Pratt v. State, Department of Natural Resources

309 N.W.2d 767, 1981 Minn. LEXIS 1403
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedAugust 28, 1981
Docket51180
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 309 N.W.2d 767 (Pratt v. State, Department of Natural Resources) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Pratt v. State, Department of Natural Resources, 309 N.W.2d 767, 1981 Minn. LEXIS 1403 (Mich. 1981).

Opinion

SIMONETT, Justice.

This is an appeal by the state from a decision of the district court finding a com-pensable taking of plaintiff’s property by reason of a legislative change in the character of the water in three sloughs from private to public. The appeal is from an order denying the state’s motion for a new trial. We remand for further proceedings.

In 1975 the state advised Sheldon Pratt he could no longer harvest the wild rice on his property by mechanical picker but had to do it by hand flailing. Since Mr. Pratt felt this would substantially reduce the profitability of his wild rice operation, he submitted a claim for damages to the Legislative Claims Commission. 1 The commission directed Mr. Pratt to seek a declaratory judgment action on whether the wild rice was being grown in public waters and deferred further action on the claim.

Mr. Pratt brought his action in the Crow Wing County District Court, asking that the bodies of water on which he harvested the rice be declared private and “not subject to any control by Minnesota Statutes 105.37 and 105.38.” The state interposed an answer asking for judgment that the waters be declared public and subject to state regulation. The trial court, after *770 hearing the evidence, found the waters to be public. But the court did more. It also found the waters had been private prior to 1973; that the 1973 amendments to Minn. Stat. §§ 105.37 and 105.38 “caused previously private waters to be reclassified as public waters, thus subjecting the rice growing thereon to regulation by the state and vesting ownership of the rice in the state”; and that, consequently, there was a compensa-ble taking under eminent domain law “since he [the plaintiff] may no longer use a mechanical picker on the above-mentioned waters.”

The main facts adduced at trial were these: For some 20 years plaintiff has owned three sloughs, called Island Lake, Rice Lake and Tamarack Lake. Island Lake averages 15 inches in depth, 5 feet at the deepest, and it covers about 60 acres. Mr. Pratt owns all the land around the lake. Rice Lake is shallower than Island and covers about 65 acres. Mr. Pratt owns all the surrounding land except for one small parcel. Tamarack Lake is the shallowest of the three lakes, about 3 feet at its deepest and covers 40 acres. Mr. Pratt owns virtually all the surrounding land.

All three lakes are unmeandered, natural waterbasins. They “freeze out” each winter. None has an outlet, except Island. The lakes are not suitable for boating, swimming or fishing, but there are ducks for hunting, muskrat and beaver, and the sloughs are good for raising wild rice. Mr. Pratt purchased the three properties for his private harvesting of wild rice. He has been able to exclude others from harvesting on the lakes. Mr. Pratt harvested all three lakes since the 1950’s; he originally seeded Island Lake himself.

Since 1960, Mr. Pratt has used a mechanical picker to harvest his rice. It is more efficient, and hence more profitable, than harvesting manually. The beds are reseeded as necessary.

1. The first issue is whether the evidence supports the trial court’s findings that the three lakes were private waters before 1973 and public waters since. We believe the evidence does support these findings.

Prior to 1973, Minn.Stat. § 105.38(1) provided:

Subject to existing rights all waters in streams and lakes within the state which are capable of substantial beneficial public use are public waters subject to the control of the state. * * *

By 1973 Minn.Laws, ch. 315, the language was changed to read:

Subject to existing rights all waters of the state which serve a beneficial public purpose are public waters subject to the control of the state. * * *

In other words, since 1973 the test has been a beneficial public purpose (not use), 2 and the test applies to all waters of the state, not just streams and lakes. 3

Here the state’s hydrologist, applying the criteria of Minn.Stat. § 105.37, subd. 6 (1978), testified that, in his opinion, Island, Rice and Tamarack Lakes were public waters. 4 The hydrologist testified (and *771 there was other testimony as well) that all three lakes exceed the minimum criteria: they serve as watersheds, have sediment and nutrient entrapment, have waterfowl habitat, exceed the minimum size of 10 acres, and have conditions of inflow which can recharge subsurface formations of water. Three of these categories — recharge, nutrient entrapment, and wildlife habitat — are very similar to three of the four uses rejected as insubstantial in aggregate under the old test in Titrud v. Achterkirch, 298 Minn. 68, 213 N.W.2d 408 (1973).

We hold the conclusions of the district court are justified by the evidence and the applicable legal authority. The 1973 statutory amendments reclassified plaintiff’s lakes from private to public.

The state next contends it should have a new trial for surprise and lack of notice because the trial court decided an issue that was not pleaded nor raised by either counsel, namely, the finding that the lakes were private before 1973 and the conclusion that a compensable taking therefore occurred by reason of the legislative reclassification. We disagree.

The state argues that if it received a new trial it would show the three lakes were public before 1973. At the hearing on the new trial motion, the state made no showing of what new evidence it might produce other than an affidavit indicating that in 1971 the DNR, in a classification of public waters for Crow Wing County, had listed Rice Lake and Tamarack Lake as public waters. But other than this there was no showing how the factual characteristics of the three lakes were any different before 1973 than after, and, indeed, at the trial evidence was received of the lake characteristics going back to at least the 1950’s. Further, it is undisputed the DNR was aware Mr. Pratt was using a mechanical picker for about 20 years prior to 1975 and never objected. ' And, finally, the state does not dispute that the legal test for public waters was broadened after 1973.

Moreover, the state should not have been surprised, since the trial court, on its own initiative, raised the taking issue during the hydrologist’s testimony, and counsel for the state responded that the court’s questions would be answered in the trial briefs. 5

This brings us, then, to the truly troublesome issue in this case. Was there a taking?

2. First of all, reclassifying and declaring waters to be “public” does not, by itself, constitute any taking in the constitutional sense. Ownership, in a proprietary sense, does not thereby pass to the state; rather, waters, once declared public, simply become subject to the protection and control of the state under its regulatory scheme. The state exercises this control by virtue of its police power.

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Bluebook (online)
309 N.W.2d 767, 1981 Minn. LEXIS 1403, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pratt-v-state-department-of-natural-resources-minn-1981.