Opinion
TAYLOR, P. J .
This is an appeal by the State Department of Fish and Game
(Department) from a judgment denying its petition for a writ of mandate to compel the State Water Resources Control Board (Board)
to issue a permit for the “in-stream” appropriation of water to provide minimum flow guarantees during low months to protect the state’s beneficial interest in the fish resources of the Mattole River. The questions are whether: 1) physical control over the water is required for an “appropriation” of water; and 2) if not, whether the applicable constitutional and statutory provisions (mainly state Const., art. X, as adopted June 8, 1976; Wat. Code, § 1243, as amended by Stats. 1972,-ch. 360), are ambiguous and if so, whether the matter is one for judicial determination or one that is exclusively within the prerogative of the Legislature, as indicated by its recent enactments. For the reasons set forth below, we have concluded that some minimal actual physical use of the water is still an element of the doctrine of appropriation in this state, and in any event, the Legislature has prescribed a statutory scheme for balancing the public interest in conservation and. recreation and the public interest in other uses of water such as for irrigation and domestic purposes.
The basic facts are not in issue and may be summarized as follows: On January 16, 1976, the Department, pursuant to Water Code section 1252
et seq., set forth below,
transmitted an application to appropriate water in the Mattole River and its tributaries for recreation and fish protection purposes. The Department’s application did not seek a permit to divert water from the river or control the natural flow of water within the river. Rather, the Department sought to appropriate a minimum flow of 38,400 acre feet
which would remain in the river during the “low flow” months, May through October, for the benefit of the fish and to protect the right of the people to fish in the public waters of this state recognized by article I, section 25 of the state Constitution. The Board returned the application without acting upon it, and stated that while the objectives of the application were desirable, the Department had not sought an “appropriation” of water rights as that term has come to be defined in California’s law of water rights, since it did not propose diversion or other physical control of the water. Thereafter, the Department filed and served
the instant complaint for declaratory relief and, in the alternative, for a writ of mandate.
The Board filed and served its answer which admitted that water may be appropriated without the prerequisite of a physical diversion, but denied that water may be appropriated in the manner proposed by the Department because it did not propose to exercise any kind of physical control of the water, but instead sought a right to require a certain amount of water to flow by natural means in the channel of Mattole River and its tributaries through lands that were not owned or controlled by the Department, or a right to “in-stream” appropriation.
The court concluded that: 1) while the use of water for recreation and for preservation of fish is a beneficial use of water, such a use is not in and of itself the sole criterion for a valid appropriation of water; the law of water rights in this state requires that an applicant for a permit to appropriate water must plan to exercise some physical control of the water sought to be appropriated; 2) the Board is the statewide agency responsible for administering and applying California law relating to surface water right appropriations' and its long-standing determination that it lacks authority to grant applications for “in-stream” appropriative rights as no physical control is exercised, is reasonable. Accordingly, the court entered its order denying the Department’s petition for a writ of mandate commanding the Board to entertain the application, as the Department’s attempt at “in-stream” appropriation was not a valid “appropriation” of water, as that term has been construed in this state.
The parties agree that the applicable constitutional provision is silent on the precise issue here presented. Article X, section 2 of the state Constitution, as adopted June 8, 1976 (formerly art. XIV, § 3, as amended Nov. 5, 1974) provides: “It is hereby declared that because of the conditions prevailing in this State the
general welfare requires that the water resources of the State be put to beneficial use to the fullest extent of which they are capable,
and that the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use of water be prevented, and that the conservation of such waters is to be exercised with a view to the reasonable and beneficial use thereof in the interest of the people and for the public welfare.
The right to water or to the use or flow of water in or
from any natural stream or water course in this State is and shall be limited to such water as shall be reasonably required for the beneficial use to be served,
and such right does not and shall not extend to the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use or unreasonable method of diversion of water. Riparian rights in a stream or water course attach to, but to no more than so much of the flow thereof as may be required or used consistently with this section, for the purposes for which such lands are, or may be made adaptable, in view of such reasonable and beneficial uses; provided, however, that
nothing herein contained shall be construed
as depriving any riparian owner of the reasonable use of water of the stream to which the owner’s land is riparian under reasonable methods of diversion and use, or
as depriving any appropriator of water, to which the appropriator is lawfully entitled. This section shall be self-executing, and the Legislature may also enact laws in the furtherance of the policy in this section contained”
(italics added).
The history of the above quoted constitutional provision indicates that its predecessor was adopted in 1928 in response to
Herminghaus
v.
South. California Edison Co.,
200 Cal. 81 [252 P. 607], which held that a riparian owner was entitled to have the entire flow of a stream run past his property. The constitutional amendment was adopted to modify this holding and apply the doctrine of reasonable use to all water rights enjoyed or asserted in this state and every method of diversion
(People
ex rel.
