Flagstaff v. Desert Mountain ( 2022 )


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  •                       NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    CITY OF FLAGSTAFF, Plaintiff/Appellee,
    v.
    DESERT MOUNTAIN ENERGY CORP., Defendant/Appellant.
    No. 1 CA-CV 21-0168
    FILED 3-24-2022
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Coconino County
    No. S0300CV202000624
    The Honorable Cathleen Brown Nichols, Judge
    VACATED AND REMANDED
    COUNSEL
    Perkins Coie LLP, Phoenix
    By Christopher D. Thomas, P. Derek Petersen, David Treadaway
    Co-Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee
    TSL Law Group, PLC, Scottsdale
    By Lee A. Storey
    Co-Counsel for Plaintiff/Appellee
    DeConcini McDonald Yetwin & Lacy, P.C., Tucson
    By Lisa Anne Smith, Sesaly O. Stamps, Tyler H. Stanton
    Counsel for Defendant/Appellant
    FLAGSTAFF v. DESERT MOUNTAIN
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Presiding Judge Cynthia J. Bailey delivered the decision of the Court, in
    which Judge Jennifer M. Perkins and Judge Maria Elena Cruz joined.
    B A I L E Y, Judge:
    ¶1            Desert Mountain Energy Corporation (“Desert Mountain”)
    appeals the superior court’s issuance of a preliminary injunction requiring
    it to apply for and obtain a state permit before operating a well it has
    constructed in Northern Arizona. For the following reasons, we vacate the
    injunction and remand for further proceedings consistent with this
    decision.
    FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY
    ¶2             On appeal from an order granting a preliminary injunction,
    we view the facts in the light most favorable to sustaining the order. See
    Lane v. Bisceglia, 
    15 Ariz. App. 269
    , 270 (1971).
    ¶3            The City of Flagstaff (“the City”) owns Red Gap Ranch,
    located approximately forty miles east of Flagstaff. The City considers Red
    Gap Ranch to be the only location that can meet its future water needs and
    intends to use wells there to pump from the Coconino Aquifer.
    ¶4             Desert Mountain is a public energy company. In 2018, the
    State Land Department issued a lease to Desert Mountain to mine for
    helium and hydrocarbon resources on Arizona State Land (“State Land”).
    The anticipated State Land mine site was approximately 1.5 miles
    upgradient of Red Gap Ranch. After securing the lease, Desert Mountain
    and the City entered an agreement allowing Desert Mountain to traverse
    Red Gap Ranch and access the State Land mine site. In exchange for Desert
    Mountain providing the City with a copy of any seismic testing data Desert
    Mountain collected from Red Gap Ranch, the City waived any license fee
    for the use of its land.
    ¶5            In 2020, Desert Mountain obtained a permit from the Arizona
    Oil and Gas Conservation Commission (“AOGCC”) to construct Well 1255
    on the State Land.
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    FLAGSTAFF v. DESERT MOUNTAIN
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    ¶6           The City then filed a complaint to enjoin Desert Mountain’s
    State Land mining operation. The City raised multiple claims, including,
    as relevant here, claims for breach of contract and for a declaratory
    judgment that Arizona Revised Statutes (“A.R.S.”) sections 49-241 et seq.
    required Desert Mountain to obtain an Aquifer Protection Permit (“APP”)
    for the well from the Arizona Department of Environmental Quality
    (“ADEQ”). After a hearing on the City’s request to enjoin operation of the
    well, the superior court found that Desert Mountain’s well permit
    “indicates that [it] intends to inject materials” in the well and Desert
    Mountain “may engage in well stimulation.” (Emphasis added.) The court
    concluded that under ADEQ regulations, the potential for well
    “stimulation” required Desert Mountain to obtain an APP under A.R.S.
    § 49-241. See A.R.S. § 49-241(A) (requiring that “facilities that discharge[]
    shall obtain an [APP]”), (B)(3) (defining an “[i]njection well[]” as a
    “discharging facilit[y]”).
    ¶7            The court also determined the City was likely to prevail on its
    claim that Desert Mountain had breached its contract with the City by
    failing to provide seismic data. The court concluded that this separately
    supported a preliminary injunction.
    ¶8           The court entered a preliminary injunction against Desert
    Mountain requiring, among other things, that Desert Mountain cease well
    operation “until or unless it obtains all necessary permits, including an
    Aquifer Protection Permit.”
    ¶9            Desert Mountain timely appealed. We have jurisdiction
    pursuant to the Arizona Constitution, Article 6, Section 9, and A.R.S. § 12-
    2101(A)(5)(b).
