{1} In Stennis v. City of Santa Fe,
{2} The sole issue on appeal is whether Section 3-53-1.1(D) allows for substantial compliance. We hold that it does not and reverse the order of the district court.
BACKGROUND
{3} In 1999, the City passed an ordinance restricting the drilling of domestic water wells. Stennis,
{4} Plaintiff Maria T. Stennis (Stennis) is one such applicant. In 2003 she applied for and was issued a well permit from the OSE. As Stennis’s well fell within the city limits, the OSE notified the City, which then informed Stennis of its own internal permit requirement. Id. ¶ 7. Stennis chose to challenge the City’s authority to enact the ordinance and proceeded to dig the well under her OSE permit. Id. ¶ 8. Instead of pursuing her challenge within the municipal administrative process, she filed a declaratory judgment action seeking to invalidate the ordinance. The district court found her claim without merit and ruled in favor of the City on its motion for summary judgment. Id. ¶ 9.
{5} On appeal, this Court affirmed, assuming without deciding that declaratory judgment was available to Stennis. Stennis v. City of Santa Fe,
{6} Taking certiorari, the Supreme Court held that Stennis had a right to challenge the ordinance with a declaratory judgment action, Stennis,
If the City filed the 1999 Ordinance with the [OSE] before Stennis applied for her domestic well permit, Stennis must file for city authorization and the City must provide her the procedural protections required by Section 3-53-1.1. If the City did not file the 1999 Ordinance with the [OSE] before Stennis applied for her domestic well permit, then the City failed to comply with the Section 3-53-1.1(D) requirement and cannot validly regulate Stennis’s well.
Stennis,
{7} After holding an evidentiary hearing on remand, the district court answered that question and found that the ordinance was “not filed with, or sent to, the [OSE].” Taking a step around home plate, however, it also found that the OSE had actual notice of the ordinance, its content, and substance because the City provided actual notice of the ordinance to the OSE in early 1999. In light of this finding, in its order and final judgment on remand, the district court decided that “because the City substantially complied with the statutory requirement in ... Section 3-53-1.1 [ (D) ] before ... Stennis applied to the [OSE] for her domestic well permit, under the Supreme Court’s opinion ... Stennis was required to apply for City authorization.”
{8} Stennis appeals again. She argues that simply providing notice of the ordinance’s language is insufficient to satisfy Section 3-53-1.1(D), which requires filing of the actual ordinance. See id.; see also NMSA 1978, § 3-17-5(A) (1965) (requiring an ordinance to be “authenticated by the signature of the presiding officer of the governing body and the municipal clerk”). Furthermore, she argues that even if Section 3-53-1.1(D) permits substantial compliance, the City’s actions were insufficient to meet that standard. In light of our Supreme Court’s opinion in this matter, we conclude that Section 3-53-1.1 requires strict compliance with the statute. Accordingly, we do not analyze whether the City substantially complied.
DISCUSSION
{9} While strict compliance is certainly not necessary in all situations, a statute’s mandatory language cannot be lightly dismissed because “many legislative goals require strict compliance.” Green Valley Mobile Home Park v. Mulvaney,
{10} Our courts have repeatedly observed that a statute’s plain language is the most reliable indicator of legislative intent. See Johnson v. N.M. Oil Conservation Comm’n,
A. A municipality may, by ordinance, restrict the drilling of new domestic water wells, except for property zoned agricultural, if the property line of the applicant is within three hundred feet of the municipal water distribution lines and the property is located within the exterior boundaries of the municipality.
B. No municipality may deny authorization for a new domestic water well permit to an applicant if the total cost to the applicant of extending the municipal water distribution line, meter and hook-up to the applicant’s residence exceeds the cost of drilling a new domestic water well.
C. A municipality that fails to authorize the drilling of a new domestic water well shall provide domestic water service within ninety days to the property owner under the municipal water provider’s usual and customary charges and rate schedules.
D. A municipality shall file with the [OSE] its municipal ordinance restricting the drilling of new domestic water wells.
E. An applicant for a domestic water well located within the exterior boundaries of a municipality with a new domestic water well drilling ordinance shall obtain a permit to drill the well from the municipality subsequent to the [OSE]’s approval.
F. A municipality with a domestic water well drilling ordinance shall act upon a new domestic water well permit application within thirty days of receipt of the request.
G. A municipality shall notify the [OSE] of all municipal permit denials for domestic well authorization.
H. An applicant may appeal the decision of the municipality to the district court in the county of the municipality.
I. Nothing in this section shall limit the authority of the [OSE] to administer water rights as provided by law.
J. The [OSE] shall not be liable for actions taken in accordance with a municipal ordinance authorizing restriction of domestic well drilling within the exterior boundaries of a qualified municipality.
