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No. 10080079
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Andrew Salas v. United States
No. 10080079 · Decided August 27, 2024
No. 10080079·Ninth Circuit · 2024·
FlawFinder last updated this page Apr. 2, 2026
Case Details
Court
United States Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
Decided
August 27, 2024
Citation
No. 10080079
Disposition
See opinion text.
Full Opinion
FOR PUBLICATION
UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS
FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT
ANDREW SABLAN SALAS, No. 22-16936
Plaintiff-Appellant, D.C. No. 1:22-cv-
00008
v.
UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, OPINION
Defendant-Appellee.
Appeal from the United States District Court
for the District of the Northern Mariana Islands
Ramona V. Manglona, Chief District Judge, Presiding
Argued and Submitted February 12, 2024
Honolulu, Hawaii
Filed August 27, 2024
Before: Richard A. Paez, Milan D. Smith, Jr., and Lucy H.
Koh, Circuit Judges.
Opinion by Judge Koh;
Concurrence by Judge Paez
2 SALAS V. USA
SUMMARY *
Animal Welfare Act
The panel affirmed the district court’s dismissal of a
complaint brought by a resident of the Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands (“CNMI”) alleging that the
Covenant to Establish a Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands in Political Union with the United States of
America (the “Covenant”) precludes the application to the
CNMI of a federal cockfighting prohibition.
The Animal Welfare Act (“AWA”), 7 U.S.C. § 2156, as
amended in 1976, prohibited animal fighting, with an
exception that if a state or territory’s laws authorized
cockfighting, then cockfighting in that state or territory was
not federally prohibited. Because cockfighting was lawful
in both Guam and the CNMI under each jurisdiction’s own
laws, cockfighting was not federally prohibited there until a
2018 Amendment to the AWA, which prohibited
cockfighting in every United States jurisdiction.
The panel held that because 7 U.S.C. § 2156 existed on
January 9, 1978, Covenant § 502—which determines the
applicability of laws of the United States in existence on
January 9, 1978, and subsequent amendments to such laws—
governs whether 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment
are applicable to the CNMI. Applying § 502, the panel held
that because 7 U.S.C. § 2156 was in existence when the
Covenant took effect on January 9, 1978, and was applicable
*
This summary constitutes no part of the opinion of the court. It has
been prepared by court staff for the convenience of the reader.
SALAS V. USA 3
to Guam and to the States generally, 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and its
2018 Amendment are applicable to the CNMI.
The panel held that Covenant § 105—which determines
the applicability of laws enacted after January 9, 1978—does
not govern the applicability of amendments to statutes in
existence on January 9, 1978, and that Covenant § 502 alone
governs. However, even if Covenant § 105 governs, 7
U.S.C. § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment would still apply to
the CNMI because they are “applicable to the several States”
and do not intrude impermissibly upon the internal affairs of
the CNMI.
Concurring in the result, Judge Paez disagreed that
Covenant § 502 alone governs whether 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and
its 2018 Amendment apply to the CNMI, and would hold
that Covenant § 105 also applies to amendments to laws in
existence on January 9, 1978. Even so, however, plaintiff
failed to demonstrate that 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and its 2018
Amendment impermissibly intrude upon the internal affairs
of the CNMI.
COUNSEL
Joseph E. Horey (argued), Banes Horey Berman & Miller
LLC, Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands, for Plaintiff-
Appellant.
Anne Murphy (argued), Trial Attorney, United States
Department of Justice, Washington, D.C.; Abby C. Wright
and John S. Koppel, Appellate Staff Attorneys; Shawn N.
Anderson, United States Attorney; Brian M. Boynton,
Principal Deputy Assistant Attorney General; Civil
Division, United States Department of Justice, Washington,
4 SALAS V. USA
D.C.; Jessica F. Cruz and Mikel W. Schwab, Assistant
United States Attorneys, Office of the United States
Attorney, Hagåtña, Guam; for Defendant-Appellee.
Jessica L. Blome, Greenfire Law PC, Berkeley, California,
for Amici Curiae Animal Wellness Action, Animal Wellness
Foundation, and The Center for a Humane Economy.
OPINION
KOH, Circuit Judge:
Andrew Sablan Salas (“Salas”), a resident of the
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (“CNMI”),
filed suit seeking a declaratory judgment stating that the
Covenant to Establish a Commonwealth of the Northern
Mariana Islands in Political Union with the United States of
America (the “Covenant”), Pub. L. No. 94-241, 90 Stat. 263
(1976), precludes the application to the CNMI of a federal
cockfighting prohibition set forth in 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and its
2018 Amendment. Salas also sought an injunction barring
the prohibition’s enforcement. In response, the government
filed a motion to dismiss. Finding that the federal
cockfighting prohibition applied to the CNMI pursuant to the
Covenant, the district court dismissed the complaint with
prejudice. Salas appeals that decision. We conclude that 7
U.S.C. § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment apply to the CNMI.
Accordingly, we affirm.
SALAS V. USA 5
LEGAL BACKGROUND
I. The Covenant to Establish a Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands in Political Union with
the United States.
After Japan’s defeat in World War II, the United Nations
Trusteeship Council established the Trust Territory of the
Pacific Islands, encompassing most of the islands of
Micronesia formerly held by Japan, including the CNMI.
United States ex rel. Richards v. Guerrero, 4 F.3d 749, 751
(9th Cir. 1993). The United Nations appointed the United
States as the administering authority of the Trust Territory
pursuant to a trusteeship agreement. Id. The agreement
imposed on the United States a duty to “promote the
development of the inhabitants of the trust territory toward
self-government or independence.” Id. In 1972, the United
States entered formal negotiations with the Northern
Mariana Islands as part of this obligation. Id.
In 1975, negotiations between the United States and the
Northern Mariana Islands concluded with the signing of the
Covenant. Id. The Covenant established “a self-governing
commonwealth for the Northern Mariana Islands within the
American political system” and “define[d] the future
relationship between the Northern Mariana Islands and the
United States.” Pub. L. No. 94-241, 90 Stat. 263, 264 (1976).
The Covenant was unanimously endorsed by the Northern
Mariana Islands legislature on February 20, 1975, and
approved by 78.8% of the people of the Northern Mariana
Islands voting in a plebiscite held later that year. Id. at 263.
The Covenant reflected the Northern Mariana Islands’
“desire for political union with the United States” which “for
over twenty years” had been “clearly expressed” through
“public petition and referendum.” Id. at 264.
6 SALAS V. USA
In 1976, Congress approved and enacted the Covenant
into law, the main provisions of which became effective on
January 9, 1978. Proclamation 4534, 42 Fed. Reg. 56,593
(Oct. 24, 1977). Today, “the authority of the United States
towards the CNMI arises solely under the Covenant.”
Hillblom v. United States, 896 F.2d 426, 429 (9th Cir. 1990).
Because the Covenant created a “unique” relationship
between the United States and the CNMI, its provisions
alone define the boundaries of those relations. N. Mariana
Islands v. Atalig, 723 F.2d 682, 684–87 (9th Cir. 1984).
The Covenant provides that certain provisions of the
United States Constitution and certain United States statutes
apply to the CNMI. For those laws not explicitly addressed,
the Covenant provides formulae for determining whether a
federal law will apply to the CNMI. Three sections of the
Covenant are at issue in this case: § 103, § 105, and § 502.
These sections outline which federal laws in existence on
January 9, 1978, and which federal laws enacted thereafter
apply to the CNMI.
Section 103 of the Covenant provides:
The people of the Northern Mariana Islands
will have the right of local self-government
and will govern themselves with respect to
internal affairs in accordance with a
Constitution of their own adoption.
Section 105 of the Covenant, which governs laws
enacted after January 9, 1978, provides, in relevant part:
The United States may enact legislation . . .
which will be applicable to the Northern
Mariana Islands, but if such legislation
SALAS V. USA 7
cannot also be made applicable to the several
States[,] the Northern Mariana Islands must
be specifically named therein for it to become
effective in the Northern Mariana Islands.
Section 502 of the Covenant, which governs the
application of laws in effect on January 9, 1978, provides:
(a) The following laws of the United States in
existence on the effective date of this Section
and subsequent amendments to such laws
will apply to the Northern Mariana Islands,
except as otherwise provided in this
Covenant:
(1) those laws which provide federal services
and financial assistance programs and the
federal banking laws as they apply to
Guam . . . .
(2) those laws not described in paragraph
(1) which are applicable to Guam and which
are of general application to the several States
as they are applicable to the several States;
and
(3) those laws not described in paragraph
(1) or (2) which are applicable to the Trust
Territory of the Pacific Islands, but not their
subsequent amendments unless specifically
made applicable to the Northern Mariana
Islands . . . .
Thus, under § 502(a)(2), a federal law that was both
“applicable to Guam” and “applicable to the several States”
on January 9, 1978, applies to the CNMI.
8 SALAS V. USA
To facilitate the transition of the Northern Mariana
Islands to its new political status, the Covenant established
the Commission on Federal Laws (“Commission”) to survey
the laws of the United States and make recommendations to
Congress as to which laws should be made applicable or
inapplicable to the CNMI and to what extent and in what
manner. Covenant § 504; Micronesian Telecomms. Corp. v.
