Lake Beulah Management District v. State Department of Natural Resources

2010 WI App 85, 787 N.W.2d 926, 327 Wis. 2d 222, 2010 Wisc. App. LEXIS 454
CourtCourt of Appeals of Wisconsin
DecidedJune 16, 2010
Docket2008AP3170
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 2010 WI App 85 (Lake Beulah Management District v. State Department of Natural Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Wisconsin primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lake Beulah Management District v. State Department of Natural Resources, 2010 WI App 85, 787 N.W.2d 926, 327 Wis. 2d 222, 2010 Wisc. App. LEXIS 454 (Wis. Ct. App. 2010).

Opinion

*226 BROWN, C.J.

¶ 1. This decision explores the interplay between the public trust doctrine and the regulation of high capacity wells, especially when citizens or conservancy organizations such as lake management districts perceive that a proposed well may adversely affect nearby navigable waters. We will go through our analysis in some detail, but for purposes of this introductory statement, it is enough to say the following: The statutes identify three types of water wells, differentiated by the quantity of water they consume — wells consuming 100,000 gallons per day (gpd) or less, wells consuming over 2,000,000 gpd and wells in-between. This case has to do with wells in-between. The parties dispute the role that the public trust doctrine plays with regard to the middling wells. The Village of East Troy says that, with certain statutorily defined exceptions, there is no role. Lake Beulah Management District and Lake Beulah Protective and Improvement Association claim that there is always a role such that the DNR is mandated to thoroughly investigate each proposed middling well for possible public trust doctrine implications. The DNR agrees with the District and the Association that the doctrine always plays a role hut asserts that the comprehensiveness of the investigation is solely at its discretion. We agree with the DNR, but we also hold that the DNR misused its discretion here. We therefore reverse and remand with directions that the circuit court remand this case to the DNR for further proceedings. We also affirm a side issue and a cross-appeal.

BACKGROUND

¶ 2. The procedural and factual history of the high capacity well at issue here — Well #7 — goes back to 2003 when the Village first applied for and received a now-expired permit from the DNR. We relate this history in detail.

*227 ¶ 3. In 2003, the Village wanted to add a fourth well to its municipal water supply "to eliminate current deficiencies and supplement for future growth." The Village chose a site for the well which was approximately 1400 feet from the shores of Lake Beulah, an 834-acre lake located in Walworth county, and determined that Well #7 would have a 1,440,000 gpd capacity. As part of its application to the DNR, the Village submitted an April 2003 report that its consultant prepared. Based upon analysis of pump test data, the report "estimated that a well producing [1,440,000 gpd] would avoid any serious disruption of groundwater discharge to Lake Beulah."

¶ 4. The DNR then issued the permit via a letter dated September 4, 2003. The letter stated the DNR's conclusion: "It is not believed that the proposed well will have an adverse effect on any nearby wells owned by another water utility." And it included an excerpt from the Village's consultant which contained the consultant's opinion that Well #7 "would avoid any serious disruption of groundwater discharged to Lake Beulah." The 2003 permit was valid for two years and required the Village to submit a new application if it did not commence construction or installation of the improvements within those two years.

¶ 5. On October 3, 2003, just short of one month after the DNR issued the 2003 permit, the Lake Beulah Management District petitioned for a contested case before the DNR, alleging that the DNR "failed to comply with ... [its] responsibility to protect navigable waters, groundwater and the environment as a whole" in issuing the permit to the Village. The District wanted the DNR to independently consider the environmental effects before approving the permit. The DNR denied the petition later that month on the basis that it lacked the *228 authority to consider the environmental concerns which the District presented.

¶ 6. But about three months later, on January 13, 2004, the DNR changed its mind and granted a contested case hearing on the issue of whether the DNR "should have considered any potentially adverse effects to the waters . .. when the [DNR] granted a conditional approval of the plans and specifications for proposed Municipal Well No. 7 in the Village of East Troy." The Village responded on March 26, 2004, by filing a motion for summary disposition with the administrative law judge (ALJ). The Village argued that the DNR lacked the statutory authority to consider the environmental effects because Well #7 is not located in a place where the Wisconsin statutes specifically mandate environmental review prior to permit approval. At this point in the procedural history, even though the DNR had reversed course and granted a contested case hearing, it still held the same view as the Village on the scope of the DNR's authority over wells. The Lake Beulah Protective and Improvement Association then successfully intervened and has been allied with the District ever since. We will hereafter refer to the two entities as one — the conservancies.

¶ 7. On June 11, 2004, the ALJ presiding over the contested case granted the Village's motion and agreed with the Village that "because the statute requires that the [DNR] consider certain impacts . .. the statute should be construed to exclude consideration of other factors." The ALJ also commented that even if what the conservancies contended was true (that in some cases the DNR may have a "basis other than the express statutory standards for reconsidering the preliminary approval in a contested case proceeding"), Well #7 was *229 not such a case because the conservancies failed to present any "scientific evidence" that the well would have an adverse effect.

¶ 8. On July 16, 2004, the conservancies filed a petition for judicial review of the 2003 permit. During the briefing for that petition, the DNR reversed its prior position and concluded that "it has authority under certain circumstances to consider the Public Trust Doctrine in its analysis of high capacity well approvals" and that it can "condition or limit a high capacity well approval where operation of the well has negative impacts on public rights in navigable waters." 1 The DNR also stated, however, that it had no duty to consider environmental impacts in the instant matter because no one presented it with any evidence that the "operation of the Village's high capacity well approval would adversely impact Lake Beulah." On June 24, 2005, the circuit court, the Honorable James L. Carlson presiding, dismissed the petition and affirmed the ALJ's decision and reasoning.

¶ 9. On August 4, 2005, the conservancies moved for reconsideration and filed the affidavit of Robert Nauta, a Wisconsin licensed geologist. The conservancies also served the motion and affidavit on the attorneys for the DNR and the Village. The affidavit stated, inter alia, that Nauta had reviewed the Village *230 consultant's 2003 report and other reports concerning the Lake Beulah area, and had installed his own test wells and conducted surface water studies relating to the hydrology of Lake Beulah.

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Related

Lake Beulah Management District v. State
2011 WI 54 (Wisconsin Supreme Court, 2011)
Lake Beulah Management District v. Village of East Troy
2010 WI App 127 (Court of Appeals of Wisconsin, 2010)

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Bluebook (online)
2010 WI App 85, 787 N.W.2d 926, 327 Wis. 2d 222, 2010 Wisc. App. LEXIS 454, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lake-beulah-management-district-v-state-department-of-natural-resources-wisctapp-2010.