- 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 9 EASTERN DISTRICT OF CALIFORNIA 10 11 PUBLIC TIMBER PURCHASERS’ No. 2:19-cv-01087 MCE-KJN GROUP, an Oregon nonprofit 12 corporation, and SIERRA PACIFIC INDUSTRIES, a California stock 13 corporation, MEMORANDUM AND ORDER 14 Plaintiffs, 15 v. 16 UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF AGRICULTURE, UNITED STATES 17 FOREST SERVICE, RANDY MOORE, Regional Forester, Pacific Southwest 18 Region, United States Forest Service, in his official capacity; and SCOTT 19 RUSSELL, Forest Supervisor, Shasta- Trinity National Forest, United States 20 Forest Service, in his official capacity, 21 Defendants. 22 23 Through the present action, Plaintiffs Public Timbers Purchasers’ Group (“PTPG”) 24 and Sierra Pacific Industries (“SPI”) (hereinafter collectively referred to as “Plaintiffs” 25 unless otherwise indicated) seek review of two administrative appeal decisions issued by 26 Defendant Randy Moore (“Moore”), in his official capacity as the Pacific Southwest 27 Regional Forester for Defendant United States Forest Service (“USFS”). Those 28 decisions pertain to Moore’s structural change recomputation of the small business 1 share allocation for timber sales conducted within the Trinity Market Area of the Shasta- 2 Trinity National Forest. In addition to Moore and the USFS, the Forest Supervisor who 3 made the initial decision, Scott Russell (“Russell”), is also named as a Defendant, as is 4 the United States Department of Agriculture (“USDA”), who developed the small 5 business set-aside program (“set-aside program”) in conjunction with the Small Business 6 Administration (“SBA”).1 7 Plaintiffs now move for summary judgment on grounds that neither of the subject 8 appeals was proper in the first instance. They go on to contend that even if they were, 9 Moore both exceeded his authority in modifying Russell’s initial decision and acted 10 arbitrarily and capriciously in any event in making the recomputation he did. The Federal 11 Defendants filed their own cross-motion for summary judgment in response arguing that 12 the decisions on appeal were entirely proper. As set forth below, Plaintiffs’ motion is 13 DENIED, and Federal Defendants’ cross-motion is GRANTED.2 14 15 PROCEDURAL FRAMEWORK 16 17 The Small Business Act, now codified at 15 U.S.C. §§ 631, et seq. (“Act”) 18 established the SBA and provides that contracts for the sale of government property be 19 awarded to small businesses if the SBA and its “disposal agency” determine that such 20 an award is “in the interest of assuring that a fair proportion of the total sales of 21 [g]overnment property be made to [such] concerns.” 15 U.S.C. § 644(a)(5). Defendant 22 USFS is the disposal agency for the sale of timber from the National Forest System. 23 Beginning in 1958, the USDA and the SBA developed a timber sale set-aside 24 program to ensure that qualifying small timber purchasers be accorded the opportunity to 25 purchase a fair share of USFS timber offered for sale. Administrative Record (“AR”) 27, 26 1 These Defendants will be collectively referred to as the “Federal Defendants” in the remainder of this Memorandum and Order unless otherwise indicated. 27 2 Having determined that oral argument would not be of material assistance, the Court submitted 28 both motions on the briefs in accordance with E.D. Local Rule 230(g). 1 p. 1. 3 Later, in 1971, the USDA entered into a written agreement (“1971 Agreement”) 2 for the sale of national forest timber and related forest products to small businesses 3 which provided the foundation for the set-aside program now in effect. 4 The set-aside program is currently administered by the USFS, in consultation with 5 the SBA, through both the 1971 Agreement and the Forest Service Directive System, 6 which consists of the Forest Service Manual (“FSM”), as well as the applicable Forest 7 Service Handbook (“FSH”) for each Region. The FSM identifies two policy objectives in 8 implementing the set-aside program; 9 1. To ensure that small business purchasers have the opportunity to purchase a fair proportion of the sales of 10 National System timber. 11 2. To administer the [set-aside program] consistently between and across the National Forests within each Region. 12 FSM § 2439.02. 13 The FSM goes on to generally vest Forest Supervisors with the duty, as the so- 14 called “Responsible Official” for administering the set-aside program “in accordance with 15 applicable policies and procedures,” as contained within the FSH. Id. at §§ 2439.04d, 16 2439.1. In that role, the FSH specifies that Forest Supervisors are responsible, among 17 other things, for reallocating the proportion of timber sales offered to small businesses in 18 the event of a so-called “structural change.” Such a change occurs when a “small or 19 large business firm that purchased at least 10 percent of the total sawlog volume during 20 the last recomputation4 period discontinues operations or changes its size status through 21 the sale or purchase of manufacturing capacity.” FSH, § 90.5(8)(b). 