Lead Opinion
Opinion by Judge KOZINSKI; Concurrence by Judge REINHARDT.
We consider whether review of certain timber sales is available under the Administrative Procedure Act.
I
Plaintiffs Oregon Natural Resources Council and Umpqua Watersheds, Inc. are environmental organizations trying to block four sales of timber by defendant Jack Ward Thomas, Chief of the United States Forest Service.
The Pinestrip and Snog sales are both located in the Upper North Umpqua River Basin in southwestern Oregon, an area “famous for its stunning scenery and its clear, jade-green rushing water.” Opening Br. of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 6. Congress has designated over 30 miles of the North Umpqua as a “wild and scenic river.” See 16 U.S.C. § 1274(a)(95). The North Umpqua also “supports one of the most outstanding native salmonid fisheries on the west coast.” Opening Br. of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 6. The Pinestrip and Snog sales also both involve timber growing on land subject to President Clinton’s Northwest Forest Plan, ' commonly referred to as “Option 9.”
According to the amended complaint, the Pinestrip and Snog sales will reduce “viable populations of native aquatic and amphibious species” and “degrad[e] ... aquatic resources,” in violation of the National Forest Management Act, 16 U.S.C. § 1604(g)(3), and its implementing regulations, 36 C.F.R. § 219, et seq. CR 23 ¶ 17.c. Plaintiffs also claim the sales don’t comply with Option 9,
The amended complaint further alleges that the sales are “arbitrary” and “capricious” under APA § 706(2)(A), because the Forest Service hasn’t obtained “information necessary to ensure that viable populations of aquatic and amphibious species will be maintained [despite the sales], and to ensure that the watershed will not be seriously adversely affected [by the sales].” CR 23 ¶ 17.-d.; see also id. ¶ 1, Prayer for Relief C. The amended complaint doesn’t allege that any statute, apart from the APA, required the agency to obtain this information. Plaintiffs’ opening brief in this appeal alleged the sales were also “arbitrary and capricious” because the Forest Service found the sales would not have significant environmental impacts, without explanation and despite a contrary finding by the Service’s own expert, Opening Br. of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 25-26, and because the Forest Service has failed to carry out mitigation measures it said it would take in connection with the sales, id. at 26-27.
On cross-motions for summary judgment, the district court dismissed plaintiffs’ case based on the 1995 Rescissions Act and the APA.
II
The Rescissions Act seeks “to provide harvestable timber to the people who live and work in the region of option 9.” S.Rep. No. 17, 104th Cong., 1st Sess. 122 (1995).
The documents and procedures required by this section for the preparation, advertisement, offering, awarding, and operation of ... any timber sale under subsection (d) shall be deemed to satisfy the requirements of the following applicable Federal laws (and regulations implementing such laws):
(5) The National Forest Management Act ...
(8) All other applicable Federal environmental and natural resource laws.
The Rescissions Act doesn’t require any documents or procedures for Option 9 timber sales.
Plaintiffs all but concede as much. See Opening Br. of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 20-21; Reply Br. of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 4. The “overriding thrust” of their case, they explain, is that the Pinestrip and Snog sales are “arbitrary and capricious” under APA § 706(2)(A), even assuming no other law applies. Reply Br. of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 2. The district court rejected this argument based on the Rescissions Act and APA § 701(a)(2). The latter statute forbids judicial review of agency action “to the extent that ... agency action is committed to agency discretion by law.” 5 U.S.C. § 701(a)(2). The district court explained that, as its name suggests, “the APA is merely a vehicle for carrying substantive challenges to court.” CR 106, 7. As plaintiffs couldn’t point to any “independent, substantive body of law,” id. at 8, that confined defendants’ discretion to go forward with the sales, their decision to sell the timber was “committed to agency discretion” under section 701(a)(2). The district court therefore dismissed the case for lack of subject matter jurisdiction. Id. (citing City of Santa Clara v. Andrus,
Plaintiffs contend that this analysis renders meaningless Rescissions Act § 2001(f)(1), to the extent it provides that “a timber sale ... under subsection (d) ... shall be subject to judicial review.”
We agree with the district court, moreover, that subsection 2001(d)’s direction to expedite the preparation, offer and award of Option 9 sales “[notwithstanding any other law” is best interpreted as requiring the disregard only of environmental laws, not all laws otherwise applicable to Option 9 sales. We have repeatedly held that the phrase “notwithstanding any other law” is not always construed literally. See E.P. Paup Co. v. Director, OWCP,
The courts shall have authority to enjoin permanently, order modification of, or void an individual salvage timber sale if it is determined by a review of the record that the decision to prepare, advertise, offer, award, or operate such sale was arbitrary and capricious or otherwise not in accordance with applicable law (other than those laws specified in subsection (%) [i.e., all federal environmental and natural resource laws]).
