Court Opinion

ID: 4536708
Source: CourtListenerOpinion
Date Created: 2020-05-26 22:08:29.509503+00
Date Added: 2024-06-11T08:48:57.670591
License: Public Domain

05/26/2020

                                        DA 19-0312
                                                                                         Case Number: DA 19-0312

          IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
                                      2020 MT 132

FLATHEAD LAKERS INC., a Montana non-profit public
benefit corporation, AMY J. WALLER, STEVEN F. MOORE,
CYNTHIA S. EDSTROM, ADELE ZIMMERMAN,
MARTIN FULSAAS and GAIL A. WATSON-FULSAAS,
LAUREL FULLERTON, ALAN and DEIRDRE COIT,
and FRANK M. WOODS,

           Petitioners and Appellees,

     v.

MONTANA DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESOURCES
AND CONSERVATION, and MONTANA ARTESIAN
WATER COMPANY,

           Respondents and Appellants,

WATER FOR FLATHEAD’S FUTURE,

           Intervenor and Appellee.

APPEAL FROM:       District Court of the First Judicial District,
                   In and For the County of Lewis and Clark, Cause No. CDV-2018-135
                   Honorable Kathy Seeley, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

            For Appellant Montana Department of Natural Resources and Conservation:

                   Brian C. Bramblett, Barbara Chillcott, Special Assistant Attorneys General,
                   Helena, Montana

            For Appellant Montana Artesian Water Company:

                   John E. Bloomquist, Richard C. Tappan, Bloomquist Law Firm P.C.,
                   Helena, Montana

            For Appellees and Intervenor:

                   John J. Ferguson, Graham J. Coppes, Emily F. Wilmott, Ferguson Law
                   Office PPLC, Missoula, Montana
               Elizabeth A. Brennan, Brennan Law & Mediation, PLLC, Missoula,
               Montana

         For Amicus Montana Building Industry Association:

               Abigail J. St. Lawrence, Abigail St. Lawrence, Attorney at Law, P.C.,
               Helena, Montana

                                           Submitted on Briefs: January 22, 2020

                                                      Decided: May 26, 2020

Filed:
                         c.,.--.6--4(
               __________________________________________
                                 Clerk

                                       2
Justice Beth Baker delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1     Montana Artesian Water Company (“MAWC”) applied for a permit to appropriate

water with the Department of Natural Resources and Conservation (“DNRC”) but did not

include aquifer testing information required by DNRC rules. DNRC failed to identify

defects in the application before the statutory deadline, and the application became correct

and complete as a matter of law. On judicial review, the District Court concluded that the

agency failed to comply with its own rules to determine whether the application was correct

and complete and voided the permit without addressing other issues raised. We reverse

and remand for further proceedings.

                 FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2     Applicant MAWC proposes to pump 710.53 acre-feet annually from an artesian

well for use in a commercial water bottling plant. The well is located in a deep alluvial

aquifer of the Flathead Valley. MAWC filed the Application for Beneficial Water Use

Permit No. 76LJ-30102978 with DNRC on June 24, 2015. DNRC issued MAWC a

deficiency letter requesting more information regarding the proposed diversion means and

beneficial use but did not identify defects in MAWC’s aquifer testing information—

namely, that it did not include complete information on the observation wells, and the

groundwater levels were not monitored prior to the beginning of the pump/aquifer test.

¶3     On December 30, 2015, more than 180 days after the application was filed, DNRC

notified MAWC that its application was determined to be correct and complete. DNRC

issued a Preliminary Determination to grant the application on January 14, 2016. After a

contested case hearing, an appointed Hearing Examiner upheld DNRC’s Preliminary

                                             3
Determination to grant the permit. Ten objectors—all of the individual appellees named—

and Intervenor Water for Flathead’s Future (collectively “Objectors”) petitioned the

First Judicial District Court for judicial review of the Hearing Examiner’s Final Order.

Flathead Lakers also petitioned for judicial review, and the District Court consolidated the

two actions.

¶4     The Objectors argued at the hearing—as they do on appeal—that DNRC erred when

it issued its Preliminary Determination granting MAWC the water use permit based on

incomplete data. The Objectors specifically point to Form 633, the “Aquifer Test Data

Form,” required by Admin. R. M. 36.12.121 (2012).1 MAWC’s Form 633 contained

incomplete information regarding its aquifer testing. The Objectors assert that DNRC

itself, through rule promulgation, deemed this information mandatory and necessary to its

determination whether to grant a permit under § 85-2-311, MCA, the statute setting forth

criteria for issuance of a permit. Because MAWC did not include all information required

by Form 633 in its application or provide it during the proceedings, the Objectors assert

that DNRC did not have enough information to find that MAWC met the required criteria.

Section 85-2-311, MCA.

¶5     DNRC and MAWC assert that it is irrelevant that the application did not have all of

the Form 633 fields completed because the agency’s administrative rules mandating this

specific testing information applied only in determining whether an application was correct

and complete. They note that the Montana Water Use Act mandates that the application

1
  All citations to the Administrative Rules of Montana will be to the rules in effect as of
June 25, 2015, the date the application was filed.
                                             4
be deemed correct and complete if DNRC does not notify an applicant of any deficiencies

within 180 days. Section 85-2-302(5), MCA. Because 180 days had elapsed, DNRC and

MAWC contend that the application was deemed correct and complete as a matter of law,

and DNRC could not require the missing information.

