State of Colorado, Department of Natural Resources; and Parks and Wildlife Commission and Division of Parks and Wildlife, v. 5 Star Feedlot, Inc.
No. 19SC986
The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
May 3, 2021
2021 CO 27
Certiorari to the Colorado Court of Appeals, Court of Appeals Case No. 18CA1131. Judgment Affirmed en banc.
ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
May 3, 2021
2021 CO 27
No. 19SC986, Dep‘t of Nat. Res. v. 5 Star Feedlot, Inc. —
The supreme court affirms the judgment of the court of appeals. A plurality of the supreme court holds that when the State brings a civil action pursuant to
Hence, the court of appeals correctly concluded that the district court erred both in entering summary judgment against 5 Star and in denying 5 Star‘s cross-motion. Accordingly, the supreme court affirms the court of appeals’ judgment, albeit on narrower grounds, and remands with instructions to return the case to the district court for entry of judgment against the State and in 5 Star‘s favor.
Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General
Christopher G. Breidenbach, Assistant Attorney General
Joseph G. Michaels, Senior Assistant Attorney General
Denver, Colorado
Attorneys for Respondent:
Richards Carrington, LLC
Christopher P. Carrington
Ruth M. Moore
Denver, Colorado
Witwer, Oldenburg, Barry & Groom, LLP
John J. Barry
Kent A. Naughton
Greeley, Colorado
Attorneys for Amicus Curiae Pacific Legal Foundation:
Jeffrey W. McCoy
Sacramento, California
Oliver J. Dunford
Palm Beach Gardens, Florida
JUSTICE SAMOUR announced the judgment of the Court and delivered an opinion, in which CHIEF JUSTICE BOATRIGHT and JUSTICE GABRIEL join.
JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ concurs in the judgment only.
JUSTICE HOOD dissents, and JUSTICE HART and JUSTICE BERKENKOTTER join in the dissent.
¶2 Pursuant to
¶4 We now hold that the State was required to prove that 5 Star performed the voluntary act proscribed by the taking statutory provisions (the actus reus).1 Consequently, the State had to prove that 5 Star, consciously and as a result of effort or determination, performed a voluntary act by which it killed or otherwise acquired possession of or control over the fish without authorization.
¶5 The only evidence presented by the State of a voluntary act performed by 5 Star was the lawful, years-long operation of wastewater containment ponds. But the lawful, longstanding operation of such ponds wasn‘t, even according to the State‘s complaint, an act through which 5 Star killed or otherwise acquired possession of or control over the fish. Rather, as the State admitted in its complaint, it was the discharge from one of 5 Star‘s wastewater containment ponds that led to the fish‘s destruction. That discharge, however, was triggered by an act
¶6 Hence, we agree with the court of appeals that the district court erred both in entering summary judgment against 5 Star and in denying 5 Star‘s cross-motion. Given this conclusion, we need not, and thus do not, decide whether the State was also required to prove that 5 Star acted knowingly. Accordingly, we affirm the court of appeals’ judgment, albeit on narrower grounds, and remand with instructions to return the case to the district court for entry of judgment against the State and in 5 Star‘s favor.
I. Facts and Procedural History
¶7 5 Star runs a cattle feedlot in eastern Colorado near the South Fork of the Republican River and Hale Ponds. As part of its operations, 5 Star uses containment ponds to store wastewater. There is no finding in the record that these ponds—each of which can hold more than twenty-four million gallons of wastewater—were built or maintained in violation of any Colorado law, rule, or
¶8 Within three miles of 5 Star‘s feedlot is the South Fork of the Republican River, which is home to an array of wildlife, including the southernmost population of the Brassy Minnow, a threatened species, and rare fish like the Stonecat and Orangethroat Darter. The river flows through the South Republican State Wildlife Area and feeds Hale Ponds, which are among the scarce locations for public sportfishing in the region.
