Frontier Fishing Corp. v. Pritzker , 770 F.3d 58 ( 2014 )


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  •           United States Court of Appeals
    For the First Circuit
    No. 13-1776
    FRONTIER FISHING CORP.,
    Plaintiff, Appellant,
    v.
    PENNY PRITZKER; KATHRYN D. SULLIVAN,
    Defendants, Appellees.
    APPEAL FROM THE UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT
    FOR THE DISTRICT OF MASSACHUSETTS
    [Hon. Douglas P. Woodlock, U.S. District Judge]
    Before
    Thompson, Kayatta, and Barron,
    Circuit Judges.
    Stephen M. Ouellette, for appellant.
    Christine J. Wichers, Assistant United States Attorney, with
    whom Carmen M. Ortiz, United States Attorney, was on brief, for
    appellees.
    October 24, 2014
    KAYATTA,    Circuit    Judge.        The    National   Oceanic     and
    Atmospheric Administration ("NOAA") determined Frontier Fishing
    liable for trawling in a restricted gear area in violation of
    regulations   promulgated     under       the    Magnuson-Stevens       Fishing
    Conservation and Management Act, 
    16 U.S.C. §§ 1801
    -1891d.                   NOAA
    fined   Frontier   Fishing   $10,000      and   suspended       one-quarter   of
    Frontier   Fishing's   seasonal    fishing      days    under    its   Northeast
    Scallop Days-at-Sea Permit. Frontier Fishing appeals, arguing that
    the record lacks substantial evidence for a rational finding that
    its vessel trawled in the restricted area, and challenging other
    aspects of the agency proceedings. Largely for reasons given by the
    district court, we affirm.
    I. Background
    The lengthy background out of which this appeal arises
    covers nearly seventeen years and is impressively reviewed in the
    most recent district court opinion. See Frontier Fishing Corp. v.
    Locke, No. 10-10162, 
    2013 WL 2090551
     (D. Mass. May 13, 2013). We
    repeat only as much as is necessary to explain our ruling.
    A. The Night of the Violation
    On the evening of October 16, 1997, the crew of the Coast
    Guard cutter Spencer detected a radar contact up to one mile inside
    Restricted Gear Area 1, southeast of Nantucket. From October 1 to
    June 15, Restricted Gear Area 1 was open only to fixed fishing
    -2-
    gear, like lobster traps marked with "high flyers."1 The applicable
    regulations prohibited the use of mobile fishing gear, like trawl
    nets. See 
    50 C.F.R. § 648.14
    (a)(98) (1997).
    Following the crew's initial report of a contact in the
    restricted area, Spencer's commander, Charley Diaz, verified the
    contact on bridge radar, and assigned identification number 8174 to
    the object indicated by the radar. At 21:30, a Coast Guard lookout
    observed a white light on the horizon. Crew members thereafter
    maintained visual contact with the lit object using oversized
    binoculars known as "big eyes." As the Coast Guard cutter got
    closer, crew members observed green over white lights, indicating
    a fishing vessel trawling at night. Commander Diaz then directed
    his crew to plot the radar contact's location. At 21:40, the Coast
    Guard       proceeded   to   record   the   following   data:   Spencer's   own
    position using its navigational system and DGPS, which determines
    and records location in longitude and latitude; the radar range and
    bearing of target 8174; and the course and speed of target 8174 as
    determined by the Command Display and Control system. Using this
    data, the Coast Guard plotted the location of radar contact 8174 at
    21:40 approximately seven-tenths of a mile inside the restricted
    area.
    1
    A high flyer is a radar reflector, attached to a lobster trap
    buoy, that assists lobster boats locating their traps.
    -3-
    In addition to recording data on electronic equipment,
    other members of Spencer's crew simultaneously used an alidade2 to
    determine by sight the bearing of the observed lights. Commander
    Diaz himself checked the approximate position of the contact both
    visually and through radar equipment. The Coast Guard crew did not
    detect by sight or radar any other vessels in the area at that
    time. Shortly after determining that the 21:40 radar contact was
    within the restricted gear area, the Coast Guard altered course to
    intercept the target at a high rate of speed. The Coast Guard
    ultimately recorded range and bearing data for radar contact 8174
    three additional times showing it within the restricted area, at
    21:47, 21:52, and 21:58. We note that the various readings estimate
    location at the time of the reading without implying that contact
    8174 moved in a straight line from one location to the other.
    At 22:00, Spencer closed on a fishing vessel that all
    parties agree was Settler, a 90-foot trawler owned by Frontier
    Fishing, which had departed New Bedford, Massachusetts earlier that
    day on a monkfish trawling expedition. Commander Diaz estimated
    that Settler was 1,000 yards off Spencer's starboard side at 22:00.
