Carangelo v. Albuquerque-Bernalillo Cnty. Water Util. Auth. , 2014 NMCA 32 ( 2013 )


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    New Mexico Compilation
    Commission, Santa Fe, NM
    '00'04- 14:37:40 2014.03.21
    Certiorari Denied, February 3, 2014, No. 34,475
    IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    Opinion Number: 2014-NMCA-032
    Filing Date: November 26, 2013
    Docket No. 26,757
    JOHN CARANGELO, ASSESSMENT
    PAYERS ASSOCIATION OF THE
    MIDDLE RIO GRANDE CONSERVANCY
    DISTRICT, AMIGOS BRAVOS, and
    RIO GRANDE RESTORATION,
    Protestants-Appellants,
    v.
    ALBUQUERQUE-BERNALILLO COUNTY
    WATER UTILITY AUTHORITY,
    Applicant-Appellee,
    and
    NEW MEXICO STATE ENGINEER,
    JOHN R. D’ANTONIO, JR.,
    Respondent-Appellee.
    APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF BERNALILLO COUNTY
    Theresa M. Baca, District Judge
    Peter Thomas White
    Santa Fe, NM
    Humphrey & Odé, P.C.
    Mary E. Humphrey
    El Prado, NM
    for Appellants
    Office of the State Engineer
    1
    DL Sanders, Chief Counsel
    Hillary Lamberton, Special Assistant Attorney General
    Santa Fe, NM
    for Appellee John R. D’Antonio, Jr., New Mexico State Engineer
    Stein & Brockmann, P.A.
    Jay F. Stein
    James C. Brockmann
    Santa Fe, NM
    Katherine W. Hall, PC
    Katherine W. Hall
    Santa Fe, NM
    Office of the City Attorney
    Michael I. Garcia, Assistant City Attorney
    Albuquerque, NM
    for Appellee Albuquerque Bernalillo County Water Utility Authority
    OPINION
    KENNEDY, Chief Judge.
    {1}      This case came before the Court on Appellants’ (Protestants) motion for rehearing.
    Both Appellees filed a response to the motion. Due consideration of the motion having been
    had by the panel, we conclude that the motion is hereby granted. The Opinion previously
    filed in this matter on November 28, 2011, is hereby withdrawn, and this Opinion issued in
    its place.
    {2}     As to the merits in this case, we hold that granting a permit based on an application
    to divert water, to which the applicant asserted no prior appropriative right and affirmatively
    asserted no beneficial use of the water diverted, was unsupported by law. Accordingly, we
    reverse the district court. We remand to the Office of the State Engineer to issue a corrected
    permit. On other matters not affecting this disposition, we affirm the district court as noted
    in this Opinion.
    INTRODUCTION
    {3}      Protestants appeal the decision of the district court affirming the granting of Permit
    4830 (the Permit) for diversion of native surface water from the Rio Grande following an
    appeal to the district court from a decision of the Office of the State Engineer (OSE). The
    district court entered judgment, together with specific findings and conclusions, affirming
    2
    the OSE’s approval of Application 4830 (the Application) and granting of the Permit.
    {4}     The City of Albuquerque (Applicant)1 applied to the OSE to divert roughly 45,000
    acre-feet per year (af/y) of native Rio Grande water, to which Applicant had no appropriative
    right, to enable the use of Applicant’s own San Juan-Chama Project (SJCP) water that
    originates in the Colorado River Basin. Applicant intended SJCP water that is carried in the
    Rio Grande to provide drinking water to the City of Albuquerque and Bernalillo County
    through Applicant’s new Drinking Water Project (DWP). The contemplated diversion of the
    native Rio Grande surface water involves what Applicant calls “non-consumptive” and “not
    beneficial” water use to ensure the necessary volume and flow levels to “carry” the SJCP
    water into the water treatment plant for processing and distribution. Applicant did not seek
    any appropriative rights to the native Rio Grande water it wishes to use in this fashion. It
    is undisputed that, by the terms of the Permit, any native Rio Grande water diverted must be
    simultaneously returned to the river in full measure.
    {5}     We review Protestants’ appeal of the following: (1) the denial of their motion to
    dismiss the Application for a permit to divert water for lack of jurisdiction, (2) the denial of
    Protestants’ motion to invoke primary jurisdiction of the OSE to consider some matters, (3)
    the orders granting Applicant’s and the OSE’s motions for partial summary judgment, and
    (4) the denial of Protestants’ motions for summary judgment. These issues concern three
    primary areas.
    {6}     We first address issues, to which Protestants collectively refer as “jurisdictional,”
    concerning what is required to invoke the power of the OSE to review the Application under
    the Water Code, NMSA 1978, §§ 72-1-1 to -20-103 (1907, as amended through 2011), to
    divert the native Rio Grande water. This includes both subject matter jurisdiction and the
    implicit or explicit statutory power of the OSE to act on the Application. We hold that,
    owing to the broad authority conferred on the OSE, there is no need to invoke particular
    statutory bases for action before the OSE acquires the ability to exercise its duties and
    powers under the Water Code to consider an application for a permit.
    {7}      However, because under the New Mexico Constitution there can be no use of water
    that is not beneficial, we reject Applicant’s position that its “non-consumptive” use is not
    beneficial. We hold that even a concurrent and non-consumptive use of surface water in a
    fully appropriated system must require a new appropriation of water. See N.M. Const. art.
    XVI, §§ 1, 2 (stating that New Mexico recognizes existing rights to use waters of the state
    for beneficial purposes and that any unappropriated water is “subject to appropriation for
    beneficial use”). In this context, we also review the OSE’s application process in this case,
    1
    In the course of this litigation, Applicant and Bernalillo County combined to form
    the Albuquerque-Bernalillo County Water Authority, which, once created, was substituted
    as a party for Applicant. Because both the name and acronym are more cumbersome than
    the word “Applicant,” we use “Applicant” to identify the party.
    3
    including the information required in an application and the applicable notice provisions for
    changing and applying for diversions of surface water. We hold that, because the
    jurisdiction of the OSE was invoked, the OSE may revise the permit that it issued in
    conformance with this Opinion.
    {8}     Second, we hold there was no necessity for the State Engineer, John D’Antonio, to
    have been recused from participating in the agency review of the Application. Third and
    last, we affirm the procedure and results of the district court’s review of the appeal of the
    OSE’s decision. This review includes the analysis of the impairment of water rights by the
    proposed diversion and whether the district court should have remanded a question
    concerning compliance with the Rio Grande Compact (the Compact), Section 72-15-23, to
    the OSE for consideration under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction. We address each in
    turn as we reverse the decision of the district court in part and affirm in part.
    PRELIMINARY FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    {9}     The Rio Grande headwaters originate near Creede, Colorado, and the river discharges
    into the Gulf of Mexico. Applicant obtained an allocation of San Juan River water rights by
    contract with the Bureau of Reclamation. This surface water is native to the Colorado River
    Basin and is transported across the Continental Divide through a tunnel to the Rio Grande
    via Heron Reservoir and the Chama River. Applicant then stores this water in Abiquiu Lake
    and schedules releases into the Rio Grande mainstream. The SJCP water is diverted for use
    in Bernalillo County. While traveling downstream in the Rio Grande, SJCP water mixes
    with native Rio Grande surface waters—the water that courses through the Rio Grande
    watershed.2
    {10} In past years, Applicant has used this SJCP water to offset its depletion of
    underground water in the Rio Grande Basin that it has pumped from Applicant’s wells for
    municipal use. The pumping of groundwater is the subject of Permit No. RG-960 (RG-960),
    which was applied for in June 1993, and reapproved in September 2003, by the OSE. Part
    of the conditions of approval for that Permit involves Applicant’s use of its SJCP surface
    water as needed to offset its depletions of groundwater under RG-960.
    {11} The effects of pumping Rio Grande Basin groundwater from municipal wells in a
    growing urban area, together with new hydrologic studies indicating that the scope of the
    2
    See Kevin G. Flanigan & Amy I. Haas, The Impact of Full Beneficial Use of San
    Juan-Chama Project Water by the City of Albuquerque on New Mexico’s Rio Grande
    Compact Obligations, 48 Nat. Res. J. 371 (2008) (detailing the exposition of the historical
    background of the SJCP and Applicant’s DWP).
    4
    aquifer is significantly more limited than had been previously described,3 led Applicant to
    conclude that its allocation of SJCP water would provide a useful municipal drinking water
    supply. To proceed to utilize this resource also appeared to be a way to conserve its future
    groundwater resources by substituting the surface water for much of what it would otherwise
    have pumped from the ground. Applicant proceeded to plan for a diversion of its entire
    allocation of SJCP water to use for this purpose. To accomplish this goal, Applicant
    concluded that an equal amount of native Rio Grande water would also need to be
    simultaneously diverted to “carry” its SJCP water. An amount of water equal to the diverted
    native water would then be returned in full to the Rio Grande without being consumed. As
    part of its planning process, Applicant met with various people in the OSE to discuss this
    ambitious project prior to eventually drafting and submitting the Application. Protestants
    or their representatives also attended some of these meetings.
    {12} Applicant filed the Application to “Divert Surface Water From The Rio Grande” in
    June 2001, to enable it to construct a municipal drinking water facility. The Application is
    for a “new diversion permit” and specifies that up to 103,000 af/y of both SJCP water and
    “‘native’ Rio Grande water” will be diverted from the Rio Grande in equal portions. The
    Application specifies no use of the Rio Grande water, stating that the Rio Grande water “will
    not be consumptively used, but returned to the river at [Applicant’s] Southside Water
    Reclamation Plant (SWRP) below Rio Bravo Bridge.” The Application asserts an
    independent right to the use of SJCP water, but does not assert a basis for any entitlement
    to the diversion or use of the native Rio Grande water. The Application does not seek any
    such entitlement or appropriation. There is no dispute that the Middle Rio Grande Basin is
    fully appropriated. Montgomery v. Lomos Altos, Inc., 2007-NMSC-002, ¶ 15, 
    141 N.M. 21
    ,
    
