The Eagle Protection Act makes it unlawful to "take, possess,
sell, purchase, barter, offer to sell, purchase or barter,
transport, export or import" bald or golden eagles or any part
thereof, with the proviso that the prohibition does not apply to
"possession or transportation" of such eagles or parts thereof
taken prior to the effective date of the Act. Similarly, the
Migratory Bird Treaty Act makes it unlawful to engage in such
activities with respect to migratory birds and their parts unless
they are permitted by regulations promulgated under the Act.
Appellant Secretary of the Interior promulgated regulations
prohibiting commercial transactions in parts of birds legally
killed before they came under the protection of these Acts. After
two of the appellees who had sold "preexisting" Indian artifacts
partly composed of feathers of currently protected birds were
prosecuted for violations of both Acts, appellees, who are engaged
in the trade of such artifacts, brought suit in District Court for
declaratory and injunctive relief, alleging that the Acts do not
forbid the sale of appellees' artifacts insofar as the constituent
bird parts were obtained prior to the effective dates of the Acts,
and that, if the Acts and regulations do apply to such property,
they violate the Fifth Amendment. The District Court granted the
relief sought, holding that the Acts were to be interpreted as not
applicable to preexisting, legally obtained bird parts, and that
therefore the regulations were void as unauthorized extensions of
the Acts, and were violative of appellees' Fifth Amendment property
rights.
Held:
1. Both Acts contemplate regulatory prohibition of commerce in
the parts of protected birds, without regard to when those birds
were originally taken. Pp.
444 U. S. 55-64.
(a) In view of the exhaustive and careful enumeration of
forbidden acts in the Eagle Protection Act, the narrow limitation
of the proviso to "possession or transportation" compels the
conclusion that, with respect to preexisting artifacts, Congress
specifically declined to except any activities other than
possession and transportation from the general ban. The legislative
history shows that this precise use of terminology
Page 444 U. S. 52
was intentional. Moreover, the prohibition against the sale of
bird parts lawfully taken before the effective date of federal
protection is fully consonant with the Act's purpose of preventing
evasion of the statutory prohibitions for commercial gain. Pp.
444 U. S.
56-59.
(b) While the Migratory Bird Treaty Act contains no explicit
exception for the possession or transportation of bird parts
obtained before the federal protection became effective,
nevertheless the text, context, and purpose of that Act support the
Secretary's interpretative regulations. There is nothing in the Act
that requires an exception for the sale of preexisting artifacts,
and no such statutory exception can be implied. The Act's structure
and context also suggest congressional understanding that
regulatory authorities could ban the sale of lawfully taken birds,
except where otherwise expressly instructed by the Act. Pp.
444 U. S.
59-64.
2. The simple prohibition of the sale of lawfully acquired
property does not effect a taking in violation of the Fifth
Amendment. The challenged regulations do not compel the surrender
of the artifacts in question, and there is no physical invasion or
restraint upon them. The denial of one traditional property right
does not always amount to a taking. Nor is the fact that the
regulations prevent the most profitable use of appellees' property
dispositive, since a reduction in the value of property is not
necessarily equated with a taking. Pp.
444 U. S.
64-68.
Reversed.
BRENNAN, J., delivered the opinion of the Court, in which
STEWART, WHITE, MARSHALL, BLACKMUN, POWELL, REHNQUIST, and STEVENS,
JJ., joined. BURGER, C.J., concurred in the judgment.
MR. JUSTICE BRENNAN delivered the opinion of the Court.
The Eagle Protection Act and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act are
conservation statutes designed to prevent the destruction
Page 444 U. S. 53
of certain species of birds. [
Footnote 1] Challenged in this case is the validity of
regulations promulgated by appellant Secretary of the Interior that
prohibit commercial transactions in parts of birds legally killed
before the birds came under the
Page 444 U. S. 54
protection of the statutes. The regulations provide in pertinent
part:
50 CFR § 21.2(a) (1978):
"Migratory birds, their parts, nests, or eggs, lawfully acquired
prior to the effective date of Federal protection under the
Migratory Bird Treaty Act . . . may be possessed or transported
without a Federal permit, but may not be imported, exported,
purchased, sold, bartered, or offered for purchase, sale, trade, or
barter. . . ."
50 CR § 22.2(a) (1978):
"Bald eagles, alive or dead, or their parts, nests, or eggs
lawfully acquired prior to June 8, 1940, and golden eagles, alive
or dead, or their parts, nests, or eggs lawfully acquired prior to
October 24, 1962, may be possessed, or transported without a
Federal permit, but may not be imported, exported, purchased, sold,
traded, bartered, or offered for purchase, sale, trade or barter. .
