THE SUPREME COURT OF THE
FEDERATED STATES OF MICRONESIA
TRIAL DIVISION
Cite as FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic
Enterprises,
8 FSM Intrm. 166 (Pon. 1997) FEDERATED STATES OF
MICRONESIA,
Plaintiff, vs. TING HONG OCEANIC
ENTERPRISES, CO., LTD.,
Defendant. CRIMINAL CASE NO. 1994-502 MEMORANDUM OF DECISION Andon L. Amaraich
Chief Justice Trial: January 8-10, 13, 1997
Judgment: March 10, 1997
Memorandum Entered: September 16,
1997 APPEARANCES: For the
Plaintiff: Teresa
K. Zintgraff, Esq.
Assistant
Attorney General
Office
of the FSM Attorney General
P.O.
Box PS-105
Palikir,
Pohnpei FM 96941 For the Defendant: John Hollinrake, Esq. Law
Offices of Hollinrake & Saimon
P.O.
Box 1450
Kolonia,
Pohnpei FM 96941 *
* *
* HEADNOTES
Criminal Law and Procedure ) Standard of
Proof
The
government has the burden of proof in criminal cases, and must prove each
element of the crimes charged beyond a reasonable doubt. FSM v. Ting
Hong Oceanic Enterprises, 8 FSM Intrm. 166, 171 (Pon.
1997). Criminal Law and Procedure ) Standard of Proof;
Evidence
Proof of
guilt may be by either direct evidence, circumstantial evidence or both.
Direct evidence is evidence, which if believed, proves the existence of
facts in issue without inference or presumption. Circumstantial
evidence is evidence of facts and circumstances from which the existence
or nonexistence of facts in issue may be inferred. FSM v. Ting Hong
Oceanic Enterprises, 8 FSM Intrm. 166, 171 (Pon. 1997). Fishing
Section
404 of Title 24 sets forth certain minimum terms that all foreign fishing
agreements must contain. FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises, 8 FSM
Intrm. 166, 172 (Pon. 1997).
Fishing
It is
unlawful for any person to violate any provision of Title 24, or of any
regulation or permit issued under it, or to violate any provision of, or
regulation under, an applicable domestic-based or foreign fishing
agreement entered into pursuant to 24 F.S.M.C. 401, 404-406. A
person is any individual, corporation, partnership, association, or other
entity, the FSM or any of the state governments, or any political
subdivision thereof, and any foreign government, subdivision of such
government, or entity thereof. FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises,
8 FSM Intrm. 166, 173-74 & n.2 (Pon. 1997). Fishing
While 24 F.S.M.C. 116(1)
places a duty to maintain the daily catch log upon the vessel master, the
statute does not make the vessel master's liability for failure to
maintain that log exclusive. Therefore when a party to a foreign
fishing agreement that says that party ensures that its authorized vessels
will properly maintain such a log that party may be held liable. FSM
v. Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises, 8 FSM Intrm. 166, 174 (Pon.
1997). Contracts
The
contract law pre-existing duty rule is that a promise to perform an act
which is already required supplies no consideration for the return promise
or performance. On that basis, a contract may fail for lack of
consideration. But a contract provision cannot be examined in
isolation to determine the sufficiency of consideration as a whole.
Therefore the rule does not apply where there is sufficient other
consideration flowing between the parties to support an agreement and all
of its provisions. FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises, 8 FSM
Intrm. 166, 175 (Pon. 1997). Agency
A
principal is bound by, and liable for, the acts of its agent, if those
acts are done with actual or apparent authority from the principal and are
within the scope of the agent's employment. FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic
Enterprises, 8 FSM Intrm. 166, 176 (Pon. 1997). Agency; Business Organizations ) Corporations
) Liability; Criminal
Law and Procedure; Fishing
Because a
corporate principal may be held criminally liable for its agent's conduct
when the agent acts within the scope of its authority for the principal's
benefit, a foreign fishing agreement party may be held criminally liable
for the conduct of its authorized vessel. FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic
Enterprises, 8 FSM Intrm. 166, 176 (Pon. 1997). Criminal Law and Procedure )
Defenses
Because
Congress has neither adopted the de minimis defense found in the Model
Penal Code nor any provision comparable to it that defense is not
available in the FSM Supreme Court. FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises,
8 FSM Intrm. 166, 179 (Pon. 1997).
Criminal Law
and Procedure ) Double
Jeopardy
There is
no violation of the double jeopardy clause of the FSM Constitution if each
offense charged requires proof of a fact which the other does not.
FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises, 8 FSM Intrm. 166, 179 (Pon.
1997). Agency; Business Organizations ) Corporations
) Liability; Criminal
Law and Procedure; Fishing
An
authorized vessel's master's knowledge is attributable to its foreign
fishing agreement party because knowledge held by an agent
or employee of a corporation may be attributed to its principal. FSM
v. Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises, 8 FSM Intrm. 166, 180 (Pon.
1997). Fishing
Revocation of a fishing permit is not the government's
sole remedy for violation of the permit's terms. Civil and criminal
penalties are also available. FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises,
8 FSM Intrm. 166, 181 (Pon. 1997). Fishing
MMA
cannot contract to insulate a foreign fishing agreement signatory from
criminal liability because to do so would violate 24 F.S.M.C. 404.
FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises, 8 FSM Intrm. 166, 181 (Pon.
1997). Criminal Law and Procedure )
Sentencing
Where
there is a plain legislative intent to impose separate punishments a court
may reject a proposal that the sentences for those counts run
concurrently. FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises, 8 FSM Intrm.
166, 181 (Pon. 1997). Criminal Law and Procedure ) Sentencing )
Probation
Probation
is inappropriate sentence when the defendant has departed from the FSM,
not permitting the FSM to monitor or control its future behavior, and
where the seriousness of its violations warranted a more serious sanction.
FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises, 8 FSM Intrm. 166, 181 (Pon.
1997). Criminal Law and Procedure ) Sentencing;
Fishing
In
fashioning an appropriate sentence for fishing violations, a court
considers the nature, circumstances, extent, and gravity of the prohibited
acts committed, the defendant's degree of culpability and history of prior
offenses, whether other civil penalties or criminal fines have already
been imposed for the specific conduct before the court, and such other
matters as justice might require, keeping in mind the statutory purpose
behind the provisions violated. FSM v. Ting Hong Oceanic
Enterprises, 8 FSM Intrm. 166, 181-82 (Pon. 1997). *
* *
* COURT'S OPINION
ANDON L. AMARAICH, Chief
Justice: Introduction
In May
1995, defendant was found guilty of four violations of Title 24 of the FSM
Code. Following defendant's successful appeal of its conviction, on
the basis of ineffective assistance of counsel, this matter came before
the Court for retrial in January 1997. Following trial, on March 10,
1997, the Court announced that it again found defendant guilty of the
offenses charged. This Memorandum of Decision sets forth the basis
for the Court's findings.
