Daryl K. and Linda L. Mullinix v. Killgore's Salmon River Fruit Co.

346 P.3d 286, 158 Idaho 269, 2015 Ida. LEXIS 94
CourtIdaho Supreme Court
DecidedApril 1, 2015
Docket41583
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 346 P.3d 286 (Daryl K. and Linda L. Mullinix v. Killgore's Salmon River Fruit Co.) 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
Daryl K. and Linda L. Mullinix v. Killgore's Salmon River Fruit Co., 346 P.3d 286, 158 Idaho 269, 2015 Ida. LEXIS 94 (Idaho 2015).

Opinion

W. JONES, Justice.

I. Nature of the Case

This' appeal involves Respondents Daryl and Linda Mullinix’s (collectively “Mullinix”) right to use Appellant Killgore’s Salmon River Fruit Co.’s (Killgore) pipeline to convey water from Joe Creek. Both parties have water rights pursuant to partial decrees from the Snake River Basin Adjudication (SRBA) to obtain water from Joe Creek. The parties also entered into a private Settlement Agreement, which required that Mullinix’s point of diversion was below Killgore’s point of diversion on Joe Creek. After the parties entered into this Agreement, Mullinix filed a complaint against Killgore seeking to use Kill-gore’s pipeline to convey water. Killgore counterclaimed. After a bench trial, the district court ordered that Mullinix could use Killgore’s pipeline, but Mullinix had to install a weir below Killgore’s weir to satisfy the point of diversion clause in the Agreement. The water from Mullinix’s weir would then join Killgore’s pipeline to reach Mullinix’s property. After the district court issued its order, Killgore prevented Mullinix from obtaining an easement on the property of a nonparty to install the weir. As a result, the district court ordered that Mullinix could forgo the separate point of diversion and instead install a tap on Killgore’s pipeline as it crossed Mullinix’s property. Killgore appeals to this Court. We affirm in part, vacate in part, and remand.

II. Factual and Procedural Background

A. Property At Issue

In the 1960s, James and Josephine Kill-gore acquired property in Idaho County *271 along the Salmon River known as the Horseshoe Group of placer mining claims located in Sections 23 and 24 T. 27 N., R. 01 E. About twenty acres of this property was conveyed to Mullinix through the following conveyances together with all appurtenances: (1) warranty deed from James and Josephine to Louis and Maude Weise; (2) warranty deed from Maude Weise to James and Kathryn Green and Roy and Irma Green; (3) warranty deed from Roy and Irma Green to James and Kathryn Green; (4) quitclaim deed from James and Kathryn Green to Greenco II, Inc.; and (5) warranty deed from Greenco II, Inc. to Mullinix. This parcel eventually conveyed to Mullinix is hereinafter referred to as the Killgore-Mullinix parcel.

Killgore is an Idaho corporation with its principal place of business in Idaho County. James and Josephine incorporated Killgore in 1974. In 1974 and 1997, James and Josephine quitclaimed their interests in the Horseshoe Group placer mining claims to Killgore. In 2000, 2004, and 2009, Killgore filed subdivision plats with the county. Kill-gore’s property has been subdivided into fifty-one lots in Killgore’s Horseshoe Bend Estates. Other than approximately forty-five acres, Killgore has sold lots in the subdivisions to third parties or transferred ownership to related persons.

B. History of Property’s Water Rights

1.Joe Creek Water Rights

Wilber Van Wey owned a parcel of land on the Salmon River in the Horseshoe Bend area. In 1929, the Idaho Department of Water Resources (IDWR, formerly the Department of Reclamation) issued Van Wey a license for 2 cubic feet per second (cfs) of water from Joe Creek, a tributary of the Salmon River, to irrigate twenty-nine acres of land.

An open ditch conveying water from Joe Creek to Killgore’s property had existed since James and Josephine purchased the property in the 1960s. The water was conveyed by the open ditch from Joe Creek to a reservoir on Killgore’s property. This ditch went across the property of a nonparty Ernest and Judith Robinson and the Killgore-Mullinix parcel. This water from Joe Creek was delivered to the Killgore-Mullinix parcel for one irrigation season in 1966.

In 1966, James filed for a water right from Joe Creek. In 1972, the Robinsons granted James an exclusive easement to construct a water diversion point at Joe Creek. In 1987, Killgore piped the open ditch and buried the pipeline from its point of diversion at Joe Creek on the Robinson property to Killgore’s property. The Soil Conservation Service, now the National Resources Conservation Services, provided Killgore $21,000 to pipe the ditch. Killgore did not construct the pipeline with an outlet or delivery point for the Killgore-Mullinix parcel, although the pipeline goes through the Killgore-Mullinix parcel as did the ditch. In 1988, Killgore filed a notice of claim to water right No. 79-4001 with the SRBA court to divert 2.6 cfs of water from Joe Creek to 130 acres for the beneficial use of irrigation.

2. Salmon River Water Rights

In 1966, James also applied for a water right to pump water from the Salmon River to irrigate 130 acres, including the Killgore-Mullinix parcel. In 1981, the IDWR issued James a water right license, No. 79-2094, to divert 1.5 cfs from the Salmon River for beneficial use to irrigate 130 acres.

In 1988, Killgore filed a notice of claim to water right No. 79-2094 with the SRBA court to divert 1.5 cfs of water from the Salmon River to 130 acres for the beneficial use of irrigation. In 2002, Killgore applied to transfer the point of diversion for water right No. 79-2094, which was approved by the IDWR.

3. Killgore’s Horseshoe Bend Estates Water Rights

In 2007, certain lot owners of Killgore’s Horseshoe Bend Estates filed applications to transfer water rights to their lots from Kill-gore. Killgore objected, and the IDWR did not approve the transfer. Some of these owners have irrigation agreements with Kill-gore, but not all of the owners receive water from Killgore’s pipeline.

*272 C. SRBA Proceedings & Settlement Agreement

On September 10, 2007, Mullinix filed a claim for water right No. 79-2063, claiming a 1928 priority date to use 0.6 cfs of water from Joe Creek to irrigate eighteen acres of Mullinix’s property. Mullinix subsequently amended this claim to 0.4 cfs for 20.1 acres. On February 6, 2008, two partial decrees were issued to Killgore: (1) water right No. 79-2094 for 1.5 cfs of water from the Salmon River to irrigate 130 acres with a priority date of 1966 and (2) water right No. 79^4001 for 2.6 cfs of water from Joe Creek to irrigate the same 130 acres with a priority date of 1965. On January 29, 2009, Mullinix was issued a partial decree for water right No. 79-2063 for 0.4 cfs of water from Joe Creek to irrigate 20.1 acres.

On June 10, 2010, the SRBA court upheld a Special Master’s decision to set aside the partial decrees for water rights Nos. 79-2094, 79-4001, and 79-2063 and remanded the case for further proceedings. On March 25, 2011, Mullinix and Killgore executed a Settlement Agreement. The Agreement provided in relevant part:

1. Water Right No. 79-2063 claimed by Mullinix in the amount of 0.4 cfs for 20.1 acres diverted out of Joe Creek shall be decreed as disallowed.
2. Water Right No. 79-4001 has been administratively split into Water Right No. 79-14233 in the amount of 2.20 cfs for 110 acres in the name of Killgores and Water Right No. 79-14234 in the amount of 0.40 cfs for 20.1 acres in the name of Mullinix....

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
346 P.3d 286, 158 Idaho 269, 2015 Ida. LEXIS 94, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/daryl-k-and-linda-l-mullinix-v-killgores-salmon-river-fruit-co-idaho-2015.