APACHE SURVIVAL COALITION, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, and James Abbott, in his official
capacity as Supervisor, Coronado National Forest,
Defendants-Appellees,
and
The University of Arizona, Defendant-Intervenor-Appellee.
APACHE SURVIVAL COALITION, et al., Plaintiffs-Appellants,
v.
UNITED STATES of America, and James Abbott, in his official
capacity as Supervisor, Coronado National Forest,
Defendants-Appellees,
and
The University of Arizona, Defendant-Intervenor-Appellee.
Nos. 92-15635, 92-16288.
United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.
Argued and Submitted Aug. 31, 1993.
Decided April 8, 1994.
Michael R. Lozeau, San Francisco, CA, for plaintiffs-appellants.
M. Alice Thurston, U.S. Dept. of Justice, Washington, DC, for defendants-appellees U.S., et al.
William N. Poorten, III, Snell & Wilmer, Tucson, AZ, for intervenor-appellee University of Arizona.
Appeals from the United States District Court for the District of Arizona.
Before: CHOY, D.W. NELSON, and NORRIS, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge D.W. NELSON
D.W. NELSON, Circuit Judge:
This is the fourth time in three years that this court has considered challenges to the Mount Graham international astrophysical observatory project.1 In this case, the Apache Survival Coalition ("Coalition"), a nonprofit corporation created under the laws of the State of Arizona in May 1990, seeks to halt construction of several telescopes on Mount Graham, Arizona, basing its challenge on constitutional and statutory grounds. Concluding that the Coalition's constitutional arguments are without merit and that its statutory claim is barred by laches, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
Factual and Procedural Background
Much of the history concerning the dispute over the Mount Graham observatory project and the subsequent congressional intervention is set out in this court's prior opinion in Mt. Graham Red Squirrel v. Madigan (Red Squirrel II),
In 1984, an international consortium proposed the construction of an observatory complex on Mount Graham that would include "construction of the most sophisticated array of telescopes ever assembled." Red Squirrel II,
In 1985, the Forest Service located what it termed three "shrines"3 on two of Mount Graham's summits: Hawk Peak and High Peak. The Service concluded that these sites qualified for the National Historical Register because of the shrines' potential religious significance to living American Indian tribes. The Forest Service recommended to the State Historical Preservation Officer ("SHPO") that efforts be taken to mitigate any adverse effect on the shrines during the construction of the telescopes, and it was contemplated that a mitigation plan would be developed in consultation with nearby Indian tribes and the University. In furtherance of this task, the University of Arizona ("University"), working with the Forest Service, contacted nineteen local tribes concerning the find, including the San Carlos Apache, but only two, the Ak-Chin and Hopi, responded. Subsequently, the SHPO determined that the planned telescopes would have no adverse affect on the shrines, but that additional surveys should be conducted on two of Mount Graham's other summits, Emerald Peak and Plainview Peak, to determine if there were cultural resources at those locations as well. Both were inspected in 1985 and no visible cultural resources were observed.
At the same time that the Forest Service conducted its NEPA and NHPA review, it also prepared a Forest Plan Draft Environmental Statement ("FEIS") pursuant to the National Forest Management Act ("NFMA"), 16 U.S.C. Sec. 1600 et seq. (1988). This document included details of the Service's NHPA review. In September 1985, attorneys for the San Carlos Apache requested a copy of the FEIS and met with the forest supervisor. In its October response the Tribe raised issues pertaining only to its property, mineral, and grazing rights. No religious objections were raised.
In December 1985, the University of Arizona provided the Forest Service with a report on the shrines. In addition to recommending mitigation measures, the report stated that a number of Indian tribes, including the San Carlos Apache, had been informed of the existence of the shrines and sent a copy of the report. Although the Apache did not respond, representatives of one of the other listed tribes, the Zuni tribe of New Mexico, requested permission to visit the site. On August 6, 1986, after extensive consultation with that tribe, the Forest Service determined that the telescopes would have no adverse impact on the cultural sites it had identified. The SHPO agreed, believing that excavations could mitigate any adverse effect; finally, the Advisory Council on Historical Preservation (AC) also concurred. Accordingly, the Forest Service published a Draft Environmental Impact Statement ("DEIS") in October 1986. Various interest groups, Indians tribes, and associations commented on the DEIS, and a copy was sent to the San Carlos Apache. Following the comment period, the Forest Service conducted further cultural surveys and prepared a status report responding to the various concerns raised. The preferred alternative identified in the report was to build five telescopes on High Peak. The SHPO and AC once again concurred in a finding of "no adverse impact," but on the condition that the shrines would be protected in their current location and would not be excavated. Subsequently, the University proposed the placement of one of the five telescopes on Emerald Peak.
