The Endangered Species Act (ESA) § 9(a)(1)(B) makes it unlawful for any person to 'take' an endangered species; 'take' is defined in § 3(19) to include actions such as 'harass' or 'harm.' The Department of the Interior, through the Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS), promulgated a regulation defining 'harm' to mean 'an act which actually kills or injures wildlife,' adding that such an act may include 'significant habitat modification or degradation where it actually kills or injures wildlife by significantly impairing essential behavioral patterns, including breeding, feeding, or sheltering.' 50 C.F.R. § 17.3. The Sweet Home Chapter of Communities for a Great Oregon—a group of small landowners, logging companies, and related businesses operating in areas inhabited by listed species such as the northern spotted owl and the red-cockaded woodpecker—challenged the regulation. They argued the agency exceeded its statutory authority by extending 'take' to cover habitat modification that was not directed at individual animals. The district court granted summary judgment to the Secretary of the Interior (Bruce Babbitt), upholding the rule. The D.C. Circuit reversed, concluding that 'take' traditionally referred to direct actions (e.g., hunting, capturing) and that the rule's habitat-modification clause was inconsistent with the statute. The Supreme Court granted certiorari to resolve whether the regulation permissibly construed the ESA.
Does the Secretary of the Interior permissibly interpret the ESA's prohibition on 'take' by defining 'harm' to include significant habitat modification or degradation that actually kills or injures listed wildlife?
Under the ESA, 'take' means 'to harass, harm, pursue, hunt, shoot, wound, kill, trap, capture, or collect, or to attempt to engage in any such conduct.' 16 U.S.C. § 1532(19). The Interior Department's regulation interprets 'harm' to mean 'an act which actually kills or injures wildlife,' including 'significant habitat modification or degradation where it actually kills or injures wildlife by significantly impairing essential behavioral patterns, including breeding, feeding or sheltering.' 50 C.F.R. § 17.3. When a statutory term is ambiguous and the agency's construction is reasonable, courts defer to that interpretation under Chevron U.S.A. Inc. v. Natural Resources Defense Council, Inc.
Yes. The Supreme Court held that the Secretary's definition of 'harm' to include certain forms of habitat modification that actually kill or injure wildlife is a permissible construction of the ESA. The Court reversed the D.C. Circuit and upheld the regulation.
Text and structure: The Court, per Justice Stevens, concluded that the term 'harm' in the ESA's definition of 'take' is ambiguous and not limited to direct, affirmative acts aimed at individual animals. Dictionary definitions and ordinary usage support reading 'harm' to encompass indirectly caused injury or death. The inclusion of terms like 'harass' and 'harm' alongside more direct verbs (e.g., 'hunt,' 'kill') indicates Congress contemplated a broader protective sweep than only face-to-face takings. The statute's overall purpose—to conserve endangered and threatened species—supports giving 'harm' a scope sufficient to address indirect but lethal or injurious human activities. Legislative history and congressional ratification: The Court highlighted the 1982 ESA amendments adding 'incidental take' permits under § 10, which allow authorization for otherwise prohibited takings that occur incidental to, and not the purpose of, lawful activities. Congress enacted these provisions with knowledge of the FWS's then-extant 'harm' definition that expressly included habitat modification where it actually kills or injures wildlife, signaling acceptance of that interpretation. This ratification weighed heavily in favor of the regulation's validity. Chevron deference: Finding ambiguity at Chevron step one, the Court proceeded to step two and held the FWS's interpretation reasonable in light of statutory text, purpose, and legislative context. The Court rejected the argument that canons like noscitur a sociis require 'harm' to be confined to direct actions akin to 'hunt' or 'kill.' It also declined to apply the rule of lenity merely because the ESA contains criminal penalties; lenity is a last resort for 'grievous ambiguity,' which was not present after considering text, structure, purpose, and history. Causation and limits: The regulation requires that habitat modification 'actually' kill or injure wildlife; mere environmental alteration, without lethal or injurious effects, does not constitute 'harm.' Justice O'Connor's concurrence emphasized the necessity of proximate cause—there must be a sufficiently direct causal link between the modification and the injury—to cabined liability and ensure the regulation does not sweep too broadly. Dissent: Justice Scalia, joined by the Chief Justice and Justice Thomas, argued that 'take' is a term of art denoting actions directed at particular animals and that 'harm' must be read in that light. He also advocated for the rule of lenity given the statute's criminal applications. The majority rejected these views as inconsistent with text, purpose, and congressional ratification.
Sweet Home is a foundational ESA case establishing that 'take' reaches certain indirect harms—specifically, habitat modifications that actually kill or injure protected wildlife. For law students, the case demonstrates Chevron's operation, how statutory purpose and subsequent congressional action inform interpretation, and how courts balance textual canons against agency expertise. It also underscores practical limits through causation requirements and illuminates the regulatory architecture surrounding incidental take permits and habitat conservation planning.
Babbitt v. Sweet Home firmly establishes that the ESA's prohibition on 'take' reaches certain indirect harms, validating a regulatory approach that treats lethal or injurious habitat modifications as actionable 'harm.' By grounding its decision in statutory text, purpose, and congressional ratification, the Court confirmed that the ESA's protective reach matches the realities of species conservation, where indirect human activities can be as destructive as direct ones.