2010 WI App 127 | Wis. Ct. App. | 2010
¶ 1. The Lake Beulah Management District (the District) appeals from an order granting summary judgment to the Village of East Troy
¶ 2. This case represents the latest chapter in ongoing litigation stemming from Well #7. We cite a recently released companion case, Lake Beulah Management District v. DNR, 2010 WI App 85, 327 Wis. 2d 222, 787 N.W.2d 926, for relevant background information. In 2000, the Village began searching for a new well site in order to provide an adequate water supply to its citizens. The site chosen was approximately 1400 feet from Lake Beulah, an 834-acre lake in Walworth county. Id., ¶ 3. This site was subsequently annexed into the Village in August 2003.
¶ 3. In June 2003, the DNR approved a permit for the construction of the well, dubbed Well #7. Based on the opinion of a consultant hired by the Village, the DNR concluded the well "would avoid any serious disruption of groundwater discharge to Lake Beulah." Id. After a swarm of litigation delayed construction, an "extension" of the DNR's permit was granted in September 2005. In Lake Beulah we held that this extension operated as a new permit, thus avoiding any conflict with the expiration date of the 2003 permit. See id., ¶ 14. Construction ultimately began in 2006 and the well was operational by August 1, 2008. It is estimated that Well #7 has a pumping capacity of up to 1,440,000 gallons per day. See id., ¶ 3. In Lake Beulah we held that the DNR had the authority to review the public trust implications of Well #7, and we remanded to the DNR to reconsider its approval of Well #7 in light of
¶ 4. The instant case concerns the District's attempt to circumvent the DNR's approval of Well #7 by passing an ordinance preventing operation of the well. In 1968, the town of East Troy
¶ 5. On December 11, 2006, the District adopted Ordinance No. 2006-03 (the Ordinance), entitled An Ordinance Prohibiting the Net Transfer of Groundwater and Surface Water from Lake District Hydrologic Basin. The Ordinance prohibited the transfer or diversion of surface water or groundwater out of the District's jurisdiction without a permit:
*646 Section 2. PROHIBITED ACTS. It shall be unlawful and prohibited by this Ordinance for any person or entity to do any of the following unless such acts are authorized in advance by and performed in conformance with a valid permit issued by the District pursuant to this Ordinance:
A. Divert or transfer surface water out of the Lake Beulah Surface Water Drainage Basin. ■
B. Divert, transfer, or induce the diversion or transfer of groundwater out of the Lake Beulah Groundwater Basin.
E. Withdraw groundwater from within the Lake Beulah Groundwater Basin and then divert or transfer said water out of the Lake Beulah Groundwater Basin.
¶ 6. Notably, the Ordinance applies regardless of whether acts causing water withdrawal occur inside or outside the District's boundaries. Moreover, the Ordinance states that no permit will be issued "unless a volume of water equal to at least 95% of the water actually diverted or transferred is returned to the Hydrologic Basin at the location(s) where the adverse effects of the proposed use, action, diversion or transfer will be mitigated."
¶ 7. This Ordinance clearly implicates the proposed use of Well #7, which the District alleges would "intercept and remove groundwater that would otherwise sustain Lake Beulah." While the well is not located within the District's physical boundaries, the District has included the well site within the Lake's "groundwater basin." Under a separate DNR permit, the water used by the Village is ultimately discharged into a different body of water, so ninety-five percent of the water removed by the well would not be returned to the basin as the Ordinance purports to require.
¶ 9. On July 22, 2008, the District brought an action for declaratory judgment upholding the Ordinance. The Village moved for summary judgment, arguing, inter alia, that the Ordinance was preempted by and conflicted with state law.
¶ 11. The District operates "with the powers of a municipal corporation" under Wis. Stat. § 60.77(2), and "municipality" in this context is explicitly inclusive of lake protection and rehabilitation districts. Wis. Stat. § 281.01(6). Therefore, the District "may pass ordinances which, while addressed to local issues, concomitantly regulate matters of statewide concern." See DeRosso, 200 Wis. 2d at 650. This is to say that the District's ordinances are not presumed invalid simply because they invoke a matter of statewide concern, such as the drilling of high-capacity drinking water wells. However, the long-standing rule is that a municipal ordinance may not conflict with state legislation; otherwise, the ordinance is preempted. See Fox v. City of Racine, 225 Wis. 542, 546, 275 N.W 513 (1937). Generally, a municipal ordinance is preempted if "(1) the
¶ 12. The DNR's authority is found in Wis. Stat. chs. 280 and 281. Section 280.11(1) provides:
The department shall, after a public hearing, prescribe, publish and enforce minimum reasonable standards and rules and regulations for methods to be pursued in the obtaining of pure drinking water for human consumption and the establishing of all safeguards deemed necessary in protecting the public health against the hazards of polluted sources of impure water supplies intended or used for human consumption, including minimum reasonable standards for the construction of well pits. It shall have general supervision and control of all methods of obtaining groundwater for human consumption including sanitary conditions surrounding the same, the construction or reconstruction of wells and generally to prescribe, amend, modify or repeal any rule or regulation theretofore prescribed and shall do and perform any act deemed necessary for the safeguarding of public health. (Emphasis added.)
