Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge FRIEDMAN; Dissent by Judge GRABER.
Commercial fishers in California are subject to a bevy of fees. For certain fees, however, non-residents are charged two to three times more than residents. Plaintiffs represent a class of non-resident commercial fishers who contend that California’s discriminatory fees violate the Privileges and Immunities Clause of the United States Constitution. Because California has failed to offer a closely related justification for its discrimination against non-residents, we agree with plaintiffs and therefore affirm the district court’s grant of summary judgment to the plaintiff class.
BACKGROUND
The named plaintiffs are commercial fishers residing outside California. They represent a class of non-residents who, since 2009, have purchased commercial fishing licenses, registrations, or permits from California and paid higher fees than residents. Plaintiffs sued Charlton Bon-ham, in his official capacity as the Director of the California Department of Fish and Game, alleging that the differential fees violate the Privileges and Immunities, and Equal Protection Clauses of the United States Constitution.
Plaintiffs challenge four specific fees: general commercial fishing license fees, commercial fishing vessel registration fees, Herring Gill net permit fees, and Dungeness Crab vessel permit fees. See Cal. Fish & Game Code §§ 7852, 7881, 8550.5, 8280.6. While the parties dispute the prevalence of Herring Gill and Dungeness Crab permits, it is undisputed that, at a minimum, non-resident commercial fishers must purchase the general license to fish in California waters and a vessel registration to do so from a boat they own or operate. See id. §§ 7852, 7881. In 2012-13, the relevant fees were as follows:
• Commercial fishing license: $130.03 for residents; $385.75 for non-residents;
• Commercial fishing vessel registration: $338.75 for residents; $1,002.25 for nonresidents;
• Herring Gill net permit: $359.00 for residents; $1,334.25 for non-residents;
• Dungeness Crab vessel permit: $273.00 for residents; $538.00 for nonresidents.
All four licenses would set a resident back $1,100.78, but a non-resident $3,260.25.
Following discovery, the parties filed cross-motions for summary judgment. The district court concluded that California had failed to demonstrate a genuine issue of material fact and granted summary judgment to the plaintiff class on its Privileges and Immunities Clause claim. The district court then entered final judgment as to plaintiffs’ Privileges and Immunities Clause claim pursuant to Rule 54(b) of the Federal Rules of Civil Procedure.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
We have jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291. We review a grant of summary judgment de novo. See Pac. Shores Props., LLC v. City of Newport Beach,
The Privileges and Immunities Clause provides that “[t]he Citizens of each State shall be entitled to all Privileges and Immunities of Citizens in the several States.” U.S. Consti. art. IV, § 2, cl. 1. This clause “was designed ‘to place the citizens of each State upon the same footing with citizens of other States, so far as the advantages resulting from citizenship in those States are concerned.’ ” Sup. Ct. of Va. v. Friedman,
The Clause, however, “is not an absolute.” Molasky-Arman,
A
California does not dispute that plaintiffs’ right to pursue “a common calling is one of the most fundamental of those privileges protected by the Clause.” Camden,
First, California argues. that our decision in International Organization of Masters, Mates, & Pilots v. Andrews,
California contends that our choice of the words “prevented or discouraged” upset decades of precedent and added an exclusion requirement to the first part of the test. We disagree. As we recited in Andrews just two paragraphs before, the first step requires only that “we determine first whether [the statute] burdens” rights protected under the Clause. Id. at 845. An exclusion requirement would undermine the purpose of the Clause because permitting a State to freely discriminate against non-residents up to the point they are driven out would not “place the citizens of each State upon the same footing with citizens of other States.” Lunding v. N.Y. Tax Appeals Tribunal,
Second, California argues that McBurney v. Young, — U.S. -,
When the Court determines that the Privileges and Immunities Clause does not apply at all, it says so. For example, in Baldwin v. Fish & Game Commission,
Requiring proof of a legislature’s protectionist purpose at the first step of the inquiry, as California urges, would negate the-second step’s burden on the state to provide a valid justification for the discrimination against non-residents. Moreover, an intent requirement would undermine the Clause’s purpose to “plac[e] the citizens of each State upon the same footing with citizens of other States,” Lunding,
To reiterate, contrary to California’s arguments, the first step of the Privileges and Immunities Clause inquiry asks only whether the challenged statute directly burdens a protected activity. It is undisputed that California’s commercial fishing license fees are significantly higher for non-resident fishers than for residents. And it is common sense that commercial fishing license fees directly affect commercial fishing. Those facts alone satisfy plaintiffs’ burden at the first step of the inquiry. See Toomer,
B
At the second step, the burden shifts to the State to demonstrate that “substantial reasons exist for the discrimination and [that] the degree of discrimination bears a close relation to such reasons.” Friedman,
The Supreme Court has noted that “[t]he State is not without power ... to charge non-residents a differential which would merely compensate the State ... for any conservation expenditures from taxes which only residents pay.” Toomer,
We are unpersuaded. Although we agree that obtaining compensation for expenditures the State makes for conservation or enforcement is a permissible state objective, the additional fees charged to non-residents must bear a close relation to the “taxes which only residents pay.” Toomer,
California does not claim, however' — -nor has it presented any evidence that shows — that the fee differential approximates the amount in taxes a resident contributes to the State’s expenditures related to commercial fishing. Mullaney,
CONCLUSION
For the above reasons, we hold that California’s differential commercial fishing license fees, Cal. Fish & Game Code §§ 7852, 7881, 8550.5, and 8280.6, violate the Privileges and Immunities Clause. Charging non-residents two to three times the amount charged to residents plainly burdens non-residents’ right to pursue a common calling, in this case commercial fishing. Such discrimination violates the Privileges and Immunities Clause unless the State carries its burden to show “that such discrimination bears a close relation to the achievement of substantial state objectives.” Friedman,
AFFIRMED.
