Signal Peak v. MEIC ( 2020 )


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  •                   ORriNiAi                                                              06/23/2020
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA                            Case Number: DA 19-0299
    DA 19-0299
    SIGNAL PEAK ENERGY,LLC,                                                  FILED
    Plaintiff and Appellant,                                     JUN 2 3 2020
    Bovven Greenwood
    Clerk of Suprerne Court
    v.                                                                Stat© nf Montana
    ORDER
    MONTANA ENVIRONMENTAL INFORMATION
    CENTER,STATE OF MONTANA BOARD OF
    ENVIRONMENTAL REVIEW,ELLEN PFISTER,
    and STEVE CHARTER,
    Defendants and Appellees.
    In this matter, Signal Peak, LLC (Signal Peak) has appealed from an order granting
    summary judgment to Defendants Montana Environmental Information Center (MEIC),
    State of Montana Board ofEnvironmental Review(BER),Ellen Pfister (Pfister), and Steve
    Charter (Charter) (collectively, Defendants) on Signal Peak's complaint for declaratory
    relief concerning a discovery dispute that arose in a BER contested case. However, upon
    a review of the parties' briefing and the administrative record, we have concluded that
    procedural irregularities and unresolved administrative issues prohibit the Court from
    proceeding on the appeal, including reaching the merits of pending constitutional issues,
    and that the case must be remanded for further proceedings before the agency.
    On August 11, 2016, MEIC filed a Notice of Appeal and Request for Hearing
    ("AM3 appeal") with BER challenging the Department ofEnvironmental Quality's(DEQ)
    issuance of a coal mining permit to Signal Peak in 2013. Pfister and Charter had provided
    comments during the permitting process, are members of MEIC, and separately own
    surface lands located above the mining operations proposed by Signal Peak in its AM3
    application. After a series of discovery disputes between the parties that required the
    extension of discovery deadlines, the hearing examiner issued a scheduling order in the
    AlvI3 appeal that required remaining discovery to be completed by April 30, 2018.
    On March 30, 2018, Signal Peak issued deposition notices and subpoenas duces
    tecum for Pfister and Charter,requiring they produce any written communications between
    them and entities or associations concerning impacts to water resources located on their
    surface lands. MEIC moved to quash the deposition notices and subpoenas on April 17,
    2018, arguing that the depositions were inappropriate, unduly burdensome, overbroad by
    seeking information that had not been before the DEQ in the permitting process,
    improperly seeking privileged communications between MEIC and its members, and
    violative of Pfister's and Charter's constitutional rights to associate and petition the
    government for redress of grievances. Pfister and Charter joined MEIC's objections, and
    Signal Peak opposed the motion to quash.
    The hearing examiner conducted a hearing on the motion on May 23, 2018, which
    essentially was a discussion between counsel for the parties and the examiner. Except for
    a later order simply staying the discovery deadlines pending resolution ofthe litigation that
    the parties would subsequently commence in the District Court, no written order was
    entered by the hearing examiner regarding the discovery issues and objections raised by
    the parties. The record captures only counsel's discussion with the hearing examiner about
    the requested depositions, particularly, the hearing examiner's concern about the
    constitutional issues raised within MEIC's motion to quash the depositions:
    [A]s a preliminary matter, I have one issue that's burning for me that I want
    you all to address. . . based on Montana Supreme Court case law, and
    specifically there is the Jarussi case and there are several others that discuss
    the separation of powers issue between MAPA and agencies deciding
    constitutional issues. In my understanding, I have no jurisdiction to decide
    constitutional issues and my inclination, unless you folks can convince me
    otherwise, is that that is a question for the District Court to resolve;
    So I guess what I need from you then, from potentially everybody, is a
    practical solution about how we're going to deal with this First Amendment
    problem and the jurisdiction piece of it;
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    [I]f we can fashion a solution here that [will] deal with the concerns without
    having to go to District Court, that would obviously be preferable. But if
    you're going to go to the District Court anyway if the decision is anything
    other than a grant ofthe motion to quash, then you might need to bring the
    First Amendment problems to District Court and you can deal with them
    anyway. So practically,Ineed you all to tell me whether you want a decision
    from me on this or whether you want me to stay the underlying decision, or
    the underlying case while you go to District Court... I will give you all until
    next Friday. I'm not going to issue an order on this, so just orally I will give
    you until next Friday to provide me with supplemental briefing all at the same
    time. ... My inclination is to not address the First Amendment or to make a
    record as to why           not addressing it, why I don't think it has to be
    addressed, it can be avoided, and then to make the ruling on the burden and
    the other issues. [(Emphasis added)].
    The hearing examiner inquired whether IVIEIC would withdraw its constitutional
    challenges, apparently believing this would permit the examiner to enter an order on "the
    other issues," namely, the non-constitutional grounds raised for quashing the deposition
    and subpoenas, but IVIEIC declined, stating that the "First Amendment concerns here are
    paramount."    MEIC did advance alternative, non-constitutional arguments that the
    subpoenas sought privileged communications, sought information not presented to DEQ
    that would be "reopenine the record, were retaliatory, and overly burdensome. In the
    discussion, Signal Peak and MEIC appeared to agree that the discovery requests could be
