State Engineer v. Diamond K Bar Ranch, LLC ( 2016 )


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    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'05- 15:56:33 2016.12.13
    IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 
    2016-NMSC-036
    Filing Date: September 22, 2016
    Docket No. S-1-SC-35446
    STATE ENGINEER OF NEW MEXICO,
    Plaintiff-Respondent,
    v.
    DIAMOND K BAR RANCH, LLC, and
    RAYMOND L. KYSAR, JR. and PATSY SUE KYSAR,
    In their capacity as Trustees of THE RAYMOND L. AND
    PATSY SUE KYSAR, JR. LIVING TRUST,
    Defendants-Petitioners.
    ORIGINAL PROCEEDING ON CERTIORARI
    Daylene A. Marsh, District Judge
    Victor R. Marshall & Associates, P.C.
    Victor Riton Marshall
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Petitioners
    Office of the State Engineer
    Gregory C. Ridgley, Special Assistant Attorney General
    L. Christopher Lindeen, Special Assistant Attorney General
    Santa Fe, NM
    Abramowitz, Franks & Olsen
    Brett Justin Olsen, Special Assistant Attorney General
    Fort Collins, CO
    for Respondent
    OPINION
    1
    DANIELS, Chief Justice.
    {1}     Water is both a scarce and a vital resource in New Mexico, and its responsible
    management is crucially important to all New Mexicans. In this appeal, we address the scope
    of the New Mexico State Engineer’s regulatory authority over use of surface water in New
    Mexico when it has been diverted from the Animas River into an acequia in Colorado and
    accessed from that ditch by Petitioners and others in New Mexico.
    {2}     We reject Petitioners’ arguments that the State Engineer lacks statutory authority
    over waters initially diverted outside of New Mexico and has no jurisdiction to enjoin
    Petitioners from irrigating an area of farmland not subject to an existing adjudicated water
    right or a permit from the State Engineer. We hold that the State Engineer is authorized by
    New Mexico law to require a permit for new, expanded, or modified use of this water and
    to enjoin any unlawful diversion.
    I.     FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    {3}     The Animas River, running south from Colorado into New Mexico, is a tributary of
    the San Juan River and part of the larger Colorado River system. In Echo Ditch Co. v.
    McDermott Ditch Company, No. 01690 (1948), the First Judicial District Court of New
    Mexico adjudicated water rights for the San Juan River and its tributaries in New Mexico,
    resulting in what is known as the Echo Ditch Decree. Among the rights adjudicated were
    those rights to water for irrigation from the Ralston Ditch. The Ralston Ditch diverts water
    from the Animas River at a headgate located in Colorado approximately one and one-half
    miles north of the New Mexico border.
    {4}      As recognized by the decree, the Ralston Ditch delivers Animas River surface water
    to irrigate 364.2 acres of land in New Mexico. The decree details the allowable purposes of
    water use. For each property owner with an adjudicated water right, the decree also specifies
    the allowable quantity of annual water use and notes that “the right to use of said water shall
    be confined to use upon the lands described” on the individual ownership forms. The Echo
    Ditch Decree gives the State Engineer, as statutory water master, exclusive authority to
    measure waters delivered from a main diversion or distributing system, to monitor waste,
    and to ensure water is delivered in “the respective quantities which the lands and said water
    users are entitled to receive.”
    {5}    Petitioner Diamond K Bar Ranch, LLC (Diamond K), an asset of the Raymond L.
    and Patsy Sue Kysar, Jr. Living Trust, and trustees Raymond L. Kysar, Jr. and Patsy Sue
    Kysar (collectively Petitioners), own and operate a farm in San Juan County, New Mexico.
    The Diamond K farm property includes a large portion of the 364.2 acres of land and its
    appurtenant water rights for the Ralston Ditch adjudicated in the Echo Ditch Decree.
    {6}      The State Engineer filed a three-count complaint against Petitioners pertaining to
    their alleged illegal use of Animas River surface water. In the second count, the only count
    2
    currently before this Court, the State Engineer sought to enjoin Petitioners’ illegal use of
    Animas River surface water to irrigate additional acreage that was not part of the adjudicated
    acreage under the Echo Ditch Decree and for which Petitioners have no permit. See NMSA
    1978, § 72-5-39 (1965) (“The [S]tate [E]ngineer may apply for and obtain an injunction in
    the district court of any county in which water is being diverted or the land affected is
    located, against any person, firm or corporation who shall divert water . . . in violation of
    statute, or who shall cause or permit the application of said water upon lands or to purposes
    for which no valid water right exists.”).
