State Ex Rel. Office of the State Engineer v. Lewis

2007 NMCA 008, 150 P.3d 375, 141 N.M. 1
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedNovember 16, 2006
Docket25,522
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 2007 NMCA 008 (State Ex Rel. Office of the State Engineer v. Lewis) 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
State Ex Rel. Office of the State Engineer v. Lewis, 2007 NMCA 008, 150 P.3d 375, 141 N.M. 1 (N.M. Ct. App. 2006).

Opinion

OPINION

SUTIN, Judge.

{1} The Pecos River, flowing from north (upstream) to south (downstream) in New Mexico and then into Texas, has challenged water experts for well over a hundred years, without meaningful resolution of the issues of rampant usage with attendant shortages.

{2} In significant part, the Pecos River issues have revolved around: (1) the competing claims of downstream, senior surface water users in the Carlsbad, New Mexico area and upstream, junior groundwater users in New Mexico’s Roswell Artesian Basin; and (2) the competing claims of New Mexico users and Texas users. The present case involves the attempt by the State of New Mexico, the United States, and irrigation entities through a settlement agreement to resolve difficult long-pending water rights issues through public funding, without offending New Mexico’s bedrock doctrine of prior appropriation, and without resorting to a priority call. In this case, certain downstream, senior surface water users, specifically Tracy/Eddy Trusts and Farms (Tracy/Eddy), and Hope Community Ditch Association (Hope), who are the Appellants in this appeal, seek to abort that attempt and to require the doctrine of prior appropriation to be strictly enforced through senior against junior priority enforcement in order to assure adequate water for the downstream users and additionally to assure that the upstream, junior users and not the State’s taxpayers bear the burden of providing adequate water.

{3} Appellees, who are Carlsbad Irrigation District (CID), Pecos Valley Artesian Conservancy District (PVACD), and the State of New Mexico, seek ratification of a settlement agreement among themselves and the United States establishing a managed water plan for the Pecos River, which recognizes prior appropriation rights but subsumes individual interests to collective and representative bodies. We affirm the judgments in favor of Appellees, including the partial final decree that incorporates the settlement agreement.

{4} We begin with a thumbnail history of significant events in relation to the Pecos River, followed by a review of the court determination that is the subject of the appeal now before this Court. We then discuss the points raised by Appellants.

HISTORY

A. A BRIEF LOOK AT TWENTIETH CENTURY ACTIVITY

{5} Jumping over nineteenth century Pecos River water issues, we start with the point at which the United States became involved with Pecos River water concerns. See generally G. Emlen Hall, High and Dry: The Texas-New Mexico Struggle for the Pecos River (2002) [hereinafter Hall, High and Dry ]; Water Resources of the Lower Pecos Region, New Mexico: Science, Policy and a Look to the Future (Peggy S. Johnson et al. eds., 2003) [hereinafter Water Resources ]. Following the 1904 Pecos River flood, the newly created United States Reclamation Service (later called the Bureau of Reclamation) became involved in a federal reclamation project located on the Pecos River called the Carlsbad Project, which consists of several dams, reservoirs, canals, and other works on the river. See Hall, High and Dry, supra, at 31, 36; see also Brantley Farms v. Carlsbad Irrigation Dist., 1998-NMCA-023, ¶ 26, 124 N.M. 698, 954 P.2d 763. The Bureau of Reclamation owns the reservoirs and other works servicing water users in the Carlsbad area, and owns and administers the Carlsbad Project. Brantley Farms, 1998-NMCA-023, ¶ 26, 124 N.M. 698, 954 P.2d 763. At the time of our statehood in 1912, and even before then, there existed issues of protection of downstream, senior users and Texas users from upstream, junior users. See Hall, High and Dry, supra, at 42-43.

{6} From these early times forward, the quest to resolve the water issues involved several significant activities and events. In 1920, in United States v. Hope Community Ditch, Cause No. 712 (Equity) (D.N.M.1933), the United States sought a Pecos River stream system adjudication to establish downstream senior surface water rights. Entered in 1933, the final decree in the Hope Community Ditch adjudication (the Hope decree) recognized 1887 priorities for Hope farmers and for the irrigation area that included what is known as the Tracy/Eddy farmlands in the Carlsbad area. The Hope decree also recognized 25,055 water right acres in the Carlsbad Project along with a corresponding duty of water, three acre feet per year per acre. Hall, High and Dry, supra, at 41-42, 257 n. 33. However, while the Hope decree recognized that downstream users had certain senior rights to surface water, the decree was problematic because it did not include claims to interrelated groundwater. See Hall, High and Dry, supra, at 41-42; cf. Cartwright v. Pub. Serv. Co. of N.M., 66 N.M. 64, 76, 343 P.2d 654, 662 (1958) (determining that the Hope decree was not res judicata with respect to entities that were not a party to the federal action), overruled on other grounds by State ex rel. Martinez v. City of Las Vegas, 2004-NMSC-009, 135 N.M. 375, 89 P.3d 47.