    modified to be less burdensome, but also appeared to view the constitutional issues as
    primary. The hearing examiner ordered supplemental filings and,on June 1,2018,the date
    the supplemental submissions were due, Signal Peak filed a status report that concurred
    with MEIC that "the [h]earing [e]xaminer and the Board of Environmental Review lack
    jurisdiction to decide the constitutional issue that the [Defendants] advanced in [their]
    Motion to Quash," but contended the Defendants had "presented no legitimate ground for
    the putative deponents to avoid their obligations to respond to discovery."
    As noted, no written order was entered by the hearing examiner on either the
    constitutional or non-constitutional issues raised by the Defendants' motion to quash, and
    3
    after careful review of the record, we can discern no oral ruling on these issues either. In
    its briefing to this Court, Signal Peak offers that the hearing examiner "implicitly declin[ed]
    to quash the subpoena on the other grounds raised by MEIC, not[ing] that the remaining
    constitutional issue could only be addressed by thejudiciary, not by the executive branch,"
    but we are hard pressed to discern even an implicit ruling. Rather, it appears the hearing
    examiner was focused on resolution of the "jurisdiction piece of it," that is, the
    constitutional issues that the agency did not have jurisdiction to resolve, and directed the
    parties to proceed to the courts for a decision on those issues. Despite expressing an
    inclination, the hearing examiner never did "make the ruling on the burden and the other
    issues." If Signal Peak's assessment of an implicit ruling was correct, Signal Peak would
    have been the prevailing party before the hearing examiner, and yet it was Signal Peak, not
    MEIC,that initiated litigation by filing a Complaint for Declaratory Judgment before the
    District Court seeking a declaration that "complying with discovery would not infringe the
    Defendants' constitutional rights and order the Parties to abide by applicable rules and
    respond to discovery." More importantly, no one in this matter seemed to recognize that
    resolution of the non-constitutional objections to the discovery by the hearing examiner
    was a prerequisite to reaching the constitutional objections. A ruling that the depositions
    were improper on these non-constitutional grounds may well have mooted the
    constitutional objections.
    At a minimum,the hearing examiner was presented with arguments concerning: the
    legality of additional discovery at this stage ofthe proceeding; the scope and burden ofthe
    requested subpoenas and depositions; the potentially privileged communications that
    would be encompassed by requests for communications between Pfister, Charter, and the
    associations; and the standing of MEC to file a motion to quash on behalf ofits members.
    As a consequence of the failure to resolve these non-constitutional discovery issues, this
    Court has been presented with arguments about administrative procedure for which there
    is no final ruling from the agency, or any ruling at all, that provides the agency's decision
    and rationale, including its interpretation of governing statutes and regulations. For
    4
    example, the'parties argue at length about the scope ofreview for BER proceedings, with
    Signal Peak contending that "the BER is not 'confined to the record' relied on by DEQ,
    but must receive evidence on any issue raised in the permitting process," citing Admin.
    R. M. 1.3.217-221 and 1.3.230(2020), and MEIC v. DEQ,2005 MT 96,¶¶ 13, 22-25, 326
    Mont.502, 
    112 P.3d 964
    . Defendants respond that"the only relevant analysis [for a permit
    appeal] is that contained within the four corners of the [technical review]. . .. BER is
    unambiguous that extra-record evidence is not allowedr citing § 82-4-227(3)(c), MCA,
    Admin. R. M. 17.24.405(6), and an administrative decision in In re Bull Mountains,
    No. BER 2013-07 SM, 56-57 (Mont. BER, Jan. 14, 2016). The District Court decided
    these administrative issues without the benefit ofan agency decision or rationale about the
    agency's application of its regulations, and then proceeded to decide the constitutional
    issues.
    While it is correct that the agency cannot resolve constitutional issues, Jarussi v.
    Board ofTrustees, 
    204 Mont. 131
    , 135-136,664 P.2d 316, 318 (1983), the administrative
    scope of review issue presented here, as well as the discovery issues that lie within the
    hearing examiner's discretionary governance, such as whether requested depositions are
    overly burdensome, must first be addressed and resolved by the agency before judicial
    review of any constitutional questions can be undertaken. Otherwise, the parties are
    seeking an advisory opinion from the courts on constitutional questions that may never be
    ripe or dispositive. "We have repeatedly recognized that courts should avoid constitutional
    issues whenever it is possible to decide a case without reaching constitutional
    considerations." In re G.M, 
    2008 MT 200
    , ¶ 25, 
    344 Mont. 87
    , 
    186 P.3d 229
    (internal
    citation omitted). Further, "[t]he well-settled principle undergirding the exhaustion
    doctrine is that ``no one is entitled to judicial relieffor a supposed or threatened injury until
    the prescribed administrative remedy has been exhausted.'" Shoemaker v. Denke, 
    2004 MT 11
    , ¶ 18, 
    319 Mont. 238
    , 
    84 P.3d 4
    (internal citation omitted). Consequently, it is
    necessary to remand this matter for completion ofthe necessary administrative process by
    the agency. Therefore,
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    IT IS ORDERED that this appeal is DISMISSED WITHOUT PREJUDICE. The
    judgment ofthe District Court is VACATED.
    IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that this matter is REMANDED to BER for further
    proceedings consistent with this order.
    The Clerk is directed to provide a copy of this Order to counsel of record, to the
    Thirteenth Judicial District Court, and BER.
    DATED this 23 -ray of June, 2020.
    6
    

Document Info

Docket Number: DA 19-0299

Filed Date: 6/23/2020

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 6/23/2020