NLRB, 820 F.2d 1097, 1101 (9th Cir. 1987). In formulating
its recommendations, the Commission considered the
policies embedded in the law and the provisions and
purposes of the Covenant. Covenant § 504. The Commission
published its recommendations as interim reports to
Congress until the Trust Territory’s termination. Id.
In its second interim report, the Commission reported
that it examined the chapters of Title 7 of the United States
Code, including the chapter containing 7 U.S.C. § 2156, and
found “[n]o significant problems in the application of these
chapters to the Northern Mariana Islands.” Commission on
Federal Laws, Welcoming America’s Newest
Commonwealth: The Second Interim Report of the Northern
Mariana Islands Commission on Federal Laws to the
Congress of the United States 229 (1985) (“Second Interim
Report”).
II. The Animal Welfare Act and the Agriculture
Improvement Act of 2018.
The Animal Welfare Act (“AWA”), established in 1966,
sets forth standards for the humane care and treatment of
animals. Pub. L. No. 89-544, 80 Stat. 350 (1966). In 1976,
Congress amended the Animal Welfare Act to prohibit
animal fighting. Pub. L. No. 94-279, 90 Stat. 417 (1976).
That amendment, codified as 7 U.S.C. § 2156, is the
pertinent version of § 2156 at issue here.
SALAS V. USA 9
Section 2156 provided that “[i]t shall be unlawful for any
person to knowingly sponsor or exhibit an animal in any
animal fighting venture to which any animal was moved in
interstate or foreign commerce.” 7 U.S.C. § 2156(a) (1976).
Section 2156(d) provided an exception stating that the
prohibition of animal fighting ventures “shall be unlawful
with respect to fighting ventures involving live birds only if
the fight is to take place in a State where it would be in
violation of the laws thereof.” Id. § 2156(d). “State” was
defined as “any State of the United States, the District of
Columbia, the Commonwealth of Puerto Rico, and any
territory or possession of the United States.” Id.
§ 2156(g)(4). Therefore, after 1976, cockfighting was
federally unlawful in a particular state or territory only if that
state or territory also deemed cockfighting unlawful. In other
words, if a state or territory’s laws authorized cockfighting,
then cockfighting in that state or territory was not federally
prohibited.
Because cockfighting was lawful in both Guam and the
CNMI under each jurisdiction’s own laws, cockfighting was
not federally prohibited there under the AWA.
In 2018, Congress passed the Agriculture Improvement
Act of 2018 (“AIA”), which amended the AWA. Section
12616 of the AIA, hereafter the “2018 Amendment,”
eliminated the cockfighting exception contained in 7 U.S.C.
§ 2156(d). Pub. L. No. 115-334, 132 Stat. 4490 (2018). The
ultimate effect of the 2018 Amendment was “the prohibition
of animal fighting ventures, including live-bird fighting, in
every United States jurisdiction.” Club Gallístico de Puerto
Rico Inc. v. United States, 414 F. Supp. 3d 191, 200 (D.P.R.
2019) (citations omitted), aff’d sub nom. Hernández-Gotay
v. United States, 985 F.3d 71 (1st Cir.), cert. denied sub nom.
Ortiz-Diaz v. United States, 142 S. Ct. 336 (2021).
10 SALAS V. USA
Thus, after the AIA went into effect, cockfighting was
federally prohibited in both Guam and the CNMI.
FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
Until 2019, when the AIA prohibited cockfighting
completely, Salas had been regularly and actively involved
in cockfighting. After the passage of the AIA, Salas filed suit
in the U.S. District Court for the Northern Mariana Islands,
seeking a declaratory judgment stating that 7 U.S.C. § 2156
did not apply to the CNMI in 1978, and in turn, that the 2018
Amendment (eliminating the cockfighting exception) did
not apply to the CNMI. Salas also sought an injunction
prohibiting the U.S. government from enforcing those laws
in the CNMI.
In his complaint, Salas advanced three legal theories as
to why the Covenant precluded the application of the
AWA’s federal prohibition on cockfighting to the CNMI.
First, Salas argued that because § 2156 was not a law of
general application in 1978, it did not apply to the CNMI
under Covenant § 502. Second, Salas asserted that § 2156
did not apply to the CNMI under § 105 because it could not
be made applicable to the several states. Finally, Salas
contended that the 2018 Amendment intrudes into the
internal affairs of the CNMI in violation of Covenant § 103,
which preserves the CNMI’s right of local self-government.
The government moved to dismiss Salas’s complaint
with prejudice under Federal Rule of Civil Procedure
12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim. The district court granted
the government’s motion with prejudice. In its decision, the
district court noted that § 502 “was the pertinent section of
the Covenant to determine whether § 2156 applies to the
CNMI” because § 2156 existed prior to 1978. Additionally,
because the parties “agreed in their briefs and at the hearing
SALAS V. USA 11
that section 502 of the Covenant governs, as opposed to
section 105,” the district court found it unnecessary to
address whether § 105 of the Covenant precludes the
application of § 2156 to the CNMI. For the reasons below,
the district court determined that § 2156 applied to the
CNMI because § 2156 was applicable to Guam and the
several states as required by § 502 of the Covenant.
First, the district court found that § 2156 “was applicable
to Guam” in 1978, explaining that although the § 2156(d)
exception allowed cockfighting to remain legal in Guam, the
lack of a cockfighting prohibition in Guam did not mean that
the statute was not “applicable to Guam.” The district court
noted that Salas’s argument that § 2156 needed to impose a
federal cockfighting prohibition in Guam for it to apply to
Guam under Covenant § 502, was “very similar to the
government’s unsuccessful argument” in Northern Mariana
Islands v. United States, 279 F.3d 1070 (9th Cir. 2002),
where the Ninth Circuit defined “applicable to Guam” to
mean “applicable within” and “applicable with respect to”
Guam. Because the Ninth Circuit’s definition of “applicable
to Guam” foreclosed “Plaintiff’s proposed definition of
‘apply,’” the district court found that § 2156 applies to
Guam.
Next, the district court found that § 2156 was applicable
to the several States under Covenant § 502. Because the
Ninth Circuit in Northern Mariana Islands defined the
phrase “applicable to Guam” to mean “applicable with
respect to” and “applicable within” Guam,” the district court
held that § 502’s phrase “general application to the several
States” also meant “applicable within” and “applicable with
respect to” the several States, as principles of statutory
interpretation require a court to presume that the same words
12 SALAS V. USA
and phrases have the same meaning when used in different
parts of the same statute.
Finally, the district court determined that Covenant
§ 103 did not preclude the 2018 Amendment’s application to
the CNMI because § 502 governed, as opposed to § 105.
Because Covenant § 502 governed, the requirement under
§ 103, that a federal law not intrude on the CNMI’s internal
affairs, was not implicated. Even if such a requirement were
implicated, the district court explained that the federal
interests in regulating interstate or foreign commerce,
protecting the nation’s values, and controlling the interstate
spread of the avian flu outweighed any degree of intrusion.
The district court declined to give Salas leave to amend his
complaint, noting that Salas’s request to plead more facts
regarding the importance of cockfighting in the CNMI was
unnecessary because the district court had presumed
cockfighting regulation to be an internal affair of the CNMI.
Additionally, leave to amend would be futile because the
federal interests outweighed any intrusion caused by § 2156
and its 2018 Amendment. The district court thus dismissed
Salas’s complaint with prejudice. Salas timely appealed.
STANDARD OF REVIEW
“We review de novo the dismissal of a complaint for
failure to state a claim.” Telesaurus VPC, LLC v. Power, 623
F.3d 998, 1003 (9th Cir. 2010).
DISCUSSION
The issue in this case is whether the district court
properly dismissed Salas’s complaint because the federal
cockfighting prohibition, set forth in 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and its
2018 Amendment, applies to the CNMI. To address this
question, we must first determine whether Covenant § 105
SALAS V. USA 13
or § 502 governs. For the reasons below, we hold that
Covenant § 502 governs. However, under either section of
the Covenant, 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment
apply to the CNMI.
I. The Covenant’s plain language establishes that
§ 502 governs.
The applicability of a federal law to the CNMI is guided
by whether § 502 or § 105 of the Covenant governs. See
Richards, 4 F.3d at 756. “When interpreting the meaning of
[a] statute, we look first to its plain language.” Infuturia
Glob. Ltd. v. Sequus Pharms., Inc., 631 F.3d 1133, 1137 (9th
Cir. 2011) (internal quotation marks omitted). According to
its terms, Covenant § 502 determines the applicability of
“laws of the United States in existence on [January 9, 1978]
and subsequent amendments to such laws.” Covenant
§ 502(a). “Section 105 governs the application of federal
laws enacted after that date.” Richards, 4 F.3d at 754. We
have held that the language of the Covenant “is clear and
unambiguous.” Micronesian Telecomms. Corp., 820 F.2d at
1101. “If the statutory language is plain, we must enforce the
statute according to its terms.” Rainero v. Archon Corp., 844
F.3d 832, 837 (9th Cir. 2016) (citing Jimenez v. Quarterman,
555 U.S. 113, 118 (2009)). Here, § 2156 existed on January
9, 1978. See Pub. L. No. 94-279, 90 Stat. 421 (1976).
Covenant § 502 thus governs whether § 2156 and its 2018
Amendment apply to the CNMI.
