Ninth Circuit Clarifies Scope of U.S. Fish and Wildlife’s Authority to Regulate Land
January 23, 2002
Lawrence R. "Larry" Liebesman- Washington
Rafe Petersen - Washington
In December 2001, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit issued a
ruling that could greatly benefit landowners concerned about the presence of
endangered species on their properties. In Arizona Cattle Growers’
Association v. U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service, No. 99-16102 (December 17,
2001), the court held that the USFWS acted arbitrarily and capriciously by
issuing Incidental Take Statements under the Federal Endangered Species Act (ESA)
that impose terms and conditions on land use permits, when either there was no
evidence that the endangered species existed on the land or no evidence that a
"take" (defined as "habitat modification resulting in the actual
death or injury to a listed species") would occur if the permit were
issued. The court held that USFWS would have to demonstrate that a
"take" of protected species was "reasonably certain to
occur."
This holding could curtail the ability of USFWS to condition or to restrict
land uses in situations when endangered species or their habitats are not
clearly present. Under this ruling, for activities covered by the Ninth Circuit
(California, Arizona, Hawaii, Nevada, Idaho, Montana, Oregon, Washington, and
Guam) USFWS will have to provide specific evidence that the activity would lead
to a "take" of the species in situations when it issues an incidental
take statement as part of a Section 7 ESA consultation.
This case stemmed from a challenge by the cattlemen to the Incidental Take
Statements set forth in the Biological Opinions issued by USFWS in consultation
with the Bureau of Land Management (BLM) and the U.S. Forest Service in response
to ACGA’s application for cattle grazing permits in Southeastern Arizona. In
its Biological Opinion on the permits, USFWS concluded that ongoing grazing
activities on 21 of 22 allotments at issue would not jeopardize the continued
existence of any protected species or result in the destruction or adverse
modification of any critical habitat. It determined, however, that ongoing
grazing activities would incidentally take members of one or more protected
species in each of the 22 allotments, and it issued Incidental Take Statements
(ITS) for each of those allotments.
The ITS included specific conditions that would immunize the ranchers from
ESA Section 9 take liability and penalties for harm to endangered species
committed during activities that are otherwise lawful. The court noted that,
although the action agency and permittee are "technically free to disregard
the Biological Opinion and proceed with its proposed action . . . it does so at
its own peril. . . . Consequently, if the terms and conditions of the ITS are
disregarded and a taking does occur, the action agency or the applicant may be
subject to potentially severe civil and criminal penalties under Section
9."
Hence, given the potential liability of not complying with the conditions in
the ITS, the conditions "exert a powerful coercive effect" that cannot
be ignored. As a practical matter, parties that hope to receive approval for
federal permits must agree to comply with the terms and conditions of the ITS.
The court addressed the standards for determining when USFWS must issue an
ITS. Fundamentally, "an ITS must be predicated on a finding of an
incidental take." The court concluded that USFWS "acted in an
arbitrary and capricious manner by imposing terms and conditions on land use
permits, where either there was no evidence that the endangered species existed
on the land or no evidence that a take would occur if the permit were
issued." In making its finding that there was "no rational basis"
to conclude that a take will occur, the court rejected USFWS’s position that
the definition of "take" under Section 7 of the ESA should be
interpreted broadly to require issuance of an ITS when harm to a listed species
is "possible" or "likely." The court rejected the notion
that Sections 7 and 9 ought to be interpreted differently, holding that there
must be a reasonable basis for concluding that a taking will occur as a result
of the activity in question. Significantly, the court then noted that
"there is no evidence that Congress intended to allow the Fish and Wildlife
Service to regulate any parcel of land that is merely capable of supporting a
protected species."
Central to this finding was that USFWS failed to present evidence that an
indirect taking would occur absent the existence of the species on the property.
The practical effect is that USFWS has to present more than speculative evidence
that habitat modification would impact a listed species. "The agency has a
very low bar to meet, but it must at least attain it. It would be improper to
force [the ranchers] to prove that the species does not exist on the permitted
area, as the Fish and Wildlife Service urges, both because it would require [the
ranchers] to meet the burden statutorily imposed on the agency, and because it
would be requiring it to prove a negative." Hence, USFWS must
"establish a link between the activity and the taking of species before
setting forth specific conditions." It remains to be seen whether other
circuits will adopt the Ninth Circuit’s reasoning.
The new Corps wetlands nationwide permits were published in the January 15,
2002, Federal Register. A summary will be available in the next edition of the
Environmental Newsletter
For more information, contact Lawrence R. Liebesman or Rafe Petersen at
888-688-8500 or via e-mail at lliebesm@hklaw.com or rapeters@hklaw.com,
respectively.