The American Bald v. Bhatti ( 1993 )


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    UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
    FOR THE FIRST CIRCUIT
    ____________________

    No. 92-2387

    THE AMERICAN BALD EAGLE, ET AL.,

    Plaintiffs, Appellants,

    v.

    ILYAS BHATTI, ET AL.,

    Defendants, Appellees.

    ____________________

    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT

    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS

    [Hon. Rya W. Zobel, U.S. District Judge]
    ___________________

    ____________________

    Before

    Torruella and Stahl, Circuit Judges,
    ______________

    and DiClerico, Jr.,* District Judge.
    ______________

    _____________________

    Florence Mansbach, with whom Steven M. Wise and Fraser &
    _________________ _______________ ________
    Wise, P.C., were on brief for appellants.
    __________
    Mary C. Connaughton, Assistant Attorney General, with whom
    ____________________
    Scott Harshbarger, Attorney General, and Rebbeca Webb, Assistant
    _________________ ____________
    Attorney General, were on brief for appellees.



    ____________________

    November 16, 1993
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    ____________________

    * Of the District of New Hampshire, sitting by designation.














    TORRUELLA, Circuit Judge. The issue to be decided by
    _____________

    this appeal is whether the hunting of deer on a Massachusetts

    reservation significantly affects bald eagles so as to constitute

    a prohibited "taking" of that endangered species1 as defined by

    the Endangered Species Act ("ESA").2 16 U.S.C. 1532(19) &

    1538(a)(1)(B). How we get from a deer hunt to an allegation

    regarding the taking of bald eagles requires considerable

    explanation.

    I. BACKGROUND
    I. BACKGROUND
    __________

    The Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife

    ("DFW") operates a restoration project for bald eagles on Quabbin

    Reservation in Eastern Massachusetts ("Quabbin"). This

    reservation covers an area of approximately 125 square miles and

    contains a 25,000 acre reservoir. According to the DFW the bald

    eagle population has ranged from a low of 13 in 1982 to an all

    time high of 45 in 1992. In that year, the statewide population

    of bald eagles was estimated at 60.

    In 1986, the Metropolitan District Commission ("MDC")

    began to investigate the impact of deer feeding habits on the

    forest at Quabbin. Among other findings, the study determined

    that the deer population at Quabbin far exceeded the statewide

    average of 6-8 deer per square mile. It was concluded that this

    ____________________

    1 The bald eagle is listed as an endangered species. 50 C.F.R.
    17.11 (1992).

    2 The defendant-appellees in this case are Ilyas Bhatti in his
    capacity as Commissioner of the Metropolitan District Commission
    and Wayne McCallum in his capacity as Director of the
    Massachusetts Division of Fisheries and Wildlife.

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    was the result of a then existing deer hunting prohibition and

    the decline of natural predators in the Reservation. It was also

    found that deer consumption of tree seedlings was gradually

    eliminating the root system necessary for the soil to act as a

    filter for pollutants. This in turn posed a threat to the

    quality of water at the Reservoir. After considering a variety

    of alternatives, the MDC concluded that the only effective means

    of addressing the underlying problem was to allow controlled deer

    hunting in the reservation.

    Legislation was subsequently enacted by the State to

    permit a limited deer hunt at Quabbin under the MDC's authority.

    Mass. Regs. Code tit. 350, 8.02 (1991). Thereafter, the MDC,

    aided by DFW recommendations, developed a deer management plan

    that attempted to ensure that the eagles would not be disturbed

    by the deer hunt.

    In the fall of 1991, appellants brought this action to

    enjoin the limited deer hunt on the ground that it posed a

    significant risk to the bald eagles at Quabbin in violation of

    the ESA. 16 U.S.C. 1538(a)(19) & 1532(19) (1985). The

    nucleus of their allegation was as follows: some of the deer

    shot by hunters during the Quabbin hunt would not be recovered

    but would die thereafter within the feeding area of the Quabbin

    bald eagles; these deer, termed "cripple-loss deer," would

    contain lead in their bodies from the lead slugs used by the

    hunters as ammunition; and bald eagles would feed on these

    unrecovered deer carcasses, consume a portion of the lead in the


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    deer, and be harmed by the lead.

    The district court denied the preliminary injunction

    ruling that appellants failed to show a reasonable likelihood of

    success on the merits. The hunt proceeded as planned.

    Appellants then requested a permanent injunction which the court

    also denied because it concluded that the hunt did not pose a

    significant risk of harm to the bald eagles. This appeal

    followed.

