brownsville-irrigation-district-bayview-irrigation-district-cameron ( 2008 )


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  •       TEXAS COURT OF APPEALS, THIRD DISTRICT, AT AUSTIN
    NO. 03-06-00690-CV
    Brownsville Irrigation District, Bayview Irrigation District,
    Cameron County Irrigation District No. 6, Hidalgo and Cameron Counties Irrigation
    District No. 9, and Valley Acres Irrigation District, Appellants
    v.
    Texas Commission on Environmental Quality; Presidio Valley Farms, Inc.;
    Maverick County; City of Laredo; and City of Eagle Pass Water Works System, Appellees
    FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF TRAVIS COUNTY, 98TH JUDICIAL DISTRICT
    NO. D-1-GN-06-000840, HONORABLE LORA J. LIVINGSTON, JUDGE PRESIDING
    OPINION
    This case concerns whether the Texas Commission on Environmental Quality
    properly allowed a party authorized to divert water from the Rio Grande to change the location of
    and the purpose for that diversion of water. Appellee Presidio Valley Farms, Inc. has a certificate
    of adjudication1 authorizing it to divert a certain amount of water each year from the Rio Grande at
    several locations in Presidio County and to use the water for irrigation purposes. In 2003, in
    conjunction with Maverick County, the City of Laredo, and the City of Eagle Pass Water Works
    System, Presidio Valley Farms filed applications with the Commission to amend its certificate of
    1
    A certificate of adjudication is essentially a water rights permit that has been subjected to
    a water rights adjudication proceeding. City of Marshall v. City of Uncertain, 
    124 S.W.3d 690
    , 692
    n.1 (Tex. App.—Austin 2003), aff’d in part and remanded, 
    206 S.W.3d 97
    (Tex. 2006); see
    Water Rights Adjudication Act, Tex. Water Code Ann. §§ 11.301-.341 (West 2008).
    adjudication to relocate the authorized points of diversion in Presidio County to points of diversion
    downstream in Maverick County, Laredo, and Eagle Pass and to change the purpose of use of the
    water from irrigation to municipal. Appellants Brownsville Irrigation District, Bayview Irrigation
    District, Cameron County Irrigation District No. 6, Hidalgo and Cameron Counties Irrigation District
    No. 9, and Valley Acres Irrigation District (collectively, “the Water Districts”) intervened to protest
    the applications. After a contested case hearing, an administrative law judge issued a proposal for
    decision recommending that the applications be denied. The Texas Commission on Environmental
    Quality declined to follow the ALJ’s recommendation and instead, entered an order approving the
    applications. The Water Districts sought judicial review of the Commission’s order, and the district
    court affirmed the order.
    The sole issue presented on appeal is whether the Commission complied with
    its administrative rule governing amendments to water rights in approving the applications of
    Presidio Valley Farms, Maverick County, the City of Laredo, and the City of Eagle Pass Water
    Works System to amend the certificate of adjudication. Specifically, we are asked to decide whether
    the Commission approved “an applicable conversion factor” for the transfer of the points of
    diversion and place of use from Presidio County to Maverick County, Laredo, and Eagle Pass as
    required by section 303.42(4) of the administrative code. See 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 303.42(4)
    (2005). We conclude that the Commission complied with section 303.42(4) of the administrative
    code in approving the applications and, therefore, affirm the judgment of the district court.
    2
    Background
    Presidio Valley Farms is located in Presidio County, Texas, which is bordered by a
    portion of the Rio Grande known as the Upper Rio Grande.2 Presidio Valley Farms owns surface
    water rights pursuant to Certificate of Adjudication No. 23-952 authorizing the diversion of 8,059
    acre-feet of water per year from the river at ten locations, or points of diversion, in Presidio County.
    Under this certificate of adjudication, the water diverted by Presidio Valley Farms is to be used for
    irrigation purposes.    In 2003, after filing for bankruptcy protection, Presidio Valley Farms
    entered into sales agreements to sell its water rights under the certificate of adjudication to
    Maverick County, Eagle Pass, and Laredo, which are located downstream from Presidio County in
    the Middle Rio Grande region.
    After the sales agreements were approved by the bankruptcy court, Presidio Valley
    Farms, in connection with Maverick County, Eagle Pass, and Laredo, filed three applications
    with the Commission to amend its certificate of adjudication. The applications sought to transfer
    the points of diversion in Presidio County to points of diversion downstream in Maverick County,
    Eagle Pass, and Laredo, change the purpose of use of the water from irrigation to municipal, change
    the place of use from Presidio County to the service areas of Maverick County, Eagle Pass, and
    Laredo, and reduce the combined diversion rates from 173.8 cubic feet per second to 75 cubic feet
    2
    The Texas Commission on Environmental Quality’s administrative rules governing the
    operation of the Rio Grande apply to three portions of the river—the Upper Rio Grande, the
    Middle Rio Grande, and the Lower Rio Grande. See 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 303.1 (2005).
