“This would have remained a profoundly insignificant case to all except its immediate parties had it not been so tried ... as to raise questions both fundamental and far-reaching in federal criminal law....”
Morissette v. United States,
This case requires us to consider the scope of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act (MBTA or Act). The Act declares it a misdemeanor to “pursue, hunt, take, capture, [or] kill” birds protected by several international treaties. 16 U.S.C. § 703. The MBTA also specifies a maximum penalty of $15,000 and six months in prison for *682 a misdemeanor violation, but does not require any particular mental state or mens rea to violate the statute. See 16 U.S.C. § 707(a). The question this case presents is whether the MBTA constitutionally can make it a crime to violate its provisions absent knowledge or the intent to do so.
Appellants are two Kansas oil drilling operators who were charged with violating the Act after dead migratory birds were discovered lodged in a piece of their oil drilling equipment called a heater-treater. After a trial before a magistrate judge, both Apollo Energies and Dale Walker (doing business as Red Cedar Oil) were convicted of taking or possessing migratory birds, each misdemeanor violations. Apollo was fined $1,500 for one violation, and Walker was fined $250 for each of his two violations. The federal district court affirmed the convictions, concluding that violations of § 703 of the MBTA are strict liability offenses, which do not require that defendants knowingly or intentionally violate the law.
On appeal, Apollo and Walker renew their challenges to the MBTA, claiming (1) it is not a strict liability crime to take or possess a protected bird, or, (2) if it is a strict liability crime, the Act is unconstitutional as applied to their conduct. We conclude the district court correctly held that violations of the MBTA are strict liability crimes. But we hold that a strict liability interpretation of the MBTA for the conduct charged here satisfies due process only if defendants proximately caused the harm to protected birds. After carefully examining the trial record, we agree Apollo proximately caused the taking of protected birds, but with respect to one of his two convictions, Walker did not. Due process requires criminal defendants have adequate notice that their conduct is a violation of the Act.
Consequently, exercising jurisdiction under 28 U.S.C. § 1291, we AFFIRM in part and REVERSE in part the district court’s decision.
I. Background
Apollo and Walker own many heatertreaters, a device commonly used in oil drilling operations. Heater-treaters are cylindrical equipment up to 20 feet high and more than three feet wide that separate oil from water when the mixture is pumped from the ground. The heatertreaters at issue in this case have vertical exhaust pipes that are approximately nine inches in diameter, and Walker’s heatertreaters included movable louvers that can be opened to access heating equipment at the base. Birds can crawl into the exhaust pipes or through the louvers to form nests. Once inside the heater-treaters, escape can be difficult for some birds.
Acting on an anonymous tip, an agent with the U.S. Fish and Wildlife Service (Fish and Wildlife, or Service) inspected more than a dozen of Apollo’s heater-treaters in December 2005. He found bird remains in about half of the heater-treaters he inspected. In February 2006, Fish and Wildlife officers expanded their investigation in the region (southeast Kansas), finding more than 300 dead birds in heater-treaters, 10 of which were identified as protected species under the MBTA. 1
As a result of the investigation, Fish and Wildlife embarked on a public education campaign to alert oil producers to the heater-treater problem. The Service sent letters to 36 of the oil companies involved in the February 2006 inspections, including *683 Apollo. The record does not disclose, however, that Walker’s company, Red Cedar, received the notice. Fish and Wildlife also created a poster describing the problem, which it distributed to oil equipment supply companies. Service representatives made presentations to the Kansas Independent Oil and Gas Association and at a Kansas Corporation Commission Oil and Gas meeting. Finally, a Kansas television station and the Associated Press news service each ran a story about heater-treaters’ threat to protected birds. Fish and Wildlife chose not to recommend prosecution for MBTA violations related to heatertreaters through the end of 2006, while the education campaign was ongoing. 2
In April 2007, after Fish and Wildlife’s grace period ended, agents searched heater-treaters belonging to Apollo and Walker. The search of Apollo’s heater-treaters yielded the carcass of a Northern Flicker, an MBTA-protected species. Agents found four protected birds in Walker’s heater-treaters, as well. When confronted with the dead birds, Walker is reported to have said “that’s not good.” Aplt.App. 212. A year later, in April 2008, the Service again conducted a search of Walker’s heater-treaters. Although Walker had placed metal caps on the exhaust pipes— where birds previously had been found — a Fish and Wildlife agent retrieved a protected bird that he found lodged in a heater-treater’s louvers.
Apollo was convicted of one violation of the MBTA based on the April 2007 bird death. Walker also was convicted of two violations based on the April 2007 and April 2008 deaths.