Notes
. The district court expressly did not reach or enter final judgment on plaintiffs' Equal Protection Clause claim. We therefore lack jurisdiction over that claim. See 28 U.S.C. § 1291.
. "While the Privileges and Immunities Clause cites the term 'Citizens,' for analytic purposes citizenship and residency are essentially interchangeable.” Friedman,
. Our conclusion is supported by the fact that, as the district court noted, our "most recent Privileges and Immunities Clause decision, Molasky-Arman, contains no discussion at all — at either step of the inquiry — of the extent to which the challenged law's increased burden on nonresidents led to any deterrence or exclusion.”
. California argues that the district court applied a purportedly different rule taken from the Supreme Court’s "tax” cases, as opposed to its "common calling” cases, and failed to consider California’s justifications for the discrimination. The Supreme Court, however, has employed the same two-step inquiry for both “tax” and "common calling” cases. Compare Friedman,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting:
I respectfully dissent. Although I agree fully with the majority’s analysis at step one of the inquiry, I would hold, at step two, that the differential fees survive summary judgment. Further evidentiary development is necessary to determine whether the nonresident fees “merely compensate the State for any added enforcement burden [nonresidents] may impose or for any conservation expenditures from taxes which only residents pay.” Toomer v. Witsell,
We have little guidance to assist us in determining what the United States Supreme Court meant in the foregoing passage from Toomer. Only twice since Toomer has the Court quoted the phrase “taxes which only residents pay” in a privileges and immunities context, and in neither case did it explain the meaning of those words. Baldwin v. Fish & Game Comm’n,
Acknowledging those limitations, we must decide how to interpret the phrase “taxes which only residents pay.” Toomer,
The New Jersey Supreme Court has interpreted Toomer in this way. In Salorio v. Glaser,
Applying the Salorio court’s reasoning here, nonresidents are on “equal footing” with residents so long as they are not charged more than their “fair share” of commercial fisheries management expenses that residents’ tax dollars fund. California introduced evidence that nonresidents purchased 11% of commercial fishing licenses, while the differential fees for out-of-state licenses equaled only 3% of the net general fund contributions to the Department of Fish and Wildlife (“DFW”) budget. The State asserts that it constitutionally could charge differential fees that total up to 11% of the DFW’s general fund-supported commercial fishing expenditures, so the smaller fee that California actually charges is — a fortiori — permissible.
On the other hand, Plaintiffs read “taxes which only residents pay,” Toomer,
Implicit in Salorio is the notion that it is permissible to require nonresidents to pay up to 100% of their pro rata share of expenditures regardless of what percentage of their pro rata share residents are in fact pajdng. In other words, Sa-lorio, as applied to this case, seems to add up to a general proposition that the state may subsidize its own residents in the pursuit of their business activities and not similarly situated nonresidents, even though this results in substantial inequality of treatment.
Carlson,
Under the Carlson court’s approach, the state would have to divide general fund
I would reject the per capita formula. The purpose of the Privileges and Immunities Clause is to “place the citizens of each State upon the same footing with citizens of other States, so far as the advantages resulting from citizenship in those States are concerned.” Paul v. Virginia,
California residents subsidize each other with their taxes. For example, suppose that each taxpayer’s share of state support for secondary schools is $1 per year. A certain California taxpayer has a teenager who attends public high school. That taxpayer’s per capita “payment” for the educational benefit is $1, but the benefit to the taxpaying parent is worth much more than that. The parent agrees to subsidize a number of other activities in the state, including commercial fishing. In exchange, taxpayers without school-age children subsidize public education.
Instead of using a per capita formula, I would adopt the Salorio court’s “fair
Turning to the “close relationship” requirement, I would hold that the State has the burden to show three things. First, it must isolate the state expenditures that benefit only the licensees.