(emphasis added). Were subsection 2001(b)’s phrase “notwithstanding any other provision of law” given the broadest possible interpretation, subsection 2001(f)(4)’s allowance for legal challenges to salvage timber sales based on non-environmental laws would be nugatory.
Following Glacier Bay, and “[mindful ... of the common-sense principle of statutory construction that sections of a statute generally should be read to give effect, if possible, to every clause,” Heckler v. Chaney,
Plaintiffs also argue that Rescissions Act § 2001(f)(4) shows “arbitrary and capricious” review is consistent with the Rescissions Act’s suspension of the federal environmental and natural resource laws. Opening Br. of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 21. As already discussed, subsection 2001(f)(4) requires a court to review a “salvage timber sale” to determine whether the sale is “arbitrary and capricious or otherwise not in accordance with applicable law (other than those laws specified in subsection (i)).” Plaintiffs’ reliance on subsection 2001(f)(4) overlooks the fundamental reason why “arbitrary and capricious” review can’t occur under the APA if there’s no law to apply: Section 706(2)(A) merely provides “[t]he standards to be applied on review.... But before any review at all may be had, a party must first clear the hurdle of § 701(a).” Heckler,
Plaintiffs also point to Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm Mut.,
Normally, an agency rule would be arbitrary and capricious if the agency has relied on factors which Congress has not intended it to consider, entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for its decision that runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or is so implausible that it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency expertise.
Id. at 43,
Plaintiffs suggest that “arbitrary and capricious” review could be conducted under APA § 706(2)(A), independent of another statute, under the last three criteria set forth in Motor Vehicle Mfrs. See Opening Br. of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 25; Reply Br. at 11. Whether an agency has overlooked “an important aspect of the problem,” however, turns on what a relevant substantive statute makes “important.” In law, unlike religion or philosophy, there is nothing which is necessarily important or relevant. In Motor Vehicle Mfrs., for example, the agency’s failure to consider adopting a rule requiring car makers to install airbags in new cars was arbitrary and capricious, as the agency’s own data showed this would have saved thousands of lives a year, and the National Highway Transportation Safety Act required the agency to make rules enhancing auto safety at reasonable cost. Moreover, where there is no law to apply for purposes of section 701(a)(2), it is legally irrelevant whether an
Plaintiffs’ remaining arguments need not detain us long. They observe that subsection 2001(i) and, under our interpretation, subsection 2001(d), only excuse Option 9 sales from complying with the federal environmental and natural resource laws, not the APA. Plaintiffs therefore argue that Option 9 sales remain subject to “arbitrary and capricious” review under the APA despite the Rescis-sions Act. This argument fails because it’s circular. It assumes section 706(2)(A) can provide “law to apply” under section 701(a)(2). But, as explained above, review is unavailable under section 706(2)(A) unless there’s law to apply under section 701(a)(2). See 5 U.S.C. § 701(a)(2); Heckler,
Lastly, plaintiffs argue that, while the Re-scissions Act greatly expanded agency discretion with respect to Option 9 sales, section 706(2)(A) provides for review for “abuse of discretion,” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2)(A). This argument overlooks the Supreme Court’s reconciliation of section 701(a)(2) with section 706(2)(A) in Heckler,
We thus conclude that the district court properly dismissed plaintiffs’ claims; its judgment is therefore AFFIRMED. The Opposition Brief of Defendants-Intervenors-Appellees, which was “Received Only,” because it was late, is ordered FILED.
Notes
. We upheld Chief Thomas’s authority to sell the timber as the subdelegatee of the Secretary of Agriculture in Inland Empire Public Lands Council v. Glickman,
. Plaintiffs' challenge to the Roughneck and Watchdog sales assumed that subsection 2001(k)(l) of the 1995 Rescissions Act, see n. 4 infra, applied only to timber sale contracts made pursuant to the terms of section 318 of Public Law 101-121. See Opening Br. of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 28-30. We rejected this interpretation of subsection 2001(k)(l) in Northwest Forest Resource.
.By "Option 9” or "President Clinton’s Northwest Forest Plan,” we mean the Standards and Guidelines for Management of Habitat for Late-Successional and Old-Growth Forest Related Species Within the Range of the Northern Spotted Owl adopted in the Record of Decision for Amendments to Forest Service and Bureau of Land Management Planning Documents Within the Range of the Northern Spotted Owl (April 13, 1994). Compare Am. Comp., CR 23 ¶ 1 with Br. of the Federal Appellees at 3.
