GETTLEMAN, District Judge:
The Federal Lands Recreation Enhancement Act ("REA") prohibits the United States Forest Service from charging fees "[s]olely for parking, undesignated parking, or picnicking along roads or trailsides," for "hiking through ... without using the facilities and services," and "[f]or camping at undeveloped sites. ..." 16 U.S.C. § 6802(d)(1)(A), (D) & (E). Despite these clear prohibitions, the Forest Service collects fees from all drivers who park their vehicles in a mile-wide piece of the Coronado National Forest running along the 28-mile Catalina Highway, the only paved road to the summit of Mount Lemmon, a heavily used recreational area
Four recreational visitors sued,
Everyone is entitled to enter national forests without paying a cent. 16 U.S.C. § 6802(e)(2) ("The Secretary shall not charge an entrance fee for Federal recreational lands ... managed by ... the Forest Service."). The Forest Service may, however, charge a "standard amenity recreation fee" in an "area":
But the REA prohibits the Forest Service from charging that fee, even in a place where subsection (f) would otherwise authorize it, "for certain activities or services." 16 U.S.C. § 6802(d)(1). This blanket "[p]rohibition on fees for certain activities or services" forbids fees, among other things:
After the REA was enacted, the Forest Service drafted Interim Implementation Guidelines. Those guidelines interpreted the REA as authorizing the Forest Service to impose a standard amenity recreation fee in a "High Impact Recreation Area" ("HIRA"), defined as:
The Guidelines require a HIRA to meet the same criteria as the REA requires for an "area" where the Forest Service may collect a standard amenity recreation fee, and add four more criteria.
Finding that the land adjacent to the Catalina Highway met all of the Guidelines' requirements, the Forest Service designated that area as a HIRA. The fee structure there remained essentially identical
Based on their position that the Forest Service was impermissibly imposing fees on that group of visitors, plaintiffs filed a complaint seeking declaratory and injunctive relief, as well as reimbursement of fees they had already paid, on behalf of a putative class.
Defendants argued that the Forest Service's interpretation was entitled to Chevron
Plaintiffs filed a Rule 59(e) motion to reconsider, arguing that: (1) the statute was unambiguous, so the district court should not have deferred to the agency's interpretation; (2) the court erred in applying Skidmore deference to a statute carrying criminal consequences; and (3) even if Skidmore review were proper, the court did not correctly apply it. The court largely disagreed, but did find that it had erred in failing to state that the statute was ambiguous before proceeding to apply Skidmore. Finding that the error was harmless, however, the court denied the motion.
"A district court's decision to grant a motion to dismiss under Rule 12(b)(6) is reviewed de novo." Ta Chong Bank Ltd. v. Hitachi High Techs. Am., Inc., 610 F.3d 1063, 1066 (9th Cir.2010) (citation omitted). In evaluating a Rule 12(b)(6) motion, the court accepts the complaint's well-pleaded
In evaluating an agency's interpretation of a governing statute, the court conducts the familiar two-step Chevron inquiry. At the first step, the court asks "whether Congress has directly spoken to the precise question at issue." Chevron, 467 U.S. at 842, 104 S.Ct. 2778. If it has, the agency (and the court) must give effect to Congress's clearly expressed intent. If, however, the text is ambiguous, the court proceeds to step two and considers whether the agency's interpretation was "a reasonable policy choice for the agency to make." Id. at 845, 104 S.Ct. 2778.
The REA unambiguously prohibits the standard amenity recreation fee structure in place at the Mount Lemmon HIRA. The statute provides that the Forest Service "may charge"—"[e]xcept as limited by subsection (d)"—a standard amenity recreation fee "at" four types of locations, one of which is an "area" with all of six enumerated amenities. 16 U.S.C. § 6802(f) (emphasis added).
A. The Forest Service is prohibited from charging an amenity fee "[s]olely for parking." 16 U.S.C. § 6802(d)(1)(A). There is nothing ambiguous about that text. If all a visitor does is park, and he is charged a fee, that fee is imposed "[s]olely for parking." If a visitor parks at Mount Lemmon, he is charged a fee. If a visitor goes to Mount Lemmon but does not park there, he is not charged a fee. See United States v. Smith, 740 F.Supp.2d 1111, 1124 (D.Ariz.2010) ("It is apparent that Mr. Smith would not have received a ticket had he not parked a vehicle, i.e., had a friend delivered him to the trailhead and retrieved him the following day. Accordingly, what Mr. Smith received was actually a ticket for parking, clearly prohibited by the plain language of the statute."). It may often be the case that a visitor, after parking, does something else. Then the fee would not be "[s]olely for parking," and so long as the "something else" is not
According to the Forest Service's version of the statute's "plain text," however, a fee is "[s]olely for parking" only "where the other amenities required by REA are absent." That is incorrect. If it were true, a "[s]olely for parking" fee would be possible only in places where the REA requires amenities,
Because this reading is so illogical, we will consider another interpretation of the agency's position. Perhaps the Forest Service is really saying that a fee is "[s]olely for parking" when imposed in a location where a visitor has no option to do something else, whether or not that "something else" is an amenity required by the statute. A parking fee in the Mount Lemmon HIRA, therefore, is not "[s]olely" for parking—it is also "for" other things, because it is possible that the parker might proceed to do something for which subsection (d)(1) does not prohibit a fee. This interpretation, however, would be sensible only if we ignored the plain meaning of the word "for" in the context of the REA.