    150 P.3d 971
    (recognizing the position of the OSE that the Rio Grande’s surface waters are
    fully appropriated and that “new surface water appropriations are not allowed”).
    {13} Various entities and individuals protested the Application. The OSE held extensive
    hearings on the Application and received volumes of evidence. The decision of its hearing
    officer was adopted by the OSE, which granted a permit for the diversion subject to a
    number of specific conditions concerning the proposed diversion, such as water levels and
    return flows, to name but two. By the time this case reached the district court during the
    appeal, only Protestants remained as parties contesting the Permit.
    STANDARD OF REVIEW
    {14} All parties to the appeal stipulated in the district court that the facts presented in the
    administrative hearings would be the facts to be considered during the appeal. The district
    court then entertained a number of competing motions for summary judgment, granting those
    3
    E.g., Conde R. Thorn, Douglas P. McAda, & John Michael Kernodle,
    Geohydrologic Framework and Hydrologic Conditions in the Albuquerque Basin, U.S.
    Geological Survey Water Resources Investigations Report 93-4149 (1993).
    5
    of Applicant and the OSE and denying a motion made by Protestants. All motions are the
    subject of this appeal, and we review the district court’s determinations on the motions de
    novo. 
    Id. ¶ 16.
    {15} Where reasonable minds would not differ as to issues of material fact, summary
    judgment is proper. Upon our review, we construe all reasonable inferences in favor of the
    non-moving party. 
    Id. We also
    review any interpretation of statutes de novo. Stennis v. City
    of Santa Fe, 2008-NMSC-008, ¶ 13, 
    143 N.M. 320
    , 
    176 P.3d 309
    . Our Constitution
    provides that appeals from a decision of the OSE shall be de novo “as cases originally
    docketed in the district court,” giving the district court the power to find and adjudicate facts.
    N.M. Const. art. XVI, § 5. Here, the district court stated that it treated the motions for
    summary judgment as limiting and directing attention to the issues the parties considered
    important. Under this hybrid approach, the district court would review de novo the record
    below where facts seemed disputed. While our Supreme Court has held that de novo review
    is a “full” review in which the district court may take new evidence and independently reach
    the “questions which the [OSE] was required, in the first instance, to determine[,]” such
    latitude is not required here. In re Carlsbad Irrigation Dist., 1974-NMSC-082, ¶ 5, 
    87 N.M. 149
    , 
    530 P.2d 943
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted). The parties stipulated
    that the facts contained in the administrative record would constitute the entirety of available
    facts for any review, and no new evidence was taken in the district court.
    {16} Since summary judgment was granted, we presume the district court found no
    material facts in dispute. See Self v. United Parcel Serv., Inc., 1998-NMSC-046, ¶ 6, 
    126 N.M. 396
    , 
    970 P.2d 582
    (holding that when there are no genuine issues of material fact,
    summary judgment is appropriate). Protestants assert only that the district court’s summary
    judgment concerning the issue of public welfare was in error because it ignored the material
    fact of whether conjunctive use of groundwater under RG-9604 would adversely affect
    compliance with New Mexico’s obligations under the Compact. We will address that issue
    below in this Opinion.
    DISCUSSION
    I.      Jurisdiction
    A.      General Powers of the OSE
    {17}    Subject matter jurisdiction depends on the class of questions that a decision-maker
    4
    We recognize that this does not represent all of Applicant’s allocation of SJCP water
    or its uses thereof. Applicant also owns an amount of SJCP water that is leased to the
    Middle Rio Grande Conservancy District under a separate arrangement. Because of both the
    need for some linearity in our discussion and the interrelationship of the DWP and the
    Permit, we will not discuss other aspects of Applicant’s SJCP allocation.
    6
    has been empowered by the constitution or a statute to hear and determine. See Williams v.
    Rio Rancho Pub. Sch., 2008-NMCA-150, ¶ 10, 
    145 N.M. 214
    , 
    195 P.3d 879
    . The OSE
    possesses broad authority to act concerning the public waters of New Mexico. It has
    possessed the power to permit surface water rights and uses since at least the 1907 Water
    Code. 1907 N.M. Laws, ch. 49, § 4. Section 72-2-1 confers general jurisdiction on the OSE.
    “[The OSE] has general supervision of waters of the state and of the measurement,
    appropriation, distribution thereof and such other duties as required.” 
    Id. Article 5,
    Chapter
    72 of the Water Code specifically regulates issues concerning the appropriation, diversion,
    and use of surface water. Section 72-5-4 authorizes the OSE to publish notice after the filing
    of an application concerning surface water, “where the water will be or has been put to
    beneficial use” and specifies the form requirements for that notice. Section 72-5-4 requires
    the notice to include “all essential facts as to the proposed appropriation; among them, the
    places of appropriation and of use, amount of water, [and] the purpose for which it is to be
    used[.]” Applicant applied to the OSE to divert surface water, which is within the OSE’s
    regulatory power under Sections 72-2-1 and -5-1 and, as a result, properly established
    subject matter jurisdiction without further invocation of a statute. We thus conclude that the
    OSE had jurisdiction to determine whether the Application fell within its statutory authority.
    Next, we address whether the OSE properly decided that Applicant met the statutory
    requirements for the Application.
    B.     The Application Must Fall Within the OSE’s Statutory Authority for the OSE
    to Have Jurisdiction to Grant the Permit
    {18} Protestants argue that “[i]n order to act upon an application, the [OSE] is required
    to invoke specific statutory authority.” They assert that the “two statutes that authorize the
    [OSE] to approve applications for permits to divert and use surface water” are Section 72-5-
    1, which governs the application for a permit to apply surface water to beneficial use, and
    Section 72-5-24, which states that an appropriator of water may, subject to statute, change
    the purpose and point of diversion of appropriated water. They further assert that these
    statutes must specifically be “invoked” prior to the OSE assuming “jurisdiction” over the
    application. Protestants argue that the Application contemplates both a new use of the native
    Rio Grande water that would require an appropriation, as well as a change in purpose and
    point of diversion for the SJCP water requiring a permit. Applicant argues that the OSE had
    jurisdiction to consider the Application based on Sections 72-2-1 and -5-24.
    {19} In order for the OSE to authorize diversion and appropriation of water, the OSE must
    follow statutory procedures. In Clodfelter v. Reynolds, our Supreme Court rejected an
    argument that “statutory authority is necessary for a change of the point of diversion.” 1961-
    NMSC-003, ¶ 13, 
    68 N.M. 61
    , 
    358 P.2d 626
    . Our Supreme Court held that the statutes only
    restricted the appropriator’s otherwise inherent right to effect such a change as the owner of
    the property if no detriment to other users would ensue. 
    Id. Protestants’ use
    of Clodfelter
    to assert that Sections 72-5-1 and -24 “can be used” to permit a diversion is correct.
    However, it is not the invocation of a statute that confers the right of the OSE to review an
    application, but that the statute creates a procedure by which proposed actions are reviewed
    7
    in specific ways and for specific purposes.
    {20} Sections 72-5-1 and -24 are part of a framework that requires an applicant to describe
    proposed actions in detail, including the source and proposed disposition of the water to
    beneficial use and the potential effects of the proposed actions on other water users. The
    statutes require the disclosure of sufficient information to provide notice to interested parties
    and to allow the determination of likely impairment of others’ water rights by any
    contemplated changes. See § 72-5-4 (delineating the information requirements of an
    application). But, Sections 72-5-1 and -24 set forth OSE authority; they do not restrict it.
    {21} Protestants’ arguments seem to confuse the OSE’s power to administer water with
    the form and notice requirements for particular types of applications to appropriate or divert
    surface water. The Water Code confers the power to review a proposed use for possible
    impairment to others’ water rights on the OSE, which, regardless of statutory citation, must
    comply with statutes that set out the form for applications or notice of its contents. We hold
    that the OSE has subject matter jurisdiction to review the Application irrespective of
    Applicant making specific reference to, or invocation of, any statutory section in the
    Application, so long as the Application seeks permission to do something within the
    statutory and regulatory authority of the OSE. In this regard, as we have noted, the OSE’s
    authority is broad. See Lion’s Gate Water v. D’Antonio, 2009-NMSC-057, ¶ 24, 
    147 N.M. 523
    , 
    226 P.3d 622
    . Under Section 72-2-1, the State Engineer has general supervision of the
    “measurement, appropriation, [and] distribution” of the waters of the state.
    {22} Thus, applicants have the burden to fulfill the statutory requirements for completing
    an adequate application and notice of intent to divert, but are not required to invoke the
    specific statute. The OSE must then ascertain whether the statutory requirements were met.
    Since statutes govern what issues may be considered and how issues are raised and handled,
    we judge compliance of an application with all applicable statutes. Chalamidas v. Envtl.
    Improvement Div., 1984-NMCA-109, ¶ 13, 
    102 N.M. 63
    , 
    691 P.2d 64
    (“Administrative
    bodies are creatures of statute and can act only on those matters which are within the scope
    of authority delegated to them.”).
    {23} Both Sections 72-5-1 and -24, cited by Protestants, are specific to applicants who
    seek to acquire rights to apply surface water to a new beneficial use and provide the
    requirements for diverting that water to accomplish the beneficial use. Those statutes govern
    applications concerning two separate things: (1) the appropriation and diversion of water
    for a new beneficial use, which Protestants insist includes the diversion of the native Rio
    Grande water; and (2) the changing of the place of diversion and purpose of surface water
    already appropriated to Applicant, which they contend applies to the SJCP water. Both
    issues were fairly raised below at both the administrative and district court levels. Although
    the Application states in detail that Applicant intends to divert 47,000 af/y of native Rio
    Grande water for the DWP and how and where it intends to do it, Applicant did not seek any
    separate right for a beneficial use under Section 72-5-1, which deals with appropriations for
    new uses.
    8
    {24} Because of the broad powers of the OSE, we do not consider the absence of an
    appropriation request to be fatal to the Application. Although an appropriation is not
    specifically requested, once the OSE’s authority was properly invoked, the OSE could take
    action within its authority with regard to the Application. We discuss the action taken by
    the OSE later in this Opinion.
    1.     Applicant Was Not Required to Include a Request to Change the Point of
    Diversion for the SJCP Water in the Application
    {25} Protestants also argue that Applicant should have specifically filed an application to
    change the point of diversion of the SJCP water pursuant to its existing permit under Section
    72-5-24. Section 72-5-24 provides: “An appropriator of water may, with the approval of
    the [OSE], use the same [water] for other than the purpose for which it was appropriated or
    may change the place of diversion, storage[,] or use in the manner and under the conditions
    prescribed in [proceeding statutes].” It then requires an applicant to follow the application
    requirements stated in Section 72-5-3.
    {26} Applicant asserts the SJCP water is water to which it has an established right that
    originates outside of both the Rio Grande Basin and the Application. Applicant was already
    applying its existing rights to a quantity of this SJCP water to another use through a
    diversion in one location under RG-960. Applicant did not describe its request either as a
    change in point or purpose of diversion in the Application or point to Section 72-5-24, which
    would be on point if Applicant was acting with regard to the SJCP water. The Application
    lists three proposed points of diversion for combined SJCP and the native Rio Grande water,
    one of which would be chosen, depending on the outcome of environmental studies. At this
    point, we conclude that although detailed discussion of what was intended for the SJCP
    water was essential to justify the diversion of the native Rio Grande water, it was not
    essential to granting a permit to use or divert the water from the Rio Grande. The
    Application adequately gives notice as to the contemplated nature of the SJCP diversion as
    either an existing diversion or one that involves a change in location.
    {27} We agree that the Application represents a change in the use of SJCP water, as well
    as the introduction of a comprehensive management regime to be imposed on the connection
    between uses under the DWP and the Permit. However, for the reasons that follow, the
    Application is concerned only with diversion of native Rio Grande surface water and need
    not be concerned with Applicant’s SJCP water allocation.
    2.     Protestants’ Arguments Concerning Section 72-5-24 and SJCP Water are
    Misplaced
    {28} A brief part of Protestants’ argument concerning “jurisdiction” is that Applicant’s
    failure to specifically apply for a change in place or purpose of diversion for the SJCP water,
    pursuant to Section 72-5-24, is fatal to the OSE having “jurisdiction to act upon the
    9
    Application that was filed.” Applicant asserts that the SJCP water is subject to contract, and
    its absence through diversion in the Rio Grande would not impair any existing water rights
    in the Rio Grande. We agree with this assertion because Applicant already uses the SJCP
    water from the Colorado River Basin pursuant to its contract with the Bureau of
    Reclamation, the validity of which is uncontested. It is an incident of the appropriation that
    its holder has a statutory “right to change the point of diversion, or place of use, of water
    which has been obtained as a result of an appropriation[.]” Clodfelter, 1961-NMSC-003, ¶
    16. This right of ownership is subject to review under Section 72-5-24 as to “whether the
    proposed transfer will be detrimental to existing water rights, will not be contrary to the
    conservation of water in the [s]tate, and will not be detrimental to the public welfare of the
    state.” Herrington v. State ex rel. Office of State Eng’r, 2006-NMSC-014, ¶ 46, 
    139 N.M. 368
    , 
    133 P.3d 258
    .5 The Application is for a diversion of water other than what Applicant
    allocates from the SJCP appropriation. Applicant’s failure to ask for review of the SJCP
    appropriation is not fatal to its request for a new diversion of Rio Grande water. The SJCP
    water is not public water within the Rio Grande Basin6 and, as a result, no action with regard
    to it is required in the Application to divert water from the Rio Grande.
    {29} Next, at the administrative level, the OSE found that matters concerning the right
    to the use of the SJCP water were specifically outside the scope of its consideration for the
    Permit. The OSE premised this conclusion on the fact that the SJCP water was subject to
    priority administration in the San Juan River Basin and is diverted from the San Juan River
    to provide for beneficial consumptive use as a part of New Mexico’s allocation of Colorado
    River water under the Colorado River Basin Compact and Upper Colorado River Basin
    Compact. This allocation was purchased and developed by Applicant for its use. The SJCP
    water does not come from the Rio Grande Basin, and Applicant’s entitlement to its beneficial
    use is not within the administrative scope of the Rio Grande Basin. We see no reason to
    disturb these findings.
    5
    We note that some analysis of detriment, conservation of water, and concerns for
    public welfare, relative to the SJCP water being used for a new purpose than groundwater
    recharge under RG-960, is part of the administrative and district court review of the Permit.
    This review gives us pause to consider that there are substantial issues awaiting
    consideration with regard to future policies governing water that has yet to be developed.
    Owing to our rulings in this Opinion, these issues concerning future overall management of
    the Rio Grande Basin and its water resources remain largely unresolved by this action.
    Protestants’ desire for a global review in this case of meta-issues regarding the effects of a
    growing population, changing water needs, and methods of delivery to that population, and
    the ultimate effect of diminishing resources, full allocation and increasing demand are
    limited to the issues raised, preserved, and briefed herein.
    6
    Article II of the Compact specifically excludes the SJCP water from flow
    calculations.
    10
    {30} Accordingly, we hold that failing to invoke or proceed under Section 72-5-24 does
    not preclude consideration of the Application irrespective of whether it might apply to a
    change in purpose or diversion of the SJCP water. Of greater import, however, is
    Protestants’ assertion that the Application runs afoul of Section 72-5-1. Protestants argue
    that it involves a new use of native Rio Grande water without a corresponding appropriation
    of water to such a use to justify giving permission to divert the Rio Grande water to
    accomplish the use.
    C.     The Application Involves a New Beneficial Use of Native Rio Grande Surface
    Water That Would Require an Appropriation to Enable It
    {31} Applicant requested a permit to divert native water from the Rio Grande, which is
    fully appropriated. City of Albuquerque v. Reynolds, 1962-NMSC-173, ¶ 20, 
    71 N.M. 428
    ,
    
