In Re Application No. 5189-3 to Extend Time

467 N.W.2d 907, 1991 S.D. LEXIS 52, 1991 WL 42373
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 27, 1991
Docket17097
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 467 N.W.2d 907 (In Re Application No. 5189-3 to Extend Time) 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
In Re Application No. 5189-3 to Extend Time, 467 N.W.2d 907, 1991 S.D. LEXIS 52, 1991 WL 42373 (S.D. 1991).

Opinions

WUEST, Justice.

Mr. Gerald Person appeals the judgment of the circuit court, affirming the decision of the Water Management Board to extend the time for construction of an irrigation works under Water Permit No. 4780-3. We affirm in part and reverse in part.

On June 8, 1981, Walter W. Johnson applied for a permit to appropriate water for the irrigation of farmland located in Marshall County, South Dakota. The farmland was owned by Vincent and Isabel Fryer. Mr. Johnson was a long-time tenant on the Fryer farmland pursuant to an oral crop-share lease and was a close personal friend of the Fryers. The application was approved by the Water Management Board (Board) on July 29,1981, and Water Permit No. 4780-3 was issued with a priority date of June 8, 1981. Pursuant to the permit, construction necessary to put the water to beneficial use was to be completed on or before July 29, 1986, and the water was to be put to beneficial use on or before July 29, 1990.

A dam from which the irrigation water was to be appropriated was constructed and filled with water in the spring of 1982. The dam was built by Teiger Construction Co. in return for gravel from the Fryers’ land worth approximately $32,000. Mr. Johnson assisted in the construction of the dam.

In 1982, a dispute arose between Mr. Johnson and the Fryers. The dispute culminated in the Fryers commencing an eviction action against Mr. Johnson in April 1983. A judgment of eviction was entered against Mr. Johnson on July 5, 1983. Mrs. Fryer transferred Water Permit No. 4780-3 into her name, alone, on August 23, 1983.

In the fall of 1982, the Fryers rented their land to Curtis and Richard Foster, the present tenants on the land. The Fosters checked into completing the irrigation project and discussed it with the Fryers. Plans to finish the project were put on hold, however, because Mr. Johnson commenced a lawsuit against the Fryers on August 24, 1983, seeking over $100,000 in damages for lost improvements made during the oral lease.

At the time Mr. Johnson filed his lawsuit, Mr. Fryer was in his early eighties and had, and continued to suffer, serious health problems which ultimately resulted in permanent mental impairment and memory loss. Mr. Fryer was hospitalized with congestive heart failure and suffered psychological stress as a result of the falling-out with Mr. Johnson. Mrs. Fryer was in her mid-seventies.

This second lawsuit was settled in June of 1987. In March 1988, Curtis Foster contacted the Water Rights Division concerning completion of the irrigation project and on March 19, 1988, Mrs. Fryer made application to reinstate Water Permit No. 4780-3. This application was subsequently revised to an application to extend the time for completion of the construction works under Permit No. 4780-3, and was formally filed August 15, 1988.

Mr. Gerald Person intervened in opposition to the extension of time for construction. Mr. Person is a downstream irrigator who has two water permits, one with a priority date of February 23, 1983, and another with priority as of October 24, 1984. Mr. Person’s interest in this matter stems from the fact that Mrs. Fryer’s water permit retains its original priority date (June 8, 1981) if it is “extended,” but loses its priority date if it must be reinstated.1

The Board determined that “exigent circumstances” existed under SDCL 46-5-26 and extended the time for construction to July 29, 1989. Mr. Person appealed to circuit court, which affirmed the Board’s decision. Mr. Person appeals to this court and [910]*910raises seven issues.2 Under our holding, we need address only:

I. Whether the Board lacks jurisdiction to amend a permit to extend the construction period pursuant to SDCL 46-5-26 by an application filed after the expiration of the permit’s five-year construction period;
II. Whether the 1983 amendment to SDCL 46-5-26 constitutes an unlawful delegation of legislative authority; and
III. Whether the Board’s conclusion of law that “exigent circumstances” existed is supported by the record.

I.

We set forth in full several pertinent statutes in order to establish a background for our discussion. SDCL 46-2A-8 provides:

Any construction necessary to put the water to beneficial use shall be completed within five years of approval of the permit and the water shall be put to beneficial use within an additional four years. The water management board may, in its discretion, approve any application for a lesser amount of water or may vary the periods of annual use and the permit to appropriate water shall be regarded as limited accordingly.

SDCL 46-5-24 provides:

The plans of construction or place of diversion may be amended, but no amendment may authorize any extension of time for construction beyond five years from the date of the permit, except as provided by this chapter. A change in the proposed point of diversion of water or change of construction plans shall be subject to the procedures contained in chapter 46-2A and may not be allowed to the detriment of the rights of others having valid water permits or rights to the use of the water.

And SDCL 46-5-26 provides:

A permit may be amended by extending the time for the completion of construction, or for application to beneficial use, for a reasonable time, but only on account of delays due to physical or engineering difficulties which could not have been reasonably anticipated, due to operation of law beyond the power of the applicant to avoid, or due to other exigent circumstances identified by the water management board.

It is undisputed that the construction works of the Fryers’ irrigation project were not completed within five years or that Mrs. Fryer did not apply for an extension of the construction period prior to the expiration of the original five-year construction period.

Mr. Person contends the Board is without jurisdiction to consider permit amendments to extend the construction period filed after the original five-year period. He asserts two lines of argument: (1) SDCL 46-5-26 does not expressly or impliedly grant the Board authority to consider applications to amend after the five-year period, and (2) Mrs. Fryer’s water permit lapsed by operation of law and thus was not an “existing permit” which could be amended. We address these arguments separately.

A.

The Board clearly has authority to amend water permits. See, e.g., SDCL 46-1-14,3

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In Re Application No. 5189-3 to Extend Time
467 N.W.2d 907 (South Dakota Supreme Court, 1991)

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Bluebook (online)
467 N.W.2d 907, 1991 S.D. LEXIS 52, 1991 WL 42373, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-application-no-5189-3-to-extend-time-sd-1991.