    Commander Diaz visually confirmed that Settler had mobile fishing
    gear deployed off its stern. Spencer then quickly turned around
    Settler and ended up on its port quarter, where Spencer remained
    2
    "A telescope mounted on a compass repeater and used as part
    of a ship's navigational equipment for taking bearings." WEBSTER'S
    THIRD NEW INTERNATIONAL DICTIONARY at 53 (1986).
    -4-
    parallel to Settler for several minutes. It is undisputed that this
    interception occurred just outside the restricted gear area, at
    approximately 22:08. The Coast Guard maintained continuous visual
    contact with the lit object it had observed throughout its approach
    that night.
    The Coast Guard subsequently issued Settler a citation
    for violating regulations promulgated under the Magnuson-Stevens
    Act. See 
    50 C.F.R. § 648.14
    (a)(98) (1997). Two years later, NOAA
    issued Frontier Fishing a Notice of Violation and Assessment and a
    Notice of Permit Sanction.
    B. Frontier Fishing's Challenges to the Finding of Liability
    During the seventeen years since the Coast Guard cited
    Settler, Frontier Fishing has consistently denied that Settler was
    actually in the restricted area. Central to Frontier Fishing's
    position is the radar contact recorded at 21:58 just inside the
    restricted area. That location is simply too far from the location
    that Spencer's captain estimated observing Settler two minutes
    later, at 22:00 (approximately 1,000 yards from Spencer). Frontier
    Fishing built two arguments based on this discrepancy: it must have
    been another vessel that the Coast Guard was tracking by radar (the
    phantom vessel theory); or, in any event, any unreliability of the
    21:58 readings rendered unreliable the other range and bearing
    readings, most crucially those used to plot the 21:40 contact upon
    which the citation rests.
    -5-
    The adjudication of Frontier Fishing's challenge based on
    these arguments worked its way through an administrative law judge,
    to the NOAA administrator, to the district court (which remanded
    for de novo review), Frontier Fishing Corp. v. Evans, 
    429 F. Supp. 2d 316
    , 335 (D. Mass. 2006), back through the same administrative
    law judge, to the administrator again, back for a de novo review by
    a different administrative law judge, to the administrator for a
    third time, and finally to the district court again, which this
    time affirmed NOAA's ultimate finding of liability.
    In finding Frontier Fishing liable, NOAA rested largely
    on the fact that the evidence was clear that a vessel was in the
    restricted area at 21:40, and Settler, viewed in the direction of
    the radar sightings and eventually intercepted just outside the
    restricted area, was the only vessel that could have been the
    contact identified at 21:40. In reaching that finding, NOAA agreed
    with Frontier Fishing that the 21:58 contact could not have
    represented an accurate depiction of where Settler was located at
    that time. NOAA nevertheless rejected the hypothetical explanation
    for the 21:58 contact proffered by Frontier Fishing: that there was
    a second phantom vessel visible to radar but not by sight, and that
    Settler itself was invisible to radar although visible by sight.
    Instead, NOAA opted for the explanation that the 21:58 contact was
    Settler, albeit erroneously located. In so reasoning, NOAA noted
    that the 21:40 plot placed a vessel well inside the area, that the
    -6-
    parties agreed that "something" spotted by the radar was in the
    area at the time, that the Coast Guard crew visually observed a
    lighted vessel in the direction of the 21:40 contact, and that any
    suggestion that the Coast Guard somehow missed a second vessel
    throughout the entire sequence of events was simply not credible
    given Spencer's radar capabilities and the observations of both the
    Settler and Spencer crews.
    II. Standard of Review
    The Magnuson-Stevens Act incorporates the standard of
    review from the Administrative Procedure Act (APA), and thus we
    look   for   substantial    evidence   to   support   the   agency's    final
    decision. See 
    16 U.S.C. § 1858
    (b); 
    5 U.S.C. § 706
    (2); N. Wind, Inc.
    v. Daley, 
    200 F.3d 13
    , 17 (1st Cir. 1999). Under the substantial
    evidence test, "the agency's decision is presumed valid." N. Wind,
    
    200 F.3d at 17
    . "'[I]t requires not the degree of evidence which
    satisfies the court that the requisite fact exists, but merely the
    degree that could satisfy a reasonable factfinder.'" Penobscot Air
    Servs., Ltd. v. Fed. Aviation Admin., 
    164 F.3d 713
    , 718 (1st Cir.
