City of Pocatello v. The State of Idaho

CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 2012
StatusPublished

This text of City of Pocatello v. The State of Idaho (City of Pocatello v. The State of Idaho) 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
City of Pocatello v. The State of Idaho, (Idaho 2012).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO

Docket No. 37723-2010

IN RE: SRBA CASE NO. 39576 ) _______________________________________ ) Boise, November 2011 Term ) CITY OF POCATELLO, ) 2012 Opinion No. 3 ) Petitioner-Appellant, ) Filed: January 5, 2012 ) v. ) Stephen W. Kenyon, Clerk ) THE STATE OF IDAHO, ) ) Respondent. ) )

Appeal from the District Court of the Fifth Judicial District of the State of Idaho, in and for Twin Falls County. The Hon. Eric J. Wildman, District Judge.

The judgment of the district court is affirmed.

Josephine Beeman, Beeman & Associates, P.C., Boise, argued for appellant.

Shasta Kilminster-Hadley, Deputy Attorney General, Boise, argued for respondent.

EISMANN, Justice. This is an appeal from the decision of the district court in the Snake River Basin Adjudication holding: (a) that Pocatello cannot use its wells as alternate points of diversion for its surface water rights; (b) that it can use its interconnected wells as alternate points of diversion for all of the associated water rights on the condition that doing so will not change the priority date and quantity of water that can be pumped from each well; (c) that one groundwater right was properly classified as for an irrigation purpose; and (d) that Pocatello failed to establish earlier priority dates for two of its groundwater rights. We affirm the judgment of the district court. I. Factual Background In 1985, the legislature enacted legislation to commence an adjudication of the water rights of the Snake River basin. On June 17, 1987, the Director of the Idaho Department of Water Resources (IDWR), filed a petition in the name of the State to begin the Snake River Basin Adjudication (SRBA), and on November 19, 1987, the adjudication was commenced. In April 1990, the City of Pocatello filed its water right claims, and it later filed amended claims. Pursuant to its statutory duties, IDWR filed Director’s Reports with respect to Pocatello’s claims. The disputed matters were tried to a hearing officer, and Pocatello then challenged several of the hearing officer’s findings of fact and conclusions of law in the district court. The court entered a judgment affirming the hearing officer’s recommendations, and Pocatello filed a motion to correct or amend the judgment. After that motion was denied, it timely appealed. Water for Pocatello’s in-town service area is pumped into an interconnected distribution system from twenty-two wells supplied by twenty-one groundwater rights. 1 The wells were developed at different times and are located throughout the in-town service area. Because the interconnected water distribution system was in operation prior to November 19, 1987, Pocatello contended, pursuant to Idaho Code section 42-1425, that each of these wells had become an alternate point of diversion for each of the twenty-one water rights, which would permit it to withdraw water under its most senior groundwater rights from any well. IDWR recommended that each well in the system could serve as an alternate point of diversion for each of the twenty- one water rights if the water rights were subject to a condition stating, “To the extent necessary for administration between points of diversion for ground water, and between points of diversion for ground water and hydraulically connected surface sources, ground water was first diverted under this right from Pocatello well [description] in the amount of __ cfs.” IDWR did not recommend that condition for three of Pocatello’s groundwater rights that supplied water to the in-town system (29-2274, 29-2338, and 29-7375) because those rights were subject to administrative transfer No. 5452, which did not include the condition and occurred after 1987. Pocatello also had a separate water delivery system to provide water to its airport. That system

1 These water rights are: 29-2274, 29-2338, 29-2401, 29-2499, 29-4221, 29-4223, 29-4224, 29-4225, 29-4226, 97106, 29-7322, 29-7375, 29-11339, 29-11348, 29-13558, 29-13559, 29-13560, 29-13561, 29-13562, 29-13637 and 29-13639.

2 was supplied by three water rights pumped from three wells. IDWR recommended that the condition be attached to two of those water rights (29-7450 and 29-13638). The hearing officer recommended that the condition be attached to the water rights as suggested by IDWR, and the district court agreed. Pocatello also has four surface water rights, one in Gibson Jack Creek and three in Mink Creek. 2 It contended that because those creeks had previously been a source of potable water and they feed the aquifer from which it pumps water from its wells, those wells were alternate points of diversion for the surface water rights. The hearing officer concluded that the creeks and the aquifer were separate sources, and Idaho Code section 42-1425(2) did not provide for changes in the source of a water right. The district court agreed. In 1984, Pocatello submitted an application for a groundwater right, stating that the proposed use was to irrigate crops located outside the city. On July 1, 1987, the city asked that the proposed use be changed to domestic, commercial, municipal, and industrial, but IDWR refused to do so. Based upon the city’s application, in January 2003 IDWR issued the city license number 29-7770 for an irrigation purpose. Pocatello contended that this water right should be changed to a municipal purpose pursuant to Idaho Code section 42-1425(2) because it was using the water in its biosolids program. The hearing officer rejected that argument because the statute only applied to changes in use of water rights that occurred prior to November 19, 1987. Because the city did not obtain this water right until January 2003, the statute did not apply. The district court agreed with the hearing officer. The Director’s Report recommended a priority date of July 16, 1924, for water right number 29-13558 and a priority date of October 22, 1952, for water right number 29-13639. Pocatello contended that the priority dates should be 1905, and December 31, 1940, respectively. The hearing officer concluded that the city had failed to prove the claimed earlier dates. However, because the evidence showed that the well related to water right 29-13639 preexisted the date of the application for a license, the hearing officer moved the priority date of that right forward by one day to October 21, 1952. The district court upheld the hearing officer, although it affirmed moving the priority date of 29-13639 only because the state did not object.

2 The Mink Creek rights are 29-271, 29-272, and 29-273, and the Gibson Jack Creek right is 29-4222.

3 II. Did the District Court Err in Upholding the Condition Attached to Pocatello’s Ground Water Rights? Pocatello contended that each of the wells in its two interconnected water distribution systems had become an alternate point of diversion for all water rights associated with that system pursuant to Idaho Code section 42-1425(2). That statute provides, insofar as is relevant, as follows: Any change of place of use, point of diversion, nature or purpose of use or period of use of a water right by any person entitled to use of water or owning any land to which water has been made appurtenant either by decree of the court or under the provisions of the constitution and statutes of this state, prior to November 19, 1987, the date of commencement of the Snake River basin adjudication . . . may be claimed in the applicable general adjudication even though the person has not complied with sections 42-108 and 42-222, Idaho Code, provided no other water rights existing on the date of the change were injured and the change did not result in an enlargement of the original right.

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City of Pocatello v. The State of Idaho, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-pocatello-v-the-state-of-idaho-idaho-2012.