    379 P.2d 73
    (holding “that the surface waters of the Rio Grande are fully appropriated”).
    A fully appropriated basin is one in which no further appropriation or diversion would
    generally be permitted. See Lion’s Gate Water, 2009-NMSC-057, ¶ 26 (holding that the
    OSE’s primary responsibility is to deny an application for use if no water is available and
    that secondary considerations, such as conservation, public welfare, or impairment to other
    users become moot if no water is available); § 72-5-7 (“If, in the opinion of the [OSE], there
    is no unappropriated water available, [it] shall reject such application.”). Applicant had not
    previously sought a permit either to divert the native Rio Grande water for the DWP, or to
    so use the Rio Grande water to be diverted by its plan. A water permit provides the authority
    to pursue a water right specific to a place and a beneficial use. Hanson v. Turney, 2004-
    NMCA-069, ¶ 9, 
    136 N.M. 1
    , 
    94 P.3d 1
    . There is no dispute that the Rio Grande is a natural
    stream, the waters of which are public waters under Article XVI, Section 2 of the New
    Mexico Constitution. As such, they are only “subject to appropriation for beneficial use”
    and only to the extent that they are unappropriated. N.M. Const. art. XVI, § 2; § 72-1-1.
    {32} Protestants argue that diversion of the native Rio Grande water to “carry” the SJCP
    water sought by the Application should be considered a new beneficial use, requiring a
    specific request for a new appropriation of water in the Application.7 Protestants further
    argue that there was no jurisdiction based on Section 72-5-1, which provides that anyone
    “hereafter intending to acquire the right to the beneficial use of any waters, shall, before
    commencing any construction for such purposes, make an application to the [OSE] for a
    permit to appropriate, in the form required by the rules and regulations established by him.”
    According to Protestants, there can be no jurisdiction to consider permitting the diversion,
    7
    Protestants argue that Applicant should have captioned the Application as one to
    “appropriate” surface water, thus giving notice to other water users on the Rio Grande.
    Protestants’ reply brief summarizes: “By failing to caption the Application as an
    ‘appropriation,’ [Applicant] disingenuously implies there will be no new use of water and
    thus no impact on other users. Any new use of water in a fully appropriated basin has
    potential impact on other appropriators.”
    11
    since diversion exists for the purpose of facilitating a beneficial use that in turn requires an
    appropriation. 
    Id. Applicant responds
    that it sought no appropriation and that it has no
    intention of applying the water diverted by the Permit for which it applied to beneficial use.
    Applicant argues that Protestants wrongly regard such use as beneficial and confuse
    Applicant’s “non-consumptive use of native Rio Grande ‘carry water’ with an appropriation
    of native water.” Though conceding that it intends to use the water to accomplish a specific
    purpose in the DWP, Applicant seems to rely on a position that, since the use is “non-
    consumptive,” it requires no right to apply the water and, hence, there is no appropriation.
    OSE’s response to the motion for reconsideration asserts that “it does not follow from the
    use of water, beneficial or incidental, that an appropriation of water must be made.” OSE
    bases this assertion on its expertise and what it regards as the Supreme Court’s conferring
    under Lion’s Gate, 2009-NMSC-057, ¶ 24, a presumption of propriety to its actions. We
    believe Lion’s Gate did not remove the requirement of an appropriation from the constitution
    or Section 72-5-1. The district court found that the Application involves no request for an
    appropriation.
    {33} The Application and subsequent position neither assert nor seek any new right to use
    the water it plans to divert and use to carry the SJCP water through the DWP, predicated on
    the assertion that a non-consumptive use is neither beneficial nor a use requiring an
    appropriation of the water diverted. For the reasons that follow, we consider Applicant’s
    diversion to be for a beneficial use of the native Rio Grande water and assess the necessity
    for an appropriation.
    {34} We first examine the law regarding what uses of public water are permissible and
    how a right to beneficially use water is acquired by permit. We will next address the legal
    and statutory requirements controlling the diversion of public water and the uses to which
    a diversion can be applied pursuant to our law. We will then look at Applicant’s diversion
    of the native Rio Grande water to determine how Applicant applying for a permit to divert
    the Rio Grande water necessary to operate the DWP exists in the context of the law. Last,
    we address the “jurisdictional question” of the consequences of the OSE issuing a permit for
    a diversion of native Rio Grande water without a concomitant request for an appropriation
    of water for a beneficial use.
    1.      Beneficial Use is the Basis, the Measure, and the Limit of Water Use in New
    Mexico
    {35} Water in New Mexico belongs to the state, subject to use by appropriation, the basis
    of which must be beneficial. Our constitution’s framers clearly intended that “no one has
    a right to use or divert water except for beneficial use.” State ex rel. Erickson v. McLean,
    1957-NMSC-012, ¶ 28, 
    62 N.M. 264
    , 
    308 P.2d 983
    . “[I]t is the application to a beneficial
    use which gives the continuing right to divert and utilize the water.” Snow v. Abalos, 1914-
    NMSC-022, ¶ 12, 
    18 N.M. 681
    , 
    140 P. 1044
    . Article XVI, Section 3 of our Constitution
    states that “[b]eneficial use shall be the basis, the measure[,] and the limit of the right to the
    use of water” in New Mexico. See § 72-1-2. Put another way, “[t]he amount of water which
    12
    has been applied to a beneficial use is . . . a measure of the quantity of the appropriation.”
    McLean, 1957-NMSC-012, ¶ 22.
    {36} This constitutional proposition declares the sole basis of the right to use water, which
    use is then subject to regulation by statute. See Harkey v. Smith, 1926-NMSC-011, ¶ 10, 
    31 N.M. 521
    , 
    247 P. 550
    . That the state regulates the appropriation or acquisition of the state’s
    water for a beneficial use presumes that, for any water to be put to such a use, such use must
    be supported by an appropriation of water. See § 72-5-1 (requiring anyone seeking to put
    surface water to a beneficial use to request an appropriation to do so from the OSE).
    Furthermore, “the taking or diversion of [water] from some natural stream . . . in accordance
    with law, with the intent to apply it to some beneficial use or purpose, and consummated .
    . . by the actual application of all of the water to the use designed” is an appropriation of the
    water. Carlsbad Irrigation Dist. v. Ford, 1942-NMSC-042, ¶ 14, 
    46 N.M. 335
    , 
    128 P.2d 1047
    (emphasis, internal quotation marks, and citation omitted). Thus, any diversion for a
    beneficial use must be accompanied by a right to the water acquired by the user’s
    appropriation of the water to be diverted. See State ex rel. State Eng’r v. Comm’r of Pub.
    Lands, 2009-NMCA-004, ¶ 15, 
    145 N.M. 433
    , 
    200 P.3d 86
    (“[W]ater 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.” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)); In
    re Water Rights in Rio Grande Cnty., 
    53 P.3d 1165
    , 1168 (Colo. 2002) (en banc) (holding
    that a water right is a property right created by a person appropriating unappropriated water
    and applying it to a beneficial use). We now turn to the import of consumptive versus non-
    consumptive uses as might affect whether a use is beneficial.
    2.      Beneficial Uses Can be Non-Consumptive
    {37} The New Mexico Constitution defines “[b]eneficial use” as “the basis, the measure[,]
    and the limit of the right to use water.” N.M. Const. art. XVI, § 3; § 72-1-2. Our Supreme
    Court has defined “beneficial use” as no more than “the use of such water as may be
    necessary for some useful and beneficial purpose in connection with the land from which it
    is taken.” McLean, 1957-NMSC-012, ¶ 29. This “concept requires actual use for some
    purpose that is socially accepted as beneficial.” State ex rel. Martinez v. McDermett, 1995-
    NMCA-060, ¶ 10, 
    120 N.M. 327
    , 
    901 P.2d 745
    . Primary emphasis is on the benefit of the
    use, not the particular purpose of the ultimate use to which the water is put. Kaiser Steel
    Corp. v. W.S. Ranch Co., 1970-NMSC-043, ¶ 21, 
    81 N.M. 414
    , 
    467 P.2d 986
    . A non-
    consumptive use is no more than “a type of water use where either there is no diversion from
    a source body, or where there is no diminishment of the source.” Port of Seattle v. Pollution
    Control Hearings Bd., 
    90 P.3d 659
    , 682-83 (Wash. 2004) (en banc) (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted). It is not important that, as OSE points out in its response,
    “[m]ost, if not all, appropriations of water in New Mexico are for consumptive uses.”
    {38} In the Eastern United States, riparian water law developed in a period of non-
    consumptive use for water power and minor consumptive use where a river was useful to any
    number of riparians in turn. Henry E. Smith, Governing Water: The Semicommons of Fluid
    13
    Property Rights, 
    50 Ariz. L
    . Rev. 445, 456 (2008). During this time, our Territorial Supreme
    Court decided Trambley v. Luterman, 1891-NMSC-016, 
    6 N.M. 15
    , 
    27 P. 312
    , which is cited
    by Protestants and dismissed by Applicant as inapposite. We are persuaded by Trambley,
    in which the Supreme Court held that a prior non-consumptive use of an acequia to operate
    a grist mill was entitled to protection against a later upstream use that would diminish the
    flow of the stream. 
    Id. ¶ 1.
    Trambley thus recognizes the common law priority of a non-
    consumptive beneficial use (powering a grist mill) in conjunction with other uses of a
    stream. This idea holds true in more modern times of statutory water codes. See City of San
    Antonio v. Tex. Water Comm’n, 
    407 S.W.2d 752
    , 762 (Tex. 1966) (recognizing that “water
    retained within [a] watershed is susceptible to multiple use because all water uses are not
    consumptive uses”); Richlands Irrigation Co. v. Westview Irrigation Co., 
    80 P.2d 458
    , 466
    (Utah 1938) (finding no conflict of use between awards of water for both non-consumptive
    and consumptive uses).
    {39} Where a statute spoke of the “diversion of water for ‘beneficial’ use,” the Supreme
    Court of Washington found that “[n]o distinction of ‘non[-]consumptive’ uses can arise from
    this language.” McLeary v. State ex rel. Dep’t of Game, 
    591 P.2d 778
    , 781 (Wash. 1979)
    (en banc). In United States v. State Water Resources Control Board, the California Court
    of Appeals held that the board’s authority to set water quality objectives extended to
    beneficial uses, “a concept embracing a wide spectrum of consumptive and non[-
    ]consumptive, instream uses.” 
    227 Cal. Rptr. 161
    , 195 (Cal. Ct. App. 1986).
    {40} Several other cases have recognized non-consumptive uses of water as beneficial
    uses to which priority rights attach.8 From this broad base of authority, we conclude that
    there is nothing in the law that requires consumptive use of water for a use to be beneficial.
    A beneficial use of water does not require its consumption, and a non-consumptive,
    beneficial use can be the basis for an appropriation of water as much as a consumptive one.
    The Washington Supreme Court held in 1979 that “[w]hatever the description of a right [as
    consumptive or non-consumptive], it is subject to confirmation in the general adjudication
    procedure provided” by statute. 
    McLeary, 591 P.2d at 781
    . In Trambley, our Supreme Court
    recognized that a non-consumptive use was entitled to no less protection from another user
    than had it been a consumptive use. Today, the right to use water and the protection of the
    8
    Cnty. of Amador v. El Dorado Cnty. Water Agency, 
    91 Cal. Rptr. 2d 66
    , 84-85 (Cal.
    Ct. App. 1999) (“Water for hydroelectric purposes may be diverted but ultimately is returned
    to the water system; it is usufructuary in nature and non[-] consumptive.”); see Fed. Power
    Comm’n v. Niagara Mohawk Power Corp., 
    347 U.S. 239
    , 246-47 (1954) (recognizing the
    right to use water to generate power); Pub. Serv. Co. of Colo. v. Fed. Energy Regulatory
    Comm’n, 
    754 F.2d 1555
    , 1558 n.1 (10th Cir. 1985) (discussing a non-consumptive water
    right possessed by a hydroelectric facility); Washington State Sugar Co. v. Goodrich, 
    147 P. 1073
    , 1079-80 (Idaho 1915) (limiting an appropriation for both consumptive and non-
    consumptive use of a stream to the extent of beneficial use to which water was non-
    consumptively used when no additional beneficial consumptive use was undertaken).
    14
    right are both conferred by appropriation. Diversion of water means little without thinking
    about the use to which the diverted water is ultimately put. See McDermett, 1995-NMCA-
    060, ¶ 12. Trambley only represents a recognition of the legitimacy of a non-consumptive
    use, but modern precedents clearly establish such uses as both requiring an appropriation and
    thus being conferred protection by the OSE and appropriation.
    {41} We thus do not agree with Applicant’s position that a new non-consumptive use is
    not a new beneficial use and, therefore, does not require appropriation or permission to
    divert. Neither our constitution nor Section 72-1-2 distinguishes between diversion of water
    for consumptive and non-consumptive uses. Because both can be beneficial uses, our state’s
    water law applies equally to either. Having determined that no use but beneficial use of
    water is permitted by law, and there is no inherent distinction with regard to benefit between
    consumptive and non-consumptive use, we now turn to the purposes to which persons may
    divert publicly-owned waters.
    {42} The authorities we have set out above in this Opinion speak to the beneficial use as
    the sole basis to use water. The OSE’s brief does not address the question of beneficial use
    other than to state that (1) the Application properly specified the amount of Rio Grande
    water it intends to divert along with the SJCP water, (2) no native water would be
    consumptively used, and (3) the Application “contained all essential facts pursuant to [the
    statute].” The Application contained the facts, but it did not contain a request for an
    appropriation of the native Rio Grande water, nor a request to divert it for a beneficial use.
    The Application stated that, without any prior appropriation, the Rio Grande water would
    be diverted by the DWP in certain amounts and under certain conditions. Can the OSE
    permit a diversion that is not for a beneficial use?
    3.     Applicant May Not Divert Water if Not to a Beneficial Use
    {43} Applicant argues that what it plans for the native Rio Grande water is only a
    diversion and not a beneficial use of the water to which it either could or should claim a
    specific entitlement. Applicant supports this argument by stating “a diversion alone is not
    beneficial use nor an appropriation. Applicant added “nor an appropriation” to a quote from
    McDermett, 1995-NMCA-060, ¶ 12 (“A diversion alone is not beneficial use.”), while
    leaving out this Court’s next sentence in that opinion: “There must be an ultimate, actual
    beneficial use of the water resulting from the diversion.” 
    Id. In its
    response to Protestants’
    motion for rehearing, it attempts to argue that a diversion must precede an appropriation and
    is therefore somehow separate. We reject this argument as “the rule that no one has a right
    to use or divert water except for beneficial use is clearly indicated by the framers of our
    Constitution.” McLean, 1957-NMSC-012, ¶ 28. Although Applicant tries to rely on
    McDermett’s statement that “[a] diversion alone is not beneficial use[,]” Applicant misses
    the point in two respects. 1995-NMCA-060, ¶ 12. First, McDermett dealt with a one-time
    diversion of water onto land for use partly to prepare soil for cultivation, which the Court
    determined was not a beneficial use. 
    Id. The right
    to some amount of water for irrigation
    was not disputed because twenty acres of the tract were used to produce crops. 
    Id. In the
    15
    present case, tens of thousands of acre feet of Rio Grande water to which Applicant has no
    established right at all will be diverted to perform the necessary function of carrying the
    SJCP water to which it is entitled to consumptively use. Second, the diversion of the Rio
    Grande water is not the use. The diversion is the taking of water for some ultimate
    beneficial use. “Diversion is required for non-consumptive uses . . . because diversion is a
    means of notice, measurement, and establishment of exclusive use.” Nicole L. Johnson,
    Property Without Possession, 24 Yale J. on Reg. 205, 238 (2007). “Use” is something that
    occurs with water after it is diverted as a result of proper appropriation. See Hydro Res.
    Corp. v. Gray, 2007-NMSC-061, ¶ 20 n.5, 
    143 N.M. 142
    , 
    173 P.3d 749
    (“The right to use
    water . . . is a possessory right which may be acquired by appropriation and diversion for a
    beneficial use[.]” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).
    4.     Applicant’s Diversion of Native Rio Grande Water Results in a New Beneficial
    Use
    {44} By filing the Application, Applicant is requesting a permit to allow a future diversion
    of native Rio Grande surface water for a new use. A beneficial use of water is a “use of such
    water as may be necessary for some useful and beneficial purpose.” McDermett, 1995-
    NMCA-060, ¶ 10 (internal quotation marks and citation omitted); see Hanson, 2004-NMCA-
    069, ¶ 10 (discussing beneficial use).
    {45} Appropriation is the act of taking water for a beneficial use, and the perfection of the
    appropriation, according to law, is the sole source of the right to use the water and the
    protection of the appropriator’s right to continue its use. A right to apply water to a
    beneficial use springs “from appropriation for beneficial use.” Walker v. United States,
    2007-NMSC-038, ¶ 22, 
    142 N.M. 45
    , 
    162 P.3d 882
    (internal quotation marks and citation
    omitted). “The right to use water . . . is a possessory right which may be acquired by
    appropriation and diversion for a beneficial use[.]” Hydro Res., 2007-NMSC-061, ¶ 20 n.5
    (internal quotation marks and citation omitted).
    {46} For the very reason that the DWP requires a diversion of an amount of native Rio
    Grande water equal to the drinking water requirements for all of Bernalillo County to be
    diverted from the Rio Grande stream bed for some fifteen miles, it is inconceivable that an
    appropriation for a diversion of this extent and scope would not be sought to promote a
    beneficial use of the water thus diverted. Indeed, the demonstrated necessity of taking this
    water, even in a non-consumptive manner, to promote the economic and physical well-being
    of Bernalillo County, requires us to view this diversion as being for a beneficial use.
    Consumptive or non-consumptive use is irrelevant to the beneficial nature of the use and
    whether a diversion of water would be permissible. Similarly, whether the “use” is carrying
    the SJCP water, or the diversion is made to facilitate the beneficial use of SJCP water, native
    Rio Grande surface water is being put to beneficial use by way of this large diversion.
    {47} The necessary use of the native flow in full measure benefits Applicant’s project and
    is of direct benefit to its water customers since the provision of drinking water to New
    16
    Mexico’s largest populated area depends upon it. The necessity of using the native Rio
    Grande water to carry the water ultimately consumed by the DWP renders its use beneficial.
    We therefore hold that the use of the native Rio Grande water when diverted as intended in
    the Application results in a beneficial use of that water. Hence, its diversion under the
    Application is to a new beneficial use.
    5.     The Appropriative Right for Non-Consumptive Use Required by the
    Application is Consistent With Section 72-5-7
    {48} Both the OSE and the district court found that the Permit involved the diversion of
    native Rio Grande water. The OSE’s report and recommendation extensively detailed the
    provenance of Applicant’s SJCP allocation of the water it would consume. The district court
    found specifically that Applicant was not seeking an appropriation of the native Rio Grande
    water. In its briefs, Applicant asserts that there are “no elements of a completed
    appropriation in the native carry water” and claims that its Application “did not request an
    appropriation of native surface water[.]” Applicant recognizes that surface water in the Rio
    Grande is fully appropriated, states that the native water cannot be transferred, and asserts
    that it would acquire “no priority date in the native carry water.” There is perhaps a
    misconception underlying Applicant’s position that any new beneficial or consumptive use
    in a fully appropriated system, such as the Rio Grande, cannot be granted, or its underlying
    position that an application for a permit to appropriate the water to a non-consumptive,
    beneficial use would thus be superfluous. The Water Code indicates otherwise.
    {49} Section 72-5-7 is clear that when evaluating an application to use water, if “in the
    opinion of the state engineer, there is no unappropriated water available, he shall reject such
    application.” It cannot be ignored that the Rio Grande Basin is fully appropriated and has
    been for some time. Since the Middle Rio Grande is fully appropriated, this begs the
    question of how a new appropriation for a new beneficial use could be allowed under Section
    72-5-7, so as to enable permitting Applicant’s diversion of native Rio Grande water.
    Applicant’s plan unequivocally seeks to use the native Rio Grande surface water to which
    it has and seeks no appropriative rights, and its purpose, according to the Application, is to
    carry the SJCP water through its system with one hundred percent of that volume being
    returned to the Rio Grande. Our Supreme Court held that water may be essential to various
    uses, but “water rights must still be acquired by appropriation to beneficial use.” Hydro
    Res., 2007-NMSC-061, ¶ 25. “[T]he usufructuary right to surface water is based upon a
    diversion of a specific quantity of water to a beneficial use with prior diversions prevailing
    over latter ones[.]” In re Water Rights of Park Cnty. Sportmen’s Ranch LLP v. Bargas, 
    986 P.2d 262
    , 266 (Colo. 1999) (en banc) (footnote omitted).
    {50} We conceive that Applicant’s insistence on having no intention of acquiring a
    priority date in the native Rio Grande water, its insistence that the use of the water would not
    be beneficial and, thereby, requiring no appropriation, and its use of the phrase “non-
    consumptive” may derive from two sources. The first may be the understandable conviction
    to avoid speaking in terms of a beneficial use that may require an appropriation subject to
    17
    rejection in a fully appropriated basin. The second may be a disinclination to concede the
    benefit of the use in order to argue for an appropriation for a non-consumptive use under the
    assumption that a non-consumptive use is not a beneficial use and is not subject to the
    strictures of fully appropriated water. This restrictive reading of Section 72-5-7 also may
    be at the root of both the OSE’s and the district court’s according credence to this view by
    determining that no appropriation was sought, but that diversion is permissible.
    {51} In the preceding discussion, we have indicated that there is no distinction within the
    concept of beneficial use that would separate consumptive from non-consumptive uses. In
    the context of a non-consumptive use, the apparent direction under Section 72-5-7 that the
    OSE must reject applications for an appropriation in basins in which “there is no
    unappropriated water available” requires further exploration. As discussed below, the
    relationship between a beneficial use and the need for appropriation to supply water to it and
    establish a protected right to use it is such that, in fully appropriated basins, there may be
    circumstances under which appropriations for non-consumptive use may be approved.
    {52} There is no necessary connection between the concept of “appropriation” and
    “consumptive use.” The OSE may review an individual application for an appropriation of
    water to be applied to a non-consumptive use. It is possible that, “in the opinion of the state
    engineer,” no water previously appropriated for a consumptive use is needed. Hence, water
    may also be simultaneously appropriated for a non-consumptive use. Section 72-5-7. We
    view such an opinion to be consistent with both the conservation of and maximum beneficial
    use of water and within the OSE’s discretion under Section 72-5-7. Additionally, to an
    applicant’s benefit, such an appropriation, as in Trambley, enjoys protection by virtue of a
    priority of appropriation against encroachment by other upstream, non-consumptive uses.
    Why would Applicant not wish to acquire a protectable right to the native Rio Grande water
    by seeking an appropriation?
    {53} Until now, “fully appropriated” has been conceptualized with regard only to
    consumptive appropriations; we can find no authority mentioning otherwise. It may well be
    within the OSE’s purview to recognize that a priority right may be acquired for a beneficial
    use that, owing to its non-consumptive nature, does not impair consumptive appropriative
    rights. If we are to continue to recognize that “the Water Code has provided for the
    determination of priorities through a comprehensive system of adjudication in the courts and
    through licenses[,]” we must recognize the possibility that a non-consumptive beneficial use
    piggy-backed onto a fully appropriated basin can, under appropriate circumstances, be a
    legitimate appropriation.
    {54} Thus, we hold that the OSE has the authority to determine whether a new non-
    consumptive beneficial use would or would not have any impact on the “available water”
    in a fully appropriated basin and whether it could be allowed under Section 72-5-7. We are
    not aware of any appropriations being permitted for overlapping or concurrent non-
    consumptive, beneficial uses of the same water, even in a system that is fully appropriated
    with regard to consumptive use. With this in mind, we also comment that appropriation for
    18
    a new non-consumptive use conveys not only the right to the use, but protection of that right
    against other subsequent appropriators for non-consumptive use. See Comm’r of Pub.
    Lands, 2009-NMCA-004, ¶ 15 (holding that appropriation protects the right of an earlier
    appropriator to the extent of his beneficial use against a later appropriator). The importance
    of an appropriation to protect a permittee’s ability to use water was recently underscored by
    our Supreme Court in Bounds v. State ex rel. D’Antonio, 2013-NMSC-037, 
    306 P.3d 457
    .
    Pointing out that the use of water rights are “inherently conditional” based on the availability
    of water, 
    id. ¶ 31,
    the Supreme Court emphasized the importance of an appropriation as a
    placeholder of a permittee’s rights as against other users. 
    Id. ¶ 29.
    The ability to enforce an
    order of appropriation is necessary to our system of prior appropriation. Even in the present
    situation involving the permitting of a non-consumptive use, we conceive that Applicant
    would wish to have its right to continue diversion of native Rio Grande water to this use
    protected over time. Applicant could only gain this right by appropriation.
    6.     Remand is Necessary for the Application to Comport with Section 72-5-1
    {55} As we held above with regard to Section 72-5-24, while we consider it superfluous
    to require invocation of the statute, the Application and its contents must specify sufficient
    information to provide notice to the OSE and all other potentially interested persons of the
    nature and purpose of the Application. While this might be done without unnecessarily
    narrowing or limiting an application by requiring specific reference to any particular
    statutory pronouncement in the Water Code, the notice requirements of Section 72-5-4 must
    be observed. With regard to the native Rio Grande water, Applicant requested a permit for
    a diversion only. Applicant did not request an appropriation of the Rio Grande surface water
    to be diverted for the new non-consumptive, beneficial use.
    {56} Although Applicant did not specify the section under which it sought the Application,
    and although the Application is titled as one to “Divert Surface Water From The Rio Grande
    Basin,” the subject matter of the Application was clear. The Application requests the right
    to divert otherwise appropriated native Rio Grande water to a new beneficial use and
    implicates Section 72-5-1. We thus turn to this section.
    {57} Section 72-5-1 addresses the requirements for an application to the OSE for a permit
    to appropriate water for beneficial use. Section 72-5-1 provides that anyone “hereafter
    intending to acquire the right to the beneficial use of any waters, shall, before commencing
    any construction for such purposes, make an application to the [OSE] for a permit to
    appropriate, in the form required by the rules and regulations established by [it].”
    {58}   An applicant is required
    to state the amount of water and period or periods of annual use, and all other
    data necessary for the proper description and limitation of the right applied
    for, together with such information, maps, field notes, plans[,] and
    specifications as may be necessary to show the method of practicability of
    19
    the construction and the ability of the applicant to complete the same.
    
