Carangelo v. Albuquerque-Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority

2014 NMCA 032, 5 N.M. 577
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedFebruary 3, 2014
DocketNo. 34,475; Docket No. 26,757
StatusPublished

This text of 2014 NMCA 032 (Carangelo v. Albuquerque-Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Carangelo v. Albuquerque-Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority, 2014 NMCA 032, 5 N.M. 577 (N.M. Ct. App. 2014).

Opinion

OPINION

KENNEDY, Chief Judge.

{1} This case came before the Court on Appellants’ (Protestants) motion for rehearing. Both Appellees filed a response to the motion. Due consideration of the motion having been had by the panel, we conclude that the motion is hereby granted. The Opinion previously filed in this matter on November 28, 2011, is hereby withdrawn, and this Opinion issued in its place.

{2} As to the merits in this case, we hold that granting a permit based on an application to divert water, to which the applicant asserted no prior appropriative right and affirmatively asserted no beneficial use of the water diverted, was unsupported by law. Accordingly, we reverse the district court. We remand to the Office of the State Engineer to issue a corrected permit. On other matters not affecting this disposition, we affirm the district court as noted in this Opinion.

INTRODUCTION

{3} Protestants appeal the decision of the district court affirming the granting of Permit 4830 (the Permit) for diversion of native surface water from the Rio Grande following an appeal to the district court from a decision of the Office of the State Engineer (OSE). The district court entered judgment, together with specific findings and conclusions, affirming the OSE’s approval of Application 4830 (the Application) and granting of the Permit.

{4} The City of Albuquerque (Applicant)1 applied to the OSE to divert roughly 45,000 acre-feet per year (af/y) of native Rio Grande water, to which Applicant had no appropriative right, to enable the use of Applicant’s own San Juan-Chama Project (SJCP) water that originates in the Colorado River Basin. Applicant intended SJCP water that is carried in the Rio Grande to provide drinking water to the City of Albuquerque and Bernalillo County through Applicant’s new Drinking Water Project (DWP). The contemplated diversion of the native Rio Grande surface water involves what Applicant calls “non-consumptive” and “not beneficial” water use to ensure the necessary volume and flow levels to “carry” the SJCP water into the water treatment plant for processing and distribution. Applicant did not seek any appropriative rights to the native Rio Grande water it wishes to use in this fashion. It is undisputed that, by the terms of the Permit, any native Rio Grande water diverted must be simultaneously returned to the river in full measure.

{5} We review Protestants’ appeal of the following: (1) the denial of their motion to dismiss the Application for a permit to divert water for lack of jurisdiction, (2) the denial of Protestants’ motion to invoke primary jurisdiction of the OSE to consider some matters, (3) the orders granting Applicant’s and the OSE’s motions for partial summary judgment, and (4) the denial of Protestants ’ motions for summary judgment. These issues concern three primary areas.

{6} We first address issues, to which Protestants collectively refer as “jurisdictional,” concerning what is required to invoke the power of the OSE to review the Application under the Water Code, NMSA 1978, §§ 72-1-1 to -20-103 (1907, as amended through 2011), to divert the native Rio Grande water. This includes both subject matter jurisdiction and the implicit or explicit statutory power of the OSE to act on the Application. We hold that, owing to the broad authority conferred on the OSE, there is no need to invoke particular statutory bases for action before the OSE acquires the ability to exercise its duties and powers under the W ater Code to consider an application for a permit.

{7} However, because under the New Mexico Constitution there can be no use of water that is not beneficial, we reject Applicant’s position that its “non-consumptive” use is not beneficial. We hold that even a concurrent and non-consumptive use of surface water in a fully appropriated system must require a new appropriation of water. See N.M. Const, art. XVI, §§ 1, 2 (stating that New Mexico recognizes existing rights to use waters of the state for beneficial purposes and that any unappropriated water is “subject to appropriation for beneficial use”). In this context, we also review the OSE’s application process in this case, including the information required in an application and the applicable notice provisions for changing and applying for diversions of surface water. We hold that, because the jurisdiction of the OSE was invoked, the OSE may revise the permit that it issued in conformance with this Opinion.

{8} Second, we hold there was no necessity for the State Engineer, John D’Antonio, to have been recused from participating in the agency review of the Application. Third and last, we affirm the procedure and results of the district court’s review of the appeal of the OSE’s decision. This review includes the analysis of the impairment of water rights by the proposed diversion and whether the district court should have remanded a question concerning compliance with the Rio Grande Compact (the Compact), Section 72-15-23, to the OSE for consideration under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction. W e address each in turn as we reverse the decision of the district court in part and affirm in part.

PRELIMINARY FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

{9} The Rio Grande headwaters originate near Creede, Colorado, and the river discharges into the Gulf of Mexico. Applicant obtained an allocation of San Juan River water rights by contract with the Bureau of Reclamation. This surface water is native to the Colorado River Basin and is transported across the Continental Divide through a tunnel to the Rio Grande via Heron Reservoir and the Chama River. Applicant then stores this water in Abiquiu Lake and schedules releases into the Rio Grande mainstream. The SJCP water is diverted for use in Bernalillo County. While traveling downstream in the Rio Grande, SJCP water mixes with native Rio Grande surface waters — the water that courses through the Rio Grande watershed.2

{10} In past years, Applicant has used this SJCP water to offset its depletion of underground water in the Rio Grande Basin that it has pumped from Applicant’s wells for municipal use. The pumping of groundwater is the subject of Permit No. RG-960 (RG-960), which was applied for in June 1993, and reapproved in September 2003, by the OSE. Part of the conditions of approval for that Permit involves Applicant’s use of its SJCP surface water as needed to offset its depletions of groundwater under RG-960.

{11} The effects of pumping Rio Grande Basin groundwater from municipal wells in a growing urban area, together with new hydrologic studies indicating that the scope of the aquifer is significantly more limited than had been previously described,3 led Applicant to conclude that its allocation of SJCP water would provide a useful municipal drinking water supply. To proceed to utilize this resource also appeared to be a way to conserve its future groundwater resources by substituting the surface water for much of what it would otherwise have pumped from the ground. Applicant proceeded to plan for a diversion of its entire allocation of SJCP water to use for this purpose. To accomplish this goal, Applicant concluded that an equal amount of native Rio Grande water would also need to be simultaneously diverted to “carry” its SJCP water.

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Bluebook (online)
2014 NMCA 032, 5 N.M. 577, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/carangelo-v-albuquerque-bernalillo-county-water-utility-authority-nmctapp-2014.