22 /// 23 When a structural change is identified, the Forest Supervisor “must recompute[] 24 25 3 All citations to the Administrative Record refer, as the parties do, to the document number assigned by Defendants in the Administrative Record Index attached as Ex. 1 to the Declaration of Tim Howard submitted along with the Record, and not to Bates numbers assigned to each page of the Record. 26 4 A “recomputation” is the “process of computing the small business share for a market area,” with 27 market area being the “basic unit” of administration for the set-aside program, and “small business share” is defined as the “amount of timber that small businesses are expected to purchase within a market area.” 28 Id. at § 90.5(8), (4), (9). 1 the small business share in accordance with the procedure set out in [FSH § 91.22b].” 2 Id. That procedure is “designed to provide small business firms the opportunity to 3 maintain their historical share when a firm changes size” in order to provide an 4 “adjustment of shares to reflect changes that may develop.” Id. The FSH accordingly 5 mandates that the applicable small business share be recomputed three years after a 6 structural change occurs based on the sawlog purchase history for that three-year 7 period. Id. Structural change recomputations are subject to a lower limit of one-half of 8 the “original base share,” which is the original small business share established for each 9 market area under the 1971 Agreement, and an upper limit of 80 percent of total sawlog 10 volume of the area. Id. 11 The FSH directs the Forest Supervisor to consult with the SBA both as to whether 12 a structural change has occurred and for any resulting recomputation of the small 13 business share based on purchase history, with a formula provided for the necessary 14 calculation. Id. at § 91.17, 91.22b. If the Forest Supervisor and the SBA disagree as to 15 the small business share recomputation, the FSH provides for referral of the matter to 16 the Regional Forester, who may establish a small business share that differs from the 17 recomputation formula contained within the FSH. Id. at § 91.17. 18 Recomputation decisions, once finalized, may be appealed by the timber sales 19 purchasers, or their representatives, affected by the decision. 36 C.F.R. § 223.118(c), 20 (h)(1). Where, as here, the Forest Supervisor issues the recomputation decision, the 21 Regional Forester is the “Appeal Deciding Officer” responsible for adjudicating the 22 appeal. Id. at § 223.118(d). If the Regional Forester is responsible for the underlying 23 decision, however, the Chief of the USFS, or his designee, becomes the Appeal 24 Deciding Officer. The Appeal Deciding Officer is vested with the authority to “affirm or 25 reverse,” in whole or in part, the recomputation decision. Id. at § 223.118(j)(3). 26 /// 27 /// 28 FACTUAL BACKGROUND 1 2 Between approximately 2010 and 2015, the Trinity River Lumber Company had 3 purchased some 94 percent of sawlog volume obtained from the Trinity Market Area of 4 the Shasta-Trinity National Forest. AR 21. As a small business, this purchase volume 5 had established a 74 percent small business share for the Trinity Market Area. On or 6 about May 28, 2015, however, Trinity River Lumber purchased an additional mill and 7 thereby ceased to qualify as a small business concern. Id. Thereafter, on March 31, 8 2016, the Forest Supervisor for the Shasta-Trinity National Forest, Defendant Scott 9 Russell, issued a Pre-Decision Notice of SBA Structural Change announcing that after 10 consultation with the SBA, he determined that Trinity River Lumber’s purchase made it 11 necessary to recompute the applicable small business share. Id. Russell subsequently 12 revealed, on May 13, 2016, his methodology in undertaking that recomputation, 13 indicating that purchase and harvest date from October 1, 2015, through September 30, 14 2018 would be employed, and that the resulting new figure would take effect on October 15 1, 2018. AR 20. 16 Russell ultimately proposed, by written notice issued on October 30, 2018, a new 17 small business share of 67 percent. He did this by limiting the change from the 18 previously established 74 percent share to one-half of the original base share of 14 19 percent, a 7 percent reduction. AR 9. Russell invited qualifying timber sale purchaser 20 interested parties to review his recommendation and provide any written commentary by 21 November 29, 2018, after which time a decision would be forthcoming. 