    Id. Section 72-5-1
    further requires that “[a]ll such maps, field notes, plans[,] and
    specifications, shall be made from actual surveys and measurements, and shall be duly filed
    [with] the [OSE] at the time of filing of formal application for permit to appropriate[.]” 
    Id. Such statutes
    provide no distinction between consumptive and non-consumptive use.
    {59} Section 72-5-4 requires an applicant to publish notice of an application that gives “all
    essential facts as to the proposed appropriation; among them, the places of appropriation and
    of use, amount of water, the purpose for which it is to be used, name and address of applicant
    and the time when the application shall be taken up by the [OSE] for consideration.”
    {60} Although Applicant did not request an appropriation under Section 72-5-1, the
    Application and the notice published by Applicant provided all information required for such
    an application. The Application and notice clearly indicated Applicant’s request to divert
    and non-consumptively use Rio Grande water to carry Applicant’s SJCP water for its
    drinking water project. Although the Application did not specify the use of the Rio Grande
    water, it stated that approximately 94,000 af/y would be diverted, comprising about fifty
    percent SJCP water and fifty percent Rio Grande water. It further stated that the Rio Grande
    water “will not be consumptively used, but returned to the river at the City’s Southside
    Water Reclamation Plant (SWRP).” It described the flow rates, place of use, purpose of use,
    description of the proposed diversion system, and other information. Extensive exhibits
    were attached to the Application. In response to the Application and notice, nineteen
    individuals and entities filed protests. The OSE hearing examiner conducted thirteen days
    of hearings that addressed, among other issues, whether the Application would result in
    impairment to existing water users, was contrary to the conservation of water within the
    state, and was detrimental to the public welfare of the state. See § 72-5-6 (requiring for a
    permit that “the proposed appropriation is not contrary to the conservation of water within
    the state and is not detrimental to the public welfare of the state”). The Permit was
    conditioned specifically on compliance with measures that addressed concerns in these areas.
    {61} Although Applicant did not request an appropriation of the native Rio Grande water,
    and the OSE did not include an appropriation in the Permit, the OSE proceedings
    nevertheless addressed the issues essential to an appropriation. As we have held, the
    Application properly invoked the jurisdiction of the OSE. In determining the action
    necessary on remand to the OSE, we believe it incumbent upon us to consider the efficiency
    of the process. As we noted in our November 28, 2011, opinion withdrawn on March 29,
    2012, it “would be redundant in the extreme to require reconsideration of matters that have
    already painstakingly been developed.” We thus remand to the OSE to reissue the Permit in
    accordance with this Opinion.
    II.    Recusal Was Unnecessary
    {62}   Believing that any further proceedings might involve further determinations by the
    20
    OSE, we now consider Protestants’ argument that D’Antonio’s failure to recuse violated
    their due process rights. During the administrative phase of this case, Protestants became
    aware that, prior to his appointment as the State Engineer, D’Antonio had been present at
    meetings in which the Application was discussed. As such, D’Antonio became at least
    incidentally familiar with the details of the Application before he formally considered it as
    the State Engineer. Protestants filed a motion requesting that he recuse, which was denied.
    They then appealed to the district court, which affirmed the administrative ruling after
    reviewing the issue de novo. Nothing in evidence suggests a bias that would violate due
    process. We affirm the district court on this issue.
    {63} We begin by noting that Section 72-5-3 deals with the submission of applications to
    the OSE. That statute specifically supplies a process by which “[i]f the application is
    defective as to form, or unsatisfactory as to feasibility or safety of plan, or as to the showing
    of ability of the applicant to carry the construction to completion, it shall be returned with
    a statement of the corrections, amendments[,] or changes required[.]” 
    Id. The applicant
    is
    then given an opportunity to submit corrected applications. 
    Id. It seems
    to us that
    discussions at which even Protestants were in attendance undertaken with an eye to
    submitting what would ultimately become Application 4830 were geared to fulfill a similar
    purpose as the statute—to enable Applicant to more completely comply with the
    requirements of applying for the permit it sought. The fact that D’Antonio, in his capacity
    as district director, attended meetings, is not, in and of itself, the sort of fact that would lead
    us to search out administrative bias on his part that might later necessitate recusal. The legal
    standards employed to analyze whether recusal is required agree.
    {64} The contours of administrative bias are well defined in New Mexico. As we
    observed in Reid v. New Mexico Board of Examiners in Optometry, “[t]he Fourteenth
    Amendment guarantees every citizen the right to procedural due process in state
    proceedings.” 1979-NMSC-005, ¶ 6, 
    92 N.M. 414
    , 
    589 P.2d 198
    (internal quotation marks
    and citation omitted). Such proceedings must be administered by fair and impartial triers
    of fact who are “[a]t a minimum, . . . disinterested and free from any form of bias or
    predisposition regarding the outcome of the case.” 
    Id. ¶ 7.
    Triers of fact must likewise be
    “impartial and unconcerned in the result” of the adjudication, and the rigidity of this
    requirement “applies more strictly to an administrative adjudication where many of the
    customary safeguards affiliated with court proceedings have, in the interest of expedition and
    a supposed administrative efficiency, been relaxed.” 
    Id. ¶ 8.
    In Reid, the plaintiff
    challenged a professional board’s decision to revoke his license asserting bias. 
    Id. ¶ 2.
    A
    member of the board later admitted to saying, prior to the hearing, that the plaintiff “would
    be losing his license soon anyway[.]” 
    Id. ¶ 4
    (internal quotation marks omitted). This Court
    held that such a statement made prior to a hearing, especially where the declarant admitted
    making it, constituted bias and violated the plaintiff’s due process right. 
    Id. ¶ 10.
    {65} We focused on Reid’s holding concerning the issue of bias in Las Cruces
    Professional Fire Fighters v. City of Las Cruces, 1997-NMCA-031, ¶¶ 22-29, 
    123 N.M. 239
    ,
    
