THE PEOPLE, Plaintiff and Respondent, v. BRANDON LANCE RINEHART, Defendant and Appellant.
No. S222620
Supreme Court of California
Aug. 22, 2016.
November 9, 2017
67 Cal. 4th 652
WERDEGAR, J.
Murphy & Buchal and James L. Buchal for Defendant and Appellant.
Damien M. Schiff, James S. Burling and Jonathan Wood for Pacific Legal Foundation, Western Mining Alliance and Siskiyou County as Amici Curiae on behalf of Defendant and Appellant.
Parsons Behle & Latimer, Brook B. Bond, L. Michael Bogert; Mountain States Legal Foundation, Steven J. Lechner and Jeffrey W. McCoy for American Exploration & Mining Association as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Defendant and Appellant.
Kamala D. Harris, Attorney General, Edward C. DuMont, State Solicitor General, Mark J. Breckler, Chief Assistant Attorney General, Robert W. Byrne, Assistant Attorney General, Joshua A. Klein, Deputy State Solicitor General, Gavin G. McCabe, Michael M. Edson, Marc N. Melnick and J. Kyle Mast, Deputy Attorneys General, for Plaintiff and Respondent.
Jonathan Evans; Saxton & Associates and Lynne R. Saxton for Karuk Tribe, Center for Biological Diversity, Friends of the River, Klamath Riverkeeper,
Sean B. Hecht and Eric Biber for John D. Leshy and Alejandro E. Camacho as Amici Curiae on behalf of Plaintiff and Respondent.
John C. Cruden, Assistant Attorney General, and Lane N. McFadden for The United States as Amicus Curiae on behalf of Plaintiff and Respondent.
OPINION
WERDEGAR, J.-California was shaped by the search for gold. In time, the state‘s other natural treasures-its waters and wildlife, its forests and coastlines-proved similar draws. We consider here a conflict arising from the competing desires to exploit and to preserve these various resources. The People assert the state may, in pursuit of protecting fish habitats and the quality of the state‘s waterways, temporarily ban a particular method of gold mining pending adoption of suitable regulations. Defendant Brandon Lance Rinehart, convicted of engaging in the banned mining technique, asserts it is the only practicable method and federal law promoting mining on federal land preempts the state‘s contrary legislation. The Court of Appeal concluded Rinehart potentially was correct and remanded for consideration of additional evidence and argument. We granted the People‘s petition for review.
We conclude the state‘s moratorium is not preempted. The federal laws Rinehart relies upon reflect a congressional intent to afford prospectors secure possession of, and in some instances title to, the places they mine. But while Congress sought to protect miners’ real property interests, it did not go further and guarantee to them a right to mine immunized from exercises of the states’ police powers. We reverse the Court of Appeal.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Suction dredging is a technique used by miners to remove matter from the bottom of waterways, extract minerals, and return the residue to the water. A high-powered suction hose vacuums loose material from the bottom of a streambed. Heavier matter, including gold, is separated at the surface by passage through a floating sluice box, and the excess water, sand, and gravel is discharged back into the waterway. (See
California has regulated suction dredging for the last half-century. As originally enacted,
Responding to concerns that suction dredging disturbed endangered coho salmon habitats and contributed to mercury contamination of both fish and humans, in 2009 the Legislature imposed a temporary moratorium on the issuance of dredging permits pending further environmental review by the Department. (Stats. 2009, ch. 62, § 1, adding
In 2012, defendant Brandon Rinehart was charged by criminal complaint with both possession and unpermitted use of a suction dredge. (
In his demurrer, Rinehart contended
After a hearing, the trial court overruled the demurrer. Having rejected as a matter of law the preemption defense, the court also excluded testimony Rinehart would have presented in support of that defense. Rinehart waived a jury. After a bench trial on stipulated facts, the court convicted Rinehart on both counts and sentenced him to three years’ probation.
The Court of Appeal reversed. The court agreed with Rinehart that federal mining law should be interpreted as preempting any state law that unduly hampers mining on federal land. The court further concluded Rinehart had made a colorable argument that (1) the state regulatory scheme amounted to a de facto ban on suction dredging and (2) this ban rendered mining on his claim “commercially impracticable.” (Quoting California Coastal Comm‘n v. Granite Rock Co. (1987) 480 U.S. 572, 587 [94 L.Ed.2d 577, 107 S.Ct. 1419] (Granite Rock).) Because the establishment of these points hinged on disputed factual issues and the trial court had refused to admit evidence pertaining to them, the court remanded for further proceedings.