II. Under Covenant § 502, 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and its 2018
Amendment apply to the CNMI.
Because § 502 of the Covenant governs, the test to
determine whether 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment
apply to the CNMI is whether that law was “applicable to
Guam” and was “of general application to the several States”
14 SALAS V. USA
prior to January 9, 1978. Covenant § 502(a)(2). Under this
framework, we hold that § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment
apply to the CNMI for the reasons below.
Salas argues that § 2156 was not “applicable to Guam”
under the first prong of § 502 because cockfighting was legal
under Guam’s laws in 1978. In other words, because
§ 2156(d) exempted Guam from § 2156’s animal fighting
prohibition, the cockfighting prohibition did not “apply to
Guam.” As the district court noted, however, Salas appears
to misconstrue what it means for a law to be “applicable to
Guam.” According to Salas, “[t]he plain meaning of ‘apply’
is to have some practical effect, and a law imposing a ban
that bans nothing in a given place has no more practical
effect in that place than a law that is never enacted in the first
place.” Salas’s theory, however, contradicts the language of
§ 2156 and Ninth Circuit precedent.
First, the language of § 2156 clearly states that the law
was meant to apply in every state and territory, including the
CNMI. When interpreting a statute, we “look to the
particular statutory language at issue, as well as the language
and design of the statute as a whole.” K Mart Corp. v.
Cartier, Inc., 486 U.S. 281, 291 (1988); see JPMCC 2007-
C1 Grasslawn Lodging, LLC v. Transwest Resort Props. Inc.
(In re Transwest Resport Props., Inc.), 881 F.3d 724, 727
(9th Cir. 2018). Section 2156 made it a federal offense to
sponsor or exhibit an animal in any “animal fighting
venture” in which an animal was moved in interstate
commerce, 7 U.S.C. §§ 2156(a), (e) (1976), including “live
bird[s],” id. §§ 2156(g)(1), (4). Interstate commerce was
defined as “any movement between any place in a State to
any place in another State or between places in the same
State through another State.” Id. § 2156(g)(2). In turn, State
meant “any State of the United States . . . and any territory
SALAS V. USA 15
or possession of the United States.” Id. § 2156(g)(4). Salas
acknowledges that Guam falls under the definition of “State”
because it is a U.S. territory. Thus, Salas concedes that
§ 2156 writ large was the law in Guam. Even without this
concession, a statute that references the United States and its
territories and possessions is a strong indication that it is
meant to apply in the CNMI. Misch ex rel. Est. of Misch v.
Zee Enters., Inc., 879 F.2d 628, 631 (9th Cir. 1989) (“[T]he
Act itself strongly indicates that it is meant to apply in the
CNMI by expressly barring relief to those seamen who
[worked] . . . ‘in the territorial waters or waters overlaying
the continental shelf of a nation other than the United States,
its territories, or possessions.’” (quoting 46 U.S.C. App.
§ 688(b)(1))).
Second, we rejected a theory like the one Salas advances
in Northern Mariana Islands v. United States. There, the
government argued that amendments to the federal Quiet
Title Act that exempted the States, but not Guam, from the
act’s statute of limitations were not “applicable to Guam”
under Covenant § 502. 279 F.3d at 1072–74. We rejected the
government’s theory, explaining that “[t]he Covenant’s
framers considered the term ‘applicable to Guam’ to mean
not only ‘applicable with respect to’ Guam, but also to mean
‘applicable within’ Guam.” Id. at 1073. As a result, that “the
amendments themselves did not exempt Guam from [the
act’s] statute of limitations” did not mean the amendments
were not applicable to Guam within the meaning of
Covenant § 502(a)(2). Id. at 1073–74. “That is, the
amendments, regardless of their treatment of Guam, are law
within Guam.” Id. at 1073. We thus rejected understanding
“applicable to Guam” in Covenant § 502 to mean that a
federal law must have a practical effect in Guam for the law
to apply. Therefore, § 2156(d) was applicable to Guam in
16 SALAS V. USA
1978, satisfying the first prong (“applicable to Guam”) of
§ 502’s two-part test.
For the second prong (“of general application to the
several States”), Salas asserts the same theory. Specifically,
Salas argues that § 2156 was not of “general application to
the several states” because it was applicable to the states
“only variably and selectively,” “depending on whether
cockfighting was or was not already prohibited by their own
laws,” In interpreting statutes, “the same words or phrases
are presumed to have the same meaning when used in
different parts of a statute.” Prieto-Romero v. Clark, 534
F.3d 1053, 1061 n.7 (9th Cir. 2008) (internal quotation
marks omitted). Thus, the meaning of “application to Guam”
should be consistent with the meaning of “application to the
several States.” Because application to Guam is understood
to mean “applicable with respect to” and “applicable within”
Guam, it follows that “application to the several States”
likewise means “applicable with respect to” and “applicable
within” the several States. See N. Mariana Islands, 279 F.3d
at 1073. Therefore, § 2156 “was of general application to the
several states” for the same reasons that § 2156 was
“applicable to Guam,” as discussed above.
Because § 2156 was in existence on January 9, 1978, and
was applicable to Guam and to the States generally, § 2156
and its 2018 Amendment prohibiting cockfighting are
applicable to the CNMI under Covenant § 502. 1 United
1
Our conclusion is consistent with the Commission on Federal Laws’s
own determination that Title 7 of the U.S. Code, which includes § 2156,
is applicable to the CNMI. Second Interim Report 299. This factor
“point[s] unequivocally in favor of [the law at issue] applying in the
Commonwealth.” Misch, 879 F.2d at 630 (holding that the Jones Act
applied to the CNMI based, in part, on the Commission on Federal
Laws’s conclusion that the act applied to the CNMI).
SALAS V. USA 17
States v. Dela Cruz, 358 F.3d 623, 625 (9th Cir. 2004)
(where other conditions of § 502 were met, “[t]he only
inquiry for this court is therefore whether [the challenged
law] was in existence on [January 9, 1978]”).
III. Covenant § 105 does not govern the applicability
of amendments to statutes in existence on January
9, 1978.
In the district court, Salas argued that either (1) both
§ 2156 and its 2018 Amendment were governed by
Covenant § 502, or (2) the 2018 Amendment was “a new law
enacted in 2018” that was instead governed by Covenant
§ 105. As we have explained, § 2156 and its 2018
Amendment are governed by § 502; Salas’s argument in the
alternative is incorrect. Now on appeal, however, Salas
contends that Covenant § 105 must also govern the
applicability of the 2018 Amendment—indeed, all
amendments to statutes in existence on January 9, 1978—
notwithstanding the applicability of § 502. We disagree.
First, “in the absence of strong evidence that Congress
intended a different meaning,” “we must interpret statutory
terms by their plain meaning.” N. Mariana Islands, 279 F.3d
at 1072 (citing Amoco Prod. Co. v. Village of Gambell, 480
U.S. 531, 548 (1987)). The language of the Covenant, which
is “clear and unambiguous,” Micronesian Telecomms.
Corp., 820 F.2d at 1101, states that § 502 governs the
applicability to the CNMI of “laws of the United States in
existence on [January 9, 1978] and subsequent amendments
to such laws.” Salas offers no evidence, let alone “strong
evidence,” that Congress intended § 502 to possess a
meaning different from its plain meaning. At oral argument,
Salas could point to no case, nor does our research reveal
any, in which the applicability of a federal law was governed
18 SALAS V. USA
by both § 105 and § 502. We thus interpret § 502 consistent
with its plain meaning.
Second, consistent with the statutory language, Ninth
Circuit precedent also holds that § 502 governs the
applicability of amendments to laws that existed on January
9, 1978, even if the amendments were enacted after that date.
In holding the 1986 Quiet Title Act amendments applicable
to the CNMI under Covenant § 502 in Northern Mariana
Islands, as noted above, we explained that “the 1986
amendments became part of the Quiet Title Act.” 279 F.3d
at 1073. As a result, because the Quiet Title Act itself was
applicable to the CNMI under § 502, so too were the 1986
amendments. Id. at 1073–74. 2
2
The concurrence asserts that Northern Mariana Islands does not
control the resolution of this issue because the court in that case was not
presented with the argument that both § 105 and § 502 governed. In other
words, the concurrence would have us disregard Northern Mariana
Islands’s interpretation and application of § 502 because the court did
not consider § 105 when it analyzed § 502. We respectfully disagree. In
determining that the amendments at issue met § 502’s requirements, the
Northern Mariana Islands court reasoned that § 502 encompasses
amendments of laws that are applicable to the CNMI as amendments
become part of the original law. We remain bound by this well-reasoned
analysis. See Cetacean Cmty. v. Bush, 386 F.3d 1169, 1173 (9th Cir.
2004) (“[W]here a panel confronts an issue germane to the eventual
resolution of the case, and resolves it after reasoned consideration in a
published opinion, that ruling becomes the law of the circuit, regardless
of whether doing so is necessary in some strict logical sense.”); Marshall
Naify Revocable Tr. v. United States, 672 F.3d 620, 627 (9th Cir. 2012)
(“[W]e treat reasoning central to a panel’s decision as binding later
panels.”). In other words, Northern Mariana Islands “squarely
address[ed]” the issue whether § 502 encompasses amendments, even if
it did not consider a potential counterargument. United States v. Kirilyuk,
29 F.4th 1128, 1134 (9th Cir. 2022) (quoting Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507
U.S. 619, 631 (1993)).
