IN RE WATERFALL COMMUNITY WATER USERS ASS'N, 2009-NMCA-101, 147 N.M. 20, 216 P.3d 270
IN THE MATTER OF THE APPLICATION BY
WATERFALL COMMUNITY WATER USERS ASSOCIATION FOR PERMIT TO APPROPRIATE PUBLIC
SURFACE WATERS FROM CULBERSON SPRING LOCATED IN NEW MEXICO
WATERFALL COMMUNITY WATER USERS ASSOCIATION,
Applicant-Appellant,
v.
NEW MEXICO STATE ENGINEER, Appellee,
and
MEL ELKINS, Protestant-Appellee.
COURT OF APPEALS OF NEW MEXICO
2009-NMCA-101, 147 N.M. 20, 216 P.3d 270
APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF OTERO COUNTY, James W.
Counts, District Judge.
Released for Publication September 15,
2009.
Burroughs & Rhodes, Jefferson R.
Rhodes, Alamogordo, NM, for Appellant.
New Mexico Office of the State Engineer,
DL Sanders, Special Assistant Attorney General, Susanne Hoffman-Dooley, Special
Assistant Attorney General, Santa Fe, NM, for Appellee.
Holt Babington Mynatt, P.C., David
McNeill, Jr., Las Cruces, NM, for Appellee.
LINDA M. VANZI, Judge. WE CONCUR: JAMES J.
WECHSLER, Judge, TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge.
{1} Appellant,
Waterfall Community Water Users Association (Waterfall), submitted an
application for 320 acre-feet per year of surface water from Culberson Spring
1 within the Pecos River stream
system. Appellant argued that it possessed a natural right, pursuant to NMSA
1978, Section
72-5-29 (1953), to those waters. The State of New Mexico Office
of the State Engineer (State Engineer) dismissed the application. Waterfall
appealed to the district court. The district court, upon its de novo review of
the State Engineer’s decision to dismiss, granted summary judgment against
Waterfall. Waterfall appeals the district court’s ruling. We affirm.
{2} On September 23,
1999, Waterfall filed an application for unappropriated water with the
Appellee, State Engineer. In that application, Waterfall sought appropriation
of 320 acre-feet per year of surface water from Culberson Spring for use in its
community water system. Waterfall’s application was protested by Mel Elkins
(Protestant), an individual named as Appellee in this matter. Waterfall’s
application was filed with the State Engineer’s hearing unit, the entity within
the Office of the State Engineer responsible for conducting the hearing on
Waterfall’s application.
{3} On May 31, 2001,
prior to any evidentiary hearing, the Water Rights Division (WRD) of the State
Engineer filed a motion to dismiss with the hearing unit of the State Engineer.
The WRD requested dismissal of Waterfall’s hearing and denial of its
application. In support of its motion, the WRD argued that Culberson Spring is
a tributary to Cox Canyon, which is in turn a tributary to Rio Peñasco, which
is in turn a tributary to the Pecos River. The WRD asserted that the State
Engineer had previously found, in an unrelated case, that there are no
unappropriated waters available in the Pecos River stream system. Accordingly,
the WRD asserted that Waterfall’s request for appropriations from Culberson
Spring must be denied. To conclude otherwise would result in permitting the
appropriation of water from a water system that is fully appropriated.
{4} In response,
Waterfall disputed the WRD’s claim that there was no unappropriated water in
the Pecos River stream system. Additionally, Waterfall claimed that it had a
“natural right” pursuant to Section 72-5-29 to appropriate water from Culberson
Spring. The exact contours of this “natural right” and how this right could be
said to ameliorate the fact that Waterfall was requesting water from a stream
system that was fully appropriated was not explained in Waterfall’s response.
Indeed, Waterfall’s sole argument was that Section 72-5-29 “would appear to provide
for the specific situation that is present in this case, that is, diverting
waters from the Culberson Spring for the domestic uses of the inhabitants of
the land adjacent to Culberson Spring to distribute those waters as equitably
as possible without interference with vested rights.”