    ANALYSIS
    ¶10          Desert Mountain argues that the superior court abused its
    discretion by issuing the preliminary injunction and by excluding
    testimony based on hearsay during the evidentiary hearing.
    I.     Injunctive Relief
    ¶11           We review the court’s decision whether to grant a preliminary
    injunction for an abuse of discretion. See Fann v. State, 
    251 Ariz. 425
    , 432,
    ¶ 15 (2021). The superior court abuses its discretion if it “clearly err[s] in
    finding the facts or applying them to the legal criteria for granting an
    injunction,” or “applie[s] the incorrect substantive law.” 
    Id.
     (citations
    omitted).
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    FLAGSTAFF v. DESERT MOUNTAIN
    Decision of the Court
    ¶12           The party requesting a preliminary injunction must show:
    (1) a strong likelihood of success on the merits, (2) the
    possibility of irreparable harm if the relief is not granted, (3)
    the balance of hardships favors the party seeking injunctive
    relief, and (4) public policy favors granting the injunctive
    relief. To meet this burden, the moving party may establish
    either 1) probable success on the merits and the possibility of
    irreparable injury; or 2) the presence of serious questions and
    that the balance of hardships tips sharply in favor of the
    moving party. This is a sliding scale, not a strict balancing of
    factors. The greater and less reparable the harm, the less the
    showing of a strong likelihood of success on the merits need
    be. Conversely, if the likelihood of success on the merits is
    weak, the showing of irreparable harm must be stronger.
    Id. at ¶ 16 (internal quotation marks and citations omitted).
    ¶13           The superior court based its injunction on two conclusions of
    law that followed two of the City’s causes of action: breach of contract and
    a violation of A.R.S. § 49-241. Neither conclusion of law supported the
    preliminary injunction.
    A.     Breach of Contract
    ¶14            Injunctive relief is available only where the possibility of
    irreparable injury is “not remediable by damages.” Shoen v. Shoen, 
    167 Ariz. 58
    , 63 (App. 1990) (explaining that a party must show “[t]he possibility of
    irreparable injury . . . if the requested [injunctive] relief is not granted”
    (citations omitted)). Here, the City’s contract claim arises from its
    agreement to allow Desert Mountain to traverse City-owned Red Gap
    Ranch land in exchange for any seismic data collected by Desert Mountain
    while testing nearby or adjacent State Land. Even assuming the court
    properly found the City was likely to prevail on its breach of contract claim,
    the breach was remediable by damages, i.e., payment by Desert Mountain
    for either the value of a license to traverse the Red Gap Ranch land or the
    cost to the City to collect its own seismic data.
    ¶15            The City even acknowledged the adequacy of damages in its
    complaint, which alleges that Desert Mountain breached the parties’
    contract “by completing seismic testing on Red Gap Ranch and failing to
    share the results of that testing with the City,” and that “[a]s a result . . . ,
    the City has been harmed in an amount to be proven at trial, but in no event
    less than the full amount of licensing fees it waived.” (Emphases added.) The
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    FLAGSTAFF v. DESERT MOUNTAIN
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    claim thus expressly alleges monetary damages and does not suggest that
    monetary damages are inadequate to remedy the alleged breach; nor does
    the claim suggest that the alleged breach relates to the alleged irreparable
    harm and requested injunctive relief here. See IB Prop. Holdings, LLC v.
    Rancho Del Mar Apartments Ltd. P’ship, 
    228 Ariz. 61
    , 65, ¶ 10 (App. 2011)
    (“[T]he party seeking an injunction must show a possibility of irreparable
    injury ‘not remediable by [monetary] damages’” (quoting Shoen, 
    167 Ariz. at 63
    )).
    ¶16           Even if an injunction were an appropriate remedy for the
    breach of contract claim, such an injunction must be tied to a specific
    performance of seismic testing, or a prohibition on crossing the City-owned
    Red Gap Ranch land and not on some other activity that was not
    contemplated in the terms of the contract. Here, the City claimed a breach
    of contract because Desert Mountain failed to provide it with data. But the
    relief provided in the injunction is far removed from any obligation by
    Desert Mountain to provide data to the City.
    B.     Declaratory Relief Under A.R.S. § 49-241
    1.     The City failed to properly pursue a direct action under
    A.R.S. § 49-241.
    ¶17            The superior court alternatively based its injunction on a
    violation (or potential violation) of A.R.S. § 49-241. But because no § 49-241
    claim was properly before the court, the injunction fails here, too.