Facts and Procedural History
On April
16, 1994, Defendant Ting Hong Oceanic Enterprises, Co., Ltd. ("Ting Hong")
entered into a Foreign Fishing Agreement with the Micronesian Maritime
Authority (the "Agreement"). The Micronesian Maritime Authority
("MMA") is the governmental agency in the FSM responsible for
the management and regulation of
marine resources within the FSM's Exclusive Economic Zone ("EEZ").
The only parties to the April 1994 Agreement were Defendant Ting
Hong and MMA. Under the Agreement, Ting Hong agreed to abide by all
applicable laws, rules and regulations of the FSM and its States,
including Titles 18 and 24 of the FSM Code. Ting Hong also agreed to
abide by the Harmonized Minimum Terms and Conditions for Foreign Fishing
Vessel Access (hereinafter "HMTCs") and agreed to "ensure that its
Authorized Vessels comply with the terms of [the] Agreement and all
applicable laws and regulations." In exchange for these commitments, Ting
Hong was allowed to bring up to 270 of its long line fishing vessels into
the FSM EEZ to conduct fishing operations. On August
9, 1994, Ting Hong applied for a Foreign Fishing Permit (the "Permit") for
the vessel Horng Yih Fwu #130. Pl.'s Ex. P. MMA issued the
vessel a one-month permit, which was valid until September 8, 1994.
Pl.'s Ex. L. Among other things, that Permit set the Horng Yih
Fwu #130's authorized crew size at eight, required that the vessel's
fishing operations "be conducted in accordance with Title 18 & 24 of
the FSM Code," and required that the Approved Catch Record be maintained
and produced to an authorized inspector of the Federated States of
Micronesia when required. Id. On August
24, 1994, the Horng Yih Fwu #130 was found at a location off the state of
Chuuk, approximately 100 miles inside the FSM EEZ. The vessel was
boarded, inspected and subsequently seized by marine surveillance officers
of the FSM National Police for suspected violations of Title 24. It
is undisputed that when the vessel was boarded, FSM Marine Surveillance
Officer Wichap asked the vessel master for the vessel's papers, including
the English language catch report required under both the Agreement and
the Permit. Although the vessel master produced a number of
documents, he did not produce a catch report in English for the voyage the
vessel had been on when it was seized. From the papers the master
did provide, it could be ascertained that the vessel had been operating in
FSM waters since August 14, 1994. During
inspection of the vessel, officers of the FSM National Police found that
the storage area of the Horng Yih Fwu #130 contained freshly caught fish.
Defendant did not dispute that there were fish on board, although there
was some dispute as to the exact amount of fish involved. In
addition, marine surveillance officers testified at trial that during
their inspection of the vessel, they observed that the vessel carried no
marine VHF radio capable of monitoring international distress frequencies.
Officer Wichap testified that when he boarded the vessel, there were
eleven crew members present rather than the eight authorized by the
vessel's Permit. Defendant did not dispute this fact. After
the vessel was seized, it was taken to Pohnpei, where the fish on board
were off-loaded and sold. On August
30, 1994, the government filed a six-count criminal information against
defendant and others, alleging various violations of Title 24 of the FSM
Code. Following trial, on May 17, 1995, Ting Hong was convicted on
four counts, and found not guilty on a fifth count. A sixth count
was dismissed prior to trial. Defendant
subsequently appealed its convictions, alleging, among other things, that
it had received ineffective assistance of counsel due to its counsel's
joint representation of other individual defendants who were later severed
from the trial. On April 15, 1996 the Appellate Division reversed
defendant's convictions, and remanded the case for retrial. On
retrial, the case proceeded based on the original criminal
information. On June
6, 1996, defendant moved to dismiss based on lack of jurisdiction, arguing
that defendant should be properly tried in Chuuk State. That motion
was heard on July 23, 1996 and denied on August 6, 1996. On
September 9, 1996, defendant then moved to disqualify Chief Justice
Amaraich from presiding over the retrial of the case, based in part on his
having presided over the earlier trial, and in part on his having formerly
held the position of Chairman of MMA. The Court
denied that motion on November 11, 1996.
On November 19, 1996, defendant filed a Petition for Writ of
Prohibition and in the Alternative Writ of Mandate in the Appellate
Division, again seeking the Chief Justice's disqualification based on his
involvement and rulings in the initial trial and his former association
with MMA. The Appellate Division granted the writ on November 1, 1996,
until such time as the Chief Justice had placed his reasons for denying
defendant's motion to disqualify on the record. The Chief Justice
did so on November 25, 1996. Defendant then renewed its petition for writ
of prohibition on November 26, 1996. The Appellate Division denied that
petition on January 3, 1997. The case
proceeded to trial on January 8-10 and January 13, 1997. After the
parties had had an opportunity to submit post-trial briefs, on March 10,
1997, the Court announced that it again found defendant guilty of the
offenses charged. A sentencing hearing was set for March 25, 1997.
After reviewing the evidence and arguments presented by the parties,
both in sentencing memoranda and at the March 25, 1997 hearing, the Court
sentenced defendant to a fine of $300,000 for each violation, for a total
fine of $1.2 million. Charges Before the Court on Retrial
The four
counts which came before the Court for retrial in January 1997 are set
forth in the government's original criminal information, filed on August
30, 1994. Count IV
of the original information alleges that on or about August 24, 1994,
defendant failed to maintain a catch log in English on board the vessel
and failed to make that log available for inspection, as required by the
Agreement and 24 F.S.M.C. 404, in violation of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(a) and
(c). Count V
alleges that on or about August 24, 1994, defendant failed to maintain and
have on board the vessel a radio capable of monitoring radio frequency
2.182 KHz and 156.6 MHz (Channel 16, VHF) for the purpose of facilitating
communication between fishing vessels and authorities of the FSM wishing
to establish their credentials, in violation of the Agreement and 24
F.S.M.C. 501(1)(a) and (c). Count VI
alleges that on or about August 24, 1994, defendant exceeded the
authorized limit for crew personnel, by having on board the vessel eleven
crew members, three in excess of the eight allowed under the applicable
permit, in violation of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(a) and (c). Finally,
based on the previous violations charged, Count II alleges that on or
about August 24, 1994, defendant knowingly shipped, transported, had
custody, control or possession of fish unlawfully taken or retained in
violation of Title 24 of the FSM Code and the Agreement, in violation of
24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(l). Arguments of the Parties
During
retrial, the government argued that defendant's criminal liability for the
acts of the Horng Yih Fwu #130 arises from three sources: (1) the
specific terms of defendant's Foreign Fishing Agreement with MMA, in which
defendant agreed to "ensure that its Authorized Vessels comply with the
terms of this Agreement and with all applicable laws and regulations"; (2)
the language of 24 F.S.M.C. 404(3)(c), which sets forth minimum terms and
conditions which must be contained in all foreign fishing agreements; and
(3) the principal-agent relationship in existence between Ting Hong and
the Horng Yih Fwu #130 at the time the violations
occurred. Defendant
offered a number of legal defenses to the four specific offenses charged.
