Orchards v. United States

4 Cl. Ct. 601, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1482
CourtUnited States Court of Claims
DecidedFebruary 21, 1984
DocketNos. 113-80C, 226-80C and 36-81C
StatusPublished
Cited by27 cases

This text of 4 Cl. Ct. 601 (Orchards v. United States) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering United States Court of Claims primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Orchards v. United States, 4 Cl. Ct. 601, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1482 (cc 1984).

Opinion

OPINION ON CROSS-MOTIONS FOR SUMMARY JUDGMENT

PHILIP R. MILLER, Judge:

In these three consolidated cases approximately 160 plaintiffs seek damages from the United States for breach of claimed contract obligations by the United States Bureau of Reclamation (the Bureau) to inform them accurately in February 1977 as to the total quantity of water it expected to be able to supply to them for irrigation purposes during the 1977 growing season. Plaintiffs assert that because the Bureau understated the quantity of water available it caused them to plant fewer crops than they could have had they received accurate estimates, to their financial detriment. The government defends upon a number of grounds, including: (1) That the Bureau' had no such contractual obligation; (2) that plaintiffs neither had a contract with the Bureau nor were third-party beneficiaries entitled to sue under the contracts of their irrigation districts with the Bureau; (3) that plaintiffs failed to exhaust the administrative remedies provided for in the contract between the districts and the Bureau; (4) that under the terms of such contracts the government is absolved from liability for the claimed breach; (5) that this court lacks jurisdiction because the claims sound in tort; and (6) that to the extent plaintiffs rely on the terms of a consent decree in a district court action for the meaning of the contract provisions, exclusive jurisdiction to interpret the decree is reserved by the decree to the district court.

It is determined herein that defenses (1) and (2) are valid. Accordingly, it is unnecessary to rule on the validity of the other defenses.

[603]*603FACTS

Plaintiffs are both natural persons and corporations who farm in an area of eastern Washington state drained by the Yakima River. They are some of the members of ten Yakima Project irrigation districts.1

The Yakima Project consists of 250 miles of rivers in the Yakima Basin system. It includes six man-made or enhanced storage reservoirs with storage capacity of approximately 1,070,700 acre-feet (a.f.) of water and benefits approximately 500,000 acres of irrigated land. The Project stores, diverts, and delivers irrigation water through its Project works into the works of the various participating irrigation districts. Water is channeled from storage reservoirs and the Yakima River and its tributaries, to the head gates of the districts. The districts then channel the water into their main irrigation district canals, allocate it among their members and deliver it through their own distribution systems to the individual farms and fields. The United States is not involved in the delivery to, or the allocation of water among, or assessment of members by the districts. Individual water users within the districts are not billed by the United States but by the districts proportionately for the water used.

The Yakima Project was first authorized by the Secretary of the Interior in 1905, pursuant to the Reclamation Act of 1902, 32 Stat. 390 (now embodied throughout 43 U.S.C. ch. 12 (1976)). Although originally the Bureau contracted directly with some individual Project water users for a period of time, it now contracts with water user organizations only, usually irrigation districts organized under Washington State law. The charges made by the Bureau to the districts cover amortization of project construction costs as well as the federal government’s operating and maintenance costs.

In 1939 a suit for declaratory judgment was instituted in the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Washington (Kittitas Reclamation District v. Sunnyside Valley Irrigation District, Civil No. 21) to determine the obligation of the Bureau to deliver water to the Sunnyside Valley Irrigation District. Thereafter, a cross-complaint was filed in the case requesting the district court to determine the respective water rights of all the users of the waters of the Yakima River and its tributaries.

During the pendency of this action, a decision was issued by the Court of Appeals for the District of Columbia which dealt with the same Yakima Reclamation Project. Fox v. Ickes, 137 F.2d 30 (D.C.Cir.), cert. denied 320 U.S. 792, 64 S.Ct. 204, 88 L.Ed. 477 (1943). It held that under the Reclamation Act, the water rights of the irrigation districts and water users were property rights to the extent they could beneficially use the water and, accordingly, the Secretary of the Interior was barred from posting charges for water usage in order to pay for additional construction costs in excess of the construction charges authorized by statute. While the Bureau was not obligated to furnish any more water than was available, the court determined that the Bureau was obligated to distribute the available water according to the priorities of the parties that had been established according to the law of the State of Washington.

After the decision in Fox v. Ickes, the parties in the Kittitas Reclamation case elected not to continue the adjudication of the issue of the actual priorities of the individual water users, but instead agreed in 1945 upon a consent decree to be entered by the United States District Court for the Eastern District of Washington. The decree set forth both the allotment of water to the various irrigation districts in normal years and a procedure for allocation of the total water supply available in times of water shortage. It defined the “Total Water Supply Available” (TWSA) as:

That amount of water available in any year from natural flow of the Yakima River, and its tributaries, from storage in the various Government reservoirs on the [604]*604Yakima watershed and from other sources, to supply the contract obligations of the United States to deliver water and to supply claimed rights to the use of water on the Yakima River, and its tributaries, heretofore recognized by the United States.

Irrigation districts holding senior contract rights and others holding historically recognized rights, designated as “non-proratables”, were to receive all of their decreed amounts to the extent possible from TWSA prior to those holding junior or “pro-ratable” rights. Some districts are entirely non-proratable; others have both non-pro-ratable and proratable rights. Plaintiffs all claim to be members of proratable districts.

After the entry of the 1945 consent decree redefining the irrigation water supply entitlements to the various districts and establishing the proratable classifications, the Bureau executed new or amended contracts with all irrigation districts within the Yakima Project. The contracts referred to the consent decree and incorporated portions of it either verbatim or by reference.

In 1977 there was a water shortage in the Yakima area because of drought and low snow pack. Precipitation averaged only about one-third of normal for several months prior to March. At the beginning of 1977, the Yakima area snow pack was only 4 percent of normal. Although the Bureau generally puts little or no reliability on forecasts in any year until April or May, the irrigation districts, with which the Bureau had several meetings, were eager to know what the Bureau’s preliminary estimate would be. Accordingly, on February 7, 1977, the Bureau issued a TWSA estimate of 1,220,000 a.f., including 860,000 a.f. of storage and 360,000 a.f. of runoff. The Bureau’s TWSA forecast projected continuation of the approximately one-third of normal precipitation which it had been experiencing for several months.

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Bluebook (online)
4 Cl. Ct. 601, 1984 U.S. Claims LEXIS 1482, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/orchards-v-united-states-cc-1984.