I would hold that the “close relationship” requirement of step two is satisfied so long as the state charges a differential fee that, in the aggregate, does not exceeds
This fair share approach accurately reflects the relative benefit that residents and nonresidents obtain from a state’s general fund expenditures. Suppose that a state charges a $50 license fee to resident commercial fishers. Over and above the revenue collected from those fees, the state spends $1 million in tax-supported funds on commercial fisheries management. If 10,000 people per year obtain licenses, the benefit of the $1 million subsidy to each fisher is $100. Thus, a nonresident may be charged the $50 fee that residents pay, plus a $100 differential. If only 5,000 people obtain licenses, each nonresident may be charged a $200 differential. This variance makes sense, because the benefit to each fisher of the tax-supported outlay decreases as more people use the resource. The per capita approach makes less sense because it is unresponsive to such changes; so long as a state’s tax rate and general fund outlay on the commercial fisheries program remain unchanged, the permissible differential is fixed. It is the same whether 10 or 10,000 people obtain licenses and use the resource.
Plaintiffs raise the specter of a year in which only one nonresident purchases a commercial fishing license. They argue that the state’s approach would permit California to collect hundreds of thousands of dollars from that single licensee. Not so. The fair share formula accounts for this possibility. Assuming the scenario described above, in a year in which a single nonresident and 4,999 residents obtain licenses the permissible differential for that nonresident would remain $200.
Finally, Plaintiffs challenge the “fair share” approach because, using it, the
First, the Supreme Court did not reject the differential fees because of the size of the ratio. Rather, it rejected the nonresident fees because Alaska and South Carolina had failed to show any connection between the differential and state spending on services to the nonresidents. See Mullaney,
Second, focusing on the size of the ratio requires consideration of fees in a vacuum. That isolation makes little sense in light of the Supreme Court’s statement that a state may charge a fee designed to “compensate [it] for any added enforcement burden [nonresidents] may impose or for any conservation expenditures from taxes which only residents pay.” Toomer,
Because it applied a different test, the district court did not address whether the net general fund outlay benefits only licensees, whether that outlay derives solely from taxes that only residents pay, or what portion of qualifying costs is properly allo-cable to nonresident fishers. Thus, on the current record, I would hold that we cannot determine whether the differential fees are permissible under the Privileges and Immunities Clause. Accordingly, I would reverse the summary judgment of the district court and remand for further proceedings.
. This illustrative example likely is a generous estimate, as the population of California was nearly 39 million in 2014. U.S. Census Bureau, State & County QuickFacts, http:// quickfacts.census.gov/qfd/states/06000.html. Thus, the permissible differential likely would be less than $ 1 under the per capita formula, even though a substantial number of California residents — for example, minor children— are not taxpayers.
. Of course, some commercial fishers are parents whose children attend public school. But that fact just demonstrates that each taxpayer benefits directly from a different set of state programs supported by his or her tax dollars. The Value of the taxpayer-funded investment in a given program to each individual taxpayer who benefits from that program varies. The value is less than the taxpayer’s total tax bill, but more — generally, significantly more' — than the taxpayer’s strict pro rata contribution to the program.
. These expenditures would include any costs associated with programs or activities in which only licensees participate — for example, the cost of enforcing rules such as size of fish or season limits. They also would include conservation expenditures made necessary by licensees' activities. If the state engages in conservation activities designed to keep fish stocks at a certain level, some of those activities benefit only licensees. To count those costs, the state must separate general conservation activities from conservation activities directed to the effect of commercial fishing.
. It may be, as the State asserts, that multiplying the qualifying expenditures by the percentage of commercial fishers who are nonresidents is the appropriate way to calculate those nonresidents’ fair share, but that is not necessarily the case. See Salorio v. Glaser,
. Because the Privileges and Immunities Clause neither bars the residents of a state from deciding to use their tax dollars to subsidize the activities of nonresidents nor precludes a state from providing a greater benefit to nonresidents than it provides to residents, it is permissible for a state to charge less than the maximum allowable differential.
. The test here is one of "substantial equality of treatment,” not absolute equality. Austin v. New Hampshire,
.The only way the permissible differential charged to a nonresident would skyrocket is if the overall number of fishers obtaining licenses plunged to single digits. But if that happened, the state likely would slash its commercial fisheries management spending. And if it did not cut spending, it is hard to see how the State could prove that the full $1 million in my example benefitted just a handful of fishers, because it is not reasonable to attribute hundreds of thousands of dollars in enforcement and conservation costs to a single fisher.
. The ratio of nonresident fees to resident fees for commercial fishing licenses and commercial boat registrations is three to one. For dungeness crab vessel permits, the ratio is lower (two to one); and for herring gill net permits, the ratio is higher (nearly four to one).
