Sewell Ditch v. D'Antonio

1 This memorandum opinion was not selected for publication in the New Mexico Reports. Please see 2 Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished memorandum opinions. Please 3 also note that this electronic memorandum opinion may contain computer-generated errors or other 4 deviations from the official paper version filed by the Court of Appeals and does not include the 5 filing date. 6 IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO 7 THE G.R. SEWELL DITCH, RIO 8 ARRIBA BOARD OF COUNTY 9 COMMISSIONERS, LA ASOCIACION 10 DE LAS ACEQUIAS DEL RIO 11 VALLECITOS, TUSAS Y OJO 12 CALIENTE, DONALD GRIEGO 13 and THOMAS GRIEGO, 14 Protestants-Appellants, 15 v. NO. 29,332 16 JOHN D’ANTONIO, JR., NEW MEXICO 17 STATE ENGINEER, 18 Appellee, 19 and 20 GILBERT GRAVES and DEBORAH 21 GRAVES, 22 Applicants-Appellees. 23 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF RIO ARRIBA COUNTY 24 Daniel A. Sanchez, District Judge 25 Humphrey & Odé, P.C. 26 Mary E. Humphrey 1 Connie Odé 2 El Prado, NM 3 for Appellants G.R. Sewell Ditch, 4 Rio Arriba Board of County 5 Commissioners, La Asociacion 6 de las Acequias del Rio Vallecitos, 7 Tusas Y Ojo Caliente 8 Law Offices of Ted J. Trujillo 9 Ted J. Trujillo 10 Espanola, NM 11 for Appellants Donald Griego and Thomas Griego 12 New Mexico Office of the State Engineer 13 DL Sanders, Chief Counsel, Special Assistant Attorney General 14 Hilary Lamberton, Special Assistant Attorney General 15 Santa Fe, NM 16 for Appellee New Mexico State Engineer 17 O’Friel & Levy, P.C. 18 Pierre Levy 19 Santa Fe, NM 20 for Appellees Gilbert Graves and Deborah Graves 21 MEMORANDUM OPINION 22 BUSTAMANTE, Judge. 23 Appellants G.R. Sewell Ditch, Rio Arriba Board of County Commissioners, La 24 Asociacion de las Acequias del Rio Vallecitos, Tusas y Ojo Caliente, Donald Griego 2 1 and Thomas Griego (Protestants), appeal the district court’s approval of two permits 2 originally granted by the State Engineer to Gilbert and Deborah Graves (Applicants). 3 Pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 72-5-4 (2001), Applicants published notice of their 4 desire to change a point of diversion to a ditch located within a certain ten-acre 5 section. At issue in this case is whether that notice was adequate to allow the district 6 court to approve the change in diversion to one of two ditches within the indicated 7 section. Because the notice was adequate to apprise the average citizen of the general 8 purpose of the permits sought, we affirm. 9 I. BACKGROUND 10 This appeal involves two permits granted pursuant to applications to change 11 points of diversion and types of use of water filed by Applicants in October 2002. We 12 first describe the ditches that irrigate Applicants’ land. With this necessary 13 background in place, we discuss the applications that were filed, the notice that was 14 published, and the permits that were granted. 15 The Rio Tusas runs west to east across Applicants’ property. Two ditches, 16 Ditch W and the Tony Griego Ditch, are north of the river. Ditch W, a 1.3 mile-long 17 ditch with no organizational structure, irrigates the northern portion of Applicants’ 18 property. Applicants are located at the tail end of the ditch and rarely receive water 19 from it. The Tony Griego Ditch is a private ditch irrigating Applicants’ property and 3 1 the Griegos’ property. Its origin is on Applicants’ property, and it continues on to and 2 terminates on the Griegos’ property. Prior to the granting of the permits at issue here, 3 Applicants irrigated 2.6 acres from the Tony Griego Ditch and the Griegos irrigated 4 35.36 acres. At the time the permits were granted, Applicants and the Griegos were 5 involved in litigation over the use and maintenance of the Tony Griego Ditch. 6 Two additional ditches, the Gurule Ditch and the Romero-Gurule Ditch, are 7 located on Applicants’ property to the south of the Rio Tusas. The Gurule Ditch 8 arises near the western boundary of Applicants’ property. It originates less than 500 9 feet upstream from the diversion for the Tony Griego Ditch. Applicants are the sole 10 users of the Gurule Ditch, which is entirely contained within their property. There are 11 no intervening diversions between the Gurule Ditch and the Tony Griego Ditch. The 12 southern part of Applicants’ property is irrigated by the Romero-Gurule Ditch. This 13 ditch originates upstream, is used by several other persons, and terminates on 14 Applicants’ property. 15 On October 2, 2002, Applicants filed applications for three permits. 