Humane Society of the United States v. Glickman

                  United States Court of Appeals

               FOR THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA CIRCUIT

         Argued May 9, 2000        Decided July 18, 2000 

                           No. 99-5309

        The Humane Society of the United States, et al., 
                            Appellees

                                v.

                    Dan Glickman, Secretary, 
             U.S. Department of Agriculture, et al., 
                            Appellants

          Appeal from the United States District Court 
                  for the District of Columbia 
                           (98cv01510)

     James C. Kilbourne, Attorney, U.S. Department of Justice, 
argued the cause for appellants.  With him on the briefs were 
Lois J. Schiffer, Assistant Attorney General, and Andrew 
Mergen, Attorney.

     Jonathan R. Lovvorn argued the cause for appellees.  
With him on the brief was Katherine A. Meyer.

     Before:  Edwards, Chief Judge, Randolph and Garland, 
Circuit Judges.

     Opinion for the Court filed by Circuit Judge Randolph.

     Randolph, Circuit Judge:  The "International Convention 
for the Protection of Migratory Birds," 39 Stat. 1702 (1916), 
between the United States and Great Britain (acting for 
Canada) sought to preserve, in the words of Justice Holmes, 
"a national interest of very nearly the first magnitude," 
Missouri v. Holland, 252 U.S. 416, 435 (1920).  The Treaty 
"recited that many species of birds in their annual migrations 
traversed certain parts of the United States and of Canada, 
that they were of great value as a source of food and in 
destroying insects injurious to vegetation, but were in danger 
of extermination through lack of adequate protection."  Id. at 
431.  Legislation implementing the Treaty--the Migratory 
Bird Treaty Act of 1918--"prohibited the killing, capturing or 
selling any of the migratory birds included in the terms of the 
treaty except as permitted by regulations" now administered 
by the Department of the Interior.1  252 U.S. at 431.  In this 
appeal from the district court's order enjoining the Depart-
ment of Agriculture from violating the statute, the question is 
whether the Migratory Bird Treaty Act prohibits federal 
agencies from killing or taking migratory birds without a 
permit from the Interior Department.

                                I

     At the center of the controversy is the Canada goose--
Branta canadensis. With its black-stockinged neck and head 
and distinctive white cheek patch, its loud resonant honking 
calls, and its V-shaped flight formations, the Canada goose is 
a familiar sight throughout most of North America.  See 
Frank C. Bellrose, Ducks, Geese and Swans of North America 
142 (3d ed. 1980).  The Mid-Atlantic population of Canada 

__________
     1 The Act originally delegated regulatory authority to the De-
partment of Agriculture.  The 1939 Reorganization Plan No. II, 
s 4(f), 53 Stat. 1433, transferred the functions of the Secretary of 
Agriculture relating to the conservation of wildlife, game, and 
migratory birds to the Secretary of the Interior.

geese, one of eleven recognized races, winters in the coastal 
areas of Virginia, Delaware, and New Jersey, and returns in 
the spring to the tundra zone of the Ungava Peninsula in 
Quebec, its traditional summer breeding grounds.  See id. at 
144-45.  In recent years, however, large flocks of Canada 
geese have stopped migrating, preferring to breed, nest and 
rear their young in the coastal states of the middle Atlantic 
region.  The Commonwealth of Virginia has become a host to 
many of these full-time residents.  In 1991, an estimated 
66,169 Canada geese lived year round in Virginia.  By 1998 
Virginia's resident goose population had quadrupled to 
254,000.  See Wildlife Services, Animal and Plant Health 
Inspection Service, U.S. Dep't of Agriculture, Environmental 
Assessment for the Management of conflicts associated with 
non-migratory (resident) Canada geese, migratory Canada 
geese, and urban/suburban ducks in the Commonwealth of 
Virginia s 2.1, at 6 (Mar. 30, 1999) ("Environmental Assess-
ment").  In the same year, only 70,000 migratory Canada 
geese wintered over in Virginia, see id. tbl.5, at 18, a number 
not much larger than the migratory population in the 1970s, 
see Bellrose, supra, at 148.

