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LANDMARK PLEADINGS
AND OTHER DOCUMENTS IN NEW MEXICO WATER LAW CASES
Since the passing of Steve Reynolds, the New Mexico
State Engineer Office has been effectively under the control of its
Chief Legal Counsel, D.L. Sanders. Mr. Sanders and the State
Engineer have turned their back on the Doctrine of Prior Appropriations
and have been trying to take complete control of New Mexico water and to
wrest it from private citizens. They have repeatedly turned their
back on the State Constitution, State Law, their own regulations,
decisional law, and an extensive body of former administrative
decisions. They have gone to far. They have misled and
misinformed the courts. They commonly argue two sides of a
question in different cases before the courts. They engage
litigation to protect public monopolies. They change their own
regulations ex post facto when the existing regulations do not suit
them. And, they continue to defalcate in their duty to adjudicate
water rights in the entire state, a failing of more than 102 years.
They maintain legal fictions. They engage in malicious
and onerous skulduggery to defeat water rights belonging to private
owners. This is only a partial list of their bad faith behavior
over the past 10 or 15 years. Others may add to this list.
Given their malicious behavior,
certain litigants and major issues have arisen in the past five years
such that our attorneys and judges are in the process of taking back our
water law and setting the State Engineer back on course. This is
fortunate because Courts commonly have had so few water law cases that
judges do not last long enough to learn the New Mexico water law, its
history, and its twists and turns. This results in bad decisions
throughout our court system. This is changing drastically and here
are a few of the cases that are causing this change. For pleadings
and other materials on these cases, click on each case.
Turner
v. Basstt, 2005 NMSC 9; 111 P.3d 701
(March 2005) A quiet title action to water
rights which established the ownership of water rights are not subject
to adverse possession. The case also established that the State
Engineer is the title plant for all water rights ownership matters and
not the County Recorder. The case also gutted the Statute of
Frauds when it decided that it is not the written agreement of the
parties to a contract as to whether water rights are severed from the
land or not. It is only the agreement of the State Engineer to
sever the water rights whether or not there is any severance by deed.
Judge Chavez was particularly interested in oral argument as to how to
prevent the Plaintiff from obtaining a windfall.
Bounds v. State Engineer, D-608-CV-2006-166
This case was filed by Hubert and Hernandez on behalf of the Bounds
family who reside in the Mimbres Valley of southern New Mexico.
The Bounds are surface water diverters and users. They have
protested the domestic well permits that are issued by the State
Engineer automatically. The domestic wells are junior to the
senior water rights owned by the Bounds Family and others in the Valley.
Judge Robinson has sided with the Plaintiffs and declared the statute
that authorizes the issuance of these permits as unconstitutional and
comes down in support of the Doctrine of Prior Appropriations. The
State Engineer has lobbied the Legislature for at least 15 years to del
with domestic wells. They have not. To force the legislature
to act, the State Engineer should not have appealed the decision; but,
appeal it he did.
Tri-State v. State Engineer, D-725-CV-2005-00003
- This case concerns the Active Water Management Regulations promulgated
in a rather rough-handed manner by the State Engineer in which Water
Masters appointed by the State Engineer for the various streams in the
state would have the power to carry out de facto adjudication and
deny water to irrigators on an administrative basis. Any
disagreement would lead to a hearing before the State Engineer and if
the Appellant didn't like the outcome he could appeal to District Court
for a trial de novo. Judge Rawlings determined that the
regulations were unconstitutional. He determined that the
regulations would lead to administrative adjudication and that only the
courts had the authority to adjudicate water rights. The matter is
on appeal. A number of amicii briefs have been filed with
the appeals court. All of them oppose the AWRM regulations and
defend the Doctrine of Prior Appropriations.
State Engineer v. EBID et al., D-303-CV-1996-00888
Lower Rio Grande Adjudication in which
the State Engineer has refused to recognize any pre-1907 private water
rights and has failed to use its own records including old maps to
recognize that more than 30,000 acres of land were irrigated in the
Lower Rio Grande prior to 1900 and certainly pre-dated the Application
by the U.S. Irrigation Service on January 23, 1906 for the Rio Grande
Project known as the so-called Application Number 8. Application Number 8
was not filed by the United States and bears no signature of any U.S.
employee. Further, it was so
totally incomplete that it must be rejected. Most importantly,
so-called Application
No. 8 was never approved by the Territorial or State Engineer and no
permit was every issued. Intercession in this case by Lion's Gate
Water and Westwater Resources dba WaterBank through direct mailings and
pleadings have revealed the massive amount of information on pre-1900
irrigation. Likely in response to these revelations, Judge
Valentine wrote to all plaintiffs in the adjudication to inform them that
if they believe they have pre-1907 water rights, they should file a
declaration with the Las Cruces office of the State Engineer. In
fact, neither the Elephant Butte Irrigation District (EBID) nor
their attorneys were aware of the 1903 French Map discovered by
WaterBank and are now scurrying to find some documentary proof that
farmers in the area did turn over their water rights to the EBID.