22 Both the SBA and Franklin Logging, a small business concern that expressed 23 interest in purchasing timber from the Trinity Market Area, submitted comments in 24 support of Russell’s proposal within the requisite period. Plaintiff PTPG, a regional trade 25 organization representing large forest produce manufacturers that purchase USFS 26 timber, also commented, as did Plaintiff SPI, a large timber purchase and member of 27 PTPG. 28 Both SPI and PTPG asserted that Russell erred in calculating the new proposed 1 business share, since the limitation to one-half of the original base share formula he 2 relied upon applied only to periodic five-year recomputation and not to the recomputation 3 needed after an intervening structural change. AR 8, 15. In a structural recomputation, 4 according to Plaintiffs, the only limit that applied was that under FSH § 91.22b, such that 5 the new share would be not less than one-half of established base share of 14 percent, 6 or 7 percent. In the Trinity Market Area, because there had been virtually no timber 7 sales during the applicable control period (only one small sale occurred to a large 8 company), no percentage was assigned to small business interests, Plaintiffs argued 9 that a zero percentage allocation therefore had to be applied for small purchasers, 10 bringing the new percentage down to the 7 percent minimum rather than the 67 percent 11 figure advocated by Russell. 12 On December 10, 2018, Deputy Forest Supervisor Terri Simon-Jackson issued a 13 revised decision concluding that the correct small business share for the Trinity Market 14 Area was in fact 7 percent as advocated by Plaintiffs. AR 5. Ms. Simon-Jackson 15 informed timber purchasers and interested parties of their right to appeal the decision 16 pursuant to 36 C.F.R. § 223.118 and identified the Regional Forester as the Appeal 17 Deciding Officer. Id. This caused the SBA and Franklin Logging to submit notices of 18 appeal on December 20, 2018 and January 7, 2019, respectively. AR 3, 4. 19 While the SBA tacitly acknowledged that application of FSH § 91.22b would result 20 in the 7 percent small business allocation specified by Ms. Simon-Jackson, it 21 nonetheless claimed that using that figure would be a “total disservice to the entire small 22 business community.” AR 3. The SBA pointed out that because there was only one 23 open sale, and because that sale occurred only in the last six-month segment of the 24 referenced three-year period (during four of the remaining five six-month segments, the 25 sales that did occur were excluded from consideration and in the other no sales occurred 26 at all) the opportunity for small businesses to quantify their purchasing history was 27 “extremely limited”. Id. Rather than reduce the available small business share so 28 drastically from 74 to 7 percent, the SBA instead suggested the “middle range” of 44 1 percent, a figure between the 7 percent minimum and the 80 percent maximum allowed 2 for structural change recomputations under the FSH. 3 Franklin Logging, like the SBA, argued that the reduction proposed by the Deputy 4 Forest Supervisor would “fall well short” of the Timber Set Aside Program’s objective in 5 giving small businesses the “opportunity to acquire [a] fair share of federal contracts.” 6 AR 4. Franklin claimed that dropping the small business share to 7 percent would 7 “severely limit our ability to purchase timber sales in the Trinity Market area.” Id. It 8 accordingly advocated that Scott Russell’s initial recommendation of 67 percent be 9 adopted by the Regional Forester on appeal. 10 On February 13, 2019, Regional Forester Randy Moore issued essentially 11 identical decisions as to both appeals. While agreeing that the Forest Supervisor’s small 12 business recomputation was technically made in compliance with the provisions of the 13 FSH, Moore agreed with the concern voiced by both appellants concerning the “dramatic 14 drop” from 74 percent to 7 percent in small business share that the Forest Supervisor’s 15 decision entailed. Finding that he had the discretion to adjust the 7 percent figure 16 upward under FSM 2439.04c(3) and FSH § 91.17, Moore found as follows: 17 It is my responsibility to ensure that small business timber purchasers have the opportunity to purchase a fair proportion 18 of sales of National Forest System timber. The 7 percent, in my opinion, will not provide a fair share of timber to small 19 businesses and the 7 percent is well below historical SBA Set- Aside timber offerings and will not be in the best interest of the 20 Forest Service and small businesses nor in the spirit of the SBA Set-Aside program (Forest Service Manual (“FSM”)- 21 Timber Management, 2439.01(1), 2439.02(1). 22 AR 1, 2 23 After examining the underlying record, Moore determined, in the best interest of 24 both the SBA and the Forest Service that the small business share of the Trinity Market 25 Area should be increased from 7 percent to 44 percent, effective October 1, 2018, on 26 grounds that 44 percent is “a reasonable middle range for the small business share 27 /// 28 between the 7 percent floor and the 80 percent ceiling set forth in FSH 2409.18, 91.22b.” 1 Id. 2 Plaintiffs filed the present lawsuit challenging that determination on June 14, 3 2019. ECF No. 1. The cross-motions for summary judgment presently before the Court 4 for adjudication were commenced on March 27, 2020, by the filing of Federal 5 Defendant’s Motion for Summary Judgment (ECF No. 36), followed by Plaintiffs’ 6 Opposition and Cross-Motion on April 24, 2020 (ECF No. 38), and both motions have 7 been fully briefed. 