WS Ranch Company v. Kaiser Steel Corporation

439 P.2d 714, 79 N.M. 65
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 18, 1968
Docket8368
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 439 P.2d 714 (WS Ranch Company v. Kaiser Steel Corporation) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
WS Ranch Company v. Kaiser Steel Corporation, 439 P.2d 714, 79 N.M. 65 (N.M. 1968).

Opinion

OPINION

CARMODY, Justice.

The district court affirmed the state engineer’s approval of Kaiser Steel’s application to change the point of diversion of certain adjudicated water rights, and W. S. Ranch appeals.

Although there are other connected topics,' the basic issue has to do with the meaning and effect to be given to the final decree which adjudicated the water rights of the Vermejo Stream System in 1941. Under the decree, the maximum duty of water of the 163.4 acres with which we are concerned was adjudged “to be two acre-feet of water per annum per acre of land irrigated delivered at the land.” These particular rights were junior to other rights of W. S. Ranch, and the point of diversion was below that of W. • S. Ranch. Kaiser purchased the rights to 115 of the 163.4 acres, and applied to the state engineer for authority to change the point of diversion to a location above that of W. S. Ranch. The application sought to divert 230 acre-feet annually at a point some fifteen miles higher up on the stream system, and, of course, to dry up 115 acres, or 230 acre-feet of water, at the old location. The proposed transfer was also from agricultural to industrial use, for mining and coal-washing facilities.

At the hearing before the state engineer, considerable testimony was presented as to the amount of water available, the manner in which Kaiser would utilize the water, and the amount of return flow to the stream system; but Kaiser offered no testimony as to the extent to which water had been applied to beneficial use on the 163.4 acres involved. What little testimony there is as to application or non-application of water to beneficial use was brought out on cross-examination of one of Kaiser’s witnesses. It is W. S. Ranch’s position that even though the adjudication decree provided that the maximum duty was two acre-feet, that this does not justify the transfer of this amount of water without an affirmative showing that such maximum has been applied to beneficial use and that the transfer can be made without detriment to existing rights.

The state engineer found that the change of place of use, and the change in purpose and point of diversion, could be made “without detriment to existing rights.” Such a finding is required by law (§§ 75 — 5— 22 and 75-5-23, N.M.S.A.1953), but the question here is: Does the adjudication decree take the place of proof of the amount of water actually applied to beneficial use by a junior appropriator ? It is our considered judgment that the adjudication decree is proof of the nature and extent of the rights sought to be transferred. The adjudication court determined that the water had been applied to beneficial use, thus satisfying the constitutional and statutory requirements. The state engineer could not do else than accept the court’s decree. Were it otherwise, the engineer could, in effect, overrule, amend or revise an adjudication decree. This, of course, would offend not only the constitution but our statutes and decisional law.

The purpose of adjudications under the New Mexico statutory procedure is well stated in Harkey v. Smith, 1926, 31 N.M. 521, 247 P. 550, wherein he said:

“ * * * A careful re-examination of this legislation convinces us that there has been a departure from the old arid region doctrine of appropriation and seasonal or periodical appropriation, and that not [sic] the right to use water, either as to volume or periods of use, is regulated either by the permit of the state engineer, or the decrees of the courts. It is, of course, true that ‘beneficial use shall be the basis, the measure, and the limit of the right to the use of water,’ as is provided by section 3 of article 16 of our Constitution. But this provision merely declares the basis of the right to the use of the water, and in no manner prohibits the regulation of the enjoyment of that right. This legislation provides in section 23 that when water rights are adjudicated, the court shall declare as to each party the priority, amount, p^lrposeJ periods, and place of usej and, in case of irrigation, the lands to which the water shall be appurtenant. * * *
“It thus appears that all of these serious questions, leading so often to vexatious and disastrous litigation in regard to the appropriation of waters, both as to quantity and time, have been eliminated by this legislation. Now the right of the water user is measured by the permit of the state engineer or the decree of the court. It is the nature of the grant which prevents all future controversy as to the extent an [sic] character of the right.
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“But under the old arid region doctrine it was necessary to hold that beneficial ttse, both as to volume and periods of time, was the evidence and measure of the right, and hence an irrigator might by conduct limit his right to certain periods of the year. Now, however, under our statute, the grant under the permit of the state engineer or the decree of the court marks the limit of the right.” (Emphasis added.)

And in El Paso & R. I. Ry. Co. v. District Court of Fifth Judicial Dist., 1931, 36 N.M. 94, 8 P.2d 1064, it was pointed out why and in what manner New Mexico adjudications differ from those in Colorado. There we said:

“The allegations that petitioners have abandoned their rights or a portion of them, or that some of the use to which they have subjected the waters has been unlawful or wasteful, do not bring this case within those cited. Such issues are proper to be raised in the adjudication suit, where petitioners have submitted the validity and extent of their right, and where all parties contesting or questioning it may be heard and may have their own rights established.
'
“It is true that Colorado adjudications are not so sweeping as ours, and that much more is left to the ordinary jurisdiction of equity. The adjudication determines priorities of ditches only. It is confined to the limits of a water district which does not necessarily embrace a whole stream system. Priorities among consumers from the same ditch, and among appropriators in different districts from the same stream system, must be settled elsewhere. * * *
“Colorado was the leader in statutory state control and adjudication, with twenty-five years of experience before we undertook it. Undoubtedly its statutes and precedents furnished a background for our own legislation. Undoubtedly our adjudication was intended to be more comprehensive. Here stream systems as a whole are to be surveyed. Section 151-118, supra. All rights in the stream system.- are to be adjudicated. Sections 151-120, .151-122, supra. All claimants are to be parties. Section 151-122, supra. The owners of-water - rights, not the' owners of ditches, are thve parties. Snow; v. Abalos, supra. In the light of Colorado’s experience, we undertook a more thorough job. With North and South Dakota and Oklahoma, we are said to have based our statutes on the draft of Mr. Bean of the Reclamation Service. 2 Weil on Water Rights in the Western States (3d Ed.) p. 1480. Our scheme seems more logical.

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Bluebook (online)
439 P.2d 714, 79 N.M. 65, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ws-ranch-company-v-kaiser-steel-corporation-nm-1968.