. ."
Appellees are engaged in the trade of Indian artifacts: several
own commercial enterprises, one is employed by such an enterprise,
and one is a professional appraiser. A number of the artifacts are
partly composed of the feathers of currently protected birds, but
these artifacts existed before the statutory protections came into
force. After two of the appellees who had sold "preexisting"
artifacts were prosecuted for violations of the Eagle Protection
Act and the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, [
Footnote 2] appellees brought this suit for declaratory
and injunctive relief in the District Court for the District of
Colorado. The complaint alleged that the statutes do not
Page 444 U. S. 55
forbid the sale of appellees' artifacts insofar as the
constituent birds' parts were obtained prior to the effective dates
of the statutes. It further alleged that, if the statutes and
regulations do apply to such property, they violate the Fifth
Amendment. [
Footnote 3]
A three-judge court, convened pursuant to 28 U.S.C. § 2282
(1970 ed.), [
Footnote 4] held
that, because of "grave doubts whether these two acts would be
constitutional if they were construed to apply to pre-act bird
products," the Acts were to be interpreted as "not applicable to
preexisting, legally obtained bird parts or products therefrom. . .
." App. to Juris.Statement 13a-14a. Accordingly, the court ruled
that
"the interpretive regulations, 50 C.F.R. §§ 21.2(a)
and 22.2(a) [are] void as unauthorized extensions of the Migratory
Bird Treaty Act and the Eagle Protection Act and [are] violative of
the [appellees'] Fifth Amendment property rights."
Id. at 14a. Judgment was entered declaring
"the subject regulations to be invalid and unenforceable as
against the [appellees'] property rights in feathers and artifacts
owned before the effective date of the subject statute,"
and enjoining appellants "from any interference with the
exercise of such rights, including the rights of sale, barter or
exchange."
Id. at 16a-17a. We noted probable jurisdiction.
440 U.S. 905 (1979). We reverse.
I
Appellant Secretary of the Interior contends that both the Eagle
Protection and Migratory Bird Treaty Acts contemplate
Page 444 U. S. 56
regulatory prohibition of commerce in the parts of protected
birds, without regard to when those birds were originally taken.
Appellees respond that such a prohibition serves no purpose,
arguing that statutory protection of wildlife is not furthered by
an embargo upon traffic in avian artifacts that existed before the
statutory safeguards came into effect.
A
Our point of departure in statutory analysis is the language of
the enactment.
See Southeastern Community College v.
Davis, 442 U. S. 397,
442 U. S. 405
(1979). "Though we may not end with the words in construing a
disputed statute, one certainly begins there." F. Frankfurter, Some
Reflections on the Reading of Statutes 16 (1947).
The terms of the Eagle Protection Act plainly must be read as
appellant Secretary argues. The sweepingly framed prohibition in
§ 668(a) makes it unlawful to "take, possess, sell, purchase,
barter, offer to sell, purchase or barter, transport, export or
import" protected birds. Congress expressly dealt with the problem
of preexisting bird products by qualifying that general prohibition
with the proviso that "nothing herein shall be construed to
prohibit
possession or transportation" of bald or golden
eagle parts taken prior to the effective date of coverage under the
Act. (Emphasis supplied.)
In view of the exhaustive and careful enumeration of forbidden
acts in § 668(a), the narrow limitation of the proviso to
"possession or transportation" compels the conclusion that, with
respect to preexisting artifacts, Congress specifically declined to
except any activities other than possession and transportation from
the general statutory ban. To read a further exemption for
preexisting artifacts into the Eagle Protection Act, "we would be
forced to ignore the ordinary meaning of plain language."
TVA
v. Hill, 437 U. S. 153,
437 U. S. 173
(1978). Nor can there be any question of oversight or drafting
error. Throughout the statute, the distinct concepts of
Page 444 U. S. 57
possession, transportation, taking, and sale or purchase are
treated with precision. The broad proscriptive provisions of the
Eagle Protection Act were consistently framed to encompass a full
catalog of prohibited acts, always including sale or purchase.
See §§ 668(a), 668(b), 668b(b). In contrast, the
exemptions created were specifically limited to possession or
transportation, § 668(a), [
Footnote 5] taking, § 66a, [
Footnote 6] or taking, possession, or transportation,
ibid. [
Footnote 7]
That this precise use of terminology was intentional is clear
from the legislative history. An explanatory letter from the
Department of Agriculture that was adopted in the Senate Report on
the bill defines the reach of the Eagle Protection Act to make it
unlawful to
"take, possess, sell, purchase, transport, or otherwise deal
with the bald eagle . . . with the proviso to the effect that it
will not apply to the
possession or transportation of any
such eagle . . . taken prior to the effective date of the
bill."
