Concho River Basin Water Conservancy Association v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

CourtCourt of Appeals of Texas
DecidedDecember 3, 2013
Docket07-12-00302-CV
StatusPublished

This text of Concho River Basin Water Conservancy Association v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (Concho River Basin Water Conservancy Association v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Texas primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

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Concho River Basin Water Conservancy Association v. Texas Commission on Environmental Quality, (Tex. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

In The Court of Appeals Seventh District of Texas at Amarillo ________________________

No. 07-12-00302-CV ________________________

CONCHO RIVER BASIN WATER CONSERVANCY ASSOCIATION, APPELLANT

V.

TEXAS COMMISSION ON ENVIRONMENTAL QUALITY AND CITY OF SAN ANGELO, APPELLEES

On Appeal from the 98th District Court Travis County, Texas Trial Court No. D-1-GN-11-001298; Honorable Tim Sulak, Presiding

December 3, 2013

MEMORANDUM OPINION Before QUINN, C.J., and CAMPBELL and PIRTLE, JJ.

This is an appeal of the judgment entered following the judicial review of a final

decision in a contested administrative proceeding1 under Subchapter G of the Texas

1 State Office of Administrative Hearings Docket No. XXX-XX-XXXX. Administrative Procedure Act.2 Appellant, Concho River Basin Water Conservancy

Association (CRBWCA),3 appeals the decision of 98th District Court, Travis County,

affirming the administrative decision of the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality

(TCEQ),4 which approved the application of Appellee, City of San Angelo (Amendment

1318C), seeking to amend a previously adjudicated water right (Certificate of

Adjudication No. 14-1318), issued on March 12, 1980 by the Texas Water Commission,

predecessor to TCEQ, in favor of the San Angelo Water Supply Corporation. In the

contested hearing before the TCEQ the interests of the San Angelo Water Supply

Corporation, the owner of the water right, were represented by the City of San Angelo.

Accordingly, throughout the remainder of this opinion, references to the City of San

Angelo include by reference the San Angelo Water Supply Corporation.

By this appeal, CRBWCA contests the approval of Amendment 1318C, which

resulted in the issuance by TCEQ of Certificate of Adjudication No. 14-1318C, on April

13, 2011. In five points of error, CRBWCA asserts: (1) TCEQ misconstrued the City’s

2 TEXAS GOV’T CODE ANN. §§ 2001.171 – 2001.178 (West 2008). 3 CRBWCA is a non-profit Texas corporation whose purposes include the protection of water rights in the Concho River Basin. CRBWCA filed the original petition in this cause on its behalf and on behalf of the ―Protestant Plaintiffs‖ recognized by the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality (TCEQ) as parties in the contested case hearing before the TCEQ (TCEQ Docket No. 2008-1617-WR), to-wit: City of Paint Rock; A.J. Jones, Jr.; Wilburn Bailey Estate; Carrol Blacklock; Lewis J. Buck; Lonnie L. Buck; Van W. Carson; W.G. and Wanda Dishroon; Thomas Evridge; Samie Ewald; Leonard Grantham, Jr.; Bill J. Helwig; Hudson Management, Ltd; Douglas John; John C. Ketzler; Bernie and Lucy Mika; Kevin L. Noland; Darrell Rushing; Schneemann Investment Corporation; Kenneth Schwartz; Kent C. Schwartz; Todd Schwertner; Gordon Snodgrass; Vinson Ranch Ltd; Clyde Watkins; Edward E. Werner; Ben A. Willberg; Kenneth R. Windham; Stuart Seidel and South Concho Irrigation Company. 4 Our references to TCEQ include its predecessor agencies: State Board of Water Engineers, Texas Water Commission, Texas Water Rights Commission, Texas Department of Water Resources, and the Texas Natural Resource Conservation Commission, which changed its name to Texas Commission on Environmental Quality in 2002. See Act of May 28, 2001, 77th Leg., R.S., ch. 965, § 18.01, 2001 TEX. GEN. LAWS 1933, 1985. See also 30 TEX. ADMIN. CODE § 3.2(8) (2002); FPL Farming Ltd. v. Environmental Processing Systems L.C., 383 S.W.3d 274, 277 n.1 (Tex. App.—Beaumont 2012, pet. denied).