DISCUSSION
I. Preemption of State Law on Federal Land
The federal Constitution‘s property clause vests Congress with the power to “make all needful rules and regulations respecting the territory or other property belonging to the United States.” (
Rinehart asserts two federal land statutes supply a defense to his criminal convictions. He contends the laws under which he was convicted are preempted by the general mining act of May 10, 1872 (
The State of California‘s role in protecting the waters and the fish and wildlife within its borders is long-standing, predating even the federal laws upon which Rinehart relies. Under English common law, the sovereign held title to the navigable waters within a land‘s borders in trust for the benefit of the people. (National Audubon Society v. Superior Court (1983) 33 Cal.3d 419, 434 [189 Cal.Rptr. 346, 658 P.2d 709].) Under this public trust doctrine, California became trustee of the state‘s waters, with responsibility for their oversight, from the beginning of statehood. (Ibid.) So too regarding the fish in the state‘s streams and lakes: “The fish within our waters constitute the most important constituent of that species of property commonly designated as wild game, the general right and ownership of which is in the people of the state [citations], as in England it was in the king; and the right and power to protect and preserve such property for the common use and benefit is one of the recognized prerogatives of the sovereign, coming to us from the common law, and preserved and expressly provided for by the statutes of this and every other state of the Union.” (People v. Truckee Lumber Co. (1897) 116 Cal. 397, 399-400 [48 P. 374]; see Stats. 1852, ch. 62, p. 135 [regulating to protect the state‘s salmon]; Geer v. Connecticut (1896) 161 U.S. 519, 528 [40 L.Ed. 793, 16 S.Ct. 600] [tracing the ancient roots of the recognized “right of the States to control and regulate the common property in game“], overruled on other grounds in Hughes v. Oklahoma (1979) 441 U.S. 322, 326 [60 L.Ed.2d 250, 99 S.Ct. 1727];3 see
Following the United States Supreme Court‘s lead, we traditionally have applied a strong presumption against preemption in areas where the state has a firmly established regulatory role. (Quesada v. Herb Thyme Farms, Inc., supra,
II. Preemption Under the Mining Law of 1872
Rinehart‘s principal argument is that the present moratorium on suction dredging stands as an obstacle to the purposes of Congress implicit in the Mining Law of 1872. In Granite Rock, the leading decision on the mining law‘s preemptive effect, the Supreme Court rejected the argument that the law categorically forecloses states from imposing permit requirements on federal land. (Granite Rock, supra, 480 U.S. at pp. 582-584.) But Granite Rock involved a facial challenge to the requirement that a company obtain California Coastal Commission permits before engaging in mining. The Supreme Court‘s decision left open the possibility of future preemption challenges to specific permit requirements or, as here, refusals to issue a permit. (Id. at p. 594.) Rinehart presents such a challenge.
In Granite Rock, the party asserting preemption “concede[d] that the Mining Act of 1872, as originally passed, expressed no legislative intent on the as yet rarely contemplated subject of environmental regulation.” (Granite Rock, supra, 480 U.S. at p. 582.) Rinehart makes no such concession, but we reach the same no-preemption conclusion: The purposes and objectives underlying the 1872 law do not require displacement of the challenged state laws.