S.Rep. No. 1589, 76th Cong., 3d Sess., 1 (1940). (Emphasis
added.) Further, when Congress amended the Eagle Protection Act in
1962 to cover golden eagles, it once again excepted only possession
and transportation of preexisting artifacts from the general ban.
76 Stat. 1246. And it is particularly relevant that Congress has
twice reviewed and amended the statute without rejecting the
Department's view that it is authorized to bar the sale of
preexisting artifacts. [
Footnote
8]
Cf. NLRB v. Bell Aerospace Co., 416 U.
S. 267,
416 U. S. 275
(1974).
Page 444 U. S. 58
The prohibition against the sale of bird parts lawfully taken
before the effective date of federal protection is fully consonant
with the purposes of the Eagle Protection Act. It was reasonable
for Congress to conclude that the possibility of commercial gain
presents a special threat to the preservation of the eagles because
that prospect creates a powerful incentive both to evade statutory
prohibitions against taking birds and to take a large volume of
birds. The legislative draftsmen might well view evasion as a
serious danger because there is no sure means by which to determine
the age of bird feathers; feathers recently taken can easily be
passed off as having been obtained long ago. [
Footnote 9]
Appellees argue that, even if the age of feathers cannot be
ascertained, it is still possible to date the Indian artifacts of
which the feathers are a constituent. Thus, they contend that the
goal of preventing evasion of the statute could have been achieved
by means less onerous than a general sales ban: for example, by
requiring documentation and appraisal of feathered artifacts. The
short answer is that this legislation is not limited to the sale of
feathers as part of artifacts; it broadly addresses sale or
purchase of feathers and other bird parts in any shape or form. The
prohibitions of the statute were devised to resist any evasion,
whether in the sale of feathers as part of datable artifacts or in
the sale of separate undatable bird products. Moreover, even if
there were alternative ways to insure against statutory evasion,
Congress was free to choose the method it found most efficacious
and convenient.
Page 444 U. S. 59
"[T]he legislature . . . is authorized to pass measures for the
protection of the people . . . in the exercise of the police power,
and is itself the judge of the necessity or expediency of the means
adopted. [
Footnote 10]"
New York ex rel. Silz v. Hesterberg, 211 U. S.
31,
211 U. S. 40
(1908).
B
The fundamental prohibition in the Migratory Bird Treaty Act is
couched in language as expansive as that employed in the Eagle
Protection Act. Title 16 U.S.C. § 703 provides that
"[u]nless and except as permitted by regulations made as
hereinafter provided in this subchapter, it shall be unlawful . . .
to pursue, hunt, take, capture, kill, attempt to take, capture, or
kill, possess, offer for sale, sell, offer to barter, barter, offer
to purchase, purchase, deliver for shipment, ship, export, import,
cause to be shipped, exported, or imported, deliver for
transportation, transport or cause to be transported, carry or
cause to be carried, or receive for shipment, transportation,
carriage, or export"
protected birds. But the Migratory Bird Treaty Act contains no
explicit exception for the possession or transportation of
Page 444 U. S. 60
bird parts obtained before the federal protection became
effective: that exception is created by the Secretary's regulation.
50 CFR § 21.2 (1978). Unlike our analysis under the Eagle
Protection Act, therefore, reliance upon the negative inference
from a narrow statutory exemption for the transportation or
possession of preexisting artifacts is precluded. [
Footnote 11] Nevertheless, the text,
context, and purpose of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act support the
Secretary's interpretative regulations of that enactment.
On its face, the comprehensive statutory prohibition is
naturally read as forbidding transactions in all bird parts,
including those that compose preexisting artifacts. While there is
no doubt that regulations may exempt transactions from the general
ban, [
Footnote 12] nothing
in the statute requires an exception for the sale of preexisting
artifacts. And no such statutory exception can be implied. When
Congress wanted an exemption from the statutory prohibition, it
provided so in unmistakable terms.
