Messer v. State Water Commission

332 N.W.2d 66, 1983 N.D. LEXIS 259
CourtNorth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 29, 1983
DocketCiv. No. 10298
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 332 N.W.2d 66 (Messer v. State Water Commission) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering North Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Messer v. State Water Commission, 332 N.W.2d 66, 1983 N.D. LEXIS 259 (N.D. 1983).

Opinion

PEDERSON, Justice.

This is an appeal by the State Water Commission, State Engineer, and Barnes County Water Resource District1 from a judgment of the district court which reversed the Water Resource District’s decision establishing a drain and granting a permit to drain waters in northeast Barnes County. We affirm.

The drainage project is designed to “maintain agricultural production by providing surface drainage” of approximately 400 acres within Barnes County. Over 3,000 acres, some of which are located in neighboring Griggs County, lay within the watershed area of the proposed drain. Included in this affected area are 241 acres of Federal Waterfowl Production Area which provides habitat and nesting areas for waterfowl. Also in the area is Lake Ashta-bula, a lake currently facing oxygen problems caused by accumulations of nutrients within the water. Evidence disclosed that the proposed drain could increase the amounts of nutrients entering the lake, threatening to totally destroy its fish population.

The outlet of the proposed drainage system would be a tributary of the Sheyenne River. If the drain were built, the rate of flow in the present natural drainage area would increase, resulting in prolonged flooding of some land within the watershed area.

The court, in its findings of fact upon which the order revoking the permit to drain was based, found that the Water Resource District and State Engineer failed to make an adequate investigation of the impact of the proposed drainage on downstream land, lakeshore property and waterfowl production areas, and that the benefits of the project did .not exceed its costs. In addition, the court found that the landowners had not been afforded a fair hearing before the Water Resource Board and that they had properly appealed the decision to grant a permit to drain.

I.

Until the Legislature repealed much of Chapters 61-16 and 61-21, drainage projects were handled by water management districts (Chapter 61-16, NDCC), or by county drain boards (Chapter 61-21, NDCC).2 Barnes County had both a water [68]*68management board and a board of drainage commissioners, although membership of the boards was identical.

A board of drainage commissioners was authorized to implement drainage projects within each county of the state. Section 61-21-03, NDCC, repealed by 1981 N.D. Sess. Laws, Ch. 632, § 12. Before a drain was established, a written petition stating the beginning and ending points of the proposed drain and its general course was submitted to the board. Section 61-21-12, NDCC. The board inspected the line of the proposed drain and obtained an engineer’s or surveyor’s report on the specifications and costs of the proposed drain. Section 61-21-12, NDCC. After receiving the engineer’s report, the board held a public hearing at which affected landowners were entitled to vote either in favor of or against the proposal. Section 61-21-13, NDCC. If more than fifty percent of the votes were in favor of the proposed drain and the board determined that the project costs would not outweigh the anticipated benefits, the board prepared an order establishing the drain. Section 61-21-14, NDCC. The board would then apply for a permit to drain. Section 61-01-22, NDCC.

Prior to its repeal in 1981, § 61-01-22, NDCC3 set forth the procedure to obtain a permit to drain waters as follows:

“Any person, before draining water from a pond, slough, or lake ... which drains an area comprising eighty acres or more into a watercourse ... shall first secure a permit to do so. The permit application shall be submitted to the state engineer. The state engineer shall refer the application to the board of commissioners of the water management district or districts within which is found a majority of the watershed or drainage area of the pond, slough, or lake for consideration and approval, but the state engineer may require that applications proposing drainage of statewide or interdistrict significance be returned to him for final approval. A permit shall not be granted until an investigation shall disclose that the quantity of water which will be drained from the pond, slough, or lake, or any series thereof, will not flood or adversely affect lands of lower proprietors .... ”

A petition to establish a drain was properly filed with the county drain board pursuant to § 61-21-10, NDCC. The county drain board then submitted a permit application to the State Engineer on March 11, 1980. The State Engineer determined that the drain was of “statewide or interdistrict” significance and required that the permit be returned to him for final approval. The State Engineer then referred the application to Barnes County Water Resource District. A hearing on the proposed drain was held on July 24,1980. The Water Resource District Board approved the permit on October 1, 1980 and returned it to the State Engineer for final approval. The State Engineer approved the permit on May 19,1981 and notified the Water Resource District on May 21, 1981. Affected landowners in Griggs County who apparently did not receive notice of the proposed drain appealed on June 21, 1981.

II.

The landowners appealed only from the order of the State Engineer granting final approval of the drain. They did not appeal from the findings and order of the Barnes County Water Resource District establishing the drain. Because of this, the Water Resource District asserts that the landowners cannot now collaterally challenge the findings and order establishing the drain.

[69]*69The Water Resource District asserts that any appeal by the landowners must be taken pursuant to § 61-21-18, NDCC, which provides that:

“Any person whose land is assessed or may be assessed or is condemned or may be condemned for the construction of a drain under the provisions of this chapter may appeal to the district court from the order of the board establishing or denying the establishment of the drain. Such appeal shall be taken and perfected within thirty days from and after the date of publication of the ‘notice of order establishing the drain and time of expiration of right of appeal’.”

The notice of the order establishing the drain was published on March 11, 1981. When the landowners did not appeal within thirty days, the Water Resource District concluded that “any issue which could have been fairly litigated on an appeal pursuant to § 61-21-18, NDCC cannot now be raised.”

The landowners, however, contend that their appeal was properly filed pursuant to § 61-16-38, NDCC, and therefore this court has jurisdiction to review the Water Resource District’s “preliminary” approval of the permit as well as the State Engineer’s final approval. Section 61-16-38 provides that:

“An appeal ... when taken from a decision of the commission [State Water Commission] must be taken within thirty days after the order of the commission has been filed with the secretary of the water conservation and flood control district [currently Water Resource District], and when taken from a decision of the board of commissioners [of the Water Resource District], it must be taken within thirty days after such decision has been entered by the secretary of the board of commissioners.”

The landowners appealed within thirty days of the State Engineer’s order to approve the drain permit.

We do not agree that the decision of the State Engineer is appealable.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

In re Drainage by Persons
334 N.W.2d 471 (North Dakota Supreme Court, 1983)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
332 N.W.2d 66, 1983 N.D. LEXIS 259, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/messer-v-state-water-commission-nd-1983.