Farmers who convert' wetlands to agricultural use lose eligibility for federal agricultural subsidies. The initial version of this statute, 16 U.S.C. §§ 3821-24, enacted in 1985 and dubbed “Swampbuster,” made the loss proportional to the amount of wetland converted. An amendment in 1990 provided that converting any wetland would cause the farmer to lose all agricultural payments. A further amendment in 1996 added an exception for wetlands that had been drained and farmed, had reverted to wetland status, and then were restored to agricultural use. We must interpret and apply the 1996 exception..
In 1998 Horn Farms drained about 6.2 acres of wetlands. A system of tiles under that ground showed that this was not its first conversion to farm use, but well before 1998 the system had broken down and the parcel had rеverted to wetland. The district conservationist concluded, from the age of trees and other vegetation, that the ground probably had become saturated again during the 1970s, and certainly no later than 1981. This led local agricultural officials to deem Horn Farms ineligible for the exception, which covers: “A wetland previously identified аs a converted wetland (if the original conversion of the wetland was commenced before December 23, 1985), but that the Secretary determines returned to wetland status after that date as a result of — (i) the lack of maintenance of drainage, dikes, levees, or similar structures; (ii) a lack of management of the lands containing the wetland; or (iii) circumstances beyond the control of the person.” 16 U.S.C. § 3822(b)(2)(D). The date on which the ground “returned to wetland status” could not be determined with certainty, but it preceded December 23, 1985 — so much Horn Farms concedes. Because the Department of Agriculture reads the phrase “after that date” to refer to December 23, 1985, its immediate antecedent, Horn Farms was ineligible for the exception and lost all federal agricultural subsidies. (The statute restores the subsidies if the farmer restores the wetlands, but Horn Farms has declined to do this, and the parties could not agree on the adequacy of its offer to mitigate the loss in other ways. See 16 U.S.C. § 3822(i).)
Horn Farms contends thаt “that date” is the date of the original conversion, so that any wetland converted to farm use before December 23, 1985, always may be farmed again without any loss of federal subsidy, no matter how long it had been a wetland before the second conversion and no matter what its status
on
December 23, 1985. A federal district court agreed with this pоsition and directed the Department to resume Horn Farms’ subsidy payments.
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Because the district court remanded to the Secretary, we must consider whether the judgment is appealable as a “final decision” under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. It is not clear what the Secretary is supposed to do on remand; the judgment omits all details. The remand appears to be the result of careless drafting. The district court did not want the Department of Agriculture to take more evidence and make a fresh decision; instead the court contemplated that the Department would restore Horn Farms’ subsidy. Yet if by ordering a remand rather than a concrete remedy the judge has made his decision non-final, an appeal is impermissible— though an application under Fed.R.Civ.P. 60(a) might be in order to conform the disposition to the opinion’s rationale. Given the rationale of
Sullivan v. Finkelstein,
Section 3822(b)(2)(D) is ambiguous. The referent of “that date” could be December 23, 1985, as the Secretary cоntends, but it also Could be the date on which the wetland was “previously identified” or the date on which the “original conversion ... was commenced”. Several contextual elements support the Secretary’s reading. First, December 23, 1985, is the last antecedent of “that date”. See
Barnhart v. Thomas,
So the Secretary’s interpretatiоn not only is reasonable but also is the most sensible understanding of the legislation. Moreover, because the interpretation is expressed in regulations adopted after notice and opportunity for comment, see 7 C.F.R. §§ 12.2(7), 12.2(8), and concerns the Secretary’s administration of a federal program, it receives all of the deference contemplated by
Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.,
Mr. Daschle was recognized to offer a clarifying amendment to the previously adopted Swampbuster provisions. Mr. Daschle briefly explained the provisions of the amendment. Mr. Lewis offered an amendment to the amendment to clarify that the definition of wetlands would not include simply wet soils. Mr. Daschle said he would accept the amendment. The Committee agreed to the Lewis amendment by voice vote. Mr. Daschle and Mr. Lewis discussed the question of cropland that has been flooded and later reclaimed. Mr. Daschle stressed that the amendment would not affect the use of this land because if production was underway аt any time in the past, the land would be grandfathered.
