ENSENADA LAND & WATER ASS'N V. SLEEPER, 1988-NMCA-030, 107 N.M. 494, 760
P.2d 787 (Ct. App. 1988)
IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION OF
HOWARD M. SLEEPER and
HAYDEN and ELAINE GAYLOR, NO. 436-A into 3481; TO
CHANGE POINT OF DIVERSION AND PLACE AND PURPOSE
OF USE OF SURFACE WATERS. ENSENADA LAND &
WATER ASSOCIATION, et al.,
Protestants-Appellants-Appellees,
vs.
HOWARD M. SLEEPER and HAYDEN and ELAINE GAYLOR,
Applicants-Appellees-Appellants, v. STEVE REYNOLDS,
New Mexico State Engineer,
Respondent-Appellee-Appellant.
COURT OF APPEALS OF NEW MEXICO
1988-NMCA-030, 107 N.M. 494, 760 P.2d 787
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF RIO
ARRIBA COUNTY, Art Encinias, Judge
Opinion of March 1, 1988 Withdrawn and
Substituted; Certiorari Quashed August 2, 1988
Martha A. Daly, Rothstein, Bailey,
Bennett, Daly & Donatelli, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Richard Rosenstock, Chama,
New Mexico, Attorneys for Protestants-Appellants-Appellees Ensenada Land and
Water Ass'n.
Timothy V. Flynn-O'Brien, Bryan and
Flynn-O'Brien, Albuquerque, New Mexico, Attorneys for
Applicants-Appellees-Appellants Sleeper and Gaylor.
Fred Abramowitz, Martha C. Dabney,
Special Assistant Attorneys General, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Attorneys for Respondent-Appellee-Appellant
S.E. Reynolds.
Beverly Singleman, Steven L. Hernandez,
Martin, Cresswell, Hubert & Hernandez, P.A., Las Cruces, New Mexico,
Attorneys for Amicus Elephant Butte Irrigation District.
Edward R. Pearson, Assistant City
Attorney, Albuquerque, New Mexico, Attorney for Amicus City of Albuquerque.
Rebecca Dempsey, Stephenson, Carpenter,
Crout & Olmsted, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Attorneys for Amicus Plains Electric
Generation & Transmission Cooperative, Inc.
Clifford K. Atkinson, Walter E. Stern,
Modrall, Sperling, Roehl, Harris & Sisk, P.A., Albuquerque, New Mexico,
Attorneys for Amicus W.F. and Wanda Martin.
Richard A. Simms, Hinkle, Cox, Eaton,
Coffield & Hensley, Santa Fe, New Mexico, Attorneys for Amicus Penasco Ski
Corporation.
{*495} REBECCA
SITTERLY, District Judge.
{1} On the court's own
motion, the prior opinion of this court is withdrawn and following opinion
substituted therefor.
{2} This appeal arises from a
decision of the district court of Rio Arriba County reversing an order of the
state engineer which had granted the Modified Application (the Application) of
Sleeper and Gaylors (Applicants) to change the purpose and place of use and
point of diversion of surface water rights appurtenant to the Ensenada Ditch
near Ensenada, New Mexico. The Ensenada Land and Water Association, et al.
(Protestants) appealed to the district court. After trial
de novo, the
district court reversed the state engineer's decision and denied the
Application on the grounds that the requested transfer would impair existing
water rights on the Rio Brazos stream system and would be contrary to the
public interest. The Applicants and the state engineer appeal. We reverse the
district court.
(1) Whether the state engineer's appeal is timely;
(2) Whether the applicable statutes allow consideration of
the "public interest" in ruling on an application for change of
purpose and place of use or point of diversion of surface water rights; and, if
so,
(a) Whether that grant of authority is an unconstitutional
delegation of legislative function; and
(b) Whether substantial evidence supports the trial court's
determination that the requested changes would be contrary to the public
interest; and
(3) Whether substantial evidence supports the trial court's
finding that the transfer would impair existing rights, and {*496}
that the protective conditions imposed in the state engineer's order are
insufficient to obviate the impairment.
{4} Tierra Grande, Inc. and
Penasco Ski Corporation began a recreational development and subdivision in
Ensenada. A gravel pit was dug to supply gravel for construction of various
roads in the subdivision. Primarily for recreational and aesthetic purposes,
Tierra Grande decided to create a lake over the unsightly gravel pit. For this
purpose, Tierra Grande contracted with Applicants to purchase lands and the
appurtenant water rights, conditioned upon the state engineer's approval of an
application for change of purpose and place of use and of diversion of those
water rights.