¶ 13. These statutes expressly seek to create a "comprehensive program under a single state agency for the enhancement of the quality management and protection of all waters of the state, ground and surface, public and private." Wis. Stat. § 281.11. Further, the legislature explicitly states that the DNR's powers "shall be liberally construed." Id.-, see also Wisconsin's Envtl. Decade, Inc. v. DNR, 85 Wis. 2d 518, 528-29, 271 N.W.2d 69 (1978). Wisconsin Stat. § 281.34 specifically deals with "groundwater withdrawals," and provides that any proposed well with a capacity of greater than
¶ 14. Conversely, the District's authority stems from aforementioned Wis. Stat. § 33.22(1), which authorizes the District to, inter alia, "do any other acts necessary to carry out a program of lake protection and rehabilitation." The District argues that such language is an express grant of "extremely broad powers to protect the quality of public inland lakes," and allows for the District to pass Ordinances setting standards for the construction of wells. Moreover, the District contends that the DNR's mandate only speaks to "how" groundwater may be withdrawn, while the Ordinance regulates "whether and how much" of the groundwater may be taken. In support, the District relies heavily upon a thirty-nine-page memorandum sent within the office of former Wisconsin Attorney General Peggy A. Lautenschlager, which addressed an ordinance passed by the town of Richfield in 2005.
¶ 16. We agree with the circuit court's conclusion. The legislature has explicitly delegated to the DNR the authority to permit the construction of certain wells, and has directed that such authority be construed liberally. See Wis. Stat. §§ 280.11(1), 281.11. The Ordinance creates a loophole whereby a DNR-approved well, like Well #7, is prevented from operating in lieu of another localized permit. In essence, the Ordinance casts the District and the DNR as "locomotives on a collision course," in direct conflict with one another. See State ex rel. Michalek v. LeGrand, 77 Wis. 2d 520, 530, 253 N.W.2d 505 (1977).
¶ 17. We hold that the Ordinance logically conflicts with, defeats the purpose of, and violates the spirit of the legislature's delegation of authority to the DNR.
¶ 18. Furthermore, even if given great deference, the assistant attorney general's memorandum does not advance the District's arguments. It not only refers to a factually distinct situation involving a different ordinance, but it reaches a limited conclusion — that ordinances directed at the preservation of groundwater are not presumptively invalid. If anything, the memorandum serves to weaken the District's position given its suggestion that "under conflict-preemption analysis, a local regulation that would interfere with a DNR groundwater protection measure taken under Chapter
¶ 19. State law explicitly delegated the authority over high-capacity well permits to the DNR, and the Ordinance is clearly in direct conflict with that authority. Therefore, we hold that the Ordinance is preempted under the DeRosso tests and rendered unenforceable. Accordingly, we affirm the circuit court's order granting summary judgment to the Village of East Troy.
By the Court. — Judgment affirmed.
The town of East Troy is not to be confused with the Village of East Troy, the respondent in the instant case.
All references to the Wisconsin Statutes are to the 2007-08 version, unless otherwise noted.
The parties also sparred over whether the District had any general regulatory authority to enact the Ordinance and whether the District had "extraterritorial" authority to enforce the Ordinance on the Village. However, our analysis is limited to the preemption issue, which is dispositive. Therefore, while these arguments were made again on appeal, we do not address them here. See Walgreen Co. v. City of Madison, 2008 WI 80, ¶ 2, 311 Wis. 2d 158, 752 N.W.2d 687 (noting that when resolution of one issue is dispositive, we need not reach other issues raised by the parties).
The Village also moves to strike a portion of the District's reply brief on appeal, arguing that a portion of that brief raised
This is not a "formal opinion" from the Attorney General, as the District claims. The first page of the document makes clear that it is a memorandum from the then-assistant attorney general to the then-attorney general. It is not among the attorney general's published opinions.
The Village has moved for attorney fees and costs on grounds that this appeal is frivolous pursuant to Wis. Stat. § 809.25(3)(c)2. We deny the motion. To be frivolous, the appeal must be without any basis in law. Black v. Metro Title, Inc., 2006 WI App 52, ¶ 15 n.3, 290 Wis. 2d 213, 712 N.W.2d 395. Given the presumption of validity with respect to municipal ordinances and the fact that the legislature has not explicitly withdrawn the District's power to pass the Ordinance, we find that the District's appeal, though unsuccessful, is not frivolous. See State ex rel. Grand Bazaar Liquors, Inc. v. City of Milwau