{5} On August 8, 2001,
the State Engineer dismissed Waterfall’s hearing and denied its application.
The State Engineer found, concurring with the WRD, that the waters of Culberson
Spring are tributary to the Pecos River, the Pecos River and its tributaries
are fully appropriated, and thus there are no unappropriated waters available
in the Pecos River stream system. Based on these facts, the State Engineer
concluded that granting Waterfall’s application would impair existing rights to
water in the Pecos River stream system, would be detrimental to the public
welfare, and would be contrary to the conservation of water within New Mexico.
{6} Pursuant to NMSA
1978, Section
72-7-1(E) (1971), Waterfall appealed the State Engineer’s
decision to the Twelfth Judicial District Court of New Mexico. On April 26,
2007, Protestant filed a motion for summary judgment with the district court.
The State Engineer joined Protestant’s motion and stated its agreement with the
arguments set forth therein.
{7} In his motion,
Protestant asserted that summary judgment was warranted because, as the State
Engineer found, Waterfall cannot appropriate waters from Culberson Spring; all
of that water is already fully appropriated. In addition, Protestant challenged
Waterfall’s assertion that it possessed a “natural right” to the waters of
Culberson Spring pursuant to Section 72-5-29. This assertion, Protestant
claimed, was premised on Waterfall’s erroneous interpretation of Section
72-5-29 and ignored the clear import of the statutory scheme within which
Section 72-5-29 falls. Protestant noted that the scope of Section 72-5-29 is
limited to the narrow purpose of conserving and utilizing torrential flood
water “so as to prevent erosion, waste, and damage caused by torrential
floods.” Further, the statutory provision provides that any distribution of
water cannot interfere with vested rights which Waterfall was seeking to do.
{8} On May 7, 2007,
Waterfall submitted its response to Protestant’s motion for summary judgment.
At the outset, Waterfall agreed with the facts as set forth in Protestant’s
motion and further conceded that the waters of the Pecos River stream system
could be found to be fully appropriated. In spite of these concessions,
however, Waterfall claimed that because “virtually all” the surface water it
sought to appropriate from Culberson Spring would be returned to the Pecos
River stream system, an issue of material fact existed with regard to whether
there is unappropriated water in the Pecos River stream system.
{9} Waterfall also
claimed that Section 72-5-29 provides Waterfall a “natural right” to
appropriate and “distribute the benefit of the water in the stream system as
equally as possible without interfering with vested rights.” In order to
address the concerns that Waterfall’s natural right argument was likely to
elicit in light of its acknowledgment that the Pecos River stream system is
fully appropriated, Waterfall maintained that application of its natural right
under Section 72-5-29 to the waters of Culberson Spring would have little or no
adverse impact on the existing appropriations in the Pecos River stream system.
Again, Waterfall maintained that the water it intended to divert from Culberson
Spring for municipal and industrial purposes would be returned to the Pecos
River stream system after use. As proof of this assertion, Waterfall submitted
an affidavit from James Murrill, the operator of Waterfall’s domestic water
system. Mr. Murrill’s affidavit stated that, based on his personal knowledge,
most of the water Waterfall sought to appropriate would be “discharged back
into the ground in the valley through individual liquid waste disposal
systems.”
{10} The district court
granted the motion for summary judgment on August 31, 2007, dismissing
Waterfall’s appeal. The district court found that there is no water available
for appropriation in the Pecos River stream system, that Culberson Spring is a
tributary and part of this stream system, and that the provisions of Section
72-5-29 were inapplicable to Waterfall’s claim because the application was not
made under that statute. Waterfall filed a timely notice of appeal of the
district court’s decision with this Court. The sole issue on appeal is whether
Section 72-5-29 allows Waterfall to appropriate waters from Culberson Springs
notwithstanding the fact that there is no unappropriated water in the Pecos
River stream system
{11} “An appeal from the
grant of a motion for summary judgment presents a question of law and is
reviewed de novo.”
Montgomery v. Lomos Altos, Inc.,
2007-NMSC-002, ¶ 16,
141 N.M. 21,
150 P.3d 971 (filed 2006). “Summary judgment is appropriate where
there are no genuine issues of material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment
as a matter of law.”