Developments hit a snag in 1987 when, shortly after the Forest Service completed its Biological Assessment of its preferred alternative as required by section 7 of the Endangered Species Act ("ESA"), 16 U.S.C. Sec. 1536 (1988), the red squirrel was discovered on Mount Graham. The Department of Fish and Wildlife put the squirrel on the endangered species list shortly thereafter. See generally Red Squirrel II,
The Department issued a Biological Opinion in 1988. It provided three "reasonable and prudent alternatives" to the University's proposal. In contrast to the Department's earlier position that the construction of any telescopes on Emerald Peak was inappropriate, Reasonable and Prudent Alternative Three ("Alternative Three") provided for the construction of all seven telescopes on Emerald Peak. See Red Squirrel II,
In May 1988, the Forest Service sent the San Carlos Apache and other tribes a card asking if they wished to receive a copy of the final EIS or to remain on the Forest Service's mailing list. Although the San Carlos Apache asked to be removed from the mailing list, the Forest Service kept the Tribe on it. A final EIS was issued in the fall of 1988; it stated that no further cultural resources had been discovered in the Mount Graham area since the original discoveries. A copy was sent to the San Carlos Apache.
At this juncture the University, fearing that further delay would imperil the project, took its case to Congress and lobbied for legislation authorizing immediate construction of the observatory. In late 1988, Congress enacted the Arizona-Idaho Conservation Act of 1988 ("AICA"), Pub.L. No. 100-696, 102 Stat. 4571. As described in Red Squirrel II, Congress "essentially assumed the role the Forest Service would ordinarily have played and made a selection among the three 'reasonable and prudent' alternatives, choosing Alternative Three." Red Squirrel II,
Title VI of the Act provides for the construction of seven telescopes on Emerald Peak only, but bifurcates the project into two distinct phases: the first concerns the construction of the first three telescopes, and the second deals with the remaining four. For the first phase, AICA provides that "[s]ubject to the terms and conditions of Reasonable and Prudent Alternative Three of the Biological Opinion, the requirements of the Endangered Species Act shall be deemed satisfied as to the issuance of a Special Use Authorization for the first three telescopes," AICA Sec. 602, and orders the Secretary immediately to approve construction of the telescopes and associated support facilities and access roads, see id. Section 607 of the Act similarly deems the requirements of NEPA to be met for the purposes of approving construction of the first three telescopes, and section 604 directs the Forest Service to develop and implement a plan consistent with Alternative Three. See id. Secs. 604, 607. With respect to the second phase, AICA provides that the remaining four telescopes and related facilities must be authorized and constructed in accordance with all applicable law. See id. Sec. 603.
The Administrative Record closed in late 1988 and, in January 1989, the Forest Service published the Record of Decision. The special use permit contemplated by AICA was issued on April 7, 1989. In late August 1990, two years after the administrative record had closed, the San Carlos Apache Tribal Chairman wrote to the Forest Service, informing the Service of the religious importance of Mount Graham to the Tribe.4 The letter denied receipt of any prior correspondence and asked the Forest Service to halt construction immediately. The Regional Forester responded and requested information concerning specific sites that were of interest to the Tribe. No response was forthcoming. The Regional Forester received another letter from the Tribal Council in June 1991, which again demanded cessation of construction of the three telescopes. The Forest Service responded and requested a meeting to discuss the Tribe's concerns. Again, the Tribe failed to respond; instead, it turned to the courts.
On August 19, 1991 the Coalition filed a complaint against the United States and the Supervisor of the Coronado National Forest in the United States District Court for the District of Arizona seeking injunctive and declaratory relief. The complaint asserted four causes of action, which included allegations that the special use permit issued in April 1989 was invalid because Title VI of AICA violates the constitutional doctrine of separation of powers and because the Forest Service had failed to comply with NHPA.5
In February 1992, the Coalition moved for partial summary judgment on the issue of AICA's constitutionality, and the United States filed a cross-motion for summary judgment on the entire case. Subsequently, on April 1, 1992, the Coalition moved for a preliminary injunction to halt further construction of the observatory pending the outcome of the dispute, and the University was permitted to intervene. On April 10, the district court denied the request for the injunction, and, in a separate proceeding in May, granted summary judgment for the United States. Separate appeals were taken, which were consolidated for this action.6 We have jurisdiction pursuant to 28 U.S.C. Sec. 1291.