SALAS V. USA 19
Third, we note that the Commission on Federal Laws,
tasked with assisting Congress in determining the
applicability of federal laws to the CNMI, also understood
§ 105 to govern only those laws enacted after January 9,
1978, that are not amendments to statutes enacted prior to
that date. Second Interim Report 30–31 (noting that
“[d]etermining the applicability to the Northern Mariana
Islands of statutes enacted after January 9, 1978, that are not
amendments of statutes enacted prior to that date is relatively
simple” and is accomplished by applying the “rule of
statutory construction” in § 105). 3
Finally, Salas’s argument overlooks the purpose of § 502
and § 105. Section 502 was designed to establish a
“workable body of law” for the CNMI upon its inception as
a self-governing commonwealth on January 9, 1978. To
Approve “The Covenant to Establish a Commonwealth of
the Northern Mariana Islands,” and for Other Purposes:
Hearing on H.J. Res. 549, 550 and 547 Before the Subcomm.
3
The concurrence makes much of the fact that a portion of the Second
Interim Report was superseded by the Commission on Federal Laws’s
Final Report. As an initial matter, our court has continued to rely on the
Second Interim Report’s recommendations, which in turn necessarily
rely on the analysis contained in the portions of the report that were
superseded, even after the publication of the Final Report. See, e.g., Fang
Lin Ai v. United States, 809 F.3d 503, 513–14 (9th Cir. 2015). At least
one other court of appeals, too, has found the Second Interim Report to
be a helpful tool in interpreting the Covenant notwithstanding the
existence of the Final Report. See Xianli Zhang v. United States, 640
F.3d 1358, 1373–74 (Fed. Cir. 2011). In any event, we need not resort to
this history because, as explained above, the Covenant’s language is
clear. See Church of Scientology of Cal. v. U.S. Dep’t of Just., 612 F.2d
417, 421 (9th Cir. 1979) (“[I]f the language of a statute is clear and there
is no ambiguity, then there is no need to ‘interpret’ the language by
resorting to the legislative history or other extrinsic aids.”).
20 SALAS V. USA
on Territorial & Insular Affs. of the H. Comm. on Interior &
Insular Affs., 94th Cong. 388 (1975). On the other hand,
§ 105 granted Congress the right to enact laws applicable to
the CNMI post-inception so long as the laws also applied to
the several States or otherwise named the CNMI
specifically. Id. at 630–32. To hold that both § 105 and § 502
govern the applicability of amendments to pre-existing
federal laws would eliminate this distinction. Collins v. Gee
W. Seattle LLC, 631 F.3d 1001, 1005 (9th Cir. 2011) (“[W]e
may not read a statute’s plain language to produce a result
contrary to the statute’s purpose or lead to unreasonable
results.” (internal quotation marks omitted)).
Against this evidence, Salas and the concurrence point to
§ 502(a)’s preamble stating that laws and subsequent
amendments to those laws apply to the Northern Mariana
Islands “except as otherwise provided in this Covenant.”
Under Salas’s interpretation, § 502 is subordinate to § 105,
notwithstanding § 502’s clear instruction to treat
amendments to laws that existed on the Covenant’s effective
date the same as those laws themselves. We find this
contention unpersuasive. Salas’s argument hinges on the
premise that “subsequent amendments” to laws in effect on
the Covenant’s effective date do not automatically apply to
the Northern Mariana Islands but rather must meet § 105’s
requirements, just like entirely new legislation. Section
502(a)’s vague reference to “except as otherwise provided in
this Covenant” is insufficient evidence in favor of Salas’s
position.
Moreover, if subsequent amendments were treated like
new legislation for purposes of applying § 105’s
requirements, then we would expect to see some textual
evidence distinguishing between laws in effect on the
Covenant’s effective date and subsequent amendments to
SALAS V. USA 21
those laws. We see no such evidence. Indeed, the one
provision that does not treat “subsequent amendments”
identically to existing laws is § 502(a)(3), which exempts
“subsequent amendments” to certain laws “unless
specifically made applicable to the Northern Mariana
Islands.” In our view, the absence of similar language from
the remainder of § 502(a) evinces an intent to treat other laws
in effect on the Covenant’s effective date and their
subsequent amendments the same. See, e.g., United States v.
Lopez, 998 F.3d 431, 440 (9th Cir. 2021) (discussing canon
against surplusage), abrogated in part on other grounds by
Pulsifer v. United States, 601 U.S. 124 (2024).
At bottom, Salas’s (and the concurrence’s) position is
that there is no conflict between treating laws in effect on the
Covenant’s effective date and their subsequent amendments
the same on the one hand, and yet subjecting subsequent
amendments to laws in effect on the Covenant’s effective
date to § 105’s requirements as though they are new laws on
the other. For all the reasons discussed above, we
respectfully disagree. Accordingly, we hold that § 502 alone
governs whether § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment apply to
the CNMI.
IV. Even if Covenant § 105 governs, 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and
its 2018 Amendment would still apply to the CNMI.
Even if Covenant § 105 governs, which requires laws to
be applicable to the several States or otherwise name the
CNMI, § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment would still apply to
the CNMI because they are “applicable to the several
States.” Moreover, the federal interests advanced by § 2156
and its 2018 Amendment are significant, outweighing any
intrusion into the internal affairs of the CNMI.
22 SALAS V. USA
A. 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment are
“applicable to the several States.”
Under Covenant § 105, “the United States may legislate
with respect to the CNMI, ‘but if such legislation cannot also
be made applicable to the several States[,] the Northern
Mariana Islands must be specifically named therein for it to
become effective in the Northern Mariana Islands.’”
Richards, 4 F.3d at 754 (quoting Covenant § 105). Salas
argues that the federal cockfighting prohibition cannot apply
to the several States because state law in all fifty States
already prohibited cockfighting. However, as explained
above, under the Covenant the applicability of a federal law
to the States is not based on the law’s practical effect in the
States. Section 2156 and its 2018 Amendment are thus
“applicable to the several States” under § 105 and need not
name the CNMI to apply.
B. 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment do not
intrude impermissibly upon the internal affairs of
the CNMI under Covenant § 103 and § 105.
Finally, Salas argues that § 2156 and its 2018
Amendment do not apply to the CNMI because they intrude
upon the CNMI’s right to local self-government as
guaranteed by § 103 and § 105 of the Covenant. We
disagree.
Covenant § 103 guarantees the people of the CNMI the
ability to “govern themselves with respect to internal affairs
in accordance with a Constitution of their own adoption.”
Covenant § 103. In turn, Covenant § 105 “prevent[s] any
inadvertent interference by Congress with the internal affairs
of the Northern Mariana Islands to a greater extent than with
those of the several States.” Richards, 4 F.3d at 754 (citation
omitted). As a result, the United States must “have an
SALAS V. USA 23
identifiable federal interest that will be served by” the
legislation it seeks to apply to the CNMI. Id. Congress is not
precluded from passing legislation affecting the internal
affairs of the CNMI. Id. at 755. Rather, a court must “balance
the federal interest to be served by the legislation at issue
against the degree of intrusion into the internal affairs of the
CNMI.” Id.
This balancing test, however, is unnecessary for statutes
enacted before January 9, 1978, and thus governed by
Covenant § 502. United States v. Chang Da Liu, 538 F.3d
1078, 1084 (9th Cir. 2008) (“For legislation enacted after
[January 9, 1978], we balance the federal interests served by
the legislation against the degree of intrusion into local
affairs.”). 4 Because Covenant § 502 alone governs, as
discussed above, we need not conduct the Richards
balancing test. Nonetheless, even if § 105 governed, the
federal interests served by § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment
would outweigh any intrusion into the CNMI’s current
internal affairs.
1. We presume the regulation of cockfighting to be an
internal affair of the CNMI.
At the motion to dismiss stage, we must accept all
allegations of material fact as true and construe them in the
light most favorable to the nonmoving party, and material
allegations, even if doubtful in fact, are assumed to be true.
See Cedars–Sinai Med. Ctr. v. Nat’l League of Postmasters
of U.S., 497 F.3d 972, 975 (9th Cir. 2007); Bell Atl. Corp. v.
Twombly, 550 U.S. 544, 555 (2007). The district court
4
Indeed, although the government cited Chang Da Liu in its answering
brief for the proposition that the Richards balancing test is unnecessary
for statutes governed by § 502, Salas’s reply failed to respond to this
point.
24 SALAS V. USA
presumed the regulation of cockfighting to be an internal
affair of the CNMI, 5 and we do the same. 6
2. 7 U.S.C. § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment serve
significant federal interests.
We next balance the federal interests to be served by
§ 2156 and its 2018 Amendment against the degree of
intrusion into this presumed internal affair of the CNMI. The
5
At the hearing below, Salas requested leave to amend the complaint to
plead more facts regarding the importance of cockfighting in the CNMI.
The district court found additional facts to be unnecessary as it had
presumed cockfighting to be an internal of affair of the CNMI.
Moreover, as the district court correctly noted, additional facts about
how deeply entrenched cockfighting is in the CNMI would be futile.