    {7}     Petitioners filed a motion to dismiss all three counts against them, primarily relying
    on Turley v. Furman, 
    1911-NMSC-030
    , 
    16 N.M. 253
    , 
    114 P. 278
    , to support their contention
    that the State Engineer lacks the authority to regulate the use of surface water from the
    Animas River for irrigation purposes when that water is diverted in Colorado and transported
    into New Mexico by the Ralston Ditch.
    {8}     Petitioners further argued that Article XVI, Section 2 of the New Mexico
    Constitution limits the State Engineer’s regulatory authority over unappropriated “natural
    waters” flowing within New Mexico’s boundaries and that any attempt by the State Engineer
    to exert jurisdiction over waters diverted from the Animas River in Colorado, which are
    appropriated and brought through a “constructed” ditch for beneficial use in New Mexico,
    violates Colorado’s right to regulate diversions in its state.
    {9}     Finally, Petitioners argued that the Ralston Ditch, as a community ditch constructed
    in the 1880s, is exempt from the permit requirements of NMSA 1978, Section 72-5-1 (1941)
    as stated in NMSA 1978, Section 72-5-2 (1913). See § 72-5-1 (requiring application to the
    State Engineer for a permit to appropriate water); § 72-5-2 (“None of the provisions of the
    preceding [S]ection [72-5-1] . . . shall apply to community ditches which are already
    constructed.”).
    {10} The Eleventh Judicial District Court denied the motion to dismiss, concluding that
    “the State Engineer has legal jurisdiction to enforce the [Petitioners’] adjudicated water right
    on the Ralston Ditch notwithstanding the Ditch’s diversion point within . . . Colorado.” The
    district court reasoned that Turley was inapplicable to the facts of this case, stating that if
    there was ever a question whether Turley had any application to preclude the State
    Engineer’s authority on the Ralston Ditch, the issue was resolved by the 1948 Upper
    Colorado River Basin Compact codified at NMSA 1978, Section 72-15-26 (1949); and the
    court confirmed that the Echo Ditch Decree explicitly recognized the exclusive regulatory
    authority of the State Engineer over “‘waters to be delivered to any water user’ in the San
    Juan River Stream System, the Ralston Ditch included.” See § 72-15-26 & Article XV(b)
    (determining the rights and obligations of each of the upper basin states of Colorado, New
    Mexico, Utah and Wyoming for the use and delivery of water of the upper basin of the
    Colorado River and its tributaries and affirming “the right or power of any signatory state
    to regulate within its boundaries the appropriation, use and control of water, the consumptive
    use of which is apportioned and available to such state by th[e] [C]ompact”). Nevertheless,
    3
    the district court certified its ruling for interlocutory appeal on the grounds that “the meaning
    and application of Turley . . . is a controlling question of law as to which there is substantial
    ground for difference of opinion and an immediate appeal from this order may materially
    advance the ultimate termination of the litigation.”
    {11} The Court of Appeals granted Petitioners’ unopposed application for an interlocutory
    appeal but after full briefing by both parties decided to quash the appeal. See N.M. State
    Engineer v. Diamond K Bar Ranch, No. 34,103, order quashing interlocutory appeal, ¶¶ 8-10
    (N.M. Ct. App. June 25, 2015). We granted Petitioners’ unopposed petition for writ of
    certiorari to clarify the extent of the State Engineer’s statutory authority to administer the
    use of Animas River surface waters when the waters are diverted into an acequia in Colorado
    and applied to lands in New Mexico in the absence of a vested water right or permit. See
    Davis v. Devon Energy Corp., 
    2009-NMSC-048
    , ¶ 11, 
    147 N.M. 157
    , 
    218 P.3d 75
     (granting
    a petition for writ of certiorari after the Court of Appeals denied interlocutory review).
