William P. ALLINDER and Caroline I. Allinder d/b/a Sunnyside
Bee Farm; Elmer Steiner and Marilyn L. Steiner,
Plaintiffs-Appellees,
v.
STATE OF OHIO; Ohio Department of Agriculture; Dale
Locker, Director of Ohio Department of
Agriculture; Eric Nelson, Hardin County
Bee Inspector, Defendants-Appellants.
Nos. 85-3664, 85-3807.
United States Court of Appeals,
Sixth Circuit.
Argued Aug. 5, 1986.
Decided Jan. 8, 1987.
John K. Maguire (argued), Asst. Atty. Gen., Columbus, Ohio, for defendants-appellants.
Gregory L. Arnold (argued), Arnold & Barrett, Toledo, Ohio, for plaintiffs-appellees.
Before ENGEL and MARTIN, Circuit Judges, and COHN*, District Judge.
COHN, District Judge.
I. INTRODUCTION.
A. Nature of the Case.
This case involves a fourth amendment challenge to the scope of section 909.05 of the Ohio Revised Code (ORC) which empowers the Ohio Director of Agriculture or his authorized representative to conduct warrantless searches of apiaries and other premises, buildings or places where bees or bee paraphernalia are kept.1 After notification of a planned warrantless inspection of their apiaries, the plaintiff-beekeepers commenced separate actions for declaratory and injunctive relief in the United States District Court for the Northern District of Ohio. The district court granted the plaintiffs' motion for partial summary judgment in the Allinder action and permanently enjoined the Ohio Department of Agriculture from "conducting warrantless, nonconsensual inspections of apiaries pursuant to the Ohio Apiary Inspection Law, ORC Sec. 909.05" on the grounds the law was unconstitutional "insofar as it purports to authorize non-consensual apiary inspections without a warrant or its equivalent." Allinder v. Ohio,
B. The Regulatory Scheme.
Pursuant to Chapter 909 of the ORC, Ohio maintains an apiary2 inspection program.3 3] The program is designed to detect bee diseases in their early stages and to prevent their spread. ORC Sec. 909.03 declares infected hives a public nuisance. Under ORC Sec. 909.03, the director of agriculture has rulemaking and enforcement powers "as in his judgment are necessary to control, eradicate, or prevent the introduction, spread, or dissemination of any bee diseases." Of particular concern in the production of honey and pollination of crops is the spread of American Foulbrood disease (AFB) which infects the preadult stage of the bee.4 Although the disease is not harmful to humans, it can destroy entire colonies of bees. Under ORC Sec. 909.02, a beekeeper must register his apiaries with the director of agriculture along with directions as to their location. Not all beekeepers are registered, primarily because of their ignorance of the statutory requirements. The program is enforced by the state apiarist, four deputy apiarists, and part-time county inspectors who are appointed and funded by the individual counties and over whom the state retains little control.5 Because of the technical knowledge needed to make inspections, inspectors are often competitors of those whom they inspect and are often charged with the responsibility of inspecting their own apiaries. Under ORC Sec. 909.05, an inspector is expressly authorized to examine apiaries without prior notice, without a warrant and outside the presence of the owners.
There are no published rules and regulations. The inspectors are provided a training manual which appears to outline the goals and guidelines of the program. Final decisions as to what to inspect, how to inspect and when to inspect rests with the individual inspectors.
Inspection involves manipulation of the hive6 and not merely visual inspection of the exterior of an apiary. The inspector approaches the hive and removes the lid with a crowbar-like hive tool. The front entrance of the hive is then smoked with another appliance to subdue the bees. Smoking continues as needed throughout the inspection process. The inner cover, honey layers, queen excluder, and other layers are manipulated and removed to arrive at the bottom layers where the brood7 chambers are located. All the layers in the hive are stuck together with propolis, a sticky substance which the bees process from tree residues, and which generally has to be pried from the hive. Some of the brood frames are then removed and examined for signs of disease. If the inspector diagnoses AFB, surrounding colonies or sometimes the entire apiary is quarantined under ORC Sec. 909.04. A sample is taken from the colony and sent to the Ohio Department of Agriculture laboratory for testing. If the presence of AFB is confirmed, the bees and hive equipment are ordered destroyed by burning. Under ORC Sec. 909.16, the beekeeper has five days within which to appeal the decision to burn the bees and equipment to the Director of Agriculture whose determination is final.
