In Re the Contested Case Hearing on Water Use, Well Construction, & Pump Installation Permit Applications, Filed by Wai'ola O Moloka'i, Inc.

83 P.3d 664, 103 Haw. 401
CourtHawaii Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 29, 2004
Docket22250
StatusPublished
Cited by54 cases

This text of 83 P.3d 664 (In Re the Contested Case Hearing on Water Use, Well Construction, & Pump Installation Permit Applications, Filed by Wai'ola O Moloka'i, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Hawaii 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 the Contested Case Hearing on Water Use, Well Construction, & Pump Installation Permit Applications, Filed by Wai'ola O Moloka'i, Inc., 83 P.3d 664, 103 Haw. 401 (haw 2004).

Opinions

[407]*407Opinion of the Court by

LEVINSON, J.

This appeal arises from a contested case hearing before the appellee Commission on Water Resource Management [hereinafter, “the Commission”] involving the water use permit, well construction permit, and pump installation permit applications submitted by the applicant-appellee Wai'ola 0 Moloka'i, Inc. (Wai'ola) and its parent company Molo-ka'i Ranch, Ltd. (MR) [collectively, hereinafter, “MR-Wai‘ola”] to construct and utilize the proposed Kamiloloa-Wai'ola Well (Well No. 0759-01) within the Kamiloloa aquifer system of the Kamiloloa water management area (WMA) on the island of Moloka'i. The appellant Department of Hawaiian Home Lands (DHHL), the intervenor-appellant Office of Hawaiian Affairs (OHA), the interve-nors-appellants Walter Ritte, Karl Mowat, and Glenn Davis [hereinafter, “the Ritte in-tervenors”], and the interven ors-appellants Martin Kahae, Wayde Lee, Sheldon Hama-kua, Walter Mendes, Louise Bush, Judy Ca-parida, and Robert Alcain [hereinafter, “the Kahae intervenors”] appeal from the decision and order (decision) of the Commission, filed on December 28, 1998, granting MR-Wai'ola’s application for a water use permit, pursuant to Hawai'i Revised Statutes (HRS) § 174C-49 (1993),1 and authorizing the chairperson of the Commission to issue well construction and pump installation permits, pursuant to HRS § 174C-84 (1993) as requested by MR-Wai‘ola.

On appeal, DHHL, OHA, the Ritte inter-venors, and the Kahae intervenors [hereinafter, collectively, “the appellants”] raise the following issues: (1) whether the Commission clearly erred in finding that MR-Wai‘ola had satisfied the conditions requisite to obtaining a water permit for a “new” use, as set forth in HRS § 174C-49(a), see supm note 1; (2) whether the Commission’s decision violated the State’s duty to protect DHHL’s water rights, pursuant to the Hawai'i Homes Commission Act (HHCA) §§ 220 and 221 (1993),2 [408]*408article XI, sections 1 and 7 and article XII, section 7 of the Hawaii Constitution,3 and HRS chapter 174C, the State Water Code (Code); (3) whether the Commission’s decision sufficiently protected native Hawaiians’ traditional and customary gathering rights, as guaranteed by the HHCA, the Hawaii Constitution, and HRS § 174C-101 (1993);4 (4) whether the Commission (a) erred in interpreting the four-year “use or lose” provi- ' sion set forth in HRS § 174C-58(4) (1993), see infra note 39, as an enforcement, and not a planning, tool and (b) abused its discretion by finding that the circumstances of the present matter warranted an allocation of water for “future” uses that would extend beyond a four-year time frame; (5) whether the Commission erred in granting an “interim” permit for a “new,” vis-a-vis an “existing,” use of [409]*409water, pursuant to HRS § 174C-53 (1993);5 (6) whether the Commission clearly erred in finding that MR had correlative rights to transport groundwater outside the watershed of origin; and (7) whether the Commission clearly erred in finding that a monitoring well located in Kakalahale was “reasonable and proportional to the effect” of MR-Wai'ola’s permitted uses.6 In addition, the Ritte and Kahae intervenors [hereinafter, collectively, “the Intervenors”] argue that the Commission abused its discretion by refusing to permit the cross-examination of MR-Wai'ola’s oceanography expert, Steven Dollar, Ph.D., with prior inconsistent statements made in an unrelated contested case hearing, pending before the Commission. Finally, the Kahae intervenors separately contend that the Commission abused its discretion under Hawai'i Administrative Rules (HAR) §§ 13-167-56(b) and 13-167-59(a) (1998)7 by denying their oral motion to admit Exhibits B-28 through B-34 into evidence upon MR-Wai'ola’s objection that the proffered evidence had not been properly identified on the exhibit lists and filed by the parties prior to the contested ease hearing.

For the reasons fully explained below, we hold that: (1) the Commission’s decision violated DHHL’s reservation rights as guaranteed by HHCA §§ 220 and 221, article XI, sections 1 and 7 of the Hawai'i Constitution, HRS §§ 174C-49(a)(7) and 174C-101(a), and the public trust doctrine; (2) the Commission clearly erred in finding that MR-Wai'ola had satisfied the conditions requisite to obtaining a water permit for a “new” use, as set forth in HRS § 174C-49(a); (3) the Commission failed adequately to discharge its public trust duty to protect native Hawaiians’ traditional and customary gathering rights, as guaranteed by HHCA § 220(d), article XII, section 7 of the Hawai'i Constitution, and HRS §§ 174C-101(a) and (c) by refusing sufficiently to permit the cross-examination of MR-Wai'ola’s oceanography expert, Dr. Dollar; (4) HRS § 174C-58(4) is a statutory mechanism by which to enforce allocations of water anticipated by the Commission to be used within four years of issuing a water use permit; (5) although the Code supplants the common law doctrine of correlative rights in WMAs, the Commission nevertheless rendered the findings, prescribed by HRS § 174C-49(c), requisite to permitting MR-Wai'ola to transport groundwater outside the aquifer of origin; and (6) the Commission erred in granting MR-Wai'ola an “interim” permit for a “new” use, pursuant to HRS [410]*410§ 174C-49(a). Accordingly, we vacate the Commission’s decision and order and remand this matter for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. BACKGROUND

A. Introduction

1. MR and Wai'ola

MR owns approximately one third of the land on Moloka'i (approximately fifty thousand acres). Wai'ola, a domestic water purveyor, is a wholly-owned subsidiary of MR and operates as a public utility under a certificate of public convenience and necessity issued by the Hawai'i Public Utilities Commission. As of 1998, Wai'ola supplied potable water to approximately one sixth of the population of Moloka'i, primarily consisting of residences and commercial businesses in Kípü, Kualapu'u, and Maunaloa, all located in west Moloka'i. Although Wai'ola owns and operates transmission and distribution systems across the island, neither it nor MR controls any source of potable groundwater on Moloka'i. Instead, Wai'ola purchases potable water from the County of Maui (County), DHHL, and Kukui (Moloka'i), Inc.

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Bluebook (online)
83 P.3d 664, 103 Haw. 401, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-contested-case-hearing-on-water-use-well-construction-pump-haw-2004.