    II.     STANDARD OF REVIEW
    {12} We review de novo a district court’s order granting or denying a motion to dismiss
    under Rule 1-012(B)(6) NMRA. Delfino v. Griffo, 
    2011-NMSC-015
    , ¶ 9, 
    150 N.M. 97
    , 
    257 P.3d 917
    . The district court’s denial of Petitioners’ motion to dismiss was based on its
    interpretation of the regulatory authority of the State Engineer. The State Engineer’s power
    derives from statute and is “‘limited to the . . . authority expressly granted or necessarily
    implied by those statutes.’” Tri-State Generation & Transmission Ass’n, Inc. v. D’Antonio,
    
    2012-NMSC-039
    , ¶ 13, 
    289 P.3d 1232
     (citation omitted). “We review questions of statutory
    and constitutional interpretation de novo.” Id. ¶ 11.
    III.    DISCUSSION
    A.      Relevant Constitutional, Statutory, and Administrative Framework for Surface
    Water Rights in New Mexico
    {13} Water law in New Mexico is governed by the doctrine of prior appropriation. Id. ¶
    40. “Under the doctrine of prior appropriation, water rights are both established and
    exercised by beneficial use, which forms ‘the basis, the measure and the limit of the right to
    use of the water.’” Walker v. United States, 
    2007-NMSC-038
    , ¶ 22, 
    142 N.M. 45
    , 
    162 P.3d 882
     (quoting N.M. Const. art. XVI, § 3). New Mexico adopted the prior appropriation
    doctrine rather than the common law riparian doctrine in part because “‘[o]ur entire state has
    only enough water to supply its most urgent needs’” so that “‘[i]ts utilization for maximum
    benefits is a requirement second to none, not only for progress, but for survival.’” State ex
    rel. Martinez v. City of Las Vegas, 
    2004-NMSC-009
    , ¶ 34, 
    135 N.M. 375
    , 
    89 P.3d 47
    (citation omitted). Consequently, water holds a unique place within our Constitution that is
    distinct from other natural resources. See 
    id.
    {14}    The New Mexico Constitution broadly provides that “[t]he unappropriated water of
    4
    every natural stream, perennial or torrential, within the state of New Mexico, is hereby
    declared to belong to the public and to be subject to appropriation for beneficial use, in
    accordance with the laws of the state.” N.M. Const. art. XVI, § 2; see also NMSA 1978, §
    72-1-1 (1941) (codifying N.M. Const. art. XVI, § 2 and similarly stating, “All natural waters
    flowing in streams and watercourses, whether such be perennial, or torrential, within the
    limits of the state of New Mexico, belong to the public and are subject to appropriation for
    beneficial use.”). To effect this mandate, the Legislature delegated to the State Engineer the
    wide-ranging authority to manage New Mexico’s water resources. Tri-State Generation &
    Transmission Ass’n, Inc., 
    2012-NMSC-039
    , ¶ 34; see also Lion’s Gate Water v. D’Antonio,
    
    2009-NMSC-057
    , ¶ 24, 
    147 N.M. 523
    , 
    226 P.3d 622
     (discussing the “general purpose of the
    water code’s grant of broad powers to the State Engineer”).
    {15} The duties of the State Engineer include “general supervision of waters of the state
    and of the measurement, appropriation, [and] distribution thereof and such other duties as
    required.” NMSA 1978, § 72-2-1 (1982). “The [S]tate [E]ngineer shall . . . supervis[e] . . .
    the apportionment of water in this state according to the licenses issued by him and his
    predecessors and the adjudications of the courts.” NMSA 1978, § 72-2-9 (1907).
    {16} The diversion or application of water to lands in New Mexico absent a valid water
    right or permit is unlawful. See § 72-5-39 (“No person shall divert water or apply water to
    land without having a valid water right to do so, or apply it to purposes for which no valid
    water right exists.”). Accordingly, the Legislature also gave the State Engineer the authority
    to apply for an injunction in the district courts against anyone unlawfully diverting water or
    applying water to land without a valid right to do so. See id.
    B.     The State Engineer Has Statutory Authority to Regulate the Use of Surface
    Waters in New Mexico Regardless of Their Diversion Location
    {17} Relying primarily on dicta in Turley, Petitioners argue that the State Engineer lacks
    the authority to require a permit or otherwise regulate Petitioners’ use of Animas River
    surface waters for irrigation purposes when those waters have been diverted in Colorado and
    transported into New Mexico by the Ralston Ditch. They assert that because the Ralston
    Ditch is not a natural watercourse, see § 72-1-1, the waters it carries become private at the
    point of diversion in Colorado and thereafter are not part of the public waters of New
    Mexico subject to the State Engineer’s jurisdiction. Not only is Petitioners’ interpretation
    of Turley erroneous, but Turley is inapposite to the facts of this case.