    938 P.2d 1384
    . In that case, the plaintiff labor union sought to invalidate a city ordinance
    21
    that prohibited union activities on city property during business hours. 
    Id. ¶¶ 2-4.
    The
    plaintiff’s claim was successful at both the administrative and the district court levels, and
    the defendant appealed. 
    Id. ¶ 4
    . Among other arguments, the defendant asserted that the
    proceeding before the administrative board was defective because one board member had
    been appointed by union interests and was therefore biased. 
    Id. ¶ 21.
    This Court held that
    recusal was unnecessary in such a scenario. 
    Id. ¶ 29.
    The solitary fact that the board
    member was appointed by union interests was insufficient to disqualify him. 
    Id. “Even if
    he had previously expressed support for aggressive unionization of the public sector, he
    would not be disqualified. Members of tribunals are entitled to hold views on policy, even
    strong views, and even views that are pertinent to the case before [them].” 
    Id. An official
    is not required to recuse himself just because his “prior conduct . . . indicates a view that
    would favor one party or the other. If that were the law, no judge could sit on a case after
    rendering a decision in a similar case.” 
    Id. ¶ 23.
    {66} Las Cruces Professional Fire Fighters also analyzed administrative bias in general
    and adopted the analysis of Professor Kenneth Culp Davis, who, in his treatise, compiled a
    list of five basic types of bias. 
    Id. ¶ 24
    (describing framework laid out in 3 Kenneth Culp
    Davis, Administrative Law Treatise § 19:1, at 371-72 (2d ed. 1980)). Most importantly, we
    adopted Professor Davis’s position that an official’s “[a]dvance knowledge of adjudicative
    facts . . . is not alone a disqualification for finding those facts, but a prior commitment may
    be.” Las Cruces Prof’l Fire Fighters, 1997-NMCA-031, ¶ 24 (emphasis added) (internal
    quotation marks and citation omitted). Thus, although some instances of prejudgment may
    present no instance of bias, evidence of a prejudgment certainly augurs strongly in its favor.
    {67} This idea of prejudgment as the line between administrative bias and impartiality
    explains our holdings in both Reid and Las Cruces Professional Fire Fighters. In Reid, the
    board member’s admitted statement of prejudgment required recusal. Whereas, in Las
    Cruces Professional Fire Fighters, the board member’s prior affiliation with the union was
    inadequate to create a bias. See In re Comm’n Investigation v. N.M. State Corp. Comm’n,
    1999-NMSC-016, ¶ 42, 
    127 N.M. 254
    , 
    980 P.2d 37
    (holding that prejudgment constitutes
    cause for recusal); Phelps Dodge Tyrone, Inc. v. N.M. Water Quality Control Comm’n, 2006-
    NMCA-115, ¶ 50, 
    140 N.M. 464
    , 
    143 P.3d 502
    (holding that familiarity with facts is
    insufficient to constitute bias, stating that “it is impractical to require commissioners to sit
    with an entirely clean slate [and that c]ommissioners are appointed because of their
    knowledge and expertise”).
    {68} In the instant case, both the hearing examiner and the district court properly found
    no cause for recusal. Our examination of the record likewise finds none. We see nothing
    to indicate that D’Antonio prejudged the Application. The fact that he was familiar with the
    facts beforehand is not determinative. See Phelps Dodge, 2006-NMCA-115, ¶ 50.
    {69} Both the hearing examiner and the district court considered a great deal of evidence
    on this issue, and neither party at this stage materially disputes the accuracy of that evidence.
    D’Antonio stated that, prior to his appointment as the State Engineer, he was the District
    22
    One supervisor in Albuquerque. In that capacity, his first knowledge of the Application was
    on March 21, 2000, when he attended an informational meeting concerning the proposed
    project. Several representatives from interested parties around the state also attended.
    D’Antonio stated that he might have also attended other meetings where the Application was
    discussed, but he could not remember. After the Application was filed, D’Antonio and his
    staff assisted Applicant in drafting a public notice to be published in local newspapers
    pursuant to the statute. Once the notice was published, D’Antonio’s next contact with the
    Application was when he reviewed the findings and recommendations of the hearing
    examiner in his capacity as the State Engineer. Neither he nor any of his personnel assisted
    in drafting the Application.
    {70} Protestants rely on Reid and cite to other cases for the proposition that hearing
    officials like D’Antonio should be recused when there is an “appearance of bias.” See City
    of Albuquerque v. Chavez, 1997-NMCA-054, ¶¶ 15-16, 
    123 N.M. 428
    , 
    941 P.2d 509
    (holding that recusal is appropriate when a reasonable person would seriously doubt the
    hearing officer’s objectivity); see also Reid, 1979-NMSC-005, ¶ 5 (holding that a board
    member should have recused after making a statement indicating bias or prejudice).
    Protestants argue that the standard is not whether D’Antonio was actually biased but, rather,
    whether his actions created an appearance of bias and whether, as Protestants claim, his
    “impartiality might reasonably be questioned.” We agree only insofar as proof of actual bias
    has never been a requirement. Yet, Protestants misstate the law. The line of cases beginning
    with Reid and continuing through Phelps Dodge develops the standard clearly. Regardless
    of whether an official is actually biased, he appears biased when he expresses prejudgment
    of an issue in a pending case and will, therefore, need to recuse himself in most instances.
    {71} Our analysis of the record indicates no evidence that D’Antonio expressed any such
    prejudgment of the merits of the Application in this matter. That he attended meetings
    where he became aware of the facts of the case has no legal effect. Likewise, it makes no
    difference that he and his personnel assisted Applicant with the notice for publication. We
    therefore affirm the district court on this issue.
    III.   The Doctrine of Primary Jurisdiction Was Properly Eschewed
    A.     Protestants Misapprehended the Issue Concerning the Compact Compliance
    {72} Protestants argue that the district court improperly dismissed their motion to invoke
    the doctrine of primary jurisdiction with regard to remanding to the OSE their concerns
    about how granting the Application might affect New Mexico’s compliance with the
    Compact. Specifically, they claim that the OSE’s hearing report fails to make sufficient
    findings of fact on whether the Application satisfies New Mexico’s obligations under the Rio
    Grande Compact, Section 72-15-23, and that invoking primary jurisdiction was required of
    the district court. Based on a theory relating the depletions of groundwater in the Rio
    Grande Basin to pre-1929 depletions, Protestants argue that groundwater depletions since
    that date will result in impairment to vested rights, specifically impairing New Mexico’s
    23
    ability to deliver water to Texas under the Compact, which Protestants assert would be a
    detriment to the public welfare. They obliquely seek to direct our attention to a ruling
    concerning the “1947 condition” in the Pecos River Compact, in which apportionment of
    water in the Pecos River did not include pre-1947 diversions of groundwater that did not
    deplete the Pecos River prior to that year, which resulted in the state of Texas receiving the
    water available to it under what was referred to as the “1947 condition.” Texas v. New
    Mexico, 
    446 U.S. 540
    , 541 (1980) (per curiam) (Stevens, J., dissenting) (internal quotation
    marks omitted). The “condition” is a baseline figure of water in the Pecos River Basin based
    on calculations of the amount of water that would have been available downstream to Texas
    based on calculating flow each year from 1905 through 1946 had New Mexico’s uses in
    1947 been in place in prior years “to determine whether New Mexico was using a larger
    share of the river water than it had in 1947, in violation of the [Pecos River] Compact.” 
    Id. Protestants do
    not demonstrate in their argument how such calculations have ever been a part
    of, or applied to, the Rio Grande Compact. Texas consists only of an order ratifying the
    special master’s report in the case and Justice Stevens’ dissent, in which he disagreed with
    the special master’s definition of the “1947 condition.” This tells us nothing about what we
    should do in this case. The “1947 condition” in the Pecos River Basin is not an ongoing
    measure analogous to any mention in the Rio Grande Compact of that river’s flow in 1929.
    {73} Because, in their view, the OSE is most qualified to assess compliance with the Rio
    Grande Compact, Protestants assert that, under the doctrine of primary jurisdiction, this
    matter must be addressed first by the OSE. Furthermore, Protestants claim that the district
    court failed to make adequate findings of fact on the issue and, although Protestants failed
    to point to specific evidence on the subject or recommend any specific relief, we shall
    presume they seek to have the matter remanded to the OSE for additional findings of fact.
    Even so, such speculation matters little because we affirm the district court and hold that (1)
    the doctrine of primary jurisdiction is inapplicable to this case, and (2) the findings of fact
    of both the OSE and the district court were adequate.
    {74} In State ex. rel. Norvell v. Arizona Public Service Co., our Supreme Court compared
    the doctrines of primary jurisdiction and exhaustion of remedies. 1973-NMSC-051, 
    85 N.M. 165
    , 
    510 P.2d 98
    . The plaintiff asserted in the district court that the defendant created a
    public nuisance by polluting the Four Corners region. 
    Id. ¶ 2.
    The defendants sought
    dismissal, asserting that the New Mexico Environmental Improvement Agency had primary
    jurisdiction over matters relating to environmental pollution. 
    Id. ¶¶ 3,
    11. They argued that
    although claims for public nuisance may properly be brought in the district courts, the issue
    of pollution would be better left to the expertise of the statutorily appropriate state agency.
    
