Orange Cove Irrigation Dist. v. L. Molinos Mut. Water Co.

241 Cal. Rptr. 3d 283, 30 Cal. App. 5th 1
CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal, 5th District
DecidedDecember 12, 2018
DocketC078323, C078888
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 241 Cal. Rptr. 3d 283 (Orange Cove Irrigation Dist. v. L. Molinos Mut. Water Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering California Court of Appeal, 5th District primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orange Cove Irrigation Dist. v. L. Molinos Mut. Water Co., 241 Cal. Rptr. 3d 283, 30 Cal. App. 5th 1 (Cal. Ct. App. 2018).

Opinion

HULL, Acting P. J.

*3The owner of an appropriative right to water in a creek sought declaratory relief to determine whether, under the judicial decree that established the right, it may (1) use water appropriated to it on a year around basis and not only during the irrigation season; (2) use or transfer its water outside of the creek's watershed; and (3) make these changes in the use and location of use without obtaining prior approval of the creek's water master or the superior court.

*4The trial court declared the decree did not give the owner these rights. We reverse the judgment.

FACTS AND PROCEEDINGS

Mill Creek drains a watershed of approximately 135 square miles. It begins at the base of Mt. Lassen and travels in a westerly direction until it drains into the Sacramento River near the towns of Tehama and Los Molinos in Tehama County. In a year of normal rainfall, Mill Creek's volume is approximately 250 cubic feet per second (cfs) when the irrigation season begins.

By a stipulated decree issued in 1920, the Tehama County Superior Court adjudicated water rights in Mill Creek. It declared the natural flow of the water up to a total rate of 203 cfs had been appropriated by the parties appearing before it for use upon their and other persons' lands. The decree entitled these original owners of the water rights and their successors to continue diverting from Mill Creek a total of 203 cfs of water, and it allotted them shares in the amount of water each could divert. It entitled the owners to use or dispose of their share of water in any manner, at any place, or for any purpose, or in accordance with whatever agreement the owners may make with any other person or entity.

As part of the decree, the court also appointed a water master of Mill Creek to implement its order. The decree gave the water master exclusive authority to divert and apportion the water during the irrigation season according to the decree's terms, measure the diversions, and control and superintend the diversions and the gates and ditches used to divert the water.

By succession of interest, respondent Los Molinos Mutual Water Company (Los Molinos) is the current water master of Mill Creek. It also holds water rights entitling it to receive approximately 140 cfs of the 203 cfs diverted from the creek. As the water master, it diverts and apportions the water during the irrigation season and delivers it to its shareholders and the other owners of decreed water rights through a system of canals and ditches.

*286Typically, Los Molinos has delivered Mill Creek water from April to October each year primarily to irrigate pastures and orchards and for watering stock. Due to limitations in its conveyance system, Los Molinos combines the diverted water and delivers it on a rotational basis instead of simultaneously. Each rotation takes generally 12 to 14 days, but it takes longer during a drought or later in the season as Mill Creek flows decrease. By the middle of July, all of Mill Creek's available surface water, by then down to a volume of less than 100 cfs, is being diverted. By August, the owners' demand exceeds *5the supply of water. In September, the rotation period can exceed 18 days due to the lack of water. Meeting the water needs of all the owners becomes impossible because deliveries may occur less than twice a month.

In October, water demand decreases as harvest occurs, but there is almost no flow in Mill Creek downstream from Los Molinos's last diversion dam except for a small amount bypassed by Los Molinos and another rights holder at the request of the state to support salmon migration.

As rains begin in November, Los Molinos shuts down its system of canals and ditches for maintenance and repair while flows in Mill Creek begin to increase.

The record indicates Mill Creek is usually low in October, but flows increase afterward. A study prepared for the State Water Resources Control Board found that from 1998 to 2012, average daily flows in Mill Creek below Los Molinos's last diversion dam were greater than 50 cfs only 28 percent of the month of October, but were greater than 85 cfs approximately 98 percent of the time from November 1 through May 31.

With limited exceptions, Los Molinos does not divert or deliver any water again until April, when the cycle repeats. It does not provide irrigation water in the winter months because pasture vegetation and orchard trees are dormant and irrigation is not necessary. It has never delivered water 365 days a year for any purpose.

Appellant Orange Cove Irrigation District (District) supplies water for parts of Fresno and Tulare Counties in Central California. It receives its water from the federal Central Valley Project under a contract with the United States Bureau of Reclamation.

In 2000, the District acquired decreed rights to Mill Creek water. Its rights authorized it to receive approximately 10.5 cfs of the diverted 203 cfs. The District's predecessors in interest historically used the water to irrigate land within Los Molinos's service area. The District acquired only the rights to the water; it did not purchase any land within the Mill Creek watershed.

The District acquired the water rights to offset fees imposed on its purchase of federal water. Federal law imposed a surcharge on the District's purchase of Central Valley Project water to fund environmental restoration projects. ( Pub.L. No. 102-575, §§ 3406(b)(1), (c)(1); 3407(b) (Oct. 30, 1992) 106 Stat. 4706.) The District hoped to offset the surcharge by having Los Molinos hold its water rights in trust and use the water to increase flows in *6Mill Creek to improve salmon migration. For a variety of reasons, however, the District was not able to use its Mill Creek water rights as planned.

In 2009, the District determined to put its water rights to other uses, including municipal, industrial, agricultural or environmental uses by a downstream user. In the meantime, the District issued Los Molinos a license to continue using its share of Mill Creek water.

In 2010, the District granted an option to a private developer to purchase some of *287its Mill Creek water rights. The developer intended to use the water for a redevelopment project in Napa County. Los Molinos submitted comments as part of the redevelopment project's environmental review. It stated it had always been its understanding and practice "that the rights adjudged in the 1920 decree are seasonal in nature, and limited to the irrigation season, which typically lasts from April to October." Ultimately, the developer did not exercise its option to acquire the District's rights.

Following Los Molinos's comments on the project, District representatives met with Los Molinos representatives to discuss the District's plan to transfer its water rights to a person or entity located outside the Mill Creek watershed for any reasonable use.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
241 Cal. Rptr. 3d 283, 30 Cal. App. 5th 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orange-cove-irrigation-dist-v-l-molinos-mut-water-co-calctapp5d-2018.