Washington County Water Conservancy District v. Morgan

2003 UT 58, 82 P.3d 1125, 489 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 2003 Utah LEXIS 139, 2003 WL 22998493
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 23, 2003
Docket20010561
StatusPublished
Cited by46 cases

This text of 2003 UT 58 (Washington County Water Conservancy District v. Morgan) 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
Washington County Water Conservancy District v. Morgan, 2003 UT 58, 82 P.3d 1125, 489 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 2003 Utah LEXIS 139, 2003 WL 22998493 (Utah 2003).

Opinion

PARRISH, Justice:

T1 In this case, we address the circumstances under which a water conservancy district has standing to bring an action for forfeiture of private water rights. Specifically, we address whether water conservancy districts have been granted special standing to press forfeiture claims without regard to whether such districts have a stake in the outcome of those claims. We also consider whether a party who protests a change application to the state engineer thereby acquires standing to assert forfeiture of water rights. Because we find that water conservancy districts have no special standing and because we hold that a party who protests a change application does not thereby acquire standing to assert forfeiture, we also address whether the water conservancy district in this case met the traditional test for standing by establishing that it had an actual stake in the outcome of this particular forfeiture dispute.

FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY

2 The Corporation of the Presiding Bishop of the Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints (the "CPB") owns certain water rights in Washington County, Utah,. When the CPB filed a change application with the state engineer to alter the nature, place of use, and points of diversion for these water rights, the Washington County Water Conservancy District (the "Conservancy District") protested. The Conservancy District claimed that all or part of the CPB's water rights had been forfeited for nonuse according to the provisions of section 78-1-4 of the Utah Code.

3 The state engineer approved the CPB's change application. The state engineer's memorandum decision did not decide the question of forfeiture, noting and apparently agreeing with the CPB's position that a finding of forfeiture requires judicial action and therefore was beyond the state engineer's jurisdiction. The Conservancy District then filed a district court action for review of the state engineer's decision, challenging the approval of the change application 1 and seeking a judicial declaration that the CPB had forfeited the water rights in question.

T4 The trial court held that the Conser-vaney District's administrative protest to the CPB's change application did not give the Conservancy District standing either to challenge the state engineer's decision in court or to assert forfeiture of the CPB's water rights. Rather, the trial court ruled that the Conservancy District's standing was contin *1128 gent upon its demonstration that it would be affected in some way by the approval of the CPB's change application or a forfeiture of the CPB's water rights. After hearing conflicting testimony on these issues, the trial court found the evidence inconclusive. Because the Conservancy District had not carried its burden of showing a connection between its own water use and that of the CPB, the trial court found that the Conservancy District lacked standing and therefore entered judgment in favor of the CPB. We affirm.

ANALYSIS

15 The Conservancy District argues that the trial court erred by conditioning the Conservancy District's standing upon demonstration of a measurable connection between the Conservancy District's own water rights and those of the CPB. The Conservancy District maintains that water conservancy districts have been given special statutory standing to press claims regarding water rights even where their own water uses would not be affected by the outcomes. In addition, the Conservancy District asserts that it acquired standing to challenge the state engineer's decision on the change application and to seek forfeiture of the CPB's water rights by virtue of filing a protest to the CPB's change application in the administrative proceedings before the state engineer.

T6 The Conservancy District also argues, in the alternative, that it satisfied traditional standing requirements by establishing that its water rights would be enhanced by any forfeiture of the CPB's rights. Finally, the Conservancy District contends that even if it failed to satisfy traditional standing requirements, it was entitled to press its claims under established exceptions to traditional standing requirements for claims of significant public importance. See Nat'l Parks & Conservation Ass'n v. Bd. of State Lands, 869 P.2d 909, 918 (Utah 19983) (setting forth the standards to be met under the two exceptions for issues of public importance); see also Jenkins v. Swan, 675 P.2d 1145, 1150-51 (Utah 1983). We address each argument in turn. 2

I. DOES THE WATER CONSERVANCY ACT CONFER STANDING ON THE WASHINGTON COUNTY WATER CONSERVANCY DISTRICT?

T7 As an entity charged to promote the public interest in matters of water use, the Conservancy District argues that it has been granted special statutory standing to assert forfeiture of private water rights regardless of whether it satisfies traditional standing requirements. This issue is one of statutory interpretation, which we review for correctness. State v. Bohne, 2002 UT 116, ¶ 4, 63 P.3d 63.

18 Section 17A-2-1401 of the Utah Code enumerates the purposes for which water conservancy districts were created. 3 It is *1129 true that water conservancy districts have been charged to serve the public interest. It is also true that the public generally may benefit from the forfeiture of water rights when water is not being put to beneficial use. Nevertheless, the broad statements of purpose to be served by water conservancy districts are insufficient to establish statutory standing to seek to overturn approved change applications or to press forfeiture claims in cases where a district's own uses would not be affected.

T9 Our conclusion in this regard is buttressed by the structure of the Water Conservancy Act. The general statements of purpose in section 17A-2-1401 of the Act are followed in section 17¥A-2-1418 by a specific enumeration of powers granted to water conservancy districts. These powers include, inter alia, the power to "appropriate and otherwise acquire water and water rights within or without the state," Utah Code Ann. § (20083), and to "exercise the power of eminent domain" to "take any property necessary to exercise powers granted to the district." Utah Code Ann. § 17A, 2-1418(1)(a)(ii) (2008). They do not, however, include an express grant of power to enforce the beneficial use of water through the use of the water forfeiture statute, nor do they include an express grant of power to appeal the state engineer's decisions on change applications.

110 The Conservancy District asserts that a member of a class that is intended to be benefitted by a statute necessarily has standing to enforce the requirements of the statute. We are, however, unpersuaded by this argument. Many statutes are intended to benefit the public generally, yet we do not construe them as conferring enforcement standing on the general public. This principle is illustrated by the forfeiture statute at issue in this case, section 783-1-4 of the Utah Code.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2003 UT 58, 82 P.3d 1125, 489 Utah Adv. Rep. 7, 2003 Utah LEXIS 139, 2003 WL 22998493, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/washington-county-water-conservancy-district-v-morgan-utah-2003.