     Residential owners, farmers, government officials and 
many others are deeply concerned about the exploding popu-
lation of Canada geese.  Browsing by Virginia's resident 
geese has reduced state-wide yields of cereal grains, peanuts, 
soybeans and corn.  Goose droppings have spoiled water 
quality around beaches and wetlands, and interfered with the 
enjoyment of parks and ball fields.  The geese have damaged 
gardens, lawns and golf courses.  Their fecal deposits threat-
en to contaminate drinking water supplies.  See Environmen-
tal Assessment s 2.1.1, at 6;  s 2.1.2.1, at 7;  s 2.1.3.1, at 11;  
s 2.1.4, at 12.  And they pose a hazard to aircraft.  Resident 
geese are found at most of Virginia's airports and military 
bases.  In 1995, a passenger jet hit ten Canada geese at 
Dulles International Airport, causing $1.7 million of wing and 
engine damage.  See id. s 2.1.2.5, at 10.  Collisions have also 
occurred at other Virginia airports.  And "Langley Air Force 
Base and Norfolk Naval Air Station have altered, delayed, 
aborted, and ceased flight operations because of 

Canada geese on their field."  Id.2

     In response to these problems and others, the Department 
of Agriculture, through its Animal Health and Inspection 
Service's Wildlife Services division, instituted an "Integrated 
Goose Management Program" in conjunction with Virginia 
state agencies.  The plan called for various measures such as 
harassment, biological control, habitat alteration, repellents, 
nest and egg destruction, and capture and killing.  The 
killings were to take place during the "summer molt"--
between mid-June and late-July--when the resident geese 
cannot fly (the migratory geese are in Canada at this time of 
year).  An Environmental Assessment, issued on January 29, 
1997, reflected the Interior Department's longstanding posi-
tion that the Migratory Bird Treaty Act restricted not only 
private parties and states, but also federal agencies.  Hence a 
"federal Migratory Bird Depredation Permit ... would be 
required and obtained for the proposed action."  Animal 
Damage Control, Animal and Plant Health Inspection Ser-
vice, U.S. Dep't of Agriculture, Environmental Assessment 
for the Management of conflicts associated with non-
migratory (resident) Canada geese and urban/suburban mal-
lard ducks in the State of Virginia 22 (Jan. 29, 1997).  
Interior's Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) is authorized to 
issue such depredation permits for migratory birds that 
"bec[o]me seriously injurious to the agricultural or other 
interests in any particular community."  International Con-
vention for the Protection of Migratory Birds, art. VII, 39 
Stat. 1702, 1704 (1916) ("International Convention"), refer-
enced in 16 U.S.C. s 704;  see also 50 C.F.R. pt. 21.

     In 1997, the Director of FWS issued a memorandum to 
regional directors stating that federal agencies no longer 

__________
     2 Resident Canada geese and the problems they cause are not 
confined to the east coast.  The Washington Post reported that the 
Agriculture Department, having obtained a permit from FWS, is 
rounding up resident Canada geese and killing them in twelve 
counties surrounding Puget Sound in Washington State.  See Ben 
White, Honk if You Hate Goose Droppings, Wash. Post, June 29, 
2000, at A29.

needed to obtain a permit before taking or killing migratory 
birds.  The Humane Society of the United States, Citizens for 
the Preservation of Wildlife, the Animal Protection Institute, 
and three individuals thereupon filed suit against the Secre-
taries of Agriculture and Interior and other officials in those 
departments seeking to enjoin implementation of the Goose 
Management Plan.  The district court ruled that s 703 of the 
Migratory Bird Treaty Act restricted federal agencies.  The 
court therefore enjoined the defendants "from conducting the 
Canada Goose Plan until such time as they shall obtain valid 
permits to do so pursuant to the" Act.  Humane Soc'y v. 
Glickman, No. 98CV-1510, memorandum opinion at 21-22 
(D.D.C. July 6, 1999).

                                II

     Although Virginia's Canada geese are year-long residents, 
they are members of a species that migrates and therefore 
fall within the category of "migratory birds" protected by the 
1916 Treaty and the Act.  See 50 C.F.R. s 10.13.  Protected 
from whom?  The district court thought s 703 of the Act 
gave the answer--from everyone in the United States, includ-
ing federal agencies.  The provision reads:

          Unless and except as permitted by regulations made as 
     hereinafter provided in this subchapter, it shall be unlaw-
     ful at any time, by any means or in any manner, to 
     pursue, hunt, take, capture, kill, attempt to take, capture, 
     or kill, possess, offer for sale, sell, offer to barter, barter, 
     offer to purchase, purchase, deliver for shipment, ship, 
     export, import, cause to be shipped, exported, or import-
     ed, deliver for transportation, transport or cause to be 
     transported, carry or cause to be carried, or receive for 
     shipment, transportation, carriage, or export, any migra-
     tory 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 in part, of any such bird or any 
     part, nest, or egg thereof, included in the terms of the 
     conventions between the United States and Great Britain 
     for the protection of migratory birds concluded August 
     16, 1916 (39 Stat. 1702)....
     
