Parkview Community Ditch Ass'n v. Peper

2014 NMCA 049, 5 N.M. 773
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedDecember 19, 2013
DocketDocket 32,276
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2014 NMCA 049 (Parkview Community Ditch Ass'n v. Peper) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Parkview Community Ditch Ass'n v. Peper, 2014 NMCA 049, 5 N.M. 773 (N.M. Ct. App. 2013).

Opinion

OPINION

BUSTAMANTE, Judge.

{1} This case began its life as a dispute between the Parkview Community Ditch Association and Appellants, the Pepers, concerning placement by the Pepers of a new headgate on the Association’s acequia system. The dispute led the Association to seek an injunction to stop the construction. The case mushroomed to include a challenge to the district court’s jurisdiction and to implicate the statutes governing acequias and the Open Meetings Act (OMA). See NMSA 1978, §§ 10-15-1 to -4 (1974, as amended through 2013); NMSA 1978, §§ 73-2-1 to -68 (1874, as amended through 2005).

{2} We affirm the district court’s rulings concerning its jurisdiction and its ultimate decision ordering removal of the structure, but we reverse the district court’s order granting attorney fees to'the Association. Finally, we remand one of the OMA claims for further consideration.

BACKGROUND

{3} As context for the facts specific to this case, we provide a brief history of the laws governing acequias in New Mexico.

New Mexico being in the arid region, the early settlements were established along the banks of perennial rivers, or in the mountain valleys where water from springs and creeks was reasonably certain to be available for irrigation at the needed times. . . . [T]he people built their houses and established their towns and plazas close together, and cultivated the lands in small tracts adjacent to the settlement.... [T]he people by their joint effort would construct an irrigation ditch, sufficiently large to convey water to their lands for the irrigation of crops.
Each individual owned and cultivated a specific tract of land, sufficient to provide food for the needs of his family, and from the main ditch laterals were run to the various tracts of land to be watered.

Snow v. Abalos, 1914-NMSC-022, ¶ 8, 18 N.M. 681, 140 P. 1044; see generally Christopher J. DeLara, Who Controls New Mexico's Acequias? Acequia Government & Wilson v. Denver, 40 Nat. Resources J. 727, 728 (2000). “The distribution of the water and the repair of the ditch was in charge of a mayordomo, or officer elected by the water users under the ditch.” Snow, 1914-NMSC-022, ¶ 8. The mayordomo had the authority to “require the water users to contribute labor toward the repair of the ditch and its maintenance, and also distributed the water to the various irrigators equitably, in proportion to the land to be irrigated.” Id. Today, “[t]he governmental and managerial structure of the acequia is based on the historic management of the acequia[.] . . . The ditch rules that govern acequia affairs ... for the most part simply codify the norms already imbedded in custom and tradition.” DeLara, supra, at 728-29 (internal quotation marks omitted).

{4} The parties’ dispute in the present matter arose when the Pepers, relatively new owners of land served by the ditch, notified the Association of their intent to install a diversion structure in the ditch. In spite of the fact that neither the Association nor the mayordomo, Walter Pina, approved the Pepers’ plans, the Pepers installed the structure. The parties disagree as to whether the mayordomo told the Pepers in person that the structure must not be installed and also on whether the structure was built in compliance with the mayordomo’s recommendations and/or the Association’s bylaws.

{5} Pina and Pedro Arechuleta, acting as mayordomo and commissioner respectively, sought and obtained a temporary restraining order on behalf of the Association prohibiting the Pepers from continuing work on the ditch and ordering removal of the structure “until all surveys are provided.” After a hearing on an order to show cause why the restraining order should not be extended or a preliminary injunction issued, the district court permitted the Pepers to post a $1,000 bond instead of removing the structure and extended the restraining order pending an evidentiary hearing. The Pepers then filed counterclaims alleging violations of the OMA and asserting that the petition was invalid because Pifia and Arechuleta were not properly authorized to file it.

{6} After two days of evidentiary hearings, the district court rejected the Pepers’ counterclaims based on violations of the OMA and ordered the Pepers to submit plans and surveys for the structure to Pifia for review. It also required Pifia to “issue findings identifying any and all inadequacies ... in the plans and survey within [fourteen] days of sirbmission[,]” to which the Pepers were required to respond with “a written proposal as to how they would correct any inadequacies or deficiencies identified by the mayordomo.” The order provided that the Pepers “shall have ten ... days to file objections to the [njotice of [inadequacies and [deficiencies provided by . . . [the] mayordomo, and if [the Pepers] timely file such objections, the [district c]ourt will resolve the objections as provided by subsequent order.” The district court also ordered the Pepers to pay over $21,000 in attorney fees to the Association.

{7} The Pepers moved for reconsideration of the order in part and dismissal of the action for lack of standing. They argued that because of the Association’s violations of the OMA, neither Pifia nor Arechuleta were properly elected and, therefore, they did not have standing to file a petition on behalf of the Association against the Pepers. They maintained that “[i]t is well established in New Mexico that lack of standing under a statutorily created cause of action implicates a court’s subject matter jurisdiction.” The Pepers also argued that Pifia’s work inspecting the work on the headgate was void because — based on a number of OMA violations in the 2011 election — he had not been properly elected as mayordomo for the 2012 calendaryear. The Pepers also objected to Pifia’s findings on factual grounds. Based on the OMA violations, they also argued that they, not the Association, were entitled to attorney fees.

{8} The district court held a hearing on the motion to reconsider or dismiss and on the Pepers’ objections to Pifia’s findings. After the hearing, the district court found that (1) it had jurisdiction over this matter and denied the motion to reconsider or dismiss, and (2) the Pepers’ objections to Pifia’s findings were “not well taken” and ordered the Pepers to remove the structure. Additional facts are provided as pertinent to our analysis of the issues on appeal.

DISCUSSION

{9} We begin by addressing the Pepers’ arguments pertaining to the OMA. The Pepers assert that, because of the Association’s violations of the OMA, Pifia and Arechuleta were never properly elected as officers of the Association in 2010 and hence lacked standing to bring the present suit. They argue further that the present suit is invalid because the Association never properly met and voted to initiate the suit. Finally, they argue that Pifia was never properly elected as mayordomo in December 2011 for the following year and, therefore, he did not have the authority in 2012 to make findings about the Pepers’ structure orto compel compliance with those findings. After a general review of the OMA, we address these arguments in turn.

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Related

Parkview Cmty. Ditch Ass'n v. Peper
2014 NMCA 49 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2013)

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Bluebook (online)
2014 NMCA 049, 5 N.M. 773, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/parkview-community-ditch-assn-v-peper-nmctapp-2013.