North Dakota hunting rules illegal, Minnesota lawyer argues
Dale Wetzel, Associated Press
Outdoors
GRAND FORKS, N.D. - North Dakota cannot extend preferential duck hunting rights to resident landowners while denying the same benefits to property owners who live outside the state, a Minnesota assistant attorney general says.
Attempting to revive a Minnesota lawsuit against an assortment of North Dakota hunting laws, Ann Bildtsen tried Friday to persuade a three-judge panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that the regulations were unconstitutional discrimination against outsiders.
The laws were not motivated by conservation or other, more noble goals, but were selfishly meant to ensure "North Dakotans can save the best hunting of waterfowl for themselves," Bildtsen told the appeals court.
Dean Haas, a North Dakota assistant attorney general, said the state's regulations were legal and reasonable. "All states, including Minnesota, regulate hunting and fishing on differential terms," Haas said.
Appeals judges Myron Bright of Fargo, Lavenski Smith of Little Rock, Ark., and William Jay Riley of Omaha are considering the case. They heard arguments Friday in a courtroom at the University of North Dakota's law school, drawing a crowd of more than 150 students and onlookers.
The dispute is about North Dakota restrictions on out-of-state hunters that mainly affect duck and goose hunters, but also extend to pheasants and other types of game.
North Dakota gives resident waterfowl hunters a week's head start on the duck season, during which duck hunting by visitors is banned. The state charges visitors more for duck licenses and requires out-of-state hunters who own North Dakota land to buy a state license to hunt that land. Resident North Dakota landowners may hunt their property without buying a license.
Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch, U.S. Rep. Collin Peterson, D-Minn., and two Minnesota residents who own property in North Dakota challenged the laws in a federal lawsuit filed in Bismarck. U.S. District Judge Dan Hovland dismissed the case last June, and Minnesota appealed.
Bildtsen argued Friday that the restrictions clash with the U.S. Constitution's protection for doing business among states, which is called the commerce clause, and its assurance that privileges extended to a person in one state also apply in another.
She said a property owner has a "fundamental right" to hunt his or her land.
North Dakota's arguments rely on what Haas believes is each state's right to regulate hunting and fishing and to favor its own residents while doing so. Last year, Congress also approved a law saying it did not intend the commerce clause to apply to hunting and fishing regulation.
Nine states, including South Dakota and Montana, signed a brief supporting North Dakota's position. During Friday's arguments, Charles McGuigan, a South Dakota assistant attorney general, pointed out that Minnesota does not allow nonresidents to hunt moose.
"I can't go shoot a moose in Minnesota. I can't even apply for a license," McGuigan said.
He also argued that "the issue of property ownership does not tie in with the right to hunt on that property."
The judges appeared dubious about the argument that hunting one's land is a fundamental property right, but also skeptical of assertions that hunting, which is a multibillion-dollar industry, is not commerce. "Common sense says that it is," Riley said.
Riley asked Bildtsen if the state could ban all hunting on a property owner's land. When she replied yes, Riley asked, "How is it a fundamental right if the government can deprive you of it completely?"
McGuigan handled most of the judges' questions after Haas became speechless early in his own presentation. After making a few remarks, Haas was able to speak only a few words at a time, standing silent at the lectern for about 20 seconds at a time before sitting down. He appeared to be stricken by stage fright.
"I've had quite a case of insomnia," Haas said. "I really apologize."
Haas retreated to a private room afterward, and a reporter was prevented from speaking to him. Bright said the lapse would not affect the case.
"You really had a good brief," Bright told Haas, referring to his court filing in the case. "You shouldn't be concerned."
Dale Wetzel, Associated Press
Outdoors
GRAND FORKS, N.D. - North Dakota cannot extend preferential duck hunting rights to resident landowners while denying the same benefits to property owners who live outside the state, a Minnesota assistant attorney general says.
Attempting to revive a Minnesota lawsuit against an assortment of North Dakota hunting laws, Ann Bildtsen tried Friday to persuade a three-judge panel of the 8th U.S. Circuit Court of Appeals that the regulations were unconstitutional discrimination against outsiders.
The laws were not motivated by conservation or other, more noble goals, but were selfishly meant to ensure "North Dakotans can save the best hunting of waterfowl for themselves," Bildtsen told the appeals court.
Dean Haas, a North Dakota assistant attorney general, said the state's regulations were legal and reasonable. "All states, including Minnesota, regulate hunting and fishing on differential terms," Haas said.
Appeals judges Myron Bright of Fargo, Lavenski Smith of Little Rock, Ark., and William Jay Riley of Omaha are considering the case. They heard arguments Friday in a courtroom at the University of North Dakota's law school, drawing a crowd of more than 150 students and onlookers.
The dispute is about North Dakota restrictions on out-of-state hunters that mainly affect duck and goose hunters, but also extend to pheasants and other types of game.
North Dakota gives resident waterfowl hunters a week's head start on the duck season, during which duck hunting by visitors is banned. The state charges visitors more for duck licenses and requires out-of-state hunters who own North Dakota land to buy a state license to hunt that land. Resident North Dakota landowners may hunt their property without buying a license.
Minnesota Attorney General Mike Hatch, U.S. Rep. Collin Peterson, D-Minn., and two Minnesota residents who own property in North Dakota challenged the laws in a federal lawsuit filed in Bismarck. U.S. District Judge Dan Hovland dismissed the case last June, and Minnesota appealed.
Bildtsen argued Friday that the restrictions clash with the U.S. Constitution's protection for doing business among states, which is called the commerce clause, and its assurance that privileges extended to a person in one state also apply in another.
She said a property owner has a "fundamental right" to hunt his or her land.
North Dakota's arguments rely on what Haas believes is each state's right to regulate hunting and fishing and to favor its own residents while doing so. Last year, Congress also approved a law saying it did not intend the commerce clause to apply to hunting and fishing regulation.
Nine states, including South Dakota and Montana, signed a brief supporting North Dakota's position. During Friday's arguments, Charles McGuigan, a South Dakota assistant attorney general, pointed out that Minnesota does not allow nonresidents to hunt moose.
"I can't go shoot a moose in Minnesota. I can't even apply for a license," McGuigan said.
He also argued that "the issue of property ownership does not tie in with the right to hunt on that property."
The judges appeared dubious about the argument that hunting one's land is a fundamental property right, but also skeptical of assertions that hunting, which is a multibillion-dollar industry, is not commerce. "Common sense says that it is," Riley said.
Riley asked Bildtsen if the state could ban all hunting on a property owner's land. When she replied yes, Riley asked, "How is it a fundamental right if the government can deprive you of it completely?"
McGuigan handled most of the judges' questions after Haas became speechless early in his own presentation. After making a few remarks, Haas was able to speak only a few words at a time, standing silent at the lectern for about 20 seconds at a time before sitting down. He appeared to be stricken by stage fright.
"I've had quite a case of insomnia," Haas said. "I really apologize."
Haas retreated to a private room afterward, and a reporter was prevented from speaking to him. Bright said the lapse would not affect the case.
"You really had a good brief," Bright told Haas, referring to his court filing in the case. "You shouldn't be concerned."