¶9 In the spring of 2015, an act of God—a three-day rainstorm of historic proportions—impacted both 5 Star‘s feedlot and the South Fork of the Republican River. More than six inches of water inundated the area. On the first day alone, two inches fell within thirty minutes, a phenomenon which, on average, takes place only twice every century. The extreme rainstorm caused overflow from, and a partial breach in, one of 5 Star‘s wastewater containment ponds. A mixture of wastewater and rainwater then escaped from that pond. Despite 5 Star‘s prompt
¶10 The State filed a complaint against 5 Star under
Section 33-2-104(3) , C.R.S. (2020), states that, except as otherwise provided in regulations issued by the Parks and Wildlife Commission (“the Commission“), “it is unlawful for any person to take . . . nongame wildlife” that the Commission has deemed to be in need of management;Section 33-2-105(4) , C.R.S. (2020), states that, except as otherwise provided in article 33, “it is unlawful for any person to take . . . any species or subspecies of wildlife appearing on the list of wildlife indigenous to this state determined to be threatened within the state pursuant to subsection (1) of this section“; and
Section 33-6-109(1) , C.R.S. (2020), states that “[i]t is unlawful for any person to . . . take . . . any wildlife that is the property of this state as provided in section 33-1-101, except as permitted by articles 1 to 6” of title 33 or by rule or regulation of the Commission.
(Emphases added.)4 It is uncontested that the fish that perished were protected under one or more of these provisions.
¶11 Relying on
¶12 In a lean order, the district court denied 5 Star‘s motion and granted the State‘s motion. After implying that 5 Star had taken the fish by killing the fish, it ruled that 5 Star was strictly liable. The court added that no genuine issue of material fact remained on the issue of liability. The case then proceeded to a bench trial on the issue of damages. The court ultimately ordered 5 Star to pay $625,755 to the State.
¶13 5 Star appealed, raising three contentions: (1) it was not liable for the fish‘s deaths because it had neither acted with the culpable mental state of knowingly nor performed an unlawful voluntary act that killed or otherwise acquired possession of or control over the fish; (2) genuine issues of material fact remained that rendered the grant of the State‘s summary judgment motion erroneous; and (3) its own motion for summary judgment should have been granted because the State had presented insufficient evidence as to the cause of the fish‘s demise. Believing that the State‘s motion had been mistakenly granted and that its cross-motion had been mistakenly denied, 5 Star asked the court to reverse the summary judgment in favor of the State and to remand with instructions to enter judgment in favor of 5 Star.
¶15 Judge Fox concurred in part and dissented in part. Id. at ¶¶ 43–50 (Fox, J., concurring in part and dissenting in part). Though she agreed that the State was
¶16 The State then sought our intervention. In its petition for review, it asserted that (1) it didn‘t have to prove that 5 Star acted with a culpable mental state because, in its view, the taking statutory provisions describe strict liability offenses, and (2) it was required to prove that 5 Star committed any voluntary act (not necessarily an unlawful voluntary act). We accepted the State‘s appeal.6
II. Analysis
¶17 Before we up-anchor and set sail, we brush up on the applicable standards of review and the relevant principles of statutory interpretation. With our course illuminated by these lighthouses, we embark on our analytical voyage and consider whether the State was required to prove an unlawful voluntary act, as the division ruled. We hold that the State was required to prove that 5 Star performed the voluntary act proscribed by the taking statutory provisions (the actus reus). Consequently, the State had to prove that 5 Star, consciously and as a
A. Applicable Standards of Review and Relevant Principles of Statutory Interpretation
¶18 We review de novo an order granting summary judgment. People ex rel. Rein v. Meagher, 2020 CO 56, ¶ 19, 465 P.3d 554, 559. Hence, when reviewing such an order, we apply the same legal standard as the district court. City of Longmont v. Colo. Oil & Gas Ass‘n, 2016 CO 29, ¶ 9, 369 P.3d 573, 578.