First, Ting Hong claimed at trial that due process requirements
preclude its conviction on Counts IV and V because 24 F.S.M.C. 116(1) places an
affirmative duty on the vessel master to maintain the catch log in
English, rather than on Ting Hong, and paragraph 9(d) of the HMTCs places
the duty of monitoring VHF Channel 16 on the "vessel operator," rather
than on Ting Hong. Defendant argues that the terms of the Agreement
are therefore confusing and vague, and prosecution based on that Agreement
violates due process. Second, Ting Hong contended that its
prosecution on Count VI is improper because the crew size violation
charged is legally de minimis. Third, Ting Hong asserted that any
conviction on Count II is barred by the FSM Constitution's prohibition
against double jeopardy, because Count II is a lesser included offense of
Counts IV, V and VI. Defendant
also raised a series of defenses to its criminal liability based on the
terms of the Agreement, including the following: imposition of
criminal liability by contract is unenforceable; paragraph 23 of the
Agreement is unenforceable because it requires defendant to do something
it already has a legal duty to do; and cancellation of the vessel's
fishing permit is the exclusive remedy for any violation of the Agreement
or statute. Finally, and more broadly, defendant asserted that
general principles of agency liability do not apply in criminal cases, and
the government failed to prove certain elements of the crimes
charged. Legal Standard
The
government has the burden of proof in criminal cases, and must prove each
element of the crimes charged beyond a reasonable doubt. Ludwig v.
FSM, 2 FSM Intrm. 27, 35 (App. 1985); FSM v. Oliver, 3 FSM Intrm. 469, 479
(Pon. 1988). Proof of guilt may be by either direct evidence,
circumstantial evidence or both. Direct evidence is evidence, which
if believed, proves the existence of facts in issue without inference or
presumption. Black's Law Dictionary 413 (5th ed. 1979).
Circumstantial evidence is evidence of facts and circumstances from
which the existence or nonexistence of facts in issue may be inferred.
Id. at 221. After
reviewing the testimony and evidence presented at trial, together with the
arguments of the parties, the Court found that the government had proven
each element of Counts II, IV, V, and VI beyond a reasonable doubt.
The Court further found that defendant had presented no compelling
factual or legal defense to its criminal liability for these
charges. Count IV
Failure to Maintain Catch Log in the English
Language
Count IV
charges defendant with failure to maintain on board the vessel a catch log
in the English language in violation of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(a) and (c).
The Court found defendant guilty based on the following evidence
adduced at trial. Marine
Surveillance Officer Wichap testified that when he boarded the vessel on
August 24, 1994, he asked the vessel master for the vessel's papers.
In response, the vessel master provided him with an expired fishing
Permit and a packet of papers, most of which were in what appeared to be
Chinese. None of the papers provided could be described as a catch
record or log, required to be maintained under the terms of the Agreement,
the Permit and the HMTCs. Through the testimony of Eugene Pangelinan, the
government then introduced into evidence the information required to be
recorded on a properly maintained catch log or record. None of this
information had been recorded, in any form, for the period the vessel was
operating within the FSM EEZ. Based upon this evidence, the Court
found that the government had proved beyond a reasonable doubt that no
catch log in English was maintained on board the vessel on or about August
24, 1994. The Court then found Defendant Ting Hong criminally liable
for this violation under Title 24, based on the language of the Agreement
between the parties, and on the relationship of the defendant to the Horng
Yih Fwu #130. A. Liability Based on
the Foreign Fishing Agreement
Section
404 of Title 24 sets forth certain minimum terms that all foreign fishing
agreements entered into between MMA and foreign parties must
contain: Section 404. Foreign fishing agreements -
Terms.
All foreign fishing agreements shall have the
following minimum terms: *
* * (2) the foreign party or the owner or
operator of any fishing vessel fishing, as appropriate, pursuant to such
agreement shall: (a) comply with
the requirements of this title, all regulations issued pursuant to this
title and all other applicable laws and regulations; *
* * (3) foreign parties will: (a)
apply . . . for any required permits;
(b) deliver
promptly to the owner or operator of the appropriate fishing vessel any
permit which is issued under that section for such vessel;
and
(c) abide by the
requirement that no foreign fishing will be permitted in the [EEZ] without
a valid and applicable permit, except as provided by foreign fishing
agreements concluded pursuant to this chapter, and that all conditions and
restrictions of the permit, or any applicable foreign fishing agreement,
are complied with. 24 F.S.M.C. 404 (emphasis added).
The Agreement between MMA and Ting Hong (as "the Company")
incorporates these minimum terms: 2. The
Company agrees to abide by all applicable laws, rules and regulations of
the FSM and its States, including but not limited to, Titles 18 and 24 of
the Code of the Federated States of Micronesia. The Company agrees
to comply with the Harmonized Minimum Terms and Conditions for Foreign
Fishing Vessel Access as set forth in Attachment 1, attached hereto and
incorporated herein. 3. The
Authority agrees to permit fishing only by the Company's longline fishing
vessels in good standing . . . up to a maximum of two hundred seventy
(270) vessels within the EEZ in accordance with provisions of this
Agreement and all applicable laws . . . *
* * 9.
Authorized Vessels shall continuously monitor the
international distress radio frequency 2.182 KHz and 156.6 MHz (Channel
16, VHF) for the purposes of facilitating communication between such
vessels and air and seaborne authorities of the Federated States of
Micronesia wishing to establish the credentials of the vessel while in the
EEZ. 10. The
Company shall complete and transmit to the Authority voyage catch reports
in the form set forth in Appendix B in the English language . . . . The
Company and each Authorized Vessel Master shall ensure that all the
records are accurate for the entire given trip. The catch
report shall be dispatched to the Authority within ten (10) days of
the completion of a voyage. Any Authorized Vessel
which fails to submit its catch report in compliance with this paragraph
shall pay a penalty fine of USD 250 to the Authority for each such
failure. The Company shall ensure that the requirements of this
paragraph are met. The Authority reserves the right to cancel issued
permit(s) for non-compliance. 11. Each
Authorized Vessel shall maintain a catch log in English on board the
vessel and make such log available for inspection by officers authorized
by the Authority. *
* * 23. The
Company shall ensure that its Authorized Vessels comply with the
provisions of this Agreement and all applicable laws and regulations.
