Turner v. Georgia River Network, Grady County Board of Commissioners v. Georgia River Network ( 2015 )


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  • 297 Ga. 306
    FINAL COPY
    S14G1780. TURNER v. GEORGIA RIVER NETWORK et al.
    S14G1781. GRADY COUNTY BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS v.
    GEORGIA RIVER NETWORK et al.
    BENHAM, Justice.
    This appeal arises from our grant of petitions for certiorari filed by
    appellants Judson H. Turner, the Director of the Environmental Protection
    Division (EPD) of the Georgia Department of Natural Resources (DNR), and the
    Grady County Board of Commissioners (Grady County), requesting our review
    of the Court of Appeals’s decision in Georgia River Network v. Turner, 
    328 Ga. App. 381
     (762 SE2d 123) (2014). Appellees Georgia River Network and
    American Rivers are both non-profit organizations. The relevant facts show that
    in 2010, Grady County received federal approval to construct a 960-acre fishing
    lake.1 The project also entailed building a large dam and inundating 129 acres
    of wetlands and nine miles of streams to create the lake. To proceed with the
    project, Grady County was required to apply for a buffer variance through the
    EPD in order to disturb the stream waters that would be affected by the project.
    1
    See Georgia River Network v. Turner, supra, 328 Ga. App. at 383-384 for a full recitation
    of the facts.
    Appellees challenged the variance, arguing that Grady County’s application was
    deficient because it failed to address buffers for the wetlands that would also be
    affected by the project. The Director granted the variance over appellees’
    objections. In a separate letter, the EPD advised appellees that wetlands did not
    require buffers because they generally lack wrested vegetation and were not
    subject to a variance request. Appellees sought review of the Director’s decision
    from an administrative law judge (ALJ) in the Office of State Administrative
    Hearings. The ALJ overturned the variance, reasoning that OCGA § 12-7-6 (b)
    (15) (A) of the Erosion and Sedimentation Act requires a buffer for all state
    waters, including wetlands. The Director and Grady County filed appeals
    challenging the ALJ’s decision in the superior courts of Fulton County and
    Grady County, respectively. On the substantive issue of the construction and
    interpretation of OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A),2 both trial courts determined that
    the Director’s construction of the statute was correct and that the buffer
    requirement only applies to state waters that have wrested vegetation.
    2
    There were also issues concerning whether the appellees had a statutory right and standing
    to seek review of the Director’s decision, but those issues are not before us in this appeal.
    2
    Accordingly, the trial courts reversed the judgment of the ALJ. Appellees then
    appealed to the Court of Appeals.
    OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A) states as follows: “There is established a 25
    foot buffer along the banks of all state waters, as measured horizontally from the
    point where vegetation has been wrested by normal stream flow or wave action.
    . . .” Citing to principles of statutory construction, the Court of Appeals
    concluded that this buffer requirement applies to state waters3 whether or not
    their banks have wrested vegetation. The Court of Appeals explained that the
    language regarding how the buffer is to be measured did not create an additional
    exception to OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A),4 but merely explained the location of
    the buffer. 328 Ga. App. at 391. In addition, the Court of Appeals reasoned that
    the statute was internally inconsistent and that its finding that the buffer applied
    to all state waters, without regard to the existence of wrested vegetation, would
    avoid any absurd or unintended result contrary to the legislature’s purpose in
    enacting the legislation. Id. at 392.                 Based on this analysis, the Court of
    3
    The Court of Appeals noted that the parties did not dispute that “wetlands” fall within the
    statutory definition of “state waters” and stated that it would not reach that issue as it had not been
    fully litigated. Id. at 390, n. 4. We likewise do not address this issue on appeal.
    4
    There are six statutory exceptions to the buffer requirement which appear at OCGA §
    12-7-6 (b) (15) (A) (i)-(vi). These exceptions are not at issue in this appeal.
    3
    Appeals found the ALJ had not erred and reversed the decisions of the trial
    courts. We granted certiorari to determine whether the Court of Appeals erred
    in its construction of OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A). Because we find that it did
    err, its judgment is reversed.