¶19 It is apodictic that summary judgment is a drastic remedy reserved for those situations in which it is clear that the applicable legal standard has been satisfied. Rein, ¶ 21, 465 P.3d at 559. Summary judgment is proper only if “the pleadings, depositions, answers to interrogatories, and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a judgment as a matter of law.” Id. at ¶ 19, 465 P.3d at 559 (quoting
¶20 We also review questions of statutory interpretation de novo. Id. at ¶ 22, 465 P.3d at 559. In interpreting a statute, we aim to ascertain and give effect to the General Assembly‘s intent. Linnebur v. People, 2020 CO 79M, ¶ 9, 476 P.3d 734, 736–37. To do so, we consider first the plain language of the statute, giving the words and phrases their plain and ordinary meaning. Id., 476 P.3d at 737. We look to the entire statutory scheme because we are required to give consistent, harmonious, and sensible effect to all its parts, while simultaneously avoiding constructions that would either render any of its words or phrases superfluous or yield illogical or absurd results. Elder v. Williams, 2020 CO 88, ¶ 18, 477 P.3d 694, 698. If the statute is unambiguous—i.e., if it is not reasonably susceptible to multiple interpretations—we apply it as written and refrain from resorting to other rules of statutory construction. Id.
B. The State Was Required to Prove the Voluntary Act Proscribed by the Taking Statutory Provisions (the Actus Reus)
¶21 5 Star claims, the State concedes, and we conclude that the State could prevail on its civil claim only if it proved that 5 Star violated at least one of the predicate taking statutory provisions. While the State had to prove any such violation only by a preponderance of the evidence (not beyond a reasonable doubt) because this is a civil (not criminal) case, it was nevertheless required to prove all the elements necessary for a conviction.
¶23 The parties skirmish over two questions related to the elements of the offenses underlying this civil action: (1) Do the taking statutory provisions impose strict liability or was the State required to prove that 5 Star acted with the culpable
¶24 The State avers that the voluntary act or actus reus prong of criminal liability in Colorado does not require proof of an unlawful act.9 5 Star counters that the State was required to prove the voluntary act proscribed by the taking statutory provisions. We agree with 5 Star.
¶25 Our General Assembly has declared that “[t]he minimum requirement for criminal liability is the performance by a person of conduct which includes a voluntary act or the omission to perform an act which he is physically capable of performing.”10
¶27 Black‘s Law Dictionary defines actus reus as:
- The wrongful deed that comprises the physical components of a crime and that generally must be coupled with mens rea to establish criminal liability; a forbidden act <the actus reus for theft is the taking of or unlawful control over property without the owner‘s consent>.
- The voluntary act . . . , the attendant circumstances, and the social harm caused by a criminal act, all of which make up the physical components of a crime.—Also termed deed of crime; overt act.
Actus Reus, Black‘s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019) (first two emphases added); see also id. (quoting Glanville Williams, Criminal Law: The General Part 19 (2d ed. 1961), for the following propositions: (1) in the event “the specification of a crime includes a number of circumstances, all of these are essential and all must be regarded as part of the actus reus“; and (2) “[t]he view that actus reus means all the
¶28 Colorado jurisprudence has long treated the “voluntary act” required by
¶29 We have made similar declarations in other cases. In People v. Wilhelm, after acknowledging that the General Assembly has enacted strict liability offenses, which do not contain a culpable mental state or mens rea requirement,11 we explained that such offenses simply require “proof . . . that the prohibited conduct was ‘the product of conscious mental activity involving effort or determination.‘”
¶30 Not surprisingly, the Colorado Model Criminal Jury Instructions have followed suit.
¶31 Therefore, here, the State could not prevail unless it proved that 5 Star committed the voluntary act proscribed by the taking statutory provisions.12 Though the State disputes this point and argues that any voluntary act—not necessarily the voluntary act proscribed by the taking statutory provisions—
¶32 So, did the State present proof of the voluntary act proscribed by the taking statutory provisions? We turn to that question next.
C. The District Court Erred in Granting the State‘s Motion for Summary Judgment
¶33 In the district court, the State presented no evidence that 5 Star performed a voluntary act by which it killed or otherwise acquired possession of or control over the fish without authorization. Accordingly, the State failed to satisfy the voluntary act or actus reus requirement of the taking statutory provisions.
¶34 The voluntary act the State alleged 5 Star performed was the lawful, years-long operation of wastewater containment ponds. But 5 Star‘s lawful, longstanding operation of wastewater containment ponds was not proscribed by the taking statutory provisions because such operation didn‘t kill or otherwise acquire possession of or control over the fish.
