Waterfall Community Water Users Ass'n v. New Mexico State Engineer

2009 NMCA 101, 216 P.3d 270, 147 N.M. 20
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedJuly 28, 2009
Docket28,049
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 2009 NMCA 101 (Waterfall Community Water Users Ass'n v. New Mexico State Engineer) 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
Waterfall Community Water Users Ass'n v. New Mexico State Engineer, 2009 NMCA 101, 216 P.3d 270, 147 N.M. 20 (N.M. Ct. App. 2009).

Opinion

OPINION

VANZI, Judge.

{1} Appellant, Waterfall Community Water Users Association (Waterfall), submitted an application for 320 acre-feet per year of surface water from Culberson Spring 1 within the Pecos River stream system. Appellant argued that it possessed a natural right, pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 72-5-29 (1953), to those waters. The State of New Mexico Office of the State Engineer (State Engineer) dismissed the application. Waterfall appealed to the district court. The district court, upon its de novo review of the State Engineer’s decision to dismiss, granted summary judgment against Waterfall. Waterfall appeals the district court’s ruling. We affirm.

I. BACKGROUND

{2} On September 23,1999, Waterfall filed an application for unappropriated water with the Appellee, State Engineer. In that application, Waterfall sought appropriation of 320 acre-feet per year of surface water from Culberson Spring for use in its community water system. Waterfall’s application was protested by Mel Elkins (Protestant), an individual named as Appellee in this matter. Waterfall’s application was filed with the State Engineer’s hearing unit, the entity within the Office of the State Engineer responsible for conducting the hearing on Waterfall’s application.

{3} On May 31, 2001, prior to any evidentiary hearing, the Water Rights Division (WRD) of the State Engineer filed a motion to dismiss with the hearing unit of the State Engineer. The WRD requested dismissal of Waterfall’s hearing and denial of its application. In support of its motion, the WRD argued that Culberson Spring is a tributary to Cox Canyon, which is in turn a tributary to Rio Peñasco, which is in turn a tributary to the Pecos River. The WRD asserted that the State Engineer had previously found, in an unrelated case, that there are no unappropriated waters available in the Pecos River stream system. Accordingly, the WRD asserted that Waterfall’s request for appropriations from Culberson Spring must be denied. To conclude otherwise would result in permitting the appropriation of water from a water system that is fully appropriated.

{4} In response, Waterfall disputed the WRD’s claim that there was no unappropriated water in the Pecos River stream system. Additionally, Waterfall claimed that it had a “natural right” pursuant to Section 72-5-29 to appropriate water from Culberson Spring. The exact contours of this “natural right” and how this right could be said to ameliorate the fact that Waterfall was requesting water from a stream system that was fully appropriated was not explained in Waterfall’s response. Indeed, Waterfall’s sole argument was that Section 72-5-29 “would appear to provide for the specific situation that is present in this case, that is, diverting waters from the Culberson Spring for the domestic uses of the inhabitants of the land adjacent to Culberson Spring to distribute those waters as equitably as possible without interference with vested rights.”

{5} On August 8, 2001, the State Engineer dismissed Waterfall’s hearing and denied its application. The State Engineer found, concurring with the WRD, that the waters of Culberson Spring are tributary to the Pecos River, the Pecos River and its tributaries are fully appropriated, and thus there are no unappropriated waters available in the Pecos River stream system. Based on these facts, the State Engineer concluded that granting Waterfall’s application would impair existing rights to water in the Pecos River stream system, would be detrimental to the public welfare, and would be contrary to the conservation of water within New Mexico.

{6} Pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 72-7-l(E) (1971), Waterfall appealed the State Engineer’s decision to the Twelfth Judicial District Court of New Mexico. On April 26, 2007, Protestant filed a motion for summary judgment with the district court. The State Engineer joined Protestant’s motion and stated its agreement with the arguments set forth therein.

{7} In his motion, Protestant asserted that summary judgment was warranted because, as the State Engineer found, Waterfall cannot appropriate waters from Culberson Spring; all of that water is already fully appropriated. In addition, Protestant challenged Waterfall’s assertion that it possessed a “natural right” to the waters of Culberson Spring pursuant to Section 72-5-29. This assertion, Protestant claimed, was premised on Waterfall’s erroneous interpretation of Section 72-5-29 and ignored the clear import of the statutory scheme within which Section 72-5-29 falls. Protestant noted that the scope of Section 72-5-29 is limited to the narrow purpose of conserving and utilizing torrential flood water “so as to prevent erosion, waste, and damage caused by torrential floods.” Further, the statutory provision provides that any distribution of water cannot interfere with vested rights which Waterfall was seeking to do.

{8} On May 7, 2007, Waterfall submitted its response to Protestant’s motion for summary judgment. At the outset, Waterfall agreed with the facts as set forth in Protestant’s motion and further conceded that the waters of the Pecos River stream system could be found to be fully appropriated. In spite of these concessions, however, Waterfall claimed that because “virtually all” the surface water it sought to appropriate from Culberson Spring would be returned to the Pecos River stream system, an issue of material fact existed with regard to whether there is unappropriated water in the Pecos River stream system.

{9} Waterfall also claimed that Section 72-5-29 provides Waterfall a “natural right” to appropriate and “distribute the benefit of the water in the stream system as equally as possible without interfering with vested rights.” In order to address the concerns that Waterfall’s natural right argument was likely to elicit in light of its acknowledgment that the Pecos River stream system is fully appropriated, Waterfall maintained that application of its natural right under Section 72-5-29 to the waters of Culberson Spring would have little or no adverse impact on the existing appropriations in the Pecos River stream system. Again, Waterfall maintained that the water it intended to divert from Culberson Spring for municipal and industrial purposes would be returned to the Pecos River stream system after use. As proof of this assertion, Waterfall submitted an affidavit from James Murrill, the operator of Waterfall’s domestic water system. Mr. Murrill’s affidavit stated that, based on his personal knowledge, most of the water Waterfall sought to appropriate would be “discharged back into the ground in the valley through individual liquid waste disposal systems.”

{10} The district court granted the motion for summary judgment on August 31, 2007, dismissing Waterfall’s appeal. The district court found that there is no water available for appropriation in the Pecos River stream system, that Culberson Spring is a tributary and part of this stream system, and that the provisions of Section 72-5-29 were inapplicable to Waterfall’s claim because the application was not made under that statute. Waterfall filed a timely notice of appeal of the district court’s decision with this Court.

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

Related

Vigil v. Taintor
2020 NMCA 037 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2019)
State Ex Rel. State Engineer v. Romero
2020 NMCA 001 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2019)
State v. Benson
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2018
State v. Werkmeister
New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2013
Bounds v. State
252 P.3d 708 (New Mexico Court of Appeals, 2011)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2009 NMCA 101, 216 P.3d 270, 147 N.M. 20, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/waterfall-community-water-users-assn-v-new-mexico-state-engineer-nmctapp-2009.