II. Discussion
Appellants make one statutory and several due process arguments. Their statutory argument is that the MBTA does not create a strict liability crime to take or possess migratory birds, and, under that statutory construction, they lacked the necessary imputed mental state to commit an MBTA violation. Our precedent forecloses Appellants’ statutory construction, and consequently we are obliged to address Appellants’ broader arguments about the MBTA’s constitutionality.
As to their constitutional due process claims, Appellants argue: (1) the MBTA is unconstitutionally vague because it provides inadequate notice of what conduct is criminal, (2) due process requires that they caused an MBTA violation to be guilty of a crime, and (3) the district court erred in applying the law to the facts in this case.
A. Standard of Review
“In an appeal from a bench trial, we review the district court’s factual findings for clear error and its legal conclusions de novo.”
Keys Youth Servs., Inc. v. City of Olathe,
B. Statutory Construction: The MBTA Creates a Strict Liability Crime
Appellants first contend § 703 is not a strict liability offense, but contains a scienter requirement.
Section 703 makes it a crime to “take” protected birds:
[I]t shall be unlawful at any time, by any means or in any manner, to ... take [or] ... attempt to take ... any migratory bird, any part, nest, or egg of any such bird, or any product, whether or not manufactured, which consists, or is composed in whole or part, of any such bird or any part, nest, or egg thereof, included in the terms of [various treaties between the United States and Great Britain, Mexico, Japan, and the U.S.S.R.]. (Emphasis added).
16 U.S.C. § 703. Regulations implementing the statute explain that the term “take” means to “pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect.” 50 C.F.R. § 10.12. 3 Under § 707(a), “any person, association, partnership, or corporation” is “guilty of a misdemeanor” if they “violate any provisions” of the Act. The statute does not supply a mens rea requirement.
Appellants’ contention is foreclosed by our holding in
United States v. Corrow,
Our holding in
Corrow
fell in line with those of other circuits at the time of that case. At least seven other circuits either had held that MBTA misdemeanors are strict liability crimes or noted the MBTA’s lack of mens rea in passing.
See, e.g., United States v. Pitrone,
Despite this applicable precedent, Appellants challenge the extension of Corrow to the conduct alleged here. They reason our holding in Corrow was limited to the MBTA violations at issue there — possess ing and selling protected bird feathers. For support, they point to Fish and Wildlife’s regulations that define “possession” as “detention and control,” and “to take” as to “capture, or collect.” 50 C.F.R. § 10.12. They say the linguistic differences imply an active state of mind to violate the Act, and the conduct here was passive— they merely failed to bird-proof the heater-treaters.
We see no express or implied limitation to our holding in
Corrow.
In fact, that decision broadly held “misdemeanor
violations
under § 703 are strict liability crimes.”
Corrow,
Appellants also point to Supreme Court case law on the books at the time we decided
Corrow
as fatally undermining its holding. They contend three years before
Corrow,
the Supreme Court in
Staples v. United States,
While we did not cite to
Staples
in
Cor-row,
our reasoning was that although the MBTA was silent as to mens rea, its “plain language” — an indicia of legislative intent — supported a strict liability interpretation. Congress, moreover, in 1986 added the word “knowingly” to create the felony offense of
selling
migratory birds, while leaving intact the language of the misdemeanor provision without an explicit mens rea requirement. This is further evidence the legislative scheme invokes a lesser mental state for misdemeanor violations.
See
S.Rep. No. 99-445, at 15 (1986),
reprinted in
1986 U.S.C.C.A.N. 6113, 6128 (“Nothing in this amendment [to create the MBTA felony offense] is intended to alter the ‘strict liability’ standard for misdemeanor prosecutions under 16 U.S.C. 707(a), a standard which has been upheld in many Federal court decisions.”). Finally, the Court in
Staples
took pains to reaffirm the basic proposition that “public welfare” or “regulatory” offenses can “impose a form of strict criminal liability.”
Staples,
Appellants also point to cases outside our circuit to argue that Corrow’s logic does not apply to the facts here. In particular, they cite
Newton County Wildlife Ass’n v. U.S. Forest Service,
In sum,
Corrow
squarely addressed the mens rea requirement for an MBTA violation, and we are bound by its holding.
See In re Smith,
C. Due Process: Notice and Causation
Having concluded the MBTA applies a strict liability standard to the taking or killing of migratory birds, we must address Appellants’ additional arguments that the Act is unconstitutional facially and as applied to the conduct in this case. Appellants’ broader argument is that the MBTA violates their due process rights because of its scope and application to their conduct.
By way of background, although § 703 is a strict liability crime, a few historical elements are worth remembering. At common law, crime was a “compound concept” consisting of both an “evil-meaning mind” and an “evil-doing hand.”