¶36 The State‘s attempt to analogize 5 Star‘s lawful, long-term operation of wastewater containment ponds to the situation we dealt with in People v. Garcia misses the mark. 541 P.2d 687 (Colo. 1975), superseded by statute,
¶37 Our holding today jibes with Garcia. Just as a defendant can‘t be found guilty of fourth degree arson if the fire was started by events beyond his control, a defendant can‘t be found guilty of taking protected wildlife without authorization under one of the taking statutory provisions if the taking was accomplished by events beyond his control. Regardless of whether the culprit was fire or water, criminal liability may not attach in either scenario if the defendant did not perform the voluntary act proscribed by the statute defining the offense. Thus, although the State seeks refuge in Garcia, we perceive nothing in Garcia that can reasonably be read as relieving the State of its burden to prove that 5 Star
¶38 The flaw in the State‘s analytical approach in the district court was that it seemed to analyze this case through the prism of a negligence tort.14 But tort principles can‘t be shoehorned into
¶39 In short, to borrow from the old idiom, the State brought a negligence-tort knife to an actus-reus gun fight and, as this opinion demonstrates, it could not
¶40 Our work isn‘t done yet, though, because the denial of 5 Star‘s cross-motion for summary judgment is also before us. We explore that aspect of 5 Star‘s appeal below.
D. The District Court Also Erred in Denying 5 Star‘s Motion for Summary Judgment
¶41 An order denying a motion for summary judgment is generally not appealable because it doesn‘t terminate the litigation. Glennon Heights, Inc. v. Cent. Bank & Tr., 658 P.2d 872, 875 (Colo. 1983). However, as the division astutely recognized, where the parties file cross-motions for summary judgment on the issue of liability and the district court grants one, denies the other, and then resolves the issue of damages at a bench trial, the judgment is final and we may review the order denying summary judgment. See Dep‘t of Nat. Res., ¶ 36 (citing Yaffe Cos., Inc. v. Great Am. Ins. Co., 499 F.3d 1182, 1184 (10th Cir. 2007)).
¶42 In its motion for summary judgment, 5 Star relied on the lack of any argument or evidence by the State regarding the voluntary act or actus reus required by the taking statutory provisions. As such, it was incumbent on the State to come forward with evidence demonstrating the existence of a genuine issue of material fact vis-à-vis that requirement. Rein, ¶ 20, 465 P.3d at 559. Because the State failed to do so, the district court erred in denying 5 Star‘s motion and we now direct the entry of judgment against the State and in favor of 5 Star. See In re Estate of Scott, 119 P.3d 511, 515–16 (Colo. App. 2004) (directing entry of judgment for the party whose summary judgment motion was denied by the district court because no factual issue remained); Udis v. Universal Commc‘ns Co., 56 P.3d 1177, 1183 (Colo. App. 2002) (same); see also Witcher v. Canon City, 716 P.2d 445, 456–57 (Colo. 1986) (explaining that a party‘s failure to challenge evidence presented in support of a motion for summary judgment in the district court waives any such challenge on appeal).
III. Conclusion
¶43 We affirm the division‘s judgment, albeit on narrower grounds. And we remand with instructions to return the case to the district court to enter judgment against the State and in 5 Star‘s favor.
JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ concurs in the judgment only.
JUSTICE HOOD dissents, and JUSTICE HART and JUSTICE BERKENKOTTER join in the dissent.
JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ, concurring in the judgment only.
