water laws committee meeting and case law update
TRANSCRIPT
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Presented by: Martin C. Rochelle [email protected]
(512) 322-5810
816 Congress Avenue Suite 1900
Austin, Texas 78701 (512) 322-5800
(512) 472-0532 Fax www.lglawfirm.com
Water Laws Committee Meeting
and Case Law Update
2012 Annual Conference
Texas Water Conservation
Association
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
HB 2694: Water Curtailment
Rulemaking • Would allow ED to suspend or adjust water rights
during drought or emergency shortage of water
– Proposed rules define key terms:
• Adjustment
• Drought
• Emergency shortage of water
• Suspension
• Suspension or adjustment order
• Water right
– Rules would maintain prior appropriation system
• First in time is still first in right
• Note: for public welfare, ED may decide not to suspend a junior right and
require increased conservation instead
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
HB 2694: Water Curtailment
Rulemaking • ED may issue suspension or adjustment order when:
– Drought or emergency shortage of water exists;
– Insufficient water to meet the needs of senior water rights;
– Senior rights holders can put water to beneficial use; and
– By suspending or adjusting junior rights, senior rights could
divert water for beneficial use
• Opportunity for hearing
– Suspension and adjustment orders may be issued by ED without
prior notice or opportunity for hearing
– However, notice and opportunity for hearing must be provided as
soon as practicable after order issued—hearing uncertain
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
HB 2694: Water Curtailment
Rulemaking
• Public hearing held on December 1, 2011.
• Public comment period closed on December 5,
2011.
– Many comments sought more clarification and
definition as to hearings process and scope of
drought or emergency shortage of water.
• Considered for adoption at April 11, 2012 TCEQ
Commissioners’ Agenda.
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
SB 181 / SB 660 – Water Use Reporting
Rulemaking • Implementing revised water use and conservation
reporting metric and guidance.
• Timeline
– Draft TCEQ rules and definitions promulgated in November 2011
– Jan. 18, 2012 WCAC meeting
• TCEQ and TWDB agency reports
• Status of water use and conservation calculator
– Feb. 14, 2012 Committee conference call to discuss concepts for
preparation of draft guidance
– Jan. 1, 2013: Official deadline to implement rules, guidance, and
reporting forms
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Watermaster Evaluations
• Evaluations of non-watermaster river and
coastal basins required as part of HB 2694
(TCEQ Sunset Bill). TCEQ to evaluate and issue
a report once every five years.
• During 2012, the TCEQ is evaluating:
– Brazos River Basin
– Brazos-Colorado Coastal Basin
– Colorado River Basin
– Colorado-Lavaca Coastal Basin
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Other Topics
• Interim Charges
• Petition for Certiorari to U.S. Supreme Court in
TRWD v. Oklahoma
– Amicus briefing
• The Aransas Project
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Tex. Rice Land Partners, Ltd. v. Denbury Green Pipeline-Tex., LLC
-- SW3d – (Tex. 2012)
• Challenge to “common carrier” designation by RRC of Denbury CO2
pipeline project
• RRC T-4 (pipeline operation permit) application granted 8 days after
submission without notice, hearing, evidence, or investigation
• Tex. Nat. Res. Code 111.019 gives private company eminent domain power
if pipeline available to the public for hire for transportation of others’ CO2
• Denbury Green just required to “check the box” on T-4 claiming the pipeline
was a common carrier line
• Tex. Rice Partners lessee refused Denbury’s entry to property
• Denbury won on summary judgment, affirmed by court of appeals
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Tex. Rice Land Partners, Ltd. v. Denbury Green Pipeline-Tex., LLC
-- SW3d – (Tex. 2012)
• Tex. Sup. Ct.:
– Questions regarding determinations of “public use” under Art. I, Sec. 17
analysis are “inherently judicial” and are reserved for the courts.
– RRC T-4 “application” process more akin to registration, not application
– No effort conducted to confirm the true nature of the proposed pipeline (i.e.,
public use v. private use)
– Consequently, no evidence demonstrating as a matter of law that pipeline
will be available to the public for hire
• Holding:
– To qualify as a common carrier, person must demonstrate “a reasonable
probability” exists that pipeline will at some point after construction serve the
public by transporting gas for one or more customers that will retain
ownership of their gas
– A reasonable probability is one that is more likely than not
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Rolling Plains Groundwater Conservation Dist. v.
City of Aspermont
353 SW3d 756 (Tex. 2011)
• City refused to pay GCD-imposed groundwater transport fee
• GCD assessed late payment penalties, civil penalties, attorney fees and
costs
• GCD sued for fees due and owing, and sought declaration in State district
court that City must comply with Ch. 36, Water Code and GCD rules
• City filed PTJ asserting immunity from suit under governmental immunity
• Eastland Court: City was immune from suit for GCD efforts to collect past
due fees, penalties, costs, but City not immune from GCD dec. action
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Rolling Plains Groundwater Conservation Dist. v.
