Raymond Reser v. Pollution Control Hearings Board

CourtCourt of Appeals of Washington
DecidedOctober 12, 2023
Docket39115-9
StatusPublished

This text of Raymond Reser v. Pollution Control Hearings Board (Raymond Reser v. Pollution Control Hearings Board) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Washington primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Raymond Reser v. Pollution Control Hearings Board, (Wash. Ct. App. 2023).

Opinion

NOTICE: SLIP OPINION (not the court’s final written decision)

The opinion that begins on the next page is a slip opinion. Slip opinions are the written opinions that are originally filed by the court. A slip opinion is not necessarily the court’s final written decision. Slip opinions can be changed by subsequent court orders. For example, a court may issue an order making substantive changes to a slip opinion or publishing for precedential purposes a previously “unpublished” opinion. Additionally, nonsubstantive edits (for style, grammar, citation, format, punctuation, etc.) are made before the opinions that have precedential value are published in the official reports of court decisions: the Washington Reports 2d and the Washington Appellate Reports. An opinion in the official reports replaces the slip opinion as the official opinion of the court. The slip opinion that begins on the next page is for a published opinion, and it has since been revised for publication in the printed official reports. The official text of the court’s opinion is found in the advance sheets and the bound volumes of the official reports. Also, an electronic version (intended to mirror the language found in the official reports) of the revised opinion can be found, free of charge, at this website: https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports. For more information about precedential (published) opinions, nonprecedential (unpublished) opinions, slip opinions, and the official reports, see https://www.courts.wa.gov/opinions and the information that is linked there. For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/.

FILED JANUARY 16, 2024 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

COURT OF APPEALS, DIVISION III, STATE OF WASHINGTON

RAYMOND RESER, ) No. 39115-9-III ) Appellant, ) ) v. ) ORDER GRANTING MOTION ) TO PUBLISH OPINION POLLUTION CONTROL HEARINGS ) BOARD, ) ) and ) ) STATE OF WASHINGTON, DEPARTMENT ) OF ECOLOGY. ) ) Respondents. ) ) THE COURT has considered the respondent’s motion to publish the court’s opinion of

October 12, 2023, and the record and file herein, and is of the opinion the motion should be

granted. Therefore,

IT IS ORDERED, the motion to publish is granted. The opinion filed by the court on

October 12, 2023 shall be modified on page 1 to designate it is a published opinion and on page

19 by deletion of the following language:

A majority of the panel has determined that this opinion will not be printed in the Washington Appellate Reports but it will be filed for public record pursuant to RCW 2.06.040.

PANEL: Judges Fearing, Lawrence-Berrey, Staab

FOR THE COURT:

_________________________________ GEORGE B. FEARING, Chief Judge For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/.

FILED OCTOBER 12, 2023 In the Office of the Clerk of Court WA State Court of Appeals Division III

IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF WASHINGTON DIVISION THREE

RAYMOND RESER, ) ) No. 39115-9-III Appellant, ) ) v. ) ) POLLUTION CONTROL HEARINGS ) UNPUBLISHED OPINION BOARD, ) ) and ) ) STATE OF WASHINGTON, ) DEPARTMENT OF ECOLOGY. ) ) Respondents, )

FEARING, C.J. — We must decide whether the nonuse of water for fifteen years

resulting from a tenant gaining possession of a farm and changing the crop grown on the

land from irrigated asparagus to dryland wheat constitutes a “crop rotation,” within the

meaning of RCW 90.14.140(1)(k), so as to avert relinquishment of water rights. We

conclude that answering this question in the affirmative, as argued by Appellant

Raymond Reser, stretches the concept of crop rotation beyond its elasticity. We affirm

the Pollution Control Hearing Board’s (PCHB’s) dismissal of Reser’s appeal of the

Department of Ecology’s (DOE’s) determination that the water rights on Reser’s

Ferguson Farm terminated because of lack of use for more than five years. We also For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/.

No. 39115-9-III, Reser v. Pollution Control Hearings Board, et al

affirm the PCHB’s determination that estoppel does not preclude DOE from asserting

relinquishment.

FACTS

This appeal concerns water rights attended to Ferguson Farm, 457.9 acres of

agriculture land in Walla Walla County. Raymond Reser currently owns Ferguson Farm.

The facts extend decades into the past and focus on water usage during the tenure of

various owners and tenants.

Previous owner Baker & Baker, a Washington corporation, acquired water rights

for Ferguson Farm. On November 28, 1949, the state issued Ground Water Certificate

378-A to reflect the existence of those rights.

On some unknown date, Richard Reynolds and Hellen Sparrow purchased

Ferguson Farm, and the pair farmed the land until 1981. Reynolds and Sparrow raised

irrigated asparagus. They relied on an artesian well situated on the property as the source

of water.

Beginning in 1981, Richard Reynolds and Hellen Sparrow rented, under a fifteen-

year lease, Ferguson Farm to K-Farms, Inc., a company owned by the Kimball family.

The lease agreement included a right of first refusal to match the terms of any proposed

purchase of Ferguson Farm.

K-Farms severed the asparagus plants and planted winter wheat every year during

its fifteen-year rental of Ferguson Farm. Winter wheat is a nonirrigated crop. Thus, K-

2 For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/.

No. 39115-9-III, Reser v. Pollution Control Hearings Board, et al

Farms never irrigated the farmland. Nor did K-Farms maintain the farm’s irrigation

system.

On February 3, 1995, Raymond Reser purchased Ferguson Farm from the

D. Richard Reynolds Trust and Hellen Sparrow. K-Farms had declined to exercise its

right of first refusal to purchase the farmland. Reser’s acquisition of the land, however,

remained subject to K-Farms’ existing farm lease, under which the latter could farm

Ferguson Farm for two additional seasons.

On March 17, 1995, Larry Siegel, attorney for Raymond Reser, wrote to Bill

Neve, then DOE’s Walla Walla office watermaster. Siegel’s letter read:

Dear Mr. Neve:

I represent Ray Reser who recently purchased farm property located in Walla Walla County which has in place an artesian well. Mr. Reser wanted me to inquire as to whether or not there is a recorded water right on this property. I have enclosed with this letter a copy of the legal description of the property. Please let me know at your earliest convenience if a water right exists.

Clerk’s Papers (CP) at 250 (emphasis added). On March 29, 1995, Watermaster Neve

replied:

Dear Mr. Siegel:

Enclosed please find a copy of Certificate of Ground Water Right No. 378, together with a copy of the associated well log report. This water right is appurtenant to your client’s property per the legal description you sent to my office on March 27. I did not find any other water rights appurtenant to the subject property.

3 For the current opinion, go to https://www.lexisnexis.com/clients/wareports/.

No. 39115-9-III, Reser v. Pollution Control Hearings Board, et al

CP at 141 (emphasis added).

Since the PCHB granted the DOE summary judgment, we view the facts in a glow

favorable to Raymond Reser. According to Reser, K-Farms did not view his purchase of

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