¶44 The State seeks to hold 5 Star Feedlot, Inc. liable for the effects of an extreme, fifty-year rainstorm event that caused 5 Star‘s wastewater containment ponds to overflow and allegedly resulted in the death of approximately 15,000 fish several miles away. The question before us is whether 5 Star may be held liable for this result, not as a matter of tort (say, as a proximate and foreseeable result of the negligent construction or maintenance of the containment ponds), but in violation of statutory provisions that make it unlawful to “take” wildlife. I agree with the plurality that the State failed to plead a case that could survive 5 Star‘s motion for summary judgment, but I do not join its reasoning. Instead, I conclude that, as a matter of plain language and viewing the wildlife code as a whole, the “taking” of wildlife requires knowing or intentional conduct directed at wildlife. Here, because the State failed to allege knowing or intentional conduct by 5 Star amounting to a “taking” of wildlife, its case cannot survive summary judgment. Because I agree that the case should be remanded to the district court for entry of summary judgment in favor of 5 Star, but do not join the rationale of the plurality opinion, I respectfully concur in the judgment only.
I. Principles of Statutory Interpretation
¶45 In interpreting statutes, our role is to ascertain and give effect to the legislature‘s intent. See People v. Harrison, 2020 CO 57, ¶ 16, 465 P.3d 16, 20. To this
II. “Take” Requires Knowing or Intentional Conduct
¶46
¶47 As Justice Scalia once observed, in the context of wildlife, the term “take” is “as old as the law itself,” and means “to reduce those animals, by killing or capturing, to human control.” Babbitt v. Sweet Home Chapter of Cmtys. for a Great Or., 515 U.S. 687, 717 (1995) (Scalia, J., dissenting) (tracing the right to “take” wild animals back to ancient Roman law); see also id. (citing, inter alia, 2 William Blackstone, Commentaries *411 (1766) (“Every man . . . has an equal right of pursuing and taking to his own use all such creatures as are ferae naturae.“)). Under the traditional understanding of the term, an individual “takes” a wild animal through knowing or intentional conduct. See United States v. CITGO Petroleum Corp., 801 F.3d 477, 489 (5th Cir. 2015) (“One does not reduce an animal to human control accidentally or by omission; he does so affirmatively.“).
Take or hunt means to pursue, shoot, wound, kill, trap, possess, capture, collect, attract, stalk, or lie in wait or to attempt any of the foregoing for the purpose of taking wildlife, whether or not such wildlife is then or subsequently taken, but such terms shall not include stalking, attracting, or searching for or lying in wait for wildlife by an unarmed person solely for the purpose of watching wildlife or taking pictures thereof or accidental wounding or killing by a motor vehicle, locomotive, or train.
¶50 The narrower term “take,” as amended by the 1994 amendments and at the time of the 2015 rainstorm event here, was more specifically defined as “to acquire possession of wildlife.”
¶51 For purposes of the wildlife code, “possession” is defined as “either actual or constructive possession of or any control over the object referred to.”
¶52 The statutory taking provisions are silent as to the requisite mens rea that the State must prove. However, such “legislative silence does not always indicate a strict liability offense because the statute may imply a culpable mental state.” People v. Manzo, 144 P.3d 551, 556 (Colo. 2006). To the contrary, our legislature has made clear that “[a]lthough no culpable mental state is expressly designated in a statute defining an offense, a culpable mental state may nevertheless be required for the commission of that offense, or with respect to some or all of the material elements
¶53 Given the wildlife code‘s longstanding treatment of “take” as synonymous with hunting and related purposeful activities, the act of taking, by its very nature, “necessarily involves” knowing or intentional conduct.
¶54 This understanding of “take” is confirmed by a multitude of other provisions throughout articles 1 through 6 of Title 33. Viewed as a whole, the wildlife code is replete with provisions joining the word “take” with “hunt” or similar, purposeful acts directed at wildlife, signaling that “take” likewise requires knowing or intentional conduct. See, e.g.,
¶55 The State argues that “take” cannot require that conduct be knowing because if it did, there would be no need for the exception for the “accidental wounding or killing of wildlife” in
¶56 Similarly, I would decline to infer that the express limitation in
III. The State Failed to Allege that 5 Star Acted Knowingly or Intentionally
¶57 The State‘s theory throughout this litigation has been that the discharge from 5 Star‘s wastewater containment ponds following the rainstorm migrated into the waterways and ultimately resulted in the death of fish. But as discussed above, the wildlife code is concerned with hunting, fishing, trapping, and related purposeful activities directed at wildlife; it does not purport to address industrial pollution or toxic torts. And even if it did, the State has not alleged that 5 Star constructed or maintained its wastewater containment ponds in violation of any statute or regulation. To be clear, the unfortunate events that led to the death of
IV. Conclusion
¶58 For the foregoing reasons, because the State failed to allege knowing or intentional conduct by 5 Star amounting to a “taking” of wildlife, its case cannot survive summary judgment. Although I arrive at my conclusion under different reasoning than the plurality, I nevertheless agree that the case should be remanded to the district court for entry of summary judgment in favor of 5 Star. Therefore, I respectfully concur in the judgment only.