{5} Applicants have water
rights for irrigation purposes from the Ensenada Ditch. A sketch of the area,
based on one of Applicants' exhibits, is reproduced below. [SEE ILLUSTRATION IN
ORIGINAL]
{6} The Ensenada, Porvenir,
and Park View Ditches divert from the Rio Brazos. The Nutritas Creek is a
tributary of the Rio Brazos, is part of the Rio Brazos stream system, and
empties into the Ensenada and Park View Ditches after they divert from the Rio
Brazos. The Nutritas is fed by spring snow melt and occasional summer rain. It
begins to run in March and is usually dry by May or early June. Water from the
Nutritas, when it is flowing, is used by members of Ensenada and Park View
Ditches to water stock in the spring, to fill irrigation reservoirs for use in
summer, and to "fertilize" the soil with its historically high silt
content. The Nutritas produces between 800 and 4500 acre feet of water annually.
{7} The declaration of water
rights for the entire Ensenada Ditch, filed in the engineer's office, shows an
entitlement to irrigate 982.1 acres of land from Rio Brazos with a duty of 1.3
acre feet of water per acre per year. The Application seeks to change point of
diversion from Applicants' farms off the Ensenada Ditch to the proposed lake
site on the Nutritas Creek, and to change the purpose of use from irrigation to
construction and maintenance of a lake. This would be accomplished by a
one-time diversion of 61.32 acre feet from the first year to fill the lake, and
13.32 acre feet annually thereafter to maintain the lake. Based on a
consumptive use of 0.95 acre feet per acre per annum, Applicants proposed to
temporarily retire 64.55 acres of irrigated land the first year and to
permanently retire 14.02 acres of land from irrigation thereafter, which would
offset the amount required for filling and maintenance of the lake.
{*497} I. TIMELINESS
OF STATE ENGINEER'S APPEAL.
{8} We grant Protestant's
motion to dismiss the state engineer's appeal as untimely. The judgment
appealed from was entered on July 2, 1985. Applicants filed notice of appeal on
July 29, 1985, in Ct. App.No. 8782. The state engineer filed a notice of appeal
on August 30, 1985, in Ct. App.No. 8830. No request for extension of time to
file the state engineer's notice of appeal was made. Although the state
engineer's notice of appeal was filed within the time provided NMSA 1978,
Section
72-7-3 (Repl.1985), it was not filed within the time provided by the
rules of appellate procedure.
See NMSA 1978, Civ. App.R. 3 (Repl.
Pamp.1984) and Civ. App.R. 4(c) (Supp.1985). The state engineer's appeal is
untimely and this court is without jurisdiction to hear it.
American Auto.
Ass'n v. State Corp. Comm'n, 102 N.M. 527,
697 P.2d 946 (1985).
{9} However, the state
engineer was served with and is a named party in the notice of appeal filed by
Applicants. Having jurisdiction of Applicants' appeal, and there being no
prejudice to the parties, we grant the state engineer's motion to be added as a
party appellant.
See generally SCRA 1986, 12-301(A) (which provides for
the addition of parties on motion of the appellate court on essentially same
terms as did NMSA 1978, Civ. App.R. 21(a) (Repl. Pamp.1984));
see also
Morris v. Fitzgerald, 73 N.M. 56,
385 P.2d 574 (1963);
Home Fire &
Marine Ins. Co. v. Pan American Petroleum Corp., 72 N.M. 163,
381 P.2d 675
(1963).
{10} The district court
concluded that, as a public official charged with supervising important
resource belonging to the public, the state engineer must consider the public
interest in ruling on applications for transfer or change of water rights,
whether or not articulated in the statutes, and that Applicants' requested
transfer was contrary to the public interest and should be denied on that
ground. In so concluding, the district court erred as a matter of law.
{11} The jurisdiction of the
state engineer to regulate use of water is "no broader than as expressed
in or necessarily to be inferred from the statute."
State ex rel.
Reynolds v. W. S. Ranch Co., 69 N.M. 169, 172,
364 P.2d 1036, 1038 (1961)
(quoting
El Paso & R. I. Ry. Co. v. District Court, 36 N.M. 94, 101,
8 P.2d 1064, 1068 (1931)). Thus, we must look to the statutes in force at the
time of the Application to determine if public interest is a proper
consideration in transfer applications.
{12} Appropriation and use of
surface water was governed, at the time of the Application, by NMSA 1978,
Sections
72-5-1 et seq. Applicants contend that pursuant to the plain
language of NMSA 1978, Sections
72-5-23 and -24, once there has been proper
application to the state engineer, detriment to existing water rights is the
only basis on which their application can lawfully be denied. Section 72-5-23
provided: "All water used in this state for irrigation purposes, * * * may
be transferred for other purposes, without losing priority of right theretofore
established, if such changes can be made without detriment to existing rights *
* *." and Section 72-5-24 provided:
An appropriator of water may, * * * use the same for other
than the purpose for which it was appropriated, or may change the place of
diversion, storage or use, * * * provided that no such change shall be allowed
to the detriment of the rights of others having valid and existing rights to
the use of the waters of said stream system.