    Id. ¶ 29.
    The district court granted the parties an immediate appeal to the Supreme Court,
    which agreed with the defendants, holding that “[t]he [L]egislature has clearly intended . .
    . the [a]gency [to] have primary jurisdiction over pollution control.” 
    Id. ¶ 4
    3. The problem
    was “not . . . one exclusively of remedy, but one of coordination between the judicial and
    administrative arms of government.” 
    Id. ¶ 31.
    Such coordination is generally accomplished
    by applying the doctrines of primary jurisdiction and exhaustion of remedies. 
    Id. 24 {75}
    Primary jurisdiction “applies where a claim is originally cognizable in the courts, and
    comes into play whenever enforcement of the claim requires the resolution of issues which,
    under a regulatory scheme, have been placed within the special competence of an
    administrative body[.]” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted). When a court
    finds such issues exist, it may apply the doctrine and suspend judicial process “pending
    referral of such issues to the administrative body for its views.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks
    and citation omitted). Application of the doctrine is not rigid. A great deal of discretion is
    vested in the district court to determine whether to apply it. 
    Id. In contrast,
    the doctrine of
    exhaustion of remedies “applies where a claim is cognizable in the first instance by an
    administrative agency alone; judicial interference is withheld until the administrative process
    has run its course.” 
    Id. (internal quotation
    marks and citation omitted). In light of this
    authority and given the factual basis of Protestants’ claim, we hold that the doctrine of
    primary jurisdiction has no application in this case.
    {76} Protestants argue that the factual findings of both the OSE and the district court failed
    to address compliance with the Rio Grande Compact. The Rio Grande Compact, signed by
    New Mexico, Colorado, and Texas in 1938, provides for the “equitable apportionment” of
    the waters of the Rio Grande River. Section 72-15-23. It is administered by the Rio Grande
    Compact Commission. “[A]ny person aggrieved by [a] decision, act[,] or refusal to act” of
    the OSE must first address it to the OSE. Section 72-2-16. “No appeal shall be taken to the
    district court until the [OSE] has held a hearing and entered [its] decision in the hearing.”
    
