Nexgen Silica, LLC, Appellant/Cross-Respondent v. Missouri Department of Natural Resources, and Operation Sand, LLC, Respondent/Cross-Appellant.

CourtMissouri Court of Appeals
DecidedOctober 17, 2023
DocketED111424
StatusPublished

This text of Nexgen Silica, LLC, Appellant/Cross-Respondent v. Missouri Department of Natural Resources, and Operation Sand, LLC, Respondent/Cross-Appellant. (Nexgen Silica, LLC, Appellant/Cross-Respondent v. Missouri Department of Natural Resources, and Operation Sand, LLC, Respondent/Cross-Appellant.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Missouri Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Nexgen Silica, LLC, Appellant/Cross-Respondent v. Missouri Department of Natural Resources, and Operation Sand, LLC, Respondent/Cross-Appellant., (Mo. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

In the Missouri Court of Appeals Eastern District DIVISION THREE

NEXGEN SILICA, LLC, ) ) Appellant/Cross-Respondent, ) No. ED111424 ) No. ED111428 vs. ) ) MISSOURI DEPARTMENT OF ) Appeal from the Missouri NATURAL RESOURCES, ) Mining Commission ) Case No. 22-3086 Respondent, ) ) and ) ) OPERATION SAND, LLC, ) Filed: October 17, 2023 ) Respondent/Cross-Appellant. )

In this consolidated case, Nexgen Silica, LLC appeals the final decision of the Missouri

Mining Commission denying its application for a permit to conduct surface mining operations.

Operation Sand, LLC also appeals the final decision of the Missouri Mining Commission

denying Nexgen’s permit. Operation Sand appeals because, while the Mining Commission

denied issuance of Nexgen’s permit because Nexgen “did not list all persons with any interest in

the land,” the Mining Commission rejected Operation Sand’s additional contentions that

Nexgen’s application failed to identify a source granting the company a legal right to mine the

affected land and that DNR failed to adequately examine and investigate Nexgen’s application. Because Nexgen’s permit application did not identify all parties with an interest in the

land and did not contain the written consent of all parties prior to approval of the mining permit

by the Department of Natural Resources, we affirm the decision of the Missouri Mining

Commission to deny Nexgen’s permit application.

Because Operation Sand received all of the relief it requested from the Missouri Mining

Commission, namely denial of Nexgen’s mining permit, Operation Sand is not aggrieved by the

decision. We dismiss Operation Sand’s appeal accordingly.

Factual and Procedural Background

Nexgen Silica, LLC is a Missouri limited liability company. Nexgen specializes in the

mining, extraction, processing, sales, and distribution of industrial silica sand and related

pebbles, rocks, gravel, and other aggregate materials. Nexgen applied for a permit to mine

sandstone in the Ste. Genevieve area.

The Department of Natural Resources (“DNR”) administers the Missouri Land

Reclamation Act (“the Act”), section 444.760 et seq. RSMo. (2016). 1 The purpose of the Act is

to “strike a balance between mining of minerals and reclamation of land subjected to surface

disturbance by mining.” Section 444.762. The commercial mining of sandstone in Missouri

requires a permit from the Missouri Mining Commission, 10 CSR 40-10.010(1)(A), which has

the power to review and approve all applicable mining applications, section 444.767. The staff

director of the Mining Commission is obligated to investigate an application for a mining permit,

and must consider all public comments. Section 444.773.1. The staff director must then issue or

deny the permit, and may impose reasonable conditions on the permit consistent with the Act. Id.

The decision of the Mining Commission’s staff director is deemed the decision of DNR. Id.

1 References to section 444.772 are to RSMo. (Supp. 2022). All other statutory references are to RSMo. (2016).

2 Operation Sand, LLC is a Missouri limited liability company in good standing with its

principal place of business in Ste. Genevieve, Missouri. Operation Sand, its members, and its

supporters reside in the immediate vicinity of and/or downstream from the location of the silica

sand mine that Nexgen sought to operate. Operation Sand contended that DNR’s issuance of the

surface mining permit to Nexgen, and subsequent mining operations, adversely affected the

organization, its members, and supporters.

