Goshen Irrigation District v. Pathfinder Irrigation District

62 F. Supp. 2d 1218, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14207
CourtDistrict Court, D. Wyoming
DecidedJune 24, 1999
Docket2:89-cv-00161
StatusPublished

This text of 62 F. Supp. 2d 1218 (Goshen Irrigation District v. Pathfinder Irrigation District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering District Court, D. Wyoming primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Goshen Irrigation District v. Pathfinder Irrigation District, 62 F. Supp. 2d 1218, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14207 (D. Wyo. 1999).

Opinion

FINDINGS OF FACT AND CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

ALAN B. JOHNSON, Chief Judge.

I

Water is the life-blood of Wyoming and Nebraska, arid Western states. Consequently, they, like the rest of the West, were transformed by the Bureau of Reclamation’s epic water storage projects. The question raised in this ease is whether the irrigation districts of the Bureau’s North Platte River Project have priority to the use of water stored in Pathfinder Reservoir in a drought year.

The drought year in question is 1989. The water rights in question arise under contracts for water stored in reservoirs built by the federal government along the North Platte River pursuant to the Reclamation Act. The contracts are between the federal government and the plaintiff Gosh-en Irrigation District (GID) and intervening plaintiffs (collectively the government districts) on one hand and between the Bureau and the intervening defendants (the Warren Act contractors) on the other hand. The lands irrigated by the irrigation districts are in Wyoming and Nebraska. The question that divides the parties arises only in drought, or short water years because then there is not enough stored water to provide the full amount of water the federal government, through the Bureau of Reclamation (Bureau), has contracted to deliver to all the parties.

The government districts acknowledge their contracts provide that in short water years the Bureau will divide the stored water pro rata among themselves. However, they contend that the Bureau exceeded its authority and breached its contracts with them when it included Warren Act contractors in the category of districts among which the insufficient water is to be divided. According to the government districts, their rights to the stored water have priority over the rights granted to the intervening defendants pursuant to Warren Act contracts.

The Bureau, the Department of the Interior, the United States and their named officials (collectively the federal defendants) contend that the contracts for stored water, government district contracts and Warren Act contracts alike, are ambiguous and therefore must be construed according to the understanding of the parties. According to the federal defendants, the understanding of the parties is that the Warren Act defendants are part of the North Platte Project with rights to the storage water of an equal footing to the rights of the government districts. The federal defendants also contend that the Bureau has the authority to make the disputed allocation.

The Warren Act contractors echo the position of the federal defendants, and, in addition, raise the affirmative defenses of waiver, estoppel and laches.

The court finds in favor of the government districts. The contracts are not ambiguous, the contracts provide the government districts with a first right to use the storage water, the government districts did not lose their first right by operation of estoppel, waiver or laches and the Bureau violated the government districts’ *1221 contracts by the way it allocated storage water in 1989.

II Background

A brief review of the Bureau’s North Platte Project and its topography is described in the case Nebraska v. Wyoming, 325 U.S. 589, 65 S.Ct. 1332, 89 L.Ed. 1815 (1945), and is helpful as general orientation:

The North Platte River rises in Northern Colorado in the mountainous region known as North Park. It proceeds in a northerly direction on the east side of the Continental Divide, enters Wyoming west of Cheyenne, and continues in a northerly direction to the vicinity of Casper. There it turns east across the Great Plains and proceeds easterly and southerly into and across Nebraska. About 40 miles west of the Nebraska line it is joined by the Laramie River. At North Platte, Nebraska, it is joined by the South Platte, forming the Platte River. It empties into the Missouri River at Plattsmouth, near the western border of Iowa. In North Park it is a rapid mountain stream. In eastern Wyoming it gradually broadens out, losing velocity. In western and central Nebraska its channel ranges from 3000 to 6000 feet; it frequently divides into small channels; and in times of low water is lost in the deep sands of its bed. Here it is sometimes characterized as a river “two miles wide and one inch deep.”
There are six natural sections of the river basin: ... (3) Pathfinder Reservoir to Whalen, Wyoming which is 42 miles from the Nebraska line; (4) Whalen, Wyoming to the Tri-State Dam in Nebraska near the Wyoming-Nebráska line; ...
‡ ‡ ‡ ‡
The river basin in Colorado and Wyoming is arid, irrigation being generally indispensable to agriculture. Western Nebraska is partly arid and partly semiarid. Irrigation is indispensable to the kind of agriculture established there.
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Irrigation in the river basin began about 1865, when some projects were started in eastern Wyoming and western Nebraska. Between 1880 and 1890 irrigation began on a large scale. Until 1909 storage of water was negligible, irrigation being effected by direct diversions and use. Prior to 1909 the development in Colorado and Wyoming was relatively more rapid than in Nebraska. Since 1910 the acreage under irrigation in Colorado increased about 14 per cent, that of Wyoming 31 per cent, and that of Nebraska about 100 per cent. The large increase in Nebraska is mainly attributable to the use of storage water from the Pathfinder Reservoir.
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The Pathfinder Reservoir is part of the “North Platte Project” which followed the adoption by Congress in 1902 of the Reclamation Act. 32 Stat. 388, 43 U.S.C.A. §§ 372, 373, 381, 383, 391, et seq. Pathfinder was completed in 1913. It has a capacity of 1,015,000 acre feet, which is 79 per cent of the average annual run-off of the North Platte River at that point. Thi§ project includes an auxiliary channel reservoir called Guernsey, located above Whalen, Wyoming. Its capacity is 50,870 acre feet. The project also includes two small reservoirs in Nebraska — Lake Alice and Lake Minatare — having a capacity of 11,400 and 67,000 acre feet respectively. There are two main supply canals — Interstate and Fort Laramie — which take out from the North Platte at the Whalen diversion dam. The Interstate canal runs on the north side and the Fort Laramie on the south side of the river. Both extend far into Nebraska. Northport — a third canal — is located wholly in Nebraska. These canals and their laterals extend over 1600 miles. The project also includes a drainage system and two hydroelectric power plants. The United *1222 States contracted with landowners or irrigation districts for use of the water — selling it, as contemplated by the Reclamation Act, so as to recoup the cost of the project which was about $19,-000,000. It also entered into so-called Warren Act contracts pursuant to the Act known by that name (36 Stat. 925, 4,8 U.S.C.A.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
62 F. Supp. 2d 1218, 1999 U.S. Dist. LEXIS 14207, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/goshen-irrigation-district-v-pathfinder-irrigation-district-wyd-1999.