Analysis
In this appeal, the Coalition advances two distinct theories for why the special use permit issued under AICA is invalid, and therefore, that construction of the telescopes must be halted. First, the Coalition asserts that AICA itself violates separation of powers principles, and, consequently, that the special use permit lacks statutory authority. Second, and independently, the Coalition maintains that the Forest Service's failure to comply with NHPA resulted in issuance of the permit without the agency properly having "taken into account" the impact that construction of the observatory would have on the San Carlos Apache's religious practices and heritage as required by section 106 of that Act. We address each argument in turn.
I. The Constitutionality of AICA
The Coalition alleges that AICA violates separation of powers principles in two distinct but related ways. First, relying on United States v. Klein,
A.
We believe that the Coalition's Klein argument is flawed in its initial premise: that there has been no change in the underlying law.
This case is controlled by Robertson v. Seattle Audubon Soc'y, --- U.S. ----,
Without passing on the legal and factual adequacy of the Final Supplement to the Environmental Impact Statement ... the Congress hereby determines and directs that management of areas according to subsections b(3) and b(5) of this section ... is adequate consideration for the purposes of meeting the statutory requirements that are the basis for the consolidated cases captioned Seattle Audubon Society et al., v. F. Dale Robertson ... and Washington Contract Loggers Assoc. et al., v. F. Dale Robertson, ... and the case Portland Audubon Society et al., v. Manuel Lujan, Jr.....
Northwest Timber Compromise Sec. 318(b)(6)(A).
The Court phrased the decisive question as whether this language "replaced the [original] legal standard ... without directing particular applications under either the old or the new standards." Robertson, --- U.S. at ----,
In this case, the relevant language provides:
Subject to the terms and conditions of Reasonable and Prudent Alternative Three of the Biological Opinion, the requirements of section 7 of the Endangered Species Act shall be deemed satisfied as to the issuance of a Special Use Authorization for the first three telescopes and the Secretary Shall immediately approve the construction of the following items:
(1) three telescopes to be located on Emerald Peak;
(2) necessary support facilities; and
(3) an access road to the Site.
AICA Sec. 602(a) (emphasis added). AICA also provides that:
With reference to the construction of the first three telescopes, related facilities, and the access road within the boundaries of the Site described in section 601, the requirements of section 102(2)(c) of the National Environmental Policy Act of 1969 shall be deemed to have been satisfied. The Environmental Impact Statement for the Site, currently in process, shall continue and shall use the information developed to date and any additional appropriate information in analyzing the impacts of the four additional telescopes authorized under section 603 of this title.
Id. Sec. 607 (emphasis added).
AICA, it appears, had two effects. First, it expressly suspended the requirements of NEPA with respect to the construction of the first three telescopes. Second, it implicitly suspended the requirements of the ESA and replaced them with the requirements of Reasonable and Prudent Alternative Three. Thus, like in Robertson, the statute substituted preexisting legal standards that governed a particular project, in this case ESA and NEPA, with the new standards, in this case Reasonable and Prudent Alternative Three. Moreover, nothing in the statute directs a court to apply the requirements set forth in Alternative Three in any specific manner. Thus, like Robertson, AICA mandates "a change in law, not specific results under old law." Robertson, --- U.S. at ----,
The Coalition responds that Robertson is distinguishable. The Coalition asserts that a repeal of NEPA and ESA can be found only by implication; pointing to language that was proposed for AICA by the University that would have suspended the application of all applicable law to the observatory project,7 the Coalition further reasons that Congress's rejection of this proposal requires the conclusion that no repeals by implication can be found. This is buttressed, the Coalition claims, by the canon of construction that " 'repeals by implication are not favored.' " E.g., Morton v. Mancari,
This contention is contradicted by our prior decision in Red Squirrel II. Undertaking an exhaustive analysis of the statutory text, structure, purpose, and legislative history, we concluded that AICA waived the requires of both NEPA and ESA with respect to the construction of the first three telescopes:
Viewed as a whole, the statute clearly differentiates between its treatment of the first three telescopes and the next four. Construction of the first three is plainly exempted from other important environmental requirements, specifically [NEPA]. Although the statute does not waive the provisions of section 7 of [ESA] for the entire first phase of the project as clearly as it waives the provisions of NEPA, the legislators who spoke ... in support of the legislation made no distinction between the two waivers.... Because anything short of such a provision would not have provided the necessary assurance that further environmental delay would not bring a project to a halt, the conclusion that Congress intended to waive the section 7 provisions regarding the first three telescopes seems more consistent with the statutory objectives than the alternatives....
