Kelley v. Carlsbad Irrigation District

415 P.2d 849, 76 N.M. 466
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedJune 20, 1966
Docket7594
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 415 P.2d 849 (Kelley v. Carlsbad Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Kelley v. Carlsbad Irrigation District, 415 P.2d 849, 76 N.M. 466 (N.M. 1966).

Opinion

PER CURIAM.

The motion for leave to file second motion for rehearing is denied; however, upon consideration of the motion, the opinion heretofore filed is withdrawn and the following substituted therefor.

OPINION

CHAVEZ, Justice.

Appellants, State Engineer of New Mexico and Carlsbad Irrigation District, have appealed from the trial court’s ruling directing the State Engineer to approve the application of C. M. Kelley, appellee, to change his point of diversion from the Hondo River and to appropriate waters of the Roswell Artesian Basin. The State Engineer had previously denied appellee’s application and, on appeal, the trial court reversed the State Engineer’s order.

This appeal marks the second time this court has been presented with this controversy. In Kelley v. Carlsbad Irrigation District, 71 N.M. 464, 379 P.2d 763, this court reversed the trial court’s decision allowing the applicant to change the point of diversion. We there held that the trial court erred in admitting additional evidence not presented at the hearing before the State Engineer, and that the State Engineer’s decision denying the application to change the point of diversion had not, therefore, béen given a proper review. On remand and after additional arguments, the trial court again reversed the State Engineer and directed him to approve the application to change the point of diversion. This appeal followed.

The irrigation works of the Hondo Project were completed in 1907 and consisted of an inlet diversion channel from the Hondo River, a reservoir, an outlet diversion channel to return water from the reservoir to the Hondo River, and a diversion channel from the inlet channel, which provided a means whereby waters entering the inlet channel would be returned to the Hondo River before reaching the reservoir. Further downstream there were also constructed diversion ditches into which water from the Hondo River could flow, thereby allowing individual irrigators a usage of the water. Appellee Kelley is one of the individual irrigators using this downstream irrigation diversion ditch.

The Hondo Reservoir does not hold water well because of the holes in its base formation which allow water coming into the reservoir to percolate rapidly downward into the Roswell Artesian Basin.

Appellee bought the farm land in question in 1948, although he had rented the farm in 1943. Since 1949 appellee irrigated his land from the ditch and ■ from a well. The well was drilled without a permit and was not a new appropriation. All of the water appellee had taken from the ditch was water that had never reached the reservoir, and he had never taken any water that had entered the reservoir. Appellee testified that the reservoir had never operated as a storage reservoir; that he had never received any water 'from the reservoir; and that he- never knew of anyone who had received storage water from the reservoir.

In the application for change of point of diversion, appellee stated that his water rights arose out of his membership in the Hondo Water Users Association, which association derived its Rio Hondo water rights from the federal government and turned over its operation of the Hondo Project to the Hondo Water Users Association; that the Hondo Reservoir was not efficient because any water stored therein rapidly percolated into the underground basin and, as a result, applicant and others have been unable to recover therefrom any dependable supply of water; that by means of the application he seeks a permit to continue to divert his portion of the Rio Hondo waters into the Hondo Reservoir and to recover same from the underground reservoir by means of a well; that applicant proposes to utilize the underground reservoir for storage in lieu of the inefficient Hondo Reservoir.

Upon hearing the State Engineer denied the application and made the following findings:

“1. That the applicant seeks to change his point of diversion from a surface diversion located in the NEJ4 NE14 NE}4 of Section 35, Township 11 South, Range 23 East, in the Hondo River, to an artesian well located in the SWj4 SWJ4 SWJ4 of Section 6, Township 11 South, Range 24 East, and to appropriate 490 acre feet of water from the artesian basin rather than from the Hondo River for the irrigation of 167.2 acres of land described as follows: SW}4 of Section 19, Township 11 South, Range 24 East, N.M. P.M., Chaves County, New Mexico.
“2. That in addition thereto, the applicant seeks to change his claimed storage rights from the Hondo Reservoir to the underground water basin.
“3. That no waters have ever flowed into the Hondo Reservoir from the Hondo River except during the years of torrential rainfall in areas above the artificial intake canal leading into the reservoir.
“4. That the applicant or his predecessors in title has taken no water from the Hondo Reservoir for irrigation purposes since 1917 and all surface waters used by the applicant to irrigate subject land have been taken from the point of diversion of applicant in the bed of the Hondo River from flood waters of the Hon-do River.
“5. That since the year 1949, the applicant has never had a sufficient amount of surface water to irrigate the lands involved in this matter.
“6. That little of the water leaking from the Hondo Reservoir into the San Andres limestone is stored in that formation. The increased recharge-is quickly reflected in increased natural discharge from the formation because of its high permeability and low storage coefficient.
“7. That the waters of the shallow water aquifer and the artesian water ac-quifer of the Roswell Artesian Basin are fully appropriated.
“8. That the granting of the subject application would constitute a new appropriation of the ground waters of the Roswell Artesian Basin and would impair existing rights.”

Upon the second trial the district court reversed the State Engineer’s order denying the application and made the following findings and conclusions, which appellants, assert are erroneous and upon which this, appeal is grounded:

(Findings of Fact)

“1. All of the material findings of fact made by the State Engineer are contrary to the evidence and are not supported by substantial evidence and for this reason the-action of the State Engineer in denying the application was arbitrary and capricious.
“2. The action of the State Engineer in denying the application was. based upon an erroneous view and application of the law to the facts. established at the hearing before the State Engineer.
« * * *
“10.

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415 P.2d 849, 76 N.M. 466, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelley-v-carlsbad-irrigation-district-nm-1966.