Id. (internal quotation marks and citation
omitted). “Where reasonable minds will not differ as to an issue of material
fact, the court may properly grant summary judgment.”
Id. “All
reasonable inferences are construed in favor of the non-moving party.”
Id.
(internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
B. Culberson
Spring is Fully Appropriated
{12} We first address the
State Engineer’s assertion that this matter is easily resolved given the
undisputed fact that Waterfall has applied for water from Culberson Spring,
which is part of a water system that is fully appropriated. The State Engineer
correctly observes that NMSA 1978, Section
72-5-7 (1985) provides that “[i]f,
in the opinion of the state engineer, there is no unappropriated water
available, he shall reject [an] application [for water appropriation].” We
agree with the State Engineer that Waterfall’s application seems readily
subject to dismissal given the fact that the parties recognize that the water
source they seek an appropriation from is fully appropriated.
{13} Notwithstanding that
Waterfall has agreed that there could be a finding of no unappropriated water
in the Pecos River stream system, it nevertheless attempts to circumvent this
statutory roadblock to its application by asserting a “natural right” to the
water in Culberson Spring under Section 72-5-29.
{14} Waterfall agrees
that there could be a finding of no unappropriated water in the Pecos River
stream system. It also concedes that it may exercise its alleged “natural
right” to the waters specified in its application under Section 72-5-29 only if
doing so would not interfere with preexisting vested water rights. Waterfall
responds to this obstacle by alleging that the water it seeks to appropriate
from Culberson Spring would be returned to the Pecos River stream system and,
therefore, there would be no interference with any vested rights. It maintains
that the district court erred when it granted summary judgment as this
precluded inquiry into “whether [Waterfall’s] natural right could be exercised
without interfering with [other] vested water rights.”
{15} In attempting to
elucidate the argument made by Waterfall, the State Engineer describes
Waterfall’s request for unappropriated water as seeking a “super status water
use.” We agree that Waterfall appears to be asserting a superseding right to a
reasonable share of water from Culberson Spring, irrespective of whether
Culberson Spring is fully appropriated. This conclusion—that Waterfall is
asserting a superseding right to water—is the only way to make sense of
Waterfall’s assertion that “as persons specifically identified in [Section 72-
5-29, Waterfall possesses] a natural right . . . to utilize a reasonable share
of the waters of the Pecos River [s]tream system and [Waterfall is] not
precluded from exercising that natural right by a broad . . . administrative
determination that there are no unappropriated waters in the Pecos River Basin.”
C. Interpretation
of Section 72-5-29
{16} We thus address
Waterfall’s argument that the natural right created by Section 72-5-29 grants
it such a superseding right “to utilize a reasonable share of the waters of the
Pecos River [s]tream system” despite the fact that the Pecos River stream
system is fully appropriated. This argument raises two questions: (1) whether
Section 72-5-29 provides Waterfall a superseding natural right to the waters
specified in its application, and (2) whether the district court improperly
denied Waterfall an opportunity to exercise this right by granting summary
judgment. Interpretation of a statute is a question of law which an appellate
court reviews de novo.
See Morgan Keegan Mortgage Co. v. Candelaria,
1998-NMCA-008, ¶ 5,
124 N.M. 405,
951 P.2d 1066 (filed 1997).
{17} The starting point
in our efforts to resolve the questions raised by Waterfall’s argument is the
language of the statute in question. In interpreting statutes, we seek to give
effect to the Legislature’s intent, and in determining intent we look to the
language used and consider the statute’s history and background.
Key v.
Chrysler Motors Corp.,
121 N.M. 764, 768-69,
918 P.2d 350, 354-55 (1996).
Section 72-5-29 provides:
To
the end that the waters of the several stream systems of the state may be
conserved and utilized so as to prevent erosion, waste and damage caused by
torrential floods, and in order that the benefits of the use of such waters may
be distributed among the inhabitants and landowners of the country along said
streams as equitably as possible without interfering with vested rights, the
natural right of the people living in the upper valleys of the several stream
systems to impound and utilize a reasonable share of the waters which are
precipitated upon and have their source in such valleys and superadjacent
mountains, is hereby recognized, the exercise of such right, however, to be
subject to the provisions of this article.