    The Upper Rio Grande is the segment of the river between Fort Quitman, Texas, and the
    Amistad Reservoir dam, the Middle Rio Grande is the segment of the river between the
    Amistad Reservoir dam and the Falcon Reservoir dam, and the Lower Rio Grande is the segment
    of the river between the Falcon Reservoir dam and the Gulf of Mexico. See 
    id. § 303.2
    (2005).
    3
    per second. Under the proposed amendments, the amount of water available at the points of
    diversion in Maverick County, Eagle Pass, and Laredo would vary depending on the amount of water
    that could have been diverted approximately one week earlier at the points of diversion in Presidio
    County.3 Additionally, the proposed amendments required the Rio Grande watermaster4 to follow
    a twelve-step accounting procedure to reduce the amount of water available at the new points of
    diversion to account for natural channel and transportation losses that occur as water flows down the
    river.   Lastly, the proposed amendments contained several “special conditions” to give the
    watermaster flexibility to take necessary actions to protect downstream water rights in the Middle
    and Lower Rio Grande.
    The Water Districts intervened, arguing that the applications to amend
    Certificate of Adjudication No. 23-952 should be denied because the Commission did not approve
    an “applicable conversion factor” as required by section 303.42(4) of the administrative code, which
    governs the transfer of points of diversion or place of use of water rights from the Upper Rio Grande
    to the Middle and Lower Rio Grande. See 
    id. After a
    contested case hearing, an administrative law
    judge with the State Office of Administrative Hearings issued a proposal for decision recommending
    that the Commission deny the applications. The proposal for decision stated:
    3
    The one-week lag time is used to account for the time it takes the water to flow
    approximately 450 to 600 river miles downstream from the points of diversion in Presidio County
    to the proposed points of diversion in Maverick County, Eagle Pass, and Laredo.
    4
    The watermaster is the person appointed by the executive director of the Commission
    pursuant to section 11.326(a) of the Texas Water Code to administer water rights in a given
    water division or group of water divisions. 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 304.3(15) (2005); see
    Tex. Water Code Ann. §§ 11.326 (appointment of watermaster), .327 (duties of watermaster)
    (West 2008).
    4
    the Commission’s rules at 30 Tex. Admin. Code (TAC) § 303.42(4)(A) require the
    application of a conversion factor when diversion points are transferred from the
    Upper Rio Grande to the Middle Rio Grande and the use of the water is converted
    from irrigation to municipal. Because Applicants have failed to include an applicable
    conversion factor in their proposed amended COAs, the ALJ recommends that the
    Commission deny the applications.
    The Commission disagreed with the ALJ’s recommendation and entered an order approving
    the applications, finding that “the channel and transportation losses and Special Conditions
    contained in the Draft Amendments constitute an applicable conversion factor referred to in
    30 TAC § 303.42(4)(A).” The Water Districts sought judicial review of the Commission’s order,
    and the district court affirmed the order.
    Discussion
    The sole issue on appeal concerns whether the Commission approved an
    “applicable conversion factor” as required by section 303.42(4) of the administrative code in
    approving the applications of Presidio Valley Farms, Maverick County, Eagle Pass, and Laredo to
    amend Certificate of Adjudication No. 23-952. To place the parties’ arguments on this issue in
    context, we briefly summarize the administration of water rights and distribution of water to water
    rights holders in different areas along the Rio Grande.
    Presidio Valley Farms’ water rights under Certificate of Adjudication No. 23-952 are
    governed by the appropriation system applicable to water from the Upper Rio Grande.5 Under this
    system, which applies to all water rights in the Upper Rio Grande, the available water flowing in the
    5
    This appropriation system was previously applicable to the entire Rio Grande, but is not
    currently applicable to the Middle and Lower Rio Grande.
    5
    river is allocated based on the date order in which the water rights were acquired or originally
    granted by the State of Texas, with the oldest water right being allocated its authorized share of water
    first, followed by the second oldest water right, and so forth. Additionally, the type of use authorized
    by the water right—domestic, municipal, irrigation, etc.—has no bearing on water allocations among
    holders of water rights. Water rights governed by this appropriation system are often referred to as
    “run-of-the-river rights” because the water supply for these type of rights is limited to the water
    flowing in the river that is not subject to use by senior appropriators downstream.
