DeKay v. United States Fish & Wildlife Service

524 N.W.2d 855, 1994 S.D. LEXIS 179, 1994 WL 685461
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 7, 1994
Docket18708
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 524 N.W.2d 855 (DeKay v. United States Fish & Wildlife Service) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
DeKay v. United States Fish & Wildlife Service, 524 N.W.2d 855, 1994 S.D. LEXIS 179, 1994 WL 685461 (S.D. 1994).

Opinion

SABERS, Justice.

Landowners appeal circuit court’s decision affirming Water Board’s grant of water use permits to United States Fish and Wildlife Service in LaCreek National Wildlife Refuge. We affirm.

FACTS

The United States Fish and Wildlife Service (FWS) owns and operates the LaCreek National Wildlife Refuge (Refuge) in Bennett County, South Dakota. The Refuge was established by Presidential Order in 1935. In September of 1971, FWS purchased 6,665 acres of land known as the “Brown Ranch” which was contiguous to the Refuge. The Brown Ranch land is used for shallow water habitat for migratory waterfowl.

FWS applied for three water right permits to the South Dakota Water Management Board (Board).

1. The First, No. 1927-2, was a request to vest a prior claimed right to 10 cubic *857 feet per second of water from four diversion points on Lake Creek.
2. The Second, No. 2191-2, was for a new water right to the natural flow of water from six springs near Lake Creek. FWS did not plan any development of the springs; the application was to assure the continued flow of the springs if the flow decreased due to use by others. This water was to be used to maintain 235 acres of marshes, sloughs, and wet meadows for wildlife habitat.
3. The Third, No. 1921-2, was to change the point of diversion and some of the land irrigated from Cedar Creek under an existing permit. A dam authorized as the diversion point was breached and no longer functioning. FWS sought to amend its permit to use another dam approximately one-half mile away as the diversion point.

Board granted FWS the three permits on the condition that FWS’ use of water did not flood or impair the surrounding Landowners’ property. Landowners appealed the Board’s decision to the circuit court, which found that Landowners’ main complaint was the flooding of their land by FWS’ use of its permits. This flooding allegedly caused the drowning of natural grasses used for commercial hay production and livestock and replaced it with commercially non-viable marsh-type vegetation. Landowner Wendell DeKay alleges the quality of water discharged onto his property has diminished as a result of the increased carp population in FWS’ sloughs.

The circuit court reversed the First permit because insufficient evidence existed that Brown Ranch had been using 10 c.f.s. of water from the diversion points, but affirmed Board’s grant of the Second and Third permits. Landowners appeal the circuit court’s ruling on the Second and Third permits.

Landowners appeal the Board’s findings of fact which we review under the clearly erroneous standard. The decision is to be upheld unless the reviewing Court is left with a definite and firm conviction that a mistake has been committed. Fraser v. Water Rights Commission, 294 N.W.2d 784 (S.D.1980). Mixed questions of fact and law are reviewed for error without deference. Permann v. Dept. of Labor, Unemp. Ins. Div., 411 N.W.2d 113, 119 (S.D.1987).

THE SECOND PERMIT

A. Future use

FWS sought the right to the continued natural flow of six springs if the water table dropped due to conditions or use by others. Landowners argue that the Second permit would improperly reserve a future use by protecting against future diminution. Under SDCL 46-5-38, only a few enumerated agencies may reserve future water rights. FWS concedes that it is not one of the statutorily enumerated agencies. The springs’ natural flow was intended for current use to maintain 235 acres of marshes and other waterfowl habitat. Although FWS did not intend to divert any of the natural flow, 1 the court found that the use was current and that the permit was not granted for an impermissible future use. Landowners have not shown this to be error.

B. Impairment of Rights

SDCL 46-2A-9 governs water right permits:

A permit to appropriate water may be issued only if there is reasonable probability that there is unappropriated water available for the applicant’s proposed use, that the proposed diversion can be developed without unlawful impairment of existing rights and that the proposed use is a beneficial use and in the public interest.

Landowners contend that the Second permit would impair the quality of water flowing to DeKay’s property and the quantity of *858 water reaching Hines’ property. The court found that the permit would not change existing natural conditions and that it would not impair the quality of water reaching De-Kay’s property or the quantity of water reaching Hines’ property. Landowners have failed to show that the finding was erroneous.

C. Beneficial Use

SDCL 46-2A-9 also requires that the permit constitute a “beneficial use.” Under SDCL 46-1-6(3), a “beneficial use” is:

any use of water within or outside the state, that is reasonable and useful and beneficial to the appropriator, and at the same time is consistent with the interests of the public of this state in the best utilization of water supplies[.]

A two-part analysis is required to determine “beneficial use.” First, the use must be “reasonable, useful, and beneficial to the appropriator.” SDCL 46-1-6(3). Landowners argue that because duck production declined on the refuge from 1983 to 1990, 2 the use for waterfowl habitat is no longer a beneficial use for the Refuge. The court found that the habitat provides for a “nationally significant population of trumpeter swans, and for Canada geese, snow geese, blue geese, cranes, and other wildlife.” The court concluded that “[p]ropagation of all these species is reasonable, useful and beneficial to FWS and the public.”

Landowners cite Lake Shore Duck Club v. Lake View Duck Club, 50 Utah 76, 166 P. 309 (1917), for the proposition that appropriating water for cultivating food for wildlife and waterfowl is not a beneficial use. However, the weight of authority indicates that “beneficial use is an evolving concept, and a concept that can be expanded to reflect changes in society’s recognition of the value of new uses of our resources.” Rick A. Thompson, Statutory Recognition of Instream Flow Preseroation: A Proposed, Solution for Wyoming, 17 Land & Water L.Rev. 139, 143 (1982). Appropriation of water for waterfowl habitat and other wildlife is a beneficial use.

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Bluebook (online)
524 N.W.2d 855, 1994 S.D. LEXIS 179, 1994 WL 685461, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dekay-v-united-states-fish-wildlife-service-sd-1994.