On November 27,
2018, Chief Justice Roberts issued the Court’s unanimous opinion in Weyerhaeuser v. United States Fish and
Wildlife Service. Weyerhaeuser
involves the Service’s designation of property in Louisiana as a “critical
habitat” of the endangered dusky gopher frog. The problem, according to Weyerhaeuser, the owner of part of that property, is
that no dusky gopher frogs have been observed on the site since 1965, and the current
tree farm on the site has created a closed-canopy that Weyerhaeuser claims is
inhospitable to the frog.
This case is particularly interesting to me because I teach and write on animal law. The opinion contains
many classic Chief Justice Roberts techniques and is another example of why he
is one of the two best writers on the Court.
The Description of the Dusky Gopher Frog
Chief Justice
Roberts begins with a lengthy description of the dusky gopher frog:
The
amphibian Rana sevosa is popularly known as the “dusky gopher frog”—“dusky”
because of its dark coloring and “gopher” because it lives underground. The
dusky gopher frog is about three inches long, with a large head, plump body,
and short legs. Warts dot its back, and dark spots cover its entire body. It is
noted for covering its eyes with its front legs when it feels threatened,
peeking out periodically until danger passes. Less endearingly, it also
secretes a bitter, milky substance to deter would-be diners.
The Chief is known for including this type of peripheral but interesting information in his
writing and has been doing so since his time as an advocate.
As Greg Lipper (@theglipper) noted,
these details add interest and encourage the reader to continue reading this “technical”
opinion on statutory interpretation and reviewability of agency action. Chief
Justice Roberts used the same technique when he represented Alaska in Alaska v. EPA, another technical but
more complicated case involving statutory interpretation and reviewability.
And Jamie Santos (@Jamie_ASantos) is right too—including these types of details can be tricky, and Chief Justice
Roberts does it very well. A brief with too many irrelevant details can come
off as unfocused or campy, so this technique must be employed with great care.
A Description of “[H]ow [A]djectives
[W]ork”
One issue in the
case turns on the meaning of the phrase “critical habitat.” Chief Justice
Roberts writes:
According
to the ordinary understanding of how adjectives work, “critical habitat” must
also be “habitat.” Adjectives modify nouns—they pick out a subset of a category
that possesses a certain quality. It follows that “critical habitat” is the
subset of “habitat” that is “critical” to the conservation of an endangered
species.
I love both this
description and the unstuffiness of it. Many would be tempted to write “the way
in which adjectives operate in the English language.” Chief Justice Roberts
resists that temptation—“how adjectives work” is a wonderfully short description.
Avoiding First, Second, Third etc.
I don’t love the
formulaic “first, second, third” argument markers, but they are better than
nothing.* Jamie Santos noted recently, though, that replacing these markers can take
writing to the next level.
Chief Justice Roberts does this expertly in the Weyerhaeuser opinion.
There
is, at the outset, reason to be skeptical of the Service's position. The few
cases in which we have applied the § 701(a)(2) exception involved agency
decisions that courts have traditionally regarded as unreviewable . . . .
Although
the text meanders a bit, we recognized in Bennett
v. Spear, 520 U.S. 154 (1997), that the provision describes a unified
process for weighing the impact of designating an area as critical habitat. . .
.
The
use of the word “may” certainly confers discretion on the Secretary. That does
not, however, segregate his discretionary decision . . . .
Section
4(b)(2) requires the Secretary to consider economic impact and relative
benefits before deciding whether the exclude an area from critical habitat or
to proceed with a designation….
Chief
Justice Roberts’ explanation of the Court’s reasoning avoids the unimaginative “first,
second, third” problem:
There
is, at the outset, reason to be skeptical of the Service’s position. First, the
few cases . . . .
Second,
although the text meanders a bit . . . .
Third,
the use of the “may” certainly confers discretion . . . .
Fourth,
Section 4(b)(2) requires the Secretary to consider . . . .
While I don’t
love the outcome from an animal law perspective, the opinion is interesting
and the reasoning well-explained. There’s still hope for the dusky gopher frog, though—the
Court remanded the case and directed CA5 to consider questions it did not
answer regarding the definition of “habitat.” And even though the Court found
the Service’s decision reviewable, that decision is subject to the permissive
abuse of discretion standard.
*Avoid “firstly,
secondly, thirdly” at all costs.
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