Morissette v. United States,
Yet by the middle of the twentieth century, the Supreme Court was confronted with a new category of crimes for which no mens rea was required. In
Morissette v. United States,
for example, the Supreme Court gave a stamp of approval to regulatory crimes that lacked or had a minimal mens rea element.
See id.
at 255-56,
A line of subsequent cases suggest several important limiting principles to strict liability crimes. Two due process limitations are especially relevant here.
First, due process requires citizens be given fair notice of what conduct is criminal. A criminal statute cannot be so vague that “ordinary people” are uncertain of its meaning.
See Kolender v. Lawson,
Second, criminalizing acts which the defendant does not cause is unconstitutional, as is criminalizing acts based on the defendant’s status.
See Lambert v. California,
Apollo and Walker make several arguments based on these principles which fall into three general categories: (1) the statute provides inadequate notice of what conduct would violate the MBTA, (2) due process requires they caused an MBTA violation to be guilty of a crime, and (3) the district court erred in applying the preceding principles to them.
1. Vagueness: Notice of Statutorily-Prohibited Acts
Apollo and Walker contend the statute allows them to be criminally convicted without fair notice of what conduct constitutes a crime. Their notice argument comes in two varieties. First, the MBTA is unconstitutionally vague because of the multiplicity of actions the statute’s language criminalizes. Second, Appellants argue the potential predicate acts that may lead to MBTA violations — innocuous conduct such as driving a car or closing a window — do not provide fair notice of what constitutes criminal behavior. Because this second question is, at bottom, a question of causation, we will leave it to be discussed below with Appellants’ other causation arguments.
“As generally stated, the void-for-vagueness doctrine requires that a penal statute define the criminal offense with sufficient definiteness that ordinary people can understand what conduct is prohibited and in a manner that does not encourage arbitrary and discriminatory enforcement.”
Kolender,
The MBTA is not unconstitutionally vague. It criminalizes a range of conduct that will lead to the death or captivity of protected migratory birds, including to *689 “pursue, hunt, take, capture, [and] kill.... ” 16 U.S.C. § 703. The actions criminalized by the MBTA may be legion, but they are not vague.
Furthermore, the MBTA’s language does not encourage arbitrary enforcement — at least as far as vagueness is concerned. The arbitrariness at which a vagueness challenge takes aim is the “standardless sweep [of a statute’s language, which] allows policemen, prosecutors, and juries to pursue their personal predilections.”
Smith v. Goguen,
2. Causation: Notice of Predicate Acts
In a variation of their vagueness argument, Appellants also contend the statute does not provide fair notice of prohibited conduct because of the sheer breadth of the Act. They argue the Act applies to innocuous conduct several steps removed from bird deaths or takings. No reasonable person, they contend, would be on notice that those predicate acts are potentially criminal.
The Supreme Court made clear in
Lambert
that reasonable notice is “[e]ngrained in our concept of due process.”
More recently, the role of notice for conduct not reasonably foreseen as criminal has played a central role in the Court’s statutory interpretation. First, in
Liparota v. United States,
Questions abound regarding what types of predicate acts — acts which lead to the MBTA’s specifically prohibited ads — can constitute a crime. Conceptually, the constitutional challenge to the criminalization of these predicate acts can be placed under the rubric of notice or causation. The inquiries regarding whether a defendant was on notice that an innocuous predicate act would lead to a crime, and whether a defendant caused a crime in a legally meaningful sense, are analytically indistinct, and go to the heart of due process constraints on criminal statutes.
Recognizing these notice and causation concerns, the district court attempted to cabin the MBTA’s reach by holding the defendants must “proximately cause” the MBTA violation to be found guilty, and that they did so here. ApltApp. at 24 n. 16. In other words, the court found the government had found “ ‘proximate causa *690 tion’ or ‘legal causation’ beyond a reasonable doubt” by “showing that trapped birds are a reasonably anticipated or foreseeable consequence of failing to cap the exhaust stack and cover access holes to the heater/treater.” Aplt.App. at 24 n. 16.
The court’s proximate cause holding relied heavily on a district court case construing the MBTA,
United States v. Moon Lake Elec. Ass’n, Inc.,
We agree with the district court’s assessment of proximate cause. Central to all of the Supreme Court’s cases on the due process constraints on criminal statutes is foreseeability — whether it is framed as a constitutional constraint on causation (Lambert, Robinson) and mental state (International Minerals), or whether it is framed as a presumption in statutory construction (Staples, Liparota). When the MBTA is stretched to criminalize predicate acts that could not have been reasonably foreseen to result in a proscribed effect on birds, the statute reaches its constitutional breaking point.
Based on these cases, we agree with the district court’s legal conclusion and hold that the MBTA requires a defendant to proximately cause, the statute’s violation for the statute to pass constitutional muster.