State Water Resources Control Bd.
v.
Forni,
54 Cal.App.3d 743, 749, 750 [126 Cal.Rptr. 851];
Peabody
v.
City of Vallejo,
2 Cal.2d 351, 367 [40 P.2d 486];
Tulare Dist.
v.
Lindsay-Strathmore Dist.,
3 Cal.2d 489, 524 [45 P.2d 972];
Joslin
v.
Marin Mun. Water Dist.,
67 Cal.2d 132, 138 [60 Cal.Rptr. 377, 429 P.2d 889]).
Although the state Constitution does not define the term “appropriator,” the possessory nature of an appropriative water right has long been recognized.
Thus, the present constitutional provision consists of a broad policy declaration that the waters of the state should be placed to beneficial use in reasonable and nonwasteful ways, and then in the last sentence clearly and expressly delegates to the Legislature the task of ascertaining how this constitutional goal should be carried out. The Department’s contention that the above provision, by itself, authorized in-stream appropriation, ignores the express language of the constitutional provision and particularly the last sentence. The Department’s argument also ignores the large body of law pertaining to the acquisition of appropriatee water rights which the Legislature has enacted in response to the constitutional provision.
After the California Legislature enacted statutes providing for the appropriation of public waters in 1872, our Supreme Court held in
Duckworth
v.
McKinley,
158 Cal. 206, 211 [110 P. 927], and
Lower Tule River etc. Co.
v.
Angiola etc. Co.,
149 Cal. 496, 499 [86 P. 1081], that the statutory method was not exclusive. It has been held that “. . . running
water, so long as it continues to flow in its natural course, is not, and cannot be made the subject of private ownership. A right may be acquired to its use, which will be regarded and protected as property; but it has been distinctly declared in several cases that this right carries with it no specific property in the water itself”
(Kidd
v.
Laird,
15 Cal. 161, 179-180;
Rancho Santa Margarita
v.
Vail,
11 Cal.2d 501, 554 [81 P.2d 533];
Big Rock M. W. Co.
v.
Valyermo Ranch Co.,
78 Cal.App. 266 [248 P. 264]).
Although there is no private property right in the corpus of the water while flowing in the stream, the right to its use is classified as real property
(Locke
v.
Yorba Irrigation Co.,
35 Cal.2d 205 [217 P.2d 425];
Stanislaus Water Co.
v.
Bachman,
152 Cal. 716 [93 P. 858]). The concept of an appropriative water right is a real property interest incidental and appurtenant to land
(Inyo Cons. Water Co.
v.
Jess,
161 Cal. 516 [119 P. 934];
Palmer etc.
v.
Railroad Commission,
167 Cal. 163, 173 [138 P. 997];
Silver Lake Power etc. Co.
v.
Los Angeles,
176 Cal. 96, 101 [167 P. 697];
Peake
v.
Harris,
48 Cal.App. 363, 379-380 [192 P. 310]).
To constitute an appropriation, three elements must coexist,
“the intent to take, accompanied by some open, physical demonstration of the intent, and for some valuable
use”
(McDonald & Blackburn
v.
Bear River and Auburn Water and Mining Company,
13 Cal. 220, 232-233; italics added). The outward manifestation of all three elements is most often evidenced by a diversion of the water from its natural source prior to the use
(Simons
v.
Inyo Cerro Gordo Co.,
48 Cal.App. 524 [192 P. 144]). Other means of appropriation include watering liv istock directly from the source
(Steptoe Livestock Co.
v.
Gulley
53 Nev. 163 [295 P. 772]) or by placing water wheels into a stream in order to use the flowage as power to operate a mill located on the bank
(Ortman
v.
Dixon,
13 Cal. 33;
Tarter
v.
Spring Creek Water and Mining Co., supra,
5 Cal. 395) and storage
of water in a reservoir
(Meridian, Ltd.
v.
San Francisco,
13 Cal.2d 424 [90 P.2d 537, 91 P.2d 105]). The significant common element of all of these forms of possession is some physical act with respect to the water by the appropriator to manifest the possessory right.
The authorities in this state have uniformly defined the right to appropriative water as a possessory property right
(Kelly
v.
The Natoma Water Co.,
6 Cal. 105;
Conger
v.
Weaver
(1856) 6 Cal. 548;
Cardoza
v.
Calkins
(1897) 117 Cal. 106, 112 [48 P. 1010];
Utt
v.
Frey
(1895) 106 Cal. 392, 395 [39 P. 807];
Haight
v.
Costanich
(1920) 184 Cal. 426, 430-431 [194 P. 26];
De Necochea
v.
