North Kern Water Storage District v. Kern Delta Water District

54 Cal. Rptr. 3d 578, 147 Cal. App. 4th 555, 2007 Daily Journal DAR 1694, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1365, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 156
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedFebruary 5, 2007
DocketF047706
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 54 Cal. Rptr. 3d 578 (North Kern Water Storage District v. Kern Delta Water District) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
North Kern Water Storage District v. Kern Delta Water District, 54 Cal. Rptr. 3d 578, 147 Cal. App. 4th 555, 2007 Daily Journal DAR 1694, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1365, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 156 (Cal. Ct. App. 2007).

Opinion

Opinion

VARTABEDIAN, Acting P. J.

North Kern Water Storage District (North Kern) appeals and Kern Delta Water District (Delta) cross-appeals from a judgment entered on retrial, after we reversed a prior judgment. The present judgment declared a forfeiture of certain previously appropriated waters of the Kern River. Plaintiff and appellant North Kern contends that the trial court erred in selecting the timeframes against which to measure nonuse of the water, that the court should have measured differently the nonuse of water by junior water rights holders, that the court erroneously precluded North Kern from asserting that senior rights holders’ use of water was unreasonable, and that the court should have awarded the forfeited water to North Kern instead of declaring it available for appropriation through the statutory permit procedure. Defendant and appellant Delta contends the court erred in precluding its defense of estoppel and in measuring the forfeiture against Delta’s full appropriation even when the river had insufficient water to provide the full appropriation. Respondent City of Bakersfield (Bakersfield), holder of rights *559 junior to some of Delta’s rights and senior to some of North Kern’s rights, generally supports the judgment entered on retrial.

As we will explain, we modify the judgment and affirm the judgment as modified.

I. Facts and Procedural History

This matter was before us in North Kern Water Storage Dist. v. Kern Delta Water Dist. (Jan. 31, 2003, F033370) (North Kern Water Storage Dist.), and a complete statement of the facts is contained in the unpublished opinion in that case, filed January 31, 2003. We will not repeat the facts here in that level of detail.

A. Summary of Legal Principles from Prior Opinion

The parties use water from the Kern River pursuant to rights originally established in the late 19th century. As with all water rights in California, exercise of the right is conditioned on reasonable use of the water for a beneficial purpose. (See Cal. Const., art. X, § 2.) In other words, the owner of the right to a quantity of water or to the flow of water (for example, for power generation) is not entitled to waste water or to use it unreasonably. (City of Barstow v. Mojave Water Agency (2000) 23 Cal.4th 1224, 1241-1242 [99 Cal.Rptr.2d 294, 5 P.3d 853].) The owner of a common law right 1 to appropriate water from a natural watercourse, such as the Kern River, has the right to change the purpose and place of use of the water, so long as any change does not injure others with rights in the watercourse. (See Wat. Code, § 1706.) (We refer to this as the no-injury rule. (See Slater, Cal. Water Law and Policy (1995) § 10.02, p. 10-8.).) Common law appropriative rights are freely transferable, subject to the no-injury rule and to the reasonable and beneficial use requirement applicable to all water rights. (Id., § 2.18, p. 2-77.)

Water rights are a form of property and, as such, are subject to establishment and loss pursuant to the doctrines of prescription, adverse possession, and abandonment. (See Smith v. Hawkins (1895) 110 Cal. 122, 126 [42 P. 453].) In addition, however, due to the scarcity of water generally in California, its societal importance, and the peculiar nature of common and multiple rights to water from the same watercourse, the courts have recognized that water rights may be forfeited through nonuse under certain circumstances. (Id. at p. 127.)

*560 Forfeiture of the right to appropriate water from a natural watercourse can be established through a quiet title or declaratory judgment action brought by one with a conflicting claim to the unused water, such as the owner of a junior right to use water from the same watercourse. In the present case, as relevant here, North Kern sued to establish that Delta had forfeited the portion of its appropriative right that exceeded Delta’s historical use of the water.

A forfeiture may be of an entire water right, or the forfeiture may be limited to a portion of the water right or to a portion of the year, or both. (See Smith v. Hawkins (1898) 120 Cal. 86, 88 [52 P. 139].) In order to establish a forfeiture, the plaintiff must prove that the defendant failed to use some portion of its water entitlement continuously over a span of five years immediately prior to the plaintiff’s assertion of its conflicting right to the water. A portion of our remand in this case directed the trial court to determine the beginning and ending dates of this five-year period. (We will refer to the relevant five-year period as the forfeiture period.)

B. The Forfeiture Methodology Established in the Prior Opinion

Once it determined the forfeiture period, the trial court was directed to select the relevant increment of time in which to measure use and nonuse. (We will refer to the relevant period as the measurement period; the parties refer to this period as the “time-step.”)

In our prior opinion we held that the measurement period must be based on the nature of the original appropriation and the historical beneficial use. (North Kern Water Storage Dist., supra, F033370.) Use during each measurement period, whether a month, day, growing season, or otherwise, is then to be compared across the forfeiture period. The amount forfeited, if any, is the difference between the highest use in any period within the span and the overall entitlement to water established by the appropriation, subject to certain refinements and limitations we will discuss in detail below. (Ibid.) For example, if the trial court selected a monthly period of measurement and the defendant’s highest use of water in any February during the five-year span was 85 units of an initial appropriation of 100 units, a forfeiture of the right to divert 15 units of February water would be required. (Ibid.) 2

*561 In the last part of the 19th century, there were many users with claims on the waters of the Kem River. Delta, Bakersfield, and North Kem each has purchased several of the separate appropriative rights. The individual rights owned by, for example, Delta have not merged into one another but continue to be measured separately, and each right has a distinct set of customers to whom Delta sells water. When we refer to water use or exercise of a right by one of the parties, we include its predecessor in interest at that particular point in time.

Pursuant to common law, appropriative rights are afforded priority based on the date of their establishment. The appropriation that was first in time therefore had first priority to that quantity of water, and the priority of subsequent appropriators was similarly established.

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54 Cal. Rptr. 3d 578, 147 Cal. App. 4th 555, 2007 Daily Journal DAR 1694, 2007 Cal. Daily Op. Serv. 1365, 2007 Cal. App. LEXIS 156, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/north-kern-water-storage-district-v-kern-delta-water-district-calctapp-2007.