Friends of Great Salt Lake v. Utah Department of Natural Resources

2017 UT 15, 393 P.3d 291, 2017 WL 1024614
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 15, 2017
DocketCase No. 20131050
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2017 UT 15 (Friends of Great Salt Lake v. Utah Department of Natural Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Friends of Great Salt Lake v. Utah Department of Natural Resources, 2017 UT 15, 393 P.3d 291, 2017 WL 1024614 (Utah 2017).

Opinion

Associate Chief Justice Lee,

opinion of the Court:

¶1 This case involves a series of legal challenges to the decision of the Division of Forestry, Fire and State Lands (Division) granting a mining lease covering a small portion of the Great Salt Lake. Plaintiffs-appellants, collectively known as Friends of Great Salt Lake (Friends), sought to halt the lease in various requests and petitions submitted to the Division or to the Utah Department of Natural Resources (Department). The agencies rejected them all. Friends then challenged those rejections in the district court. And in the district court proceedings Friends also sought leave to amend its complaint to raise additional constitutional and statutory arguments.

¶2 The district court affirmed the rejection of Friends’ requests and petitions, denied in part Friends’ attempt to amend its 3 complaint, and later dismissed the remaining arguments on summary judgment. Friends filed this appeal. It alternatively sought extraordinary relief in this court. We affirm in large part. And we deny Friends’ request for extraordinary relief. Yet we reverse on one narrow question: We conclude that the Division was required to engage in “site-specific planning” as a prerequisite to the issuance of *294 the record of decision approving the lease application in question, see Utah Admin. Code r. 652-90-300(2) (2007), and remand to allow the Department to decide on the appropriate remedy for the failure to perform such planning,

I

A

¶3 In 1996, the Division created a resource management plan for the Great Salt Lake. This “Mineral Leasing Plan for the Great Salt Lake” divided the lake into four leasing zones, with lands in all zones foreclosed from leasing until nominated by outside parties. The first zone—and the only one relevant here—was labeled “Open.” This designation meant that “[n]o significant resource conflicts [were] identified.” It also indicated that the area would be “[ojpen to hydrocarbon or mineral salt leasing with standard lease stipulations for Great Salt Lake environments.”

¶4 One year later, the Division began the process of developing a comprehensive management plan for the Great Salt Lake, a process that included re-examining the previous year’s mineral leasing plan. From 1998 to 1999, the Division invited public participation in formulating the new comprehensive management plan and received comments from interested parties, including some members of Friends. In 2000, the Division enacted a comprehensive management plan, which also incorporated the 1996 resource management plan.

¶5 Seven years later, in February 2007, the Great Salt Lake Minerals Corporation (Corporation) nominated 23,000 acres for lease. This land fell under the “Open” zone of the resource management plan. In April, the Division invited the public to comment on what stipulations and restrictions should be applied to the lease. Numerous comments were submitted, including from Friends. In May, the Division opened up the nominated acreage to competitive bids. The Corporation’s bid was accepted.

¶6 In early July 2007, the Division released a record of decision detailing the grounds for its decision to grant the Corporation the lease. And the Division concluded that granting the lease would not violate the comprehensive management or mineral leasing plans.

B

¶7 Friends made three parallel, simultaneous attempts to halt approval of the Corporation’s mining lease on the Great Salt Lake; (1) it petitioned the Department for “consistency review” of the Division’s record of decision regarding the lease, asserting that the decision ran afoul of the state public trust doctrine and the Division’s planning regulations; (2) it filed a request for agency action with the Division’s director, asking the Division to “redo” its analysis or “undertake site-specific analysis” in furtherance of the Division’s responsibilities to protect the public trust, and to determine how the leases should be changed and “implement those changes,” Request for Agency Action at 3; and (3) it petitioned the Division for an agency declaratory order “on the correct applicability” of article XX, section 1 of the Utah Constitution, 4 Utah Code section 65A-10-1(1), 5 and the Division’s Sovereign Land Management Planning regulation 6 relating to the Division’s record of decision.

¶8 In January 2008, the Division’s Director and the Department’s Executive Director consolidated the request and two petitions and issued a single agency order denying all three. The petition for consistency review *295 and request for agency action were denied on the ground that Friends wasn’t a party to the lease application; the order concluded that the Utah Administrative Procedures Act (UAPA) prevents non-parties from intervening in informal adjudications. The petition for a declaratory order was denied for three reasons: (1) granting it would substantially prejudice the Corporation's rights without its consent, (2) the petition improperly relied on disputed facts, and (3) the petition sought a declaratory order on what was not yet an executed contract. But the directors stayed the execution of the lease to give Friends a chance to request an amendment to the 2000 comprehensive management plan.

¶9 Friends responded in three ways. First, Friends petitioned the Division to amend the comprehensive management plan based on the same arguments it had put forth in its previous petitions and request. Second, • it appealed the directors’ denial of the initial petitions and request to district court. 7 Finally, Friends sought a stay of the issuance of the lease to the Corporation.

¶10 The Division’s director denied the request to amend the comprehensive management plan amendment under Utah Administrative Code Rule 652-90-1000 (2007), a rule requiring “unforeseen circumstances” to sustain an amendment to a comprehensive management plan. In the director’s view, Friends had identified no “unforeseen circumstances” that were not addressed in the original comprehensive management plan; instead Friends put forth only its disagreements with the plan. The director also noted that the 2000 comprehensive management plan would be reviewed in 2010 and invited Friends to participate in that process.

¶11 The Division also denied Friends’ stay request. It concluded that construction could not occur until the Corporation received a Clean Water Act permit authorizing development.

¶12 The Division executed the lease with the Corporation a day later. And one month after that, the Department’s Executive Director affirmed the Division director’s denial of the plan amendment and lease stay requests.

¶13 Friends responded by amending its complaint in the district court. The amended complaint sought judicial review of the denial of the petition to amend the comprehensive management plan. At that point the Corporation moved to intervene in the district court proceedings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2017 UT 15, 393 P.3d 291, 2017 WL 1024614, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/friends-of-great-salt-lake-v-utah-department-of-natural-resources-utah-2017.