    ¶18           Under A.R.S. § 49-241, as relevant here, and with certain
    exceptions, “any person who discharges [a pollutant into state water] or
    who owns or operates a facility that discharges shall obtain an [APP] from
    the director” of ADEQ. See also A.R.S. § 49-201(12). Although the court
    found that Desert Mountain might “discharge,” the City did not have
    standing to bring a claim under § 49-241. Section 49-264(A) allows a right
    of action on § 49-241 grounds only in limited circumstances, none of which
    are present here.
    ¶19           Specifically, § 49-264(A) allows “a person that has an interest
    that is or may be adversely affected by a violation of this chapter” to sue
    “the director” in superior court “alleging a failure of the [ADEQ] director
    to perform an act or duty that is not discretionary.” The court may then
    issue an order compelling the director to perform that act or duty. Id.
    ¶20       Here, the City sued Desert Mountain and not the director of
    ADEQ. Nothing in the plain text of the statute suggests that a right exists
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    FLAGSTAFF v. DESERT MOUNTAIN
    Decision of the Court
    to sue an alleged violator rather than the director. Even if we assume that
    the term “director” somehow also encompasses the term “violator,” the
    statute requires that 120 days’ notice be given to both the director and the
    violator before a suit is filed. A.R.S. § 49-264(B)(1). The City gave no such
    notice. Finally, the only statutory remedy is a court order requiring the
    director to perform a neglected duty. The superior court considered neither
    the prerequisites, nor the procedure, nor the remedy prescribed by § 49-264
    for a perceived violation of § 49-241. Consequently, the court erred in
    granting a preliminary injunction on this basis.
    2.     The cases cited by the City permitting litigation before
    exhaustion of remedies are distinguishable.
    ¶21            The parties disagree whether the City was required to exhaust
    administrative remedies or otherwise proceed with or against ADEQ before
    bringing the instant action. The City argues that recourse to ADEQ was not
    necessary before seeking a declaratory judgment under A.R.S. §§ 49-241
    and 12-1831, citing our decisions in Canyon Del Rio Inv’rs, L.L.C. v. City of
    Flagstaff, 
    227 Ariz. 336
    , 341, ¶ 22 (App. 2011), and Manning v. Reilly, 
    2 Ariz. App. 310
    , 312 (1965). But this authority is inapposite.
    ¶22            In Canyon Del Rio, the plaintiff brought three claims for relief
    in the form of a declaratory judgment excluding it from the application of a
    Flagstaff zoning ordinance, which the trial court dismissed for failure to
    exhaust administrative remedies. Although we reversed the trial court in
    that case, citing Manning, we cabined our reasoning in Canyon Del Rio to a
    declaratory action seeking relief from “an allegedly invalid zoning
    ordinance.” 227 Ariz. at 341, ¶ 22. Here, the City does not allege that either
    A.R.S. § 49-241 or § 49-264 is invalid or unconstitutional, and this is enough
    to put us beyond Canyon Del Rio’s narrow scope.
    ¶23          Our prior reasoning in Manning helps to explain this result.
    In Manning, we evaluated whether a plaintiff challenging a zoning
    ordinance as both improperly enacted and unconstitutional was required
    to exhaust his/her remedies before bringing an action in court. We
    determined he/she was not, holding in relevant part that:
    [t]he remedy for attacking the validity of a zoning ordinance
    is distinguishable from the remedy of securing a variance
    from a zoning board of adjustment, the former being based on
    right and entitling a property owner to a court trial on
    questions of fact while the latter remedy is based on a favor
    sought and assumes the validity of the ordinance.
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    FLAGSTAFF v. DESERT MOUNTAIN
    Decision of the Court
    Manning, 2 Ariz. App. at 312 (citation omitted). We contrasted the
    questions of fact appropriately brought to a zoning board with the
    determination of “legal or constitutional questions” that require “judicial
    determination and are beyond the scope of an administrative body’s
    powers and authority.” Id. The issue at stake here—whether Desert
    Mountain requires a permit from ADEQ—is entirely a fact-specific inquiry
    requiring a high degree of technical expertise, not a question of
    constitutionality or validity. These cases do not support the City’s position.
    3.     The anti-abrogation clause and statutory reservation of
    rights do not apply.
    ¶24            The City argues that it has a right independent of the ADEQ
    statutes to sue for declaratory relief, arguing that this freestanding right
    could not be abrogated by A.R.S. §§ 49-241 and 49-264. But the anti-
    abrogation clause of the Arizona Constitution affords the City no relief.
    Article 18, Section 6, of the Arizona Constitution provides that “[t]he right
    of action to recover damages for injuries shall never be abrogated, and the
    amount recovered shall not be subject to any statutory limitation.” The
    anti-abrogation clause “was intended to take the right to seek justice out of
    executive and legislative control, preserving the ability to invoke judicial
    remedies for those wrongs traditionally recognized at common law.”