JUSTICE HOOD, dissenting.
¶59 The plurality holds that the State failed to present evidence of a voluntary but prohibited act because 5 Star Feedlot, Inc.‘s (“5 Star“) “operation of wastewater containment ponds . . . didn‘t kill . . . fish.” Plur. op. ¶ 34. Instead, the plurality attributes the deaths to the rain, which was “beyond [5 Star‘s] control.” Id. at ¶ 37.
¶60 But the plurality‘s concern implicates causation, not voluntariness. When a crime prohibits a result—like causing fish to die—proving the actus reus requires evidence of a voluntary act that actually and proximately caused the forbidden result. So, the fact that 5 Star exerted conscious effort to store feces-contaminated water in ponds was sufficient if it actually and proximately caused the deaths.
¶61 The district court found that no genuine dispute existed over whether 5 Star‘s conduct was an actual cause of the deaths. Thus, 5 Star performed the actus reus of the take statutes if it was also foreseeable that the practice of storing wastewater in ponds would combine with a rainstorm to kill fish.
¶62 Because I would reverse on actus reus, I also address whether the division correctly held that the take statutes imply a mens rea of “knowingly.” On this second issue, I would also reverse the division. The text of the take statutes reveals that the State was right to read them as imposing strict liability.
I. Actus Reus
¶64 The plurality correctly defines “actus reus” as “[t]he wrongful deed that comprises the physical components of a crime,” including “the social harm caused.” Id. at ¶ 27 (emphasis omitted) (quoting Actus Reus, Black‘s Law Dictionary (11th ed. 2019)). I also agree that a crime‘s actus reus includes “[t]he minimum requirement” of “a voluntary act,” id. at ¶ 25 (emphasis omitted) (quoting
¶65 Yet the plurality neglects to mention that, “[a]lthough a voluntary act is an absolute requirement for criminal liability, it does not follow that every act up to the moment that the harm is caused must be voluntary.” 1 Wayne R. LaFave, Substantive Criminal Law § 6.1(c) (3d ed. 2020); accord State v. Burrell, 609 A.2d 751, 753 (N.H. 1992) (holding there‘s “no support” for the rule that the prosecution must “prove that the defendant‘s last act was voluntary“). Take the example of a person subject to fainting spells who passes out while driving and kills a pedestrian. The driver‘s “voluntary act consists of driving the car,” even though the bodily movements immediately before the crash were involuntary. LaFave, supra, § 6.1(c); see State v. Newman, 302 P.3d 435, 442 (Or. 2013) (“If the driver . . .
¶66 The plurality accepts that storing feces-contaminated water in ponds was a voluntary act but dismisses the practice as irrelevant. Plur. op. ¶ 34. The take statutes prohibit voluntary acts that kill fish, and 5 Star’s “operation of wastewater containment ponds,” voluntary as it was, “didn’t kill . . . fish.” Id. Instead, the spill “was triggered by the rainstorm, which was certainly not . . . an act 5 Star undertook ‘consciously as a result of effort or determination.’” Id. at ¶ 35 (quoting
¶67 But, of course, storing the wastewater in manure ponds did kill fish. The district court found that rain alone wouldn’t have been a problem. It was the toxic combination of feces and rainwater that wreaked havoc. Thus, the storm and the containment ponds were both necessary ingredients for the deaths of the fish. As such, each was a but-for or actual cause of the accidental killings. Without the storage of the wastewater in the containment ponds, the spill would not have occurred.