16 U.S.C. s 703.  As legislation goes, s 703 contains broad 
and unqualified language--"at any time," "by any means," "in 
any manner," "any migratory bird," "any part, nest, or egg of 
any such bird," "any product ... comprised in whole or part, 
of any such bird."  The one exception to the prohibition is in 
the opening clause--"Unless and except as permitted by 
regulations made as hereinafter provided in this subchap-
ter...."  For migratory game birds, of which the Canada 
goose is one, the exception gives the Interior Department 
authority to regulate hunting seasons and bag limits.  Article 
II of the Treaty itself required a closed season--no hunting of 
these birds--between March 10 and September 1, the typical 
period when the birds breed, molt and raise their young.  In 
addition to issuing hunting regulations, see, e.g., 50 C.F.R. pt. 
20;  id. s 20.105, the Secretary of the Interior may issue 
permits for killing Canada geese and other migratory birds if 
this is shown to be "compatible with the terms of the [Migra-
tory Bird] conventions."3  16 U.S.C. s 704.  As we have said, 
Article VII of the Treaty contemplated that permits allowing 
the killing of migratory birds would be available in "extraordi-
nary conditions" when the birds have "become seriously 
injurious to the agricultural or other interests in any particu-
lar community," International Convention, art. VII, 39 Stat. 
1704.

     As s 703 is written, what matters is whether someone has 
killed or is attempting to kill or capture or take a protected 
bird, without a permit and outside of any designated hunting 
season.  Nothing in s 703 turns on the identity of the perpe-
trator.  There is no exemption in s 703 for farmers, or golf 
course superintendents, or ornithologists, or airport officials, 
or state officers, or federal agencies.  In that respect, s 703 
is rather like the statute in United States v. Arizona, 295 U.S. 

__________
     3 "Subject to the provisions and in order to carry out the 
purposes of the conventions ... the Secretary of the Interior is 
authorized and directed, from time to time ... to determine when, 
to what extent, if at all, and by what means, it is compatible with 
the terms of the conventions to allow hunting, taking, capture, [or] 
killing ... of any such bird ... and to adopt suitable regulations 
permitting and governing the same...."

174, 183-84 (1935), which also framed its prohibition in terms 
of the forbidden acts without mentioning the identity of the 
transgressor:  there shall be no "construction of any bridge, 
dam, dike or causeway over or in any port, roadstead, haven, 
harbor, canal, navigable river or other navigable water of the 
United States until the consent of Congress shall have been 
obtained and until the plans shall have been submitted to and 
approved by the Chief of Engineers and by the Secretary of 
War."  Id. at 184 (citing 33 U.S.C. s 401).  The Court viewed 
the provision as restricting not only private parties, but also 
state and federal agencies, so that the Secretary of the 
Interior could not order the building of a dam without con-
gressional authorization.  "The plaintiff maintains that the 
restrictions so imposed apply only to work undertaken by 
private parties.  But no such intention is expressed, and we 
are of opinion that none is implied.  The measures adopted 
for the enforcement of the prescribed rule are in general 
terms and purport to be applicable to all.  No valid reason 
has been or can be suggested why they should apply to 
private persons and not to federal and state officers."  Id. at 
184.

     The defendants here, in order to promote their position 
that federal agencies are exempt from s 703, seek to intro-
duce structural ambiguity into the Act, citing the criminal 
penalty provision of s 707(a):

          Except as otherwise provided in this section, any per-
     son, association, partnership, or corporation who shall 
     violate any provisions of said conventions or of this 
     subchapter, or who shall violate or fail to comply with 
     any regulation made pursuant to this subchapter shall be 
     deemed guilty of a misdemeanor and upon conviction 
     thereof shall be fined not more than $15,000 or be 
     imprisoned not more than six months, or both.
     