H.R. Rep. 99-271 (Pt. 1) at 419, 99th Cong. 1st Sess. (1985). This implies that Rep. Daschle thought that the version of the statute under consideration in 1985 allowed previously converted wetlands to be re-converted later without penalty. What that has to do with the interpretation of an amendment 11 years later is a mystery. The 1985 legislation lacked any counterpart to § 3822(b)(2)(D); Rep. Daschle could not have been trying to pin down the antecedent of “that date” in a bill whose drafting lay far in the future. The district judge also did not explain why one representative’s view would trump that of the Cabinet official to whom administration has been delegated. If agencies and legislаtors read ambiguous language differently, the agency wins under
Chevron.
When Congress delegates to the Executive Branch a power of interpretation, it surrenders any opportunity to rule the outcome via statements in committee. See, e.g.,
American Hospital Ass’n v. NLRB,
This conclusion brings to the fore Horn Farms’ contention that Congress lacks authority to make subsidies contingent on preserving wetlands. Such a tie between the agricultural subsidy and leaving wetlands alone is impermissibly coercive, Horn Farms insists, and oversteps Congress’ authority under Article I § 8 cl. 1 of the Constitution. He relies prinсipally on Justice O’Connor’s conclusion in
South Dakota v. Dole,
The majority in
South Dakota
identified three potential limitations on the spending power: conditions set on expenditurеs must (i) promote the general welfare, (ii) be unambiguous (at least when they affect states), and (iii) relate to a legitimate federal interest.
What we have said so far fully resolves the parties’ disputes. But the district court went further; actually the district court
began
with a constitutional decision that did not affect its judgment. The district court stated that the Swampbuster legislation offends the due process clause of the fifth amendment because it does not afford farmers adequate opportunities for administrative review of the district conservationist’s conclusion that particular wetlands had beén converted to farm use on particular dates.
At the close of its opinion, the district judge stated that the Secretary’s removal оf Horn Farms’ subsidy violated 5 U.S.C. § 558, a part of the Administrative Procedure Act, because it deprived Horn Farms of a “license” without the procedures required by that subsection.
It is not clear to us that Horn Farms wants that opportunity, which would mean a chance to turn the 6.2 acres back into wetlands. Since the Swampbuster legislation itself offers that opportunity, see 16 U.S.C. § 3822(i), which Horn Farms spurned, it is hard to see what role § 558 could serve. But, just in case, we add that the district judge’s understanding of § 558 is mistaken. It deals with procedures to be followed in connection with any “application ... for a license required by law”. Horn Farms did not “apply” for a “license.” It wants a check drawn on the Treasury, not a license — for it does not need any federal official’s permission under Swampbuster either to engage in farming or to drain wetlands. It is free to do as much of either as it wants (subject to other legal constraints). Procedures to be used for resolving disputes about whether land was wetlands, and when conversions occurred, are provided in the Swampbus-ter legislation and the implementing regulations, independent of the APA.
That a farmer’s acts have financial consequences no more makes a subsidy a “license” than it would make sense to say that, because a taxpayer cannot claim the child-care credit without actually having a child, the United States has established a “licеnsing” requirement to bear or raise children. Similarly the fact that a mortgage-interest deduction becomes unavailable if the IRS concludes that the taxpayer no longer has a mortgage does not mean that one needs a license to borrow money on the security of real estate. Doubtless § 558 should be read so that it enсompasses all situations in which federal approval is required to undertake some act — even if the document is called a “permit” or “certificate of public interest, convenience, and necessity” rather than a “license.” See 5 U.S.C. § 551(8) (defining a “license” as “the whole or a part of an agency permit, certifiсate, approval, registration, charter, membership, statutory exemption or other
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form of permission”); see also, e.g.,
Bullwinkel v. Department of Transportation,
The judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded with instructions to enter judgment against Horn Farms.