    Boswell v. Phoenix Newspapers, Inc., 
    152 Ariz. 9
    , 17 (1986).
    ¶25           Although the anti-abrogation clause preserves common law
    causes of action, such as actions for declaratory judgment, the plain
    language of § 49-264(A) does not support a direct action against Desert
    Mountain for violating the provisions of Title 49, Chapter 2. A justiciable
    controversy for the purposes of a declaratory judgment is one in which a
    party asserts “a right, status, or legal relation in which the plaintiff has a
    definite interest and a denial of it by the opposing party.” Keggi v.
    Northbrook Prop. & Cas. Ins. Co., 
    199 Ariz. 43
    , 45, ¶ 10 (App. 2000) (quoting
    Samaritan Health Servs. v. City of Glendale, 
    148 Ariz. 394
    , 395 (App. 1986)
    (citation omitted)). The purported “right, status, or legal relation” for
    which the City sought declaratory judgment in this case was Desert
    Mountain’s obligation to seek a permit under A.R.S. § 49-241 et seq. and
    A.R.S. § 49-264(A). Again, §§ 49-241 and 49-264 only authorize suits against
    the director and provide for enforcement of a regulatory scheme by the
    director. The City has no “right, status, or legal relation” with or against
    Desert Mountain based on these statutes, and there was thus nothing to
    abrogate. The City simply has no standing under the statute to pursue this
    claim, and enjoining Desert Mountain on this basis was improper.
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    FLAGSTAFF v. DESERT MOUNTAIN
    Decision of the Court
    ¶26           Finally, the City points to the reservation of rights clause of
    A.R.S. § 49-206 as preserving a freestanding right to enjoin Desert
    Mountain. But again, the proposed form of order submitted by the City
    and signed by the court only supplies one basis for such a declaratory
    judgment: A.R.S. §§ 49-241 and 49-264. Section 49-206 reserves no claim
    against a third party under those statutes. The foundational claim is that
    Desert Mountain did not acquire the appropriate permit from ADEQ under
    A.R.S § 49-241 and the City sought a declaratory judgment on that basis.
    Whatever other “causes of action or remedies” to “suppress[] nuisances or
    prevent[] injury due to discharges” exist, the City failed to present them in
    its proposed order. A.R.S. § 49-206. No legal basis exists for the preliminary
    injunction.
    II.    Evidentiary Rulings
    ¶27           Although Desert Mountain challenges the court’s evidentiary
    rulings, it does not assert those rulings had any bearing on the court’s
    determination to issue the preliminary injunction; and Desert Mountain has
    prevailed in any event. Because we do not issue advisory opinions, we
    decline to address these issues. See Velasco v. Mallory, 
    5 Ariz. App. 406
    , 410-
    11 (1967) (“We will not render advisory opinions anticipative of troubles
    which do not exist; may never exist; and the precise form of which, should
    they ever arise, we cannot predict.” (citations omitted)).
    III.   Attorneys’ Fees and Costs on Appeal
    ¶28            Both parties request attorneys’ fees under A.R.S. § 12-
    341.01(A). Section 12-341.01(A) gives the court discretion to award fees to
    the successful party in actions arising out of contract. The breach of contract
    claim does not support the preliminary injunction, and an award of fees
    under § 12-341.01 is not warranted. See generally Schwab Sales, Inc. v. GN
    Constr. Co., 
    196 Ariz. 33
    , 37, ¶ 11 (App. 1998); see also Marcus v. Fox, 
    150 Ariz. 333
    , 335 (1986) (explaining that “fees are not appropriate based on the mere
    existence of a contract somewhere in the transaction,” and there must be a
    “causal link between [the] claim and the underlying contract”).
    ¶29            Desert Mountain also requests attorneys’ fees under § 12-
    349(1) and (2), alleging that the City brought claims without substantial
    justification and to delay Desert Mountain’s well project, and arguing the
    City’s claims are groundless and are not brought in good faith because it
    failed to proceed through the statutorily required administrative process.
    We disagree and decline to award attorneys’ fees, but we award Desert
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    FLAGSTAFF v. DESERT MOUNTAIN
    Decision of the Court
    Mountain its taxable costs pursuant to A.R.S. § 12-341 upon timely
    compliance with Rule 21, ARCAP.
    CONCLUSION
    ¶30         For the reasons stated, we vacate the preliminary injunction
    and remand for further proceedings consistent with this decision.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED:    JT
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