If an Authorized Vessel engages in activities in contravention of
this Agreement, Titles 18 or 24 of the Code of the Federated States of
Micronesia or any other applicable law, rule or regulation of the
Federated States of Micronesia or any of its States, the Authority may
cancel or withdraw the permit . . . . Pl.'s Ex. F (emphasis added).
The Harmonized Minimum Terms and Conditions for Foreign Fishing
Vessel Access, referred to in paragraph 2 of the Agreement, are attached
to the Agreement and incorporated by reference. Paragraph 4(a) of
the HMTCs, pertaining to the maintenance and submission of catch logs,
states that "The operator shall: (a) duly complete in the English
Language, daily reports on the prescribed forms of all catch in the zone
of any licensing country and on the high seas and shall certify that such
information is true, complete and accurate." Pl.'s Ex. F.
Significantly, under paragraphs 2 and 23 of the Agreement, Ting Hong
agreed to abide by all applicable laws, rules and regulations, including
Titles 18 and 24 of the FSM Code and the HMTCs, and to ensure that its
Authorized Vessels complied with the provisions of the Agreement and all
applicable laws and regulations. The
government argued at trial that Ting Hong breached its Agreement with MMA
by failing to ensure that the Horng Yih Fwu #130 complied with applicable
law. Plaintiff contended that this contractual breach in turn
resulted in Ting Hong's direct violation of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(a) and
501(1)(c), and criminal liability under 24 F.S.M.C. 503. 1
Section 501 provides that it is unlawful for any person: 2 (a) to violate any provision of this title or of
any regulation or permit issued pursuant to this title; [or]
.
. .
(c) to violate any provision of, or regulation
under, an applicable domestic-based or foreign fishing agreement entered
into pursuant to sections 401 and 404 through 406 of this title or any
term or condition of any permit issued in accordance with this title
and any
regulations made under this title. 24 F.S.M.C. 501 (emphasis added).
The government presented testimony at trial that MMA never enters
into foreign fishing agreements with individual fishing vessels. It
prefers to have a single party responsible for ensuring compliance with
the laws and regulations of the FSM, in part because it is difficult for
MMA to effectively monitor compliance by the many individual vessels which
fish in the FSM EEZ, which extends over two million square miles of
ocean. Defendant
argued at trial that it could not be held liable for failing to maintain
the catch log in English, because 24 F.S.M.C. 116(1) expressly places
responsibility for maintaining that log upon the vessel's
"master": (1) The master of each foreign fishing
vessel issued a permit or which is permitted to fish pursuant to a treaty
or any agreement or arrangement referred to in section 106 shall at all
times while the vessel is in the fishery waters, cause to be maintained in
the English language a fishing log in a form supplied or approved by the
Authority, and shall enter the following information relating to the
activities of the vessel on a daily basis. . . . Defendant argued that the more
specific language of 24 F.S.M.C. 116(1) should prevail over the language
of the Agreement, and it is therefore the master's obligation to maintain
the catch log, rather than Ting Hong's. Defendant cited Olter v.
National Election Commissioner, 3 FSM Intrm. 123 (App. 1987) and Setik v.
FSM, 5 FSM Intrm. 407 (App. 1992). Ting Hong also pointed to 24
F.S.M.C. 404(2), which states: "(2) The foreign party or the owner
or operator of any fishing [sic] vessel fishing, as appropriate, pursuant
to such agreement shall: (a) comply with the requirements of this
title, all regulations issued pursuant to this title and all other
applicable laws and regulations . . . ." 24 F.S.M.C. 404(2) (as
amended). Ting Hong argued that it is "appropriate" for the master to be
responsible for maintaining the log. Finally,
defendant contended that the Agreement itself is ambiguous due to the
conflict between paragraph 11 of the Agreement, placing responsibility for
maintenance of the log on the Authorized Vessel, paragraph 4(a) of the
HMTCs, placing responsibility on the "operator," and Section 116(1) of
Title 24, placing responsibility on the vessel master. Defendant
urged that this inconsistency denies it proper notice of the actions
required of it to avoid criminal liability, and therefore violates its
constitutional right to due process. Under the rule of lenity,
defendant argues, any ambiguity in a statute imposing criminal liability
is to be construed in favor of the accused.
The
Court did not find these arguments persuasive. While 24 F.S.M.C.
116(1) places a duty to maintain the log upon the vessel master, the
statute does not make the vessel master's liability for failure to
maintain that log exclusive. Section 116(1) is also not inconsistent
with defendant's obligations under the Agreement. In paragraph 23 of its
Agreement with MMA, defendant clearly and unambiguously agreed to "ensure
that its Authorized Vessels comply with the terms of this Agreement and
with all applicable laws and regulations." When it was apprehended,
the Horng Yih Fwu #130 had no catch log maintained in English on board, in
violation of 24 F.S.M.C. 116(1), paragraph 11 of the Agreement, and
paragraph 4(a) of the HMTCs.
Regardless of whose specific responsibility it was to
physically maintain the catch log, in entering into its Agreement with
MMA, Ting Hong agreed to ensure that the catch log would be
properly maintained. 3
That log was not properly maintained. Accordingly, Ting Hong
breached its Agreement with MMA. As a consequence of that breach,
Ting Hong violated 24 F.S.M.C. 501(c), which makes it unlawful for any
person "to violate any provision of, or regulation under, an applicable
domestic-based or foreign fishing agreement entered into pursuant to
[Title 24]." Ting Hong is therefore subject to criminal penalties
pursuant to 24 F.S.M.C. 503(1), which provides that "a person is guilty of
an offense if he commits any act prohibited by section 501 of this
chapter." The terms of paragraphs 11 and 23 of the Agreement,
paragraphs 1(e) and 9(d) of the HMTCs, the conditions of the
Permit,4 and Sections 501(1)(a) and (c)
of Title 24 are not so vague "that men of common intelligence must
necessarily guess at [their] meaning." Laion v. FSM, 1 FSM Intrm.
