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Is the Trump Option Available In SD For Condemnation?

Posted on: February 13th, 2016
by David Ganje

Is the Trump Option Available In SD For Condemnation?

Eminent domain is one of the toughest and most controversial legal powers available to a government, but the South Dakota legislature has so far failed to manage it properly. Eminent domain allows a governmental body to convert privately owned land to another use, often over the objections of the current landowner. The Donald Trump Option is the right of a private party to use eminent domain.  This is done by developers, pipeline companies and hotel builders alike. This process is commonly known as a ‘taking’ or ‘condemning the land.’ There are rules, of course. A landowner must be paid “just compensation” for the condemnation of his land. Further, the land that is to be taken may only be taken to further a beneficial public use.

The ability to exercise eminent domain is so powerful that it almost always remains the final legal option. The use of eminent domain is not solely limited to governments. Private parties as well as corporations may exercise the immense power of eminent domain. For example, South Dakota law states that “Any person may exercise the right of eminent domain…to acquire as a public use any property or other rights necessary for application of water to beneficial uses.” Private parties as well as corporations may exercise the immense power of eminent domain.

The law allows a private party to manage water rights by a taking. The statute states, “except as otherwise provided…no person may appropriate the waters of this state for any purpose without first obtaining a permit to do so.” The power of eminent domain may used if the taker puts water to a beneficial use. For this reason, a party may not successfully exercise eminent domain without first having a water permit.

This right to take comes into play when a party seeks access to land he doesn’t own in order to access water. What is a beneficial use? South Dakota law is intentionally vague on this subject. It says beneficial use is the use of water “that is reasonable and useful and beneficial to the appropriator, and at the same time is consistent with the interests of the public.” For courts, this is a balancing test, as opposed to a concrete definition. The question in eminent domain cases, then, is whether or not a proposed use of water fits this vague legislative definition of ‘beneficial use.’ The Supreme Court has implied that it can. As a result, eminent domain cases involving water can span an enormous berth of cases, with those claiming eminent domain seeking water for everything from irrigation to oil extraction.

There is irony in too much of what the South Dakota legislature does. Counties and municipalities are forbidden from using eminent domain for the benefit of a private party. Yet the field is wide open for private parties to use eminent domain for a private party’s benefit.

Whether it is a taking to obtain water rights or land for a pipeline, the matter of ‘just compensation’ to be given to the landowner is paramount. I have advocated in prior blog articles the need to revisit the matter of just compensation. This issue applies to a government or private taking.  The ‘valuation process’ should be changed.  The SD Supreme Court has stated that the state legislature has the authority to create the method of compensation in a condemnation proceeding.  The State Constitution is interestingly stronger from a landowner’s perspective than is the US Constitution on the issue of eminent domain.

State Senator Monroe, or his speechwriter, state that that my argument (and that of 5 states and counting as of 2012) is wrongheaded. He has stated, “We have well established legal mechanisms to compensate property owners and treat them fairly.”  Good negotiations by a landowner may result in more favorable compensation. But the playing field should be level between the land taker, who has the power of the law to take, and the landowner.  Senator Monroe’s refusal to look at the issue is a belittlement of efforts to protect property rights.

I do not know whether the Senator has had a pipeline run through his property under an eminent domain proceeding. A taking is not a normal market transaction because the landowner has no choice.  A landowner can’t walk away from the table. The legal process of taking private property is just as important as the right to free speech, freedom of religion and the protection against unreasonable search and seizures.

There are several problems with South Dakotan condemnation law. The law should be revised to include written disclosures following the requirements of Wyoming law. Wyoming law provides new rights for landowners in all condemnation proceedings, whether initiated by the government or private parties. SD law should require that the taker show the details of the proposed project plan and the written basis behind any compensation offer. An additional provision that should be changed is the legal taking procedure. Currently the procedure does not allow the landowner the recovery of all of his court costs, appraisal costs, expert witness fees and attorney’s fees even in the event he should prevail in the case. This forces landowners to fear spending money defending their own land, something that a citizen should never have to do. SD law should provide that a landowner is entitled to an award of all court costs, appraisal costs, expert witness fees and attorney’s fees if the taker failed to negotiate in good faith, or if the compensation awarded by the court or jury exceeds the amount of money offered by the taker to the landowner. Until then, the playing field will remain skewed in favor of takers.