(Emphasis added.)
{11} As indicated above, the plain language of Section 3-53-1.1(D) requires municipalities to file any ordinance restricting the drilling of wells with the OSE. If we give these words their ordinary meaning, we must conclude that the actual notice given by the City to the OSE falls short of that requirement. Based only on the language of Section 3-53-1.1(D), to conclude that something less than filing the actual ordinance sufficiently satisfies the statute would require us to go outside the plain meaning of the words. The parties each urge different interpretations of Subsection (D)’s language.
{12} The parties seem to agree that Section 3-53-l.l(D) is intended to facilitate notice. They disagree, however, as to whom it is intended to notify. The City contends that Section 3-53-l.l(D)’s filing requirement was intended “to facilitate and coordinate” the efforts of municipalities and the OSE. Stennis argues that the requirement was intended to notify not only the OSE but also the public and other municipalities. As stated above, the district court agreed with the City. While the interpretation embraced by the City and the district court seems reasonable enough, Stennis’s interpretation is perhaps just as likely. Very little evidence can be found for either argument in the other provisions of Section 3-53-1.1, and for that reason, we adopt neither.
{13} As a whole, Section 3-53-1.1 recognizes the related interests of three parties: the citizen who desires to drill a well; the municipality that desires to regulate well-drilling; and the OSE, as the ultimate steward of New Mexico’s water supply. Accordingly, Section 3-53-1.1 allocates a variety of rights and obligations to each. Subsections (B), (C), (F), and (H) protect the citizen by (1) ensuring the citizen’s right to drill where the cost of drilling is cheaper than establishing a connection to the municipal system, Section 3-53-l.l(B); (2) requiring the municipality to provide water to the citizen within ninety days of a denial, Section 3-53-1.1(0; (3) requiring the municipality to act on all permits within thirty days, Section 3-53-1.1(F); and (4) bestowing upon the citizen a right to appeal adverse decisions, Section 3-53-l.l(H). Subsections (A) and (E) recognize the interests of the municipality by (1) providing the statutory power to enact ordinances regulating wells within a municipality’s own borders, Section 3-53-1.1(A); and (2) requiring citizens to obtain permits from both the city and the OSE prior to drilling, Section 3-53-1.1(E). Finally, subsections (G), (I), and (J) acknowledge the interests of the OSE by (1) providing that cities must notify the OSE when they deny permit applications, Section 3 — 53—1.1(G); (2) recognizing that the OSE retains its authority to regulate water rights, Section 3-53-1.1(1); and (3) limiting the OSE’s liability for municipal permit denials, Section 3-53-1.1(J). These provisions give us scant indication of the legislative intent behind Subsection (D). They seem to favor equally the interests of the City, Stennis, and the OSE; and it is therefore impossible for us to say conclusively whether Subsection (D) was intended to provide simple cross-communication between municipalities and the OSE, or whether some other motivation was at work — the creation of a filed public record, for instance, that might be available for inspection by citizens and other municipalities.
{14} What little evidence we find in other provisions seems to indicate that the Legislature intended municipalities to actually file their ordinances with the OSE. In Subsection (G), for example, cities must “notify” the OSE when they deny a citizen’s municipal permit application, Section 3-53-l.l(G). They are not required to file such denials with the OSE. Simple notice will not do, and it therefore seems clear that if the Legislature had intended simple notice to satisfy the requirements of Subsection (D), it would have written it to provide as much. Nor is there any indication that this situation is one the statute’s drafters failed to anticipate. See Brown,
{15} The Supreme Court has read Section 3-53-l.l(D) as we do. Throughout Stennis, the Court refers to the filing requirement in mandatory terms, and never once does the Court suggest that a municipality might satisfy the statute by filing a copy of its enactment containing the actual language of the ordinance as opposed to the ordinance itself. For instance, in the introduction, the Court observes “that a municipality must file its ordinance with the [OSE].” Stennis,
{16} Moreover, our Legislature has proven capable of explicitly providing for substantial compliance when it decides such flexibility is necessary, and although the absence of such language is not alone determinative, its absence provides additional support to our holding. See, e.g., Cockrell,
CONCLUSION
{17} Substantial compliance is a doctrine of statutory interpretation that examines whether an actor follows a statute “sufficiently so as to carry out the intent for which the statute was adopted and [in a manner that] accomplishes the reasonable objectives of the statute.” Lane,
{18} IT IS SO ORDERED.