On March 4, 2022, Nexgen submitted to DNR’s Land Reclamation Program a written

application for a permit seeking approval to operate a surface mining operation for sandstone in

Ste. Genevieve County, Missouri. The application included the five-page DNR form titled “Mine

Plan and Form Instructions.”

Page three of the form includes several critical elements. First, page three provides a

block for listing the name, address, and phone number of the landowner and mineral rights

owner, with the requirement to attach additional sheets, if needed. Second, page three includes a

block asking applicants to indicate the source of their legal right to engage in mining, which

reads “Source of Legal Right to Mine – (Check One) 444.772(2) or 10 CSR 40-10.020(2)(A)6.”

Within that block, the form asks the permit applicant to place a check mark next to one of several

choices: mineral deed; warranty deed, lease, verbal; or other (describe). The block also asks for

the date of the agreement. Finally, page three includes a signature block for the landowner to

attest as follows:

1. I have received a copy, understand and give approval of the proposed post- mining land use(s) and revegetation plan(s) to be utilized during reclamation. 2. I understand that if the operator seeks to revise the post-mine land use(s) or revegetation plan(s), the operator shall obtain my approval and signature. I will be given a copy of the revised post-mining land use(s) and revegetation plan(s) prior to the revision being implemented. 3. I hereby grant to the Staff Director of the Land Reclamation Program and authorized representatives the right of entry upon our lands or surface mining operations

3 for the purpose of making necessary field inspections, covering land reclamation in order to ensure compliance with The Land Reclamation Act, Sections 444.760 to 444.790 RSMo.

Here, page three of Nexgen’s application contained six completed sheets because of the

number of owners of properties within the area to be mined. Within the block titled source of

legal right to mine, “Other (Describe) ____” was marked “TBD” and the date of agreement line

was blank on all six pages. As provided by section 444.773, it is not unusual for DNR to confer

with an applicant to clarify information provided on the form before approving the permit. DNR

requested additional information from Nexgen concerning the missing material. The application

identified seven tracts of land owned by nine record landowners—eight individuals and one trust.

Each landowner was also named as the mineral rights owner for their respective property. 2 The

application identified no other landowners and no other parties with an interest in mineral rights.

On March 16, 2022, Nexgen informed DNR that Nexgen had signed a mining lease

agreement with Missouri Proppants, LLC (“MoPro”), and this lease agreement would be the

source of Nexgen’s legal right to mine the property. Nexgen sent a letter the same day to DNR

“to inform [DNR] that the Mining Lease Agreement between Nexgen Silica, LLC and Missouri

Proppants, LLC was signed today, March 16, 2022.” The lease agreement was not attached.

However, the first recital in the March 16, 2022 Non-Metallic Mining Option and Lease

Agreement between the lessor, MoPro, and the lessee, Nexgen, stated that “[t]he members of the

Lessor, consisting of GBB LLC and Longhorn Proppants LLC are collectively the owners (the

“Property Owners”) of that certain land (the “Property”) containing approximately 217 acres of

land ….” A DNR employee made a hand-written note on the application form that a lease dated

March 16, 2022 comprised the source of Nexgen’s right to mine. The employee noted this

2 These landowners, the eight individuals and the trust, are not involved in this appeal.

4 information on all six sheets comprising page three of the Mine Plan and Form Instructions.

DNR deemed Nexgen’s application complete the next day.

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Nexgen Silica, LLC, Appellant/Cross-Respondent v. Missouri Department of Natural Resources, and Operation Sand, LLC, Respondent/Cross-Appellant., Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nexgen-silica-llc-appellantcross-respondent-v-missouri-department-of-moctapp-2023.