We first observe that this statute was promulgated in 1909,
and the language of the present statute remains virtually unchanged since its
promulgation. This fact highlights the novelty of Waterfall’s argument—we are
aware of no other case since 1909 in which an applicant asserted a natural
right to fully appropriated waters under Section 72-5-29, and Waterfall has
directed us to none.
{18} The parties offer
competing interpretations of Section 72-5-29. Waterfall asserts that Section
72-5-29 “affords persons such as the residents of Waterfall [a natural right]
to impound and utilize a reasonable share of surface water” and has submitted
four arguments in support of this conclusion. We note at the outset of our
discussion of these arguments that we find them unpersuasive.
{19} First, Waterfall
contends that the repeated use of the word “and” in Section 72-5-29 somehow
supports its interpretation of the statute. Waterfall has given us no support
for this contention, outside of a general discussion on the use of the
conjunction, and we simply do not see why or how this is the case. Second,
Waterfall focuses on the use of the word “natural” in Section 72-5-29 and
argues that the presence of this word denotes that Section 72-5-29 establishes
a right originating not from law but from some other source. Again, we find no
support in the statutory language for Waterfall’s argument, and it has not
provided any reasoned basis to persuade us of the merits of this contention.
Third, Waterfall asserts that, when enacted, Section 72-5-29 was inconsistent
with the existing water law statutes and thus must have created a new right
that Waterfall is entitled to exercise. This argument ignores the fact that the
plain language of Section 72-5-29 indicates that it is, and always was, subject
to the provisions of the preexisting sections of NMSA 1978, Sections
72-5-1 to
-39 (1907, as amended through 2007). Finally, Waterfall argues that were we to
decline to adopt its interpretation of Section 72-5-29, we would be stripping
the statute of any meaning. This argument also fails as we are persuaded that
the State Engineer’s interpretation of Section 72-5-29 properly explains the
meaning of Section 72-5-29 and its interrelationship with the other statutes
within Sections 72-5-1 to -39. First, we have no hesitation in concluding that
Section 72-5-29 implicates fundamental water law policies.
{20} The State Engineer
suggests that Section 72-5-29 should be interpreted in the following manner:
The intended effect of Section
72-5-29 appears to be to smooth out the water supply curve by allowing water to
be impounded during periods of excess supply, which otherwise could not be
placed to beneficial use. Doing so [] promotes watershed health and prevents
erosion and property damage by allowing impoundment and use of excessive or
torrential flows under certain specific circumstances. [However, t]he State
Engineer may nevertheless grant such an application only if there is
unappropriated water to appropriate . . . and such an appropriation would not
deprive prior appropriators of their water. . . . Thus, the Legislature clearly
did not remove impoundment and utilization of flood waters from the general
scheme for surface water appropriation, to create some sort of super status
water use.
Given the complex nature of the statutory regime governing
water appropriation in this state, relying on the expertise of the State
Engineer to decipher how Section 72-5-29—a statute that has garnered little
attention in one hundred years—fits into that scheme is prudent. Second, the
State Engineer’s interpretation of Section 72-5-29 comports with the plain
language of the statute. See In re Adjustments to Franchise Fees Required by
Elec. Util. Indus. Restructuring Act of 1999, 2000-NMSC-035, ¶ 9, 129 N.M.
787, 14 P.3d 525 (“In construing a particular statute, a reviewing court’s
central concern is to determine and give effect to the intent of the
[L]egislature. In order to determine legislative intent, this Court looks
primarily to the plain language of the statute, giving ordinary meaning to the
words used.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).