Red Squirrel II,
Furthermore, nothing in Robertson precludes finding an implied repeal if otherwise appropriate, for Robertson itself involved a repeal by implication. The statute in that case provided that the requirements of two new subsections were deemed sufficient "for meeting the statutory requirements" of several pending cases. Northwest Timber Compromise Sec. 318(b)(6)(a). Because five distinct statutory schemes "formed 'the basis for' the original lawsuits," all five were found repealed in the relevant respect. Robertson, --- U.S. at ----,
The Coalition responds that the implied repeal found in Robertson is inapposite because Robertson cited Simpson v. United States,
We find it unnecessary to address this argument because the canon of construction that the court cited Simpson to stand for was neither necessary to the decision in Robertson nor to the resolution of the similar question posed in this case. Although the Robertson Court noted that repeals by implication are disfavored, it also invoked the maxim that "as between two possible interpretations of a statute, by one of which it would be unconstitutional and by the other valid, our plain duty is to adopt that which will save the act." NLRB v. Jones & Laughlin Steel Corp.,
Of course, a saving construction must be a permissible one. If the "inevitable effect of a statute on its face" is contrary to the constitution, a saving construction only arrogates Congress's power. United States v. O'Brien,
Because we believe that AICA "compel[s] changes in law, not findings or results under old law," id. at ----,
B.
In light of our conclusion that AICA changed the underlying law, we reject the Coalition's argument that Congress somehow has arrogated the powers reserved to the Executive Branch. AICA does not usurp the Forest Service's authority to decide if the requirements of ESA or NEPA have been met; rather, it exempts the Project from those requirements and substitutes new ones. "It is fully within Congress's prerogative legislatively to alter the reach of the laws it passes, assuming no constitutional principles are thereby violated." Stop H-3 Ass'n v. Dole,
The Coalition believes it has found such a "constitutional principle" in INS v. Chadha,
II. The Coalition's NHPA Claim is Barred by Laches
The Coalition argues that, even if AICA is constitutional, the special use permit is invalid because the Forest Service failed to fulfill its obligations under NHPA. The government and the University respond that AICA renders NHPA inapplicable to the Mount Graham project. As an alternative, they contend that NHPA's requirements have been satisfied. Finally, Respondents maintain that the district court was correct to find the Coalition's NHPA claim barred by laches. Because we conclude that the Coalition's challenge is barred by laches, we do not reach the questions of whether NHPA applies, and if it does, whether there has been compliance.
A. The Appropriate Laches Standard
The district court appeared to bar the Coalition's NHPA claim on the basis of laches.11 The Coalition does not dispute that laches, if otherwise appropriate, would provide a proper basis for affirming the decision of the district court;12 rather, it contends that the laches standard invoked in cases brought under NEPA, a standard that acknowledges the special concerns of suits brought to vindicate the public interest, should apply. In addition, the Coalition argues that, under the appropriate standard, laches cannot be established. While we hold that the district court applied the incorrect laches standard, we ultimately conclude that laches nonetheless bars the Coalition's claim.
1.
Although the application of laches depends on the facts of the particular case and is consigned as an initial matter to the sound discretion of the district court judge, that discretion must be exercised within limits. See, e.g., Coalition for Canyon Preservation v. Bowers,
In environmental cases, such as those brought under NEPA, however, it is recognized universally that these criteria must be applied in light of the principle that "[l]aches must be invoked sparingly" in suits brought to vindicate the public interest. Preservation Coalition, Inc. v. Pierce,
2.
We agree with the Coalition that the laches standard used in NEPA cases should apply to its NHPA claim and that the district court erred in failing to rely upon this standard. Although the obligations imposed by NHPA are "separate and independent from those mandated by NEPA," National Indian Youth Council v. Andrus,
3.