C. The Parties.
The Allinders and the Steiners are commercial beekeepers in the business of raising bees for honey production and renting bees to farmers for crop pollination. The Allinders' 600 hives and the Steiners' approximately 850 hives are located in seven different counties in Ohio. They registered their apiaries with the added notation "No inspection permitted without a warrant."
II. THE ELEVENTH AMENDMENT.
A. The State Defendants.
Defendants first argue that the district court did not have jurisdiction under the eleventh amendment bar to an action against the State. The argument has merit as to defendants State of Ohio and Ohio Department of Agriculture. The Supreme Court has consistently interpreted the eleventh amendment to preclude a citizen from bringing suit against his own state in a federal court. Edelman v. Jordan,
B. The Individual Defendants.
The eleventh amendment defense of defendants Eric Nelson, a bee inspector in the Steiner action, and Dale Locker, the director of the Ohio Department of Agriculture in both actions, implicates an exception to eleventh amendment immunity first recognized in Ex parte Young,
III. THE FOURTH AMENDMENT.
A. The Existence of a Search.
1. Open Fields.
Before invoking the fourth amendment, we must first determine if there has been a search. Dow Chemical Co. v. United States,
Defendants' reliance on these cases is misplaced. Oliver did not overrule the holding in Katz v. United States,
Similarly, in Maine v. Thornton, a case consolidated with Oliver, the officers making a visual inspection of fields spotted marihuana growing, but they obtained a search warrant before they seized the marihuana.
More recently, in Dow Chemical Co. v. United States, the Supreme Court applied the open fields doctrine to uphold the aerial observation and photography of an industrial plant complex. The Supreme Court did acknowledge that defendant had a legitimate expectation of privacy from unreasonable government entries into its covered buildings and private commercial property while emphasizing that the observation took place "without physical entry", and that any such entry would raise "significantly different questions."
2. Limitations on Open Fields.
There is no case, however, where the open fields doctrine has been applied to allow a search of personal effects or of a commercial structure in a field. Defendants attempt to extend the holding in Oliver beyond the open fields exception it addressed, and into the realm of structures as presented in this case, must fail. To so extend the open fields exception, we would have to ignore a long line of Supreme Court cases which have extended fourth amendment protection to areas other than the home and its curtilage. Cf. Donovan v. Dewey,
Inspections authorized by ORC Sec. 905.05, and the inspections to which plaintiffs object here, do not involve a mere visual inspection of apiaries in an open field. Rather, the statute allows a warrantless inspection of "any premises, buildings, or any other place, public or private, in which [the Director of Agriculture or his authorized representatives have] reason to believe that bees, honey, wax, used hives, or used appliances are kept," except "occupied dwelling[s]." Id. Thus, for example, it allows for an entry into any commercial structure where bee equipment is stored. But as the Supreme Court has explained: while the government may observe, without a warrant, whatever is observable by the public, areas where only employees are permitted are not "thrown open ... to the warrantless scrutiny of Government agents." Barlow's, Inc.,
Nor can the warrantless physical intrusion, manipulation and dismantling of the hives themselves be sanctioned by the visual inspection allowable under the open fields doctrine. Apiaries are commercial property. They are also personal property since they are movable and at times are moved for rental to farmers in crop pollination. As such they fall within the definition of effects in Oliver,
While the hives are subject to visual observation of their exteriors by a passerby, there is no claim that the hives give the appearance of abandoned property. Inspections can only be performed by a trained apiarist. The hives have bees entering and exiting at all times. As previously described, a smoker must be used to subdue the bees to enable an inspector to approach a hive, and a special hive tool must be used to pry apart the layers of the hive. With the exception of the small opening for bees, the hive is virtually sealed shut with bee propolis. The interior of the hives are simply not accessible to the public's view. The apiaries are "effects" and as such are part of plaintiffs' commercial personal property. We conclude that the physical intrusion, manipulation and dismantling of the hives by a state inspector constitutes a search under the fourth amendment.