    II. LEGAL STANDARD
    II. LEGAL STANDARD
    ______________

    Appellants make two legal challenges to the district

    court's decision. Appellants first contend that the district

    court applied the wrong legal standard in holding that they

    failed to prove that the proposed Quabbin Reservation deer hunt

    posed a significant risk of harm to its bald eagles. Appellants

    next argue that the district court erred as a matter of law by

    failing to define "significant risk." This failure, they argue,

    under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a), violated the

    requirement that the court find the facts specially and state

    separately its conclusions of law thereon. We review these legal

    challenges de novo. In re: Extradition of Howard, 996 F.2d 1320,
    _______ ____________________________

    1327 (1st Cir. 1993); Societ des produits Nestl v. Casa
    ______________________________ ____

    Helvetia, Inc., 982 F.2d 633, 642 n.9 (1st Cir. 1992).
    ______________

    The ESA prohibits the "taking" of an endangered

    species. 16 U.S.C. 1538(a)(1)(B). The ESA defines "take" as

    follows: "To harass, harm, pursue, shoot, wound, kill, trap,

    capture, or to attempt to engage in any such conduct." 16 U.S.C.


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    1532(19). Appellants ask that we establish a numerical

    standard for determining which actions constitute a "taking" of

    an endangered species. They would have us establish that a one

    in a million risk of harm is sufficient to trigger the

    protections of the ESA. We reject this invitation as we find

    nothing in the ESA, its regulations or legislative history that

    supports such an arbitrary figure.

    Rather than convince us to adopt a restrictive

    numerical standard for harm under the ESA, appellants' analogies

    to other regulatory regimes demonstrate that the exact numerical

    standard for permissible harm or risk of harm varies according to

    the context. For example, while a risk of one in a hundred

    thousand has been thought to be appropriate in the context of

    regulating benzene emissions from coke by-product plants, see
    ___

    National Emission Standard for Hazardous Air Pollutants, 49 Fed.

    Reg. 23,521, 23,527 (1984), a definition of one in a million has

    been considered more appropriate in other circumstances, such as

    in the analysis of carcinogenicity data, see 45 Fed. Reg. 36,942
    ___

    (Environmental Protection Agency: Proposed Guidelines for

    Carcinogen Risk Assessment); see also Public Citizen v. Young,
    _________ ______________ _____

    831 F.2d 1108, 1112-13 n.4 (D.C. Cir. 1987), cert. denied, 485
    _____________

    U.S. 1006 (1988). In the examples cited by appellants,

    regulatory agencies, like the EPA, adopted numerical risk

    standards only after consideration of extensive scientific data,

    publication of proposed standards for public comment, and

    extensive public hearings. Here, none of these procedures have


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    occurred and appellants provide no other convincing basis for

    blindly applying a numerical standard developed in another

    context to the definition of "taking" under the ESA.

    Furthermore, the cases cited by appellants arise in the context

    of regulations involving the use of substances that have been

    scientifically proven to be harmful to humans. See, e.g., Public
    ___ ____ ______

    Citizen, 831 F.2d 1108 (carcinogens in food additives);
    _______

    International Union, UAW v. Pendergrass, 878 F.2d 389 (D.C. Cir.
    ________________________ ___________

    1989) (OSHA regulation of formaldehyde). In contrast, appellants

    have presented no studies that have shown that the use of lead

    slugs in deer hunts has been scientifically proven to cause harm

    to bald eagles.3

    The proper standard for establishing a taking under the

    ESA, far from being a numerical probability of harm, has been

    unequivocally defined as a showing of "actual harm." The

    Secretary of Interior has defined "harm," as it appears in the

    ESA statute, setting out what constitutes a prohibited taking,

    see discussion supra p. 4, as:
    ___ _____

    an act which actually kills or injures
    wildlife. Such an act may include
    significant habitat modification or
    degradation where it actually kills or
    injures wildlife by significantly

    ____________________

    3 Appellants did present a study showing that the ingestion of
    No. 4 lead shot caused harm to bald eagles. In that study,
    eagles were fed ten pellets of lead shot a day for a period of
    ten to fifteen days. In the present case, however, appellants
    have not shown that eagles have eaten or will eat any lead slugs
    (a considerably larger caliber than No. 4 shot) as a consequence
    of the deer hunts. Furthermore, one of the limitations of the
    Quabbin deer hunt was that hunters could use only lead slugs, no
    bullets and no shot.