¶68 While the plurality’s interest in the legal significance of the rain is understandable, it has conflated the voluntary act requirement with an entirely
¶69 Causation is a part of a crime’s actus reus whenever the General Assembly prohibits a specific result. See 1 Paul H. Robinson, Criminal Law Defenses § 88 (2020) (“Every criminal code contains offenses defined to include a result element; implicit in such an element is a requirement that there be a causal connection between the actor’s conduct and the required result.”). Without meaning to suggest any moral equivalence between what happened here and the killing of human beings, I note that a common example of a “result crime” is homicide: “caus[ing] the death of a person.”
¶70 Those principles are actual and proximate cause: “It is required, for criminal liability, that the conduct of the defendant be both (1) the actual cause, and (2) the ‘legal’ cause (often called ‘proximate’ cause) of the result.” Id. Conduct is an actual cause when “the result would not have happened in the absence of the conduct.” Id. at § 6.4(b). And, “[i]n the criminal law, the gist of the concept [of proximate cause] is the not-so-complex principle that persons normally should be deemed responsible [only] for the natural and probable consequences of their acts.” People v. Rostad, 669 P.2d 126, 128 (Colo. 1983).
¶71 So, when a defendant’s conduct and an “intervening cause” combine to actually cause a forbidden result, the question becomes whether that result was “the natural and probable consequence” of the conduct, versus something that the defendant “could not foresee.” People v. Saavedra-Rodriguez, 971 P.2d 223, 226 (Colo. 1998) (quoting 1 Ronald A. Anderson, Wharton’s Criminal Law and Procedure § 200 (12th ed. 1957)); see Newman, 302 P.3d at 442 (“[A] defendant may be held criminally liable for a prior voluntary act if that act, through a course of related
¶72 As Rostad and Saavedra-Rodriguez demonstrate, the plurality shouldn’t dismiss proximate cause as exclusive to tort law. See plur. op. ¶¶ 38–39 (“[T]ort principles can’t be shoehorned into section 33-6-110(1) because that statutory provision doesn’t authorize the State to recover by proving a civil negligence claim. Rather, . . . section 33-6-110(1) requires proof establishing a criminal offense pursuant to one of the taking statutory provisions.”). Criminal law implicates proximate causation whenever the General Assembly criminalizes causing. See People v. Stewart, 55 P.3d 107, 120–21 (Colo. 2002) (“A [criminal] defendant is responsible for serious bodily injury to another if the injury is a natural and probable consequence of his misconduct.”); United States v. Apollo Energies, Inc., 611 F.3d 679, 690 (10th Cir. 2010) (“Central to all of the Supreme Court’s cases on the due process constraints on criminal statutes is foreseeability—whether it is framed as a constitutional constraint on causation and mental state, or whether it is framed as a presumption in statutory construction.” (citations omitted));
¶73 Tying everything together, to prove the actus reus of the take statutes, the State needed to show that 5 Star performed a voluntary act that actually and foreseeably caused fish to die. No one disputes that 5 Star voluntarily stored feces-contaminated water in ponds. And the State presented evidence that this wastewater mixed with rainwater, spilled into a river, and then killed fish by spiking the river’s ammonia levels and depleting its dissolved oxygen. The superseding event of the rain implicates proximate causation, not the voluntary act requirement. Thus, the plurality errs by holding that the State “failed to formally allege, never mind present proof,” that 5 Star committed a voluntary act prohibited by the take statutes. Plur. op. ¶ 5.3
II. Mens Rea
¶74 The plurality affirms the division on actus reus, so it doesn’t reach the division’s other holding that the State failed to present evidence that 5 Star violated the take statutes’ implied mens rea of “knowingly.” See id. at ¶ 6; Dep‘t of Nat. Res. v. 5 Star Feedlot Inc., 2019 COA 162M, ¶ 25, __ P.3d __; see also
¶75 The State sued 5 Star pursuant to a statute that authorizes “a civil action against any person . . . to recover . . . value of any wildlife taken in violation of [the Wildlife Code].”