C. The Administrative Search Exception to the Warrant Requirement.
For nearly two decades, the Supreme Court has followed the general rule that a warrant is required before conducting an administrative search of commercial property or commercial products. See v. City of Seattle,
Later decisions have limited this rule so that the fourth amendment does not prohibit all such searches, but only those that are unreasonable. Donovan,
1. Pervasively and Closely Regulated Industries.
An exception to the warrant requirement exists for "closely regulated industries long subject to inspection" and for "pervasively regulated" businesses, Barlow's, Inc.,
Defendants argue that the state regulatory scheme involved here amounts to close and pervasive regulation. But as the district court noted:
The state apiarist testified that less than 100% of the beekeepers in Ohio are registered and that only about 85% of those registered are inspected every year. (Inj.Tr. at 33). He testified further that the typical reason for failure to register colonies is beekeepers who are unaware of the registration and inspection requirements.11
Moreover, the statute does not pervasively regulate the beekeeping industry. Defendants concede that the limited function of the statutory scheme is to control and eradicate bee diseases. We conclude that defendants have failed to establish that a beekeeper's expectation of privacy in an apiary is unreasonable where the record fails to show either that the beekeeping industry has a long history of close regulation or that it is currently subject to pervasive and comprehensive regulation in Ohio.
2. A Predictable and Guided Regulatory Presence.
In Donovan,
In Donovan the Supreme Court explained the criteria necessary to establish this exception as follows:
[A] warrant may not be constitutionally required when Congress has reasonably determined that warrantless searches are necessary to further a regulatory scheme and the federal regulatory presence is sufficiently comprehensive and defined that the owner of commercial property cannot help but be aware that his property will be subject to periodic inspections undertaken for specific purposes.
Defendants argue that inspections of apiaries must be warrantless because of the need to retain the element of surprise so that a beekeeper cannot hide a diseased hive from the inspector's view. Apiaries, defendants say, are so spread out and are so mobile, this is easy to hide from inspectors. They further argue that since the inspection season is limited, because inspections can only be conducted on a warm, dry day, and since most of the inspectors work part-time only, time is of the essence, and it would be an administrative burden to require a warrant.
The district court rejected these arguments in light of the testimony of the state apiarist that most beekeepers were hobbyists who welcomed inspections as an aid, and in light of testimony that plaintiffs were notified of an inspection three days in advance. The district court noted that the high incidence of voluntary compliance refuted the argument as to administrative burden because most inspections would not require a warrant.
This same line of argument was rejected in Barlow's, Inc.,
The district court also concluded that the program was subject to the warrant requirement because the statute provided too much discretion, i.e., it did not provide certainty, regularity and fairness. There is no requirement that inspections are to occur on any predetermined regular basis; there is only a "goal" to provide yearly inspections. Defendants concede that they are hampered in reaching this goal because of a lack of funds, that available funds were subject to the discretion of the various counties who provided supplementary inspectors and that the goal had not been achieved.
Like the statute in Barlow's, Inc.,
In Barlow's, Inc., the Supreme Court concluded:
A warrant, by contrast, would provide assurances from a neutral officer that the inspection is reasonable under the Constitution, is authorized by statute, and is pursuant to an administrative plan containing specific neutral criteria.
We agree. Our decision today does not invalidate the entire regulatory scheme. Rather, we hold only that ORC Sec. 909.05 authorizing nonconsensual warrantless inspections is unconstitutional.
The decision of the district court is AFFIRMED in part and REVERSED in part, and this case is REMANDED to the district court for further proceedings.12
ENGEL, Circuit Judge, dissenting.