    1999) (quoting Allentown Mack Sales & Serv., Inc. v. N.L.R.B., 
    522 U.S. 359
    , 377 (1998)). The agency's findings must be set aside when
    the record before the court "'clearly precludes the [agency's]
    decision from being justified by a fair estimate of the worth of
    the testimony of witnesses or its informed judgment on matters
    within   its   special   competence.'"      Penobscot,   
    164 F.3d at
      718
    -7-
    (quoting Universal Camera Corp. v. N.L.R.B., 
    340 U.S. 474
    , 490
    (1951)).
    Our review of the district court's decision is de novo,
    because the district court reviewed only the administrative record
    and thus was "in no better position to review the agency than the
    court of appeals." Puerto Rico v. United States, 
    490 F.3d 50
    , 61
    (1st Cir. 2007) (internal quotations and citations omitted).
    III. Analysis
    A. Frontier Fishing's Procedural Complaints
    Before addressing the substance of Frontier Fishing's
    arguments on the matter of Settler's location, we address two
    procedural arguments preserved by Frontier Fishing and pressed on
    appeal.
    1. Refusal to Supplement the Administrative Record
    During discovery prior to the very first hearing, NOAA
    produced to Frontier Fishing a one-page document that consisted of
    a single handwritten entry on a form like the Coast Guard's radar
    tracking log form. Dated October 16, 1997, with a time entry of
    "10:19", the document listed a "track" of "8174", "remarks" of
    "Settler Pts" and navigation data that Frontier Fishing's expert
    claimed shows contact 8174 at 22:19 located well inside the
    restricted    area   and   a   long   way   off   from   where   Settler   was
    admittedly located post-intercept by Spencer. Due to the passage of
    -8-
    time, discovery shed no light on what exactly this document was, or
    who created it.
    At the first hearing, in August 2001, Frontier Fishing
    did not offer this document into evidence. Subsequently, it sought
    to introduce it in its first appeal to the district court. The
    district court rejected the attempt to supplement the record before
    the court. Frontier Fishing, 
    429 F. Supp. 2d at 325
    . In remanding,
    however,   the   district   court    did   not   preclude   "such   further
    development of the record . . . as appears advisable to the ALJ."
    
    Id. at 335
    .
    ALJ    Devine    denied   Frontier     Fishing's   request    to
    supplement the record compiled at the first hearing by adding
    Exhibit 15. The ALJ questioned the relevance of the document,
    noting that it was unsigned and was not annotated in standard form.
    Most significantly, the document could not have any relevance
    unless the time entry of "10:19" were construed as 10:19 p.m.
    (i.e., 22:19), which would suggest no one accustomed to use of
    military time on such documents wrote it. Finally, the ALJ observed
    that Frontier Fishing had a full and fair opportunity to offer the
    document at the original hearing, and did not do so.
    In so ruling, the ALJ did not abuse the discretion left
    to him on remand.      His observations regarding the questionable
    materiality and provenance of the document speak for themselves.
    Frontier Fishing fails, also, to offer any good cause for why it
    -9-
    did not offer the document at the first hearing, claiming only
    negligence by prior counsel (whom the ALJ found to have presented
    a vigorous defense).
    2. Denial of Request for Additional Discovery
    Frontier Fishing argues on appeal that the NOAA and the
    district court erred in denying requests for additional discovery.
    "We disturb a district court's management of discovery 'only upon
    a clear showing of manifest injustice, that is, where the lower
    court's       discovery   order      was    plainly     wrong    and    resulted    in
    substantial prejudice to the aggrieved party.'" Olsen v. United
    States, 
    414 F.3d 144
    , 156 (1st Cir. 2005) (quoting Mack v. Great
    Atl. & Pac. Tea Co., 
    871 F.2d 179
    , 186 (1st Cir. 1989)). Generally,
    further discovery is not allowed in an action for judicial review
    upon     an    administrative        record       for   the    same    reasons     that
    supplementation is generally not permitted. Id. at 155-56. "It is
    almost    inherent       in   the    idea     of    reviewing    agency    or    other
    administrative       action         for     reasonableness;       how     could      an
    administrator      act    unreasonably        by    ignoring    information      never
    presented to it?" Liston v. Unum Corp. Officer Severance Plan, 
    330 F.3d 19
    , 23 (1st Cir. 2003). As for NOAA's denial of additional
    discovery, the applicable agency rule gave the ALJ the discretion
    to "allow additional discovery only upon a showing of relevance,
    need, and reasonable scope of the evidence sought." 
    15 C.F.R. § 904.240
    (b). For the reasons stated by the ALJ and the district
    -10-
    court, we find that this is not one of those unusual cases in which
    a district court or an agency must allow additional discovery.