    {18} In Turley the Territorial Supreme Court held that the territorial engineer of New
    Mexico lacked the authority to grant a permit for a proposed diversion from the Animas
    River in Colorado that would have conveyed water into New Mexico via an artificial ditch
    because the jurisdiction of the territorial engineer did not extend beyond the territorial
    boundaries of New Mexico. See 
    1911-NMSC-030
    , ¶¶ 1, 4-5. As the district court in this case
    correctly noted, Turley’s holding limiting the State Engineer’s extraterritorial authority is
    still good law but inapplicable here. Unlike in Turley, the State Engineer in this case is not
    5
    seeking to exercise jurisdiction over appropriation of water in Colorado or construction of
    a diversion in Colorado but instead seeks to regulate the appropriation of surface waters in
    New Mexico for use on New Mexico lands.
    {19} The Territorial Supreme Court in Turley never reached the question Petitioners raise.
    Id. ¶ 2. Instead, it determined that whether the use of waters diverted in Colorado that
    entered New Mexico through an artificial ditch would be subject to regulation in New
    Mexico by the New Mexico territorial engineer was a “moot question” because the proposed
    ditch in Turley did not yet exist. See id. (“No part of the waters of the Animus [sic] [R]iver
    has come into New Mexico except by the natural channel. The proposed ditch for bringing
    it in exists only on paper and may never have any more substantial being . . . .”). In response
    to this hypothetical question, the Turley Court reiterated New Mexico’s law of prior
    appropriation stating, “It is well settled that [natural waters] lose that character at the point
    of diversion as soon, at least, as they are applied to beneficial use.” Id. Petitioners
    misapprehend this statement to support their claim that once the waters of the Animas River
    are diverted into the Ralston Ditch they become “artificial” and “private” and outside the
    jurisdiction of the State Engineer.
    {20} Diversion alone is not appropriation and does not create a water right. See State ex
    rel. Martinez v. McDermett, 
    1995-NMCA-060
    , ¶¶ 12-13, 
    120 N.M. 327
    , 
    901 P.2d 745
    (“[M]ere diversion of water into a canal or ditch, without applying water to irrigating a crop
    or other valid use, does not satisfy the requirement of beneficial use.”). Rather, an
    appropriation of water in New Mexico requires both a lawful diversion of water and
    application of that water to a beneficial use. Snow v. Abalos, 
    1914-NMSC-022
    , ¶¶ 10-11, 
    18 N.M. 681
    , 
    140 P. 1044
    . It is the application to beneficial use that gives an appropriator the
    perfected right to use the water. City of Las Vegas, 
    2004-NMSC-009
    , ¶ 34. This is a limited
    right subject to restrictions on “how [the water] may be used,” the “quantity of water” used,
    a “specified purpose” of its use, and the “place of use.” Tri-State Generation & Transmission
    Ass’n, Inc., 
    2012-NMSC-039
    , ¶¶ 41-42 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted)
    (“‘[T]he right to change point of diversion or place of use . . . cannot impair other existing
    rights and it may be enjoyed only when done in accordance with statutory procedure.’”
    (citation omitted)).
    {21} The New Mexico State Engineer is charged with regulation and enforcement of New
    Mexico water rights. NMSA 1978, § 72-2-18 (2007). In New Mexico, exercising an
    irrigation water right by putting water to beneficial use for irrigation of specified lands vests
    that irrigation right as appurtenant to those lands. NMSA 1978, §72-1-2 (1907) (“Beneficial
    use shall be the basis, the measure and the limit of the right to the use of water, and all
    waters appropriated for irrigation purposes . . . shall be appurtenant to specified lands owned
    by the person, firm or corporation having the right to use the water.”); see also Hydro Res.
    Corp. v. Gray, 
    2007-NMSC-061
    , ¶ 18, 
    143 N.M. 142
    , 
    173 P.3d 749
     (“The legislature has
    decreed, as an exception to the general rule [which makes water rights separate and distinct
    from land], that water rights are appurtenant to irrigated land.” (emphasis added)).