16 Application Nos. 0701 and 0786 into 05130 (Ditch W application) was directed at 17 changing the point of diversion of 42.04 acre-feet per year (afy) from Ditch W to the 18 Tony Griego Ditch (it was later determined that Applicants had rights to only 28.686 19 afy from Ditch W). A second application was denied and is not the subject of this 4 1 appeal. The third application, No. 05131 into 4883 (Pond application), was directed 2 at changing the place and purpose of use of 1.94 afy from irrigation of 1.66 acres of 3 Applicants’ land to a 0.346 acre pond for recreational fishing and storage for sprinkler 4 irrigation. 5 Pursuant to statute, notice of the applications was published. The notice for the 6 Ditch W application indicated that “the new point of diversion lies in the SW ¼ NE 7 ¼ SW ¼ of Section 15, Township 28 North, Range 8 East.” The notice also indicated 8 that “[t]he new point of diversion is for the Tony Griego Ditch.” Protestants concede 9 that the two approved alternate points of diversion are located in the same ten acres. 10 Our review of the record shows that this ten-acre section is entirely contained within 11 Applicants’ property. 12 Several persons filed protests. The permits were consolidated for hearing. On 13 December 8, 2006, a hearing officer filed an order approving the Ditch W and Pond 14 applications, subject to conditions. A de novo trial was held in district court and the 15 same result was reached. We provide additional facts regarding the de novo trial 16 where they are necessary in this Opinion. 17 II. DISCUSSION 18 Protestants’ arguments fall into two categories: (1) that the district court erred 19 in granting relief that was not adequately described in the published notice; and (2) 5 1 that the district court’s findings that the permits did not impair existing water rights, 2 were not contrary to water conservation, and were not detrimental to the public 3 welfare were not supported by sufficient evidence. We hold that notice was adequate 4 and that the district court’s findings were supported by substantial evidence. We also 5 discuss separately various issues that were not preserved. 6 A. Statutory Notice 7 Protestants argue that because the points of diversion granted in the Ditch W 8 permit were different from what was requested, notice was not adequate and the 9 applications should have been denied. Protestants make a similar argument with 10 respect to the Pond application. The State Engineer responds that, under the relaxed 11 rules of notice applicable here, Protestants had sufficient notice. 12 Before changing the point of diversion of appropriated water, an appropriator 13 must file an application with the State Engineer. NMSA 1978, §§ 72-5-1 to -39 14 (1907, as amended through 2009). Notice of this application must be published 15 according to statutory procedures set forth in Section 72-5-4, and must include all 16 essential facts. Parties with standing can file protests. See § 72-5-5. If protests are 17 filed, a hearing is held to determine whether the application should be granted. See 18 §§ 72-5-5, -6, -23, -24. 6 1 Our leading case on adequacy of notice is Nesbit v. City of Albuquerque, 91 2 N.M. 455, 575 P.2d 1340 (1977). In Nesbit, a developer applied to change the zoning 3 of a property from a plan allowing 83 condominiums to one allowing 287 efficiencies 4 and apartments. Id. at 457, 575 P.2d at 1342. By statute, the developer was required 5 to give notice at least fifteen days before a hearing about the change. See id. After 6 the developer’s request was denied by the City Planning Department, the developer 7 appealed to the City Commission. Id. at 458, 575 P.2d at 1343. Timely notice was 8 published. Id. However, the notice indicated only that the hearing was related to “a 9 revised development plan for land on Indian Plaza Drive N.E.” Id. Four neighbors 10 opposed the zoning change at the hearing, and the City Commission denied the 11 change. Id. The developer appealed to the district court and obtained a judgment 12 directing the City Commission to grant the change. Id. No notice was given to any 13 opposing parties of the district court’s hearing. Id. The developer did not begin 14 building until three years after the zoning change. Id. at 457, 575 P.2d at 1342. When 15 construction began, some neighbors brought a motion to intervene in the three-year- 16 old district court judgment ordering the City Commission to approve the change. Id. 17 The court allowed the intervention and ruled that the lack of notice was a 18 jurisdictional defect which rendered the action taken by the zoning authority void. Id. 19 at 458, 575 P.2d at 1343. 