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    impairing essential behavioral patterns,
    including breeding, feeding or
    sheltering.

    50 C.F.R. 17.3 (1992). In formulating this definition, the

    Secretary has explained that:

    Congress made its intent to protect
    species very clear. . . . in the
    preamble to the original definition of
    harm: "Harm" covers actions . . . which
    actually (as opposed to potentially),
    cause injury . . . .

    The purpose of the rulemaking was to make
    it clear that an actual injury to a
    ______
    listed species must be found for there to
    be a taking under Section 9.

    46 Fed. Reg. 54,748, 54,749 (1981).

    Clearly, then, for there to be "harm" under the ESA,

    there must be actual injury to the listed species. Accordingly,

    courts have granted injunctive relief only where petitioners have

    shown that the alleged activity has actually harmed the species

    or if continued will actually, as opposed to potentially, cause

    harm to the species. See Defenders of Wildlife v.
    ___ ________________________

    Administrators, 882 F.2d 1294 (8th Cir. 1988) (enjoining the EPA
    ______________

    from continuing its registration of strychnine after finding that

    continued registration of the substance resulted in poisonings of

    protected species); Sierra Club v. Yeutter, 926 F.2d 429 (5th
    ___________ _______

    Cir. 1991) (enjoining the United States Forest Service from even-

    aged lumbering following documentation by scientists of a

    dramatic decline in active Red Cockaded Woodpecker colonies and

    findings by the court tracing the decline directly to Service's

    lumbering practices). See also National Wildlife Fed'n v.
    _________ _________________________


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    National Park Serv., 669 F. Supp. 384 (D. Wyo. 1987) (no "taking"
    ___________________

    where a plan was designed to reduce conflicts between man and the

    grizzly bear and in the first season of operation under the plan,

    there were no bear mortalities).

    In this case, appellants have not shown that the hunt

    caused actual harm. Our review of the record indicates that bald

    eagles can be harmed by the ingestion of lead. There is,

    however, no evidence in the record of any harm to the bald eagles

    at Quabbin as a result of the 1991 deer hunt. See Pauite Tribe
    ___ ____________

    v. U.S. Dept. of the Navy, 898 F.2d 1410, 1420 (9th Cir. 1990)
    _______________________

    (activity must cause the harm). There is no evidence that any

    eagles at Quabbin actually ingested lead slug or that any eagles

    ate deer carrion containing lead slug. After hearing all of the

    evidence, and considering among other factors the likelihood of

    the presence of lead in cripple-loss deer, the likelihood of

    ingestion of lead by eagles feeding on the deer, and the

    likelihood that if an eagle ingests lead, it will be harmed

    thereby, the district judge was not persuaded that the bald

    eagles would be harmed by the proposed hunt. We find that the

    record fully supports the conclusion of the trial judge.4

    ____________________

    4 We note that the ESA definition of "take," includes the term
    "harass." 50 U.S.C. 1532(19). The regulations of the United
    States Fish and Wildlife Service define "harass" as:

    an intentional or negligent act which
    creates the likelihood of injury to
    wildlife by annoying it to such an extent
    as to significantly disrupt normal
    behavioral patterns which include but are
    not limited to, breeding, feeding, or
    sheltering.

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    Appellants' challenge of the district court's decision

    for allegedly failing to give specific findings under Federal

    Rule of Civil Procedure 52(a) is also without merit. The

    district court clearly stated the relevant statutory and

    regulatory provisions. To the extent that the district court's

    decision rested upon an interpretation of these provisions that

    varies from that which we have established, the court employed a

    more liberal interpretation of the statutory requirements.5

    Moreover, the court made clear factual findings. As such,

    appellants' Rule 52(a) challenge fails. We do not find it

    necessary for the court to numerically define the standard it

    applies in order to comply with this rule. Furthermore, we find

    that the record adequately supports a finding that the proposed

    deer hunt does not constitute a "taking" within the meaning of


    ____________________

    50 C.F.R. 17.3 (1992).

    Because appellants have not shown that bald eagles have
    ingested lead slugs nor fragments thereof during past hunts or
    will ingest lead slugs or fragments thereof during future hunts,
    we have no reason to consider whether the ingestion of lead slugs
    or fragments thereof would lead to a disturbance of the eagles'
    behavior pattern to the extent that it would amount to
    "harassment" of the bald eagles.