503, 506-07 (App. 1984). Accordingly, due process requirements do not
preclude Ting Hong's conviction on this count. Ting Hong
also argued, in its defense, that paragraph 23 of the Agreement, which
requires it to ensure compliance, is unenforceable. Ting Hong argued
it was already required to comply with applicable law before it signed its
Agreement with MMA, and therefore its undertaking to comply with the law
fails for lack of consideration. The reason traditionally set forth
for the pre-existing duty rule, as the rule of contract law defendant
refers to is commonly known, is that a promise to perform an act which is
already required supplies no consideration for the return promise or
performance. On that basis, a contract may fail for lack of
consideration. In this case, however, the Court finds that there is
sufficient consideration flowing between the parties to support the
Agreement and all of its provisions. Paragraph 23 of the Agreement
cannot be examined in isolation to determine sufficiency of consideration
for the contract as a whole. Defendant's other undertakings under
the Agreement provide ample consideration to support the contract between
Ting Hong and MMA. For all
the foregoing reasons, the Court found defendant criminally liable under
24 F.S.M.C. 501 and 503 for the fishing violations committed by its
authorized vessel, based on the terms of the Agreement. B. Liability Based on 24
F.S.M.C. 404
The
government next argued that Defendant Ting Hong is directly liable for the
Horng Yih Fwu #130's failure to maintain a catch log in English under 24
F.S.M.C. 404(3)(c). That section states that "(3) Foreign Parties
will: . . . (c) abide by the requirement that no foreign fishing
will be permitted in the exclusive economic zone without a valid and
applicable permit . . . and that all conditions and restrictions of the
permit, or any applicable foreign fishing agreement, are complied with."
Section 404 sets minimum terms and conditions
to be contained in all foreign fishing agreements. Because the April
1994 Agreement between Ting Hong and MMA incorporates these terms and
conditions, and because the Court has found defendant to be directly
liable under 24 F.S.M.C. 501 and 503 for the violation charged based on
breach of that Agreement, the Court need not address whether Section 404
independently places liability for violations of conditions of foreign
fishing agreements directly on the foreign parties to those
agreements. C. Liability Based On Agency
Law Principles
Separate
and apart from liability based on the terms of the Agreement, the
government also argued that defendant is directly liable for the fishing
violations committed by the Horng Yih Fwu #130 under principles of agency
law. From the
facts adduced at trial, the Court found that the Horng Yih Fwu #130 acted
as defendant's agent in conducting fishing operations in the FSM.
The Foreign Fishing Agreement between MMA and Ting Hong established
what the parties believed to be "reasonable terms and conditions" for Ting
Hong's "utilization of fisheries resources" within the EEZ, and
contemplated that Ting Hong would utilize these resources through the
efforts of "the Company's longline fishing vessels," defined in the
Agreement as Ting Hong's "authorized vessels." Ting Hong paid the
requisite fees for issuance of the Horng Yih Fwu #130's Permit, and Ting
Hong's corporate representative signed the application for that Permit.
Paragraph 11 of the Agreement requires each authorized vessel to
maintain a catch log in English on board the vessel, and in paragraph 23,
Ting Hong agreed to ensure that its authorized vessels complied with this
requirement, and all other applicable legal requirements. The Court
finds that maintenance of the daily catch log in English was squarely
within the scope of the vessel's duties as Ting Hong's agent under the
Agreement. Therefore, the vessel's failure to maintain that log was
also an act of Ting Hong's agent. This
Court has held in civil cases that a principal is bound by, and liable
for, the acts of its agent, if those acts are done with actual or apparent
authority from the principal and are within the scope of the agent's
employment. See Bank of the FSM v. O'Sonis, 8 FSM Intrm. 67, 69
(Chk. 1997) (citing Black Micro Corp. v. Santos, 7 FSM Intrm. 311, 315-16
(Pon. 1995)). However, the question of corporate criminal liability,
based on agency law principles, has yet to be addressed in this context in
the FSM.
Where there are no
directly controlling statutes, cases or other authorities within the
Federated States of Micronesia, this Court may look to the law of other
jurisdictions for use in formulating general principles for use within the
FSM. Sohl v. FSM, 4 FSM Intrm. 186, 191 (Pon. 1990) (common law of
the United States has been recognized as an appropriate source of guidance
for courts within the FSM); Semens v. Continental Airlines, Inc., 2 FSM
Intrm. 131, 139-42 (Pon. 1985) (common law decisions of the United States
are an appropriate source of guidance for contract and tort issues
unresolved by FSM statutes, decisions of constitutional courts, or custom
and tradition). The law in the United States is well-settled that a
corporate principal may be held criminally liable for the conduct of its
agent, when the agent acts within the scope of its authority for the
benefit of the principal. See United States v. Twentieth Century Fox
Film Corp., 882 F.2d 656, 660 (2d Cir. 1989); United States v. Demauro,
581 F.2d 50, 54 (3d Cir. 1978). See generally Note, Developments in the
Law ) Corporate
Crime: Regulating Corporate Behavior Through Criminal Sanctions, 92
Harv. L. Rev. 1227, 1249-50 (1979). This Court finds no persuasive
reason not to apply the same agency law principles to corporate defendants
in the FSM. Neither party asserted that any Micronesian principle,
custom or tradition applied to the issue of corporate liability, and the
business activities underlying this prosecution are clearly of an
international, rather than traditional, nature. See Semens, 2 FSM
Intrm. at 140.
Accordingly, the Court found that the violation charged
in Count IV arose from conduct within the scope of the agent's authority,
and that defendant was criminally liable for the conduct of its authorized
vessel. The Court finds defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt
as charged in Count IV, of failing to maintain a catch log in English on
board the vessel in violation of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(a) and 501(1)(c). Count V
Failure to Maintain VHF Radio
Count V
charges defendant with violating 24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(a) and (c), by failing
to maintain on board the vessel a VHF radio capable of receiving radio
frequencies 2.182 KHz and 156.6 MHz (Channel 16, VHF). Paragraph
9(d) of the HMTCs, attached to the Agreement, and incorporated by
reference, states that "(d) a vessel operator shall ensure the continuous
monitoring of the international distress and calling frequency 2182 kHz
(HF), and the international safety and calling frequency 156.8 MHz
(channel 16, VHF-FM) to facilitate communication with the fisheries
management, surveillance and enforcement authorities of a country. . . ."
Pl.'s Ex. F. Marine
Surveillance Officer Wichap testified that upon boarding the vessel for
inspection he went to the wheelhouse. While there, he had an
opportunity to observe the area in which a radio would be located.
He testified that he is familiar with what VHF radios look like and
that nowhere on board did he observe any radio fitting that description.