    This “run-of-the-river” appropriation system does not apply, however, to water rights
    in the Middle and Lower Rio Grande that are supplied from the Amistad and Falcon Reservoirs. In
    these regions, distribution of water to water rights holders is governed by a system that gives priority
    to certain authorized uses of the water irrespective of the date that the water right was acquired.
    According to the Commission’s rules, the Rio Grande watermaster maintains a 225,000 acre-feet
    reserve for domestic, municipal, and industrial (“DMI”) uses of the water, which is set aside and
    replenished each month out of the United States’ share of water in the Amistad and Falcon
    Reservoirs. See 30 Tex. Admin. Code §§ 303.21, .22 (2005). The watermaster then allocates water
    from the “usable storage” of the Amistad and Falcon Reservoirs each month to various “accounts”
    based on the authorized use of the water, giving priority to DMI water rights. See 
    id. § 303.2
    2.
    After water is completely allocated to DMI water rights, any remaining water is allocated
    to irrigation water rights. See 
    id. Irrigation water
    rights are further divided into two priority
    classifications—Class A water rights and Class B water rights. Id.; see also 30 Tex. Admin. Code
    6
    § 303.2 (2005). Class A water rights holders receive 1.7 times as much water as Class B water rights
    holders when water is available for allocation to irrigation use. 30 Tex. Admin. Code § 303.22.
    All holders of certificates of adjudication must obtain authority from the Commission
    to change the place of use, purpose of use, or point of diversion, or otherwise alter a water right. See
    Tex. Water Code Ann. § 11.122(a) (West 2008). Section 11.122 of the water code provides:
    Subject to meeting all other applicable requirements of [chapter 11 of the water code]
    for the approval of an application, an amendment, except an amendment to a water
    right that increases the amount of water authorized to be diverted or the authorized
    rate of diversion, shall be authorized if the requested change will not cause adverse
    impact on other water right holders or the environment on the stream of greater
    magnitude than under the circumstances in which the . . . certificate of adjudication
    that is sought to be amended was fully exercised according to its terms and
    conditions as they existed before the requested amendment.
    
    Id. § 11.122(b).
    Section 11.122 also provides that the Commission “shall adopt rules to effectuate
    the provisions of this section.” 
    Id. § 11.122(c).
    The Commission’s rule governing amendments to water rights prohibits the transfer
    of the point of diversion or place of use of water rights from the Lower and Middle Rio Grande to
    the Upper Rio Grande (a transfer upstream). See Tex. Admin. Code § 303.42(3). However, the
    amendments sought by Presidio Valley Farms, Maverick County, Eagle Pass, and Laredo to
    Certificate of Adjudication No. 23-952 seek to transfer the points of diversion and places of use from
    the Upper Rio Grande into the Middle Rio Grande (a transfer downstream). Section 303.42 of the
    administrative code allows these types of transfers if certain requirements are met. That section
    provides, in relevant part:
    7
    (4) Transfers of the point of diversion or place of use of water rights from the Upper
    Rio Grande into the Middle and Lower Rio Grande below International Amistad
    Reservoir will be prohibited unless:
    (A) an applicable conversion factor has been approved by the
    commission;
    (B) the commission finds that the transfer would not impair other
    water rights within the Middle and Lower Rio Grande; and
    (C) the commission finds that the transfer would not reduce the
    amount of water available for allocation.
    
    Id. § 303.42(4).
    In this appeal, the Water Districts argue that the Commission erred by approving
    the applications to amend Certification of Adjudication No. 23-952 because it did not
    approve “an applicable conversion factor” as required by section 303.42(4)(A).6 Although the
    term “applicable conversion factor” is not defined anywhere in the rules or the water code, the
    Water Districts argue that section 303.43 of the administrative code, which governs the conversion
    of Class A and B irrigation water rights to DMI rights within the Middle and Lower Rio Grande,
    requires the Commission to apply 0.5 as “an applicable conversion factor” to Presidio Valley Farms’
    water rights in order to approve the requested amendments.
    The Commission responds that it approved an applicable conversion factor by
    reducing the maximum amount of water that Maverick County, Eagle Pass, and Laredo can divert
    to account for channel and transportation losses and by allowing the watermaster to take actions to
    6
    The Water Districts do not challenge the Commission’s findings pursuant to
    section 303.42(4)(B) and (C) that the proposed transfer would not impair other water rights within
    the Middle and Lower Rio Grande or reduce the amount of water available for allocation.
    8
    protect downstream water rights in the Middle and Lower Rio Grande when necessary. It argues
    that “an applicable conversion factor” is an intentionally undefined term and that what constitutes
    “an applicable conversion factor” changes upon the facts of each proposed transfer of the points of
    diversion or places of use from the Upper Rio Grande into the Middle or Lower Rio Grande.