2 pre-amendment water right; (2) TCEQ improperly found Certificate of Adjudication No.

14-1318C would result in no adverse impact on other water rights or (3) the

environment; (4) TCEQ improperly determined Amendment 1318C did not request a

new or increased appropriation or diversion of water that would require the City of San

Angelo to demonstrate unappropriated water was available to meet the new demand or

diversion; and (5) CRBWCA was denied due process guaranteed by both the United

States and Texas Constitutions.5 The City of San Angelo raises three cross-issues. We

will affirm.

BACKGROUND

PERMIT 1949

In February 1960, TCEQ issued Permit 1949 authorizing the San Angelo Water

Supply Corporation to appropriate, divert and use storm/flood waters of the Middle and

South Concho Rivers, tributaries of the Concho and Colorado Rivers in Tom Green

County, Texas. The City of San Angelo’s appropriation was limited to no more than

29,000 acre-feet of water per annum for municipal use and no more than 25,000 acre-

feet for the purpose of irrigating 10,000 acres of land in Tom Green County. To store

the appropriated water, the City of San Angelo was authorized to impound 170,000

acre-feet of water in the South Butte Dam and Reservoir (Reservoir), an on-channel

dam located on the South and Middle Concho Rivers. 6

5 In addition to the arguments presented by CRBWCA, amicus curiae briefs supporting those arguments were filed by the Caddo Lake Institute and the Texas Farm Bureau. 6 The Reservoir’s capacity is 600,000 acre-feet. See TEX. W ATER CODE ANN. § 11.021(a) (West 2008); Edwards Aquifer Authority v. Day, 274 S.W.3d 742, 752-53 (Tex. App.—San Antonio 2008), aff’d,

3 THE WATER ADJUDICATION ACT

In March 1967, the Texas Legislature passed the Water Adjudication Act7

declaring that conservation and best utilization of the State’s water resources were a

public necessity and the recordation of claims of water rights were necessary to limit the

exercise of water claims to actual use. See TEX. W ATER CODE ANN. § 11.302 (West

2008). Under the Water Adjudication Act, all persons claiming a water right were

required to file a sworn statement identifying their water right including ―dates and

volumes of use of water‖ with TCEQ. See id. at §§ 11.303, 11.307. After TCEQ made a

preliminary claim determination, id. at §§ 11.309, 11.312, considered claimant contests,

id. at § 11.313, and made a final determination, id. at § 11.315, the Commission then

obtained a final decree from a district court. See id. at § 11.322. Claimants were

permitted to file exceptions to the final determination of TCEQ in district court. See id.

at § 11.318. At the conclusion of the district court’s proceedings, the court entered a

decree that was ―final and conclusive as to all existing and prior rights and claims to the

water rights in the adjudicated stream or segment of a stream‖; id. at § 11.322(d),

subject to civil appeal. Id. at § 11.322(c). Thereafter, TCEQ issued a certificate of

adjudication setting forth ―the priority, extent, and purpose of the adjudicated right‖ and

―all other information in the decree relating to the adjudicated right.‖ Id. at §

11.323(b)(3), (4).

369 S.W.3d 814, 822-24 (Tex. 2012). 7 See Act of March 13, 1967, 60th Leg., R.S., ch. 45, 1967 TEX. GEN. LAWS 86. The bulk of the water rights provisions in the Water Adjudication Act were moved to Chapter 11 of the Water Code in 1977. See Act of May 17, 1977, 65th Leg., R.S., ch. 870, § 1, 1977 TEX. GEN. LAWS 2207, 2215. See also TEX. W ATER CODE ANN. §§ 11.301-.324 (West 2008).

4 ADJUDICATION OF THE CITY OF SAN ANGELO’S WATER RIGHTS

In August 1976, the Commission issued a modified final determination of the City

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