Call Our Firm:   605.385.0330

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

Archive for the ‘Corporate & Business Law’ Category

Does Eminent Domain Apply to Water Rights?

Posted on: February 7th, 2016
by David Ganje

Does Eminent Domain Apply to Water Rights?

Eminent domain is one of the toughest and most controversial legal powers available to a government. The doctrine of eminent domain allows a governmental body to convert privately owned land to another use, often over the objections of the current landowner. This process is commonly known as ‘condemning the land.’ There are rules, of course. A private landowner must be paid “just compensation” for the condemnation of their land. I have written several blog articles regarding the matter of just compensation. Further, the land that is to be taken must be taken to further a beneficial public use.

The ability to exercise eminent domain is so powerful that it almost always remains a final legal option left to state and government bodies. In North Dakota, a little-known law allows private citizens to exercise eminent domain. North Dakota law states that “The United States, or any person, corporation, limited liability company, or association [may] exercise the right of eminent domain to acquire for a public use any property or rights existing when found necessary for the application of water to beneficial uses.” Private citizens as well as corporations may exercise the immense power of eminent domain – but only when it comes to using water for a beneficial use.

North Dakota evaluates whether or not a citizen is able to put water to a beneficial use through a permit system. The law requires “any person, before…appropriating waters of the state…, shall first secure a water permit from the state engineer.” There are few sources of water (groundwater, surface water, river water, etc.) within the limits of the state that are not subject to such a water permit. The power of eminent domain can only be harnessed in order to put water to a beneficial use. For this reason, a citizen cannot successfully exercise eminent domain without first having a water permit.

The right of eminent domain may come into play when a private citizen or corporation wants to use water for a beneficial use, but needs access to land they don’t own in order to access water. What is a beneficial use? North Dakota law is intentionally vague on this subject. It says beneficial use is the use of water for “a purpose consistent with the best interest of the people of the state.”

Traditionally the landowner who desires the use of a water source, having first secured a state permit, will negotiate an easement with the landowner who owns the land on which the water sits. But this does not always work out. Such was the case in Mougey Farms v. Kaspari, a 1998 North Dakota Supreme Court case. The plaintiff, Mougey, owned farmland neighboring the defendant Kaspari’s land. Kaspari’s land also bordered the Sheyenne River. Mougey wanted to use the Sheyenne River as a water supply to irrigate his land. To that purpose Mougey approached Kaspari to negotiate a lease of his land in order to build a water transport system connecting Mougey’s irrigation system to the Sheyenne River. Kaspari agreed, the two signed a lease, and the irrigation system was built across Kaspari’s land without incident. The lease began in 1979 and continued for almost seventeen years.

In 1996 Kaspari informed Mougey that the lease would not be renewed, and Mougey would no longer be allowed to transport water from the Sheyenne River to Mougey’s farmland. This left Mougey without a source of water for irrigation. Mougey brought suit with an eminent domain claim against Kaspari’s land – in other words, he brought a suit to condemn the part of Kaspari’s land on which the water pipeline stood, asking for the right to continue piping water from the river to his irrigation system. Though this argument was rejected in the lower court, the North Dakota Supreme Court held that “irrigation of farmland under a perfected water permit issued by the State Engineer is a beneficial use of water consistent with the best interests of the people of North Dakota, which we conclude satisfies the ‘public use’ requirement.” The Supreme Court of North Dakota held that a private citizen could exercise the power of eminent domain in order to condemn part of his neighbor’s land, so long as the condemnation was in support of an approved public use of water.

The law lays out what public uses trigger the right of eminent domain. It states, “oil, gas, coal, and carbon dioxide pipelines and works” and the plants for supplying the above, together with “lands, buildings, and all other improvements” needed to for the purpose of “generating, refining, regulating, compressing, transmitting, or…development and control” are all public uses capable of triggering eminent domain.

The question is whether or not use of water fits a category. Is the use one that supports “generating, refining, regulating, compressing, transmitting,” or “development and control” of oil and/or natural gas? This issue may be considered regarding one of the most important uses of water in the oil and gas industry, hydraulic fracturing. There are parallels that can be drawn between the use of water for irrigation seen in Mougey Farms and the use of water for hydraulic fracturing.

Energy developers and landowners should be aware of this eminent domain statute and the possibility of its use. Both parties need to remember that when water rights are involved in a public use, the prospect of eminent domain is conceivable. The North Dakota Supreme Court teaches us that the ‘eminent domain of water statute’ allows individuals or companies to acquire for public use property when found necessary for using water for beneficial purposes.

David Ganje. David Ganje of Ganje Law Offices practices in the area of natural resources, environmental and commercial law in South Dakota and North Dakota. The website is Lexenergy.net

Dealing with Environmentally Challenged Property

Posted on: September 27th, 2013
by David Ganje

Buying and Selling Dirty Property

Experienced attorney in the Dakotas & New York Practicing in Commercial Transactions & Litigation, Environmental Law, Natural Resources Law, & Energy Law

The below information links to workshop information on doing a business transaction on environmentally damaged property though planning, insurance and proper strategy.