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

Solar Agreements In New York State

Posted on: January 27th, 2016
by David Ganje

Solar Agreements In New York State
By David Ganje of Ganje Law Offices

Recently new solar collection projects are appearing in Sullivan and surrounding counties in New York. Solar collection systems are not new to the area or state, but are becoming more feasible because of technology and government support. Solar agreements with landowners are a viable economic opportunity for landowners but are nevertheless, at the same time, what I call a ‘second marriage’ of the landowner.

I suggest landowners review an article on the web found at the following link: http://www.wiseenergy.org/Energy/Leaseholder.pdf
The article discusses some of the legal and economic issues landowners and farmers should consider when contracting with a solar energy company.

The long-standing questions of preserving property rights while giving up other rights are addressed in the article. Of course a landowner should not rely on web articles as formal legal advice but informing oneself of the many issues is important.

While I am a pro solar energy development person, I also maintain that property rights are more essential to address in any long term agreement than the immediate economic benefits of having solar on one’s property.

Pipeline Easements in New York

Posted on: January 8th, 2016
by David Ganje

Pipeline Easements in New York

As natural gas exploration and production has increased, so too has the need to overhaul and expand the natural gas transportation system. Currently, there plans are under way pipe-in shale natural gas being extracted in neighboring Pennsylvania.

In late-November, Kinder-Morgan, the Northeast Energy Direct (“NED”) Pipeline operator, filed a certificate application with the Federal Energy Regulatory Commission (“FERC”) in int’s effort to begin construction at the beginning of 2017, and make the pipeline operational by the end of 2018. While Kinder Morgan says most of the pipeline would be co-located with existing utility lines, many of these corridors would need to be widened, resulting in impacts to private property.

In the case of the NED, scores of privately-owned parcels will have to be crossed along the pipelines route through New York State. In order to facilitate construction of the pipeline, the operators behind the NED and Constitution Pipelines will negotiate easements with the owners of these parcels.

The relationship between public utilities and negotiated easements is nothing new. Easements may be granted to private businesses, such as a public utility company, to cross a land parcel in order to provide common services such as sewer access or electricity. Natural gas pipeline easements present a different situation. Setting aside for the moment the issue of whether the pipelines are a good thing economically and environmentally for the state, affected landowners should tread carefully.

Unlike a public utility easement, a natural gas pipeline moves product for profit across land rather than providing a direct benefit to the land. At peak capacity, millions of dollars worth of natural gas will be moving through these pipelines every day. Are affected landowners receiving fair compensation?

Traditionally in these situations, landowners receive “market value” of the land affected by an easement, which often includes money for reduction in agriculture output or other productive use of the land.

While this system makes sense under the common public utility easement paradigm, how does this process apply when the landowner’s property is the “transportation vehicle” for a commodity? How does one calculate “fair market value” when millions of dollars worth of product are flowing across privately-held land? Is a one-time payment for an easement fair compensation?

The term eminent domain should raise a red flag with any landowner along a pipeline’s proposed route. Eminent domain means “forced taking” though litigation. Under the doctrine of eminent domain, private property may be seized so long as the seizure is for a public purpose, and fair compensation is provided.

The concept of “public purpose” is liberally construed under the law. So, a seizure of property for a pipeline could be for a public purpose even when the direct benefactor is a private company. “Fair compensation” typically means that the taking party must provide market rate for the seized or affected land. In such cases, the focus is on production loss to the landowner rather than benefit provided to the operator.

Forty-two states have enacted new legislation or passed ballot measures since 2006 concerning problems with eminent domain as a taking of private property. Compensation to landowners in eminent domain proceedings has been notoriously small in amount. However, five states have recently enacted legislation increasing the compensation amount.

So, if the easements are coming, for what terms should New York landowners be on the lookout?

When landowners are approached about an easement they are presented with a standard agreement. These agreements will not refer to any individualized needs or considerations. But they do contain many important legal terms.

Some examples of common terms:

-“Temporary periods” are often mentioned. How long is temporary?