    6
    {22} Petitioners’ contention that diversion and conveyance of waters “by artificial means”
    such as a ditch renders the use of those waters private and not subject to the State Engineer’s
    regulatory authority because they “never flow in a natural stream within the boundaries of
    New Mexico” is entirely without merit. To support this argument, Petitioners quote language
    from statutes and a number of cases addressing artificial waters. See, e.g., NMSA 1978, §
    72-5-27 (1941); Hagerman Irrigation Co. v. E. Grand Plains Drainage Dist., 1920-NMSC-
    008, ¶ 15, 
    25 N.M. 649
    , 
    187 P. 555
    . Artificial surface waters are “waters whose appearance
    or accumulation is due to escape, seepage, loss, waste, drainage or percolation from
    constructed works.” Section 72-5-27. Authorities addressing artificial waters are inapplicable
    here. No authority holds that conveyance of waters “by artificial means” changes the source
    or character of those waters. The waters in the Ralston Ditch are diverted directly from the
    Animas River, a natural watercourse, and remain unappropriated natural surface waters upon
    entry into New Mexico.
    {23} Moreover, water is incapable of full private ownership. See Walker, 2007-NMSC-
    038, ¶ 27 (“[W]ater rights are not considered ownership in any particular water source, but
    rather a right to use a certain amount of water to which one has a claim via beneficial use.”).
    For over a century, New Mexico law has provided that what is owned by the water user is
    not the water itself but only the right to the use of a certain amount of water for a specified
    purpose. See Snow, 
    1914-NMSC-022
    , ¶ 11 (“The appropriator does not acquire a right to
    specific water flowing in the stream, but only the right to take therefrom a given quantity of
    water, for a specified purpose.”). “All water within the state, whether above or beneath the
    surface of the ground belongs to the state, which authorizes its use, and there is no ownership
    in the corpus of the water but the use thereof may be acquired and the basis of such
    acquisition is beneficial use.” State ex rel. Erickson v. McLean, 
    1957-NMSC-012
    , ¶ 23, 
    62 N.M. 264
    , 
    308 P.2d 983
    ; see also Jicarilla Apache Tribe v. United States, 
    657 F.2d 1126
    ,
    1133 (10th Cir. 1981) (applying New Mexico law and affirming that “[t]he state controls the
    use of water because it does not part with ownership; it only allows a usufructuary right to
    water”).
    {24} Accordingly, the Animas River waters diverted into New Mexico by the Ralston
    Ditch remain natural, unappropriated, public waters of the State. Water is transformed from
    unappropriated to appropriated by putting the water to beneficial use, which requires an
    existing water right or a permit from the State Engineer. See § 72-5-1; § 72-5-39. The State
    Engineer has jurisdiction to regulate Petitioners’ application to beneficial use of Animas
    River surface waters diverted in Colorado to the Ralston Ditch which conveys their flow to
    New Mexico. The regulatory role of the State Engineer includes its lawful authority to
    require Petitioners to apply for a permit to use this water where there is no existing water
    right.
    C.     Petitioners Are Not Exempt from the Requirement to Obtain a Permit for New,
    Expanded, or Modified Use of Waters from the Ralston Ditch
    {25}   Petitioners alternatively claim that the Ralston Ditch as a community ditch
    7
    constructed in the 1880s does not require a lawful permit to divert water from it and that
    Petitioners’ pre-1907 water right also exempts them as individual users of that water from
    a permit requirement. We agree that the Ralston Ditch is an existing community ditch that
    does not require a permit to divert water under Section 72-5-2. But even for an existing
    community ditch, this exemption does not extend to changes in the amount of water
    appropriated or the location of use. See § 72-1-2 (stating that the rightful use of the water
    appropriated for irrigation purposes “shall be appurtenant to specified lands”); NMSA 1978,
    § 73-2-63 (1912) (stating that a community acequia established prior to March 19, 1907,
    need not apply for a permit to change the place of diversion “provided that by such change
    no increase in the amount of water appropriated shall be made beyond the amount to which
    the acequia was formerly entitled”). It is the acequia users that hold the rights to use water,
    not the ditch itself, which is the “carrier system” for those waters. Snow, 
    1914-NMSC-022
    ,
    ¶ 14; see also Wilson v. Denver, 
    1998-NMSC-016
    , ¶¶ 18-19, 
    125 N.M. 308
    , 
    961 P.2d 153
    (distinguishing between an interest in water rights which are dependent on the amount of
    water the individual users of the acequia water put to beneficial use and an interest in ditch
    rights based on the contributions of the individual users of the water to the construction of
    the ditch). The rights of users of the acequia water are limited and remain subject to
    regulation by the State Engineer, see Tri-State Generation and Transmission Ass’n, 2012-
    NMSC-039, ¶ 41-42, despite that an acequia has an elected commission and mayordomo,
    see NMSA 1978, § 73-2-21(B)(2) (“The mayordomo . . . shall, under the direction of the
    commissioners, . . . perform . . . duties in connection with the ditch as may be prescribed by
    the rules and regulations of the same or as may be directed by the commissioners.”