.Buying & Selling Dirty Property image

Drafting a Choice of Law Provision

Posted on: August 28th, 2013
by David Ganje

Drafting A Choice of Law Provision

Consider All Aspects & State Revisions

Annual Funding Source Issue

Drafting a choice of law provision is not as easy as it seems if you assume the Uniform Universal Code (UCC) is ‘universal’ in all states. But it isn’t. Therefore, one needs to be extra vigilant in writing these provisions to ensure the outcome isn’t different from what was intended.

A choice of law provision is used in a lease or contract to determine the state or jurisdiction whose laws will govern if litigation arises between the lease parties. At first glance, when drafting or administering a commercial lease, it is easy to ask, “What is the real value of a ‘choice of law’ provision” if contractual rules are to be uniform under the “universal” Uniform Commercial Code (UCC)? A lessor should be able to achieve the same result in a contractual dispute regardless of the state in which litigation may be filed.

While states have adopted the UCC, they have not uniformly adopted all provisions of the UCC, nor do the various states uniformly interpret its terms. States tend to revise and edit sections and provisions of the UCC thus varying the outcome of any litigation. In drafting a choice of law provision in a lease one should consider a number of factors, including proximity to the court, the reputation of the judges in the particular legal area, the likely type of available jurors, and differences in the states governing leasing law and procedure.

Given the importance a choice of law provision will have on the outcome of possible litigation, it is surprising that the UCC provides, at best, minimal guidance on the subject. Case law over the years has developed the best guidance for drafting choice of law provisions in a commercial lease. The real source of direction in drafting a choice of law provision is, therefore, case law. Rules developed by case law have engendered a strong public policy in favor of allowing and enforcing choice of law provisions.

Case law provides our roadmap. This article will add comments on important rules of the road. If a choice of law provision is not procured by fraud and is not a violation of public policy, then courts will apply the law of the state designated in the lease if the selected forum bears sufficient contacts with the transaction. The law allows, in this instance, for contractual freedom. Three important aspects of a choice of law provisions are: the “reasonable relation” of the choice of law provision to the lease parties or to the state in which the suit is to be brought; the “conspicuousness” of the choice of law provision in the lease; and whether or not the provision places an inconvenience on the party seeking to avoid the provision.

Most of my “relations” are unreasonable. By that, I mean a good number of my cousins are a bunch of clowns. But the law is not referring to my kin when it talks about a “reasonable relationship.” The law of the state chosen in a choice of law provision must have some “business relation” to the lease parties or to the subject of the lease. The relationship need not be substantial or formal but requires some everyday relevance.

Accordingly, a choice of law provision will be deemed to have a reasonable relationship to the transaction if the headquarters of one party to the lease is within the state selected. In contrast, if the provision bears no relationship at all to the jurisdiction selected, such a choice of law provision will not be upheld.

Assume a choice of law provision requires that all lawsuits be brought in Utah, but Party A resides in New York City and Party B resides in Portland, OR, with the leased equipment to be manufactured and distributed from Denver. Courts likely will not uphold a choice of law provision of this nature (Utah), because of the lack of relationship with the forum selected. On the other hand, if the choice of law provision designated either, New York, Oregon or Colorado, then the provision would be deemed to have a reasonable relationship to the transaction— each of these states either has some connection to the lease parties or is connected to the subject of the lease.

The conspicuousness of a choice of law provision is another issue that will determine whether the provision will be upheld. The rationale behind making sure that a choice of law provision is conspicuous is to prevent fraud and to insure that a party to a lease agreement is not compelled to fight a lawsuit in a jurisdiction utterly unrelated to the lease. A choice of law provision that clearly indicates within the lease agreement which jurisdiction’s law is to be applied will be upheld.

Case law has provided an example of what would constitute “clearly indicated.” A choice of law printed in large cap letters has been deemed to be conspicuous, although it should also be noted that the court also mentioned that use of large cap letters was more than necessary. Parties entering into a commercial lease are considered to be more sophisticated than a consumer, thus, the steps to insure that a choice of law provision is sufficiently explicit for a consumer may not be needed when a businessperson is involved.

While the law allows for freedom of contract, and while lessors might want to gain any business advantage they can when drawing up a contract, courts will not validate a choice of law provision that would be manifestly inconvenient for the party seeking to avoid the provision. Finding that application of a choice of law provision would be unreasonable takes more than a mere claim of inconvenience by the party seeking to avoid the provision. Courts have ruled that the fact a litigation party has to travel will not, by itself, be deemed a legal inconvenience.

For example, Party A conducts business in North Carolina while Party B conducts business in New York. A choice of law provision, which requires that all lawsuits be brought in the state of New York included in the lease agreement will be upheld, because although Party A must travel to New York the fact that there is traveling involved does not bar the application of the choice of law provision.

As a final note, just because the drafters of the UCC effectively overlooked choice of law issues, does not mean you should or that a judge will. When drafting a choice of law provision in a commercial lease pay attention to the road map. Failure to follow the rules of the road could send you on a litigatious journey to Iowa, when you wanted to go to New York.