    Frontier   Fishing        (1)   was    given    ample      opportunity      to   conduct
    reasonable        discovery        throughout    the       various      administrative
    proceedings; (2) was able to move for summary judgment without the
    information       it   now    seeks    through       further    discovery;       and   (3)
    received all of the information the agency used to make its
    determination.         Frontier Fishing Corp., 
    429 F. Supp. 2d at 326
    .
    B. The Merits
    We    begin     our    analysis     of    the     merits     with   several
    observations amply supported by the record. First, prior to 21:40,
    the   cutter's     crew      spotted   one     set    of   lights    in    the   general
    direction of the restricted area, prompting the taking of a plotted
    radar contact at 21:40. Second, Frontier Fishing, by conceding that
    the Coast Guard reliably plotted 'something' in the restricted gear
    area, agreed that the position of radar contact 8174 at 21:40 was
    .69 nautical miles inside the restricted gear area.3                      Third, there
    is no claim that the distance between that location and the
    location where Spencer intercepted Settler just outside the area
    was too far for Settler to travel between 21:40 and 22:08. Fourth,
    during the entire incident, no crew member of either vessel
    observed any other lights or vessels, nor did Spencer's radar
    3
    Spencer's quartermaster placed it approximately 200 yards
    further inside the area.
    -11-
    detect two vessels at any point during the relevant events. Fourth,
    Settler could not have been in the location of the radar contact as
    recorded at 21:58 because that location was too far from the
    location at which Commander Diaz estimated Settler at 22:00,
    approximately 1,000 yards away from Spencer.
    NOAA's take on the foregoing information was that radar
    contact 8174 was Settler, and that the 21:58 radar contact was
    erroneously recorded. The primary alternative explanation tendered
    by Frontier Fishing is that there was a phantom vessel that moved
    from the site of the 21:40 plot to the sites of the 21:47, 21:52,
    and 21:58 contacts, and then disappeared from the radar. This
    explanation presumes that Settler itself was invisible to the radar
    until after 21:58, while the phantom vessel by coincidence remained
    visible to the radar until after 21:58 but invisible to the eyes of
    those on both Settler and Spencer on an evening when visibility was
    eight miles.
    NOAA, which plainly has much more expertise with such
    matters than do we, rejected this explanation as not credible.
    Substantial evidence supports this conclusion. Spencer's radar was
    set to pick up vessels within twelve nautical miles. Frontier
    Fishing's claim that "radar clutter" from "high flyers" in the area
    may have blinded Spencer's radar does not persuasively explain how
    Spencer's radar would repeatedly detect one moving vessel and not
    the other over the course of a half hour.    And the commanders of
    -12-
    both   Spencer    and    Settler    testified that they could tell the
    difference on radar between high flyers and a vessel.
    Frontier     Fishing    claims     that    the     Coast    Guard   never
    visually correlated radar target 8174 to the lighted vessel, and
    that Spencer's steady approach to the lighted vessel was actually
    consistent with Frontier Fishing's claim that Settler maintained a
    straight, southerly trawl path outside the restricted area, and was
    not consistent with target 8174's radar plots. Frontier Fishing's
    expert testified that "the heading and maneuvering of [Spencer] was
    always   directed       at   the   trawler   lights      and    at     no   time   was
    [Spencer's] maneuvering or heading directed toward any of the radar
    points purported to be [Settler]." Of course the alidade readings
    cut against this theory, so Frontier Fishing points to an absence
    of any written reference to those readings in some reports, as
    implying that the crew of Spencer actually took no such visual
    bearings.
    NOAA considered Frontier Fishing's expert analysis on
    this point and rejected it. NOAA found that "there is no evidence
    of a continuous navigational track for [Settler]," as assumed by
    Frontier Fishing's expert. The ALJ noted that Frontier Fishing's
    expert   relied    on    Settler's    manually        inputted    21:30       waypoint
    position    to   support     his   analysis,    and     that    no     corroborating
    evidence    supports     Frontier    Fishing's        allegation       that    Settler
    actually began trawling at the manually inputted waypoint position.
    -13-
    Further,    nothing   in    the      record       conclusively    established    that
    Spencer's approach angles, cited by Frontier Fishing's expert,
    would be unreasonable for intercepting another vessel at high
    speed. Contrary to Frontier Fishing's claim, we also note multiple
    instances in the record that show the crew did correlate radar
    readings with its visual sightings using an alidade. For example,
    in the offense investigation report, Commander Diaz noted that he
    himself at one point "shot a bearing" of Settler using Spencer's
    starboard     alidade.     He    also      testified    that     Coast   Guard   crew
    determined target 8174's location at 21:40 using "an alidade
    bearing, a radar range and [Spencer's] electronic DGPS position."