{13} Protestants argue that
language in other sections of Chapter 72, Article 5 of statutes allows the
state engineer to deny an application for transfer of surface water rights if
the transfer would be detrimental to the public interest. They rely principally
on NMSA 1978, Section
72-5-7, which provided: "If, in the opinion of the
state engineer, there is no unappropriated water available, he shall reject
such application * * *. He may also refuse to consider or approve any
application or notice of intention to make application * * * if, in his
{*498} opinion, approval thereof would be
contrary to public interest."
{14} It is apparent that the
first sentence refers to applications to acquire rights unappropriated waters.
Protestants argue that the second sentence quoted allows the state engineer to
deny any application, including transfer of existing water rights, if it would
be contrary to the public interest. Applicants contend that Section 72-5-7
applied only to applications to appropriate previously unappropriated surface
water, and not to transfers of rights to waters already appropriated. We find
Applicants' argument persuasive.
{15} It is conceded that the
state engineer has traditionally and consistently construed Section 72-5-7 to
apply only to applications for unappropriated water, and that Sections 72-5-23
and -24 apply to transfers of existing rights, and allow him to deny a proper
application for transfer only if it would be detrimental to other existing
water rights. Long-standing administrative constructions of statutes by the
agency charged with administering them are to be given persuasive weight, and
should not be lightly overturned.
Molycorp., Inc., v. State Corp. Comm'n,
95 N.M. 613,
624 P.2d 1010 (1981);
Perea v. Baca, 94 N.M. 624,
614 P.2d
541 (1980). The logic of those rules is clear. First, the state engineer's
orders are presumed to be proper implementations of the water laws. NMSA 1978,
Section
72-2-8. Second, the more long-standing the state engineer's
interpretation of construction of the statutes without amendment by the
legislature, the more likely that the state engineer's interpretation reflects
the legislature's intent.
{16} Case law also supports
the state engineer's interpretation of the statute. "Inherent in a water
right is the right to change the place of diversion,
subject only to the
requirement that the rights of other water users not be injured or impaired
thereby."
Langenegger v. Carlsbad Irrigation Dist., 82 N.M. 416,
421,
483 P.2d 297, 302 (1971) (emphasis added) (citing
Durand v. Reynolds,
75 N.M. 497,
406 P.2d 817 (1965));
Clodfelter v. Reynolds, 68 N.M. 61,
358 P.2d 626 (1961);
Application of Brown, 65 N.M. 74,
332 P.2d 475
(1958).
{17} Although dealing with
our groundwater rather than surface water statutes, two recent cases and the
legislative reaction to them further support the Applicants' position.
city
of El Paso v. Reynolds. 563 F. Supp. 379 (D.N.M.1983) (
El Paso I)
held that New Mexico could not constitutionally embargo the export of water
out-of-state. Our legislature immediately passed Laws 1983, Ch. 2, amending the
groundwater statutes to allow new appropriations and transfers of groundwater
for out-of-state use, if not contrary to the conversation of water or otherwise
detrimental to the public welfare.
City of El Paso v. Reynolds, 597 F.
Supp. 694 (D.N.M.1984) (
El Paso II) then ruled the amendments
unconstitutional because the conservation and public welfare criteria were
applicable to transfers out-of-state, but not to in-state transfers.
"In-state, no permit to transfer a water right * * * can be denied on the
ground that it would be contrary to the conversation of water or detrimental to
the public welfare. These factors are irrelevant with regard to in-state
transfers and domestic wells."
El Paso II, 597 F. Supp. at 704.
Although the El Paso cases dealt with the groundwater statutes, the transfer
provisions are similar to those applicable to surface waters. The legislature
again responded by enacting Laws 1985, Ch. 201, amending the water laws. But
this time, both groundwater and surface water statutes were amended, adding for
the first time the conservation and public welfare criteria to Sections 72-5-23
and -24, applicable to transfers of surface water rights. We will not distort
the plain geography of a statutory scheme to find Protestants' construction.
The statutes in force at the time of the Application did not allow denial of
the requested transfer on the basis of general "public interest"
considerations.
{18} In view of our
disposition, we need not reach the other public interest issues listed. As the
state engineer acknowledged at oral argument, the public interest is relevant
in considering certain aspects of an application to transfer existing surface
{*499} water rights, such as whether the transfer
is to a beneficial use. However, in this case the trial court's decision
incorporates a broader view of the public interest than in our judgment the
legislature contemplated in enacting the controlling statute. Further, neither
the record on appeal nor the oral arguments indicate that the issue of whether
the proposed transfer was to a beneficial use was raised at trial.