16 U.S.C. s 707(a).  Federal agencies, they say, cannot be 
considered "persons" who may be held criminally liable for 
violating the Act or the Treaty.  (They do not discuss wheth-
er federal officers carrying out the extermination of migrato-
ry birds could be considered "persons.") The defendants' 

reading of s 707(a) gains support from the canon that the 
term "person" does not ordinarily include the sovereign.  See 
United States v. Cooper Corp., 312 U.S. 600, 604 (1941).4  And 
so we are willing to assume that the criminal enforcement 
provision could not be used against federal agencies.  From 
this the defendants reason that Congress could not have 
intended to have s 703 restrict federal agencies because there 
would have been no means to enforce the restrictions;  at the 
time of its enactment, they tell us, there was no provision in 
the Migratory Bird Treaty Act for injunctive relief.5

     The argument goes nowhere.  Even without a specific 
review provision, there still could have been a suit against the 
appropriate federal officer for injunctive relief to enforce 
s 703.  Missouri v. Holland, for instance, was a "bill in 
equity brought by the State of Missouri to prevent a game 
warden of the United States from attempting to enforce the 
Migratory Bird Treaty Act."  252 U.S. at 430.  The Supreme 
Court had already recognized the "equity injunction as a 
method for review of administrative action" in Noble v. Union 
River Logging Co., 147 U.S. 165 (1893), affirming an injunc-
tion against the Secretary of the Interior although the under-
lying statute contained no provision for judicial review.  4 
Kenneth Culp Davis, Administrative Law Treatise s 23:6, at 
149 (2d ed. 1983).  By 1903 the Court had determined that 
the "acts of all of [an agency's officers] must be justified by 
some law, and in case an official violates the law to the injury 
of an individual the courts generally have jurisdiction to grant 
relief."  American School of Magnetic Healing v. McAnnul-
ty, 187 U.S. 94, 108 (1902);  see also U.S. Dep't of Justice, 
Attorney General's Manual on the Administrative Procedure 

__________
     4 The canon applies not only to the federal government but also 
to the States.  See Vermont Agency of Natural Resources v. United 
States ex rel. Stevens, 120 S. Ct. 1858 (2000).  Yet defendants 
maintain that States and state agencies are subject to the Act's 
restrictions.

     5 Today, the Administrative Procedure Act, 5 U.S.C. s 702, 
authorizes suits in federal courts naming the United States as a 
defendant and specifying in any injunctive decree the federal offi-
cers "personally responsible" for compliance.

Act 97 (1947);  Richard H. Fallon et al., Hart and Wech-
sler's The Federal Courts and The Federal System 1015-17 
(4th ed. 1996).  Defendants are, in short, quite mistaken in 
supposing that s 703 could not be enforced against federal 
agencies except through the criminal provision contained in 
s 707(a).

     Defendants' argument, and our assumption, that federal 
agencies are not "persons" within s 707(a)'s meaning there-
fore does not lead to the conclusion that Congress meant to 
exempt federal agencies from s 703.  Indeed it would be odd 
if they were exempt.  The Migratory Bird Treaty Act imple-
ments the Treaty of 1916.  Treaties are undertakings be-
tween nations;  the terms of a treaty bind the contracting 
powers.  After ratification of the Treaty, President Woodrow 
Wilson affixed his signature to it and made it public, "to the 
end that the same and every article and clause thereof may 
be observed and fulfilled with good faith by the United States 
and the citizens thereof."  39 Stat. 1705 (italics added). If one 
year later, in 1917, Canadian authorities had started slaugh-
tering eider ducks, no one would doubt that Canada would be 
guilty of violating Article IV of the Treaty, which protects 
these ducks.  If some agency of the federal government did 
the same in Alaska, the United States too would be in 
violation of the Treaty.  There is no reason to treat the Act 
differently from the Treaty since the legislation was meant to 
"give effect to the convention between the United States and 
Great Britain for the protection of migratory birds," ch. 128, 
40 Stat. 755, 755 (1918).  The Act incorporates the terms of 
the Treaty in determining, among other things, two critical 
issues:  which birds are covered, see 16 U.S.C. s 703, and 
under what conditions the Interior Department may issue 
exemptions, see id. s 704.  See also id. ss 708, 709a, 712 (all 
referencing the conventions).  In short, the fact that the Act 
enforced a treaty between our country and Canada reinforces 
our conclusion that the broad language of s 703 applies to 
actions of the federal government.