{21} Section 72-5-29
plainly contemplates the potential utilization of water “so as to prevent
erosion, waste and damage caused by torrential floods.” The statute further
specifies that any appropriation of the water contemplated by the provision
should not “interfere[] with vested rights” and is “subject to the provisions
of [Section 72-5-1 to -39].” Section 72-5-29. Accordingly, the State Engineer’s
contentions that Section 72-5-29 concerns appropriation of flood waters under
certain specific circumstances, that an application to appropriate those flood
waters is required, that an appropriation of those flood waters is appropriate
only if that appropriation would not interfere with prior appropriations, and
that Section 72-5-29 did not create a super status water use that supersedes
the normal appropriation process is consistent not only with the express
language of the statute, but also with the underlying rationale of conservation
and damage control.
{22} Having arrived at
the foregoing conclusions, we turn to the questions posed by Waterfall’s
argument that it possesses a superseding “natural right” to the waters of
Culberson Spring under Section 72-5-29 and that it was erroneously denied a
hearing to determine whether it was entitled to exercise that right. In
considering whether Section 72-5-29 provides Waterfall a superseding natural
right to waters from Culberson Spring, we conclude that it does not. As
described above, Section 72-5-29 concerns flood waters and the appropriation of
flood waters under certain specific circumstances. Waterfall is not asserting a
right to flood waters under Section 72-5-29. It is asserting a right to water
from Culberson Spring. This incongruity disposes of Waterfall’s claim that it
is entitled to the water specified in its application under Section 72-5-29. In
determining whether the district court erroneously denied Waterfall an
opportunity to a hearing on whether it was potentially entitled to an
appropriation under Section 72-5-29, we conclude that it did not. The district
court properly held that Waterfall was not entitled to an appropriation from
Culberson Spring, a part of a fully appropriated water system. Waterfall’s
reliance on Section 72-5-29 to challenge this determination is unavailing.
D. Alternative
Grounds for Summary Judgment
{23} Moreover, even if we
were to accept Waterfall’s interpretation of Section 72-5-29, the district
court was nevertheless correct in granting summary judgment on alternative
grounds. Waterfall’s stated intent is to utilize a “reasonable share” of water
from Culberson Spring “for use in the community water system serving the
Waterfall Subdivision.” According to Waterfall, water use in Waterfall’s
community water system means “household and domestic” use. Waterfall contends
that the 320 acre-feet per year that it requested for household and domestic
use would result only in “minimal consumptive use.” Further, Waterfall argues
that the used waters that are diverted from Culberson Spring would somehow then
be “pass[ed] on downstream to the other vested right holders.” The only basis
for these assertions are James Murrill’s unsupported and conclusory statements
that “the source of the water for the [Culberson] Spring is precipitated on the
slopes of the valley where the Spring and the Waterfall subdivisions are
located” and that “the water is discharged back into the ground in the valley
through individual liquid waste disposal systems.” Mr. Murrill’s statements,
based only “upon [his] personal knowledge,” are neither competent nor
admissible and are therefore insufficient to defeat summary judgment.
Pedigo
v. Valley Mobile Homes, Inc.,
97 N.M. 795, 798,
643 P.2d 1247, 1250 (Ct.
App.1982) (noting that “factually unsupported opinion testimony” is “not
sufficient to defeat a motion for summary judgment”). The State Engineer found,
and the district court agreed, that Waterfall’s exercise of its alleged natural
right would interfere with preexisting vested water rights. We agree, and
Waterfall has provided no evidence to the contrary. Furthermore, this
conclusion is a proper basis upon which to have granted summary judgment
dismissing Waterfall’s application.
See State ex rel. State Eng’r v. Comm’r
of Pub. Lands,
2009-NMCA-004, ¶ 15,
145 N.M. 433,
200 P.3d 86 (filed 2008)
(“The appropriation of water for beneficial use establishes the priority date
of a water right in relation to other water rights, and the full right of an
earlier appropriator will be protected, to the extent of that appropriator’s
use, against a later appropriator.”).
{24} Accordingly, we hold
that summary judgment was proper as a matter of law and that Waterfall was not
entitled to the appropriation specified in its application, nor was it entitled
to those waters under Section 72-5-29. We affirm the district court’s ruling.
Topic Index for Waterfall Community Water Users Assn.
v. NM State Engineer, No. 28, 049