters where much of the scup is harvested during the summer months; and the proposal provided that any excess over quota landed by a state's fishermen in one summer would be deducted from its allocation in the following summer. See 62 Fed. Reg. 5375, 5376. The Commonwealth and its fishery interests expressed concern or opposition while the refined quota proposal was being formulated by the Mid-Atlantic Council in the summer and fall of 1996 and during the federal-rulemaking comment period in February and March 1997. The Commonwealth did not oppose a seasonal quota. That measure tends to protect Massachusetts inshore fishermen from the threat that, without the seasonal division, the scup quota would be largely (or completely) recovered earlier in the year by offshore vessels fishing further south before the scup reached Massachusetts to spawn in the summer. However, for the state-by-state quota, the Commonwealth said, among other things, that the historical data from which shares were to be computed were inaccurate. The proposal derived the state-by-state allocation from a readily available federal database of landings of scup and an array of other species in the period 1983-92. The Commonwealth said that these data tended to be inclusive as to scup landings from large trawlers fishing offshore and sold to big dealers but to undercount landings from fishing inshore, especially in state waters in summer months, from smaller vessels, weirs, and pots, often sold directly to retailers. The Commonwealth argued, based on some rough approximations, that 80 percent or more of its summer scup harvest came from inshore fishing, much of which was not included in the database. It made a brief effort to expand the database to include the 1993-95 period, whose data could be more readily supplemented by further inquiries, but it abandoned the effort when other states protested that this would delay the program and cause other problems. Ultimately, the Commonwealth opposed the use of any state-by-state quota for the summer until better data could be acquired. Nevertheless, after receiving public comment, the Fisheries Service adopted the proposed regulation including the three-season quota and the state-by-state quota for the summer season. The final regulation was adopted with an effective date of May 20, 1997. See 62 Fed. Reg. 27978. On June 19, 1997, the Commonwealth brought the present action in the district court to overturn the state-by-state quota. Such a review action is specifically provided for by the Magnuson-Stevens Act. See 16 U.S.C. 1855(f). For the 1997 summer season, the Commonwealth simply did not enforce its quota against its fishermen. In the district court, the Secretary filed an administrative record comprising primarily the minutes of the meetings of the Mid-Atlantic Council, Federal Register notices of the proposed and final regulations, and comments received from public authorities and private interests. The Commonwealth then moved for judgment on the pleadings and also asked leave to offer extra-record evidence to show that the historical data used undercounted scup taken in Massachusetts. The Secretary opposed the new evidence and entered a cross motion for summary judgment. On April 27, 1998, just before the beginning of the 1998 summer catch period, the district court announced that it was overturning the state-by-state quota, and on June 24, 1998, the court released its written opinion. Commonwealth v. Daley, 10 F. Supp. 2d 74 (D. Mass. 1998). Although the accompanying order denied the Commonwealth's motion to add new evidence to the record, the opinion granted its motion for judgment on the pleadings. The decision forbad the Secretary to enforce the state-by-state quota or to reduce the Massachusetts quota because of any overage and directed the Secretary to promulgate a new regulation to replace the flawed one. See id. at 79. In a nutshell, the district court found that the Fisheries Service had erred in basing the state-by-state quota on historical data that it knew seriously undercounted Massachusetts' past scup recoveries. This undercounting, said the district court, was established by the Fisheries Service's own data. See Daley, F. Supp. 2d at 77-78. Its use had produced a state-by-state allocation of the summer quota that discriminated against Massachusetts in violation of the statutory standard forbidding FMPs from "discriminat[ing] between residents of different States." 