8 9 STANDARD 10 11 The Administrative Procedure Act (“APA”) governs a court’s review of agency 12 action taken under the set-aside program. 5 U.S.C. §§ 701, et seq.; see Duke City 13 Lumber Co. v. Butz, 382 F. Supp. 362 (D.D.C. 1974). 14 Summary judgment is an appropriate procedure in reviewing agency decisions 15 under the dictates of the APA. See, e.g., Northwest Motorcycle Assn. v. U.S. Dept. of 16 Agric., 18 F.3d 1468, 1471-72 (9th Cir. 1994). Under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure 56, 17 summary judgment may be had where, “viewing the evidence and the inferences arising 18 therefrom in favor of the nonmovant, there are no genuine issues of material fact in 19 dispute.” Id. at 1472. In cases involving agency action, however, the court’s task is 20 governed by the judicial review provisions of the APA, which requires a court to hold 21 unlawful and set aside an agency decision that is “arbitrary, capricious, an abuse of 22 discretion, or not otherwise in accordance with law,” or adopted “without observance of 23 procedure required by law.” 5 U.S.C. § 706(2); Native Ecosystems Council v. U.S. 24 Forest Service, 418 F.3d 953, 960 (9th Cir. 2005). A decision is arbitrary and capricious 25 if the agency has “relied on factors which Congress has not intended it to consider, 26 entirely failed to consider an important aspect of the problem, offered an explanation for 27 its decision that runs counter to the evidence before the agency, or is so implausible that 28 it could not be ascribed to a difference in view or the product of agency expertise.” 1 Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins.Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983). In 2 reviewing an agency decision, the court must be “searching and careful” (Ocean 3 Advocates v. U.S. Army Corps of Engineers, 402 F.3d 846, 858-59 (9th Cir. 2005); Or. 4 Natural Res. Council v. Lowe, 109 F.3d 521, 526 (9th Cir. 1997)) but may not substitute 5 its own judgment for that of the agency. Ocean Advocates, 361 F.3d at 118 (citing 6 Citizens to Preserve Overton Park, Inc. v. Volpe, 401 U.S. 402 (1971), overruled on 7 other grounds by Califano v. Sanders, 430 U.S. 99 (1977)). An agency must examine 8 the relevant data and articulate a satisfactory explanation for its action including a 9 rational connection between the facts found and the choice made. Motor Vehicle Mfs. 10 Ass’n of U.S., Inc. v. State Farm Mut. Auto Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983) (internal 11 quotations omitted); see also Marsh v. Or. Natural Res. Council, 490 U.S. 360, 378 12 (1989). 13 In reviewing an agency’s actions, then, the standard to be employed is decidedly 14 deferential to the agency’s expertise. Salmon River v. Robertson, 32 F.3d 1346, 1356 15 (9th Cir. 1994). Although the scope of review for agency action is accordingly limited, 16 such action is not unimpeachable. The reviewing court must determine whether there is 17 a rational connection between the facts and resulting judgment so as to support the 18 agency’s determination. Baltimore Gas and Elec. v. NRDC, 462 U.S. 87, 105-06 (1983), 19 citing Bowman Trans. Inc. v. Arkansas-Best Freight Sys. Inc., 419 U.S. 281, 285-86 20 (1974). In order to be arbitrary and capricious, there must be “a clear error of judgment” 21 on the part of the agency. League of Wilderness Defenders v. U.S. Forest Serv., 22 549 F.3d 1211, 1215 (9th Cir. 2006). Plaintiffs bear the burden of proof in making the 23 requisite showing in that regard. Kleppe v. Sierra Club, 427 U.S. 390, 412 (1976). 24 /// 25 /// 26 /// 27 /// 28 /// 1 ANALYSIS 2 3 A. SBA Has Standing To Appeal 4 In moving for summary judgment, Plaintiffs first posit the procedural argument the 5 SBA was not permitted to appeal the Regional Forester’s recomputation decisions. 6 According to Plaintiffs, because the regulation governing the administrative appeal 7 process for the set-aside program only specifically identifies the SBA as an “interested 8 party” entitled to comment on USFS small business allocation determinations and 9 resulting appeals, the SBA necessarily cannot itself appeal a decision since that role is 10 limited to either a timber sale purchaser or its representative. The Court is unpersuaded 11 by Plaintiffs’ position. 