Nowhere in its memorandum denying the Coalition's request for a preliminary injunction did the district court acknowledge the special concerns implicated by suits brought to vindicate the public interest. Because the district court applied the incorrect legal standard, it abused its discretion. See Park County Resource Council, Inc. v. United States Dep't of Agriculture,
When the district court has misapprehended the law in assessing a laches defense, we often have remanded for application of the correct standard, particularly if further factual development is necessary. See, e.g., Espino v. Ocean Cargo Line, Ltd.,
B. Laches Analysis
Applying the correct legal standard, we believe that recourse to laches is justified to bar the Coalition's NHPA claim. First, we conclude that the Coalition brought its NHPA claim with inexcusable delay. Second, we conclude that permitting the Coalition's claim to proceed would result in undue prejudice to the respondents.
1. Inexcusable Delay
(a)
As an initial matter, we hold that, for the purposes of laches analysis, the Tribe and the Coalition should be treated as a single entity. It is clear that the Coalition represents the interests of the Tribe and its members. This is evident both from the fact that the Coalition is composed of members of the San Carlos Apache Tribe--including members of the governing Tribal Council--and from the Coalition's stated purpose of "protect[ing] and preserv[ing] traditional Apache Culture." Complaint pp 10, 12. Moreover, the primary arguments advanced by the Coalition in this court focus on how the Forest Service's implementation of NHPA ignored the interests of the San Carlos Apache as a tribe. See Appellants' Opening Brief at 6, 36-41. Finally, we believe that to hold otherwise would permit an entity, such as the Tribe in this case, to avoid taking responsibility for its conduct by the simple expedient of suing in a different capacity. Cf. 18 Charles A. Wright & Arthur R. Miller, Federal Practice and Procedure Sec. 4456, at 491 (1981) [hereinafter Wright & Miller] (noting in the res judicata context that "i[t] seems clear enough that [an] association should not be able to evade preclusion continually by averring that unidentified members are not bound and bringing successive suits by claiming injury to different identified members").
(b)
Identifying the Coalition with the Tribe, we believe that the Coalition and its members asserted their rights in this action with inexcusable tardiness. As discussed above, the San Carlos Apache were solicited for input concerning Mount Graham and its cultural resources starting in 1985. The Tribe's only response was to seek assurances that its property rights would be protected. In 1986, the Tribe failed to respond to the Forest Service's request for comments on the DEIS, and in 1988, the Tribe asked to have its name taken off the mailing list for the final EIS. Nonetheless, a final EIS was provided; the Tribe, however, failed to provide comment or input.
It is clear, then, that the Tribe ignored the very process that its members now contend was inadequate. In these circumstances, we believe that laches should not be measured not from the date of the relevant agency action, in this case issuance of the Special Use Permit, but from the onset of the NHPA review process, beginning with the Forest Service's first attempts to elicit the Tribe's input in 1985.14 Although rarely articulated in the cases, the primary rationale for finding laches to run from the date of the relevant agency action is that "[u]ntil that date plaintiff might have presumed that the Secretary would not approve the project" without first ensuring compliance with the appropriate regulatory procedures. Clarke v. Volpe,
Although it is true that the Tribe's awareness that the Forest Service was conducting NHPA review could not inform the Tribe of each of the specific defects that it now alleges infected that process, "the Tribe would have acquired this knowledge had it exercised the proper diligence." Jicarilla Apache Tribe v. Andrus,
A second rationale for measuring laches from the relevant agency action is that parties other than the one that happened to file suit might suffer the asserted harm. Cf. Preservation Coalition,
Finally, using 1985 as the relevant measuring date is justified by cases that have taken into account the failure of a party to avail itself of the opportunity to engage in the very process that it seeks to challenge. See, e.g., Foundation on Economic Trends v. Heckler,
Our case-law, however, requires us additionally to consider "(1) whether the party attempted to communicate its position to the agency before filing suit, [and] (2) the nature of the agency response." Preservation Coalition,
Although the Tribe failed to engage in the NHPA process prior to the issuance of the permit, it did make a subsequent aborted attempt to contact the Forest Service. The Tribe claims to have discussed the sacred character of Mt. Graham with the University on two occasions in late 1989, months after issuance of the permit. See Davis Dec'l pp 14-15; Victor Dec'l p 14. However, it is conceded that there was no attempt at that time to advise the Forest Service of the Tribe's position. See Victor Dec'l p 14. Subsequently, on August 31, 1990, a full year after construction commenced on the telescopes, the Forest Service received a letter from the Chairman of the Tribal Council. The letter explained that the University of Arizona had visited the Tribe a week before, but that the one week's grace period the University offered the Tribe to create a mitigation plan was inadequate. The letter further threatened legal action unless a response was received within 72 hours. See CR 36 Ex. J. The Forest Service responded on September 7, explaining its prior efforts to obtain input from the Tribe and expressing its willingness to consider any information the Tribe could provide on religious sites or proposals for mitigation. See CR 36 Ex. K. No response was received from the Tribe. Almost a year later, the Tribe sent a similar letter. The Forest Service responded that it would "be pleased to meet with the San Carlos Tribal Council and listen to their concerns," CR 36 Ex. M, and once again no response from the Tribe was forthcoming.