    (emphasis added)); § 73-2-21(A)(6) (“The commissioners shall . . . provide bylaws, rules and
    regulations not in conflict with the laws of the state for the government of the ditch or
    acequia.” (emphasis added)). That is, “[i]f the water rights of an acequia have been
    adjudicated, then the State Engineer must approve any change, regardless of whether or not
    it is a community acequia.” Honey Boy Haven, Inc. v. Roybal, 
    1978-NMSC-088
    , ¶¶ 2-3, 6-7,
    
    92 N.M. 603
    , 
    592 P.2d 959
     (emphasis added) (reviewing disputes over changes in an
    acequia’s point of diversion from a creek, place of use of the water, and purpose of use of
    the water that were made without permits from the State Engineer).
    {26} It is undisputed that the waters of the Ralston Ditch were adjudicated in the Echo
    Ditch Decree. As set forth in the decree, Petitioners hold a valid water right and are not
    required to apply for a permit to exercise their pre-1907 water right, whether or not that right
    had been adjudicated. See NMSA 1978, § 72-1-3 (1961) (stating that a holder of a pre-1907
    water right may file a declaration of the right); § 72-5-1 (requiring anyone “hereafter
    intending to acquire the right to the beneficial use of any waters” to apply for a permit to
    appropriate water). Petitioners’ vested right is still subject to regulation by the State
    Engineer. NMSA 1978, § 72-9-1 (1941) (stating that the water code shall not be construed
    to impair existing vested rights, although such rights “shall be subject to regulation,
    adjudication and forfeiture for nonuse as provided in this article”).
    {27} The State Engineer is attempting to enjoin Petitioners’ alleged improper use of a
    valid water right. Petitioners are alleged to be improperly irrigating land to which their valid
    8
    water right is not appurtenant because it is not part of the acreage adjudicated by the Echo
    Ditch Decree. Petitioners are also alleged to be improperly using a quantity of water that
    exceeds the amount appropriated for use on the acreage adjudicated by the Echo Ditch
    Decree. It is within the jurisdiction of the State Engineer, and it is the regulatory
    responsibility of the State Engineer, to prevent any such illegal use. See NMSA 1978, § 72-
    2-8(A) (“The [S]tate [E]ngineer may adopt regulations and codes to implement and enforce
    any provision of any law administered by [the State Engineer].”). If Petitioners wish to
    acquire a new water right or modify their existing right to allow use of an additional quantity
    of irrigation water or to allow irrigation on new land, Petitioners must obtain a permit from
    the State Engineer for a new appropriation or for a change in the place of use of their
    irrigation water. See § 72-5-1 (requiring an application to the State Engineer for a permit to
    appropriate the stated amount of water); see also NMSA 1978, § 72-5-23 (1985) (requiring
    an application to the State Engineer for approval of any change of place of use of water for
    irrigation purposes). Nothing in the permit exemptions Petitioners rely on suggests that they
    would not need a permit to use more water from the Ralston Ditch than they have a vested
    right to use or to use that water on land to which that vested right is not appurtenant.
    IV.    CONCLUSION
    {28} The use of waters diverted from the Animas River in Colorado that enter New
    Mexico in the Ralston Ditch is subject to regulation by the State Engineer. The State
    Engineer has the statutory authority to require a permit for new, expanded, or modified use
    of this water and, when such changes are made without its approval, to enjoin the illegal use.
    Accordingly, we affirm the district court’s denial of Petitioners’ motion to dismiss and
    remand this case for trial on the pending claims.
    {29}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    CHARLES W. DANIELS, Chief Justice
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    PETRA JIMENEZ MAES, Justice
    ____________________________________
    EDWARD L. CHÁVEZ, Justice
    ____________________________________
    BARBARA J. VIGIL, Justice
    ____________________________________
    JUDITH K. NAKAMURA, Justice
    9