    Id. Because Protestants’
    claim was thus originally cognizable only in the OSE, Protestants
    fail to satisfy an essential element of primary jurisdiction, and the district court properly
    dismissed their motion as a matter of law.
    {77} Nevertheless, in the interest of a thorough, de novo review of the issues that
    Protestants assert, we reexamine the abundant findings of fact made by both the OSE and
    the district court and hold that both were adequate. We begin by observing that the
    Compact, in an effort to preserve interstate comity among Colorado, New Mexico, and
    Texas, establishes minimum amounts of Rio Grande water that must be delivered to gauging
    stations along the river’s length from north to south. See § 72-15-23. Since the signing of
    the Compact, all waters of the Rio Grande have been fully appropriated. Reynolds, 1962-
    NMSC-173, ¶ 12. The OSE, as the steward of New Mexico’s obligations under the
    Compact, must ensure that it approves only those applications that are “not contrary to the
    conservation of water within the state and . . . not detrimental to the public welfare of the
    state[.]” Section 72-5-6; see Montgomery, 2007-NMSC-002, ¶ 15 (discussing rules
    promulgated by the OSE to ensure compliance with the Compact); Heine v. Reynolds, 1962-
    NMSC-002, 
    69 N.M. 398
    , 
    367 P.2d 708
    (holding that the OSE has a positive duty to
    determine whether an application impairs existing water rights). In Montgomery, as opposed
    to this case, the protestants came forward in their brief and delineated the nature of the
    impairment they alleged. 2007-NMSC-002, ¶ 8. To establish impairment of a sort
    Protestants allege to exist under the Application requires more than confusion with the Pecos
    River Compact and unsubstantiated assertions. As stated above, we do not investigate facts
    or develop arguments inadequately presented to us for consideration.
    25
    {78} We hold that the OSE fulfilled its duties and sufficiently analyzed the issue of the Rio
    Grande Compact compliance. Prior to granting the Permit, the OSE heard extensive
    arguments and evidence from both parties and published its conditions and official findings
    of fact in a report dated July 8, 2004. As its first condition for approval, the OSE stated that
    the Permit “shall not be exercised to the detriment of valid existing water rights or in a
    manner that is contrary to the conservation of water within the state or detrimental to the
    public welfare of the [s]tate.” The report also required Applicant to agree to limit “[t]he total
    annual combined diversion of surface water” and to complete “a study of incremental loss
    rates for delivery of [SJCP] water. It provided that the use of Rio Grande water would have
    to be curtailed whenever “the [OSE] determines that suspension is necessary to meet [the
    C]ompact obligations or to protect existing water rights.” These conditions were supported
    by extensive findings of fact, which considered “the annual quantity of SJCP water available
    for diversion[,] conveyance losses of . . . water from Heron reservoir to the Paseo del Norte
    diversion site[,]” and the possible effects of “[u]nderestimation of conveyance losses.” Such
    findings are adequate.
    {79} We likewise hold that the district court’s findings of fact sufficiently analyzed the
    Rio Grande Compact compliance. Though it extensively adopted the OSE’s findings of fact,
    the district court also made many of its own. Foremost, it agreed with the OSE
    that compliance with the . . . Compact is always at the forefront of any
    permit assessment. Not only would the issue concern public welfare of the
    state, but the obligation of the [OSE] in evaluating impairment or detriment
    to existing water rights naturally encompasses compliance with the . . .
    Compact. If the [OSE] satisfied its duty to ensure that granting the
    [A]pplication would not be detrimental to existing water rights, then there is
    no doubt that [C]ompact compliance would have to be part of the analysis.
    Furthermore, the district court found that (1) the Permit properly addressed “concerns of
    impairment,” (2) the Permit was “conditioned so that incremental conveyance loss[]
    estimates of [SJCP] water will be accurately accounted for[,]” (3) “there [were] no existing
    surface water rights within the . . . diversion” area, and (4) “an amount of water equivalent
    to the amount of native surface water diverted under this . . . [P]ermit shall be
    simultaneously returned directly to the” river. In affirming the district court on this issue,
    we hold that the district court’s reasoning was sound and that its findings on the issue of
    Compact compliance were adequate.
    B.      The District Court’s Assessment of Impairment Issues
    {80} One observer in 2003 commented that “[a]bsent a proportionate decrease in
    diversions by other users, the city’s diversion is likely to have a significant effect on actual
    river flow.” John R. Brown, “Whisky’s Fer Drinkin’; Water’s Fer Fightin’!” Is It?
    Resolving a Collective Action Dilemma in New Mexico, 43 Nat. Res. J. 185, 208 (2003). It
    26
    is the concern over the effect of Applicant’s diversion on river flow that frames the next
    series of issues in Protestants’ appeal. This case concerns a large “non-consumptive” use
    of surface water that removes an amount of water equal to Applicant’s drinking water supply
    from the Rio Grande for fifteen miles downstream from the diversion point and returns a like
    amount of water to the river after passage through Applicant’s wastewater treatment facility.
    The terms of the Permit specify that the return flow must equal the native water diverted, and
    allowances are required for Applicant to compensate from the SJCP water for any
    conveyance loss involved. The quality of the water will presumably change, since the water
    will run through Applicant’s wastewater treatment facility prior to being returned to the Rio
    Grande. No issues were raised concerning this observation, and we will not discuss it
    further.
    {81} Protestants contend that the evidence before the OSE and the district court did not
    support the finding that the proposed use would not impair other users. They allege that
    impairment of downstream water rights was inadequately considered by the OSE and the
    district court in three respects. First, Protestants allege that there was no determination as
    to whether the amount of water in the river would satisfy water rights below Isleta Dam.
    Second, Protestants contend that the OSE’s impairment analysis was insufficient because it
    did not determine whether existing rights would be impaired and because the OSE failed to
    update its estimate of Applicant’s pre-1956 Rio Grande depletions using a more recent
    hydrological model. Third, Protestants allege problems with the DWP accounting for return
    flows from both the use of an annual, rather than monthly, accounting and in the accounting
    for return flow credits to the river from sources other than Applicant’s.
    {82} Before we address these arguments, we reiterate the requirements set forth in the
    Rules of Appellate Procedure. Rule 12-213(A)(3) and (4) NMRA requires Protestants to
    specifically attack a factual determination of the district court and set out all of the evidence
    on the issue that bears on the proposition advanced by Protestants. Protestants must
    demonstrate that the district court’s determination is unsupported by substantial evidence.
    Team Specialty Prods., Inc. v. N.M. Taxation & Revenue Dep’t, 2005-NMCA-020, ¶ 8, 
    137 N.M. 50
    , 
    107 P.3d 4
    . “Rule 12-213(A)(3) is designed to promote judicial economy by
    requiring appellants challenging the sufficiency of the evidence to provide an appellate court
    with a summary of all relevant evidence instead of relying upon the [C]ourt to review the
    record independently and prepare its own summary.” Chavez v. S.E.D. Labs., 2000-NMSC-
    034, ¶ 18, 
    129 N.M. 794
    , 
    14 P.3d 532
    .
    {83} In order to sustain the burden articulated under Rule 12-213(A)(3) and (4),
    Protestants must specifically attack the district court’s factual determinations regarding these
    impairment arguments and set out all of the evidence on the issue or demonstrate that the
    district court’s determination that the project would not impair downstream users was
    unsupported by substantial evidence. Protestants have not always risen to shoulder this
    burden.
    C.      Impairment to Users Downstream of Isleta Dam
    27
    {84} Protestants originally asserted that the diversion would prove detrimental to water
    rights holders downstream of Isleta Dam. This location is well south of the wastewater
    treatment facility where native water diverted for the DWP is returned to the Rio Grande.
    {85} On appeal, Protestants again assert that the OSE did not adequately determine
    whether the diversion would impair rights below Isleta Dam. Both the OSE and Applicant
    maintain that this issue was abandoned below, and we agree. The district court found that
    Protestants’ objection to the OSE’s Finding 39 that there would be no decrease in the amount
    of water available to downstream users provided the diverted native water is timely returned
    to the Rio Grande was withdrawn by Protestants. This finding is supported by Protestants’
    own pleadings. We consider this objection to have been withdrawn by Protestants from
    consideration by the district court.
    1.      Insufficient Impairment Analysis
    {86} Protestants argue that the OSE failed to adequately evaluate the Application for
    detriment to other water users, first, by performing an incomplete impairment analysis and,
    second, by failing to update the estimate of Rio Grande depletions using a more current
    model. As concluded above, Protestants waived any objection to the OSE’s finding that
    there would be no decrease in the amount of water available to downstream users under the
    conditions of the Permit. We therefore only consider Protestants’ remaining objections with
    regard to water rights in the fifteen-mile stretch between the northern diversion point and
    southern discharge point.
    {87} Protestants are correct that impairment analyses must be tailored to each particular
    application to ensure that the conditions specific to the proposed water use, the existing
    water rights, and both local and regional hydrologic conditions are adequately considered.
    “[T]he question of impairment of existing rights is one which must generally be decided
    upon the facts in each case, and . . . a definition of impairment of existing rights is not only
    difficult, but an attempt to define the same would lead to severe complications.”
    Montgomery, 2007-NMSC-002, ¶ 21 (alterations in original) (internal quotation marks and
    citation omitted).
    {88} In this case, the OSE’s impairment analysis evaluated the possible decrease in flow
    in the Rio Grande due to diversion of the SJCP water, effects of the DWP on the Compact
    obligations, impacts on groundwater levels, and water quality impacts downstream of the
    discharge point. The Permit is conditioned to ensure that diversion of native water is not
    overestimated. The Permit conditions also require that native water is returned
    simultaneously at the southern project outflow to ensure that there is no decrease in surface
    water to existing downstream water rights. The DWP diversion regime described in the
    Permit is also conditioned to curtail diversions when the Rio Grande is experiencing low
    flows or drought conditions.
    {89}   Protestants agree with the OSE that, under the DWP diversion scheme, the “river is
    28
    kept whole[,]” but argue that a presumption of non-impairment does not follow from this
    conclusion. Protestants assert that the impairment analysis is inadequate because it does not
    evaluate impacts to specific users. However, Protestants fail to set forth any evidence that
    particular detriment would in fact result from the Permit as conditioned. In fact, the OSE
    determined that there are no extant surface water rights holders in this stretch of the river.
    This point is never addressed by Protestants. The protestants in Montgomery defeated
    summary judgment by offering scientific evidence that disputed the state engineer’s
    administrative analysis and demonstrated with particularity the rights affected, and the rights
    that might be potentially affected by the applicant’s permit if granted. 
    Id. ¶¶ 8-11.
    Thus, the
    OSE’s determination that a proposed transfer would not impair existing rights was plainly
    rebutted in the record with specificity in that case. The evidence offered in Montgomery and
    the specific allegations of harm to existing water rights established the state engineer’s
    failure to take all of the identified rights into account and provided a basis for our Supreme
    Court to hold that it created an issue of material fact sufficient to defeat summary judgment.
    