Carrico v. City & County of San Francisco, 656 F.3d 1002, 1008 (9th
Cir. 2011) (“[Leave to amend] is properly denied . . . if amendment
would be futile.”). First, weighing the federal interest against the degree
of intrusion into the CNMI’s local affairs per the Richards test is
unnecessary for statutes enacted before January 9, 1978. See Chang Da
Liu, 538 F.3d at 1084 (citing Richards, 4 F.3d at 755). Second, as we
explain below, even if we employ the Richards balancing test, the federal
interests in regulating interstate commerce, ensuring the humane
treatment of animals, and preventing the spread of avian flu outweigh
any intrusion into the CNMI’s internal affairs.
6
Despite this presumption, we note that Salas may not have established
that the interstate regulation of cockfighting concerns an internal affair
of the CNMI. Salas presents evidence indicating that Guamanian men
enjoyed cockfighting in the 1700s and 1800s, as well as evidence that
cockfighting has taken place in Bali, Cuba, Puerto Rico, and the
Philippines. None are relevant to whether the regulation of cockfighting
is an internal affair of the CNMI. Regarding the CNMI, Salas cites a
book excerpt stating that cockfighting occurred there, without context or
time period, and points to an essay from the 1900s, when the islands were
under German rule, noting the occurrence of cockfighting to be an
activity from “Spanish times.” Such evidence, however, does not resolve
whether cockfighting is integral to and thus an internal affair of the
CNMI today.
SALAS V. USA 25
government asserts that the United States has an interest in
regulating animal fighting, including cockfighting, because
of its significant effect on interstate commerce and potential
to spread avian flu. Salas, on the other hand, challenges these
asserted interests, arguing that the animal fighting
prohibition is instead motivated only by Congress’s
subjective, “moral distaste” for the sport. To the contrary, as
discussed below, in regulating animal fighting under the
AWA, Congress sought to relieve the burden of animal
fighting on interstate commerce, ensure the humane
treatment of animals, and prevent the spread of avian flu, all
of which are significant federal interests.
When determining legislative intent, we look to specific
expressions of legislative intent in the statute itself. See Cal.
Tow Truck Ass’n v. City & County of San Francisco, 693
F.3d 847, 859 (9th Cir. 2012); see also Bittner v. United
States, 598 U.S. 85, 98 n.6 (2023) (“A preamble, purpose
clause, or recital is a permissible indicator of meaning.”
(quoting A. Scalia & B. Garner, Reading Law: The
Interpretation of Legal Texts 217 (2012))). We may also
look to the legislative history, including congressional
committee findings. See Garcia v. United States, 469 U.S.
70, 76 (1984) (“[T]he authoritative source for finding the
Legislature’s intent lies in the Committee Reports on the bill,
which represent the considered and collective understanding
of those Congressmen involved in drafting and studying
proposed legislation.” (alteration and internal quotation
marks omitted)).
Here, the statement of findings contained in the AWA
expressly states that Congress sought to eliminate the burden
26 SALAS V. USA
of animal fighting ventures on interstate commerce and
assure the humane treatment of animals in such commerce:
The Congress finds that animals and
activities which are regulated under this
chapter are either in interstate or foreign
commerce or substantially affect such
commerce or the free flow thereof, and that
regulation of animals and activities as
provided in this chapter is necessary to
prevent and eliminate burdens upon such
commerce and to effectively regulate such
commerce, in order . . . to assure the humane
treatment of animals during transportation in
commerce . . . .
7 U.S.C. § 2131.
The AWA’s congressional committee findings show the
same. See H.R. Rep. No. 94-801, at 10 (1976) (“[The AWA]
is necessary to prevent and eliminate burden upon [interstate
or foreign] commerce, to effectively regulate such
commerce, to protect the human values of this great Nation
from the subversion of dehumanizing activities, and to carry
out the objectives of the Act.”).
The government also asserts, and the district court
agreed, that the cockfighting prohibition serves to prevent
the spread of avian flu, offering statements made by
members of Congress to that effect. E.g., 153 Cong. Rec.
S451 (daily ed. Jan. 11, 2007) (statement of Sen. Cantwell)
(“Interstate and international transport of birds for
cockfighting is known to have contributed to the spread of
avian influenza in Asia and poses a threat to poultry and
public health in the United States.”); 153 Cong. Rec. E2
SALAS V. USA 27
(daily ed. Jan. 5, 2007) (statement of Rep. Gallegly) (“There
is the additional concern that cockfighters spread diseases
that jeopardize poultry flocks and even public health.”).
Although “comments by legislators are generally less
authoritative than official committee reports, they
nonetheless may be persuasive authority” as to statutory
intent. U.S. Aviation Underwriters Inc. v. Nabtesco Corp.,
697 F.3d 1092, 1099 n.3 (9th Cir. 2012) (citations omitted).
Evidence that Congress may have also sought to prevent the
spread of avian flu by restricting, and ultimately prohibiting,
cockfighting reinforces the conclusion that the prohibition
serves significant federal interests.
Thus, Congress’s interests in regulating animal fighting
to relieve its burden on interstate commerce, ensure the
humane treatment of animals, and prevent the spread of
avian flu are significant, not illusory, as Salas suggests.7
Because these federal interests outweigh any intrusion into
the CNMI’s internal affairs, neither § 103 nor § 105 preclude
§ 2156 and its 2018 Amendment’s application to the CNMI. 8
7
Salas does not challenge Congress’s ability to regulate interstate
commerce through the AWA. Nor could he. “The authority of Congress
to keep the channels of interstate commerce free from immoral and
injurious uses has been frequently sustained and is no longer open to
question.” United States v. Lopez, 514 U.S. 549, 558 (1995) (cleaned up).
8
Salas can point to no case, nor does our research reveal any, in which
we have held a federal law inapplicable to the CNMI under § 105. We
do not foreclose the possibility that a federal law can impermissibly
intrude upon the CNMI’s internal affairs, which would preclude its
application under Covenant § 103 and § 105. Our decision holds only
that § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment do not.
28 SALAS V. USA
CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s
judgment.
AFFIRMED.
PAEZ, Circuit Judge, concurring in the result:
I concur in the court’s judgment. Respectfully, however,
I disagree that “§ 502 alone governs whether § 2156 and its
2018 Amendment apply to the [Commonwealth of the
Northern Mariana Islands (“CNMI”)].” 1 Maj. Op. at 21. In
my view, the majority’s analysis with respect to this point is
incomplete, overlooking that the Covenant must be
interpreted as a whole. Following this approach, I would
hold that, based on the Covenant’s plain text and “every
other interpretive tool,” § 105 also applies to amendments to
1
The pertinent language of § 502 of the Covenant to Establish a
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands in Political Union with
the United States of America (“Covenant”) provides:
The following laws of the United States in existence
on the effective date of this Section and subsequent
amendments to such laws will apply to the Northern
Mariana Islands, except as otherwise provided in this
Covenant: . . . (2) those laws not described in
paragraph (1) which are applicable to Guam and which
are of general application to the several States as they
are applicable to the several States[.]
SALAS V. USA 29
laws in existence on January 9, 1978. 2 Saipan Stevedore Co.
Inc. v. Dir., Off. of Workers’ Comp. Programs, 133 F.3d 717,
723 (9th Cir. 1998). As I explain below, such amendments
constitute “legislation” as set out in § 105 and therefore must
comply with that provision. Even so, however, Salas has
failed to demonstrate that § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment
“impermissibly intrude[] on the internal affairs of the
CNMI.” U.S. ex rel. Richards v. De Leon Guerrero, 4 F.3d
749, 755 (9th Cir. 1993). I would thus affirm the district
court for the reasons discussed by the majority in Part IV of
its opinion. See Maj. Op. at 21–27.
I.
This case involves a question of first impression:
whether § 105 of the Covenant applies to amendments to
laws in existence on January 9, 1978. To be sure, we have
previously held that “Section 502 governs the application to
the CNMI of federal laws existing prior to January 9, 1978,
and that Section 105 governs the application of federal laws
2
Section 105 of the Covenant provides:
The United States may enact legislation in accordance
with its constitutional processes which will be
applicable to the Northern Mariana Islands, but if such
legislation cannot also be made applicable to the
several States the Northern Mariana Islands must be
specifically named therein for it to become effective in
the Northern Mariana Islands. In order to respect the
right of self-government guaranteed by this Covenant
the United States agrees to limit the exercise of that
authority so that the fundamental provisions of this
Covenant, namely Articles, I II and III and Section 501
and 805, may be modified only with the consent of the
Government of the United States and the Government
of the Northern Mariana Islands.
30 SALAS V. USA
enacted after that date.” Richards, 4 F.3d at 756. But
Richards and later cases, which discuss the applicability of
laws in existence on January 9, 1978. to the CNMI, do not
shed light on the question of “subsequent amendments to
such laws.” Covenant § 502. That question is squarely
presented in this case.
Importantly, Northern Mariana Islands v. United States,
279 F.3d 1070 (9th Cir. 2002)—one of the only Ninth Circuit
opinions to address amendments to laws in existence on
January 9, 1978—does not settle the matter. In Northern
Mariana Islands, we considered whether amendments to the
Quiet Title Act were applicable to the CNMI under the terms
of the Covenant. We ultimately determined that they were,
concluding:
Because the Quiet Title Act was in existence
on January 9, 1978, and because the Quiet
Title Act is applicable to Guam and to the
States generally, the Quiet Title Act and its
amendments are applicable to the CNMI “as
they are applicable to the several States,”
under the terms of section 502(a)(2).