7 1 The Supreme Court affirmed the district court, holding that the lack of notice 2 rendered subsequent proceedings void. Id. at 458, 460, 575 P.2d at 1343, 1345. The 3 foundation of this decision was due process. See id. at 457, 575 P.2d at 1342 (finding 4 no error because of “the lack of due process apparent in the record”). The Court 5 began by noting that “[l]ack of statutory notice is generally held to be a jurisdictional 6 defect which renders the [administrative] action . . . void.” Id. However, this rule is 7 tempered somewhat by the fact that New Mexico does not take a strict view regarding 8 compliance with statutory notice requirements. Instead, whether notice is adequate 9 depends on “whether notice as published fairly apprised the average citizen reading 10 it with the general purpose of what was contemplated.” Id. at 459, 575 P.2d at 1344. 11 Because the published notice did not adequately describe the location of the property 12 or the nature of the changes proposed, the Court agreed with the district court that the 13 notice was not adequate, concluding that “[b]y failing to follow statutory procedures, 14 due process of law was violated.” Id. 15 As a preliminary matter, we note that Protestants contend that their argument 16 is not directed to due process, but instead to subject matter jurisdiction. 17 [Protestants] do not claim that they were denied due process because of 18 inadequate notice. [Protestants] assert that neither the State Engineer nor 19 the district court had jurisdiction to approve actions that were not 20 contemplated or contained in the notice that was published. It is a 21 jurisdictional argument, not a due process complaint. 8 1 This argument misunderstands Nesbit. It is true that the Nesbit Court held that 2 inadequate notice could deprive an agency of jurisdiction to act. However, as the 3 reasoning in Nesbit makes plain, this is because inadequate notice violates due 4 process. In Eldorado at Santa Fe, Inc. v. Cook, we summarized the rule from Nesbit 5 as follows: “[T]he failure to follow statutory procedures is a due process violation and 6 renders void all subsequent acts of the state engineer.” Eldorado at Santa Fe, Inc., 7 113 N.M. 33, 37, 822 P.2d 672, 676 (Ct. App. 1991), abrogated on other grounds by 8 Goodloe v. Bookout, 1999-NMCA-061, 127 N.M. 327, 980 P.2d 652. Simply put, a 9 statutory notice argument is a due process argument—albeit one with its own specific 10 set of standards. Accordingly, we construe Protestants’ brief in chief to argue that, 11 under Nesbit, the notice published by Applicants was not adequate to apprise an 12 average citizen that the State Engineer might grant the rights that were granted, and 13 that therefore the State Engineer was without jurisdiction to make those changes. 14 Having thus construed the issue, we may now state the applicable standard of 15 review. Whether due process rights were violated is an issue that we review de novo. 16 See Maso v. N.M. Taxation & Revenue Dep’t, 2004-NMCA-025, ¶ 18, 135 N.M. 152, 17 85 P.3d 276, aff’d 2004-NMSC-028, 136 N.M. 161, 96 P.3d 286. “In order to meet 18 the statutory requirement of adequate notice, it must be determined whether notice as 19 published fairly apprised the average citizen reading it with the general purpose of 9 1 what was contemplated.” Nesbit, 91 N.M. at 459, 575 P.2d at 1344. Notice is 2 inadequate if it is “ambiguous, misleading or unintelligible to the average citizen.” 3 Id. A minor defect of notice will not invalidate agency action so long as there has 4 been “substantial compliance with the statutory notice provisions [that] would satisfy 5 the purpose of the statute.” Id. at 457, 575 P.2d at 1342. 6 The identification of the ten-acre section for the move-to point was adequate to 7 fairly apprise the average citizen with the general purpose of what was contemplated. 8 Protestants take the position that because the application was specific to the Tony 9 Griego Ditch, it did not provide adequate notice that the State Engineer might allow 10 pumping from another location. However, the notice is required only to apprise 11 citizens of the general purpose of the application. Here, the general purpose was the 12 pumping of water from the identified ten-acre section to irrigate Tract Ten. The 13 published notice apprised the public of that purpose. The hearing officer found that 14 the Tony Griego Ditch was subject to litigation between Applicants and the Griegos. 