A. Text
We begin with the relevant federal statutes. The Mining Law of 1872 allows citizens to enter federal land freely and explore for valuable minerals. (
While these provisions all generally involve mining, their focus is considerably more specific-the delineation of the real property interests of miners vis-à-vis each other and the federal government. The provisions of the 1872 law identify in detail the conditions for obtaining, and extent of, a right of occupancy (
As discussed, the property clause alone does not foreclose states from exercising their ordinary police powers on federal land; Congress must act. From time to time in the years prior to 1872, California had seen fit to regulate mining within its borders. (See, e.g., Stats. 1860, ch. 212, pp. 175-176 [conveyance of mining claims]; Stats. 1863-1864, ch. 91, p. 91 [disputes over property within mining claims]; Stats. 1865-1866, ch. 600, pp. 828-830 [mining partnerships].) The 1872 law is explicit concerning the effect of such past and future laws: it endorses their continuing vitality and prospectors’ ongoing obligations to abide by them. Claimants are granted a right of possession “so long as they comply with the laws of the United States, and with State, territorial, and local regulations.” (
More generally, the law endorses in the first instance local, rather than federal, control over the mining fields. (See
The text and history of
Rinehart, however, asserts the 1872 law reflects a more expansive congressional purpose, an affirmative intent to grant individuals a federal right to mine, and requires preemption of state laws whenever they unduly infringe that right. He focuses on the opening passage of section 22, which provides: “Except as otherwise provided, all valuable mineral deposits in lands belonging to the United States, both surveyed and unsurveyed, shall be free and open to exploration and purchase, and the lands in which they are found to occupation and purchase . . . .” (
B. Legislative History
Gold was discovered in California in 1848. Across the West, other discoveries of valuable minerals followed soon after. (U.S. v. Shumway (9th Cir. 1999) 199 F.3d 1093, 1098.) Congress debated how best to regulate mining of these resources but took no immediate action. (See Remarks of Sen. Stewart, Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. (1866) p. 3226 [discussing earlier inaction]; Remarks of Rep. Ashley, Cong. Globe, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. (1866) p. 4053 [same].) For years, the prospectors who entered federal land to seek their fortunes operated without federal regulation (Shumway, at p. 1098; Woodruff v. North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Co. (C.C.D.Cal. 1884) 18 Fed. 753, 773), subject instead to state and territorial law and local custom (Sparrow v. Strong (1865) 70 U.S. 97, 104 [18 L.Ed. 49]).
As the Civil War concluded, Congress returned attention to the mining of the West and the need for formal rules. Competing proposals contemplated two very different regimes. Led by Congressman George Julian of Indiana, eastern legislators pushed a measure that would have put mining land up for public auction, selling out from under miners the territory they had explored and developed.4 In response, Senator William Stewart of Nevada proposed a system advocated by western legislators under which miners would be granted a right to occupy and, for a small fee, acquire title to the land they mined.5 The Stewart approach prevailed. (See Act of July 26, 1866, ch. 262, 14 Stat. 251.)
The 1866 mining law provided a template for what followed. Originally applicable only to lodes, the law‘s principles were extended to placer claims in 1870. (Act of July 9, 1870, ch. 235, § 12, 16 Stat. 217; see Deffeback v. Hawke (1885) 115 U.S. 392, 401 [29 L.Ed. 423, 6 S.Ct. 95].) Those principles, and much of the 1866 act‘s original language, were then incorporated into the Mining Law of 1872. (Act of May 10, 1872, ch. 152, 17 Stat. 91, codified at
Second, while occupation and development of one‘s claim might protect against a federal sale, it did not insulate against parochial regulation. The 1866 act, unlike Representative Julian‘s proposal, gave the force of law to local miner rules. (Compare Act of July 26, 1866, ch. 262, §§ 1-2, 14 Stat. 251-252 with H.R. No. 322, 39th Cong., 1st Sess. (1866).) It also authorized state and territorial legislatures to regulate land sales to miners. (Act of July 26, 1866, ch. 262, § 5, 14 Stat. 252.) These features were carried forward to the Mining Law of 1872. (Act of May 10, 1872, ch. 152, §§ 1, 9, 17 Stat. 91, 94, codified at
From this history, we may infer Congress was concerned principally with removing federal obstacles to mining, and specifically the threat of a property sale, that might deter individual prospectors and mining concerns from investing effort in mineral development. Granted a right to enter federal land, the opportunity to obtain a right of possession, and the opportunity to acquire ownership, miners could pursue mineral discovery and exploitation free from the specter of having the land they worked sold at auction. In contrast, the purpose Rinehart attributes to these laws-an intent to confer a right to mine, immune in whole or in part from curtailment by regulation-is not apparent. The mining laws were neither a guarantee that mining would prove feasible nor a grant of immunity against local regulation, but simply an assurance that the ultimate original landowner, the United States, would not interfere by asserting its own property rights.
C. Congressional Acquiescence in State Regulation of Mining Methods
Our confidence in this reading of the 1872 law is enhanced by Congress‘s reaction to state law limitations on mining in the immediate wake of the law‘s passage. When in 1884 the application of California law resulted in a de facto ban on a major industrial mining method, Congress did not move to restore the affected mining companies’ rights. Instead, it expressly approved and helped enforce the ban, which stayed in place for nearly a decade.