WaterBank has never found such evidence. WaterBank has provided an
Amicus Curiae
brief to the court that disputes any interest of the United States or
the EBID or any of their members. A Declaration for pre-1907 water
rights has been prepared by WaterBank for an EBID irrigator. To
view the Declaration
click here.
Lion's Gate Water v. State Engineer, D-1329-CV-2007-00596
The Application of Lion's Gate for a
new appropriation of up to salvage 372,000 acre feet of water from the
Rio Grande which is lost by evaporation. This application was
filed in 2003 and for five years, the State Engineer has run LGW around
and around. After rejecting the application at the hearing level
(which was a foregone conclusion) LGW filed an Appeal and Complaint as
an originally docketed action in District Court in Sandoval County.
After 300 days, the State Engineer had not filed its Answer or any 12(B)
Motions, LGW filed for Judgment on the Pleadings for failure to file an
answer. Judge Eichwald denied the Motion but granted interlocutory
appeal on the question. The appeal was denied by the appeals court
and the supreme court. LGW is now preparing a petition for Writ of
Certiorari to the U.S. Supreme Court for deprivation of due process.
In the meanwhile immediately following LGW's Motion for Judgment on the
Pleadings and more than 300 days since LGW filed its Appeal and
Complaint as an originally docketed action, the State Engineer filed its
Motion for Summary Judgment. LGW has responded to the Motion for
Summary Judgment and is in the process of filing its own Motion for
Summary Judgment The State Engineer originally rejected the
Application stating that the Rio Grande is already overappropriated.
He has been saying that for years and using for his basis, a letter
dated on or about April 25, 1908 from the Reclamation Service to
Vernon Sullivan, the Territorial Engineer, that appropriated all of the
unappropriated water of the Rio Grande. There are several reasons
why this attempted reservation is illegal and of no substance.
First, the National Irrigation Act of June 17, 1902 established the
Reclamation Service. Section 8 of the Act requires the Reclamation
Service to follow Territorial and State Law
in obtaining water rights for its projects. The Reclamation
Service never tried to do this. They never filed an Application as
required by the New Mexico Territorial Water Code of 1905.
So-called Application No. 8 was not filed by the Reclamation Service and
was not signed by anyone let alone an official representative of
the United States. Further, it was was never approved according to State Engineer records, the
Yeo Survey and a March 23, 1927 letter from Herbert W. Yeo to the Bureau
of Reclamation. Second, water for federal reclamation and
conservancy projects can not be reserved as stated in Kansas v. Colorado
(1907) and Winters(1908). Further the State Engineer simply said
that the evaporative water loss is already accounted for in the Rio
Grande Compact, a thinly veiled justification without explication.
When one examines Rio Grande Accounting one finds that credit water is
determined by subtracting lake evaporation from reservoir inflow.
The evaporation is, in fact, wet water, and it is unappropriated for
beneficial use. It is one of the quantities of wet water in the
water budget equation and it is the water that LGW seeks to salvage and
appropriate for beneficial use. Further, the water does not have
to be in the lake to quantify the evaporation. In fact, Arthur
Powell Davis, Chief Engineer for the Bureau of Reclamation in 1917
calculated the evaporation loss for Elephant Butte Reservoir from 1894
through 1915 as though the reservoir were in existence during that
period. Elephant Butte Dam was completed in 1916. Therefore,
one can do the Rio Grande Compact accounting and salvage the
unappropriated wet water that would have been evaporated without
allowing it to evaporate.
Lion's Gate Water v. State Engineer, D-608-CV-2007-00328
The Application of Lion's Gate Water
for up to 48,000 acre feet of water from the Gila River below Redrock
actually sought 18,000 acre feet reserved to New Mexico under the
Colorado River Compact. The Arizona Water Settlement Act signed by
George Bush in December 2005, reduced that amount to 14,000 acre feet
per annum. LGW published its notice of their application as
required. The State Engineer rejected the Application on the
grounds that in his opinion there was no unappropriated water which is
absurd if the Congress reserved 14,000 acre feet. Since passage of
the AWSA, major efforts are in progress to develop a river model that
incorporates all of the side-agreements to the AWSA so that one can
easily determine when and how much water can be diverted. In a
recent court hearing in front of Judge Robinson, State Engineer Attorney
Jonathan Sperber was asked by the judge if the water existed.
