Black Canyon Irrig Dist v. State / Suez Water

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 2, 2018
Docket44636
StatusPublished

This text of Black Canyon Irrig Dist v. State / Suez Water (Black Canyon Irrig Dist v. State / Suez Water) 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
Black Canyon Irrig Dist v. State / Suez Water, (Idaho 2018).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 44636

In Re: SRBA CASE NO. 39576 ) SUBCASE NOS. 65-23531 and 65-23532. ) -------------------------------------------------------- ) BLACK CANYON IRRIGATION ) Boise, November 2017 Term DISTRICT, ) Appellant, ) 2018 Opinion No. 1 ) v. ) Filed: January 2, 2018 ) STATE OF IDAHO and SUEZ WATER ) Karel A. Lehrman, Clerk IDAHO, INC., ) Respondents. ) )

Appeal from the Snake River Basin Adjudication, State of Idaho. Hon. Eric J. Wildman, District Judge.

District court judgment, affirmed.

Sawtooth Law Offices, PLLC, and McDevitt & Miller, Boise, for appellant Black Canyon Irrigation District. Andrew J. Waldera argued.

Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for respondent State of Idaho. Michael C. Orr, Deputy Attorney General argued.

Givens Pursley, LLP, Boise, for respondent for Suez Water Idaho, Inc. Michael P. Lawrence argued.

_________________________________

BURDICK, Chief Justice. This water rights appeal flows from two consolidated subcases, numbers 65-23531 and 65-23532, litigated in the Snake River Basin Adjudication (SRBA). The subcases concern the United States’ late claims (Late Claims) filed in January 2013, which assert “supplemental beneficial use storage water rights” claims under the constitutional method of appropriation to store water in priority after flood-control releases. The special master recommended that the

1 State’s motion for summary judgment be granted, concluding the Late Claims should be disallowed because, as the Director of the Idaho Department of Water Resources (Director) recommended, the Late Claims assert rights that had not been claimed when the underlying water rights were adjudicated and decreed. Alternatively, the special master concluded the Late Claims should be disallowed because, as intervenor Black Canyon Irrigation District (BCID) asserted, the decreed water rights already authorize the rights the Late Claims now assert, and hence, the Late Claims are unnecessary. The district court agreed with the special master insofar as the Late Claims were precluded. However, the district court rejected the special master’s alternative recommendation that the Late Claims were duplicative of the rights already decreed and unnecessary. The district court entered judgment reflecting these conclusions. BCID timely appeals and we affirm the district court for the reasons below. I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND The United States has been decreed rights to 700,000 AFY in Cascade Reservoir, and 163,000 AFY in Deadwood Reservoir. These water rights were decreed in the Payette Adjudication, and when that adjudication was consolidated with the SRBA, they were decreed again in the SRBA. The Payette Adjudication and the SRBA were both general adjudications. 1 No objection was made to the water rights as they were decreed in the Payette Adjudication and the SRBA. The specific decrees provide in relevant part as follows 2: Right Reservoir Purpose Period of Use Quantity Priority 65-2927A Cascade Irrigation Storage 01-01 to 12-31 697,500 AFY 12/24/1937 Irrigation from Storage 01-01 to 12-31 697,500 AFY 12/24/1937

1 “ ‘General adjudication’ means an action both for the judicial determination of the extent and priority of the rights of all persons to use water from any water system within the state of Idaho that is conclusive as to the nature of all rights to the use of water in the adjudicated water system, except as provided in section 42-1420, Idaho Code, and for the administration of those rights.” I.C. § 42-1401A(5). 2 As relevant to understanding the tables that follow in the text above, we have previously explained: The purpose of use element of a storage water right generally contains at least two authorized purposes of use. The first authorizes the storage of water for a particular purpose (i.e., “irrigation storage,” or “power storage”). The second authorizes the subsequent use of that stored water for an associated purpose, which is often referred to as the “end use” (i.e., “irrigation from storage,” or “power from storage”). Each purpose of use is assigned its own quantity and period of use, which may or may not differ from one another. With respect to storage rights for irrigation, for example, it is typical for the “irrigation storage” purpose of use to be a year-round use (January 1 to December 31), and the “irrigation from storage” purpose of use to be limited to the irrigation season (e.g., March 15 to November 15). In re SRBA, 157 Idaho at 389, 336 P.3d at 796.

2 Power Storage 01-01 to 12-31 697,500 AFY 12/24/1937 Power from Storage 01-01 to 12-31 697,500 AFY 12/24/1937 65-2927B Cascade Municipal Storage 01-01 to 12-31 2,500 AFY 12/24/1937 Municipal from Storage 01-01 to 12-31 2,500 AFY 12/24/1937 65-9483 Deadwood Irrigation Storage 01-01 to 12-31 163,000 AFY 12/31/1926 Irrigation from Storage 04-01 to 11-01 163,000 AFY 12/31/1926 65-2917 Deadwood Power Storage 01-01 to 12-31 163,000 AFY 12/31/1926 Power from Storage 01-01 to 12-31 163,000 AFY 12/31/1926

The decrees grant the United States rights to water in specific quantities, which are “essentially equal to the active capacit[ies] of Cascade and Deadwood Reservoirs.” Cascade and Deadwood Reservoirs are on-stream reservoirs created by dams. Annual stream flows frequently exceed the Reservoirs’ capacities, and accordingly, the United States, through the Bureau of Reclamation (BOR), manages flood-control releases. Flood-control releases generated disputes in the SRBA and led to Basin-Wide Issue 17, where water rights holders sought resolution of what “effect flood control releases have on storage water rights” where the decrees lack “refill” remarks. See In re SRBA, 157 Idaho 385, 390, 336 P.3d 792, 797 (2014). While Basin-Wide Issue 17 was being litigated in the district court, on January 31, 2013, the United States filed the Late Claims at issue here. The Late Claims assert “supplemental beneficial use storage water rights” claims under the constitutional method of appropriation as follows: Subcase Reservoir Purpose Period of Use Quantity Priority 65-23531 Cascade Irrigation Storage 10-01 to 09-30 1,066,653 AFA 09/30/1965 Irrigation from Storage 01-01 to 12-31 697,500 AFA 09/30/1965 Power Storage 10-01 to 09-30 1,066,653 AFA 09/30/1965 Power from Storage 01-01 to 12-31 697,500 AFA 09/30/1965 Municipal Storage 10-01 to 09-30 1,066,653 AFA 09/30/1965 Municipal from Storage 01-01 to 12-31 2,500 AFA 09/30/1965 65-23532 Deadwood Irrigation Storage 10-01 to 09-30 268,113 AFA 09/30/1965 Irrigation from Storage 04-01 to 11-01 163,000 AFA 09/30/1965 Power Storage 10-01 to 09-30 268,113 AFA 09/30/1965 Power from Storage 01-01 to 12-31 163,000 AFA 09/30/1965

3 The Late Claims surfaced after the Idaho Department of Water Resources (IDWR) shifted to a computerized water accounting system in 1993. That shift brought about the change from a “physical fill” system of accounting to a computerized “paper fill” system of accounting. The physical fill system is summarized as follows: Upon completion of the flood control releases, the reservoirs refill with spring runoff to the point of maximum physical fill. When the dam has refilled, typically in early June to mid-July, the stored water, including the “refill” water, is allocated to those holding storage rights in the reservoirs and is available for irrigation purposes. In a paper fill system, by contrast, All water entering the . . . Reservoirs is counted toward the initial paper fill of the reservoirs. When flood control water is passed through the reservoirs the water passed for flood control is not deducted from the storage accounting of the reservoir, even though it is no longer physically stored in the reservoir.

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