By the early 1850s, much of the low-hanging fruit, the densest deposits of loose gold flakes and nuggets, had been picked clean from the Sierra Nevada foothills. Prospectors turned from panning and digging to other more efficient techniques. (Kelley, Gold vs. Grain: The Hydraulic Mining Controversy in California‘s Sacramento Valley (1959) pp. 23-28 (Kelley, Gold vs. Grain); Leshy, The Mining Law (1987) p. 184.) Chief among these, hydraulic mining involved blasting hillsides with large volumes of high-pressure water to liquefy the earth and cull from it gold. (See
In time, state officials and members of Central Valley communities sued hydraulic mining companies under state nuisance law and obtained permanent injunctions prohibiting the discharge of debris into various waterways (see, e.g., People v. Gold Run D. & M. Co. (1884) 66 Cal. 138, 152 [4 P. 1152]; Woodruff v. North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Co., supra, 18 Fed. at pp. 806-809), which had the practical effect of banning the mining practice. Of note, the Woodruff court considered at length and rejected the mining industry‘s argument for preemption under the Mining Law of 1872. The Woodruff defendants argued federal legislation “recognize[ed] mining as a proper and lawful employment, and encourage[ed] this industry” with full knowledge of the environmental consequences it might impose, and thus they could not be enjoined. (Woodruff, at p. 770.) The court identified as the purpose of the mining laws the granting to miners of estates in land and the legalization of what had been trespasses (id. at pp. 773-774), and found no purpose to authorize mining notwithstanding any proscriptions in state law addressed to its collateral consequences.
Though the injunctions effectively crippled a major industry (North Bloomfield Gravel Mining Co. v. U.S. (9th Cir. 1898) 88 Fed. 664, 671; Kelley, Gold vs. Grain, supra, at pp. 243-270) and de facto forbade a predominant form of mining, even on federal land, Congress endorsed the state law ban. In 1886, Congress appropriated money for improvement of the Sacramento and Feather Rivers, but conditioned its expenditure on the Secretary of War satisfying himself “that hydraulic mining hurtful to navigation has ceased on said rivers and their tributaries.” (Act of Aug. 5, 1886, ch. 929, 24 Stat. 310, 326 (1886).) If the Secretary of War found hydraulic mining had not ceased, he was “instructed to institute such legal proceedings as may be necessary” to end it. (Ibid.)
Seeking an accommodation between mining and farming interests, our Legislature warned Congress that “the mining industry of our State is in imminent danger of being entirely suppressed” and asked for action. (Assem. Joint Res. No. 10, Stats. 1887 (1887 Reg. Sess.) res. ch. 10, p. 253.) Senator Stewart, the author of the original 1866 mining act and the chair of the Committee on Mines and Mining, submitted a report to Congress advising that state law injunctions had “practically stopped” hydraulic mining and “rendered valueless” the affected miners’ property (Sen.Rep. No. 1944, 50th
From this chapter in history, we may infer that Congress in the late 19th century, at a time not long removed from passage of the Mining Law of 1872 and related enactments, did not view these laws as conveying a federal right to mine on federal land without regard to any environmental impacts a particular method might have and any interests a state might seek to protect. Woodruff and related cases did not merely impose damages, reallocating the burden of the impacts of mining to those responsible, but issued injunctions. For nearly a decade, hydraulic mining, a method of far greater economic significance than the suction dredging at issue here, stood in abeyance based solely on state laws giving priority to other concerns. Congress, including even the author of the law first declaring federal land open to mining, was explicitly aware of this circumstance. Yet it acquiesced in hydraulic mining‘s discontinuation, allocating money to prosecute miners (see Sen.Rep. No. 1944, 50th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 2 (1888); Act of Aug. 5, 1886, ch. 929, 24 Stat. 310, 326 (1886)) instead of taking action to assert federal supremacy, protect any supposed federal right to mine, and ensure the continued availability of federal lands for hydraulic mining notwithstanding contrary state law. It stands to reason that Congress did not deem the core purposes and objectives of the mining laws impaired by state regulation of mining methods and further, that states can place limits on effective but environmentally destructive mining methods without contravening the supremacy clause.