Cf. 16 U.S.C. §
711. [
Footnote 13]
The structure and context of this enactment -- to the extent
that they enlighten -- also suggest congressional understanding
that regulatory authorities could ban the sale of lawfully
Page 444 U. S. 61
taken birds, except where otherwise expressly instructed by the
statute. If Congress had assumed that lawfully taken birds could
automatically be sold under the Act, it would have been unnecessary
to specify in § 711 that it is permissible under certain
circumstances to sell game birds lawfully bred on farms and
preserves. [
Footnote 14]
Furthermore, Congress could not have been unaware that a
traditional legislative tool for enforcing conservation policy was
a flat proscription on the sale of wildlife, without regard to the
legality of the taking. At the time, a number of States, for
example, simply prohibited or restricted possession or sale of
wildlife during seasons closed to hunting.
See New York ex rel.
Silz v. Hesterberg, supra at
211 U. S. 40.
Also before Congress was the Canadian law implementing the
Migratory Bird Treaty, [
Footnote
15] and that law itself contained a provision barring the
purchase, sale, or possession of protected bird parts "
during
the time when the capturing, killing, or taking of such bird,
nest, or egg is prohibited by law," 55 Cong.Rec. 5412 (1917).
[
Footnote 16] (Emphasis
added.) The Canadian sale ban -- of which Congress was aware --
thus applied not to illegally taken birds, but rather to all
protected birds during the season in which hunting was prohibited.
Against this background, the absence of a statutory exemption for
preexisting avian artifacts implies that the Migratory Bird Treaty
Act was intended to embrace the traditional conservation technique
of banning transactions in protected birds, whenever taken.
Page 444 U. S. 62
Related statutes may sometimes shed light upon a previous
enactment.
Cf. United States v. Aluminum Co. of America,
148 F.2d 416, 429 (CA2 1945) (L. Hand, J.). Other conservation
legislation enacted by Congress has employed the enforcement
technique of forbidding the sale of protected wildlife without
respect to the lawfulness of the taking. The Eagle Protection Act
is a notable example. The more recent Endangered Species Act of
1973, as originally framed, prohibited the sale of products or
parts of endangered species, without an exception for those
products legally held for commercial purposes at the time of the
Act's passage. [
Footnote 17]
See 16 U.S.C. § 1538 ;
United States v.
Kepler, 531 F.2d 798 (CA6 1976);
Delbay Pharmaceuticals,
Inc. v. Department of Commerce, 409 F.
Supp. 637, 641-642, 644 (DC 1976);
see also H.R.Rep.
No. 94-823, pp. 3-4 (1976) (discussing an amendment to the
Endangered Species Act). And when Congress has meant to exempt
lawfully taken items from the retroactive application of statutory
prohibitions, it has taken care to do so explicitly,
see
16 U.S.C. § 1372 (Marine Mammal Protection Act of 1972); 16
U.S.C. § 153(b) (Endangered Species Act of 1973), or it has
specifically amended the statute for that purpose, see 90 Stat.
911, amending 16 U.S.C. § 1539 (Endangered Species Act); 92
Stat. 3760, amending 16 U.S.C. §§ 1538 and 1539
(Endangered Species Act). In contrast, Congress has never
established a preexisting artifacts exception to the Migratory Bird
Treaty Act, even though it has amended the statute on several
occasions. [
Footnote 18]
Page 444 U. S. 63
We are therefore persuaded that the Migratory Bird Treaty Act
empowers the Secretary of the Interior to bar commercial
transactions in covered bird parts in spite of the fact that the
parts were lawfully taken before the onset of federal protection.
We see no indication to the contrary. [
Footnote 19] It follows
Page 444 U. S. 64
that the Secretary could properly permit the possession or
transportation, and not the sale or purchase, of preexisting bird
artifacts. [
Footnote 20]
Accordingly, we disagree with the District Court's interpretation
of the Act as inapplicable to preexisting legally obtained bird
parts.
II
We also disagree with the District Court's holding that, as
construed to authorize the prohibition of commercial transaction in
preexisting avian artifacts, the Eagle Protection and Migratory
Bird Treaty Acts violate appellees' Fifth Amendment property rights
because the prohibition wholly deprives them of the opportunity to
earn a profit from those relics. [
Footnote 21]
Page 444 U. S. 65
Penn Central Transportation Co. v. New York City,
438 U. S. 104,
438 U. S.
123-128 (1978), is our most recent exposition on the
Takings Clause. That exposition need not be repeated at length
here. Suffice it to say that government regulation -- by definition
-- involves the adjustment of rights for the public good. Often
this adjustment curtails some potential for the use or economic
exploitation of private property. To require compensation in all
such circumstances would effectively compel the government to
regulate by purchase.
"Government hardly could go on if, to some extent, values
incident to property could not be diminished without paying for
every such change in the general law."
Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, 260 U.
S. 393,
260 U. S. 413
(1922);
see Penn Central, supra at
438 U. S.
124.
The Takings Clause, therefore, preserves governmental power to
regulate, subject only to the dictates of "
justice and
fairness.'" Ibid.; see Goldblatt v. Hempstead,
369 U. S. 590,
369 U. S. 594
(1962). There is no abstract or fixed point at which judicial
intervention under the Takings Clause becomes appropriate. Formulas
and factors have been developed in a variety of settings. See
Penn Central, supra at 438 U. S.
123-128. Resolution of each case, however, ultimately
calls as much for the exercise of judgment as for the application
of logic.
The regulations challenged here do not compel the surrender of
the artifacts, and there is no physical invasion or restraint upon
them. Rather, a significant restriction has been imposed on one
means of disposing of the artifacts. But the denial of one
traditional property right does not always amount to a taking. At
least where an owner possesses
Page 444 U. S. 66
a full "bundle" of property rights, the destruction of one
"strand" of the bundle is not a taking, because the aggregate must
be viewed in its entirety.
Compare Penn Central, supra at
438 U. S.
130-131,
and United States v. Twin City Power
Co., 350 U. S. 222
(1956),
with Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, supra, and United
States v. Virginia Electric & Power Co., 365 U.
S. 624 (1961).
See also Michelman, Property,
Utility, and Fairness: Comments on the Ethical Foundations of "Just
Compensation" Law, 80 Harv.L.Rev. 1165, 1230-1233 (1967). In this
case, it is crucial that appellees retain the rights to possess and
transport their property, and to donate or devise the protected
birds.
It is, to be sure, undeniable that the regulations here prevent
the most profitable use of appellees' property. Again, however,
that is not dispositive. When we review regulation, a reduction in
the value of property is not necessarily equated with a taking.
Compare Goldblatt v. Hempstead, supra at
369 U. S. 594,
and Hadacheck v. Sebastian, 239 U.
S. 394 (1915),
with Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon,
supra. [
Footnote 22] In
the instant case, it is not clear that appellees will be unable to
derive economic benefit from the artifacts; for example, they might
exhibit the artifacts for an admissions charge. At any rate, loss
of future profits -- unaccompanied by any physical property
restriction -- provides a slender reed upon which to rest a takings
claim. Prediction of profitability is essentially a matter of
reasoned speculation that courts are not especially competent to
perform. Further, perhaps because of its very uncertainty, the
interest in anticipated gains has traditionally been viewed as less
compelling than other property-related interests.
Cf.,
e.g., Fuller & Perdue, The Reliance Interest in Contract
Damages (pt. 1), 46 Yale L.J. 52 (1936).
Page 444 U. S. 67
Regulations that bar trade in certain goods have been upheld
against claims of unconstitutional taking. For example, the Court
has sustained regulations prohibiting the sale of alcoholic
beverages despite the fact that individuals were left with
previously acquired stocks.
Everard's Breweries v. Day,
265 U. S. 545
(1924), involved a federal statute that forbade the sale of liquors
manufactured before passage of the statute. The claim of a taking
in violation of the Fifth Amendment was tersely rejected.
Id. at
265 U. S. 563.
[
Footnote 23] Similarly, in
Jacob Ruppert, Inc. v. Caffey, 251 U.
S. 264 (1920), a federal law that extended a domestic
sales ban from intoxicating to nonintoxicating alcoholic beverages
"on hand at the time of the passage of the act,"
id. at
251 U. S. 302,
was upheld. Mr. Justice Brandeis dismissed the takings challenge,
stating that
"there was no appropriation of private property, but merely a
lessening of value due to a permissible restriction imposed upon
its use. [
Footnote 24]"
Id. at
251 U. S. 303.
See Mugler v. Kansas, 123 U. S. 623
(1887).
It is true that appellees must bear the costs of these
regulations. But, within limits, that is a burden borne to secure
"the advantage of living and doing business in a civilized
community."
Pennsylvania Coal Co. v. Mahon, supra at
260 U. S. 422
(Brandeis, J., dissenting). We hold that the simple prohibition of
the sale of lawfully acquired property in this
Page 444 U. S. 68
case does not effect a taking in violation of the Fifth
Amendment. [
Footnote 25]
Reversed.
THE CHIEF JUSTICE concurs in the judgment of the Court.