    A quartermaster also testified to the use of an alidade that night.
    While   not    supported        by   all     the     evidence    in   the   record--
    acknowledging that several crew member reports do lack specific
    reference to alidade use--NOAA's conclusion that Coast Guard crew
    properly correlated the 21:40 radar reading and visual sightings
    was supported by substantial evidence, given the testimony by crew
    members at the hearings. The ALJ's decision to credit the testimony
    from Coast Guard crew on this point, and not Frontier Fishing's
    expert's analysis, based on uncorroborated assertions, constituted
    a reasonable resolution of the record.
    Substantial evidence also amply supports the finding that
    the presumed location of the 21:58 radar contact was simply an
    error. The 21:58 reading was taken after the chase was on, as
    -14-
    Spencer traveled at high speed in the direction of Settler. The
    quartermaster recorded the reading by hand, based on information
    relayed to him verbally by other crew members. The measurement's
    baseline margin of error was as much as 200 yards, although that
    was not enough, even doubled, to account for the discrepancy
    between the 21:58 location and the 22:00 estimated position. The
    ALJ, however, cited as well the fact that, once the 21:40 plot was
    confirmed as a vessel within the restricted area, the crew would
    have   devoted   attention   to   the    law   enforcement   and   safety
    considerations manifest in the visually observed rapid pursuit of
    that vessel. And, in affirming the ALJ's decision, NOAA pointed to
    the fact that the 21:58 bearings were "taken when the vessels were
    closing in on each other at high speed." In short, the record
    supports the conclusion that human error provided an additional
    reason, beyond random error, to distinguish the 21:58 readings from
    the 21:40 plot. So, too, once one concludes that the convincing and
    reinforcing radar and visual evidence placed Settler at the 21:40
    plot and that it was unbelievable that Settler remained invisible
    to radar while another visually invisible vessel was detectable by
    radar in a peek-a-boo manner, it follows, as Sherlock Holmes might
    observe, that the 21:58 location must have been wrong for the
    reasons suggested. And given the undisputed fact that the vessel
    detected at 21:40 was inside the area, it matters not that the
    21:58 reading of that same vessel was itself erroneous.
    -15-
    We also recognize that Frontier Fishing, throughout its
    brief, makes a series of objections to NOAA's handling of this
    case. None of these objections leads inexorably to the conclusion
    that substantial evidence does not support the finding that Settler
    trawled illegally at 21:40. Frontier Fishing claims in essence that
    both ALJs and the Administrator all joined together with the Coast
    Guard in overzealous enforcement, in such a manner to render the
    NOAA's decisions unreliable. We have reviewed the record as a whole
    and find nothing that would support such a claim. The record here
    contained a complicated set of facts. That these extensive and
    complicated facts do not all neatly fit together does not thereby
    support a finding that NOAA proceeded in a manner that would allow
    its conclusions to be disregarded as biased. See N.L.R.B. v. Hosp.
    San   Pablo,   Inc.,   
    207 F.3d 67
    ,   70   (1st   Cir.   2000)   (internal
    quotations and citation omitted)("[T]he possibility of drawing two
    inconsistent conclusions from the evidence does not prevent an
    administrative agency's finding from being supported by substantial
    evidence.")
    In so concluding, we do not suggest that the case against
    Frontier Fishing was ironclad.       The vessels' relative locations in
    relationship to the restricted area boundaries potentially rendered
    location by visual sighting insufficiently precise.            And the point
    of interception was outside the area. Perhaps Settler was in the
    wrong (but legal) place at exactly the wrong time when unusual
    -16-
    radar conditions masked the visually obvious Settler even as the
    radar clearly and repeatedly detected an inexplicably unlit vessel
    moving nearby, but in the restricted area.        Just as the district
    court did, we hold only that, in rejecting this interpretation of
    the evidence, NOAA acted neither irrationally nor without minimally
    sufficient support in the record to conclude that Settler was the
    vessel plotted in the restricted area at 21:40.         In short, the
    record here does not "clearly preclude[] the [agency's] decision
    from being justified by a fair estimate of the worth of the
    testimony of witnesses or its informed judgment on matters within
    its special competence." Penobscot, 
    164 F.3d at 718
     (quoting
    Universal Camera Corp., 
    340 U.S. at 490
    ) (internal quotation marks
    omitted).
    IV. Conclusion
    Substantial   evidence     supports     NOAA's    finding.
    Consequently, and for the reasons outlined above, we affirm the
    district court's decision upholding the NOAA Administrator's final
    decision.   So ordered.
    -17-