12 The regulation in question, 36 C.F.R. § 223.118, separately defines the entities 13 that may comment on an appeal as an interested party, and those that are entitled to 14 actually file an appeal. The applicable subsection, (c), is entitled “Who may appeal or 15 file written comments as an interested party.” (emphasis added). The regulation goes on 16 to define those entities who may appeal: 17 (1) Only timber sale purchasers, or their representatives, who are affected by recomputations of the small business 18 share of timber sales as described in paragraph (a) of this section and who have submitted predecisional comments 19 pursuant to paragraphs (b)(1) of this section, may appeal recomputation decisions under this section or may file 20 comments as an interested party. 21 36 C.F.R. § 223.118(c)(1) 22 Consequently, an appellate right is initially vested on timber sales purchasers or 23 their representatives, provided they have been “affected” by a recomputation. The 24 regulation goes on to further require, once that fundamental showing has been made, 25 that the entity also “have submitted predecisional comments,” a right which 26 subdivision (b)(1) accords to the same group by using the definition contained in (c)(1). 27 The subdivision ends by specifying that the same group of timber sale purchasers or 28 their representatives can also file written comments to appeal as an interested party. 1 Plaintiffs focus on subdivision (c)(2), which defines “interested parties” as 2 including not only timber purchasers or their representatives but also the SBA, to argue 3 that the regulation’s specific inclusion of the SBA as an interested party means that the 4 SBA is not also entitled to appeal because it is not similarly included within the definition 5 of an appealing party. The regulation provides: 6 (2) Interested parties are defined as the Small Business Administration and those timber sale purchasers, or 7 their representatives, who are affected by recomputations of the small business share of timber sales as described in 8 paragraph (a) of this section and who have individually, or through an association to which they belong, submitted 9 predecision comments pursuant to paragraph (b)(1) of this section. 10 11 36 C.F.R. § 223.118(c)(2). 12 Plaintiffs’ contention that the two sections are mutually exclusive with respect to 13 the SBA’s role in this matter does not withstand careful scrutiny. The SBA’s appeal 14 makes it clear that in doing so it represents small timber purchasers affected by the 15 Trinity Market Area recomputation: “The SBA, representing the small business 16 community, is adversely affected by the dramatic drop from the current small business 17 share of 74 percent to 7 percent.” AR 3. Moreover, the SBA’s authorizing statute, at 18 15 U.S.C. § 631 (a), directs it to “aid, counsel, assist, and protect insofar as possible, the 19 interests of small business concerns.” And, of course, the regulation governing the 20 administrative appeal process itself, as set forth above, permits appeals by either timber 21 sale purchasers affected by recomputation decisions “or their representatives.” 22 36 C.F.R. § 223.118(c)(1). There can be no question that the SBA is a representative of 23 such purchasers in this context. 24 The fact that the definition of “interested parties” happens to also specifically 25 name the SBA does not change that conclusion. First, the definition of “interested 26 parties” also includes timber purchaser representatives so the SBA qualifies as such 27 both because it is enumerated as a listed party and because it is acting in this particular 28 case as a representative for timber sale purchasers. Second, subdivision (b)(1), which 1 spells out who may comment upon the Forest Supervisor’s initial decision here to reduce 2 the small business percentage to 7 percent, does so by reference to the definition 3 contained in (c)(1), a definition which unlike (c)(2), does not include the SBA. 4 Consequently, to be entitled to submit such predecisional comments the SBA had to 5 qualify as a timber purchase representative. The record is clear that the SBA did 6 comment initially on the Forest Supervisor’s initial recommendations in this matter (see 7 AR 7), and it was entitled to do so under § 223.118(a) only if it fell within the definition 8 set forth by (c)(1), a definition which includes an entity acting as a representative but 9 does not specifically name the SBA as such a representative. 10 Plaintiffs have not disputed the SBA’s authority to comment on the Forest 11 Supervisor’s predecisional notice, yet that authority undermines their ability to now argue 12 that the SBA cannot also appeal. Significantly, too, the SBA cannot qualify as an 13 interested party under subdivision (c)(2) unless it also submitted predecisional 14 comments, and it could do so under (b)(1) and (c)(1) only as a timber purchaser 15 representative. Accordingly, the Court finds the SBA’s appeal to be authorized.5 16 B. Franklin’s Appeal Was Timely 17 Even if the SBA’s appeal of the Regional Forester’s recomputation decision was 18 not authorized under applicable USFS regulations, a conclusion which the Court rejects 19 as indicated above, dismissing the instant appeal in its