Prisbrey v. Bloomington Water Co.

2003 UT 56, 82 P.3d 1119, 488 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2003 Utah LEXIS 134, 2003 WL 22871726
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 5, 2003
Docket20010465
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 2003 UT 56 (Prisbrey v. Bloomington Water Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Prisbrey v. Bloomington Water Co., 2003 UT 56, 82 P.3d 1119, 488 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2003 Utah LEXIS 134, 2003 WL 22871726 (Utah 2003).

Opinion

NEHRING, Justice:

{1 Ladell Prisbrey appeals from the district court's grant of summary judgment in favor of Bloomington Water Company and the state engineer. Mr. Prisbrey protested the state engineer's approval of Blooming-ton's application to change the point of diversion of specified Bloomington water rights. We affirm.

12 Bloomington Water Company is the record owner of certain water rights in Washington County, Utah, which it leased to Leucadia Financial Corporation. Leucadia asked Bloomington, as record owner, to file an application with the state engineer to permanently change the point of diversion and place of use for the water rights. Bloomington complied.

T3 As required by section 73-3-6 of the Utah Code, the state engineer published notice of the Bloomington change application in The Spectrum, a newspaper of general cireu-lation in Washington County, on April 26, 1999, and again on May 6, 1999. The state engineer's notice also included change applications made by parties other than Bloom-ington. The notice specifically stated that all of the change applications concerned water rights in Iron and Washington Counties, located in the Salt Lake Base and Meridian. Pursuant to section 73-38-7 of the Utah Code, the notice also alerted those objecting to a change application of the need to file a clearly readable protest at a specified address on or before May 26, 1999.

14 The state engineer's notice of the Bloomington change application contained information useful to interested parties, including (1) the number of the water right, (2) the name of the record title holder, (8) the quantity of water flow at the proposed point of diversion, measured in cubic feet per second (cfs), (4) the source of the water, (5) the locations of the existing and intended points of diversion, and (6) the nature of use.

15 The state engineer communicated the locations of the points of diversion using terminology established by convention and longstanding practice. The relevant geographic data for all the change applications that appeared in The Spectrum with Bloom-ington's were set out in a form utilizing the same established conventions.

T6 Notwithstanding the state engineer's notice, Mr. Prisbrey, owner of real property adjacent to the land where the proposed points of diversion were located, did not file a timely protest to the Bloomington change application. Consequently, Mr. Prisbrey was not a party to the administrative proceeding on October 15, 1999, when the state engineer approved Bloomington's proposed changes.

T7 On November 12, 1999, Mr. Prisbrey filed a petition for judicial review of the state engineer's proceeding in district court, naming Bloomington and the state engineer as parties. Shortly afterward, Mr. Prisbrey filed an amended petition joining Leucadia as a party. Bloomington moved for summary judgment, asserting that Mr. Prisbrey lacked standing to challenge the change application proceedings because he had failed to exhaust his administrative remedies by filing a timely protest. Mr. Prisbrey opposed the motion, claiming the state engineer's published notice was defective in form and therefore invalid. The district court granted Bloomington's motion for summary judgment, and Mr. Pris-brey made the appeal now before us.

ANALYSIS

18 Mr. Prisbrey argues that the state engineer failed to strictly comply with Utah's statutory requirements regarding public notice of change applications. These alleged shortcomings include (1) legal descriptions of *1121 the points of diversion in the change application that are "virtually undecipherable," (2) misleading information which describes the points of diversion as "southeast of Little Valley," and (8) failure to identify Leucadia, as lessee of the water rights, as the applicant in the notice, instead of Bloomington.

T9 Section 78-8-6 of the Utah Code provides, in pertinent part, for notice of water right change applications as follows:

(1)(a) When an application is filed in compliance with this title, the state engineer shall publish, onee a week for a period of two successive weeks, a notice of the application informing the public of the contents of the application and the proposed plan of development.

Utah Code Ann. § 78-3-6(1)(a) (Supp.2008) {emphasis added). In interpreting this statute, we have recently held that notice of change applications must be in strict compliance with these provisions, otherwise "the public will be denied its role in the process of equitable water development contemplated by the [notice provision] statute." Longley v. Leucadia Fin. Corp., 2000 UT 69, 122, 9 P.3d 762.

1 10 Section 73-38-38 specifies the contents of a change application that the state engineer must disclose to the public in a published notice:

(4)(b) Applications ... shall set forth:
() the name of the applicant;
(i) a description of the water right;
(Mi) the quantity of water;
(iv) the stream or source;
(v) the point on the stream or source where the water is diverted;
(vi) the point to which it is proposed to change the diversion of the water;
(vii) the place, purpose, and extent of the present use;
(viii) the place, purpose, and extent of the proposed use; and
(ix) any other information that the state engineer requires.

Utah Code Ann. § 78-3-8(4)(b) (Supp.2008). In their briefs to this court, both Blooming-ton and Mr. Prisbrey provided copies of the actual notice published by the state engineer in The Spectrum. 1 An examination of the published notice reveals that the necessary items of information were, in fact, fully disclosed, up to and including "other information" required by the state engineer, in this case the depth and diameter of the disclosed wells.

T11 The "virtual undecipherability" charge leveled by Mr. Prisbrey is directed at the nomenclature used to describe the locations of the existing and proposed points of diversion. This is the centerpiece of Mr. Prisbrey's first claim on appeal.

12 Mr. Prisbrey contends that the published description of the points of diversion in the Bloomington change application failed to properly reference the standard descriptive terms, township, range, or section. Accordingly, Mr. Prisbrey concludes that the notice of change application did not strictly comply with the statutory requirements and is therefore invalid. We disagree.

1 13 Section 78-8-2 of the Utah Code provides that points of diversion in applications for water appropriation can be designated with reference to United States land survey corners. Utah Code Ann. § 78-3-2@(d)0) (Supp.2008). Contrary to Mr.

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Bluebook (online)
2003 UT 56, 82 P.3d 1119, 488 Utah Adv. Rep. 22, 2003 Utah LEXIS 134, 2003 WL 22871726, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/prisbrey-v-bloomington-water-co-utah-2003.