-Many agreements give an operator the right to conduct several activities (reconstructing, modifying etc.) at any time. However, the Landowner does not retain the right to renegotiate the type of access allowed. These activities could cause future disturbances to the Landowner’s use and enjoyment of their land. Is the landowner left without any recourse?

-Some agreements allow for the installation of “any appurtenant facilities.” What are these appurtenant facilities? Are they going to impact the Landowner’s use and enjoyment of the land?

While Landowners may feel pressure to sign, that does not mean that they must be left with a bad deal. Any proposed agreement should be reviewed with the help of experienced advisor’s. A landowner should always carefully consider the circumstances of his land and, importantly the future of his land.

Author: David Ganje. David Ganje of Ganje Law Offices practices in the area of natural resources, environmental and commercial law in New York.

Termination of Oil & Gas Leases

Posted on: October 22nd, 2015
by David Ganje

David L. Ganje, of Ganje Law Offices, has been invited to speak on November 11th at a professional legal education program sponsored by Strafford Publications, Inc. Ganje’s presentation will discuss Termination of Oil & Gas Leases based upon Lack of Production.

Letter to the Editor: A South Dakota Water Lottery

Posted on: October 20th, 2014
by David Ganje

Letter to the Editor: A South Dakota Water Lottery

Posted Aberdeen American News, Farm Forum: Monday, October 13, 2014 9:08 am

by David Ganje

While it has yet to come to the attention of the national environmental and natural resources community, the South Dakota state legislature passed a first-in-the-nation law this year in the field of natural resources. The state will use a ‘lottery system’ for the issuance of certain state managed water permits. The water lottery system is combined with a moratorium on water use for identified water bodies managed by the state. Under current South Dakota law, all water within the state’s jurisdiction is property of the people of the state. The right to the use of water may be acquired by private parties and municipalities by a state-managed appropriation procedure. The state has been historically a first in time, first in right state when granting water use rights. South Dakota’s ‘water management’ jurisdiction does not however apply to Indian Country or on federal lands. Water use in South Dakota is authorized when the state Water Management Board grants a private, beneficial use of the state’s water resources. An example of a private use is an irrigation permit. A water use permit is issued either as a new water use or as a vested water right for an existing water use if it predates 1955.

The new water lottery system comes into play in situations where the state Water Board has determined that an existing groundwater source is ‘fully appropriated.’ A water source is fully appropriated when the state rules that no new or further access to the water should be granted because it would prejudice the ability of the water source to recharge to an acceptable level. The lottery system will not apply to open or unappropriated aquifers. The Water Board under the new legislation can accept water permit applications even for a fully appropriated aquifer. A 30 day application time period will also be set for a fully appropriated aquifer by public notice. The notice gives prospective applicants the right to apply under the lottery system. The applications are then placed in a lottery drawing system. The actual method for drawing successful applicants has not yet been implemented but will be announced in the next several weeks. The ‘winning’ applicants will then have to wait under the state’s five-year moratorium on approval of permits in those instances when the state has made a designation of a ‘fully appropriated aquifer.’

A lottery system for resource development permits has been used in the past, but never by a state for access to state managed water. The U.S. Bureau of Land Management used a lottery system for granting oil and gas leases until 1987 but has not used it since. The state, of course, does not call this new law a lottery system. I do. The new unchallenged law describes the lottery system as a procedure in which, “the board shall create a priority list using a random selection process to be determined by the board.” This new lottery system is an effort to cure problems in past experiences when an aquifer is placed in a moratorium. One cannot criticize the conceptual fairness of the new law. The statutes attempt to treat water permit applicants seeking access to a particular aquifer equally by using the “random selection process” in a moratorium scenario. The law itself has some challenges in its language as well as in its untested procedure. It is soon to be implemented by the state Water Board and the S.D. DENR. The new law is a unique effort by the state to deal with natural resources stewardship issues. In that regard the legislature should be applauded. Will the bar of reason support this brave new attempt at fairness? Time will tell.

 

Tags: Environmental Law, Infrastructure Security, Natural Resources Law, Water Law, Water Regulation, Water Rights, Water Systems Security