entirety also requires a 20 determination that the second appealing party, Franklin Logging, was not entitled to 21 appeal. Plaintiffs’ only argument in that regard is that Franklin’s appeal was untimely 22 23 5 The Court notes that the Federal Defendants have also made standing arguments in their cross- motion for summary judgment. They argue that Franklin Logging failed to demonstrate any harm 24 stemming from the Regional Forester’s decision by not identifying any specific timber sales upon which they could not bid. Given Franklin’s status as a small business, its purchase of timber from the Trinity 25 Market Area in the past, and its claim that decreasing the small business percentage would impact its ability to do so in the future (see AR 17) the Court concludes that it had the requisite standing to appeal the decision. Importantly, too, by adjudicating Franklin’s appeal, the Regional Forester tacitly concurred 26 with that conclusion. Additionally, the Court further concludes that both Plaintiff SPI, as a large timber purchaser which has regularly participated in Trinity Market Area timber sales in the past and intends to do 27 so in the future (see Decl. of Robert Hoover, ECF No. 39-1), and Plaintiff PTPG, which was organized in part to protect the interests of its members from undue preference by the USFS to small timber purchasers 28 (see Decl. of Mark Pawlkicki, ECF No. 39-2), have standing to pursue the present judicial appeal. 1 because, although submitted in accordance with the time frame explicitly provided in the 2 Forest Supervisor’s revised predecisional notice of December 10, 2018 (AR 5), it 3 nonetheless was not, according to Plaintiffs, filed within twenty days of the notice of said 4 decision. 5 The December 10, 2018 notice provided the following directive as to any appeal 6 therefrom: 7 Any written Notice of Appeal of this decision must be fully consistent with 36 CFR 223.118(f), Content of Notice of 8 Appeal, must include reasons for appeal and must be postmarked by January 09, 2019 which is 30 days from the 9 date of this notice of decision. 10 AR 5. 11 Subdivision (f) of the statute provides detailed instructions as to the specific 12 information a notice of appeal must provide, and the above paragraph goes on to 13 establish a date certain (January 9, 2019), as to when an appeal must be postmarked in 14 order to be considered timely. The Forest Supervisor identified that date as 30 days 15 from the date of her December 10, 2018 notice of decision. 16 While the notice of decision refers specifically to subdivision (f) of the regulation 17 as stated above, nowhere does it point to subdivision (e), which requires, in apparent 18 odds with the notice, that any appeal be filed “within 20 days of the date of the notice of 19 the decision.” 36 C.F.R. 223.118(e). According to Plaintiffs, because Franklin Logging’s 20 appeal was filed on January 7, 2019, within the time-period specified within the Forest 21 Supervisor’s notice of decision but outside the 20-day deadline established by 22 § 223.118(e), its appeal must necessarily be considered untimely. Plaintiffs point to 23 language elsewhere in the regulation stating that is both “the responsibility of those filing 24 an appeal to file the notice of appeal by the end of the filing period,” with that date being 25 “not extendable.” 36 C.F.R. § 223.118(g)(3), (4). Plaintiffs thereby argue that even 26 though Franklin Logging followed the explicit filing instructions contained in the Notice of 27 Appeal itself, it should have realized that the Forest Supervisor’s computation was 28 /// 1 erroneous. Franklin’s failure to do so in Plaintiffs’ view bars the present appeal from 2 proceeding given its contention that the SBA’s appeal was improper as well. 3 This Court finds Plaintiffs’ position as to the timeliness of Franklin Logging’s 4 appeal utterly unpersuasive. It ignores the USFS’ own role in establishing the filing 5 deadline while blaming Franklin Logging for simply having followed the instructions it 6 was given in the notice of decision itself. First, to the extent that Plaintiffs claim that 7 Franklin Logging had “responsibility” for filing a notice of appeal “by the end of the filing 8 period’ under subdivision (g)(3), and although Plaintiffs place great stock on the fact that 9 that period “is not extendable” under (g)(4), the USFS was tasked with specifying the 10 end of the 20-day filing period set forth in subdivision (e). The regulation clearly states 11 that “[t]his date must be specified in the notice of decision…” 36 C.R.R. § 223.118(e). 12 Here, no 20-day deadline was provided under subdivision (e). Instead, the Forest 13 Supervisor established a different, 30-day deadline and calculated the applicable filing 14 date of January 9, 2019 in the subject notice of decision. Franklin Logging was 15 unquestionably entitled to rely on that date.6 Even if the USFS erred in establishing the 16 date it did, Franklin Logging cannot be held accountable for that mistake when it did 17 exactly what the notice of decision instructed it to do. Franklin’s appeal was timely under 18 those circumstances. 