    Id. ¶¶ 26-34.
    The protestants’ specific scientific evidence disputing the OSE’s
    administrative analysis and determination allowed our Supreme Court to review that case
    in a manner that was not presented to us here.
    {90} Protestants have not sustained the burden of demonstrating that the district court’s
    findings are not supported by substantial evidence. Likewise, Protestants observe that the
    OSE did not update depletion projections under the original application with the more
    current hydrologic model used to project Rio Grande depletions under the Application.
    Protestants do not demonstrate how the OSE’s failure to reassess the depletions attendant
    to the Permit will either result in specific detriment to other users or undermine the findings
    of the district court. Absent such a showing, this issue is outside of our purview for
    consideration.
    2.     Impairment Resulting From the Return Flow Accounting Methodology
    {91} Finally, Protestants argue that the methodology for calculating return flow credits
    results in surface water flows that will impair existing surface water rights. The essence of
    Protestants’ argument is that return flows at the discharge point may fall short during the
    irrigation season because effluent return flows will be used to offset Rio Grande depletions
    under the Permit. According to Protestants, “[t]he City contends that [the] Permit . . . only
    requires it to return effluent water to the Rio Grande equal to 100% of diverted surface water
    on an annual basis.”
    {92} The Permit is conditioned on the requirement that “an amount of water equivalent
    to the amount of native surface water diverted under this [P]ermit shall be simultaneously
    returned directly to the Rio Grande at [Applicant’s] SWRP wastewater outfall as verified by
    accounting methodology acceptable to the [OSE].” Further, “[t]he requirement of
    simultaneous return flows should ensure that the flow of native water in the Rio Grande
    below the SWRP will be the same as if the DWP diversion did not exist.”
    29
    {93} Protestants again fail to demonstrate how the annual accounting approach related to
    the offset of the Permit depletions will result in impairment, particularly in light of the
    conditions placed on the Permit, or how the annual accounting convention undermines the
    district court findings regarding surface flows and impairment. Likewise, in their argument
    that Applicant’s use of non-city return flow credits will impair existing surface water rights,
    Protestants make no relevant reference to the record and fail to challenge the substance of
    the district court findings. Consequently, we are unable to conclude that the OSE’s
    examination of the Permit’s potential to impair existing water rights lacks consideration or
    sufficient process to conclude that either the OSE or the district court erred in their decisions.
    CONCLUSION
    {94} Because the Application proposed to divert native Rio Grande water for a non-
    consumptive, beneficial use, the Permit must include such an appropriation. However, the
    OSE had jurisdiction of the Application and considered all issues pertinent to an
    appropriation request. We therefore reverse the district court’s approval of the Permit and
    remand to the OSE to reissue the proper Permit. We affirm in all other respects.
    {95}    IT IS SO ORDERED.
    ____________________________________
    RODERICK T. KENNEDY, Chief Judge
    WE CONCUR:
    ____________________________________
    JAMES J. WECHSLER, Judge
    ____________________________________
    JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    Topic Index for Carangelo v. Albuquerque-Bernalillo Cnty. Water Util. Auth., No. 26,757
    ADMINISTRATIVE LAW AND PROCEDURE
    Administrative Appeal
    Arbitrary and Capricious Actions
    Due Process
    Hearings
    Judicial Review
    Legislative Intent
    Notice
    30
    CIVIL PROCEDURE
    Summary Judgment
    CONSTITUTIONAL LAW
    Due Process
    New Mexico Constitution, General
    GOVERNMENT
    State Engineer
    Water and Waster Systems
    JUDGES
    Excusal or Recusal
    JURISDICTION
    Subject Matter
    NATURAL RESOURCES
    Appropriation
    Water Law
    31
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 26,757

Citation Numbers: 2014 NMCA 32

Filed Date: 11/26/2013

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 3/3/2016

Authorities (35)

McLeary v. Department of Game , 91 Wash. 2d 647 ( 1979 )

Stennis v. City of Santa Fe , 143 N.M. 320 ( 2008 )

City of San Antonio v. Texas Water Commission , 10 Tex. Sup. Ct. J. 66 ( 1966 )

In Re Application for Water Rights , 986 P.2d 262 ( 1999 )

County of Amador v. El Dorado County Water Agency , 76 Cal. App. 4th 931 ( 1999 )

public-service-company-of-colorado-v-federal-energy-regulatory-commission , 754 F.2d 1555 ( 1985 )

Port of Seattle v. PCHB , 90 P.3d 659 ( 2004 )

Phelps Dodge Tyrone, Inc. v. New Mexico Water Quality ... , 140 N.M. 464 ( 2006 )

Carlsbad Irr. Dist. v. Ford , 46 N.M. 335 ( 1942 )

State Ex Rel. Erickson v. McLean , 62 N.M. 264 ( 1957 )

In Re Com'n Investigation , 127 N.M. 254 ( 1999 )

Kaiser Steel Corporation v. WS Ranch Company , 81 N.M. 414 ( 1970 )

State Ex Rel. Norvell v. Arizona Public Service Co. , 85 N.M. 165 ( 1973 )

Harkey v. Smith , 31 N.M. 521 ( 1926 )

RICHLANDS IRR. CO. v. WESTVIEW IRR. CO. Et Al. , 96 Utah 403 ( 1938 )

State Ex Rel. Martinez v. McDermett , 120 N.M. 327 ( 1995 )

Las Cruces Professional Fire Fighters v. City of Las Cruces , 123 N.M. 239 ( 1997 )

Self v. United Parcel Service, Inc. , 126 N.M. 396 ( 1998 )

Hanson v. Turney , 136 N.M. 1 ( 2004 )

Reid v. New Mexico Board of Examiners in Optometry , 92 N.M. 414 ( 1979 )

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