[
Footnote 1]
The Eagle Protection Act, § 1, 54 Stat. 250, as amended, as
set forth in 16 U.S.C. § 668(a), provides in pertinent
part:
"Whoever, within the United States or any place subject to the
jurisdiction thereof, without being permitted to do so as provided
in this subchapter, shall knowingly, or with wanton disregard for
the consequences of his act take, possess, sell, purchase, barter,
offer to sell, purchase or barter, transport, export or import, at
any time or in any manner any bald eagle commonly known as the
American eagle or any golden eagle, alive or dead, or any part,
nest, or egg thereof of the foregoing eagles, or whoever violates
any permit or regulation issued pursuant to this subchapter, shall
be fined not more than $5,000 or imprisoned not more than one year
or both: . . .
Provided further, That nothing herein shall
be construed to prohibit possession or transportation of any bald
eagle, alive or dead, or any part, nest, or egg thereof, lawfully
taken prior to June 8, 1940, and that nothing herein shall be
construed to prohibit possession or transportation of any golden
eagle, alive or dead, or any part, nest, or egg thereof, lawfully
taken prior to the addition to this subchapter of the provisions
relating to preservation of the golden eagle."
The Migratory Bird Treaty Act, § 2, 40 Stat. 755, as
amended, as set forth in 16 U.S.C. § 703, similarly
provides:
"Unless and except as permitted by regulations made as
hereinafter provided in this subchapter, it shall be unlawful at
any time, by any means or in any manner, to pursue, hunt, take,
capture, kill, attempt to take, capture, or kill, possess, offer
for sale, sell, offer to barter, barter, offer to purchase,
purchase, deliver for shipment, ship, export, import, cause to be
shipped, exported, or imported, deliver for transportation,
transport or cause to be transported, carry or cause to be carried,
or receive for shipment, transportation, carriage, or export, any
migratory bird, any part, nest, or eggs of any such bird, or any
product, whether or not manufactured, which consists, or is
composed in whole or part, of any such bird or any part, nest, or
egg thereof, included in the terms of the conventions between the
United States and Great Britain for the protection of migratory
birds concluded August 16, 1916 (39 Stat. 1702), the United States
and the United Mexican States for the protection of migratory birds
and game mammals concluded February 7, 1936, and the United States
and the Government of Japan for the protection of migratory birds
and birds in danger of extinction, and their environment concluded
March 4, 1972."
[
Footnote 2]
Appellee L. Douglas Allard was convicted and fined for violating
the Eagle Protection Act, 16 U.S.C. § 668(a), which
establishes criminal penalties for unpermitted eagle sales.
United States v. Allard, 397 F.
Supp. 429 (Mont.1975). Appellee Pierre Bovis was prosecuted
under the Eagle Protection Act and under the Migratory Bird Treaty
Act, 16 U.S.C. § 707, which provides criminal penalties for
the unlawful sale of migratory birds.
United States v.
Bovis, Nos. 75-CR-63 and 75-CR-66 (Colo.1975).
[
Footnote 3]
Appellees also alleged that the Migratory Bird Treaty Act and
regulations thereunder were unconstitutionally vague and involved
an improper delegation of legislative power to the Executive
Branch. These allegations were not passed on by the District Court,
and are not pressed here. We therefore do not address them.
[
Footnote 4]
The Secretary contends that appellees' constitutional claims are
insubstantial, and did not justify convention of a three-judge
court. We disagree.
See Goosby v. Osser, 409 U.
S. 512 (1973);
Hagans v. Lavine, 415 U.
S. 528,
415 U. S.
536-538 (1974).
[
Footnote 5]
Exemption for preexisting artifacts.
[
Footnote 6]
Exemption for takings necessary to protect wildlife, livestock,
or agriculture from predation.
[
Footnote 7]
Exemption for scientific, zoological, or religious needs and, in
certain circumstances, for falconry.
[
Footnote 8]
In 1962, Congress extended the Eagle Protection Act to cover
golden, as well as bald, eagles, 76 Stat. 1246, and in 1972
penalties under the statute were reinforced, 86 Stat. 1064. On each
occasion -- especially the latter -- the purposes and scheme of the
bill were considered. S.Rep. No.1986, 87th Cong., 2d Sess. (1962);
H.R.Rep. No. 1450, 87th Cong., 2d Sess. (1962); S.Rep. No. 92-1159
(1972); H.R.Rep. No. 92-817 (1972). Regulations preventing the sale
of preexisting artifacts had been in force for some time preceding
these amendments,
see 50 CFR § 6.1 (Cum.Supp. 1944);
50 CFR §§ 11.1 and 11.8(b) (1964); 50 CFR § 22.2
(1978), although the wording of the 1960 regulation may suggest
otherwise, 50 CFR §§ 11.1 and 11.6(b) (1961).