19 C. The Regional Forester did not exceed his authority in modifying the Forest Supervisor’s initial decision. 20 21 Having disposed of Plaintiffs’ procedural arguments for dismissing this lawsuit, the 22 Court now moves to the substantive grounds advanced. The Court finds those 23 arguments no more persuasive. 24 Plaintiffs first advance a claim that the Regional Forester’s decision to modify the 25 Forest Supervisor’s structural recomputation exceeded his authority under the applicable 26 6 It is also significant to note that the USFS accepted Franklin Logging’s appeal. In announcing 27 his February 13, 2019 decision as to that appeal, Regional Forester Randy Moore described Franklin’s January 7, 2019 appeal as “timely”. AR 1. 28 1 regulations. That argument is both tortured and illogical. It is based on the regulation’s 2 directive that “[t]he Appeal Officer may affirm or reverse the Responsible Official’s 3 decision, in whole or in part.” 36 C.F.R. § 223.118(j)(3).7 According to Plaintiffs, 4 because the Regional Forester “modified” the Forest Supervisor’s decision, that action 5 runs counter to the directive that he only “affirm or reverse” that decision, despite the fact 6 that such affirmance or reversal may specifically be either “in whole or in part.” 7 Here, the Regional Forester affirmed the appealed decision to the extent that it 8 changed the small business share applicable to the Trinity Market Area, but reversed the 9 decision insofar as it established a 7 percent small business share. Instead, because 10 the historical small business share for the Area had been 74 percent, and given the very 11 limited data upon which the drastic reduction of that share down to 7 percent had been 12 premised (only one qualifying sale in the previous three-year period had been utilized), 13 the Regional Forester exercised his discretion8 and found that a midpoint of 44 percent, 14 approximately halfway between the two figures, better served the interests of all 15 involved. 16 It makes no sense to argue, as Plaintiffs do, that the Regional Forester could 17 partially affirm or reverse the appealed decision, but lacked the authority to modify it. 18 The result under either scenario is to change the small business share, so it is a 19 distinction without a difference.9 The Court accordingly rejects Plaintiff’s argument that 20 the Regional Forester exceeded his authority in modifying the structural recomputation. 21 /// 22 7 There is no dispute that “Appeal Officer” and “Responsible Official” refer here to the Regional 23 Forester and the Forest Supervisor, respectively. 24 8 While Plaintiffs also argue that the Regional Forester, when acting in his role as an Appeal Officer, lacks any discretion in reaching his decision, nothing in either the FSM or FSH support that 25 contention, which the Court therefore rejects. The Court further rejects any assertion that the language of 36 C.F.R. § 223.118(j)(3), which permits the Appeal Officer to affirm or reverse, in whole or in part, the Responsible Official’s underlying structural recomputation, limits his discretion to modify that decision. 26 9 The Court accordingly rejects Plaintiffs’ argument that permitting the Regional Forester to 27 “modify” a small business share on appeal, as opposed to partially affirming or reversing the underlying decision, represents a “significant” change to the set-aside program for which an opportunity to comment 28 should have been provided before implementation pursuant to 36 C.F.R. § 223.118(l) 1 D. The Regional Forester’s Decision Was Neither Arbitrary Nor Capricious 2 3 Plaintiffs next claim that even if the Regional Forester had the ostensible authority 4 to act as he did, Moore’s decision to increase the small business share from 7 to 5 44 percent was arbitrary and capricious and cannot withstand APA scrutiny on that 6 basis. This is because, according to Plaintiffs, the Regional Forester’s decision to use 7 the midpoint figure advocated by the SBA lacked the necessary “rational connection” 8 with the actual facts before him for consideration. Motor Vehicle Mfrs. Ass’n of U.S., Inc. 9 v. State Farm Mut. Auto. Ins. Co., 463 U.S. 29, 43 (1983). Pointing to the Act’s dictate 10 that “a fair proportion of the total sales of Government property be made to small 11 business concerns” (14 U.S.C. § 644(a)(5)j), Plaintiffs claim that the Regional Forester’s 12 decision on appeal failed to assure any such fair percentage and instead constitute a 13 “clear error of judgment” that “must be held unlawful and set aside.” Pls.’ Mot., ECF No. 14 37, 13:13-14. They maintain that his “proffered explanation is not the product of agency 15 expertise” because “it capriciously acquiesces, without critical analysis, to the SBA’s 16 equally arbitrary [midpoint] proposal.” Id. at 19-20. Again, the Court disagrees. 