    The cardinal rule of statutory construction requires this Court
    to look diligently for the intention of the General Assembly (OCGA
    § 1-3-1), and the golden rule of statutory construction requires us
    to follow the literal language of the statute unless it produces
    contradiction, absurdity, or such an inconvenience as to [e]nsure
    that the legislature meant something else. Absent clear evidence
    that a contrary meaning was intended by the legislature, we assign
    words in a statute their ordinary, logical, and common meanings.
    (Citations and punctuation omitted.) Judicial Council of Georgia v. Brown &
    Gallo, LLC, 
    288 Ga. 294
    , 296-297 (702 SE2d 894) (2010). Here, the Court of
    Appeals erred because the literal language of the statute does not require a
    buffer for state waters alongside banks without wrested vegetation. The
    language at issue states in pertinent part: “There is established a 25 foot buffer
    along the banks of all state waters, as measured horizontally from the point
    where vegetation has been wrested. . . .” Had the legislature placed a period
    after the word “waters” rather than a comma and had gone no further, then there
    would be no other conclusion but that buffers are established along the banks
    4
    of all state waters, regardless of the existence of wrested vegetation. But that is
    not what the legislature did. By adding the phrase “as measured horizontally
    from the point where vegetation has been wrested,” the General Assembly
    expressly defined how the buffer “is established.” Since the legislature offered
    no other method for the buffer to be established but for measuring it horizontally
    from the point of wrested vegetation, the buffer necessarily cannot be applied
    to state waters that are adjacent to banks without wrested vegetation. No further
    interpretation or analysis is required.
    Our plain reading of OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A) is in keeping with
    longstanding tenets of statutory construction: “expressio unius est exclusio
    alterius (expression of one thing implies exclusion of another) and expressum
    facit cessare tacitum (if some things are expressly mentioned, the inference is
    stronger that those not mentioned were intended to be excluded). . . .” See
    Hammock v. State, 
    277 Ga. 612
     (3) (592 SE2d 415) (2004). The courts cannot
    construe OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A) to force an outcome that the legislature
    did not expressly authorize. “The doctrine of separation of powers is an
    immutable constitutional principle which must be strictly enforced. Under that
    doctrine, statutory construction belongs to the courts, legislation to the
    5
    legislature. We can not add a line to the law.” (Citation and punctuation
    omitted.) Allen v. Wright, 
    282 Ga. 9
     (1) (644 SE2d 814) (2007). OCGA §
    12-7-6 (b) (15) (A) simply does not provide for the establishment of a buffer for
    state waters that are adjacent to banks without wrested vegetation.5 In order for
    the buffer requirement to apply to state waters alongside banks without wrested
    vegetation, the legislature would need to take action to amend the statute.
    5
    The dissent suggests that it would be absurd to attribute to OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A) its
    plain meaning because that would leave state waters with no vegetation along their banks
    unprotected. The dissent is wrong in two respects. First, it appears that the principal purpose of the
    buffer requirement is to protect state waters in a specific way – by protecting whatever natural
    vegetation grows alongside state waters. See OCGA § 12-7-3 (2) (defining “buffer” as “the area
    of land immediately adjacent to the banks of state waters in its natural state of vegetation, which
    facilitates the protection of water quality and aquatic habitat” (emphasis supplied)). See also
    OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (B) (“a buffer shall remain in its natural, undisturbed state of vegetation
    until all land-disturbing activities on the construction site are completed,” and after “the final
    stabilization of the site is achieved, a buffer may be thinned or trimmed of vegetation as long as a
    protective vegetative cover remains to protect water quality and aquatic habitat and a natural canopy
    is left in sufficient quantity to keep shade on the stream bed”). Where there is no natural vegetation,
    there is nothing to preserve, and so the decision of the General Assembly to limit the buffer
    requirements to state waters with wrested vegetation is not absurd.
    Secondly, the dissent fails to consider the fact that OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A) is not
    the only means by which the EPD protects state waters both with and without wrested vegetation.
    The establishment of buffers for state waters alongside banks with wrested vegetation is only one
    of many tools or “best management practices,” available to accomplish the intent of the Erosion and
    Sedimentation Act as stated in OCGA § 12-7-2. See, e.g., OCGA § 12-7-6 (a) (1), 12-7-6 (b) (1)-
    (14). See also Manual for Erosion and Sediment Control in Georgia, Georgia Soil and Water
    Conservation Commission (6th ed. 2014) (manual is specifically referenced by OCGA § 12-7-6 (b)).