III. IMPAIRMENT OF EXISTING RIGHTS.
{19} The district court found
that the requested transfer would be detrimental to existing rights because:
[30.] a. Rio Brazos stream system water users would be
deprived of water * * * (for) livestock in the early spring with water derived
principally from the Nutritas Creek; and
b. Rio Brazos stream system water users would be deprived of
their first watering in the spring which benefits the land in two ways:
i. the watering moistens the soil in preparation for sowing;
and
ii. the watering "fertilizes" the soil by providing
rich silt carried by the waters of the Nutritas Creek.
Applicants argue that, as a matter of law, water rights do
not include a right to receive a traditional or historical amount of silt
carried in the water. We agree.
{20} Protestants argue that
the reduction in silt content is a reduction in the quality of the water, citing
Heine v. Reynolds, 69 N.M. 398,
367 P.2d 708 (1962) and
Stokes v.
Morgan, 101 N.M. 195,
680 P.2d 335 (1984). Both of those cases involved
claims of diminished water quality from increased salt content in the water.
Salt becomes chemically associated with water in a solution, while silt is
physically associated with water in a suspension. Even salt has been held not
to be part of the water in which it is dissolved, where the proposed
appropriation sought water with a particular salt content so that the salt
could be extracted for sale.
Deseret Livestock Co. v. State, 110 Utah
239, 171 P.2d 401 (1946).
{21} Apparently the only case
directly on point is
A-B Cattle Co. v. United States, 196 Colo. 539, 589
P.2d 57 (1978). The Colorado Supreme Court interpreted
Colo. Const.,
art. XVI, Section 5, to define water, "not silt and water," as
subject to appropriation. 196 Colo. at 545, 589 P.2d at 61. That part of the
Colorado constitution is remarkably similar to N.M. Const., art. XVI, Section
2. We agree with the Colorado Supreme Court. We hold that an owner of surface
water rights does not have a right to receive a particular silt content that
has existed historically. To hold otherwise could prevent all upstream users
from controlling erosion on their lands for fear that silt would be reduced
downstream.
{22} Applicants met their
burden of showing no impairment by introducing evidence supporting an inference
that the Rio Brazos has historically produced a sufficient supply for
irrigation needs on the Ensenada Ditch, except during the late summer months
when the Nutritas is dry, by proving they will be retiring enough land from
irrigation along the Ensenada Ditch to offset the water being used at the new location
along with Nutritas, and by proof that the State Engineer had found no
impairment.
See Stokes v. Morgan. Thereafter, the burden of going
forward with additional evidence shifted to Protestants.
{23} Protestants' evidence of
impairment included testimony that the users of the Rio Brazos stream system
"need all the water they can get." This is not a sufficient showing.
Protestants are entitled only to the amount of water allocated to them by
declared right.
{24} The remaining evidence
does not support the trial court's findings as to the impact of the transfer on
early spring watering. Applicants proposed to fill the lake by diversion of two
days' flow in early March, and thereafter divert annually a much smaller amount
of water to offset evaporation losses. In good years, when the flow of the
Nutritas is high, the record indicates there would be no net effect on other
users. In dry years, when the snow
{*500} melt
is low, Applicants may not be able to receive their full entitlement from the
Nutritas. However, because their point of diversion at the move-to location
lies above the confluence of the Ensenada Ditch and the Nutritas, Applicants
cannot make up the difference from the flow of the Rio Brazos. Therefore, if
the transfer is granted, in all years the downstream users would have
additional water available from the Rio Brazos that would otherwise have been
subject to Applicants' claims at the move-from location. Finally, there was
uncontroverted evidence that some amount of water from the Nutritas passes
unused through the ditches and back to the Rio Brazos at various times in the
spring.
{25} In addition, the state
engineer's order specified that no water shall be diverted from the Nutritas at
any time that the combined flow of the Nutritas and the Rio Brazos are
insufficient to meet the needs of the users along the Ensenada Ditch. Further,
the order required that all water diverted for filling and maintaining the lake
be measured in a manner acceptable to the state engineer.
{26} Protestants have argued
that the conditions imposed in the state engineer's order are inadequate to
insure that their rights will not be impaired. The record indicates that a
requirement for monthly metering was omitted by inadvertence. That omission
shall be corrected on remand, including, if necessary, provision for monitoring
to make metering effective. Once so corrected, the conditions imposed by the
state engineer's order will adequately protect against any possible impairment
of existing rights.
{27} The trial court's
judgment is reversed, and the case is remanded for further proceedings not
inconsistent with this opinion. No costs are awarded.
REBECCA SITTERLY, District Judge, A. JOSEPH ALARID, Judge,
PAMELA B. MINZNER, Judge, concur