17 Plaintiffs themselves concede that the Forest Supervisor’s ultimate 18 recomputation, while technically correct, was based on only one qualifying timber sale 19 within the three years following the structural change brought about by Trinity River 20 Lumber’s 2015 change in small business status. That sale, at 2,261 MBF, was both 21 relatively small in size and occurred during the final six-month segment of the relevant 22 three-year period, with sales from the other five segments either excluded from 23 consideration or producing no sales whatsoever. In appealing the resulting 24 recomputation, Franklin Logging argued that this “very limited transactional evidence” 25 failed to justify “the long term and lasting negative impact to the small business 26 community” that the Regional Forester’s decision to cut the small business share from its 27 previous 74 percent figure to a drastically reduced 7 percent would represent. AR 4. 28 The SBA concurred, stating that the decision would be both “unfair and detrimental to 1 the small business community” under such circumstances. AR 3. The Regional 2 Forester ultimately agreed, finding the 7 percent figure to be “well below historical SBA 3 Set-Aside timber offerings,” not in the SBA’s spirit of ensuring that small businesses be 4 afforded at least the opportunity to purchase a fair proportion of National Forest Service 5 timber, and accordingly not in the best interest of either the USFS or small businesses. 6 AR 1, 2. 7 The balancing of needs and objectives that the Regional Forester’s decision on 8 appeal represents is hardly arbitrary and capricious. Indeed, the FSH itself recognizes 9 the balancing required by providing that structural changes are “designed to provide 10 small business firms the opportunity to maintain their historical share” while at the same 11 time providing “a reasonably rapid adjustment of shares to reflect changes that may 12 develop.” FSH § 91.22b. While Plaintiffs appear to fault the Regional Forester for not 13 basing his decision on more evidence, Moore expressly recognizes that the evidence 14 prescribed for making the decision was scant and did not, in his estimation, justify the 15 precipitous decline in small business opportunity that would result from that limited data’s 16 rote application. Although Trinity River Lumber had purchased most of the timber 17 available in the Trinity Market Area before it ceased to qualify as a small business, 18 providing other small business concerns like Franklin Logging the opportunity to 19 compete for future sales unquestionably comports with the objectives of both the Act and 20 the USFS. Balancing the competing interests at stake, and adopting a midpoint 21 compromise between the prior share reserved for small business competitors and the 22 figure derived though a strictly formulaic structural change recalculation, was not clearly 23 /// 24 /// 25 /// 26 /// 27 /// 28 /// eee OE OEE OS SEE IIIS ee 1 || erroneous. The Regional Forester’s decision consequently withstands APA scrutiny and 2 | Plaintiffs’ appeal fails." 3 4 CONCLUSION 5 6 Based on the foregoing, the Federal Defendants’ Cross Motion for Summary 7 | Judgment (ECF No. 38) is hereby GRANTED, and Plaintiffs’ Motion for Summary 8 | Judgment (ECF No. 37) is DENIED. The Court concludes that the Regional Forester’s 9 | February 13, 2019 decisions, which adjudicated appeals lodged by the SBA and by 10 | Franklin Logging on December 20, 2018 and January 7, 2019, respectively, were proper. 11 || The Clerk of Court is directed to enter judgment in favor of the Federal Defendants 12 || accordingly. 13 IT |S SO ORDERED. 14 | Dated: January 19, 2022 Eo i F _ AMX’ 16 MORRISON C. ENGLA JR) (_) SENIOR UNITED STATES DISTRICT JUDGE 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 10 With respect to whether an APA violation occurred, the Court recognizes the Federal Defendants’ even more fundamental argument that Plaintiffs have failed to identify any underlying 25 statutory violation upon which APA review can proceed. See, e.g., El Rescate Legal Servs., Inc. v. Executive Office of Immigration Review, 959 F.2d 742, 753 (9th Cir. 1991) (“There is no right to sue for a 26 violation of the APA in the absence of a relevant statute whose violation forms the legal basis for complaint.”). According to Plaintiffs, the requisite statutory basis is derived both from the Act, which requires that a “fair proportion” of the sale of government property be allocated to small business concerns 27 at 15 U.S.C. § 644(a)(5), and USFS implementing regulations which spell out how to accomplish that objective in the context of timber sales. For purposes of this appeal the Court concludes that is sufficient 28 for APA purposes. 18
Document Info
Docket Number: 2:19-cv-01087
Filed Date: 1/19/2022
Precedential Status: Precedential
Modified Date: 6/19/2024