These brief communications do not constitute the sort of conduct that we have found previously to preclude a finding of unreasonable delay. This is not a case in which the plaintiffs pursued an alternative avenue of relief, see Park County,
Accordingly, nothing in Preservation Coalition, or any of the other relevant cases, undermines our conclusion that 1985 is the appropriate date for starting the laches clock. See also City of Rochester v. United States Postal Serv.,
(c)
It still must be inquired if the Coalition's NHPA claim before this court properly is limited only to those violations of NHPA that related to the issuance of the special use permit, or whether the Coalition, as it contends, also charged the Forest Service with failing to fulfill ongoing duties under NHPA that would support a claim based on continuing violations of the Act. If Appellants properly may raise a claim for the post-permit period, the above analysis of inexcusable delay would not apply to that claim.
We agree with Respondents that the Coalition's challenge was restricted initially to the issuance of the permit. In its complaint, the Coalition alleged that its claims arose out of the Forest Service's errors "in planning and approving a telescope project" on Mount Graham, and that "th[is] action alleges that the Forest Service granted a Special Use Permit to the Arizona Board of Regents and the University of Arizona ... in violation of the United States Constitution and various federal statutes." Complaint p 1 at 1-2 (emphasis added). These allegations were incorporated into the NHPA cause of action, and nowhere did the Coalition allege the violation of any continuing duty.
The complaint, however, does not control the issues properly before this court. We have held previously that, when issues are raised in opposition to a motion to summary judgment that are outside the scope of the complaint, "[t]he district court should have construed [the matter raised] as a request pursuant to rule 15(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure to amend the pleadings out of time." Johnson v. Mateer,
Before the district court, the Coalition appeared to argue both that the section 106 process that led to the approval of the special use permit was defective, see, e.g., Plaintiff's Statement of Facts in Opposition to Summary Judgment at 5, and that NHPA imposes "ongoing obligation[§ on the part of] the agency to evaluate ongoing project[s]," Plaintiff's Response and Opposition to Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment at 21 [hereinafter Summary Judgment Opposition]. The regulations promulgated by the Advisory Council recognize that an obligation to undertake additional section 106 process is triggered (1) when the implementing agency discovers previously unidentified properties that are eligible for inclusion in the National Register, see 36 C.F.R. Sec. 800.11(b)(2) (1989); (2) when stage-by-stage compliance with NHPA is contemplated, see id. Sec. 800.3(c); Morris County Trust,
Although Appellants alluded in their papers to the Forest Services's "ongoing obligations" under NHPA in a general manner, see, e.g., Plaintiff's Response to Government's Motion for Protective Order at 5, 18 [hereinafter Protective Order Response]; Plaintiff's Reply to Opposition to Motion to Compel Discovery at 8; Summary Judgment Opposition at 21, only the first of the triggering events described above was alleged below with sufficient distinctness such that the district court should have treated the scope of the case expanded to the post-permit period. See Plaintiff's Response to Intervenor's Reply Mem. in Support of Summary Judgment at 6 ("However, when new and significant information is brought to the attention of the responsible agency, the NHPA 106 process must be re-opened and the new information considered.... Thus, [Appellants] find themselves before this court, seeking to enforce defendant's ongoing NHPA obligations."); see also Response to Gov'ts Motion for a Protective Order at 5 ("Although NHPA imposes an ongoing obligation on the agency, Defendants persist in ignoring repeated pleas from the Apache and the Plaintiffs.").17
