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[No. 45471. En Banc. June 14, 1979.]
LLOYD A. PETERSON, Respondent, v. THE
DEPARTMENT OF ECOLOGY, ET AL,
Appellants.
[1] Mandamus - Nature - Procedure. An action seeking a writ of mandamus has all the elements of a civil action and the Superior Court Civil Rules apply to such a proceeding. Issues of fact may be tried to the court or a jury and a judgment entered on the verdict or findings.
[2] Judgment - Collateral Estoppel - Administrative Decision - Sufficiency. An administrative decision is not subject to collateral attack if proper jurisdiction and statutory authority were present and no bad faith or fraud is shown, but it will not collaterally estop judicial litigation unless the same specific issue was actually and necessarily litigated before the administrative body and an unambiguous decision was rendered.
[3] Mandamus - Scope - Discretionary Acts. Mandamus will lie to require an officer to exercise discretion which it is his duty to exercise, but it may not be used to compel the performance of a discretionary act.
[4] Waters and Watercourses - Ground Water Permit - Issuance - Discretion. The issuance of a ground water permit by the Department of Ecology involves the exercise of discretion.
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[5] Constitutional Law - Police Power - Validity - Determination. The validity of an exercise of the police power which restricts the use of private property depends upon a balancing of that encumbrance against the public interest involved. Each case depends upon the particular facts involved.
[6] Administrative Law and Procedure - Judicial Review - Issues Not Appealed - Effect. The failure to challenge a particular administrative conclusion in a superior court review of the final decision of an administrative body precludes consideration of that issue by an appellate court.
Nature of Action: During the pendency of a superior
court review of administrative proceedings involving
applications for ground water permits and a cease and desist
order, the plaintiff filed this mandamus action seeking to
compel the Department of Ecology to issue the desired
water permit.
Superior Court: The Superior Court for Grant County, No. 26641, B. J. McLean, J., on March 17, 1978, ordered the department to issue the permit.
Supreme Court: Finding procedural deficiencies in the mandamus proceeding and holding that the issuance of a ground water permit is not subject to a writ of mandamus, the court reverses the judgment.
Slade Gorton, Attorney General, Charles B. Roe, Jr.,
Senior Assistant, and Robert E. Mack, Assistant, for
appellants.
Schillberg & Sorlien, P.L.C., by Charles T. Schillberg,
for respondent.
WILLIAMS
WILLIAMS, J.-The State Department of Ecology appeals
a writ of mandamus issued by the trial court ordering the
department to issue a permit to respondent Peterson for
the withdrawal of public ground waters. We reverse.
The complex factual and procedural history of this case
can be summarized as follows:
Peterson owns property located within the boundaries of
the state's Quincy Ground Water Management Subarea
308 June 1979
(Quincy Subarea). See WAC 173-124 and 173-134. In or
about 1948, a previous owner, Zimmerman, dug a well on
the property without a permit to do so. Zimmerman's
successor, Shinn, installed a pump in 1956. Since that time,
water has been withdrawn at the rate of 640 gallons per
minute (g.p.m.) for the seasonal irrigation of crops. In
1973, Shinn filed a water right claim with the Department
of Ecology (department) pursuant to RCW 90.14.041.
In 1974, Shinn sold the property to Peterson. Then,
in January 1975, a hold was placed on the processing of
applications for the use of public ground waters in the Quincy
Subarea by the department pending further investigation
of water availability. In February 1975, Peterson filed with
the department two applications involving the use of water.
One was for a permit to use artificially stored ground water
pursuant to WAC 173-136 and the other was for a permit to
withdraw public ground waters pursuant to RCW 90.44.050.
The department returned the applications with notice
that (1) the application for natural ground water must be
resubmitted to obtain a priority date, and (2) no permits
would be issued by the department pending further study
of the Quincy Subarea. Peterson resubmitted the application
for a permit to appropriate public ground water, and
the department gave him a priority date of January 23,
1976. No action was taken on either of the applications
by the department.
In 1977, the department issued a cease and desist order,
as authorized by RCW 43.27A.190, which prohibited Peterson
from making any further withdrawals from the well in
excess of the amounts exempt under RCW 90.44.050 without
a permit. Peterson filed an appeal of the order with the
Pollution Control Hearings Board (PCHB). The notice of
appeal, however, went beyond the question of whether
Peterson was withdrawing water without a permit in
violation of RCW 90.44.050. It also raised the issues of the
propriety of the priority date assigned to the application,
the validity of the department's finding that ground water was
in short supply, and the due process afforded Peterson. An
309 June 1979
amended notice of appeal raised the additional questions of
the effect of a water right claim filed under RCW 90.14,
prescriptive rights, unconstitutional taking, and the
department's abuse of discretion. In short, the appeal of the
cease and desist order raised those issues germane to the
question of whether the department had unlawfully failed
to issue Peterson a permit to withdraw ground waters.
