Clеmens GRUNERT, Jr., Appellant, v. STATE of Alaska, COMMERCIAL FISHERIES ENTRY COMMISSION, Appellee.
No. S-1091.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
April 3, 1987.
Rehearing Denied April 23, 1987.
735 P.2d 118
Margot O. Knuth, Asst. Atty. Gen. and Harold M. Brown, Atty. Gen., Juneau, for appellee.
Before RABINOWITZ, C.J., and BURKE, MATTHEWS, COMPTON and MOORE, JJ.
OPINION
MOORE, Justice.
Clemens Grunert, Jr. applied for a limited entry permit pursuant to the Limited Entry Act,
FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS
Clemens Grunert, Jr. has lived all his life in Chignik, Alaska. Since boyhood, Grunert has assisted his father in the commercial salmon purse seine fishery. Grunert crewed for his father as skiffman from 1965 until 1973 and then crewed for his uncle for the next five years. Following that, he fished from his father‘s older boat, then from a leased boat, and finally from his own boat, pursuant to interim-use permits issued pending a final decision on his limited entry permit application. He was unable to obtain an interim-use permit for 1985.
In July 1972, while Grunert was crewing on his father‘s boat, his father became ill, requiring medical treatment in Anchorage. Only a gear license holder could legally operate the gear, and it was too late in the season to get a new license for someone else. Anxious that the boat not remain idle during his absence, the father radioed an official of the Alaska Department of Fish and Game for advice.
The father claims that Fish and Game official Paul Pedersen advised him over the radio “that it would be alright for Clemens Grunert, Jr. to operate [the] vessel, ... and that it would not be necessary for the time being to work a gear license transfer.” Grunert testified his father told Pedersen “that he was going to have to be leaving for awhile and that I would be running the boat and Paul said it would be okay.” Grunert claims that Pedersen never indicated that any paperwork would be required. The record contains no written documentation of this conversation or of any gear license transfer.
The father was absent for a week. Grunert fished as captain of the boat for two days during this period. Upon his return from Anchorage, the father resumed control of the boat аnd gear while Grunert went back to crewing. No one attempted to notify Fish and Game that the father was resuming the role of gear license holder.
On several other occasions during the 1972 season, Grunert took command of the boat and gear when his father went home early for health reasons.
Grunert applied for a limited entry permit in 1977 and requested an administrative hearing. The hearing officer issued a recommended decision finding that 1) Grunert
The only question presented on appeal is whether Grunert has satisfied the threshold eligibility requirement of
DISCUSSION
A. The CFEC determined the eligibility issue
Grunert‘s first argument before this court is that the CFEC based its decision only on the timeliness issue and did not consider the eligibility question. Since the timeliness issue is now moot, Grunert asks that his case be remanded to the CFEC so it can consider and decide the eligibility issue.
The hearing officer carefully analyzed Grunert‘s gear license argument and concluded that Grunert is not eligible to apply for a limited entry permit. He also concluded that any advice Grunert received as to his ineligibility was entirely correct, and since there was no misadvice, there was no excuse for the late application. The CFEC voted to “adopt” this recommended decision. Grunert contends that since the CFEC offered additional comment only on the timeliness issue, it chose to rely on only one of the two grounds underlying the hearing officer‘s decision.
In our view, by adopting the hearing officer‘s recommended decision, the CFEC accepted as its own everything in that decision. See
B. Grunert was not a gear license holder
Grunert argues that the CFEC incorrectly interpreted former
The CFEC, however, adopted a different interpretation of the statute. The hearing officer‘s decision stated:
The failure of the applicant or his father to send such written statement within the 10-day period results in the failure to complete the legal transfer of the father‘s gear license. Since a legal transfer did not occur, the applicant did not harvest fishery resources while holding a gear license issued under
AS 16.05.536 throughAS 16.05.670 . His participation as a gear operator during his father‘s absenсe was simply illegal. Based upon the application ofAS 16.43.260(a) , he is ineligible to apply.