15 Apparently concerned by this, the hearing officer added the alternate pumping 16 location in the Gurule Ditch “in the event that [placement in the Tony Griego Ditch] 17 is determined inconsistent with or precluded by court determination.” The Gurule 18 Ditch diverts within the same ten-acre section, and no other diversions exist between 19 it and the Tony Griego Ditch. Unlike the Tony Griego Ditch, there is no litigation 10 1 involving the Gurule Ditch because there are no other users of the ditch. Indeed, the 2 Gurule Ditch is entirely contained within Applicants’ property. Providing an 3 alternative intake point on the Gurule Ditch solves the potential problems that could 4 arise out of the ongoing litigation that was revealed during the hearings. 5 Accordingly, inclusion of the alternative was not a violation of due process, but a 6 result of it. 7 The published notice for the Pond application was also adequate. As we 8 understand Protestants’ argument, they claim that the published notice was inadequate 9 because it did not request a change to the point of diversion. But Applicants were not 10 requesting, nor did they receive, a change in diversion. The issued permit retired 11 existing rights in order “to offset the initial filling and annual evaporative losses” of 12 the pond. The published notice indicated that the 1.94 afy were to be “removed from 13 irrigation,” and that the new place and purpose of use was to be transferred to the 14 pond. We hold that this notice substantially complied with the statutory requirements 15 by apprising an average citizen the general purpose of what was contemplated. 16 B. Historic Supply 17 Protestants’ next argument is that it was error for the district court to presume, 18 in the absence of a water study, that the historic supply of water on the Rio Tusas was 19 100%. Protestants proffer three reasons for this: (1) that finding of fact number 13, 11 1 which finds that a 1999 survey of the Rio Ojo Caliente was not applicable to the Rio 2 Tusas, was not supported by substantial evidence; (2) that the district court gave 3 undue deference to the State Engineer; and (3) that the district court’s application of 4 a presumption violated Rule 11-301 NMRA. The State Engineer counters that 5 Protestants waived their sufficiency argument by not summarizing or citing the 6 evidence supporting the factual findings. The State Engineer chose not to address 7 Protestants’ second two arguments. 8 Protestants have not preserved their legal arguments about undue deference or 9 Rule 11-301. Although Protestants cite to pages 197, 321, and 334 of the record 10 proper for preservation, the only relevant statements in these pages are the assertions 11 that it was improper for the district court not to decrease Applicants’ water rights by 12 finding a historic usage of less than 100%. No mention is made of undue deference 13 or of the rules of evidence. Furthermore, we note that our review of the transcripts did 14 not reveal evidence of these arguments. Since the arguments regarding undue 15 deference and Rule 11-301 were not raised below, we will not address them for the 16 first time on appeal. See In re T.B., 1996-NMCA-035, ¶ 13, 121 N.M. 465, 913 P.2d 17 272 (“[W]e review the case litigated below, not the case that is fleshed out for the first 18 time on appeal.”). However, to the extent that Protestants’ argument that the district 12 1 court gave undue deference to the State Engineer, we address the issue in the next 2 section. 3 Protestants’ most cogent argument is that “failure to reduce the amount of water 4 available for diversion and use at the move-to sites to the amount historically available 5 for use at the move-from locations . . . would increase chronic shortages to 6 downstream users, thereby impairing those users while being contrary to the 7 conservation of water.” Protestants cite to no New Mexico case or statute discussing 8 historic supply, and we can find none. However, to the extent that the argument about 9 historic supply is directed at impairment and conservation, they have preserved the 10 issue, which we address next. 11 C. Impairment, Conservation, Public Welfare 12 The majority of Protestants’ arguments challenge the district court’s findings 13 that the Ditch W and the Pond permits would not impair existing rights, would not be 14 contrary to water conservation, and would not be detrimental to the public welfare. 15 These arguments address the requirements of Section 72-5-23. The State Engineer 16 counters that the district court’s findings were supported by substantial evidence. 