See
Black’s Law Dictionary 1225 (6th ed.1990) (defining “proximate cause” as “that which, in a natural and continuous sequence, unbroken by any efficient intervening cause, produces the injury and without which the accident could not have happened, if the injury be one which might be reasonably anticipated or foreseen as a natural consequence of the wrongful act”),
In re Antrobus,
519 F.Sd 1123, 1127 (10th Cir.2008) (Tymkovich, J., concurring) (“If the intervening cause was foreseeable then proximate cause can be established.”),
Babbitt v. Sweet Home Chapter of Cmtys. for a Great Or.,
*691 3. Proximate Cause As Applied to Appellants
Applying these principles to Appellants’ claims, we reject the contention that the Act violates due process, with one important exception.
As to Apollo, the record shows it had notice of the heater-treater problem for nearly a year-and-a-half before the bird death resulting in its conviction. Indeed, Apollo admitted at trial that it failed to cover some of the heater-treaters’ exhaust pipes as Fish and Wildlife had suggested after the December 2005 inspection. In effect, Apollo knew its equipment was a bird trap that could kill.
In contrast, Walker was charged and convicted for dead birds found in both the April 2007 and April 2008 inspections. Walker contends the conviction arising from the April 2008 inspection should be reversed because on that occasion the bird was found in his heater-treater’s louvers, not the exhaust pipe, for which he had no knowledge of a problem. Fish and Wildlife argues it warned Walker of the louver problem when, in its 2007 letter, it admonished Walker to secure all heater-treater cavities in which a protected bird might become trapped. Regardless, we find that once Walker was alerted to protected birds’ proclivity to crawl into the heatertreaters’ exhaust pipes, it was reasonably foreseeable protected birds could become trapped in other of the heater-treaters’ cavities.
The conviction for the April 2007 bird death is a different matter. Walker’s testimony — which the Fish and Wildlife agent does not dispute — is that prior to April 2007, he was not aware of problems with heater-treaters in the oil industry or in his specific operations. Fish and Wildlife did not send him a letter about the issue before the April 2007 inspection, and he was not a member of the trade association to which the Service advertised the oil field equipment problem. Nor was Walker aware of the one television report or newspaper article about heater-treaters. Given the state of this record, we agree no reasonable person would conclude that the exhaust pipes of a heater-treater would lead to the deaths of migratory birds.
In its findings of fact, the magistrate judge found generally that “birds trapped in heater/treaters [were] relatively common in the industry,” ApltApp. at 23, and “oil operators have been aware for some time that bird remains are frequently found in heater/treaters,” id. at 24 n. 15. The magistrate judge did not provide citations in support of these factual conclusions, and our review of the trial record reveals no substantial evidence of pervasive industry knowledge about the heatertreater problem until the Service’s educational outreach campaign. To the contrary, a Fish and Wildlife agent testified bird deaths in heater-treaters were “brand new” to the Service before the December 2005 inspections, ApltApp. at 160, and the fact that the Service did not recommend prosecutions during its educational campaign suggests the issue was not well known.
Therefore, the magistrate judge’s finding as to the April 2007 bird death is reversed.
III. Conclusion
For the foregoing reasons, we AFFIRM in part, REVERSE in part, and REMAND for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
Notes
. According to a government witness at trial, the issue of bird deaths in heater-treaters was "brand new to the Service,” and to his knowledge, no Fish and Wildlife officer had ever inspected heater-treaters before the December 2005 inspection. Aplt.App. at 116
. The education campaign apparently reached Apollo but not Walker. Apollo had notice of the heater-treater problem from the time of Fish and Wildlife's inspection of its property in December 2005, and the company’s president acknowledged he received the Service's 2006 letter. Walker, however, received no such notice. The Fish and Wildlife agent in charge of the investigation admitted he did not send Walker the Service's 2006 letter, and Walker testified he did not receive a Service letter until June 2007 — after Fish and Wildlife searched his heater-treater for the first time. It is Walker’s undisputed testimony that up to the time of Fish and Wildlife’s first search of his property — in April 2007 — he did not "know anything” about the heater-treater problem. See Aplt.App. 203-5, 282-84.
. The Supreme Court in
Babbitt v. Sweet Home Chapter of Cmtys. for a Great Or.,
. Another important consideration is the severity of punishment. Appellants did not develop this argument below, but due process suggests some constitutional limits on the penalties contained in strict liability crimes. Severe fines and jail time would warrant a state of mind requirement.
See Engler,
. We emphasize that "foreseeability” in the proximate cause sense is not foreseeability of a legal rule. "We have long recognized the 'common maxim, familiar to all minds, that ignorance of the law will not excuse any person, either civilly or criminally.' "
Jerman v. Carlisle, McNellie, Rini, Kramer & Ulrich LPA,
- U.S. -,