Because "for" is, of course, not defined in the statute, we must give it "its ordinary or natural meaning." Smith v. United States, 508 U.S. 223, 228, 113 S.Ct. 2050, 124 L.Ed.2d 138 (1993) (citation omitted). This might seem like an impossible task— according to Webster's, "for" has over thirty non-obsolete meanings. Webster's Third New International Dictionary 886 (2002). "Ambiguity," however, "is a creature not of definitional possibilities but of statutory context." Brown v. Gardner, 513 U.S. 115, 118, 115 S.Ct. 552, 130 L.Ed.2d 462 (1994). And the statutory context here—a "[p]rohibition on fees for certain activities or services"—allows only one definition. 16 U.S.C. § 6802(d)(1). In common understanding, a buyer pays a fee "for" something he chooses to buy, even if that "something" is simply an option to do or use something (like $17.99 "for" an all-you-can-eat buffet). Consider what would happen if a restaurant-goer inspected his bill and noticed an unexpected charge. If told that the fee was for ten bottles of wine that the patron's group neither ordered nor drank, the patron would rightly be outraged. He would not find much solace in a waiter's explanation that the wine cellar contained ten bottles, which the patron could have ordered if he wished.
Moreover, the REA clearly contemplates that individuals can go to a place offering facilities and services without using the facilities and services and without paying a fee. For example, subsection (d)(1)(D) prohibits fees "for persons who are driving through, walking through, boating through, horseback riding through, or hiking through . . . without using the
By ignoring the plain text, the Forest Service arrives at an interpretation that would enable an end-run around the clear statutory restrictions. If the REA gave the agency complete discretion to dictate a fee's so-called purpose, then the agency could entirely evade the prohibition on parking fees by simply declaring that its fees are "for" something else too. At any of the places where subsection (f) contemplates recreation fees, it is possible for a visitor to do something more than park a car—take photos of a volcano, make a cell phone call, chew a piece of gum—and a visitor must use a facility or service to be subject to a subsection (g) fee. Therefore, the agency could simply say that its parking fee is also "for" those other activities.
First, § 6802(d)(1)(D) clearly prohibits imposing a fee "[f]or persons who are driving through, walking through, boating through, horseback riding through, or hiking through Federal recreational lands and waters without using the facilities and services." 16 U.S.C. § 6802(d)(1)(D) (emphasis added). The agency interprets the conjunction "and" too loosely. It claims that its fees comply with the statute because any visitor who travels through the HIRA necessarily "uses" its security services. But security services are, at most, "services"—not "facilities and services." Id. (emphasis added). "And" does not mean "or." Idaho v. Wright, 497 U.S. 805, 831 n. 2, 110 S.Ct. 3139, 111 L.Ed.2d 638 (1990) (Kennedy, J., dissenting) ("The word `and' is conjunctive. . . . The Legislature would have used the word `or' had it intended the disjunctive.") (quotation and citation omitted); MacDonald v. Pan Am. World Airways, Inc., 859 F.2d 742, 746 (9th Cir.1988) (Kozinski, J., dissenting) ("As a linguistic matter, `and' and `or' are not synonyms; indeed, they are more nearly antonyms. One need only start the day with a breakfast of ham or eggs to be duly impressed by the difference."). The Forest Service points to no "facilities" that a backcountry hiker necessarily uses.
The Forest Service also maintains that the latter part of § 6802(d)(1)(A), which prohibits fees "solely for . . . picnicking along roads or trailsides," clearly permits fees for road or trailside picnics that take place within a larger area (delineated by the Forest Service) if that larger area offers amenities. The REA does not say that. It provides simply and unambiguously that the Forest Service cannot collect a standard amenity fee from someone who picnics on a road or trailside, even if that picnic occurs within an "area" that has amenities. The Forest Service fails to distinguish—as the statute does—between
Finally, the Forest Service claims that it may charge a fee for any and all camping within the Mount Lemmon HIRA. The REA, however, clearly prohibits fees "[f]or camping at undeveloped sites that do not provide a minimum number of facilities and services as described in subsection (g)(2)(A)." 16 U.S.C. § 6802(d)(1)(E); see 16 U.S.C. § 6802(g)(2)(A) (requiring a "developed" campsite to provide "at least a majority" of nine specified facilities and services). The Forest Service violates that prohibition by charging visitors who camp at sites lacking the required "minimum number" of nine "facilities and services." For example, a camper who pitches a tent in a spot without garbage cans, picnic tables, campfire pits, bathrooms, and someone collecting fees is required to pay a standard amenity recreation fee. That plainly violates § 6802(d)(1)(E).
For the foregoing reasons, we conclude that the REA unambiguously prohibits the Forest Service from charging fees in the Mount Lemmon HIRA for recreational visitors who park a car, then camp at undeveloped sites, picnic along roads or trailsides, or hike through the area without using the facilities and services. We therefore reverse the district court's grant of defendants' motion to dismiss Count I and remand to the district court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.