A & B Irrigation District v. State

336 P.3d 792, 157 Idaho 385, 2014 WL 3810591, 2014 Ida. LEXIS 203
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 4, 2014
DocketNos. 40974, 40975
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 336 P.3d 792 (A & B Irrigation District v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Idaho Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
A & B Irrigation District v. State, 336 P.3d 792, 157 Idaho 385, 2014 WL 3810591, 2014 Ida. LEXIS 203 (Idaho 2014).

Opinion

BURDICK, Chief Justice.

This appeal arises out of the Snake River Basin Adjudication (SRBA) court’s decision on the following basin-wide issue: Does Idaho law require a remark authorizing storage rights to “refill,” under priority, space vacated for flood control? The SRBA court concluded that a remark was not necessary because a storage water right, that is filled cannot refill under priority before affected junior appropriators satisfy their water rights once. The court declined to address when the quantity element of a storage water right is considered filled. Sev.en Magic Valley irrigation districts and canal companies (collectively the “Surface Water Coalition”) appeal this decision in Docket No. 40974. The Boise Project Board appeals this decision in Docket No. 40975. Because both cases appeal the same decision of the SRBA court and have significant overlap, we address them together in this opinion.

I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

The basis of this appeal, Basin-Wide Issue 17, arose from several individual SRBA sub-[388]*388cases that involved the question of how filling a reservoir after the release of flood control waters should be addressed on the face of partial decrees for storage water rights in the Palisades and American Falls Reservoirs. Both the State and the Bureau of Reclamation (Reclamation) took the position that a remark is necessary on the face of a water right to authorize the right to refill. Reclamation wanted the following remark under the quantity element of its water right: “This water right includes the right to refill under the priority date of this water right to satisfy the United States’ storage contracts.” The State disagreed with the language of Reclamation’s proposed refill remark. It proffered the following alternate remark, arguing that it more accurately reflects Idaho law on storage refill:

This right is filled for a given irrigation season when the total quantity of water that has been accumulated to storage under this right equals the decreed quantity. Additional water may be stored under this right but such additional storage is incidental and subordinate to all existing and future water rights,

As a result of the remarks proposed'by Reclamation and the State, a dispute arose over Idaho law on storage refill. Several irrigation districts in the Treasure Valley, whose storage water rights were already decreed without a remark on refill rights, were concerned that the outcome of the storage refill issue might affect their right to the use of storage water. Therefore, Reclamation, the Surface Water Coalition, and the Boise Project Board, among others, filed a petition to designate a basin-wide issue arguing that the issue of storage refill was an issue of basin-wide significance and should be resolved in a basin-wide proceeding. In addition, the Surface Water Coalition asserted that the following two issues should also be addressed as part of the basin-wide proceeding to clarify and guide administration of storage water rights:

(1) [Whether] [t]he storage right holder determines when to divert water to storage in order to maximize the beneficial use of water under this right.
(2) [Whether] [t]he beneficial use under this right is fully satisfied when the water stored and available for beneficial use equals the capacity of the reservoir.

The SRBA court entered an order granting the petition and designating the following issue as Basin-Wide Issue 17: “Does Idaho law require a remark authorizing storage rights to ‘refill,’ under priority, space vacated for flood control?” The court recognized that the issue was fundamentally an issue of law, noting that “[w]hen asked if the issue could be addressed in a basin-wide setting without the need to develop factual records specific to individual reservoirs, the Petitioners represented that little, if any, factual record development would be necessary.” Accordingly, the court limited the scope of the basin-wide proceeding as follows:

[T]he Court will not consider the specific factual circumstances, operational history, or historical agreements associated with any particular reservoir in conjunction with this basin-wide issue. Such specific factual inquiries do not lend themselves to review in a basin-wide proceeding involving many parties and many reservoirs. Rather, the basin-wide issue will be limited to the above-identified issue of law.

The SRBA court declined to address either of the Surface Water Coalition’s additional proposed issues pertaining to how a storage right is initially filled, finding that these issues were not well situated for resolution in a basin-wide proceeding. In declining to address the Surface Water Coalition’s issues regarding fill, the court reasoned:

An on-stream reservoir alters the stream affecting the administration of all rights on the source. Accordingly, some methodology is required to implement priority administration of affected rights. Addressing the issue of reservoir fill may require factual inquiries, investigation and record development specific to a given reservoir, including how the State accounts for fill in each individual reservoir under its accounting program. As stated above, such factually specific inquiries do not lend themselves to review in a basin-wide setting involving multiple reservoirs. Further[389]*389more, unlike the issue of priority refill which is directly related to the quantity element of a water right, the issue of fill is purely an issue of administration.

Thus, the SRBA court explicitly stated that its designation of Basin-Wide Issue 17 did not include the question of when a water right is initially filled.

After briefing and oral argument, the SRBA court entered its Memorandum Decision on March 20, 2013. In this decision, the court concluded that a remark was not necessary because a storage water right that is filled cannot refill under priority before affected junior appropriators satisfy their water rights once. The court declined to address when the quantity element of a storage water right is considered filled. The Surface Water Coalition and the Boise Project Board timely appealed this decision.

II. ANALYSIS

The rights at issue in this case are storage water rights. Storage water is water held in a reservoir and intended to assist the holders of the water right in meeting their decreed needs. Am. Falls Reservoir Dist. No. 2 v. Idaho Dep’t of Water Res., 143 Idaho 862, 878, 154 P.3d 433, 449 (2007). “One may acquire storage water rights and receive a vested priority date and quantity, just as with any other water right.” Id.; I.C. § 42-202. Historically, water rights have been appropriated in one of two ways in Idaho:

Under the constitutional method of appropriation, appropriation is completed upon application of the water to the beneficial use for which the water is appropriated. When following the constitutional method, one must depend upon actual appropriation, that is to say, actual diversion and application to beneficial use. Under the statutory method of appropriation, the appropriation is not complete and a license will not issue until there is proof of application to beneficial use for the purpose for which it was originally intended.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
336 P.3d 792, 157 Idaho 385, 2014 WL 3810591, 2014 Ida. LEXIS 203, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/a-b-irrigation-district-v-state-idaho-2014.