17 An appropriator of water may apply to the State Engineer to change the place 18 of diversion, storage, or use of appropriated water. Section 72-5-24. However, this 19 type of change may only be made if it can be done without detriment to existing water 13 1 rights, if it is not contrary to conservation of water, and if it is not detrimental to the 2 public welfare of the state. See § 72-5-23. 3 The issues of impairment, conservation, and public welfare under Section 72-5- 4 23 are questions of fact. Thus, we apply a substantial evidence standard of review. 5 See Bishop v. Evangelical Good Samaritan Soc’y, 2009-NMSC-036, ¶ 25, 146 N.M. 6 473, 212 P.3d 361 (applying a substantial evidence standard where no legal questions 7 remain). “Substantial evidence is such relevant evidence that a reasonable mind 8 would find adequate to support a conclusion.” Landavazo v. Sanchez, 111 N.M. 137, 9 138, 802 P.2d 1283, 1284 (1990). In reviewing a substantial evidence claim, “[t]he 10 question is not whether substantial evidence exists to support the opposite result, but 11 rather whether such evidence supports the result reached.” Las Cruces Prof’l Fire 12 Fighters v. City of Las Cruces, 1997-NMCA-044, ¶ 12, 123 N.M. 329, 940 P.2d 177. 13 “Additionally we will not reweigh the evidence nor substitute our judgment for that 14 of the fact finder.” Id. 15 1. Impairment 16 Protestants offer several arguments contesting the district court’s finding that 17 the permits would not impair existing water rights. Specifically, they argue that: (1) 18 pumping impairs existing rights because pumpers do not share in shortages, (2) failure 19 to conclude that historic supply was less than 100% and reduce the water use in the 14 1 permits would impair existing rights, and (3) changing the type of use of a given 2 quantity of water from ditch irrigation to the use of efficient sprinklers would impair 3 existing rights. Most of these advance their views that the evidence presented at trial 4 should have led the court to a different result. We do not reweigh the evidence on 5 appeal. See State v. Sutphin, 107 N.M. 126, 131, 753 P.2d 1314, 1319 (1988). 6 Instead, we examine whether the district court’s finding that existing water rights 7 would not be impaired is supported by substantial evidence. 8 First, Protestants argue that pumping impairs existing rights because pumpers 9 do not share in shortages. The district court found that by placing the pump intake in 10 a ditch, Applicants would share in shortages because “there could be no pumping from 11 the ditches if the water level on the river was too low to allow the water to flow into 12 the ditches.” Even so, if the intake is located in the Tony Griego Ditch, there is the 13 possibility that it might interfere with the Griegos’ rights in that ditch. However, Mr. 14 Sterman Buck Wells, a water resource specialist at the State Engineer Water Rights 15 Division, testified that the flow through the Tony Griego Ditch is three acre-feet per 16 day, more than adequate to support both Applicants’ and the Griegos’ needs. 17 Furthermore, the district court found that Applicants would not be increasing their 18 water usage. Also, the permit is subject to thirteen conditions, including: (1) that the 19 pump will not be used to the detriment of existing water rights, (2) that several 15 1 measuring devices should be installed, (3) that usage from these meters must be 2 submitted to the state engineer each month, and (4) that the State Engineer shall retain 3 jurisdiction over the permit to ensure compliance. Accordingly, the district court’s 4 finding that pumping would not impair existing rights is supported by substantial 5 evidence. 6 Second, Protestants repeatedly argue that the court should have used a historical 7 supply value from a study of a different river to reduce Applicants’ water rights. 8 Protestants cite to no authority requiring the State Engineer to reduce the permitted 9 use based on historic supply. Instead, they argue that, to the extent that findings of 10 fact numbers 13 and 14 imply a finding that the historic supply in the Rio Tusas was 11 100%, those findings were not supported by substantial evidence. Protestants connect 12 this to legal authority by suggesting that if historic supply is less than 100% then 13 failure to reduce water rights will cause impairment. 