In this case, however, as discussed above, the very information that the Coalition now wants the Forest Service to consider--the asserted importance of Mount Graham to San Carlos Apache religious practices and culture--would have been brought to the agency's attention by the Tribe had it not consistently ignored the NHPA process. See supra pp. 912-13. In these circumstances, we think it would undermine the policies behind the laches doctrine, as well as the justifications for requiring an agency to conduct additional NHPA review when previously undiscovered cultural resources are identified, to treat the asserted violation of this "ongoing" duty in this case as distinct from the claim that the original section 106 process was defective for the purposes of determining inexcusable delay. Had the Tribe participated in the process, the Coalition could not now claim that the information that it subsequently brought to the Forest Service's attention was "new." Indeed, a contrary result would give parties that an agency seeks to consult under NHPA incentives not to participate in the process: even if the agency would, after appropriate consideration of the information, go forward with the project, an entity such as the Tribe could hold back some evidence of the existence of cultural resources until after the project had been approved, and then receive a second bite at the apple (and perhaps an injunction) by bringing forward the previously withheld information. Such sandbagging of agency decisionmakers clearly was not contemplated by Congress. Cf. Portland Audubon Soc'y,
Accordingly, we conclude that the Coalition brought its NHPA claims with inexcusable delay.
2. Undue Prejudice
The second component of laches is undue prejudice. See, e.g., Portland Audubon Soc'y,
At the time the plaintiffs filed their complaint, the construction of the telescopes was 35% complete and a total of almost $4,000,000 had been expended. See Powell Dec'l, CR 53 Tab D at 5, app. at 10. By the time Appellants moved for a preliminary injunction, the amount of expenditures had doubled, and the cost of delay was estimated at almost $11,000 per day. Id.18 Not only has a substantial percentage of the project been completed, but also the portion that is complete includes much of the basic infrastructure that will alter permanently the character of the mountain. Thus, although it is true that a number of cases have refused to find higher degrees of completion to evince prejudice, see, e.g., Coalition for Canyon Preservation,
Of course, our cases indicate that the degree of completion is only one factor to be taken into consideration. See, e.g., Preservation Coalition,
Second, we cannot ignore that what spurred Congress to pass AICA was fear that further delays in the construction of the telescopes might result in a loss of the project to a foreign site or the breakdown of the international coalition that supported the project. See, e.g., Red Squirrel II,
Therefore, the broad purpose behind AICA indicates that we should find delaying construction of three telescopes highly prejudicial. See Red Squirrel II,
* * * * * *In this case, there is no doubt that laches has sound application. The San Carlos Apache, with full knowledge of the impending construction of the observatory on Mount Graham, were content to stand on the sidelines while the federal agencies undertook their administrative duties. Only after substantial work on the observatory complex had been completed did they raise objections, and even then without a reasonable amount of diligence. Therefore, we conclude that the Coalition's NHPA claim is barred by laches.
Conclusion
Because we hold that Title VI of AICA is constitutional and the Coalition's NHPA claim barred by laches, the judgment of the district court is AFFIRMED.
Notes
See Mount Graham Red Squirrel v. Espy,
Section 106, the operative section of NHPA, provides:
The head of any Federal agency having direct or indirect jurisdiction over a proposed Federal or federally assisted undertaking in any State and the head of any Federal department or independent agency having authority to license any undertaking shall, prior to the approval of the expenditure of any Federal funds on the undertaking or prior the issuance of any license, as the case may be, take into account the effect of the undertaking on any district, site, building, structure or object that is included in or eligible for inclusion in the National Register. The head of any such Federal agency shall afford the Advisory Council on Historic Preservation ... a reasonable opportunity to comment with regard to such undertaking.
16 U.S.C. Sec. 470f (1988). The Advisory Council has promulgated regulations to guide agencies' implementation of these requirements. See 36 C.F.R. Sec. 800 et seq. (1993); 16 U.S.C. Sec. 470s (1988).