Id. at 1073 (footnotes omitted).
The majority understandably relies on Northern
Mariana Islands as evidence that only “§ 502 governs the
applicability of amendments to laws that existed on January
9, 1978, even if the amendments were enacted after that
date.” Maj. Op. at 18. Yet the parties in that case never
presented the court with the argument that both § 105 and
SALAS V. USA 31
§ 502 applied. Indeed, the parties did not brief the issue,3
and § 105 appears nowhere in the opinion. Northern
Mariana Islands thus does not control how we should
resolve this important question of territorial law. See United
States v. Kirilyuk, 29 F.4th 1128, 1134 (9th Cir. 2022)
(“Prior precedent that does not ‘squarely address’ a
particular issue does not bind later panels on the question.”
(quoting Brecht v. Abrahamson, 507 U.S. 619, 631 (1993)));
United States v. Marin, 90 F.4th 1235, 1240 (9th Cir. 2024)
(observing that “questions which merely lurk in the record,
neither brought to the attention of the court nor ruled upon,
are not to be considered as having been so decided as to
constitute precedents” (cleaned up) (internal quotation
marks omitted) (quoting Cooper Indus., Inc. v. Aviall Servs.,
Inc., 543 U.S. 157, 170 (2004))). 4
3
In Northern Mariana Islands, the parties did not argue over which
sections of the Covenant applied to the amendments to the Quiet Title
Act. Rather, both parties agreed that § 502 applied, and the key dispute
was whether the amendments met § 502’s requirements. See Opening
Brief, N. Mariana Islands v. United States, 279 F.3d 1070, 2000 WL
33982882, at *7; Answering Brief, N. Mariana Islands v. United States,
279 F.3d 1070, 2000 WL 33984520, at *13–14 & n.9, *31; Reply Brief,
N. Mariana Islands v. United States, 279 F.3d 1070, 2000 WL 33982268,
at *7–11. Notably, however, the CNMI nonetheless assumed that both
provisions applied, even though that issue was not litigated. See Reply
Brief, N. Mariana Islands v. United States, 279 F.3d 1070, 2000 WL
33982268, at *8–*9 & n.18.
4
The majority suggests that I mean to “disregard Northern Mariana
Islands’s interpretation and application of § 502 because the court did
not consider other evidence (that is, § 105) when it analyzed § 502.”
Maj. Op. at 18 n.2. Not at all. Indeed, I do not dispute that “§ 502
encompasses amendments of laws that are applicable to the CNMI as
amendments become part of the original law.” Maj. Op. at 18 n.2.
32 SALAS V. USA
As this case demonstrates, an amendment to a law can be
just as far-reaching as the original law itself. The question
of whether § 105 also applies to an amendment of a law in
existence on January 9, 1978, is thus an important one. We
should not imply an answer from Northern Mariana Islands
to dispose of the matter. See Guerrero v. RJM Acquisitions
LLC, 499 F.3d 926, 938 (9th Cir. 2007) (“We are not
required to follow what amounts to, at most, an implicit
assumption, because ‘[s]uch unstated assumptions on non-
litigated issues are not precedential holdings binding future
decisions.’” (alteration in original) (quoting Sakamoto v.
Duty Free Shoppers, Ltd., 764 F.2d 1285, 1288 (9th Cir.
1985))).
II.
Turning to the merits, we must ascertain the statute’s
plain meaning by “look[ing] to the particular statutory
language at issue, as well as the particular language and
design of the statute as a whole.” K Mart Corp. v. Cartier,
Inc., 486 U.S. 281, 291 (1988). 5 In my view, given the
Covenant’s plain text, § 105 applies to all federal
“legislation” enacted after January 9, 1978, including
original “laws” not in existence on January 9, 1978, and
“subsequent amendments to [existing] laws.” Covenant
Rather, and as I explained above, the panel in Northern Mariana Islands
was never presented with the argument that both § 105 and § 502 could
apply. We are thus not bound by Northern Mariana Islands as to this
separate issue.
5
We have interpreted the Covenant to be “a congressionally approved
compact that is both a contract and a statute such that resort to extrinsic
evidence of the Covenant’s negotiations is entirely appropriate.” Fang
Lin Ai v. United States, 809 F.3d 503, 507 n.4 (9th Cir. 2015) (cleaned
up) (quoting Oklahoma v. New Mexico, 501 U.S. 221, 235 n.5 (1991)).
SALAS V. USA 33
§ 502. In addition, and to the extent there is any remaining
ambiguity, the Covenant’s structure and purpose, practical
effects, and legislative history further support this
interpretation.
A.
I begin with Richards, where we interpreted § 105. In
that case, we first acknowledged that “Congress’ legislative
authority over the Commonwealth derives from Section
105.” 4 F.3d at 754. We then held:
To give due consideration to the interests of
the United States and the interests of the
Commonwealth as reflected in Section 105,
we think it appropriate to balance the federal
interest to be served by the legislation at issue
against the degree of intrusion into the
internal affairs of the CNMI.
Id. at 755.
Importantly, our analysis in Richards adhered to the
plain text of the Covenant, referring consistently to
“legislation.” Id. at 754–55. And though we did not define
the term in that case, the proper analysis for doing so is
straightforward. The ordinary plain meaning of “legislation”
is “the enactments of a legislator or a legislative body.”
Merriam-Webster Dictionary, “legislation,”
https://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/legislation
(last accessed Aug. 15, 2024); see also LEGISLATION,
Black’s Law Dictionary (12th ed. 2024) (“The law so
enacted; collectively, the formal utterances of the legislative
organs of government.”). Given these definitions, there can
be no question that both original “laws” and “subsequent
34 SALAS V. USA
amendments to [existing] laws,” Covenant § 502, constitute
“legislation” that “[t]he United States may enact” as
contemplated by § 105.
Unsurprisingly, the majority does not refute this point.
In fact, the majority does not construe § 105 at all, even
though we must examine both “the particular statutory
language at issue, as well as the language and design of the
statute as a whole.” K Mart Corp., 486 U.S. at 291
(emphasis added). Instead, the majority focuses only on
§ 502, reasoning that this provision controls the immediate
case because it references the applicability of “laws of the
United States in existence on [January 9, 1978] and
subsequent amendments to such laws.” Maj. Op. at 13
(alteration in original) (quoting Covenant § 502). This
uncontroversial proposition, however, in no way suggests
that § 105 cannot also apply. In circumstances where two
provisions may be applicable, we do not merely disregard
one or the other. Rather, we apply the “elementary canon of
construction that an interpretation which gives effect to all
sections of a statute is preferred.” Biodiversity Legal Found.
v. Badgley, 309 F.3d 1166, 1175 (9th Cir. 2002).
In this case, giving effect to all sections of the Covenant
requires that § 105 encompass all “legislation,” even
amendments to laws in existence on January 9, 1978. A
narrower interpretation—for example, that “legislation”
refers only to laws not in existence on January 9, 1978—
would create an exception to § 105 not found in the
Covenant. This, in turn, would also run afoul of the canon
against surplusage. See United States v. Lopez, 998 F.3d
431, 440 (9th Cir. 2021) (“This canon of construction
requires a court, if possible, to give effect to each word and
clause in a statute.”).
SALAS V. USA 35
Moreover, reading the Covenant to apply both
provisions to such amendments is further supported by
examining § 502. As Salas argues, § 502(a) (emphasis
added) provides that:
The following laws of the United States in
existence on the effective date of this Section
and subsequent amendments to such laws
will apply to the Northern Mariana Islands,
except as otherwise provided in this
Covenant[.]
Section 502(a) thus appears to contemplate that its own
requirements operate subordinately to or in conjunction with
those of other provisions, including § 105. 6 Cf. Arizona All.
for Cmty. Health Centers v. Arizona Health Care Cost
Containment Sys., 47 F.4th 992, 999 (9th Cir. 2022)
(observing that “[p]articular phrases must be construed in
light of the overall purpose and structure of the whole
statutory scheme” (alteration in original) (quoting United
States v. Neal, 776 F.3d 645, 652 (9th Cir. 2015))). There is
no textual reason to read these provisions as being in conflict
6
The majority confusingly responds that “if subsequent amendments
were treated like new legislation for purposes of applying § 105’s
requirements, then we would expect to see some textual evidence
distinguishing between laws in effect on the Covenant’s effective date
and subsequent amendments to those laws.” Maj. Op. at 20–21. But if
the drafters of the Covenant believed that the document would be
examined as a whole and that § 105 applied to all “legislation”
subsequently enacted by Congress—as is evident from, inter alia, their
inclusion of the language “except as otherwise provided in this
Covenant” in § 502—there is no reason why they would need to specify
anything more.
36 SALAS V. USA
with one another, and we should correspondingly interpret
the Covenant to give effect to both.
B.
If the plain text were to leave any ambiguity, 7 the
Covenant’s structure and purpose, practical effects, and
legislative history leave no doubt that both provisions apply.