A prehearing conference was held in July 1977 with
attorneys for Peterson and the department. The prehearing
conference report contained the following provisions:
1. CONTENTIONS
Appellant Peterson will rely at the formal hearing on the factual and legal contentions set forth in his Appeal of Order (filed February 16, 1977) and Amended Notice of Appeal of Order (dated March 15, 1977) . . . . . .
IV. ACTION OF PRESIDING OFFICER
1. Issues, exhibits, and witnesses at the hearing on the merits will be limited to those identified herein, . . .
A formal hearing for the appeal of the cease and desist
order was held before the PCHB. The chairman of the
board stated at the outset that he would allow Peterson
to present testimony beyond the scope of the issue of the
lawfulness of the cease and desist order, not because he was
convinced that it was dispositive of the issues of this case
but "to preserve a record for him and to avoid a piecemeal
determination of this matter perhaps at another time by
another body." Peterson then presented testimony and
argument with regard to the merits of the permit
application.
The board issued findings of fact and conclusions of law
and an order. In conclusion of law No. 5, the PCHB stated:
Appellant has failed to successfully challenge the issuance of the Cease and Desist Order and it will be affirmed. Further, *the Board concludes that it has no jurisdiction to compel the Department of Ecology to process an application for a ground water permit*. A hearing before this Board of an appeal which challenges the validity of the Department's Cease and Desist Order does not open up, nor confer original jurisdiction upon
310 June 1979
the Board to determine, the merits of an application for a water right which has not yet been acted upon by the Department. Only in Superior Court will a Writ of Mandamus properly lie to compel the exercise of discretion.
(Footnote omitted. Italics ours.)
Despite this conclusion, the PCHB stated in its finding
of fact No. 4 that "[i]n summary, there would appear to be
ground water available for appropriation by Mr. Peterson."
The board further refused to consider the water right claim
filed in 1973 as an application for a permit, but it changed
Peterson's priority date from January 23, 1976, to February
14, 1975, the date he originally filed his application for
the permits.
Peterson appealed to the Superior Court for Grant
County for a review of one issue only: the PCHB's refusal
to treat Shinn's water right claim under RCW 90.14.041 as
an application for a permit which would result in his
receiving an earlier priority date. In his appeal he did not
challenge conclusion of law No. 5, in which the board stated
that in this particular action it had no jurisdiction to
determine the merits of the permit application or to compel
the department to process an application for a ground
water permit. At the same time that he filed his appeal,
Peterson filed in a separate action in the same court an
alternative petition for mandamus to order the department
to issue a permit for the use of public ground water.
Peterson, on an ex parte order, had the record of the
Pollution Control Hearings Board appeal transferred to the
mandamus cause. It is the mandamus action that is presently
before this court.
In its defense in the mandamus action, the State
answered by admitting certain allegations, denying others,
and asserting 10 affirmative defenses. At trial, the court
allowed no evidence to be presented. Counsel were allowed
to argue the evidence introduced at the PCHB hearing as
well as the findings of that board. At the conclusion of
arguments, the trial court judge announced his intention
to issue the writ of mandamus directing the department to
311 June 1979
grant Peterson a permit. He based his decision in part on
the PCHB's finding that there appeared to be ground water
available for appropriation. The department's motion for
reconsideration was denied and the writ of mandamus was
issued.
On appeal, the department contends that the trial court
erred in refusing to take evidence in the mandamus action
and in basing its decision on the PCHB's findings in the
appeal of the department's cease and desist order. We agree
with these contentions.
[1] The Superior Court Civil Rules apply to all civil
actions, including mandamus proceedings. Chief Seattle
Properties, Inc. v. Kitsap County, 86 Wn.2d 7, 541 P.2d
699 (1975). An application for a writ of mandamus has all
the elements of a civil action. Chief Seattle Properties, Inc.
v. Kitsap County, supra; State ex rel. Amende v. Bremerton,
33 Wn.2d 321, 205 P.2d 1212 (1949). If issues of fact are
raised, they may be tried before the court or a jury, and
an appropriate judgment may be entered upon the verdict
or findings. State ex rel. Amende v. Bremerton, supra;
State ex rel. Ryder v. Pasco, 3 Wn. App. 928, 478 P.2d 262
(1970). The department argues that it raised in its answer a
number of factual issues, including that of whether public
ground water was available. The department therefore
concludes that it was entitled to introduce evidence on
this point at the trial.
Peterson contends that the department was not entitled
to give testimony because the answer raised only questions
of law, the facts having been determined by the PCHB.