{7} It was during the Hope Community Ditch adjudication that Carlsbad area users organized the Carlsbad Irrigation District (the CID), which was court-approved in 1933. See Tompkins v. Carlsbad Irrigation Dist., 96 N.M. 368, 370, 630 P.2d 767, 769 (Ct.App.1981). The CID was formed in cooperation with the Bureau of Reclamation pursuant to New Mexico law and is a “body corporate and politic.” Id.; see Brantley Farms, 1998-NMCA-023, ¶¶ 2, 26, 124 N.M. 698, 954 P.2d 763; see also NMSA 1978, §§ 73-10-1 to -50 (1919, as amended through 2003) (providing for the creation of irrigation rights); NMSA 1978, §§ 73-13-43 to -46 (1934) (validating irrigation districts as “continued bodies corporate and politic”). The CID board of directors has broad powers to act on behalf of the CID, including authority to acquire and deal with water rights. See § 73-10-16. The CID board also has discretionary authority to make decisions on behalf of its constituent members regarding distribution and use of water supply. Id.; § 73-10-24; Brantley Farms, 1998-NMCA-023, ¶ 23, 124 N.M. 698, 954 P.2d 763.

{8} The CID is one of three irrigation entities established on the Pecos River. Another is the Fort Sumner Irrigation District (the FSID), which received Bureau of Reclamation funds to reconstruct a diversion dam. Like the CID, the FSID is an irrigation district cooperating with the United States. See John W. Utton, Irrigation Districts in New Mexico: A Legal Overview of Their Role and Function, in Water Resources 55, 55. The third irrigation entity is the Pecos Valley Artesian Conservancy District (the PVACD), which, like the CID and the FSID, is a political subdivision of the state. Id.; see NMSA 1978, § 73-1-11 (1931). The PVACD was formed in 1932 to conserve groundwater in the Roswell Artesian Basin, following the New Mexico Legislature’s enactment in 1931 of a groundwater code aimed at conservation of artesian waters. See 1931 N.M. Laws ch. 97, § 1 (codified at NMSA 1978, § 73-1-1 (1931)); see also John W. Shomaker, How We Got Here: A Brief History of Water Development in the Pecos Basin, in Water Resources 61, 63. Groundwater development in the Roswell Artesian Basin was unregulated prior to 1931. Shomaker, supra, at 63.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Snow Oil & Gas, Inc v. Garcia Richard
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2026
N.M. Educ. Ret. Bd. v. Romero
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2023
Carlsbad Irrigation Dist. v. D'Antonio
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2023
New Mexico ex rel. State Eng'r v. Carson
908 F.3d 659 (Tenth Circuit, 2018)
New Mexic Ex Rel. State Eng'r v. Carson
899 F.3d 1132 (Tenth Circuit, 2018)
State ex rel. State Engineer v. San Juan Agricultural Water Users Ass'
425 P.3d 723 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2018)
State ex rel. State Engineer v. Horner
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2018
Nationstar Mortg. LLC v. O'Malley
415 P.3d 1022 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2018)
Quevado v. Children, Youth & Families Dep't
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2016
Quevedo Ex Rel. Bevan v. New Mexico Children, Youth & Families Department
2016 NMCA 101 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2016)
New Mexico ex rel. State Engineer v. Aamodt
171 F. Supp. 3d 1171 (D. New Mexico, 2016)
Bustos v. City of Clovis
2016 NMCA 018 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2015)
Moses v. Skandera
2015 NMCA 036 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2015)
Bounds v. State ex rel. D'Antonio
2013 NMSC 37 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 2013)
Bounds v. State
252 P.3d 708 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2011)
State v. Lindsey
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2010
Tri-State Generation & Transmission Ass'n v. D'Antonio
2011 NMCA 015 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2010)
Mason Family Trust v. DeVaney
2009 NMCA 048 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2009)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2007 NMCA 008, 150 P.3d 375, 141 N.M. 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-office-of-the-state-engineer-v-lewis-nmctapp-2006.