First, a reading of § 105 that encompasses amendments
to laws in existence on January 9, 1978, conforms with the
document’s structure and purpose. With respect to structure,
the Covenant makes clear that certain provisions of the
document are “fundamental,” “namely Articles I, II and III
and Section 501 and 805.” Covenant § 105. It therefore
makes sense that § 502 (and the analysis that the provision
requires) is subordinate to § 105, which is found in Article I.
With respect to purpose, it is evident that at least one of
the guiding principles of the Covenant is self-government.
See Covenant Preamble (recognizing the CNMI’s right to
“express their wishes for self-government or independence”
and “desire . . . to exercise their inalienable right of self–
determination”); Covenant § 103 (“The people of the
Northern Mariana Islands will have the right of local self-
government and will govern themselves with respect to
internal affairs in accordance with a Constitution of their
7
The majority repeatedly cites Micronesian Telecommunications Corp.
v. N.L.R.B., 820 F.2d 1097, 1101 (9th Cir. 1987), amended, (9th Cir.
Sept. 2, 1987), for the proposition that § 502 is “clear and unambiguous.”
Maj. Op. at 13, 17 (citing Micronesian Telecommunications Corp., 820
F.2d at 1101). But Micronesian Telecommunications Corp. exclusively
interpreted § 502 and dealt only with laws in existence on January 9,
1978, not “subsequent amendments to such laws.” Covenant § 502.
Thus, for the reasons already discussed, the cited language from
Micronesian Telecommunications Corp. is of limited utility here.
SALAS V. USA 37
own adoption.”); Covenant § 105 (“In order to respect the
right of self-government guaranteed by this Covenant the
United States agrees to limit the exercise of [its legislative]
authority . . . .”). 8 To allow some “legislation” to escape the
reach of § 105—which we have interpreted to incorporate
the right of self-government enshrined in § 103, see
Richards, 4 F.3d at 755—would consequently undermine
one of the Covenant’s guiding principles. 9, 10
8
Further evidence that self-government is one of the Covenant’s guiding
principles is that the Covenant was ratified with the goals of the
antecedent trusteeship in mind. See Micronesian Telecommunications
Corp., 820 F.2d at 1101 (“The 1976 Covenant was designed so the
Commission [on Federal Laws] could take into consideration those laws
that might defeat the goals of the trustee agreement.”). And as we have
recognized, two of the “purposes of the trusteeship agreement” were
“self-government and economic self-sufficiency.” Id.; see also Wabol v.
Villacrusis, 958 F.2d 1450, 1461 (9th Cir. 1990) (“And we must be
mindful also that the preservation of local culture and land is more than
mere desideratum—it is a solemn and binding undertaking memorialized
in the Trusteeship Agreement.”).
9
The majority suggests that this interpretation “overlooks the purpose of
§ 502 and § 105.” Maj. Op. at 19. As the majority points out, the
purpose of § 502 was to “establish a ‘workable body of law’ for the
CNMI upon its inception as a self-governing commonwealth on January
9, 1978.” Maj. Op. at 19 (citation omitted). “On the other hand, § 105
granted Congress the right to enact laws applicable to the CNMI post-
inception so long as the laws also applied to the several States or
otherwise named the CNMI specifically.” Maj. Op. at 20. It is far from
clear, however, how the purposes of these provisions, even if distinct,
are in conflict.
10
In fact, when determining whether application of a statute to the CNMI
is “inconsistent with the purposes of the trusteeship agreement or the
Covenant,” our caselaw has examined whether application of that statute
would be “incompatible with the history or culture of the
38 SALAS V. USA
Second, the practical results of the majority’s
interpretation also counsel in favor of construing § 105 to
reach all legislation, including “subsequent amendments to
[existing] laws.” Covenant § 502. Indeed, not only would
the majority’s interpretation allow amendments to laws in
existence on January 9, 1978, to escape the reach of § 105,
it would allow them to do so on the arbitrary basis of whether
those enactments are classified as original “laws” or
“subsequent amendments to [existing] laws.” Covenant
§ 502. As Salas argues, “[t]he history of the Animal Welfare
Act illustrates the folly lurking in such formalism.” 11 Cf. E.
Bay Sanctuary Covenant v. Biden, 993 F.3d 640, 670 (9th
Cir. 2021) (“We avoid absurd results when interpreting
statutes.” (citing Rowland v. Cal. Men’s Colony, Unit II
Men’s Adv. Council, 506 U.S. 194, 200–01 (1993))).
Nor would Salas’s interpretation impose novel
constraints on the federal government. The primary
requirement of § 105—that federal legislation specifically
name the CNMI—only becomes effective when legislation
is not applicable to the several states. Yet amendments to
laws in existence on January 9, 1978, must already meet this
requirement to be applicable to the CNMI under § 502(a)(2)
as well. See N. Mariana Islands, 279 F.3d at 1073–75. The
Commonwealth,” even under § 502. Saipan Stevedore, 133 F.3d at 722;
see also id. at 725 (concluding that the Longshore and Harbor Workers’
Compensation Act was “conceptually consistent with the goals of United
States involvement in the Commonwealth” where there was “nothing in
the Act itself or that we can foresee in its application that conflicts with
the Commonwealth’s right of self-government over local and internal
matters”).
11
Opening Br. 13 n.20 (explaining how the Act’s evolution “show[s]
clearly that the choice of whether or not to formally characterize a given
piece of legislation an ‘amendment’ to an earlier law is often arbitrary”).
SALAS V. USA 39
only additional requirement for such amendments would be
Richards’s interest-balancing test, which already applies to
all other legislation enacted after January 9, 1978.
Interpreting § 105 to reach subsequent amendments to laws
in existence on January 9, 1978, would thus only harmonize
implementation of the Covenant’s scheme.
Third, the Covenant’s legislative history supports this
reading as well. 12 First, the Marianas Political Status
12
In previous cases involving the Covenant, we have relied upon the
section-by-section analyses produced by representatives of the CNMI
and the United States, see, e.g., Richards, 4 F.3d at 754, even calling
them “authoritative,” N. Mariana Islands v. United States, 399 F.3d
1057, 1065 (9th Cir. 2005). These include section-by-section analyses
produced by the Marianas Political Status Commission and the
Department of Interior. See, e.g., Richards, 4 F.3d at 754 (first citing
Marianas Political Status Commission, Section-by-Section Analysis of
the Covenant to Establish a Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana
Islands 15 (1975) [hereinafter Marianas Commission Section Analysis];
and then citing Department of Interior, Section-by-Section Analysis of
the Covenant, reprinted in To Approve “The Covenant to Establish a
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands,” and for Other
Purposes: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on Territorial and Insular
Affairs of the House Comm. on Interior and Insular Affairs, 94th Cong.,
1st Sess. 385 (1975) [hereinafter Administration Section Analysis]. We
have likewise relied upon the congressional reports “produced in
connection with Congress’s approval of the Covenant.” Fang, 809 F.3d
at 513 (citing H.R. Rep. No. 94–364, at 11 (1975); S. Rep. No. 94–433,
at 83 (1975)). Finally, we have also relied upon the final report produced
by the Northern Mariana Islands Commission on Federal Laws
established pursuant to Covenant § 504. See, e.g., Saipan Stevedore, 133
F.3d at 725 & n.14 (citing The Final Report for the Northern Mariana
Islands Commission on Federal Laws to the Congress of the United
States, CNMI Reports Vol. I, p. 1G (1991) [hereinafter Final Report (as
paginated in Opposition to Motion to Dismiss, Ex. 4, Salas v. United
States, No. 1:22-CV-00008, 2022 WL 16964141 (D. N. Mar. I. Nov. 17,
2022), ECF No. 8)]).
40 SALAS V. USA
Commission’s Section-by-Section Analysis confirms that
§ 105 affects Congress’s “legislative authority,” not merely
its ability to enact laws rather than amendments. Marianas
Commission Section Analysis, at 630; see also id. (“It is the
view of the [Marianas Political Status Commission] that as a
practical matter this wording of Section 105, combined with
the recognition of the right of local self-government in
Section 103 and the other provisions of Article I, provide
adequate assurances that federal legislation will not be made
applicable unless it is appropriate.” (emphasis added)); id. at
631 (“The United States has made clear on many occasions
its intent to exercise its powers with respect to the Northern
Marianas with strict regard for the right of local self-
government, as it must in view of Section 103.” (emphases
added)). The Administration’s Section-by-Section Analysis
and the House and Senate Reports are not to the contrary.
See Administration Section Analysis, at 384 (“The main
point of this section is that the United States may enact
legislation applicable to the Northern Mariana Islands in
accordance with its Constitutional processes.”); H.R. Rep.
No. 94–364, at 5 (“Section 105 provides that laws which
Congress could not also make applicable to a state cannot be
made applicable to the Northern Marianas unless the
Northern Marianas is specifically named in the legislation,
so as to insure that legislation is not unintentionally applied
to the Northern Marianas.”); S. Rep. No. 94–433, at 67
(“This section provides that the United States may enact
legislation applicable to the Northern Mariana Islands in
accordance with its Constitutional processes.”); see also
Final Report, at 22 (“Section 105 grants the United States
the power to legislate with respect to the Commonwealth
according to its Constitutional process.”).