¶6     The District Court reversed the Hearing Examiner’s decision. It held that DNRC’s

administrative rules required certain minimum aquifer testing in the permit application

criteria; as such, it was erroneous to conclude that the omitted information was not required

when analyzing the -311 criteria. The court thus found it unnecessary to consider the

Objectors’ additional arguments and voided the permit.2

                                 STANDARD OF REVIEW

¶7     The Montana Administrative Procedure Act (“MAPA”) governs judicial review of

final agency decisions. A reviewing court may reverse or modify an agency decision if

substantial rights of the appellant have been prejudiced because the administrative decision

is, among other reasons: affected by an error of law; clearly erroneous in view of the whole

record; or arbitrary or capricious. Section 2-4-704(2)(a)(iv)-(vi), MCA. A district court

reviews an administrative agency’s conclusions of law for correctness. Mont. Fish,

Wildlife & Parks v. Trap Free Mont. Pub. Lands, 2018 MT 120, ¶ 11, 391 Mont. 328,

417 P.3d 1100 (citing Molnar v. Fox, 2013 MT 132, ¶ 17, 370 Mont. 238, 301 P.3d 824).

2
 The District Court identified six issues objectors raised alleging error by the Hearing Examiner:
1) failing to require the mandatory components of aquifer tests; 2) not including analysis of all
water sources that must be reviewed for legal availability; 3) determining no adverse effect to
senior irrigators; 4) unequally applying the relevant evidence regarding water quality;
5) determining that speculatively accumulating groundwater is a beneficial use; and 6) applying
an incorrect standard of review. The District Court found the first issue dispositive.
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The same standard of review applies to this Court’s review of the district court’s decision.

Molnar, ¶ 17.

                                        DISCUSSION

¶8     DNRC is charged with “coordinat[ing] the development and use of the water

resources of the state so as to effect full utilization, conservation, and protection of its

waters.” Section 85-1-101(3), MCA. The Montana Water Use Act requires any person

who wishes to appropriate water after July 1, 1973, to apply for and receive a permit from

DNRC. Title 85, chapter 2, MCA. Applicants for a permit to appropriate water must prove

that the permit applicant meets the criteria listed in § 85-2-311, MCA, known as the

“-311 criteria.”

                                        Permit Process

¶9     Once DNRC receives an application to appropriate water, the agency evaluates

whether the application has the requisite “correct and complete” information for it to

determine whether to approve or deny the permit. Sections 85-2-102(9), -302(2), MCA.3

DNRC has adopted administrative rules to guide applicants on criteria it will use to

determine when an application is correct and complete.             See § 85-2-302(2), MCA;

Admin. R. M. 36.12.1601. Some of these rules involve minimum requirements for aquifer

testing. Admin. R. M. 36.12.1703 provides that applicants for groundwater appropriations

“must follow aquifer testing requirements and provide to the department, at a minimum,

3
  We cite to the 2019 version of the statutes as there are no relevant substantive changes between
the 2015 and 2019 statutes.
                                                6
information and data in conformance with ARM 36.12.121.” Applicants submit this

information to DNRC using Form 633. Admin. R. M. 36.12.121(2)(f).

¶10   If it determines there is information missing, DNRC notifies the applicant of defects

in the application, and the applicant may remedy the defects. Section 85-2-302(5), MCA.

Importantly, DNRC has 180 days to notify the applicant of any defects.

Section 85-2-302(5), MCA. If DNRC does not provide such notice within those 180 days,

the application must be treated as “correct and complete,” and the process moves forward.

Conversely, if DNRC deems the application incomplete and it is not remedied, DNRC may

terminate the application and will not analyze its substance against the -311 criteria.

Section 85-2-310(9)(a), MCA; see Town of Manhattan v. DNRC, 2012 MT 81, ¶ 11,

364 Mont. 450, 276 P.3d 920.

¶11   After the application is deemed correct and complete, DNRC next determines

whether the application meets the requirements for a new appropriation outlined in

§ 85-2-311, MCA; Admin. R. M. 36.12.1601(2); see Bostwick Props. v. DNRC,

2009 MT 181, ¶ 22, 351 Mont. 26, 208 P.3d 868 (After the “correct and complete”

determination, the permit application is “thus eligible to go forward in the permit

consideration process” and DNRC has a “clear, legal duty to process that application.”).

The applicant must prove, by a preponderance of the evidence, that it meets

the -311 criteria. Section 85-2-311(1), MCA. DNRC then issues a written preliminary

determination whether the application meets the requirements of § 85-2-311, MCA, to

grant the permit. Section 85-2-307(2), MCA.

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¶12    If valid objections are filed to an application, DNRC must appoint a hearing

examiner to preside over a contested case hearing on the objections. Sections 2-4-601

to -631; 85-2-309(1), MCA. This hearing is an opportunity for the parties to present

evidence and argument why the permit should or should not be granted.

