In the Matter of Keystone Xl Pipeline, in Re: Cheyenne River Sioux tribe/yankton Sioux tribe/dakota Rural Action

2018 SD 44
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJune 13, 2018
StatusPublished

This text of 2018 SD 44 (In the Matter of Keystone Xl Pipeline, in Re: Cheyenne River Sioux tribe/yankton Sioux tribe/dakota Rural Action) 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 the Matter of Keystone Xl Pipeline, in Re: Cheyenne River Sioux tribe/yankton Sioux tribe/dakota Rural Action, 2018 SD 44 (S.D. 2018).

Opinion

#28331, #28332, #28333-dismiss-PER CURIAM 2018 S.D. 44

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF SOUTH DAKOTA

****

IN THE MATTER OF PUC DOCKET HP 14-0001, ORDER ACCEPTING CERTIFICATION OF PERMIT ISSUED IN DOCKET HP 09-001 TO CONSTRUCT THE KEYSTONE XL PIPELINE. ****

APPEAL FROM THE CIRCUIT COURT OF THE SIXTH JUDICIAL CIRCUIT HUGHES COUNTY, SOUTH DAKOTA

THE HONORABLE JOHN L. BROWN Judge

TRACEY ANN ZEPHIER of Attorneys for appellant Fredericks Peebles & Morgan, LLP Cheyenne River Sioux Tribe Rapid City, South Dakota #28331.

THOMASINA REAL BIRD JENNIFER S. BAKER of Fredericks Peebles & Morgan, LLP Attorneys for appellant Louisville, Colorado Yankton Sioux Tribe #28332.

BRUCE ELLISON Rapid City, South Dakota and ROBIN S. MARTINEZ of The Martinez Law Firm, LLC Attorneys for appellant Dakota Kansas City, Missouri Rural Action #28333.

ARGUED ON APRIL 17, 2018 OPINION FILED 06/13/18 ****

ADAM de HUECK Attorneys for appellee Pierre, South Dakota Public Utilities Commission.

JAMES E. MOORE of Woods Fuller Shultz & Smith P.C. Sioux Falls, South Dakota

and

WILLIAM G. TAYLOR of Taylor Law Firm Attorneys for appellee Trans- Sioux Falls, South Dakota Canada Keystone Pipeline. #28331, #28332, #28333

PER CURIAM

[¶1.] TransCanada Keystone Pipeline LP (TransCanada) applied to the

South Dakota Public Utilities Commission (the Commission) for a permit to

construct the Keystone XL Pipeline in South Dakota. Following a contested

proceeding, the Commission granted the permit subject to 50 conditions. None of

the parties in that proceeding—including Dakota Rural Action, a party to the

current appeal—appealed the order issuing a permit. Because TransCanada was

unable to commence physical construction within four years, it subsequently

certified that it continued to meet the permit conditions as required by

SDCL 49-41B-27. Upon receipt of that certification, the Commission opened a

docket, allowed the intervention of numerous parties, conducted an evidentiary

hearing, and ultimately issued an order accepting the certification. The Cheyenne

River Sioux Tribe, the Yankton Sioux Tribe, and Dakota Rural Action (collectively,

“Appellants”) each appealed the Commission’s decision to circuit court, which

affirmed. On appeal to this Court, Appellants argue that the Commission and the

circuit court committed numerous errors. We consolidated the appeals, and because

the circuit court lacked jurisdiction to hear the appeals, we do not reach the parties’

arguments. Therefore, we vacate the circuit court’s decision and dismiss the appeal.

Facts and Procedural History

[¶2.] In 2008, TransCanada announced its plan to construct the Keystone

XL Pipeline. The Keystone XL Pipeline would connect to existing segments of the

Keystone Pipeline system, which carries tar-sands crude oil from Alberta, Canada,

to delivery points in Oklahoma and Texas. The proposal included placing a

-1- #28331, #28332, #28333

36-inch-diameter steel pipe capable of transporting up to 900,000 barrels of oil per

day. The South Dakota portion of the project would begin at the Montana border

and exit into Nebraska. The pipeline would extend 314 miles, crossing portions of

Harding, Butte, Perkins, Meade, Pennington, Haakon, Jones, Lyman, and Tripp

counties.

[¶3.] On March 12, 2009, TransCanada filed an application with the

Commission for a construction permit pursuant to SDCL chapter 49-41B, the South

Dakota Energy Facility Permit Act. The Commission opened Docket HP09-001, and

on April 6, the Commission issued a notice of application, an order for and notice of

public-input hearings, and a notice of opportunity to apply for party status. The

Commission held two public hearings on April 27 and a third on April 28, where

individuals presented comments and questions at the hearings. In May and June,

the Commission granted party status to Dakota Rural Action and fourteen other

entities and individuals. Following discovery, the Commission conducted a three-

day contested-case hearing beginning November 2, 2009, at which TransCanada,

Dakota Rural Action, and Commission staff appeared. The Cheyenne River Sioux

Tribe and the Yankton Sioux Tribe, appellants in the present case, were not parties.

[¶4.] On February 18, 2010, the Commission voted to grant the permit

subject to 50 conditions,1 including that “Keystone shall comply with all applicable

laws and regulations in its construction and operation of the Project” and that

“Keystone shall obtain and shall thereafter comply with all applicable federal, state

1. Many of the 50 conditions also contain sub-conditions, totaling 107 separate conditions.

-2- #28331, #28332, #28333

and local permits, including but not limited to: [a] Presidential Permit from the

United States Department of State[.]” The project required a presidential permit

because the pipeline emanated from Canada and crossed an international border.

TransCanada’s application for a presidential permit, filed in 2008, was still pending

at the time of the permit hearing. On June 29, 2010, the Commission issued an

amended final decision and order granting the permit. No party appealed the

Commission’s decision.

[¶5.] Four years later, TransCanada still lacked a presidential permit, and

construction of the South Dakota portion of the project had yet to begin.

Meanwhile, TransCanada continued to build other portions of the Keystone Pipeline

system outside South Dakota. Desiring to move forward with the Keystone XL

Pipeline, on September 15, 2014, TransCanada filed a certification with the

Commission as required by SDCL 49-41B-27. This statute provides in part that

“if . . . construction . . . commences more than four years after a permit has been

issued, then the utility must certify to the Public Utilities Commission that such

facility continues to meet the conditions upon which the permit was issued.”

[¶6.] In its “Petition for Order Accepting Certification,” TransCanada

attested that “the conditions upon which the Commission granted the facility

permit . . . continue to be satisfied.” TransCanada stated that it remained “in

compliance with the conditions . . . to the extent that those conditions have

applicability in the current pre-construction phase of the Project” and that

“[TransCanada] will meet and comply with all the applicable permit conditions

during construction, operation, and maintenance of the Project.” TransCanada also

-3- #28331, #28332, #28333

attached to its certification a quarterly report and a tracking table of changes. The

tracking table identified changes in circumstances to those detailed in the findings

made in the Commission’s 2010 final decision and order. For example,

TransCanada indicated that the total length of the South Dakota portion of the

pipeline had increased by approximately one mile. TransCanada claimed that any

such changes were “either neutral or positive to the Commission’s concerns” and

that “the need, impacts, efficacy, and safety” of the project had not changed in the

intervening years.

[¶7.] The Commission opened docket HP14-001 for consideration of the

petition for certification.

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