SALAS V. USA 41
Second, the legislative history strongly suggests that
§ 502 is subordinate to the demands of § 105. For example,
the Senate Report expressly provides that § 502 “does not
relate to the power of Congress to legislate with respect to
the Northern Mariana Islands; that issue is dealt with in
section 105.” S. Rep. No. 94–433, at 76 ; see also
Administration Section Analysis, at 388 (same). 13 More
broadly, the Final Report, at 22 (emphasis added), notes that
“Section 502 makes applicable . . . federal laws existing on
January 9, 1978, and amendments to those laws provided
that they are not inconsistent with the Covenant.” See also
id. (“The most important limitation on the applicability of
these laws is Section 103 of the Covenant.”); id. at 34 n.4
(emphasizing that, unlike § 503, § 502 has the “limitation
‘except as provided by this Covenant’”). In combination,
this legislative history supports concluding that (1) § 105
sweeps broadly, and (2) § 105 reaches § 502.
By contrast, the only legislative history cited by the
majority is the Northern Mariana Islands Commission on
Federal Laws’s Second Interim Report, which predated the
Commission’s Final Report. To be sure, we have cited this
specific report in prior cases involving the CNMI, see, e.g.,
Fang, 809 F.3d at 513–14 (quoting Second Interim Report
13
The Senate and Department of the Interior observed that this was the
case even though they also noted that the “purpose of [§ 502] is to
provide a workable body of law.” S. Rep. No. 94–433, at 76;
Administration Section Analysis, at 388. These two facts—that is, that
§ 105 applies to Congress’s power to legislate and that § 502’s purpose
is to provide a workable body of law to the CNMI following ratification
of the Covenant—thus do not inherently conflict. Again, the majority
does not explain how holding “that both § 105 and § 502 govern the
applicability of amendments to pre-existing federal laws would eliminate
this distinction,” or why this would matter. Maj. Op. at 20.
42 SALAS V. USA
of the N. Mariana Islands Comm’n on Fed. Laws to the
Congress of the United States 415 (1985) [hereinafter
Second Interim Report]), and the approach described there
does in fact support the majority’s interpretation, see Second
Interim Report, at 23–33. However, that approach was
explicitly repudiated by the Commission’s Final Report,
which in turn sanctioned an entirely different approach. 14
See Final Report, at 24 (“[T]his final report specifically
supplants those General Recommendations and other
materials set forth in the Second Interim Report at pages 22
through 52.”). And we have approvingly cited that
superseding approach. See, e.g., Saipan Stevedore, 133 F.3d
at 725 (citing Final Report). 15
14
As laid out in the Final Report, at 24:
In deciding whether or not to apply a federal law to the
Commonwealth we should initially ask two questions:
(1) Is the law necessary and proper for carrying out the
Covenant, and (2) Is the law inconsistent with the right
of self-government over local and internal matters
reserved to the people of the Commonwealth in
Section 103. Only if a Federal Law is both necessary
and proper in carrying out the Covenant and not
inconsistent with the right of self-government is it
applicable within the Commonwealth.
15
The majority responds that we have continued to rely on the Second
Interim Report in other cases. I never suggested otherwise. The
difference here, of course, is that each of the cases cited by the majority
relied on portions of the Second Interim Report that examined the
applicability of specific statutes. See Fang, 809 F.3d at 513–14; Xianli
Zhang v. United States, 640 F.3d 1358, 1373–74 (Fed. Cir. 2011). These
portions of the Second Interim Report were not “specifically
supplant[ed].” Final Report, at 24; see also id. (“Some of those laws that
the Commission found applicable [in the Second Interim Report] may
SALAS V. USA 43
Finally, to the extent the above interpretive tools do not
settle the matter, I would read any remaining ambiguity in
favor of the CNMI and its people for at least two reasons.
First, as Salas argues, this aligns with the intent of the
Covenant’s drafters. Indeed, Representative Phillip Burton,
who served as Chairman of the House Subcommittee on
Territorial and Insular Affairs, 16 expressed as much. See 122
Cong. Rec. 727 (statement of Rep. Burton) (“Our
committee’s and my own intent is that all possible
ambiguities should be resolved in favor of and to the benefit
of the people and Government of the Northern Mariana
Islands.”).
Second, in similar circumstances, both the Supreme
Court and our court have read statutory ambiguities in favor
of self-governing parties with whom the United States has
ratified agreements. See Antoine v. Washington, 420 U.S.
194, 199 (1975) (“The canon of construction applied over a
century and a half by this Court is that the wording of treaties
and statutes ratifying agreements with the Indians is not to
be construed to their prejudice.”); Swim v. Bergland, 696
F.2d 712, 716 (9th Cir. 1983) (“Agreements between the
United States and Indian tribes are to be construed according
not be applicable to the extent they conflict with the test adopted in this
final report. . . . We leave to Covenant Section 902 consultations this
methodology for reassessing some of the specific recommendations
made in the Second Interim Report.” (emphasis added)).
16
See Howard P. Willens & Deanne C. Siemer, An Honorable Accord:
The Covenant Between the Northern Mariana Islands and the United
States 296–99 (2002). In fact, according to Willens and Siemer,
Representative Burton “[d]eliver[ed] the House [of Representatives]” as
part of Congress’s approval of the Covenant. Id. He also served as a
member of the Northern Mariana Islands Commission on Federal Laws
until his death in 1983. See Final Report, at 5.
44 SALAS V. USA
to the probable understanding of the original tribal
signatories.”); United States v. S. Pac. Transp. Co., 543 F.2d
676, 687 (9th Cir. 1976) (“[S]tatutes enacted for the
protection of Indians must be broadly construed in the
Indians’ favor.”); see also James T. Campbell, Aurelius’s
Article III Revisionism: Reimagining Judicial Engagement
with the Insular Cases and “The Law of the Territories,” 131
Yale L.J. 2542, 2637 (2022) (“There are many potentially
relevant doctrinal threads with which to link the notion of
promise keeping in the territorial and Indian law contexts.
For instance, the Supreme Court’s Indian-law
jurisprudence . . . has declined to distinguish between treaty
and nontreaty agreements with the federal government,
subjecting both to interpretive rules that are designed to
vindicate those promises and prevent diminishment of
reservation borders.”). Given the Covenant’s consistent
emphasis on self-government, I would likewise view any
remaining ambiguity in the Covenant’s language in favor of
the CNMI and its people.
In this case, reading ambiguity in the Covenant in favor
of the CNMI and its people means ensuring that § 105
reaches all federal “legislation,” including subsequent
amendments to laws in existence on January 9, 1978. This
reading would further protect § 103’s right to self-
government. I would therefore hold that § 105 also applies
to amendments to laws in existence on January 9, 1978.
This, in turn, requires that the Richards balancing test apply
to our review of § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment.
III.
Applying the Richards balancing test to the immediate
case, I agree with the majority that Salas has failed to
demonstrate § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment
SALAS V. USA 45
“impermissibly intrude[] on the internal affairs of the
CNMI.” Richards, 4 F.3d at 755. I thus concur in the
majority’s thorough analysis concluding that “the federal
interests advanced by § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment are
significant, outweighing any intrusion into the internal
affairs of the CNMI.” Maj. Op. at 21.
***
To close, when the United States and the people of the
Northern Mariana Islands came together to ratify the
Covenant, they enshrined in that document the CNMI’s
fundamental right to self-government. See Covenant
§§ 103, 105; see also “The Covenant to Establish a
Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands,” and for
Other Purposes: Hearing Before the Subcomm. on
Territorial and Insular Affairs of the House Comm. on
Interior and Insular Affairs, 94th Cong., 1st Sess. 625 (1975)
(“We look forward to the day when the people of the
Marianas can control their own destiny.”). As part of that
momentous process, the United States expressly agreed to
limit the exercise of its authority to “enact legislation . . . [i]n
order to respect the right of self-government guaranteed by
this Covenant.” Covenant § 105; see also Richards, 4 F.3d
at 755. We are faced here with the question of just how
committed we are to upholding that promise. Because I
believe that we are bound to do so based on the Covenant’s
plain text and “every other interpretive tool,” Saipan
Stevedore, 133 F.3d at 723, I would hold that § 105 applies
to all federal “legislation,” including “laws” and “subsequent
amendments to [existing] laws.” Covenant § 502.
Notwithstanding this application, Salas has failed to
demonstrate that § 2156 and its 2018 Amendment
“impermissibly intrude[] on the internal affairs of the
46 SALAS V. USA
CNMI.” Richards, 4 F.3d at 755. I therefore respectfully
concur in the court’s judgment.
Plain English Summary
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ANDREW SABLAN SALAS, No.
Key Points
01FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ANDREW SABLAN SALAS, No.
02Manglona, Chief District Judge, Presiding Argued and Submitted February 12, 2024 Honolulu, Hawaii Filed August 27, 2024 Before: Richard A.
03USA SUMMARY * Animal Welfare Act The panel affirmed the district court’s dismissal of a complaint brought by a resident of the Commonwealth of the Northern Mariana Islands (“CNMI”) alleging that the Covenant to Establish a Commonwealth of t
04§ 2156, as amended in 1976, prohibited animal fighting, with an exception that if a state or territory’s laws authorized cockfighting, then cockfighting in that state or territory was not federally prohibited.
Frequently Asked Questions
FOR PUBLICATION UNITED STATES COURT OF APPEALS FOR THE NINTH CIRCUIT ANDREW SABLAN SALAS, No.
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