[
Footnote 9]
See Affidavit of Dr. Alan H. Brush, App. 44-46.
[
Footnote 10]
Our reading of the Eagle Protection Act is not shaken by the
fact that, until 1959, Alaska was exempted from the strictures of
§ 668.
See 54 Stat. 250, amended by § 14, 73
Stat. 143. The fact that eagles could be taken, possessed, sold,
and purchased in the Territory of Alaska in no way undercut the
general ban on sales in the 48 States; we do not read the pre-1959
Alaska exemption as a license to sell Alaska eagles in the rest of
the country, or vice versa.
We are also unpersuaded by appellees' argument that the Eagle
Protection Act does not apply to feathers that have lost their
"identities" as elements in artifacts. This contention is bottomed
on the statutory use of the word bird "part" instead of bird
"product." The distinction between the terms is immaterial: for
example, when Congress amended the Migratory Bird Treaty Act to
specify that it applied to bird products as well as bird parts,
Pub.L. 93-300, 88 Stat.190, the Senate Report indicated that the
change was a clarification, rather than a substantive change in the
reach of the law. S.Rep. No. 93-851, p. 3 (1974).
[
Footnote 11]
The Migratory Bird Treaty Act, passed in 1918, 40 Stat. 755,
predates the Eagle Protection Act by 22 years. Originally, the
legislation implementing a Migratory Bird Convention between Great
Britain (on behalf of Canada) and the United States, the Act now
implements similar treaties between this country and other nations.
See generally Coggins & Patti, The Resurrection and
Expansion of the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, 50 Colo.L.Rev. 165,
169-174 (1979); M. Bean, The Evolution of National Wildlife Law
68-74 (1977).
[
Footnote 12]
The § 703 prohibition is, by its own terms, subject to
regulatory exception.
See also 16 U.S.C. § 704.
[
Footnote 13]
"Nothing in this subchapter shall be construed to prevent the
breeding of migratory game birds on farms and preserves and the
sale of birds so bred under proper regulation for the purpose of
increasing the food supply."
[
Footnote 14]
In fact, the Conference Report accepting the floor amendment
that became § 711 was actually withdrawn in order to add
language indicating that lawfully bred birds could be sold.
See 56 Cong.Rec. 8015 (1918);
id. at 8130,
8430.
[
Footnote 15]
55 Cong.Rec. 5412-5413 (1917) (Senate); 56 Cong.Rec. 7372 (1918)
(House).
Britain entered into the treaty on behalf of Canada.
[
Footnote 16]
The Canadian statute indicates that there might be a lawful
excuse for possessing or selling birds out of season, but not what
such an excuse would be.
[
Footnote 17]
In 1976, Congress specifically amended the Act to establish a
very limited sales exemption for products of animals lawfully owned
for commercial purposes before the Act came into effect. Pub.L.
9359, 90 Stat. 911, amending 16 U.S.C. § 1539. The amendment
was circumscribed in scope, and merely authorized, but did not
order, the Secretary of Commerce to grant exemptions for pre-Act
animal products.
[
Footnote 18]
In arguing the position that the statute prevents only the sale
of illegally taken birds, appellees rely upon the language of the
1972 Migratory Bird Convention with Japan, incorporated into the
Migratory Bird Treaty Act in 1974. Pub.L. 93-300, 88 Stat.190. The
Convention provides that
"[a]ny sale, purchase or exchange of these [migratory] birds or
their eggs,
taken illegally, alive or dead, and any sale,
purchase or exchange of the products thereof or their parts shall .
. . be prohibited."
(Emphasis added.) But the language of the Convention, like the
terms of the other Conventions, does not carry great weight in the
interpretation of the statute. There are material variations in the
particulars of each of the Conventions,
see Coggins &
Patti,
supra, n 11,
at 173-174; Bean,
supra, n 11, at 70-73; it is therefore hazardous to look to any
single Convention for definitive resolution of a statutory
construction problem. Furthermore, inasmuch as the Conventions
represent binding international commitments, they establish minimum
protections for wildlife; Congress could and did go further in
developing domestic conservation measures.
See id. at
74-76.
[
Footnote 19]
Our interpretation of the statute does not depart from any
course of construction adopted by other courts. Although appellees
argue that several courts have determined that lawfully taken birds
may be sold under the Migratory Bird Treaty Act, we do not read the
cases as supporting appellees' position. Two of the cited cases,
United States v. Hamel, 534 F.2d 1354 (CA9 1976) (per
curiam), and
United States v. Blanket, 391 F. Supp.