14 Assuming that the State Engineer is required to reduce water usage based on 15 findings of historical supply, Protestants’ argument nevertheless fails because findings 16 13 and 14 are both supported by substantial evidence. Finding 13 declines to apply 17 the Rio Ojo Caliente study to the Rio Tusas because of differences in the geological 18 and hydrologic characteristics of the two rivers. Mr. Wells testified at length about 19 historical supply. Wells noted that no study had been made of the Rio Tusas. In 16 1 particular, he explained numerous differences between the Rio Ojo Caliente and the 2 Rio Tusas that made it inappropriate to assume that the findings of the Rio Ojo 3 Caliente study were applicable to the Rio Tusas. Finding 14 takes note of the State 4 Engineer’s policy of assuming a full historical supply on the Rio Tusas. Wells 5 testified that this is in fact the current practice of the State Engineer. 6 Of course, even if the district court had made a different finding of historic 7 supply, there is no reason that a finding of less than 100% historic supply and a 8 finding that existing rights will not be impaired cannot both be supported by 9 substantial evidence. As we have discussed, there is substantial evidence to support 10 the district court’s findings that, under the current supply conditions, the permits do 11 not impair existing water rights. The historic supply argument does not help 12 Protestants. 13 Protestants’ third argument is that the increased efficiency of sprinklers requires 14 the State Engineer to reduce the amount of water Applicants are entitled to in order 15 to avoid impairment of existing rights. No authority is cited requiring a permit to 16 restrict an applicant’s water rights if the application proposes using more efficient 17 irrigation techniques. Indeed, Wells testified that he was unaware of any time this had 18 ever occurred. Wells also testified that the amount of water approved in an 19 application could be based either on the delivery requirement (which is based on a 17 1 consumptive irrigation requirement but assumes a 40% efficiency characteristic of 2 ditches) or the consumptive use (which is based on the consumptive irrigation 3 requirement but uses the efficiency of the new use) depending on the circumstances. 4 Regardless, as we have already explained, substantial evidence supports the district 5 court’s finding that rights will not be impaired. 6 2. Public Welfare 7 Protestants make three arguments directed to public welfare: (1) that pumping 8 is detrimental to public welfare; (2) that the pond itself is detrimental to public 9 welfare; and (3) that the necessity of monitoring the pump’s water meters and 10 Applicants’ history of non-compliance will require “intensive oversight” which is 11 contrary to public welfare. 12 Protestants first argue that pumping is detrimental to public welfare. To make 13 this argument, they characterize the issue of public welfare as one of fact, and argue 14 that the district court’s conclusion is contrary to its other findings of fact. Although 15 the State Engineer identified this as a substantial evidence question, he responds to it 16 as a question of law. Nevertheless, the State Engineer’s response directs our attention 17 to district court findings providing substantial evidence to support the finding that the 18 approval of pumping in this permit is not detrimental to public welfare. First, the 19 district court found that because Ditch W is not a community ditch or acequia, 18 1 allowing pumping does not threaten acequia culture. Second, the district court noted 2 that the permit imposes significant conditions to protect the environment. Finally, the 3 district court found that the new permits do not increase the amount of water 4 Applicants can use. 5 Protestants’ argument that the pond is against public welfare and contrary to 6 water conservation is at best an invitation for this Court to reweigh the evidence. The 7 argument consists of two paragraphs. The first paragraph recites evidence that 8 Protestants believe supports a finding opposite of the finding made by the district 9 court. On review for substantial evidence, we may disregard evidence and inferences 10 contrary to the result below. See Weidler v. Big J Enters., Inc., 1998-NMCA-021, ¶ 11 30, 124 N.M. 591, 953 P.2d 1089. The second paragraph is simply a conclusory 12 statement that, because the water supply to the pond cannot be controlled by the State 13 Engineer, the pond is both contrary to the conservation of water and detrimental to 14 public welfare. This argument has not been developed sufficiently to allow us to 15 consider it. See Summit Props. Inc. v. Pub. Serv. Co., 2005-NMCA-090, ¶ 35, 138 16 N.M. 208, 118 P.3d 716. In any event, Wells testified that the water rights that were 17 retired in order to support the pond were more than enough to offset the initial filling 18 and evaporative losses. The district court’s conclusions were supported by substantial 19 evidence. 