    5 The district court correctly stated that the issue to be
    decided was "whether the hunt will cause harm or whether it will
    harass, or cause the [b]ald [e]agle to be harassed." The parties
    agreed that the plaintiffs had the burden of proof and that in
    order to prevail they must show that "the deer hunt poses a
    significant risk of harm to the [b]ald [e]agle." By requiring
    the plaintiffs to show only "a significant risk of harm" instead
    of "actual harm," the district court required a lower degree of
    certainty of harm than we interpret the ESA to require. The
    appellants certainly cannot meet this court's standard of "actual
    harm" if the district court found that they failed to prove that
    even a "significant risk of harm" existed.

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    the ESA.6

    III. CREDIBILITY OF WITNESSES
    III. CREDIBILITY OF WITNESSES
    ________________________

    Appellants claim that the district court clearly erred

    by discounting the testimony of appellants' experts and finding

    more credible the testimony of appellees' experts regarding the

    effect of the deer hunt on bald eagles at Quabbin.

    We review the district court's credibility findings for

    clear error. Brennan v. Carvel Corp., 929 F.2d 801, 806 (1st
    _______ ____________

    Cir. 1991) (in non-jury trials, findings of fact based on oral or

    documentary evidence should only be set aside for clear error).

    See also Anderson v. Bessemer City, 564 U.S. 575 (1984) (where
    ________ ________ ______________

    there are two permissible views of the evidence, the factfinder's

    choice between them cannot be clearly erroneous). On the record

    presented, the district court did not err. Thus, we affirm the

    findings of the district court.

    IV. EXCLUSION OF APPELLANTS' EXHIBITS FROM EVIDENCE
    IV. EXCLUSION OF APPELLANTS' EXHIBITS FROM EVIDENCE
    _______________________________________________

    Appellants posit that the lower court erroneously

    ____________________

    6 We are aware of the decision of National Wildlife Federation
    ____________________________
    v. Hodel, 23 Env't Rep. Cas. (BNA) 1089 (E.D. Cal. Aug. 26, 1985)
    _____
    in which a court enjoined hunting of migratory birds with lead
    shot, finding a "taking" of the bald eagle. We believe that the
    present case is easily distinguishable. In National Wildlife,
    _________________
    the defendant had published a proposed rule stating that "there
    is a substantial likelihood that lead shot used by waterfowl
    hunters poses a threat to bald eagles" and significant evidence
    indicated that most lead shot that poisons bald eagles is
    consumed by the eagles when they feed upon other migratory birds
    that are themselves either ill due to consumption of lead shot,
    or have been wounded or killed by lead shot but not retrieved by
    hunters. In the present case, the defendant made no such
    admission and the evidence did not indicate that eagles were
    poisoned by feeding on deer carcasses. Id. at 1090.
    ___
    Furthermore, the present case concerns the use of lead "slugs"
    rather than lead "shot."

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    excluded appellants' exhibits 11, 11A, 11B, 11C, 12 and 13 from

    evidence. We disagree. Appellants offered as exhibits

    highlighted portions of documents which the court found to

    contain only portions of sentences taken out of context. These

    exhibits were offered by appellants as either self-authenticating

    documents or admissions. Appellees objected to their admission

    on the grounds of completeness and that the statements were taken

    out of context and stated during trial "we only prefer . . . that

    the entire document be admitted in evidence, as opposed to

    highlighted portions."

    Pursuant to Federal Rule of Evidence 106, "[w]hen a

    writing . . . or part thereof is introduced by a party, an

    adverse party may require the introduction . . . of any other

    part . . . which ought in fairness be considered

    contemporaneously with it." Appellants argue in their briefs

    that "as the defendants did not even dispute the admissibility of

    the entire documents, the Court was bound to accept the portions

    offered by the plaintiffs and allow the defendants to offer any

    additional portions . . . ." The record shows that it was not

    appellees, but appellants who vehemently opposed admitting into

    evidence the entire document which would put the phrases

    contained in their offered exhibits into context. In essence,

    before making a final ruling on the admissibility of these

    statements, the lower court let appellants choose whether the

    entire documents or no portions thereof would be admitted. The

    court did not abuse its discretion in refusing to admit only


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    misleading portions of documents taken out of context.7

    Affirmed.
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    ____________________

    7 We have no occasion to review the lower court's finding that
    the exhibits appellants sought to admit into evidence contained
    portions of sentences taken out of context. Appellants do not
    argue that they were in context and on appeal, they have supplied
    us with entire pages taken from those documents from which it is
    impossible to ascertain which portions they wished admitted.

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