I respectfully dissent. I would hold that the right to be free from unreasonable searches and seizures under the Fourth Amendment is not infringed by the inspection of beehives located in open fields by state apiarists in accordance with the challenged state statute. I would so hold because in my opinion there is no reasonable expectation of privacy either on an objective basis, see Katz,
The majority opinion addresses potential, hypothetical concerns which are not present here. It assumes bad faith and motives on the part of the inspector which are not present in the record. To me it is enough to hold that the Ohio statute is valid as applied to the present circumstances. Yazoo & M.V.R.R. v. Jackson Vinegar Co.,
This Court, as is the case with all federal courts, "has no jurisdiction to pronounce any statute, either of a State or of the United States, void, because irreconcilable with the Constitution, except as it is called upon to adjudge the legal rights of litigants in actual controversies. In the exercise of that jurisdiction, it is bound by two rules, to which it has rigidly adhered: one, never to anticipate a question of constitutional law in advance of the necessity of deciding it; the other never to formulate a rule of constitutional law broader than is required by the precise facts to which it is to be applied." Kindred to these rules is the rule that one to whom application of a statute is constitutional will not be heard to attack the statute on the ground that impliedly it might also be taken as applying to other persons or other situations in which its application might be unconstitutional.... [A]pplication of this rule frees the Court not only from unnecessary pronouncement on constitutional issues, but also from premature interpretations of statutes in areas where their constitutional application might be cloudy.
United States v. Raines,
The record here shows that deputy inspector Lamp on behalf of the state informed the Allinders that he would appear "at their residence" without a warrant to search all of their apiaries containing beehives. Steiner also received prior notice. Allinder refused to let Lamp enter any part of his land and did not prohibit entry only to the curtilage. There is nothing in the record to suggest that the hives in question were within the curtilage or within any other outbuilding to which any independent expectation of privacy protectable under the Fourth Amendment might have attached.
No one disputes that American foulbrood is a serious disease for bees. That the disease poses no threat to humans may lessen but does not remove the legitimate state concern in the regulation of this industry. As I understand it, the time period for the disease to spread is relatively long, as spores can sit within the hive for 10, 12 or 14 days before the disease attacks the bees. The disease actually attacks the bee larvae and it is spread by a process called "robbing."
The act of inspection takes about five minutes per colony. During the search, the apiarist is smoking the front entrance periodically to subdue the bees, but the smoking does not occur during the whole search. It seems unquestioned that to determine if a particular hive has been infected, an apiarist must take off the cover, the queen excluder, the inner cover, and the frames since the disease does not manifest itself to someone viewing the outside of the hive. Physical entry into the hive therefore is not an arbitrary act and there seems no other less intrusive way to carry out the legitimate purpose of the act. The plaintiffs do not claim an absolute right to be free from having their hives inspected by the state apiarists. That being true, they do not claim that they are free from having the hives disturbed to the extent necessary to carry out the statutory inspection.
The statutory scheme is quite pervasive. Every Ohio beekeeper under law must register the location of all of his bee colonies within the state. There is no penalty for knowingly maintaining diseased hives, but there is a penalty for failing to register. As the majority opinion notes, less than 100 percent of the beekeepers comply, apparently because many are amateurs ignorant of the statutory scheme. And likewise, not all hives registered are in fact inspected. Neither of these factors I believe affects the validity of the regulation or of inspections carried out under it, nor do they affect the question of whether the inspection process intrudes upon any areas or protected zones of privacy under the Fourth Amendment. The Department's county inspectors try to find unregistered colonies and to make personal visits. They also send letters in an effort to increase compliance. The statute does not specify any regular period for inspection, but according to the record the Department tries to inspect each hive once a year. Allinder's hives were inspected every year from 1973 until the litigation was commenced.
If foulbrood is found, a sample is sent to a state laboratory. While the sample is at the lab, a quarantine is made prohibiting the beekeeper from removing the bees from the apiary. The colonies, however, are still active during the quarantine period. If the inspection itself reveals the existence of foulbrood, the plaintiffs do not and I think probably cannot claim the right to retain the bees or otherwise to contest the right of the state to have those bees destroyed. If the bees are diseased, undoubtedly a major economic loss could be involved, but the statute provides notice and opportunity to be heard before the bees can actually be destroyed. There is a danger of loss from the inspection, it is true. If the hive is improperly reassembled, error in this regard may cause the loss of a queen or distortion to the production of honey. In fact, if the queen is lost, so also is the hive's honey crop for the year.