    There is no basis for the courts to extrapolate the application of OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A) beyond
    its literal terms based on an incorrect assumption that state waters without wrested vegetation are
    left without “some level of protection” from land-disturbing activities because the establishment of
    a buffer is not required under one subsection of the Act. Moreover, the courts are not equipped to
    decide what the “best management practices” are for wetlands, trout streams, or any other state
    waters.
    6
    Accordingly, the judgment of the Court of Appeals as regards its construction
    of the statute is reversed.6
    Judgment reversed.           Thompson, C. J., Hines, P. J., Hunstein and
    Blackwell, JJ., and Chief Judge H. Gibbs Flanders concur. Melton, J., dissents.
    Nahmias, J., disqualified.
    MELTON, Justice, dissenting.
    As OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A) is currently written, there is no guidance
    as to the measurement of a buffer zone for state waters lacking wrested
    vegetation. This raises an ambiguity, and, in the presence of such an ambiguity,
    this Court must give strong deference to the interpretation of the statute made
    by the Director of the Environmental Protection Division (EPD) of the Georgia
    Department of Natural Resources. In this case, however, the EPD’s
    interpretation that OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A) requires no buffer at all for state
    6
    Our review is limited to Division 3 of the Court of Appeals’s decision. We express no
    opinion regarding the substantive decisions made in Division 2 of the Court of Appeals’s decision.
    7
    waters without wrested vegetation is unreasonable, given the explicit purpose
    of the statute to lend some level of protection to all state waters. As a result, I
    must respectfully dissent.
    The Erosion and Sedimentation Act of 1975 was intended to protect state
    waters and related wildlife and vegetation from the detrimental effects of
    sediment and erosion caused by land disturbing activities. OCGA § 12-7-2
    plainly states:
    It is found that soil erosion and sediment deposition onto lands and
    into waters within the watersheds of this state are occurring as a
    result of widespread failure to apply proper soil erosion and
    sedimentation control practices in land clearing, soil movement, and
    construction activities and that such erosion and sediment
    deposition result in pollution of state waters and damage to
    domestic, agricultural, recreational, fish and wildlife, and other
    resource uses. It is therefore declared to be the policy of this state
    and the intent of this chapter to strengthen and extend the present
    erosion and sediment control activities and programs of this state
    and to provide for the establishment and implementation of a
    state-wide comprehensive soil erosion and sediment control
    program to conserve and protect the land, water, air, and other
    resources of this state.
    For this reason, the Legislature established buffer zones to protect state
    waters from land disturbing activities in their proximity. OCGA § 12-7-3 (2)
    defines a “buffer” as “the area of land immediately adjacent to the banks of state
    waters in its natural state of vegetation, which facilitates the protection of water
    quality and aquatic habitat.”7 (Emphasis supplied.) The particular buffer at
    issue in this matter is set forth in OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A), which requires
    “a 25 foot buffer along the banks of all state waters, as measured horizontally
    from the point where vegetation has been wrested by normal stream flow or
    wave action.” (Emphasis supplied.) The problem with this statute, however, is
    that it does not provide a measurement for a buffer zone along the banks of state
    waters without wrested vegetation. As a result, the EPD is called upon to
    interpret the statute in a way to effectuate its underlying meaning and purpose
    in the context where no wrested vegetation exists.
    7
    In footnote 5, the majority opinion argues that the statute is intended to
    protect the natural vegetation growing along state waters. It later states: “Where
    there is no natural vegetation, there is nothing to preserve, and so the decision
    of the General Assembly to limit the buffer requirements to state waters with
    wrested vegetation is not absurd.” This argument is logically untenable, as it
    rests on the idea that there will never be any natural vegetation along any state
    waters without wrested vegetation. The absence of wrested vegetation, or
    vegetation which has been pulled away from the banks by flowing water, does
    not mean that there is no natural vegetation left. To the contrary, where there is
    no wresting action, the natural vegetation remains, likely growing from the
    water and up the banks. Even if the purpose of the statute is to protect the
    natural vegetation growing along state waters, the absence of wrested
    vegetation, which would suggest conditions appropriate for the continued
    presence of natural vegetation, would not be an appropriate reason to have no
    buffer at all. To the contrary, it would make it even more unreasonable to resort
    to an interpretation that provides no buffer to protect natural vegetation.
