State Ex Rel. Intake Water Co. v. Board of Natural Resources & Conservation

645 P.2d 383, 197 Mont. 482
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 14, 1982
Docket81-209
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 645 P.2d 383 (State Ex Rel. Intake Water Co. v. Board of Natural Resources & Conservation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
State Ex Rel. Intake Water Co. v. Board of Natural Resources & Conservation, 645 P.2d 383, 197 Mont. 482 (Mo. 1982).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE HASWELL

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Relator Intake Water Company filed a petition for a writ of mandate to compel the Board of Natural Resources and Conservation and the Department of Natural Resources and Conservation to assign a priority date of January 14, 1975, to the water rights application of defendant Utah International, Inc. The District Court dismissed Intake’s petition. We affirm.

On November 20, 1973, Utah filed its application in Wyoming, on Wyoming forms to appropriate 106,730 acre feet from the Powder River, one of the rivers subject to the Yellowstone River Compact, section 85-20-101 et. seq., MCA. The water was to be diverted in Wyoming for ultimate uses in Montana which include industrial, irrigation, municipal and recreation.

Pursuant to Art. VII B of the Compact, the Wyoming state engineer sent duplicates of Utah’s application to Montana which were received by the Department on December 4,1973.

Article VII B & C provide as follows:

“B. Each claim hereafter initiated for an appropriation of water in one signatory state for use in another signatory state shall be filed in the office of the state engineer of the signatory state in which the water is to be diverted, and a duplicate copy of the application or notice shall be filed in the office of the state engineer of the signatory state in which the water is to be used.

“C. Appropriations may hereafter be adjudicated in the state in which the water is diverted, and where a portion or all of the lands irrigated are in another signatory state, such adjudications shall be confirmed in that state by the proper authority. Each adjudication is to conform with the laws of the state where the water is diverted and shall be recorded in the *485 county and state where the water is used.”

These duplicates contained much of the same information that is required on the Montana forms.

On March 15, 1974, the Department notified Utah that if it filed the information for the same project on Montana’s forms, the priority date of November 20, 1973, would be retained. The Department noted that the filing would be pursuant to sections 85-2-301 and 85-2-302, MCA, the latter of which provides in pertinent part:

“The department shall return a defective application for correction or completion together with the reasons for returning it. An application does not lose priority of filing because of defects, if the application is corrected, completed, and refiled with the department within 30 days after its return to the applicant or within a further time as the department may allow. If an application is not corrected and completed within 30 days or within a further time as the department allows, up to 18 months, the priority date of the application shall be the date of refiling the application with the corrections with the department. An application not corrected within 18 months shall be terminated.” (Emphasis added.)

On April 4, 1974, Utah replied that they intended to file applications for beneficial water use permits on the forms prescribed by Montana.

On September 27, 1974, Intake filed a Montana application with the Department and simultaneously filed a Wyoming application with the Wyoming state engineer. Duplicates of each application were filed in the other state at the same time. Intake plans to divert (for industrial, municipal, irrigation and other uses) 564,400 acre feet from the Powder River in Montana by a dam and resulting reservoir which will extend from Montana into Wyoming.

On November 13,1974, the Department informed Utah that the Department had not yet received the applications for permits to appropriate the water on the Montana forms. On January 14, 1975, Utah filed the appropriate forms and paid the filing fee. The Department assigned Utah the Wyoming priority date of November 20, 1973. Intake made repeated *486 demands upon the Department to change the priority date that had been assigned to the applications filed by Utah, contending that the priority date should have been the date that the corrected documents were filed with the Department, January 14, 1975. The Department refused to do so.

On March 6, 1975, Intake filed an action with the District Court of Lewis and Clark County seeking a writ of mandate to compel the Board and the Department to assign a priority date of January 14, 1975, to Utah’s application. On the same day the District Court issued an alternative writ of mandate requiring the Board and the Department to show cause why they had not assigned the requested priority date.

On August 21, 1975, plaintiff filed an amended application for writ of mandate and defendants filed a motion to quash and dismiss the action. About October 14,1975 (and still within the time allowed by the State District Court for the parties to file briefs in response to the above motions and to answer interrogatories), Utah filed a declaratory judgment action against Intake in Federal District Court in Billings and asked that court to adjudicate the rights of both parties in their attempts to appropriate the Powder River waters, Utah Intemat’l Inc. v. Intake Water Co. (1976), 484 F.Supp. 36.

On December 15, 1975, the State District Court stayed all proceedings in that court pending a ruling of the Federal District Court. The Federal District Court declined jurisdiction but construed the Yellowstone River Compact to require the application of Wyoming law and stated that Wyoming courts did not have sole jurisdiction, 484 F.Supp. at 45.

On January 8, 1980, the State District Court dissolved its stay and allowed further briefs and prehearing conferences. On February 25, 1981, after hearing, the District Court granted defendants’ motions to quash and dismiss the amended application in a 20-page order in which the District Court found no clear legal duty under the Yellowstone River Compact or Montana water laws requiring the Department to assign the later priority date requested by Intake. On March 16,1981, the District Court entered judgment dismissing with prejudice any further mandamus proceedings by Intake but *487 without prejudice to any other remedy Intake might have. Intake appeals.

The issue on appeal can be stated as follows: Should a writ of mandamus issue to require the Department to assign a priority date of January 14, 1975, to Utah’s water rights application?

All parties agree that a writ of mandate can be used to compel the performance of an act which the law requires as a duty resulting from an office. Section 27-26-102, MCA, provides in pertinent part:

When and by whom issued. (1) It may be issued by the supreme court or the district court or any judge of the district court to an inferior tribunal, corporation, board or person to compel the performance of an act which the law specially enjoins as a duty resulting from an office...”

It is equally clear that the writ will only issue where there has been a showing that a clear legal duty exists and there is no speedy or adequate remedy in the ordinary course of law. Cain v. Department of Health (1978), 177 Mont.

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Bluebook (online)
645 P.2d 383, 197 Mont. 482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-intake-water-co-v-board-of-natural-resources-conservation-mont-1982.