19 1 We are similarly unpersuaded by Protestants’ contention that the permits will 2 require “intensive oversight” and that they are therefore detrimental to public welfare. 3 This argument rests on three unsupported premises: (1) that administration of a pump 4 requires intensive oversight; (2) that Applicants will be noncompliant in the future, 5 thus requiring intensive oversight; and (3) that anything requiring intensive oversight 6 is detrimental to public welfare. Protestants point to Mr. William Miller’s testimony 7 that water meters would need to be monitored as proof that intensive oversight would 8 be required. However, Wells testified that he currently administers numerous pumps. 9 While having to read meters potentially increases the State Engineers’ workload, the 10 detriment to public welfare, if any, is offset by having actual data about water usage. 11 Since ditches are generally unmetered, metered pumps would appear to be superior 12 by this standard. Furthermore, whether Applicants are likely to be noncompliant in 13 the future is a credibility assessment that we will not reweigh on appeal. Finally, as 14 Protestants cite no authority for the premise that activities requiring intensive 15 oversight are detrimental to public welfare, we assume none exists. See In re 16 Adoption of Doe, 100 N.M. 764, 765, 676 P.2d 1329, 1330 (1984). 17 3. Ability to Irrigate from Ditch W 18 Protestants make one additional argument in this section that, although not 19 directed to Section 72-5-23, is a similar question of substantial evidence. Protestants 20 1 argue that the district court’s finding that Applicants were unable to irrigate from 2 Ditch W was not supported by substantial evidence. We note that this argument 3 seems to contradict their arguments about impairment, which are premised on the idea 4 that transferring rights from Ditch W would result in less water being available for 5 downstream users. The contradiction is immaterial, however, as the argument fails. 6 Protestants cite to no authority for the proposition that Applicants were required 7 to show that they were unable to pump from Ditch W before the State Engineer could 8 approve a change to pumping, and we therefore assume that none exists. See In re 9 Adoption of Doe, 100 N.M. at 765, 676 P.2d at 1330. But this argument would fail 10 even if it were supported by authority. The hearing officer found that Applicants 11 “ha[d] demonstrated that they are unable to irrigate Tract 10 from said ditch.” 12 Applicants testified that this was the case. The State Engineer’s water administration 13 expert, who had personally observed Ditch W, also noted that he “was [not] very 14 impressed by [D]itch W, because . . . it had the appearance of possible abandonment” 15 and there “was [not] very much conveyance area in the ditch.” Under the substantial 16 evidence standard, this was sufficient to support the finding that Applicants were 17 unable to irrigate from Ditch W. 18 D. Increasing Burden on the Tony Griego Ditch 21 1 In the section of their brief dealing with Section 72-5-23, Protestants make the 2 apparently unrelated argument that the State Engineer did not have authority to 3 increase the servitude of the Tony Griego Ditch. The State Engineer responds that this 4 argument was not preserved. 5 “To preserve an issue for review on appeal, it must appear that appellant fairly 6 invoked a ruling of the trial court on the same grounds argued in the appellate court.” 7 Woolwine v. Furr’s, Inc., 106 N.M. 492, 496, 745 P.2d 717, 721 (Ct. App. 1987). A 8 passing reference is not enough; the party claiming error must have raised the issue 9 below clearly. See Azar v. Prudential Ins. Co. of Am., 2003-NMCA-062, ¶ 25, 133 10 N.M. 669, 68 P.3d 909. We will not search the record for preservation, and “[a]bsent 11 . . . citation to the record or any obvious preservation, we will not consider the issue.” 12 Crutchfield v. N.M. Dep’t of Taxation & Revenue, 2005-NMCA-022, ¶ 14, 137 N.M. 13 26, 106 P.3d 1273. 