Rinehart distinguishes the Woodruff injunction on the ground it involved impacts felt elsewhere than on federal land, but this is a distinction without a
Rinehart also relies on
In sum: Like the hydraulic mining industry, Rinehart argues he holds a superior federal right to mine that allows him to proceed, notwithstanding impacts on other interests. Like the court in Woodruff and Congress thereafter, we conclude that is not so. The federal statutory scheme does not prevent states from restricting the use of particular mining techniques based on their assessment of the collateral consequences for other resources.9
D. Case Law
Against the lessons of text and history, Rinehart argues that we should follow a series of cases from other courts finding various state restrictions on mineral exploitation preempted on one basis or another. (See South Dakota Mining Assn., Inc. v. Lawrence County (8th Cir. 1998) 155 F.3d 1005,
First, all but one predates the United States Supreme Court‘s landmark 1987 decision in Granite Rock, supra, 480 U.S. 572, which for the first time clearly established the states’ authority to regulate on environmental grounds mining claims within their borders. Second, two of the cases involve statutes other than the one at issue here. Ventura County, an oil drilling case, found preemption based on a conflict with the Mineral Lands Leasing Act of 1920. (
Rinehart relies most heavily on his only post-Granite Rock case, South Dakota Mining Assn., Inc. v. Lawrence County, supra, 155 F.3d 1005, which the Court of Appeal concluded was “nearly directly on point here.” Lawrence County considered an ordinance banning surface mining in an area overlapping a national forest.10 Lawrence County concluded the ban was inconsistent with the 1872 law‘s purposes, which it held included “the encouragement of exploration for and mining of valuable minerals located on federal lands, providing federal regulation of mining to protect the physical environment while allowing the efficient and economical extraction and use of minerals, and allowing state and local regulation of mining so long as such regulation is consistent with federal mining law.” (Lawrence County, at p. 1010.)
III. Preemption Under Section 612
Additionally, Rinehart urges the moratorium is preempted by
Section 612 of title 30 United States Code was enacted in 1955 as part of a ” ‘crack-down’ upon unauthorized uses of unpatented mining claims.” (Funderberg v. Udall (9th Cir. 1968) 396 F.2d 638, 639.) Concerned that some mining claims were being staked out as a pretext to support activities wholly unrelated to mineral development, Congress prospectively prohibited the use of unpatented mining claims for anything not “reasonably incident” to prospecting and mining. (
Congress also focused on the need to better accommodate competing surface and subsurface uses of federal land. (H.R.Rep. No. 730, 84th Cong., 1st Sess., pp. 3, 8 (1955), reprinted in 1955 U.S. Code Cong. & Admin. News, No. 2, pp. 2475, 2480.)11 Mining claimants had traditionally been
granted exclusive use of the land encompassed by their claims. (
Nothing in California‘s regulation of suction dredging implicates or interferes with any of the purposes and objectives underlying this congressional reallocation of rights. Congress concerned itself with abuses of the existing claim system by miners and the need to accommodate competing demands on federal land, and sought to end sham claims and ensure to others enjoyment of federal lands to the extent compatible with mining. Section 612 of title 30 United States Code regulates the respective property rights of miners with claims on federal land, on the one hand, and the United States and its permittees who may wish to use that same land for other purposes, on the other. It does no more.
Rinehart infers from the text of
Rinehart also contends that because the last portion of section 612(b) assures certain states their laws concerning water rights will not be affected, Congress by implication preempted state law in all other regards. The final
Nor do the cases Rinehart relies on support preemption under section 612(b). U.S. v. Shumway, supra, 199 F.3d 1093, 1105-1108 addresses the interplay between the mining laws and the Act of Congress authorizing oversight of the national forests by the National Forest Service. (See
U.S. v. Backlund (9th Cir. 2012) 689 F.3d 986 likewise does not interpret the objectives of section 612(b) in a way that would require preemption of state environmental regulation. Rejecting a void for vagueness challenge to Forest Service limits on unpermitted permanent residences in national forests, the Ninth Circuit explains that the Forest Service‘s regulatory authority is limited by, inter alia, the requirement that regulations not ” ‘materially interfere’ ” with mining. (Backlund, at p. 997, quoting
For the foregoing reasons, we reverse the Court of Appeal.
Cantil-Sakauye, C. J., Chin J., Corrigan, J., Liu, J., Cuéllar, J., and Kruger, J., concurred.
Appellant‘s petition for a rehearing was denied November 9, 2017.
