Call Our Firm:   605.385.0330

Commercial Transactions & Litigation, Environmental Law, Natural Resources Law, & Energy Law

Author Archive

WIND POWER WORKSHOP, Spearfish

Posted on: August 28th, 2015
by David Ganje

The Black Hills Pioneer presents
WIND POWER WORKSHOP
Friday, Oct. 2, 2015
8:30 a.m. to Noon
High Plains Western Heritage Center
Exit 14, Spearfish

WIND POWER WORKSHOP Friday, Oct. 2, 2015 8:30 a.m. to Noon High Plains Western Heritage Center Exit 14, Spearfish

Speakers Include:

David Ganje
Ganje Law Offices, Rapid City
•    Reviewing Wind Easements – The Good, The Bad, The Ugly

Scott Minos
US Department of Energy
Senior Policy and
Communications Specialist
for the office of Energy Efficiency
and Renewable Energy (EERE)
•    Perspectives of Wind Energy Potential for South Dakota

PRESS RELEASE: Guest Lecturer Appreciation Certificate

Posted on: July 9th, 2015
by David Ganje

Please click the link below:

Appreciation Certificate Ganje

 

 

The New York Environmental Lawyer Magazine

Posted on: May 28th, 2015
by David Ganje

The New York Environmental Lawyer Magazine will publish an article by environmental and natural resources attorney David Ganje of Ganje Law Offices of Rapid City on the subject of ‘Tribal Water Codes – Their Administration and Enforcement.’ Ganje has taught as an adjunct professor in both the United States and Germany, sits on the South Dakota State Bar Natural Resources and Environment Committee and is a frequent keynote speaker at national and international natural resources conferences.

Posted on: April 6th, 2015
by David Ganje

UNDERGROUND PIPELINE TRESPASS IN SOUTH DAKOTA

My old law professor way back when held forth that man owns everything from heaven to hell. He meant to tell us that a landowner owns all the skies above and the ground deep below.  He is to be forgiven for this bold utterance because he was, I believe, born before the invention of airplanes.  His comments about ownership rights present an interesting question. What is the ground ‘below’?  Who owns it? Who has rights to it?  Both property owners and easement holders should be attentive to these questions.  Let us take a look.  We will learn that in our world my professor was wrong—a man’s ground is not necessarily his castle. Ah, but education is what remains after one forgets all one was supposed to learn.  To be sure South Dakota law recognizes that the owner of land has the right to the surface and to everything permanently situated beneath or above it. The law states “The owner of land in fee has the right to the surface and to everything permanently situated beneath or above it.”   But let’s take a closer look at underground trespass.

In North Dakota the Supreme Court addressed the issue of subsurface trespass in the modern context of horizontal drilling. In an important case a few years ago a mineral rights owner, the Plaintiff claimant, owned an interest in a quarter section of land. The oil company producer sought an agreement of all interests in the land in order to drill a horizontal well.  The Plaintiff refused to do a deal.  The Plaintiff also told the producer that it would consider any subsurface action affecting its interests as a subsurface trespass.  The oil company petitioned a state agency to ‘force pool’ the Plaintiff’s interest so that the property including the Plaintiff’s claims could be drilled. The agency approved the application. When the well was drilled the Plaintiff sued the producer under the legal theory of underground trespass. The Supreme Court held that in North Dakota the state has created a pro development policy and certain statutory and regulatory powers to promote, manage and develop natural resources throughout the state. The Court said that the state had the right to “impose such restrictions upon private (property) rights as are practically necessary for the general welfare of all.”

Subsurface trespass may still be an enforceable legal claim in situations that do not involve oil and  pooling powers. The Texas Supreme Court just last month found that a neighboring plaintiff claiming underground trespass must prove three things:  (1) entry of the alleged violation; (2) onto the property of another; and (3) without the property owner’s consent or authorization.  In this case the property owner (farmer) failed to show his ‘lack of consent’ and his claim was denied.  Someone wasn’t doing their homework in Texas. Subsurface trespass as a claim is untested in South Dakota but I predict will be upheld in the courts provided there is a showing of some harm to the property owner’s use or ‘enjoyment’ of his subsurface lands.  Pipeline operators, propagators of wastewater, utility companies, developers and surface owners can reduce potential problems in trespass by full disclosure, complete professional research of the legal and geological issues before starting a project, and by placing everything on the table, this means full disclosure, at a very early stage in a project.

Author:   David Ganje.   David Ganje of Ganje Law Offices practices in the area of natural resources, environmental and commercial law in North and South Dakota.

GANJE INVITED TO PRESENT NATURAL RESOURCES AND ENVIRONMENTAL LAW LECTURES IN CZECH REPUBLIC

Posted on: March 31st, 2015
by David Ganje

Environmental and natural resources attorney David Ganje of Ganje Law Offices in Rapid City has been invited by Masaryk University in the Czech Republic to provide guest lectures on US natural resources and environmental law during the Spring 2015 term. Ganje’s lecture series will begin with an overview of the three branches of government in the United States. Subsequent lectures will focus on the legal ramifications of pollution control, preservation of natural resources and the issue of toxic chemicals and hazardous waste in the United States. The lectures will be given to law students of the university. Masaryk University is the largest law school in central Europe and is located in the Czech Republic. Ganje has taught as an adjunct professor in both the United States and Germany, and is a frequent keynote speaker at national and international environmental conferences. He practices natural resources and environmental law in New York and North and South Dakota and is a graduate of the University of South Dakota School of Law.