Singh v. United States ( 2015 )


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    Please see Rule 12-405 NMRA for restrictions on the citation of unpublished memorandum
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    1        IN THE COURT OF APPEALS OF THE STATE OF NEW MEXICO
    2   SAMMIE SINGH, SR., SAMMIE SINGH, JR., ED
    3   PROVENCIO, LUPE GARCIA, JONNY DIAZ and
    4   JOHN FLEMING and DR. NATHAN E. BOYD
    5   ESTATE, BY JAMES SCOTT BOYD, PERSONAL
    6   REPRESENTATIVE, and JAMES SCOTT BOYD, individually,
    7          Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    8 v.                                                                                   No. 33,672
    9 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, STATE OF NEW
    10 MEXICO, ELEPHANT BUTTE IRRIGATION DISTRICT
    11 and CITY OF LAS CRUCES,
    12          Defendants-Appellees.
    13 Consolidated with
    14   SAMMIE SINGH, SR., SAMMIE SINGH, JR., ED
    15   PROVENCIO, LUPE GARCIA, JONNY DIAZ and
    16   JOHN FLEMING and DR. NATHAN E. BOYD ESTATE,
    17   BY JAMES SCOTT BOYD, PERSONAL REPRESENTATIVE,
    18   and JAMES SCOTT BOYD, individually,
    19          Plaintiffs-Appellants,
    20 v.                                                                                   No. 33,968
    21 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA, STATE OF NEW
    22 MEXICO, ELEPHANT BUTTE IRRIGATION DISTRICT
    1 and CITY OF LAS CRUCES,
    2         Defendants-Appellees.
    3 APPEAL FROM THE DISTRICT COURT OF DOÑA ANA COUNTY
    4 James J. Wechsler, District Judge
    5 Robert S. Simon
    6 Albuquerque, NM
    7 for Appellants
    8   Environment & Natural Resources Division
    9   United States Department of Justice
    10   Matthew Littleton
    11   Washington, DC
    12 for Appellee United States of America
    13 Law Office of Steven L. Hernandez, P.C.
    14 Samantha R. Barncastle
    15 Las Cruces, NM
    16 for Appellee Elephant Butte Irrigation District
    17                           MEMORANDUM OPINION
    18 BUSTAMANTE, Judge.
    19   {1}   Appellants filed separate appeals from two orders entered by the district
    20 court—the February 17, 2014, order granting partial summary judgment on certain
    21 issues, denying Appellants’ motion for summary judgment, and setting a scheduling
    22 conference [No. 33,968 RP 4664], as well as the June 18, 2014, order denying
    2
    1 Appellants’ motion to stay further proceedings in Stream System 97-104 [No. 33,968
    2 RP 5335]. Appellees United States and Elephant Butte Irrigation District filed
    3 motions to dismiss each appeal for lack of appellate jurisdiction. Appellants filed
    4 responses to the motions to dismiss, and we granted Appellees permission to file a
    5 reply brief in Case No. 33,968. Having duly considered each of these filings, we
    6 consolidate the appeals and dismiss both for the reasons stated in this Opinion. We
    7 note that any citations in this Opinion to the record proper are to the record proper
    8 filed in Case No. 33,968, since that record is much less voluminous.
    9   {2}   Initially, we deny Appellants’ request to file a sur-reply brief in Case No.
    10 33,968. The sur-reply brief proffered by Appellants is thirty (30) pages long, includes
    11 attachments that have been previously submitted to this Court, and offers nothing new
    12 for our consideration. Counsel for Appellants is cautioned to refrain from repetitious
    13 and burdensome filings in the future.
    14   {3}   We also note that counsel for Appellants has failed to bring up a record
    15 adequate to allow us to determine whether we have jurisdiction over either one of
    16 these appeals. In both appeals, Appellants requested permission to submit truncated
    17 records proper and we granted those requests. Neither submitted record proper
    18 contains a copy of the notice of appeal that was allegedly filed to trigger each appeal.
    19 Furthermore, we have been unable to confirm the filing of such notices by using the
    3
    1 Odyssey electronic-filing program, because this water-adjudication case does not
    2 appear in the Odyssey data-base. We therefore are not able to determine, on the record
    3 submitted by Appellants, whether notices of appeal were filed below and, if so,
    4 whether those notices were filed in a timely manner. As discussed below, we do not
    5 have jurisdiction over either appeal because neither appeal has been taken from a final,
    6 appealable order. Therefore, we need not address the notice-of-appeal issue. However,
    7 counsel for Appellants should be aware that when a limited record proper is filed, that
    8 record proper must contain every document that is necessary to allow us to confirm
    9 our authority to consider the appeal.
    10   {4}   As Appellants are aware, having had a previous appeal dismissed on lack-of-
    11 finality grounds, this Court’s jurisdiction lies from final, appealable orders. See Kelly
    12 Inn No. 102, Inc. v. Kapnison, 
    1992-NMSC-005
    , ¶ 14, 
    113 N.M. 231
    , 
    824 P.2d 1033
    .
    13 Generally, an order or judgment is not considered final unless all issues of law and
    14 fact have been determined and the case disposed of by the district court to the fullest
    15 extent possible. See 
    id.
     In this case it is obvious that neither order disposes of all
    16 issues of law and fact in the proceedings out of which the orders arose. As noted
    17 above, the first order is a grant of partial summary judgment, a denial of Appellants’
    18 motion for summary judgment, and an order concerning scheduling of further
    19 proceedings. This order obviously contemplates further proceedings in SS-97-104, the
    4
    1 stream-system issue presently being litigated by the parties. Similarly, the June 18,
    2 2014, order simply denies Appellants’ motion to stay further proceedings in SS-97-