City of Aspermont
353 SW3d 756 (Tex. 2011)
• Tex. Sup. Ct.:
– Only the Legislature can waive governmental immunity through clear and
unambiguous waiver
– Use of term “person” in Section 36.115, Water Code, even when
considering definition of “person” in Section 311.005(2), Gov’t Code, is not
clear and unambiguous waiver
– GCD’s claim for past due penalties, costs, etc. is akin to claim for money
damages
• Holding:
– City is immune from GCD suit for retroactive “money damages”
– City is not immune to suits that require State actors to comply in the future
with a statutory or constitutional obligation, even when such a declaration
compels the payment of money
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Hearts Bluff Game Ranch v. United States
-- F3d – (Fed. Cir. 2012)
• Hearts Bluff purchased 4,000 acres in Titus County to use as a mitigation
bank
• USACE told Hearts Bluff before acquisition that the property would be a
good candidate for such purposes
• Property was in area of proposed Marvin Nichols Reservoir
• USACE noticed Hearts Bluff application, TWDB said that approval would
jeopardize viability of Marvin Nichols
• Legislature declared Marvin Nichols location to have “unique value” as a
reservoir site; 2007 SWP recommended project
• USACE denied Hearts Bluff application
• Hearts Bluff sued for takings under 5th Amend., U.S. Const.
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Hearts Bluff Game Ranch v. United States
-- F3d – (Fed. Cir. 2012)
• Fed. Cir.:
– Don’t consider whether gov’t action is a “taking” under 5th Amend. unless it
is first shown that action implicates a cognizable property interest
– Voluntary participation in an area that is the subject of pervasive gov’t
control indicates that a protectable property interest is likely lacking
– Hearts Bluff can still fully use its property despite USCOE “action” to deny
application
– At no point did Hearts Bluff ever have a right to earn, sell or transfer
mitigation credits
• Holding:
– USCOE mitigation bank program is a creature of the gov’t; it is inherently
subject to pervasive and discretionary gov’t control
– Hearts Bluff had no cognizable property interest in access to the mitigation
bank program
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Ward Timber, Ltd. v. Texas Water Development Board
126th District Court, Travis County, Texas (filed Jan. 12, 2012)
• Plaintiff Ward Timber filed suit in Travis County challenging TWDB approval
of 2007 SWP, alleging unresolved interregional conflicts
• Reg. C proposed Marvin Nichols Reservoir in area included in Reg. D
• Reg. D environmental and agricultural interests adversely impacted by
construction of reservoir, and the Reg. D plan shows a need for water for
instream uses that will be impacted by development of reservoir project
• Dec. 5, 2011, Judge Gisela Triana denied the State’s PTJ, and declared
that TWDB rules regarding interregional conflict resolution apply to the
conflicts identified by Plaintiff
• Remanded matter to TWDB for assessment of conflicts
• 2012 SWP approved by TWDB on Dec. 15, 2011; no changes to issues
raised by Plaintiff
• Jan. 12, 2012, Plaintiff sued TWDB asserting same complaints regarding
2012 SWP
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Edwards Aquifer Auth. v. Day
-- SW3d – (Tex. 2012)
• Holdings:
– Affirmed decision to grant 14 acre-feet of historic use; held that the
water in Day’s lake changed from groundwater to surface water
because of the way in which he used his well and the lake; the Court
recognized that other landowners could manage their wells and lakes
differently to preserve the groundwater-nature of the lake water.
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Edwards Aquifer Auth. v. Day
-- SW3d – (Tex. 2012)
• Holdings:
– Landowners own groundwater “in place”:
• In our state the landowner is regarded as having absolute title in
severalty to the [water] in place beneath his land. The only
qualification of that rule of ownership is that it must be considered in
connection with the law of capture and is subject to police
regulations. The [water] beneath the soil [is] considered a part of
the realty. Each owner of land owns separately, distinctly and
exclusively all the [water] under his land and is accorded the usual
remedies against trespassers who appropriate the [water] or destroy
[its] market value.’ We now hold that this correctly states the
common law regarding the ownership of groundwater in place
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Edwards Aquifer Auth. v. Day
-- SW3d – (Tex. 2012)
• Holdings:
– Whether there is a compensable taking of a groundwater right depends
upon a complex analysis under the takings tests established by the U.S.
Supreme Court and Texas Supreme Court. The Court remanded the
case to the trial court to conduct this analysis
– Court rejected landowner’s other “due process” and “equal protection”
constitutional challenges
– Court declined to rule on the State of Texas’s claim that it is not liable
for any takings damages. It is possible that the State of Texas will be
able to assert its claim during the remand
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Essentials of Texas Water Resources
• Second Edition in publication
• Includes topics such as:
– surface and groundwater modeling;
– conjunctive management and use;
– public-private financing; and
– the energy-water nexus.
• $125 purchase price includes hard copy and
digital version
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Finally…
• Membership and Services Committee
sponsoring Summer Conference at Horseshoe
Bay.
• Send Jason Hill topics and speaker suggestions.
©Lloyd Gosselink Rochelle & Townsend, P.C.
Martin C. Rochelle
(512) 322-5810