16 U.S.C. 1851(a)(4). The Secretary now appeals, saying that the district court misunderstood the data and that the Fisheries Service used the best data available to set the state-by-state quota. The Commonwealth says that the Fisheries Service did not consider all pertinent data and that the state-by-state quota is discriminatory. The problem, as we shall see, is that both sides may be right. We start with the legal framework that governs FMPs and the implementing regulations. The Magnuson-Stevens Act's main thrust is to conserve the fisheries as a continuing resource through a mixed federal-state regime; the FMPs are proposed by state Councils but the final regulations are promulgated by the Secretary through the Fisheries Service. And both the FMPs and the regulations have multiple goals: the provision that describes their content, 16 U.S.C. 1853, sets out specific requirements and says that they must be "consistent with the national standards" set forth in an earlier section, id. 1853(a)(1)(C). The first of the specific requirements, 16 U.S.C. 1853(a)(1)(A), is that the FMPs and regulations "contain the conservation and management measures" that are necessary and appropriate for the conservation and management of the fishery, to prevent overfishing and rebuild overfished stocks, and to protect, restore, and promote the long-term health and stability of the fishery. The third of the specific requirements is a cross-reference to the national standards, id. 1853(a)(1)(C), of which two are immediately pertinent here: number two provides that the measures must be based "upon the best scientific information available," id. 1851(a)(2), and number 4 says that the measures "shall not discriminate between residents of different states." It continues: If it becomes necessary to allocate or assign fishing privileges among various United States fishermen, such allocation shall be (A) fair and equitable to all such fishermen; (B) reasonably calculated to promote conservation; and (C) carried out in such manner that no particular individual, corporation, or other entity acquires an excessive share of such privileges. Id. 1851(a)(4). On review, the district court was directed by 16 U.S.C. 1855(f)(1)(B) to test the Secretary's regulations under the familiar standards of the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. 701 et seq., which allow agency actions to be overturned, inter alia, for errors of law or where arbitrary and capricious, id. 706(2)(A), (C). The district court properly reviewed the Secretary's decision on the administrative record. We are in the same position as the district court, nominally reviewing the decision de novo but effectively reviewing the Secretary's action under the APA. The Commonwealth concedes that scup stocks are "severely depleted." Letter from Coates to Rosenberg of Jan. 3, 1997, supra, note 3. For present purposes, it follows that the fishing of scup has to be reduced below existing levels and this means that fishermen are going to get less scup. (The Commonwealth earlier urged a different solution but does not pursue this issue on appeal.) The division into seasonal quotas, and the use of a state-by-state quota for the summer, are devices for sharing the pain. The broad issue before us is whether the latter quota--the former helps Massachusetts and is not challenged--is based on the "best scientific information available," avoids "discriminat[ion]," and is "fair and equitable." 16 U.S.C. 1851(a)(2), (4). Both sides have assumed that discrimination between states could be avoided, and equity satisfied, if the new quotas roughly reflected actual historical shares, despite the fact that the raw quantities of fish allowed for each state's fishermen would necessarily be reduced. For purposes of this case we accept this undisputed premise. This is not to say that anything more than an overall coastwide quota was necessarily required. But, to the extent that the subsidiary quotas subdivided the catch further, those quotas had to be consistent--so far as possible--with the non-discrimination and equity concepts and to rely upon the best scientific evidence available. The difficulty from the outset has been that the available data do not permit a fully accurate historical allocation between states. The information used to create the quotas concerns scup landed in the individual East Coast states for the period 1983-92. As the Commonwealth argues, these figures well reflect scup landings from larger vessels and sold to dealers but undercount landings often sold to retailers from smaller vessels closer inshore and from inshore methods such as weirs and pots. This view is sufficiently clear from the record, and so little disputed by the Secretary, cf. 62 Fed. Reg. 27978, 27983, that we take it as settled. But the impact on Massachusetts is a quite different question. Massachusetts says that it is the main victim of such undercounting because it has traditionally relied on such inshore scup fishing for most of its catch while other states have not. On this appeal, the Secretary says that the district court erred in so finding because of its misunderstanding of the figures. It turns out--as the Commonwealth admits--that the district court wrongly assumed that the Secretary's 1983-92 data used to establish the quota included fish caught in the EEZ but excluded automatically fish caught in state waters. But even though the 1983-92 data used for the quota did not automatically exclude all fish caught in state waters, the evidence is solid that the data tended to undercount fish not caught by the larger trawlers and so disfavored states that caught scup closer inshore by other means. Massachusetts, compared to other states whose fishermen rely primarily on large trawlers for scup, is clearly disfavored but by what amount is unclear; much more important, it is unclear by how much it is disfavored vis- |