    According to the Commission, as long as it approves certain measures that are designed to protect
    other water rights and the water available for allocation on a case-by-case basis for each proposed
    transfer, this satisfies the requirement that the Commission approve “an applicable conversion
    factor” in section 303.42(4)(A). When, as here, there are aspects of the application of a regulation
    that are policy determinations, we will defer to the agency’s policy determinations as to those
    aspects of the application of the regulation unless they are plainly erroneous, inconsistent with
    the language of the rule, inconsistent with statute, or a violation of the constitution. BFI Waste Sys.
    of N. Am., Inc. v. Martinez Envtl. Group, 
    93 S.W.3d 570
    , 575-76 (Tex. App.—Austin 2002,
    pet. denied); H.G. Sledge Inc. v. Prospective Inv. & Trading Co., 36 S.W.3d. 597, 604
    (Tex. App.—Austin 2000, pet. denied).
    We conclude that the Commission’s interpretation of section 303.42(4)(A) is not
    erroneous or inconsistent with the language of the rule or a statute. The fact that neither the water
    code nor the rule defines what constitutes “an applicable conversion factor” indicates that the
    Commission may, by design, exercise discretion in deciding what kind of conversion factor to apply
    in each case. Additionally, the following comment to subsection (4) of section 303.42 when it was
    adopted in 2001 suggests that the Commission is only required to approve certain measures designed
    9
    to protect the other water rights and the water available for allocation in approving an applicable
    conversion factor for each proposed transfer:
    New language is proposed in § 303.42(4) to define the conditions for an inverse sale
    (from above International Amistad Reservoir to the Lower and Middle Rio Grande
    Basins). These transfers would be prohibited unless the transfer request uses a
    conversion factor approved by the commission which would not impair other water
    rights or water available for allocation. This change is necessary to clarify that
    such a transfer is not allowed without an approved conversion factor and a
    showing of no impairment of other water rights because water rights in the Lower
    and Middle Rio Grande Basins are administered under a totally different system than
    exists above International Amistad Reservoir. These rights can only be transferred
    in a manner that ensures protection of other water rights.
    26 Tex. Reg. 3013 (2001).
    In addition, the provisions of section 303.43 of the administrative code, which govern
    the conversion of Class A and B irrigation water rights to DMI rights within the Middle and Lower
    Rio Grande, do not supply the applicable conversion factor required by section 303.42(4)(A).
    Section 303.43 provides that “[a]ll Class A and B priority rights in the Lower and
    Middle Rio Grande which have been or will be acquired for domestic, municipal, or industrial use
    shall be amended to authorize the change in purpose of use and converted to receive a definite
    quantity of water in acre-feet per annum.” 30 Tex. Admin. Code 303.43. The rule then states how
    to convert these priority rights to reflect a change in purpose of use, providing that “[o]ne acre-foot
    of Class A irrigation water right shall be converted to 0.5 acre-feet of water per annum for
    either domestic, municipal, or industrial purposes.” 
    Id. Section 303.43
    does not control this case,
    however, because Presidio Valley Farms’ water rights under Certificate of Adjudication No. 23-952
    are not Class A irrigation water rights in the Middle or Lower Rio Grande. Instead, as discussed
    10
    above, Presidio Valley Farms’ water rights are located in the Upper Rio Grande and are governed
    by a different appropriation system. Presidio Valley Farms’ water rights are run-of-the-river rights.
    Although the proposed amendments to Certificate of Adjudication No. 23-952 relocate the points
    of diversion to the Middle Rio Grande and change the use of the water from irrigation to municipal,
    the water right itself remains a run-of-the-river right. In other words, the proposed amendments
    do not convert the water right from an Upper Rio Grande run-of-the-river water right to a
    Middle Rio Grande priority-based, Class A irrigation water right simply because the water is diverted
    at a different location and used for a different purpose. Because section 303.43 only governs the
    conversion of Class A and B irrigation water rights to DMI water rights, it has no bearing on whether
    the Commission approved an applicable conversion factor in approving the requested amendments
    to the run-of-the-river rights at issue in this case.
    We hold that the Commission approved an applicable conversion factor in approving
    the requested amendments to Certificate of Adjudication No. 23-952 in accordance with its rules.
    Consequently, we affirm the judgment of the district court.
    __________________________________________
    G. Alan Waldrop, Justice
    Before Chief Justice Law, Justices Waldrop and Henson
    Affirmed
    Filed: August 28, 2008
    11
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 03-06-00690-CV

Filed Date: 8/28/2008

Precedential Status: Precedential

Modified Date: 2/1/2016