Sperber's answer was an incoherent sputtering and agreement. Early
on in this case, the State Engineer issued a Limiting Order which
bifurcated the case such that the first time around LGW would have to
prove that the water exists and then it would have to publish notice all
over again. The State Engineer held that the LGW notice that was
published had not been ordered by him and was, therefore, illegal.
At a recent hearing, Judge Robinson found that not only was the notice
legally published but it was legally sufficient and there were no
protests. The State Engineer had earlier dealt with this matter by
creating a new regulation, in violation of the process for creating a
regulations. The State Engineer's attempt to meddle with the
regulations will be found illegal not only because of violations of the
rule-making process but because a rule cannot constrain or enlarge the
intent of the law that it parallels. Judge Robinson certified for
interlocutory appeal whether or not The State Engineer can bifurcate the
issues in the case because to do so could frustrate any applicant and
impose an undue burden on both the applicant and the judicial system.
The Petition of Lion's Gate Water
to Intervene in the Lower Rio Grande Adjudication Filed by LGW
because it owns water rights in Valencia County with a pre-1800 priority
date. Though EBID v. NMSU 115 N.M. 229, 849 P2d 372 (1993)
supports the view that the Rio Grande can be adjudicated by reach, LGW
disagrees and has pointed out that the decision is only an appeals court
decision. LGW has also pointed out that the oldest irrigation in
the Lower Rio Grande in New Mexico is from the Dona Ana Ditch
constructed in 1844. It is the Rio Grande Compact of 1939 that
divided the Rio Grande into reaches. However, it is LGW position
that the Rio Grande Compact did not abnegate the Doctrine of Prior
Appropriations and senior water rights in the Middle Rio Grande can
still issue a call on junior water rights in the Lower Rio Grande.
Judge Valentine certified this question for appeal where it has now
resided for six months with no action by the appeals court.
Montgomery
v. N.M. State Engineer,
2007-NMSC-002, 150 P.3d 971. Is the transfer of
a water right to a new ground-water point of diversion a new
ground-water appropriation? The Supreme Court has held that it is
not and has remanded the case to the District Court for further
findings.
MRGCD v. Turner, D-202-CV-88-14157
William Turner, was a Member of the Board of the Middle Rio Grande
Conservancy District from June, 2005 until June 2009. He was elected on a platform of improved
governance, accountability, transparency and the creation of a long-term
capital improvement program. He was also elected to end the feudal
governance system in which the Executive ran the District and the Board
was a rubber-stamp Board. He immediately began to reveal
irregularities that gained significant press coverage. He sued
Board Members for violating the Open Meetings Act. Early on he
brought a Declaratory Judgment suit against the District to get his name
on the Ballot. He voiced his opinion that the MRGCD "water bank"
was illegal and resulted in what the State Engineer calls "double
dipping". He found the District placing demolition and
construction waste in the ditches and calling it rip rap. All of this
brought considerable light upon the way in which the District operates.
This all culminated on July 3, 2006 when the Board of Directors sued him
in Socorro County to remove him from the board. Turner had made a
motion to file the suit in Bernalillo County if it were going to be
filed because the court in Socorro County had no jurisdiction.
Attorney Charles DuMars had already prepared the filing documents when
the July 3, 2006 meeting of the Board was held. In the end, Judge
Reynolds dismissed the suit without prejudice for lack of jurisdiction.
Without approval of the Board, DuMars filed the suit immediately with
the Conservancy Court in Bernalillo County. As matters progressed
and time rolled on trial approached. On the day the trial was to
begin, Turner's attorney, Martin Threet, pointed out to Judge Baca that
the MRGCD Election regulations allowed removal in a manner similar to
that permitted for other public officials and not under the 1923 Act
that created the Conservancy District at which time the Court appointed
Directors. Judge Baca allowed an interlocutory appeal on which
statute applied. The appeals court after full briefing denied the
interlocutory appeal on the grounds that the MRGCD did not have standing
to bring the matter as they could not be an interested party. The MRGCD Board subsequently voted
to drop the suit but Turner has kept it moving forward so that the MRGCD
Executive and their attorney and a rubber-stamp Board cannot use the
same stratagem to intimidate future Board Members by threatening them
with removal under an illegal process. The suit was dismissed by
Judge Baca but will be appealed by Turner who will seek non-suit.
The great number of cases have
among them overlapping issues such that the court must be constrained to
apply the low correctly to avoid a miasma of contradictory rulings.
Fiction, persiflage and sesquipedalian tergiversation from the State
Engineer in his attempt to destroy private property rights and his
attempt to socialize water rights must not stand.
Visits since August 29, 2008

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