Curtis
(1889) 80 Cal. 397, 406 [20 P. 563, 22 P. 198];
Antioch
v.
Williams Irr. Dist.
(1922) 188 Cal. 451, 463 [205 P. 688]). The possessory right entitles the owner to be protected in the quiet enjoyment of the use of water against a subsequent public land appropriator of the same water. Contrary to the Department’s contentions, the Board acknowledges that while a physical diversion is not necessary in all cases, some element of possession or other control is essential. Ownership of land with the incidental right to control the water supplies the necessary possessory right to entitle the owner to apply for an appropriation of the water (see
Hunter
v.
United States,
388 F.2d 148). By contrast, in the instant case, the Department had no possessory interest in either the water or the land through which the water flows.
The Department has not cited any authority which found a valid appropriation in the absence of some physical activity or possession of the land.
As indicated above, the California Legislature first enacted statutory procedures for obtaining appropriative water rights in 1872 (former Civ. Code, §§ 1410 to 1422). A claimant was required to post notice at the site of his proposed diversion, record his claim with the county recorder, begin developing his diversion within 60 days of his notice, and thereafter diligently prosecute his work to completion, i.e., by conducting water to the place of intended use. The provisions of the Civil Code confirmed the long existing requirement of the case law summarized above, that an appropriator must physically gain control of water and that one way of doing so was by separating it from the watercourse and conveying it to its place of use. The Civil Code procedure, however, was not exclusive as the courts continued to recognize completed appropriations of water made by actual diversion and use
(Wells
v.
Mantes, 99
Cal. 583 [34 P. 324];
Sierra Land etc. Co.
v.
Cain Irr. Co.,
219 Cal. 82 [25 P.2d 223]).
In 1913, our Legislature enacted the Water Commission Act (Stats. 1913, ch. 586) which was codified in 1943 in division 2 of the Water Code. The statutory procedure is now the exclusive method of
appropriating water in California (Wat. Code, § 1225;
Crane
v.
Stevinson,
5 Cal.2d 387, 398 [54 P.2d 1100]). As indicated above, an appropriation is initiated by the filing of an application with the Board (Wat. Code, §§ 1250-1252.5), as the Department did in the instant case.
The Board concedes that like the state Constitution, the applicable provisions of the Water Code do not contain an express requirement of physical control. However, it contends that as the term “appropriation” was not defined in the code, the Legislature left unchanged the meaning of the term, as it had consistently developed, including its characterization as essentially a possessory right like other interests in real property. We agree.
Water Code sections 1243 and 1243.5, set forth below,
further the constitutional purposes of article X, section 2, discussed above at pages 596-597.
Thus, the Department is consulted before any new diversions of water are authorized by the Board. The Department has an opportunity to inform the Board of the amounts of water that are required both for preservation of an existing piscatorial use and for its enhancement. Whenever it is in the public interest, the Board must take those amounts into account whenever a permit to appropriate water is issued. Thus, the procedure outlined by Water Code sections 1243 and 1243.5 provides for
the balancing of competing beneficial uses of water which the Department maintains is lacking.
The Department argues that the Board is attempting to enlarge the language of Water Code sections 1253 and 1375 by including a requirement of physical use or control of the water to be appropriated. The Department also relies on article I, section 25 of the state Constitution, set forth below, so far as pertinent,
and the specific provisions for the protection of fish (Fish & G. Code, § 5500 et seq.).
The Department urges that fish are a significant recreational and commercial resource which must be sustained.
As indicated above, the Board admits that its duties include the protection of fish, but rests on its long-standing construction of the Water Code provisions which require physical control either by artificial means (diversion or a storage structure) or establishment of a possessoiy right in the land to which the water is appurtenant. As is readily apparent from our above summary of the case law, the Board’s interpretation
has followed the constitutional interpretations and the statutory scheme for appropriation in this state. Both have consistently contemplated physical diversion or possession of the appurtenant land. Significantly, our Legislature has not only failed to alter the basic system but has reaffirmed it in subsequent modifications of statutes dealing with appropriative
water rights. The readoption of a statutory provision amounts to ratification of the court’s construction thereof
(Rosemary Properties, Inc.
v.
McColgan,
29 Cal.2d 677 [177 P.2d 757]). Thus, where as here, a term contained in a statute has been construed by judicial decisions and that construction is not altered by subsequent legislation, it must be presumed that the Legislature is aware of the judicial construction and approves of it
(Burt
v.
Scarborough,
56 Cal.2d 817, 822 [17 Cal.Rptr. 146, 366 P.2d 498];
People
v.