“It is unlawful for any person to hunt, take, or have in such person’s possession any wildlife [within this state and not privately owned], except as permitted by [the Wildlife Code] or by rule or regulation of the [Parks and Wildlife Commission (the “Commission”)].” § 33-6-109(1), C.R.S. (2020) (emphases added).- “[I]t is unlawful for any person to take, possess, transport, export, process, sell or offer for sale, or ship nongame wildlife deemed by the [C]ommission to be in need of management . . . . [I]t is also unlawful for any common or contract carrier to knowingly transport or receive for shipment nongame wildlife deemed by the [C]ommission to be in need of management . . . .”
§ 33-2-104(3), C.R.S. (2020) (emphases added). - “[I]t is unlawful for any person to take, possess, transport, export, process, sell or offer for sale, or ship and for any common or contract carrier to knowingly transport or receive . . . species . . . of wildlife . . . determined to be threatened . . . [by the Commission].”
§ 33-2-105(4), C.R.S. (2020) (emphases added).
¶76 Although “[t]he legislature can proscribe an act without regard to a culpable mental state,” People v. Washburn, 593 P.2d 962, 964 (Colo. 1979), “the requisite mental state may be implied,” People v. Gross, 830 P.2d 933, 940 (Colo. 1992). Whether a statute implies a mental state requirement turns on “the plain and ordinary meaning of the statutory language” and “the legislative intent represented by the statutory scheme.” People v. Manzo, 144 P.3d 551, 554 (Colo. 2006); see also
¶77 At the time of the accident, the Wildlife Code defined “take” as “to acquire possession of wildlife; but such term shall not include the accidental wounding or killing of wildlife by a motor vehicle, vessel, or train.”
¶78 5 Star’s response to the definition of “take” falls flat. It argues that the exception for some accidental killings is meant to “protect[] individuals from liability for acts knowingly directed toward wildlife after an accident,” such as “dislodg[ing], mov[ing], aid[ing], or euthaniz[ing] an animal after an accident.” But, by its own terms, the exception applies only to accidents and only to acts that kill or wound by means of a vehicle.5
¶80 5 Star responds that the legislature implied a knowing mens rea for the entire subsection but included the express language to appease common carriers. But we read statutes to “avoid[] rendering any words or phrases meaningless.” People v. Ross, 2021 CO 9, ¶ 34, 479 P.3d 910, 917.
¶81 Further, by drawing the line at knowing conduct, 5 Star (and the concurrence) would read the Wildlife Code as allowing people to kill wildlife recklessly or with criminal negligence. See
¶82 The division didn’t analyze the aforementioned textual evidence of strict liability, see 5 Star Feedlot, ¶¶ 16–26; instead, it extended the reasoning of two decisions from the court of appeals. In one of those cases, a division held that there was an implied mens rea of knowing for a statute’s prohibition against “kill[ing] and abandon[ing] any wildlife.” People v. Lawrence, 55 P.3d 155, 163 (Colo. App. 2001) (quoting
¶83 The division below thought that the take statutes at issue here also logically require a knowing mental state since they “proscribe[] conduct that is virtually identical to the conduct proscribed by the versions of [the statute] construed in those cases.” 5 Star Feedlot, ¶ 23. The division also conducted a noscitur a sociis analysis, concluding that “take” requires a mental state of knowingly because it appears in series with other conduct that implies knowledge: “hunt, take, or have
¶84 The two court of appeals cases interpreted a statute entitled “Willful destruction of wildlife—legislative intent.”
¶85 The division’s noscitur a sociis argument doesn’t work either. Sections
¶87 Having reviewed the take statutes, I would hold that they do not contain an implied mens rea requirement, let alone a mens rea of knowledge.
III. Conclusion
¶88 Because I would reverse the division on actus reus and mens rea, I would remand this case to the court of appeals for the resolution of 5 Star’s causation arguments. One of those arguments is that the district court should have granted 5 Star’s motion for summary judgment because the State’s causation evidence was insufficient. That issue includes whether 5 Star foreseeably caused the fish to die.
Notes
- Whether proving a violation of the take statutes requires evidence of knowing conduct.
- Whether proving a violation of the take statutes requires evidence of a voluntary act that is itself illegal.