     Canada too understood that legislation implementing the 
Treaty applied to the sovereign.  If Canadian authorities kill 
migratory birds without a permit they violate not only the 

Treaty, but also Canada's Migratory Birds Convention Act.  
That Act "is binding on Her Majesty in right of Canada or a 
province."6  R.S.C., ch. 22, s 3 (1994).  The Canadian Act, 
like its American counterpart, derives from Article VIII of 
the Treaty, which obligated both Contracting Powers to "pro-
pose to their respective appropriate law-making bodies the 
necessary measures for insuring the execution of the present 
Convention."  International Convention, art. VIII, 39 Stat. 
1704.  That Canada treated this joint obligation to mean that 
implementing legislation would be binding on the sovereign 
indicates still further that s 703 restricts the actions of 
federal agencies in this country.

     This too had been the longstanding conclusion of the De-
partment of the Interior, which until 1997 had "historically 
interpreted the provisions of the MBTA as applying to actions 
of FWS employees themselves."  Letter from Frank K. Rich-
ardson, Solicitor, U.S. Dep't of the Interior, to the Secretary 
of the Interior at 3 (May 31, 1985);  see also 50 C.F.R. 
s 21.12.  Although FWS has now changed its mind, neither 
Interior nor Agriculture asks us to defer to their interpreta-
tion of the Act, and for good reason.  The Agriculture De-
partment does not administer the Act and so its view of 
s 703's meaning is entitled to no special respect.  For its 
part, the Interior Department conceded that the 1997 FWS 
change of heart, in a letter to regional offices, was not "a 
policy call on the part of the Service," nor "a 'filling in' of the 
'gaps' in the" statute.  Federal Defendants' Opposition to 
Plaintiff's Emergency Motion to Compel Defendants to File 
an Administrative Record at 2 (June 4, 1999).  Christensen v. 
Harris County, 120 S. Ct. 1655, 1657 (2000), holds that:  

__________
     6 See also R.S.C., ch. 22, s 6:

     Exemptions for law enforcement activities
     
          (5) For the purpose of investigations and other law enforce-
     ment activities under this Act, the Minister may, on any terms 
     and conditions the Minister considers necessary, exempt game 
     officers who are carrying out duties or functions under this Act, 
     and persons acting under their direction and control, from the 
     application of any provisions of this Act or the regulations.
     
"Interpretations such as those in opinion letters--like inter-
pretations contained in policy statements, agency manuals, 
and enforcement guidelines, all of which lack the force of 
law--do not warrant Chevron-style deference."  See also 
EEOC v. Arabian Oil Co., 499 U.S. 244, 257 (1991).

     For many of the reasons we have mentioned, we disagree 
with the "tentative conclusion" in Newton County Wildlife 
Ass'n v. United States Forest Service, 113 F.3d 110, 115 (8th 
Cir. 1997), and the holding in Sierra Club v. Martin, 110 F.3d 
1551, 1555 (11th Cir. 1997), that s 703 does not apply to 
federal agencies.  Both opinions rest on the mistaken idea 
that in 1918, s 703 could be enforced only through the 
criminal penalty provision in s 707(a).  The Martin opinion 
adds the thought that Congress could not have wanted the 
Act to apply to the Forest Service in the early 1900s because 
whenever it cut trees it might be destroying migratory birds 
or their nests, in violation of the Act.  See 110 F.3d at 1555.  
The Martin court's assumption that timber harvesting could 
violate the Migratory Bird Treaty Act is not shared by 
others.  The Eighth Circuit in Newton County, following the 
lead of the Ninth Circuit in Seattle Audubon Society v. 
Evans, 952 F.2d 297, 302 (1991), held that s 703 does not 
prohibit "conduct, such as timber harvesting, that indirectly 
results in the death of migratory birds."  113 F.3d at 114.  
Even if the Martin court were correct about timber harvest-
ing, its observation about the Forest Service ignores the facts 
that it was not until 1997 that the Interior Department 
asserted immunity for federal agencies;  that before then the 
Fish and Wildlife Service interpreted the Act to apply to all 
federal agencies;  that during the pre-1997 period the Forest 
Service, like other federal agencies, could obtain permits;  and 
that--as the documents submitted in this case show--it was 
the Martin case and other pending litigation that "spurred" 
Interior to adopt the "new" interpretation.7

__________
     7 Nor did the Martin court acknowledge the Supreme Court's 
dictum in Robertson v. Seattle Audubon Society, 503 U.S. 429 
(1992), that the Act applies to federal agencies.

     We conclude that because the Wildlife Services division of 
the Department of Agriculture did not obtain a permit from 
the Department of the Interior, its implementation of the 
Integrated Goose Management Plan by taking and killing 
Canada Geese violates s 703 of the Migratory Bird Treaty 
Act.

                                                        Affirmed.