RCW 7.16.250 provides, in part, that:
If the answer raises only questions of law, or puts in issue immaterial statements not affecting the substantial rights of the party, the court must proceed to hear or fix a day for hearing the argument of the case.
Peterson claims that the department answer raised only one valid question of fact, i.e., of the availability of public ground water. He argues that the PCHB's finding of fact No. 4 collaterally estopped the department from denying
312 June 1979
that public ground water is available for appropriation
at the Peterson site. The department argues that the
application of the doctrine of collateral estoppel was
not appropriate in this case. We find the department to
be correct on this point.
[2] An order or determination of an administrative body
acting with jurisdiction and under authority of law is not
subject to collateral attack in the absence of fraud or bad
faith. Charles Pankow, Inc. v. Holman Properties, Inc., 13 Wn. App. 537, 536 P.2d 28 (1975). See Knestis v.
Unemployment Compensation & Placement Div., 16 Wn.2d 577,
134 P.2d 76 (1943).
The doctrine of collateral estoppel precludes parties from
relitigating issues which have been actually and necessarily
contested and determined in prior actions between the
same parties. Haslund v. Seattle, 86 Wn.2d 607, 547 P.2d
1221 (1976); King v. Seattle, 84 Wn.2d 239, 525 P.2d 228
(1974). The question becomes whether the availability of
public ground water was actually and necessarily contested
and determined in the appeal of the cease and desist order
before the PCHB
.
Pursuant to RCW 43.27A.190, the director of the Department
of Water Resources may issue a cease and desist order
if a person is violating or is about to violate the
provisions of RCW 90.44. With certain exemptions, none of
which appears applicable here, a permit is required for
the withdrawal of public ground water. RCW 90.44.050.
Therefore, upon appeal of the cease and desist order, the
only issue properly before the PCHB was whether Peterson
had withdrawn public ground water in violation of RCW 90.44, i.e., without a permit.
Peterson contends, however, that in his appeal of the
order and amended notice of appeal of the order, he raised
issues pertinent to the issuance of a permit and that in
the prehearing conference report the department attorney
agreed to litigate those issues. The language of provisions I
and IV of that report indicates that at trial Peterson would
be *limited* to the contentions set forth in his appeal of
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order and amended notice of appeal of order. Neither of
those provisions indicates that the State agreed to litigate
all of those issues.
More importantly, even if the department had agreed to
litigate those issues, the PCHB specifically held in conclusion
of law No. 5 that it *lacked jurisdiction* to adjudicate
issues regarding the issuance of a permit where the
department had not made an initial determination. Peterson
never appealed this conclusion of law. Therefore, the
board's finding that "there would appear to be ground
water available for appropriation by Mr. Peterson" cannot
be considered to have been actually and necessarily
contested and determined by the PCHB. Accordingly, the trial
court's application of the doctrine of collateral estoppel
was erroneous.
There is another reason why the trial court erred in
applying the doctrine of collateral estoppel in this case.
An ambiguous and inconsistent judgment should not be the
basis for an estoppel by judgment. Henderson v. Bardahl
Int'l Corp., 72 Wn.2d 109, 431 P.2d 961 (1967). The
department correctly argues that the statement is ambiguous
because (1) it merely states that "*there would appear*"
to be available ground water, and (2) it does not specify
whether public ground water or artificially stored ground
water is intended.
For these reasons, it is our conclusion that the trial court
erred in applying the doctrine of collateral estoppel and in
refusing to allow the department to introduce testimony on
the availability of public ground waters in its defense in
the mandamus action.
The department raises still another issue in which we
find merit. The State does not contest the authority of the
superior court to order an officer to exercise his discretion.
See State ex rel. Brown v. Board of Dental Examiners, 38
Wash. 325, 80 P. 544 (1905). It asserts, however, that in
ordering the department to issue a permit, the trial court
improperly commanded the State to perform a
discretionary act.
314 June 1979
[3] Though mandamus will lie to direct an officer to
exercise the discretion which it is his duty to exercise,
mandamus will not lie to compel performance of a discretionary
act. Neal v. Wallace, 15 Wn. App. 506, 550 P.2d 539 (1976).
See also Lillions v. Gibbs, 47 Wn.2d 629, 289 P.2d
203 (1955). The question is then one of whether the
issuance of a permit to withdraw ground water is a
discretionary act.
[4] Before a permit can be issued, the department must
find four elements.
The statute [RCW 90.03.290] requires the department to make essentially four determinations prior to the issuance of a water use permit: (1) what water, if any, is available; (2) to what beneficial uses the water is to be applied; (3) will the appropriation impair existing rights; and (4) will the appropriation detrimentally affect the public welfare.