He did observe what appeared to him to be an old HF radio set in the
wheelhouse. Marine
Surveillance Officer Benjamin also testified that after the Horng Yih Fwu
#130 arrived in Pohnpei, he boarded it and had an opportunity to go to the
bridge/wheelhouse area. He also testified that he is familiar with
the appearance of VHF radios. Like Officer Wichap, he also observed
an old HF type radio on the bridge of the vessel, but did not observe a
VHF radio during his inspection. He also testified that he was on board
the vessel when it left the Kolonia harbor to dump its bycatch and spoiled
fish outside the reef. When he asked the master of the vessel during
that trip if there was a VHF radio on board, by sign language and by
indicating on a pad of paper, the vessel master indicated that there was
not. The
evidence presented by the government on this count was uncontradicted at
trial. The Court found both Officer Wichap's and Officer Benjamin's
testimony credible. In its
defense, Ting Hong made the same argument against liability it did to
Count IV. Defendant cited to the difference in language between
paragraph 9 of the Agreement and paragraph 9(d) of the HMTCs, and argued
that these provisions create uncertainty as to who is actually responsible
for monitoring the required frequencies. Paragraph 9 of the
Agreement requires that "Authorized Vessels" continuously monitor the
international distress frequencies, while paragraph 9(d) of the HMTCs
requires that the "vessel operator" ensure the continuous monitoring of
these frequencies. On this basis, defendant argued that the charge
contained in Count V is ambiguous, and that due process precludes its
conviction. 5 For the
reasons explained above, in the Court's discussion of Count IV, the Court
finds these same arguments unpersuasive with respect to Count V.
First, defendant's duty to ensure that international distress
frequencies are properly monitored arises under paragraph 9 and 23 of its
Agreement with MMA. It was one of the express responsibilities Ting
Hong undertook in order to secure MMA's agreement to permit
its vessels to conduct fishing operations in the FSM. That duty
exists separate and apart from any duty owed by the vessel operator to
monitor these frequencies under the law, whether or not the definition of
"operator" includes Ting Hong, as alleged in the information. The
terms of paragraphs 9 and 23 of the Agreement, paragraphs 1(e) and 9(d) of
the HMTCs, and Sections 501(1)(a) and (c) of Title 24 are not so vague
that men of common intelligence must necessarily guess at their meaning.
Laion, 1 FSM Intrm. at 506-07. Accordingly, due process
requirements do not preclude Ting Hong's conviction on this
count. Second,
as explained above, in reference to Count IV, the acts of the vessel are
the acts of the defendant under principles of agency law. Paragraph
9 of the Agreement requires each authorized vessel to monitor the
international distress frequencies. Monitoring of the proper radio
frequencies was squarely within the scope of the vessel's duties as Ting
Hong's agent under the Agreement. The vessel's failure to monitor
those frequencies was an act of Ting Hong's agent and a violation of the
law, for which Ting Hong is criminally liable. For these
reasons, the Court found defendant guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of a
violation of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(a) and 501(c), as charged in Count V, based
on the vessel's failure to maintain a proper VHF radio on
board. Count VI
Exceeding Authorized Crew
Size
Count VI
charges defendant with exceeding the crew size authorized in its August 9,
1994 Permit, in violation of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(a) and (c). In
support of these charges, the government offered the testimony of Officer
Wichap, Lucio Remoket, and Eugene Pangelinan. Officer Wichap
testified that when he boarded the Horng Yih Fwu #130 on August 24, 1994,
all of the crew members were assembled, and he counted eleven crew members
on board the vessel. Lucio Remoket, Chief of the FSM Division of
Immigration, testified to the adverse effects that flow from vessels
bringing in larger crews than stated on their fishing permits.
Finally, Eugene Pangelinan, Deputy Director of MMA, testified to the
effects of increased crew size on fishing efforts and fishing
efficiency.
Defendant did not challenge Officer Wichap's testimony,
and there is no dispute that the vessel's permitted crew was, in fact,
exceeded. The only issue is the legal sufficiency of defendant's
asserted defense. Defendant argued that this Court should decline to
find defendant guilty, because the wrongful conduct charged is "de
minimis" ) it causes
little or no harm to the interests sought to be protected by Title 24. 6
Defendant cited Model Penal Code §2.12 in support. That provision
would permit a court to dismiss a prosecution for violation of a statutory
provision if the defendant's conduct was merely a technical or trivial
violation of the statute, or if the defendant's conduct did not cause or
threaten the harm the statute was designed to prevent. Defendant
argued that the vessel's increase in crew size, from eight to eleven, was
insignificant in terms of increased fishing efficiency and fishing efforts
) the harms it
contended that the statute seeks to prevent. The
government responded that the Model Penal Code has not been adopted in the
FSM, and that if the Court were to dismiss Count VI, on the grounds of de
minimis conduct, it would be usurping Congress's legislative power.
The government also argued that violations of crew size limits also
leads to other harms, including
concerns relating to immigration control.7 The
Court found the government's points persuasive. The Model Penal Code
is just that ) a
proposed model for statutory enactments relating to crimes, defenses to
crimes and criminal procedure. The FSM Congress has not adopted the
Model Penal Code or any provision comparable to Section 2.12 of that Code.
The Court will not expand the law of the FSM to include a de minimis
defense, particularly in light of the potential harm to FSM fisheries if
numerous other permitted fishing vessels were similarly to violate crew
size requirements, based on the availability of a "de minimis"
defense. Based on
the testimony of Officer Wichap, the Court found that the government had
proven beyond a reasonable doubt that the Horng Yih Fwu #130 had exceeded
the crew size authorized by its Permit. The Court further found that
defendant's "de minimis" defense was not a lawful defense in the FSM to
the crime charged. For these reasons, the Court found defendant
guilty beyond a reasonable doubt of a violation of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(a) and
501(c), as charged in Count VI, based on the vessel's crew size
violation. Count II
Transportation and Possession
of Fish
Finally,
the government charged defendant in Count II with a violation of 24
F.S.M.C. 501(1)(l), the knowing transportation and possession of fish
taken or retained in violation of the law. The evidence to support
this charge came from the testimony of Officers Wichap and Benjamin.
Both officers provided uncontested testimony that when the Horng Yih
Fwu #130 was boarded on August 24, 1994, it had freshly caught fish on
board. These fish were subsequently offloaded in
Pohnpei. 24
F.S.M.C. 501(1)(l) provides that [i]t is unlawful for any person: (l) to knowingly
ship, transport, offer for sale, sell, purchase, import, export, or have
custody, control, or possession of any fish taken or retained in violation
of this Title or any regional fishing treaty, regulation, Permit, foreign
or domestic-based fishing agreement or any applicable law. The government argued that
defendant is liable under Count II based on the violations of Title 24
alleged and proven in Counts IV, V and VI. Any fish taken or
retained by the vessel while these violations were ongoing were fish taken
or retained in violation of Section 501(1)(l). Ting
Hong argued that any such finding would violate the double jeopardy
provision of the FSM Constitution, by allowing multiple punishments for
what it claimed was, in reality, a single offense. Ting Hong also
argued that it did not "knowingly" ship, transport, have custody, control
or possession of fish taken or retained in violation of Title 24, because
the vessel master's knowledge cannot be imputed to it. The
Appellate Division of this Court has ruled that there is no violation of
the double jeopardy clause of the FSM Constitution if each offense charged
requires proof of a fact which the other does not. See Laion, 1 FSM
Intrm. at 524 (adopting the "Blockburger test" from the United
States); Blockburger v. United States, 284
U.S. 299, 304, 52 S. Ct. 180, 182, 76 L. Ed. 306, 309 (1932).