Given these most apparent facts from the record, it seems to me that in determining whether any expectation of privacy should attach to the interior of a beehive in an open field depends upon whether that expectation is one which society is prepared to respect as worthy of privacy, and I simply cannot see that concept applying here. "[R]easonableness is still the ultimate standard." Marshall v. Barlows, Inc.,
It is true that the inspection statute at section 909.05 allows warrantless searches of hives and equipment so long as there is no intrusion into a dwelling. No expectation of privacy under the Fourth Amendment extends to the conduct of the inspectors insofar as they enter upon the open fields, however, and visual observation of the hives in the open fields does not violate the Fourth Amendment. Oliver v. United States,
I believe that the majority has been led into error by considerations which might arguably have due process implications but which are not involved in the values protected by the Fourth Amendment. It seems to me that the majority's reliance upon the law concerning structures such as outbuildings is simply inapplicable. The beehives are not places of human habitation or places where human beings could even expect to work or occupy and thus carry on activity in which they might have some expectation of privacy. Likewise, the beehives do not fit my understanding and concept of containers generally. Beehives are no doubt personal property but the law is clear that the amendment protects people and not property. Katz,
I would agree with the majority that it makes no difference whether we consider the hives as "abandoned." Plainly they were not here as evidenced by the notices placed upon the registrations. Nor is the expectation of privacy lost because the use of the hives is commercial and not personal. I also readily recognize that in Dow Chemical Co. v. United States, --- U.S. ----,
There may arguably be some authority to support the fact that because Allinder and Steiner had previously allowed inspection of their beehives, they had demonstrated no personal or subjective claim of privacy with respect to them, and therefore the reassembly of the hives would not revive or restore any previously recognized and lawfully invaded privacy rights. See Illinois v. Andreas,
To me, the cases cited by the majority are inapposite. They apply to searches of structures where people have a reasonable expectation of privacy in carrying on commercial activities. Some involve invasion of containers in which similar expectations may exist because the owner might conceivably desire to keep from public view the undisclosed contents thereof. No surprises or commercial secrets are involved here. The hives contain the honey bees and the combs and the larvae. Some may be contaminated by foulbrood; nothing more, nothing less. I would vacate so much of the district court's decision as is inconsistent with the foregoing and remand for further proceedings.
Notes
The Honorable Avern Cohn, United States District Judge, Eastern District of Michigan, sitting by designation
O.R.C. Sec. 909.05 reads:
To enforce sections 909.01 to 909.18, inclusive, of the Revised Code, the director of agriculture or his authorized representatives shall have access to and egress from any apiary or to any premises, buildings, or any other place, public or private, in which he has reason to believe that bees, honey, wax, used hives, or used appliances are kept. No person shall resist or hinder the director or his authorized representative in the discharge of their duties under such sections. No occupied dwelling may be entered without a search warrant.
O.R.C. Sec. 909.05 is part of Chapter 909: APIARIES of the Ohio Revised Code. Relevant sections will be described as necessary.
O.R.C. Sec. 909.01(D) defines an apiary as "any place where one or more colonies or nuclei of bees are kept."
A number of states have such programs. For a listing of federal and state bee disease laws, see Honey Bee Pests, Preditors, And Diseases Appendix 3 (R. Morse ed., Cornell University Press, 1978). The warrantless search privilege at issue here appears to be an exception
See Identification and Control of Honey Bee Diseases, Farmer's Bulletin No. 7255, Agricultural Research Service, U.S. Department of Agriculture
Two counties in Ohio did not appoint inspectors for 1983
O.R.C. Sec. 909.01(F) defines a hive as "any modern frame hive, box hive, box ... or any other receptacle, natural or artificial, or any part thereof, which may be used as a domicile for bees."
Brood refers to the preadult stage of the bee. The honey is kept in layers separate from where the queen lays her eggs or the brood. Most hives contain a "queen excluder" which keeps the queen from traveling to the honey layers and depositing her eggs there
In Katz, the Supreme Court defined the two elements necessary to constitute a search under fourth amendment standards: (i) an actual or subjective expectation of privacy (ii) that society would deem reasonable.
The case closest to the circumstances involved here is Cady v. Dombrowski,
"The Framers would have understood the term 'effects' to be limited to personal, rather than real, property."
Allinder v. Ohio,
In response to the dissent's position that what we decide today is "potential and [hypothetical]", we are satisfied that the dispute between the Allinders, the Steiners and the Ohio Department of Agriculture is not an "imaginary" one. Yazoo and Mississippi Valley R.R. Co. v. Jackson Vinegar Co.,