14 In their brief in chief, Protestants make blanket cites to a sixteen-page span of 15 their proposed findings of fact and to a five-page span of their post-trial brief that they 16 claim preserved this issue. We do not doubt that, in some circumstances, citation to 17 a large span of pages could preserve an issue. However, in this circumstance, virtually 18 nothing in those twenty-one pages has anything to do with the issues appealed. We 19 do not believe that citation to a large span of pages for only a few sentences 22 1 “specifically point out where, in the record, the party invoked the court’s ruling on the 2 issue.” Id. (emphasis added). We take this opportunity to encourage counsel to 3 provide specific citations to where in the record an issue is preserved. Where, as 4 happened here, a party cites to a very large page range for a very small number of 5 sentences, that party effectively invites this Court to search the record. By providing 6 citation to specific portions of the record, parties can avoid the risk that we will 7 decline that invitation. 8 Protestants do a significantly better job in their reply brief, where they identify 9 four specific portions of the record they believe preserved this issue. First, Protestants 10 point to their Pre-Trial Order, where they stated “the State Engineer’s decision to 11 grant this application will work to [Protestants Griegos’] detriment [because] the 12 burdens of the existing co-tenancy arrangement on the Tony Griego Ditch will 13 increase.” Additionally, Protestants requested a conclusion of law that “allowing a 14 change in point of diversion . . . increases the burdens on . . . the Tony Griego Ditch.” 15 The reply brief also references a separate proposed finding of fact noting that a 16 separate district court case involving the “proportionality of the burdens” between 17 Applicants and the Griegos on the Tony Griego Ditch. Finally, Protestants point to 18 a comment the district court made in overruling a relevancy objection to a question 19 about the extent of the State Engineer’s jurisdiction. 23 1 On appeal, Protestants have framed this issue as a statutory argument. First, 2 they contend that, pursuant to NMSA 1978, Section 72-9-2 (1907), both the State 3 Engineer and the district court lacked jurisdiction because they have “no authority 4 over distinct and separate ditch ownership rights.” Second, they contend that approval 5 of the permit (as opposed to installation and use of the pump) violates NMSA 1978, 6 Section 73-2-7 (1882), which requires consent from a majority of owners when the 7 usage of the water changes. Protestants go to some lengths to make it clear that this 8 is not an argument about water rights, but instead about property rights in the ditch. 9 Accordingly, we understand this argument to be directed not at Section 72-5-23, but 10 at Sections 72-9-2 and 73-2-7. 11 With this in mind, we turn to the four statements Protestants claim preserved 12 their argument. In their Pre-Trial Order, Protestants mentioned a detriment to the 13 Griegos due to increased burdens on the co-tenancy in the Tony Griego Ditch. We 14 note that no authority is cited on the page that this statement appears—in particular, 15 the order makes no mention of Section 73-2-7—and that its generic language could 16 refer to impairment, equity, or could just be argumentative. We do not believe that 17 this comment was sufficient to alert the district court to the need to make a ruling on 18 Section 73-2-7. Of course, as the comment has nothing to do with jurisdiction, it 19 could not have preserved the Section 72-9-2 argument. The similar comments 24 1 Protestants point to in the proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law suffer the 2 same defects. 3 Protestants also direct our attention to the district court’s comments regarding 4 a relevancy objection. Protestants attempted to elicit testimony from Wells, to the 5 effect that the State Engineer’s jurisdiction did not extend to ditches. The district 6 court viewed this as a legal conclusion and sustained the objection. The court 7 sustained several more similar objections before counsel stopped trying to elicit this 8 testimony. This topic is related to Section 72-9-2, but is in no way related to the 9 argument on Section 73-2-7. However, counsel’s attempt to elicit a legal conclusion 10 from the expert did not invoke a ruling from the court on the substantive issue, but 11 instead invoked a ruling on admissibility of the testimony. Protestants point to 12 nowhere else in the record where such a ruling was fairly invoked. Accordingly, 13 neither of the two arguments made on appeal were clearly presented below, and we 14 will not address them for the first time on appeal. 15 III. CONCLUSION 16 For the foregoing reasons, we affirm and remand for further proceedings 17 consistent with this opinion. 18 IT IS SO ORDERED. 25 1 2 MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge 26 1 WE CONCUR: 2 3 JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge 4 5 CYNTHIA A. FRY, Judge 27