Prosecution for Count II does require proof of a fact that Counts
IV, V and VI do not. Count II requires, in addition to proof of any
of the other offenses charged, proof that the vessel knowingly shipped,
transported or had custody, control or possession of fish taken or
retained in while another violation of Title 24 was occurring. For
example, a vessel could fail to maintain a catch log, or fail to have a
VHF radio, or exceed its authorized crew size, but still not be in
violation of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(l) if it did not take or retain fish while
that violation was ongoing. Accordingly, defendant's prosecution for Count
II does not violate the constitutional prohibition against double
jeopardy. It is also evident from a close reading of the relevant
statutory provisions that Congress contemplated separate punishments for
violations of the various provisions of 24 F.S.M.C. 501. With
respect to the intent requirement of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(l), the government
presented uncontradicted testimony at trial that the Horng Yih Fwu #130
had freshly caught fish on board, when marine surveillance officers
boarded it on August 24, 1994. On that same date, marine
surveillance officers noted violations of catch log, VHF radio and crew
size requirements which apparently had been ongoing. Based on this
evidence, the Court found that these fish were on board the vessel with
the knowledge of the vessel's master and crew, and that they had been
taken or retained while violations of Title 24 were
occurring. As
previously discussed with respect to Count IV, under agency law
principles, the acts of Ting Hong's authorized vessel are the acts of Ting
Hong. Similarly, the vessel master's knowledge is attributable to
Ting Hong.8 The Court finds this to
be a logical extension of the agency law principles discussed with respect
to Count IV. Under the law of the United States, which this Court
may look to for guidance, knowledge held by an agent or employee of a
corporation may be attributed to its principal. See United States v.
A & P Trucking Co., 358 U.S. 121, 79 S. Ct. 203, 3 L. Ed. 2d 165
(1958) (corporations are responsible for the acts and omissions of their
authorized agents acting in the scope of their employment, and a
corporation can be found guilty based on the state of mind of its
employees); United States v. Dye Constr. Co., 510 F.2d (10th Cir. 1975)
(same); Riss & Co. v. United States, 262 F.2d 245 (8th Cir. 1958)
(motor carrier found guilty of knowing and willful violation of maximum
hours regulations based on its drivers' violations); Steere Tank Lines,
Inc., 330 F.2d 719, 721-22 (5th Cir. 1963) (knowledge of employees and
agents is attributable to corporation in prosecution for knowing and
willful violation). For
these reasons, the Court found that the government had proved beyond a
reasonable doubt that defendant, through the actions of its authorized
vessel, knowingly shipped, transported or had custody, control or
possession of fish unlawfully taken or retained within the meaning of 24
F.S.M.C. 501(1)(l), as charged in Count II. Revocation as Exclusive
Remedy
Ting
Hong argues that it cannot be found criminally liable for the violations
charged because cancellation of the Horng Yih Fwu #130's permit is the
exclusive remedy for these violations. In support, Ting Hong cites
paragraph 23 of the Agreement, which states, in part, The Company shall ensure that its Authorized
Vessels comply with the provisions of this Agreement and all applicable
laws and regulations. If an Authorized Vessel engages
in activities in contravention of this Agreement, Titles
18 or 24 of the Code of the Federated States of Micronesia or any other
applicable law, rule or regulation of the Federated States of Micronesia
or any of its States, the Authority may cancel or withdraw the
permit. In entering into its Agreement
with MMA, Ting Hong was on notice that the penalty for violations could
extend beyond revocation of the vessel's permit. Paragraph 23 does
not use the term "exclusive," "sole" or "only" in relation to the remedies
available to the government for violations of the Agreement, and paragraph
23 expressly refers to compliance with Title 24 of the FSM Code.
Section 501 of Title 24 makes it unlawful for any person to violate
any provision of an applicable foreign fishing agreement and Section 503,
in turn, provides for criminal penalties for violations of Section 501.
See 24 F.S.M.C. 501(a) and 501(c), 24 F.S.M.C. 503. On this
basis, the Court found that revocation was not the exclusive remedy for
the violations charged. The
Court further notes that MMA could not agree by contract to insulate a
signatory to a foreign fishing agreement from criminal liability.
Any attempt to do so would conflict with 24 F.S.M.C. 404, which sets
forth minimum terms and conditions all foreign fishing agreements must
contain by law. Sentencing
After
the original trial of this matter, Congress amended Title 24 to reduce the
minimum sentence which may be imposed for violations of that title's
provisions. After the Court convicted defendant on four counts following
retrial, and prior to the sentencing hearing, the parties agreed that
defendant should be sentenced under the amended 24 F.S.M.C. 503(2), which
provides for a minimum fine of $10,000.00 and a maximum fine of
$500,000.00 per violation. Both parties filed written suggestions
regarding the proper sentence to be imposed and argued their positions
before the Court.
Plaintiff requested that the Court impose the maximum
penalty available under law for each count. Defendant requested that
the Court impose the minimum allowable fines under the law for each count;
impose concurrent sentences for Counts II and IV; and suspend the
imposition of any fines and impose a sentence of
probation.
Defendant's request for concurrent sentences was based
on this Court's appellate findings in Laion v. FSM, 1 FSM Intrm. 503 (App.
1984). Because the Court found a plain legislative intent to impose
separate punishments for the violations charged in Counts II and IV, the
Court rejected defendant's proposal that the sentences for these counts
run concurrently. The
Court also rejected defendant's argument for probation. Although it
is indeed within the Court's discretion to impose a sentence of probation
under the terms of 11 F.S.M.C. 1002(3), the Court found that probation was
inappropriate in this case for two reasons. First, Ting Hong had
departed from the FSM. Probation would therefore not permit the FSM to
monitor or control defendant's future behavior. As the government
noted, sentencing Ting Hong to probation would effectively result in no
punishment at all. Second, the Court found that the seriousness of
defendant's violations warranted a more serious sanction. Accordingly, the
Court found that the imposition of a fine for each count was an
appropriate penalty. In
fashioning an appropriate sentence for defendant's violations, the Court
considered the factors enumerated in 24 F.S.M.C. 502(3), incorporated by
reference in 24 F.S.M.C. 503(8). Specifically, the Court considered
the nature, circumstances, extent, and gravity of the prohibited acts
committed, and defendant's degree of culpability and history of prior
offenses. See 24 F.S.M.C. 502(3). The Court also considered whether other
civil penalties or criminal fines had already been imposed for the
specific conduct before the Court, and other such matters as justice might
require, keeping in mind the statutory purpose behind the provisions
defendant was found to have violated.9
Id. Each
violation alleged and proven in this case was a serious one. At the
sentencing hearing on March 25, 1997, the government provided testimony
that defendant's failure to maintain a proper catch log obstructed the
FSM's efforts to preserve, manage and conserve its fishery resources.