15 (WD Okla.1975), neither decide nor imply a decision as to
the statutory question posed here. Language favorable to appellees
in
United States v. Aitson, No. 74-1588 (CA10, July 21,
1975), is merely dictum in an unpublished opinion. Contrast also
United States v. Richards, 583 F.2d 491 (CA10 1978).
United States v. Marks, 4 F.2d 420
(SD Tex.1925), did hold it impermissible to punish the sale of
birds taken before the Migratory Bird Treaty Act was passed. But
that ruling rested upon the court's view that Congress' authority
to regulate the birds must rest wholly upon the treaty, rather than
the commerce power. Whatever the logic of that ruling, the
underlying assumption that the national commerce power does not
reach migratory wildlife is clearly flawed.
See, e.g., Hughes
v. Oklahoma, 441 U. S. 322
(1979). Thus, only two early District Court cases, both authored by
the same judge, sustain the statutory proposition advanced by
appellees.
United States v. Fuld Store Co., 262 F. 836
(Mont.1920);
In re Informations Under Migratory Bird Treaty
Act, 281 F. 546 (Mont.1922). The cases involved no more than a
cursory inquiry into the statute, and we find them
unconvincing.
[
Footnote 20]
Indeed, heightened restrictions on the sale or purchase of
migratory bird parts were appropriate in light of congressional
recognition of the danger to wildlife posed by commercial
exploitation. The 1960 amendments to the Migratory Bird Treaty Act
specifically addressed that problem by stiffening penalties for the
taking of protected birds with intent to sell and for the sale of
protected birds. 74 Stat. 866;
see H.R.Rep. No. 1787, 86th
Cong., 2d Sess. (1960); S.Rep. No. 1779, 86th Cong., 2d Sess.
(1960).
[
Footnote 21]
Although this argument appears to have been cast in the District
Court in terms of economic substantive due process, before this
Court, appellees have used the terminology of the Takings
Clause.
The Secretary has raised the question of appellees' standing to
assert a takings claim with respect to their artifacts. He asserts
that appellees have not clearly stated that they acquired their
property interest in the bird artifacts before the sales ban came
into force. If they have not, the Secretary argues, then the
"value of any artifacts purchased by appellees after the
effective date of the Act had already been diminished by the
applicability of the Act."
Brief for Appellants 30. This contention is misplaced. Even
assuming that appellees have not sufficiently alleged
pre-effectiveness possession, they have standing to urge their
constitutional claim. Because the regulation they challenge
restricts their ability to dispose of their property, appellees
have a personal, concrete, live interest in the controversy.
See Baker v. Carr, 369 U. S. 186,
369 U. S. 204
(1962). The timing of acquisition of the artifacts is relevant to a
takings analysis of appellees' investment-backed expectations, but
it does not erect a jurisdictional obstacle at the threshold. Of
course, there is no standing to assert a takings claim by those who
are merely employed in selling artifacts owned by others. All
appellees, however, may face future criminal prosecutions for
violations of the statutes, and that, of itself, suffices to give
them standing to litigate their interest in the construction of the
statutes.
[
Footnote 22]
It should be emphasized that, in
Pennsylvania Coal, the
loss of profit opportunity was accompanied by a physical
restriction against the removal of the coal.
[
Footnote 23]
It is not significant that the statute considered in
Everard's Breweries had been passed under the Eighteenth
(Prohibition) Amendment. The Court did not suggest that the
Amendment gave Congress a special prerogative to override ordinary
Fifth Amendment limitations.
[
Footnote 24]
Although the beverage owner in
Jacob Ruppert retained
the ability to export his product or to sell it domestically for
purposes other than consumption,
see 251 U.S. at
251 U. S. 303;
Hamilton v. Kentucky Distilleries Co., 251 U.
S. 146,
251 U. S. 157
(1919), the domestic sales ban was undoubtedly commercially
crippling.
No importance should be attached to the fact that the enactment
in
Jacob Ruppert was promulgated pursuant to the war
power.
But cf. United States v. Central Eureka Mining Co.,
357 U. S. 155,
357 U. S. 168
(1958).
[
Footnote 25]
Appellees also briefly argue that the regulations in this case
interfere with their right to engage in a lawful occupation. Even
if we were inclined to exhume this variant of the theory of
substantive due process, it would not be applicable here. Appellees
may still sell artifacts that do not consist in part of protected
bird products.