    2
    In the presence of such an overt ambiguity, strong deference must be
    given to the interpretation of the statute given by the appropriate administrative
    agency. As set forth in Chevron U.S.A., Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense
    Council, Inc., 
    467 U. S. 837
    , 844 (II) (104 SCt 2778, 81 LE2d 694) (1984):
    The power of an administrative agency to administer a
    congressionally created program necessarily requires the
    formulation of policy and the making of rules to fill any gap left,
    implicitly or explicitly, by Congress. If Congress has explicitly left
    a gap for the agency to fill, there is an express delegation of
    authority to the agency to elucidate a specific provision of the
    statute by regulation. Such legislative regulations are given
    controlling weight unless they are arbitrary, capricious, or
    manifestly contrary to the statute. Sometimes the legislative
    delegation to an agency on a particular question is implicit rather
    than explicit. In such a case, a court may not substitute its own
    construction of a statutory provision for a reasonable interpretation
    made by the administrator of an agency.
    (Citations and punctuation omitted.)
    With this in mind, deference must be given to the determination by the
    Director of the EPD that state waters without wrested vegetation are entitled to
    no buffer at all. The required deference, however, is strong, but not absolute.
    Here, the EPD’s extreme interpretation of OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A) is
    unreasonable and manifestly contrary to the statute, which is intended to
    “protect water quality and aquatic habitat” of all state waters. Providing no
    3
    buffer at all to state waters without sufficient wrested vegetation works to the
    detriment of the statutory purpose, and, as such, cannot be considered
    reasonable.
    The arbitrariness of the EPD’s interpretation becomes even more evident
    when one considers OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (16), which provides, in part: “[t]here
    is established a 50 foot buffer, as measured horizontally from the point where
    vegetation has been wrested by normal stream flow or wave action, along the
    banks of any state waters classified as ‘trout streams’ pursuant to Article 2 of
    Chapter 5 of this title.” Under the EPD’s interpretation, trout would be protected
    based solely on whether they were swimming in a stream with wrested
    vegetation — a distinction that makes no sense and one which the Legislature
    would not have intended.
    Accordingly, though I do believe that the EPD may reasonably interpret
    the ambiguity present in OCGA § 12-7-6 (b) (15) (A),8 that interpretation must
    8
    The majority mischaracterizes this plain statement by arguing that this
    opinion proposes that the courts should make decisions regarding water
    management practices and the size of buffer zones. As plainly stated, this
    opinion leaves those decisions to the expertise of the EPD. However, where an
    administrative agency makes an unreasonable interpretation of a vague statute,
    as in this case, it is the duty of the courts to require the EPD to reassess its
    4
    extend at least some level of buffer protection to state waters without wrested
    vegetation. Otherwise, the purpose of the Land Erosion Act to protect water
    quality and aquatic habitat for all state waters is inappropriately undermined.
    Decided June 15, 2015.
    Certiorari to the Court of Appeals of Georgia – 
    328 Ga. App. 381
    .
    Samuel S. Olens, Attorney General, Isaac Byrd, Deputy Attorney General,
    John E. Hennelly, James D. Coots, Senior Assistant Attorneys General, Britt C.
    Grant, Assistant Attorney General, for Turner.
    William W. Sapp, Nathaniel H. Hunt; Charles M. Cork III, for Georgia
    River Network.
    Cook, Noell, Tolley & Bates, Edward D. Tolley, Devin H. Smith; Kevin
    S. Cauley, for Grady County Board of Commissioners.
    King & Spalding, Patricia T. Barmeyer, Lewis B. Jones; Stack &
    Associates, Donald D. J. Stack, Kevin H. Jeselnik, amici curiae.
    interpretation.
    5
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: S14G1780, S14G1781

Filed Date: 6/15/2015

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 10/17/2015