It also hindered the efforts of the FSM's Pacific neighbors to do
the same, because the information collected through catch reports is
shared regionally. Second, there was testimony that having no VHF
radio on board capable of monitoring the international distress
frequencies jeopardized the safety of the vessel's crew, and impaired the
FSM's efforts to monitor the vessel's actions in the FSM. In this
case, the lack of an appropriate radio made it difficult for FSM marine
surveillance officers to stop the vessel for inspection. Third,
defendant was apparently warned more than once that the crew size of the
Horng Yih Fwu #130 was in excess of that authorized under its Permit.
Nevertheless, defendant failed to correct that violation. Testimony
was presented that if crew size limits are ignored, the FSM cannot
effectively monitor the number of foreign fishermen in FSM waters.
Fourth, by transporting and exerting control over fish retained in
violation of FSM law, defendant was attempting to profit from FSM marine
resources it had no right to take, because it was ignoring the laws and
regulations passed to ensure the sustainability and renewability of these
resources. In
addition, defendant's conduct in this case is not an isolated incident in
a long record of good corporate citizenship. The government
presented evidence that Ting Hong has an extensive record of criminal
convictions, civil penalties and settlements resulting from allegations of
fishing violations both in the FSM and in the individual FSM states.
See Pl.'s Sentencing Mem. at 6-7 (setting forth a list of such
cases, many involving the same violations for which Ting Hong has been
found guilty in this case). 10 The
government also presented evidence that at the time the offenses in this
case were committed, Ting Hong was one of the FSM's largest harvesters of
FSM fisheries, and reaped a substantial financial benefit from its
utilization of the FSM's marine resources. Finally,
the Court disagreed with defendant's characterization that it was only a
passive participant and played only a minor role in the crimes charged.
See Statement in Mitigation at 2. The Court found that
defendant was not only criminally liable for violations committed by its
vessel, but also [8 FSM
Intrm. 183] culpable for these violations.
The violations which occurred could have been avoided if Ting Hong
had properly instructed the Horng Yih Fwu #130 on how to comply with the
terms of the Agreement, its Permit, and applicable law. For the
foregoing reasons, on March 25, 1997, the Court imposed a fine of
$300,000.00 on each count, for a total fine of $1.2 million. The
Court found this sentence to be commensurate with the seriousness of the
violations charged, and defendant's culpability for these violations,
particularly against the background of defendant's past violations of
Title 24. Conclusion
For the
reasons set forth above the Court found defendant guilty as charged on
each of the four pending counts: three violations of 24 F.S.M.C.
501(1)(a) and (c), and one violation of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(l).
Pursuant to the authority granted in 24 F.S.M.C. 503(2), the Court
sentenced defendant to a fine of $300,000.00 on each count, for a total
fine of $1,200,000.00.
Footnotes:
1. The FSM's August 30,
1994 Information alleges violations of 24 F.S.M.C. 501(1)(a) and
501(1)(c). These were the statutory provisions in effect at the time
of the alleged offenses. 24 F.S.M.C. 501 and 502 have since been
amended. 2. "Person" is further defined at 24 F.S.M.C. 102(34) as "any
individual, corporation, partnership, association, or other entity, the
Government of the Federated States of Micronesia or any of the States, or
any political subdivision thereof, and any foreign government, subdivision
of such government, or entity thereof." 3. Ting Hong argued that Article IV, Section 6 of the Niue
Treaty, to which the FSM is a signatory, recognizes practical limitations
on what governments can require of private parties. Defendant quoted
the following language of that Treaty: "The parties shall, as far as
possible, ensure that foreign fishing arrangements with foreign parties,
including fishing Associations, require the foreign party to take
responsibility for the compliance by its vessels with the terms of any
such arrangement and all applicable laws." Def.'s Post-Trial Br. at
10. Contrary to defendant's argument, the cited language appears
merely to recognize practical limitations on its signatories' bargaining
power with foreign fishing associations. The Agreement between MMA and
Ting Hong successfully requires Ting Hong to accept responsibility for
compliance by its vessels. 5. Defendant argued that paragraph 1(e) of the HMTCs, which
defines vessel operator, excludes Ting Hong from its coverage, by defining
"operator" as: "any person who is in charge of, directs or controls
a vessel, including the owner, charterer and master." Pl.'s Ex.
F. 6. At trial, Deputy Director of MMA, Eugene Pangelinan,
testified that the difference between a crew size of eight and a crew size
of eleven, in terms of fishing effort and fishing efficiency, is minor on
a vessel the size of the Horng Yih Fwu #130. 7. At trial and in its post-trial brief, the government cited
to a previous instance in which a fishing vessel crew member "jumped ship"
in the FSM to engage in illegal harvesting of sea cucumbers, in arguing
that without an accurate count of vessel crew size, enforcement of the
FSM's fisheries and immigration laws becomes far more
difficult.
8. Testimony and was
presented at trial that Ting Hong was itself on notice or had actual
knowledge that the Horng Yih Fwu #130 was carrying crew members in excess
of the number authorized under its Permit. The Court found this
testimony credible. The resources of the sea around Micronesia are
being heavily exploited by the citizens of other nations without benefit
to the people of Micronesia. Catch statistics indicate that certain
reef and highly migratory stocks of fish may be threatened with
irreversible diminution by reckless and excessive exploitation, thus
threatening the material advancement and ultimately the political
viability and stability of Micronesia. The purpose of this title is
to promote economic development and to manage and conserve Micronesia's
vital seas resources by extension of the fishery jurisdiction of
Micronesia out two hundred miles from its shores. 24 F.S.M.C. 101. 10. The Court notes that the conduct challenged in many of
these cited cases occurred after the conduct forming the basis for the
government's criminal Information in this case. The Court has taken
this factor into consideration in evaluating the weight to be given to
Ting Hong's history of violations, and in assessing an appropriate penalty
for the violations in this case.
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