Former
Former
fer and the reasons for it to the Alaska Department of Fish and Game. Former
We conclude that the purpose of these elaborate requirements was to control tightly the transfer of gear licenses, which were previously entirely non-transferrable. Thereforе, we believe that these requirements should be strictly construed. Accordingly, we agree with the CFEC that the statute does not provide for the temporary transfer of a license for ten days based only on a radio or telegraphic statement. The purpose of the statute is to permit rapid transfer of licenses where bona fide transfers are intended. A gear license can only be transferrеd by full compliance with all the requirements of the statute. The licensee must intend unequivocally to transfer the gear license to another. He must state that clear intent, in writing and under oath. Furthermore, he must give reasons for the transfer, and these reasons must comport with the statutorily acceptable reasons (“sickness, injury, death, unavailability or other incapacitation ... [that] keeps or may kеep a commercial fishing vessel in port....“) Former
Furthermore, Grunert has provided no statement that indicates the licensee‘s (his father‘s) unequivocal willingness to transfer his gear license to Grunert. The statement allegedly made by the father to Pedersen that Grunert would be running the boat in the licensee‘s absence does not indicate such intent. Grunert‘s father‘s
Thus, no transfer of the senior Grunert‘s gear license was made in 1972 pursuant to
Finally, this court has expressly held that “the term ‘holders of gear licenses’ can only be reasonably construed to refer to individual named licensees,” Apokedak II, 680 P.2d at 488. “When the legislature limited the right to apply for an entry permit to ‘holders of gear licenses issued under
C. Estoppel
Grunert argues that the state, in 1972, asserted the position that he was a gear license holder and it should now be estopped from changing that position. The CFEC did not expressly decide this claim although it was before the agency, nor did it rule on certain facts which would be necessary to find аn estoppel. A remand is unnecessary, however, because we find that the uncontroverted facts in the record preclude estoppel.
We have previously rejected the traditional rule that one cannot estop the government. In Municipality of Anchorage v. Schneider, 685 P.2d 94, 97 (Alaska 1984), we held that estoppel lay against a municipal government seeking to enforce a zoning regulation based on little more than the ordinary factors of estoppel: assertion of a position by word or conduct; reasonable reliance on that position; resulting prejudice; and, additionally, enforcement of the estoppel to the extent required in the interest of justice.
In order to succeed on an estoppel theory in this case, Grunert must establish that the position asserted by the state, on which he relied to his prejudice, was that he held a gear license. No other position will satisfy the eligibility requirement of
Even if Pedersen had asserted that radio notification alone, without written follow-up, were sufficient to transfer a gear license, this would not constitute an assertion of the position that Grunert was a gear license holder. The dissent apparently contends that meeting the purely mechanical requirements of the transfer statute (either by actual compliance or by their waiver by estoppel) will effect the license
Because we find that the state did not adopt and communicate to Grunert the position that he held a gear license during his father‘s absence, we need not consider whether Grunert could have reasonably relied on such an incorrect statement of law, or whether the prejudice Grunert now claims (ineligibility for a limited entry permit) actually results from the position he claims the state asserted. We conclude that Grunert cannot estop the state from denying that he held a gear license because the state never asserted that he did. This finding necessarily precludes Grunert‘s claim of quasi-estoppel (“which precludes a party from taking a positiоn inconsistent with one he has previously taken where circumstances render assertion of the second position unconscionable.” Jamison v. Consolidated Utilities, Inc., 576 P.2d 97, 102 (Alaska 1978)). Even if this doctrine may be applied against the state,6 the state did not assert a position inconsistent with its present position.
AFFIRMED.
Clemens GRUNERT, Jr., Appellant, v. STATE of Alaska, COMMERCIAL FISHERIES ENTRY COMMISSION, Appellee.
No. S-1091.
Supreme Court of Alaska.
April 3, 1987.
Rehearing Denied April 23, 1987.
735 P.2d 118
MATTHEWS, Justice, dissenting, joined by RABINOWITZ, Chief Justice.
It is useful to ask what would have happened if there had been a follow-up written notification of the emеrgency transfer following the radio communication. The answer is that it would be incontestable that Grunert had thereby fished as the holder of a gear license issued under
Under former
The general elements of estoppel are assertion of a position, reasonable reliance, and resulting prejudice. Municipality of Anchorage v. Schneider, 685 P.2d 94, 97 (Alaska 1984). In this case there is a question of fact as to the first element, assertion of a positiоn. The question is whether or not the state expressed the view that no follow-up paperwork was necessary. If this was stated it was wrong, for written
In Municipality of Anchorage v. Schneider, we nоted that the doctrine of estoppel should not be applied against a public agency where the general requirements for application of the doctrine are fulfilled if doing so would result in significant prejudice to the public interest. Id. The question of prejudice to the public interest can be answered by asking what the consequences of allowing Grunert to apply would be. The answer is that, at worst, one more permit would be issued for the Chignik purse seine fishery. I do not think that this can be regarded as prejudice to the public interest, or in this context, to the other permit holders in that fishery, of sufficient significance to deprive Grunert of the remedy that the doctrine of estoppel would otherwise give him.
For the above reasons, I would reverse the judgment of the superior court and remand this case with instructions for a further remand to the Commission to conduct an evidentiary hearing on the factual question concerning what Grunert was told by state agents with respect to the need for follow-up written notification.
Notes
(Emphasis added.)If notification of the license transfer is made by radio or telegraphic communication, the written statement of the licensee, his agent, or his legal representative shall be sent to the same depаrtment office as a radio or telegraphic communication within 10 days of the notification of the transfer.
