Collins Bros. v. Dunn

759 P.2d 891, 114 Idaho 600, 1988 Ida. LEXIS 74
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 21, 1988
DocketNo. 16844
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 759 P.2d 891 (Collins Bros. v. Dunn) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Collins Bros. v. Dunn, 759 P.2d 891, 114 Idaho 600, 1988 Ida. LEXIS 74 (Idaho 1988).

Opinion

BAKES, Justice.

The appellant, A. Kenneth Dunn, Director of the Idaho Department of Water Resources (the department), appeals a district court order regarding the department’s granting of a water permit with nine conditions to the respondent, Collins Brothers Corp. The district court (acting as an appellate court) found that the department’s action was defective on procedural due process grounds. Without remanding the case to the department for correction of the procedural errors, the district court affirmed the granting of the permit, but eliminated the conditions.

The record reflects that Collins Brothers is the successor to Royal Crest, Inc., which filed the original application with the department for a permit to appropriate water from a geothermal ground water source. Notice of the original application was published indicating that the water would be used for power purposes. No protests were received. Later the application was amended indicating that the water would be used to heat 110 homes. A new notice was published and this time protests were received from several parties.

The department scheduled a hearing and/or conference for the parties. Evidently, after the second notice was published and before the conference Collins Brothers announced its intention to additionally use the geothermal water for irrigation purposes. At the hearing the protesters alleged that pressure drops had occurred in their existing artesian wells since the completion of Collins Brothers’ wells, and they feared that the artesian aquifer would be depleted if the water was used to heat 110 homes and to irrigate crops. At this point the parties agreed to allow the department to reach a decision based upon the conference and upon the records of the department.1

Subsequently, the department issued a proposed memorandum decision and order giving the parties fifteen days to respond thereto. The proposed decision listed thirteen items which were considered by the department in reaching the decision. These included a scientific report on the geothermal aquifer prepared by the United States Geological Survey, the logs of six wells which pump water from the aquifer and the water permits for use of the aquifer waters. All of these items predated the conference between the parties. The decision carried proposed findings of fact which concluded that the ground water [602]*602rights of the protesters were in fact artesian and senior in priority. The department’s proposed conclusions of law provided that (1) reduction in the artesian pressure was not considered an injury; (2) it was not, however, in the local public interest to deplete an artesian hot water aquifer for the purposes that could be served by using cold water; (3) Collins Brothers could use ground water to supplement water from the surface sources for irrigation; and (4) it is proper that the effect of the use of water for irrigation purposes on other rights be considered.

The department then approved the application subject to nine conditions. The conditions at issue are, in relevant part, that (1) a method for measuring the water be installed, (2) geothermal water could not be used for irrigation purposes “based on it not being in the public interest,” (3) “the use of the water for irrigation under this permit is supplemental to all existing water rights with the same purpose and place of use as the other rights with the same purpose and place of use as the other rights must be developed and used to the fullest extent possible for irrigation before this permit is used for irrigation purposes,” (4) the department retained jurisdiction to assure that the water was to be put to beneficial use, (5) the amount of water was not to exceed that necessary for domestic, commercial and geothermal heating of 99 homes.

The proposed decision and order gave notice to all who took part in the hearing that, pursuant to I.C. §§ 42-1701A and 67-5211, they had the opportunity to file exceptions to the proposed order and to present briefs and request a hearing and present oral arguments in response to the proposed order. After the fifteen-day period for response had passed, without any objections to the proposed order or any requests for a hearing having been received, the department issued an order which adopted its proposed decision as final.

Collins Brothers subsequently moved to modify the final decision in part, and the department denied it. The motion to modify was based on Collins .Brothers’ argument that it had already expended approximately $95,000 developing the irrigation system, and the department was aware of this expenditure. The department’s denial was based on the need to protect the artesian hot water source and the availability of cold water to serve Collins Brothers’ irrigation needs.

Collins Brothers appealed to the district court alleging that the conditions imposed on the permit (specifically the condition that the water not be used for irrigation) were (1) in violation of the applicant’s constitutional rights, (2) in excess of the department’s statutory authority, and (3) affected by error of law. Collins Brothers also moved for sanctions against the department and for dismissal on appeal, but these motions were denied by the district court.

The district court issued a memorandum decision and order which found that the Administrative Procedures Act (APA), I.C. §§ 67-5201 et seq., was applicable and that the review of an administrative decision is limited to a determination of (1) legal questions and (2) whether there was substantial competent evidence to support the department’s decision. Based on its APA review the district court framed the issue as whether it was error for the department to base its findings and conclusions upon evidence outside the record. The district court then found that the department had based its decision on evidence outside the record and that the department’s memorandum decision was internally inconsistent. The district court found that the department’s actions constituted a procedural due process violation and struck all findings of fact and conclusions of law which were premised upon the evidence which it believed was outside the record. The district court summarized its disposition as follows:

“Given that the department considered material which was outside of the record in this matter, and that the substantial rights of the petitioner have been prejudiced, this court concludes that the final decision rendered by the department was made in excess of its statutory authority, made upon unlawful procedure, and constituted an unwarranted exercise of the department’s discretion. I.C. § 67-5215(g)(2), (3) and (6).
[603]*603“It is hereby ordered that the final decision of the Department of Water Resources be reversed, and that the petitioners be granted their permit without conditions thereon.”

The district court’s reversal of the department’s order has raised two primary issues on appeah — one procedural and one substantive. First, we must determine whether the Department of Water Resources’ procedural steps in the permit process were adequate to sufficiently protect Collins Brothers’ constitutional due process rights, and second, whether the district court erred as a matter of law when it ordered the permit issued without the contested public interest conditions which prohibited Collins Brothers from appropriating geothermal ground water for irrigation purposes. Collins Brothers has additionally asked for attorney fees on appeal.

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Bluebook (online)
759 P.2d 891, 114 Idaho 600, 1988 Ida. LEXIS 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/collins-bros-v-dunn-idaho-1988.