Stempel v. Department of Water Resources, 82 Wn.2d 109,
115, 508 P.2d 166 (1973).
It is our opinion that decisions on these issues involve the
exercise of discretion. This holding accords with the case
law of other states to the effect that considerable discretion
is given to agencies with duties similar to those of
Washington's Department of Ecology. See Smyth v. Jenkins,
208 Ore. 92, 299 P.2d 819 (1956); American Fork
Irrigation Co. v. Linke, 121 Utah 90, 239 P.2d 188 (1951);
and Kirk v. State Bd. of Irrigation, 90 Neb. 627, 134 N.W.
167 (1912).
Our holding that the issuance of a permit to appropriate
ground water is a discretionary act leads to the conclusion
that the trial court erred in directing the department to
issue such a permit.
Peterson claims that even if the issuance of a permit is
a discretionary act, the department acted in a manner so
arbitrary and capricious as to evidence a total failure to
exercise discretion, thereby entitling him to relief in
mandamus. See State ex rel. Tubbs v. Spokane, 53 Wn.2d 35,
330 P.2d 718 (1958); Miller v. Pacific County, 9 Wn. App. 177,
315 June 1979
509 P.2d 377 (1973). We find no support for this
argument in the record.
We are not unmindful of Peterson's frustrations in his
attempt to move the department to issue him a permit so
that he may irrigate his property. Although there may be
merit in his assertion that he is entitled to a permit to
withdraw public ground water, he has not sought relief
through the proper channels. What he should have done,
and still may do, is bring an action in mandamus before the
superior court to compel the department to *exercise its
discretion*, i.e., to act on his application. In accordance
with this opinion, neither party would be estopped by any
finding by the PCHB which was not actually and necessarily
litigated in the course of the appeal of the cease and desist
order. Such a trial would be held in accordance with the
Superior Court Civil Rules, and parties would be permitted
to introduce evidence relevant to the action on mandamus.
If the department is ordered to exercise its discretion as
a result of such trial, Peterson would be entitled to
department action on his application. /1 If the department
rules unfavorably on his application, he can then appeal the
department's decision to the PCHB. At that point he would
be entitled to argue the merits of the department's refusal
to issue him a permit before the board, and the board
would have jurisdiction to rule on those issues. If the board
also rules against him on appeal, he may seek review of the
decision in superior court.
[5] Finally, Peterson raises a number of issues in his
appeal brief. First, he argues that the department's failure
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1 The State contended in argument before this court that before it can properly exercise its discretion, it must drill additional test wells and do further research on the availability of water in the Quincy Subarea. The department admits that the completion of such research and testing would take a considerable period of time and would require more funds than are presently available to the department for this project. If the trial judge finds that the department cannot properly exercise its discretion without having completed these tests, and on that ground declines to issue the order of mandamus, he may feel it appropriate to invoke his equity powers and issue a stay of the cease and desist order until such time as the department is able to act.
_______________
316 June 1979
to issue him a permit is an unconstitutional taking. The
relevant inquiry in such a challenge is whether the regulatory
scheme is an exercise of police power rather than one of
condemnation. The question is one of social policy which
requires the balancing of the public interest in regulating
the use of private property against the interests of private
landowners not to be encumbered by restrictions on the use
of their property. Maple Leaf Investors, Inc. v. Department
of Ecology, 88 Wn.2d 726, 565 P.2d 1162 (1977). The
court must decide each case on its own facts. Maple Leaf
Investors, Inc. We find the permit requirement to be a
reasonable exercise of the State's police power.
[6] Peterson also argues that he has acquired a right to
the use of water by adverse possession or prescription. In
the collateral administrative proceeding, the board rejected
this argument, stating that "[n]o right to the use of ground
waters of the State can be acquired against the State itself
by prescription or adverse use." Peterson did not appeal
this conclusion of the board in his appeal of that action
to the superior court; he is therefore estopped from raising
it here. We note, however, our recent ruling in McLeary v.
Department of Game, 91 Wn.2d 647, 591 P.2d 778 (1979),
which states that water rights cannot be acquired against
the State by prescriptive use.
Finally, Peterson claims that the government should be
equitably estopped from denying him a permit because of
longstanding notice of his well. Although the State may be
subject to equitable estoppel on account of its conduct,
see Shafer v. State, 83 Wn.2d 618, 521 P.2d 736 (1974), the
record reflects no conduct on the part of the government
which would call for the application of the doctrine in this
case.
317 June 1979
The judgment of the trial court is reversed.
UTTER, C.J., and ROSELLINI, STAFFORD, WRIGHT, BRACHTENBACH, HOROWITZ, DOLLIVER, and HICKS, JJ., concur.