The "shrines" consisted of a number of artifacts, including cairns and pottery shards, that were scattered in a manner that suggested their use in religious activities. See Admin.Rec.Supp. Exs. 10, 20
Apparently, the Tribe had passed a resolution to this effect in July 1990
The complaint also alleged violations of NFMA and the APA; the Coalition, however, has declined to pursue these claims on appeal
The Coalition agrees that their appeal of the district court's denial of their motion for a preliminary injunction has merged with their appeal of the grant of summary judgment
The proposed language read as follows:
Notwithstanding any other act, law, rule or regulation, the Secretary of Agriculture is hereby authorized and directed to enter into a land use agreement with the ... University of Arizona for the establishment of the Mt. Graham International Observatory Research Site.
Quoted in Red Squirrel II,
These included NEPA, NFMA, the Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976, 43 U.S.C. Sec. 1701 et seq. (1988), the Oregon-California Railroad Land Grant Act, 43 U.S.C. Sec. 1181a (1988), and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, 16 U.S.C. Sec. 703 et seq. (1988). See Robertson, --- U.S. at ----,
Compare Northwest Timber Compromise Sec. 318(b)(6)(A) (stating that the new subsections provide "adequate consideration for the purpose of meeting the statutory requirements that are the basis for the consolidated cases") with AICA Sec. 607 (providing that ESA Sec. 7 shall be deemed satisfied "subject to the terms and conditions of Reasonable and Prudent Alternative Three")
Of course, the statute does not expressly substitute the requirements of Alternative Three for those of NEPA. See AICA Sec. 607. However, as discussed in Red Squirrel II, it is clear that the intent of Congress was to replace the requirements of both NEPA and ESA with those of Alternative Three. See Red Squirrel II,
The Coalition also argues that Robertson is distinguishable because AICA, unlike the Northwest Timber Compromise, provides no express provision for judicial review. However, judicial review of AICA's requirements is available through the APA. See Mount Graham Red Squirrel v. Espy,
The district court, in denying the Coalition's motion for a preliminary injunction, clearly relied on laches. See Memorandum and Order Denying Motion for Preliminary Injunction at 18-20 (Apr. 10, 1992). It then granted Respondents' partial summary judgment for "all the reasons fully set forth" in the memorandum denying the preliminary injunction. Memorandum and Order Granting Defendant's Motion for Summary Judgment at 1-2 (May 29, 1992)
We note that a declaratory judgment, because it is equitable in nature, can be barred by laches. See Abbott Labs. v. Gardner,
Cf. Committee to Save the Fox Building v. Birmingham Branch of the Federal Reserve Bank,
Our prior decisions have announced no general rule for determining the appropriate point from which laches runs in the environmental context. See Preservation Coalition,
The third factor, "the extent of actions, such as preparatory construction, that tend to motivate citizens to investigate legal bases for challenging an agency action," id. at 854, is discussed above. The Tribe clearly was aware of the project and the Forest Service's ongoing NHPA review as early as 1985
Similarly, sufficient diligence was found in Coalition for Canyon Preservation v. Bowers,
The Coalition also alluded to "changes in the location of the project, and changes in the scope and nature of the planned project" without further specification. Protective Order Response at 18. Additionally, Appellants speculated that undiscovered cultural resources might exist on Emerald Peak. See Summary Judgment Opposition at 21. We note that one of Appellants' contentions in this case is that the district court erroneously restricted review to the administrative record and improperly denied Appellants discovery on their post-permit NHPA claim prior to summary judgment. Because Appellants failed to identify with any specificity additional circumstances that might have triggered the need for further compliance with NHPA Sec. 106, however, we find it unnecessary to decide this question. Even if Appellants otherwise were entitled to discovery, it was within the district court's discretion to deny it when, as in this case, the complaining party could only speculate as to what it might discover. See Continental Maritime of San Francisco, Inc. v. Pacific Coast Metal Trades Distr. Council,
Although this court in Coalition for Canyon Preservation stated that the cost of delay cannot be considered because "NEPA by is very nature contemplates such delay," Coalition for Canyon Preservation,
The plaintiffs have submitted to the court two letters that they believe indicate that one of the three telescopes that was originally planned for Emerald Peak might be relocated, and request that we take judicial notice of this development. We decline the invitation. The letters in no manner indicate that the relocation will take place. Indeed, one letter, from the Department of Fish and Wildlife to the Maricopa Audubon Society, specifically notes that to do so probably would violate the terms of Reasonable and Prudent Alternative Three. Finally, the Coalition does not contend that construction of the third telescopes will cause them a harm different from that already caused by the construction of the first two. Thus, even if we considered the letters, they would not change our prejudice calculus