Section 2-4-612(1), MCA. The hearing examiner’s final decision is then reviewable by a

district court under MAPA’s judicial review provisions. Sections 2-4-701 to -704, MCA.

                                  MAWC’s Application

¶13    It is undisputed that MAWC’s application did not contain all of the information

required by Form 633 regarding the aquifer testing. MAWC’s application contained

information on MAWC’s aquifer testing and well logs, but it did not contain details

regarding the discharge measurements or the required hourly measurements. DNRC did

not notify MAWC of these deficiencies; the deficiency letter DNRC sent to MAWC

focused on other missing information.

¶14    The Hearing Examiner held that Objectors’ arguments related to the sufficiency of

the Form 633 aquifer testing information were more properly directed toward the correct

and complete requirements, not the -311 criteria. It concluded that the rules mandating

certain aquifer testing implemented the “correct and complete” section of the

Water Use Act, not the -311 section. And the application was deemed correct and complete

by operation of law once DNRC missed the 180-day deadline to inform the applicant of

any defects, so DNRC could not be held in error for failing to obtain and consider the

missing information in its -311 criteria determination.

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¶15    The District Court disagreed. The court held that § 85-2-311, MCA, and the

administrative rules mandate minimum aquifer testing requirements. Failing to adhere to

the minimum requirements specified in Form 633 meant that DNRC was unable, as a

matter of law, to find the -311 criteria satisfied—DNRC could not lawfully ignore its own

rules. The court held that the Hearing Examiner erroneously concluded that there was a

legal distinction between the application requirements (Form 633) and the statutory criteria

required to obtain a permit (-311 criteria). The court observed that the “analysis regarding

the criteria required by the statute comes from the information originally submitted with

the application, including Form 633.” It reasoned that “the omission of mandatory aquifer

testing information and data is not a slight technical deviation” but was critical to

the -311 determination. The court held that DNRC missed a mandatory foundational step

in determining whether a permit should be granted, and the resulting Preliminary

Determination to grant the permit dependent upon that information could not stand as valid

or correct.

¶16    On appeal, DNRC and MAWC assert that the administrative rules governing

specific aquifer testing pertain only to the correct and complete determination, and that

determination is not in question because the application was deemed correct and complete

as a matter of law after 180 days. Further, they assert that even without the complete

aquifer testing, DNRC and the Hearing Examiner had enough “necessary” information to

find by a preponderance of the evidence that MAWC met its burden under the -311 criteria.

¶17    The Objectors respond that the aquifer testing rules reflect DNRC’s charge to

implement the Water Use Act. Those same rules are critical to a determination whether

                                             9
the -311 criteria are met. Without strict compliance with the rules—designed to give

DNRC necessary information—DNRC could not have enough evidence to make

its -311 criteria determination.

¶18    We agree with DNRC and MAWC that the minimum regulations for correct and

complete applications are not statutorily mandated. The rules governing specific aquifer

testing are rules that DNRC promulgated in order to determine whether an application is

correct and complete. Admin. R. M. 36.12.121; 36.12.1601; 36.12.1703. These rules were

designed to elicit pertinent information necessary for DNRC to evaluate the -311 criteria.

Determining an application as correct and complete is the first step of the process; it allows

DNRC to move forward to the -311 analysis. A correct and complete application does not

mean that the permit will be granted; the applicant still must show by a preponderance of

the evidence that the -311 criteria are met. Admin. R. M. 36.12.1601(4).

¶19    The problem here is that—with or without the aquifer testing information—

MAWC’s application became correct and complete as a matter of law on

December 21, 2015, because DNRC did not notify MAWC of the aquifer testing defects

within 180 days after the application was filed.        Section 85-2-302(5), MCA.        The

District Court did not look beyond strict noncompliance with the agency’s rules regarding

aquifer testing, and essentially held that the application was incorrect or incomplete

because it did not have the required aquifer testing information. But § 85-2-302(5), MCA,

directs the agency to consider applications as correct and complete when the agency fails

to identify any defects within 180 days. The statute forecloses an argument regarding

compliance with application requirements the agency imposed by rule.

                                             10
¶20   The parties spend considerable time debating the sufficiency of the evidence,

whether the Hearing Examiner was correct in concluding the application met

the -311 criteria, and whether DNRC was afforded proper deference for agency action.

These arguments are outside of the scope of appeal. The District Court did not make

decisions on the adequacy of the Hearing Examiner’s findings; it determined as a matter of

law that an incomplete aquifer test rendered the entire permitting process invalid. The

issue remains whether DNRC’s consideration of the application without the additional

aquifer testing was arbitrary and capricious and whether its evaluation was clearly

erroneous in light of the record. Sections 2-4-704(2)(a)(v) and (vi), MCA.

                                    CONCLUSION

¶21   We reverse the District Court’s Order and remand for further proceedings consistent

with this Opinion.

                                                /S/ BETH BAKER

We Concur:

/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ JAMES JEREMIAH SHEA
/S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
/S/ JIM RICE

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