Loyal Pig, LLC v. Dep't of Ecology

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedMay 5, 2020
Docket36525-5
StatusPublished

This text of Loyal Pig, LLC v. Dep't of Ecology (Loyal Pig, LLC v. Dep't of Ecology) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Loyal Pig, LLC v. Dep't of Ecology, (Wash. Ct. App. 2020).

Opinion

FILED MAY 5, 2020 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

LOYAL PIG, LLC and COLUMBIA- ) No. 36525-5-III SNAKE RIVER IRRIGATORS ) ASSOCIATION, ) ) Respondents, ) ) v. ) ) PUBLISHED OPINION WASHINGTON STATE DEPARTMENT ) OF ECOLOGY, ) ) Appellant, ) ) WASHINGTON POLLUTION ) CONTROL HEARINGS BOARD, ) ) Defendant. )

FEARING, J. —

Washington’s designation as “The Evergreen State” really only applies to half of the state. “Irrigation in the Pacific Northwest,” Washington State University Extension (2019).

Washington water law allows one holding a water right to change the location

of the usage of the water through a process administered by the Washington State

Department of Ecology (Ecology). As part of the application process, the water right No. 36525-5-III Loyal Pig, LLC v. Department of Ecology

holder must calculate its annual consumptive quantity (ACQ) of water as defined by

RCW 90.03.380(1). In this appeal, we hold, based on RCW 90.03.380(1), that the

applicant must calculate anew its annual consumptive quantity with each change

application no matter if Ecology recently approved an earlier change. We thus reverse the

superior court.

FACTS

Despite a large record on appeal, the parties severely limit the facts outlined in

their briefs, perhaps because of the constrained questions on appeal. Loyal Pig, LLC

holds a water right certificate granted in 1970 to apply water to Franklin County

farmland. The law limits a water right to an amount of use per year, a rate of flow, a point

of diversion, and a location of application. Nevertheless, the water right holder may apply

for a change in the site of diversion, the place of application, or both.

In 2014, Loyal Pig’s predecessor applied to the Benton County Water Conservancy

Board (Benton County board) for a change in location of the diversion of and a change in

the site of the application of a portion of the water right. When reviewing the 2014

change application, the Benton County board, as required by law, calculated the annual

consumptive quantity of water on the Franklin County farmland. The calculation would

limit the amount of water that Loyal Pig could apply on the new location of application.

2 No. 36525-5-III Loyal Pig, LLC v. Department of Ecology

The law calculates the ACQ by averaging the most recent five-year period of continuous

beneficial water consumption used by the irrigator. The Benton County board calculated

the ACQ with average water use from 2009 to 2013, the five most recent years before the

2014 application for change. Neither party identifies the amount calculated by the Benton

County board. The Department of Ecology reviewed the Benton County board’s

decision, as required by law, and approved the change in the water right certificate.

Because of a lower use of water, during 2009 to 2013, the change limited the amount of

the water right from its original amount in 1970.

In January 2017, Loyal Pig submitted another application with the Franklin County

Water Conservancy Board (Franklin County board) for an additional change in diversion

location and place of application for the water right. In May 2017, the Franklin County

board issued its decision approving the January application. In doing so, the board

adopted the 2014 annual consumptive quantity amount, rather than calculating a new

amount based on the years 2012 to 2016. The Franklin County board reasoned that it

need not perform a new calculation since Loyal Pig filed the 2017 application within five

years of the 2014 calculation. We do not know if the ACQ, based on years 2012 to 2016,

would differ from any ACQ calculated for years 2009 to 2013. No party has performed

3 No. 36525-5-III Loyal Pig, LLC v. Department of Ecology

this calculation. The Department of Ecology is unable to perform the calculation because

Loyal Pig refuses to provide the records needed.

The Department of Ecology reversed the Franklin County Water Conservancy

Board’s decision because the Franklin County board failed to perform a new annual

consumptive quantity calculation for years 2012 to 2016. Loyal Pig, together with the

Columbia Snake River Irrigators Association, an association of Mid-Columbia irrigating

growers, appealed, to the Washington State Pollution Control Hearings Board (PCHB),

Ecology’s reversal of the Franklin County board’s approval of the 2017 change

application. We refer to the two challengers collectively as Loyal Pig.

Before the Pollution Control Hearings Board, Loyal Pig argued that the

Department of Ecology should have utilized the annual consumptive quantity from the

2014 change application for the 2017 application for numerous reasons. First, the

principle of res judicata precluded a new calculation. Second, a governing statute affords

a five-year grace period for loss of water rights, and Ecology should apply this grace

period when a water right holder applies for a second change in use within five years of

the first application. Third, an Ecology policy, POL 1120, simplified the determination

for an application change, and requiring a new calculation of the ACQ for each change

would thwart this policy. Fourth, irrigators in the Columbia Basin have relied on

4 No. 36525-5-III Loyal Pig, LLC v. Department of Ecology

Ecology’s application of the grace period when a water right holder applied for a second

change within five years of a previous calculation of the ACQ.

Before the Pollution Control Hearings Board, the Department of Ecology argued

that RCW 90.03.380 requires a full formal annual consumptive quantity calculation from

the most recent five-year period no matter if the applicant for a change obtained a change

approval within the last five years. For the 2017 change application, according to

Ecology’s interpretation of the statute, the ACQ would comprise water usage during

2014-2016 in addition to the previously calculated amounts for 2012 and 2013.

Both Loyal Pig and the Department of Ecology filed motions for summary

judgment before the Pollution Control Hearings Board. In support of its motion, Loyal

Pig submitted a declaration of Mark Nielson, clerk and alternate member of the Franklin

County Water Conservancy Board, and Darryll Olsen, Columbia Snake River Irrigators

Association board representative and member of the Benton County Water Conservancy

Board. Mark Nielson averred that he attended “at least one presentation in which

Ecology staff emphasized that conservancy boards, like Ecology itself, are entitled to rely

upon prior decisions through the judicial doctrine of res judicata.” Clerk’s Papers (CP) at

499.

5 No. 36525-5-III Loyal Pig, LLC v. Department of Ecology

In his PCHB declaration, Darryll Olsen averred that “[t]he community of water law

practitioners has for many decades long relied upon the five-year grace period in

assessing water rights and change/transfer applications.” CP at 601. Olsen’s declaration

attached a legal memorandum from attorney Tom McDonald. McDonald opined that the

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