    3 104; denial of a stay does not in any way resolve all issues of law and fact that are
    4 presented in a case.
    5   {5}   Appellants attempt to avoid the above analysis by relying on Rule 1-054(B)(2)
    6 NMRA, and by arguing that the district court has fully and finally disposed of all their
    7 claims to superior ownership rights to the water claimed by the United States.
    8 Appellants argue that those allegedly superior rights arose as a result of fraud
    9 committed by agents of the United States over 100 years ago; during the remainder
    10 of this opinion we will refer to this argument as Appellants’ “superior-title” claim. As
    11 a result of several orders entered by the district court, Appellants contend, their
    12 superior-title claim has been rejected by that court, with the most recent example of
    13 that rejection being the February 17, 2014, order entered in Case No. 33,672.
    14   {6}   It is true that under Rule 1-054(B)(2), an order that adjudicates all issues as to
    15 a party is final and appealable insofar as that party is concerned. However, if any issue
    16 remains to be determined with respect to that party, the order will not be appealable.
    17 See Cordova v. Cline, 
    2013-NMCA-083
    , ¶¶ 16-17, 
    308 P.3d 975
     (order dismissing
    18 plaintiff’s claims was final with respect to defendants who had not filed
    19 counterclaims, but was not final as to defendants whose counterclaims remained
    5
    1 pending). We must therefore examine the two orders involved in these appeals to
    2 determine whether as a result of these orders all issues pertaining to Appellants have
    3 been resolved.
    4   {7}   We point out first that this case is a stream-system adjudication, and Appellants
    5 have presumably all filed claims to water rights that must be addressed. At this point
    6 we have been given no information concerning the grounds for those claims; in other
    7 words, we do not know whether some or all of the Appellants (who have presented
    8 their arguments on appeal as a group rather than as disparate individuals) have claims
    9 to water rights that are not dependent on the superior-title claim. If that is the case,
    10 then disposing of the superior-title claim would not resolve all of the claims that have
    11 been put forth by Appellants in this adjudication. Therefore, even if an order did
    12 finally and unfavorably determine the superior-title claim as to Appellants, that order
    13 would not be final and appealable until all of Appellants’ possible claims to water
    14 rights have also been resolved. See Cordova.
    15   {8}   More fundamentally, it does not appear that the district court has fully and
    16 finally resolved Appellants’ superior-title claim. We recognize that there is language
    17 in the February 2014 order to the effect that the superior-title claim has been
    18 previously ruled upon and rejected by the district court. [No. 33,968 RP 4667-68]
    19 Standing alone, that language implies that the district court does not find the superior-
    6
    1 title claim persuasive. However, the February 2014 order merely denies Appellants’
    2 motion for summary judgment on the superior-title claim; it does not dismiss any
    3 Appellant from the adjudication as a whole or from the SS-97-104 proceeding.
    4 Therefore, this order is an interlocutory order that is subject to possible alteration in
    5 future proceedings. See, e.g., Sims v. Sims, 
    1996-NMSC-078
    , ¶ 59, 
    122 N.M. 618
    ,
    6 
    930 P.2d 153
     (“District courts have plenary power over their interlocutory orders and
    7 may revise them . . . at any time prior to final judgment.” (citation omitted)).
    8   {9}   In fact, the June 2014 order denying Appellants’ request for a stay clarifies the
    9 district court’s intent and strongly, if not conclusively, indicates the district court will
    10 consider the superior-title issue, either during the SS-97-104 proceeding or during
    11 expedited inter se proceedings that may be held on a representative basis. [No. 33,968
    12 RP 5337] In addition to the district court’s mention of the above possibilities, we note
    13 that the district court specifically headlined a section of the order as follows: “THE
    14 PRE-1906 CLAIMANTS’ RIGHTS TO PROJECT DIVERSION WORKS WILL BE
    15 DETERMINED IN THIS ADJUDICATION.” It is difficult, if not impossible, to
    16 interpret this statement in any other way except as an expression of the fact that the
    17 district court has yet to resolve the superior-title issue unfavorably to Appellants, and
    18 plans to address that issue in subsequent proceedings. We therefore cannot accept
    7
    1 Appellants’ contention that the district court has already decided the superior-title
    2 issue adversely to Appellants.
    3   {10}   We find that the district court has not yet made a final decision disposing of all
    4 claims raised in this action by any individual Appellant or by Appellants as a whole.
    5 Absent such a final decision, which would be tantamount to dismissing some or all of
    6 the Appellants from this adjudication, Rule 1-054(B)(2) does not apply to this
    7 situation. Since neither of the orders that are the bases of these appeals is final and
    8 appealable, the motions to dismiss each appeal are granted and both appeals are
    9 dismissed. Any further pleadings that may be filed in these consolidated appeals shall
    10 be filed in Case No. 33,672.
    11   {11}   IT IS SO ORDERED.
    12                                       _______________________________________
    13                                       MICHAEL D. BUSTAMANTE, Judge
    14 WE CONCUR:
    15
    16 JONATHAN B. SUTIN, Judge
    17
    18 TIMOTHY L. GARCIA, Judge
    8
    

Document Info

Docket Number: 33,672 33,968

Filed Date: 2/2/2015

Precedential Status: Non-Precedential

Modified Date: 4/17/2021