Hallner,
43 Cal.2d 715, 719 [277 P.2d 393]).
The Legislature is presumed to have known of the judicial interpretations of the doctrine of appropriative water rights prior to its adoption of an exclusive statutory scheme dealing with this subject (2A Sutherland, Statutory Construction, §§ 50.01, 50.03;
Estate of Sloan, 7
Cal.App.2d 319 [46 P.2d 1007]). As indicated above, the courts have consistently held that the 1913 statutory scheme was only a regulation of the existing privilege to appropriate water. “The present law was not enacted to abolish the right of appropriation of water. No attributes are added to constitute the right. The new legislation is designed ‘merely to regulate and administer this privilege.’ ”
(Yuba River Power Co.
v.
Nevada Irr. Dist.,
207 Cal. 521, 526 [279 P. 128]).
Further, and most important, here, as in
Rosemary, supra,
29 Cal.2d 677, the Legislature has consistently refused to adopt legislation designed to overcome the effect of previous court decisions and most recently refused to do so in 1977.
Even assuming, without conceding, that we felt inclined to hold that no physical activity by the appropriator is required, the question is one for legislative rather than judicial determination.
While we are aware of the Department's contentions that the present protest system (Wat. Code, § 1243) is inadequate, and that a need exists for a more expeditious system of protecting the piscatorial resources of this state, we are also aware of the recent recommendation of the Governor’s Commission to Review California Water Rights Law.
However, as an intermediate appellate court, we are constrained from making a major change
in the long-standing water rights law of this state. We conclude, therefore, that the Board properly denied the Department’s application for an in-stream appropriation permit. There is no support in the law of this state for the proposition that a minimum flow of water may be appropriated in a natural stream for piscatorial purposes without some physical act by the appropriator.
Our conclusion is also supported by the United States Supreme Court’s recent decision in
United States
v.
New Mexico,
438 U.S. 696, 704 [57 L.Ed.2d 1052, 1059, 98 S.Ct. 3012], where an in-stream flow of six cubic feet per second was being used for fish preservation purposes. The court rejected (438 U.S. at pp. 711-715 [57 L.Ed.2d at pp. 1064-1066]) an argument for an implied federal right to reserve water for recreation and wildlife preservation. The United States Supreme Court noted at page 715 [57 L.Ed.2d at page 1066] that such a reservation of water could mean a substantial loss in the amount of water available for irrigation and domestic uses. Similarly, the recognition of the Department’s right of in-stream appropriation for piscatorial purposes could mean a substantial loss in the amount of water available for irrigation, domestic and all of the other uses that the Board must balance in the public interest.
In summary, to carry out the necessary balancing process, the statutes have provided the Board with maximum flexibility to consider the competing demands of flows for piscatorial purposes and diversions for agricultural, domestic, municipal or other uses. Pursuant to Water Code section 1243, the Board gives notice to the Department each time a diversion application is filed and the Department informs the Board as to
the minimum flows which it believes are required for fish. In addition, Water Code section 1330 allows any other person or group to protest the granting of an application to appropriate water for reasons which may include adverse environmental impacts, such as reduction of flows below the minimum required for fish and wildlife preservation. Further, pursuant to Water Code sections 1243.5, 1253, 1255 and 1257, the Board examines the use to which the applicant would place the water, the public interest of that use, the necessity of the proposed minimum fish flows, and the public interest in maintaining such flows, and finally it makes a decision, if there is a conflict among various uses, as to what the public interest requires in that particular situation.
The granting of in-stream appropriation rights to the Department for piscatorial purposes would tie up the minimum flow of 38,400 acre feet of the Mattole River in perpetuity. Thus, the legal recognition of in-stream appropriation rights would eliminate piscatorial purposes from the balancing processes prescribed by the Legislature. For instance, if a subsequent application were filed seeking some of the flow of the Mattole River for new and compelling uses, the Board may not be able to follow the procedures prescribed by Water Code section 1243 and balance the public interests as they appear at that time. A grant of prior in-stream appropriation rights to the Department could tie the Board’s hands as to future uses. The water appropriated by the Department would be unavailable for other yet unforeseen and overriding uses.
We recognize that, as the Department urges, the present protest procedure may be inadequate to protect the public fish and wildlife resources of this state. The recent drought, of which we may take judicial notice, is only an example of the many constantly changing and
unpredictable conditions in the context of which the competing beneficial uses of water must be balanced. However sympathetic we may be to the views of the Department and the fact that fish are not only a recreational resource but an important food and agricultural resource, we hold that the matter should be left to the Legislature.
The judgment is affirmed.
Kane, J., and Rouse, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for a hearing by the Supreme Court was denied July 12, 1979. Tobriner, J., and Mosk, J., were of the opinion that the petition should be granted.