. By "the 1995 Rescissions Act,” we mean the FY 1995 Emergency Supplemental Appropriations for Disaster Relief and Rescissions Act, Pub.L. No. 104-19, 1995 U.S.C.C.A.N. (109 Stat.) 240 (to be codified at 16 U.S.C. § 1611 note).
. The Act also seeks “to assist the [Clinton] administration in its commitment to conduct aggressive forest health operations.” Id. This purpose is evident in the Act’s "salvage timber sale” provisions, see, e.g., Rescissions Act §§ 2001(a),(b),(c), which are only indirectly implicated in this appeal, see pp. 9342-9344 & n. 10 infra.
. At least not unless the Option 9 sale also happens to be a "salvage timber sale,” Rescissions Act § 2001(c), which the Pinestrip and Snog sales are not, see id. § 2001(a)(3) (defining “salvage timber sale” as: "a timber sale for which an important reason for entry includes the removal of disease- or insect-infested trees, dead, damaged, or down trees, or trees affected by fire or imminently susceptible to fire or insect attack. Such term also includes the removal of associated trees or trees lacking the characteristics of a healthy and viable ecosystem for the purpose of ecosystem improvement or rehabilitation, except that any such sale must include an identifiable salvage component of trees described in the first sentence.").
.Plaintiffs argue that we shouldn't interpret subsection 2001 (i) as extending legal sufficiency to the documents and procedures underlying an agency's decision to "operate” a sale. Opening Br. of Plaintiffs-Appellants at 30-31 n. 14; Reply at 12 n. 2. Subsection 2001(d), they observe, only requires the agency to expeditiously “pre
. Subsection 2001(f)(1) provides:
[A] timber sale to be conducted under subsection (d) ... shall be subject to judicial review only in the United States district court for the district in which the affected Federal lands are located. Any challenge to such sale must be filed in such district court within 15 days after the date of the initial advertisement of the challenged sale.
. Plaintiffs also argue that subsection 2001(d)'s “notwithstanding any other law” phrase gives defendants so much discretion that it runs afoul of the non-delegation doctrine. But the non-delegation doctrine applies to conferrals of legislative power, while subsection 2001(d) merely authorizes an agency to sell federal property.
. The Forest Service and Chief Thomas recognize that there can be no "arbitrary and capricious" review under APA § 706(2)(A) independent of another statute. But they ask us to hold that subsection 2001(f)(4) provides a standard of review, not only for "salvage timber sales” as its text indicates, but for other timber sales as well. We decline this invitation to rewrite section 2001(f)(4). The result that Option 9 timber sales aren't subject to arbitrary and capricious review, except to the extent allowed by the APA, is not “demonstrably at odds with the intentions of [the Rescissions Act’s] drafters," United States v. Ron Pair Enterprises, Inc.,
. This suggests another problem with plaintiffs’ free-standing APA "arbitrary and capricious” claims. To have standing under APA § 702, a claimant must show he ”suffer[ed] legal wrong because of agency action, or [was] adversely affected or aggrieved by agency action within the meaning of a relevant statute." 5 U.S.C. § 702 (emphases added); see also III Kenneth C. Davis & Richard J. Pierce, Jr., Administrative Law Treatise, § 16.9 at 53 (3d ed. 1994) (APA § 702 ”require[s] reference to other statutes—agency organic acts—to determine whether a petitioner has standing to obtain review of an action to which the APA applies.’’). As plaintiffs’ "arbitrary and capricious” claims don't invoke any other statute, plaintiffs have no standing to raise them under section 702.
. Our decision in Inland Empire,
A document embodying decisions relating to salvage timber sales ... shall, at the sole discretion of the Secretary concerned and to the extent the Secretary concerned considers appropriate and feasible, consider the environmental effects of the salvage timber sale and the effect, if any, on threatened or endangered species ....
(emphasis added). Under subsection 2001(c)(1)(A), it wouldn’t have mattered whether the Forest Service had "erred" by not considering all the factors plaintiffs identified, because "[t]he Forest Service had discretion to disregard
Concurrence Opinion
concurring:
I concur in the result. However, I see no reason to attempt to decide the abstract question whether there can ever be a violation of the APA in the absence of an independent statute that supports the violation. Here, the alleged APA violation is rooted in the environmental concerns that Congress has barred from consideration by the Rescis-sions Act and constitutes nothing more than an effort to assert prohibited environmental claims in another form. Ingenious as the plaintiffs’ argument is, we have no choice but
. As to the challenges to the Watchdog and Roughneck sales, which the majority concludes are resolved adversely to appellants by our decision in Northwest Forest Resource Council v. Glickman, I prefer the government's analysis: Those sales are simply not subject to the Act.
