San Diego County Water etc. v. Metropolitan Water Dist. etc.

CourtCalifornia Court of Appeal
DecidedJuly 18, 2017
DocketA146901M
StatusPublished

This text of San Diego County Water etc. v. Metropolitan Water Dist. etc. (San Diego County Water etc. v. Metropolitan Water Dist. etc.) 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
San Diego County Water etc. v. Metropolitan Water Dist. etc., (Cal. Ct. App. 2017).

Opinion

Filed 7/18/17 (unmodified opn. attached) CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA

FIRST APPELLATE DISTRICT

DIVISION THREE

SAN DIEGO COUNTY WATER A146901, A148266 AUTHORITY, Plaintiff and Appellant, (City & County of San Francisco Super. Ct. Nos. v. CFP-10-510830, CFP-12-512466) METROPOLITAN WATER DISTRICT OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA et al., ORDER MODIFYING OPINION AND DENYING REHEARING; Defendants and Appellants. NO CHANGE IN JUDGMENT

THE COURT: It is ordered that the opinion filed herein on June 21, 2017, be modified as follows: On page 30, at the end of footnote 16, add the following sentence: The legality of the water stewardship fee as a component of Metropolitan’s full‐ service water rate is not at issue here and we express no opinion on the matter.

There is no change in the judgment.

The petition for rehearing is denied.

Date: __________________________ P.J.

1 Trial court: San Francisco County Superior Court

Trial judge: Honorable Richard A. Kramer Curtis E.A. Karnow

Counsel for Plaintiff and Appellant QUINN EMANUEL URQUHART & SULLIVAN, LLP Metropolitan Water District of John B. Quinn Southern California: Eric J. Emanuel Valerie Roddy

MORGAN LEWIS & BOCKIUS LLP Colin C. West Thomas S. Hixson

QUINN EMANUEL URQUHART & SULLIVAN, LLP Kathleen M. Sullivan

THE METROPOLITAN WATER DISTRICT OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA Marcia Scully Heather C. Beatty Joseph Vanderhorst John D. Schlotterbeck

The City of Los Angeles acting by Michael N. Feuer, City Attorney and through the Los Angeles Joseph A. Brajevich, General Counsel Department of Water and Power: Julie C. Riley, Deputy City Melanie Tory, Deputy City Attorney

MEYERS, NAVE, RIBACK, SILVER & WILSON Amrit S. Kulkarni Gregory J. Newmark

Municipal Water District of Orange ALESHIRE & WYNDER, LLP County: Stephen R. Onstot

City of Torrance: John L. Fellows III, CITY ATTORNEY Patrick Q. Sullivan, ASSISTANT CITY ATTORNEY

2 Las Virgenes Municipal Water LEMIEUX & O’NEILL District, Eastern Municipal Water Steven P. O’Neill District, Western Municipal Water Michael Silander District, Foothill Municipal Water District, and West Basin Municipal Water District:

Three Valleys Municipal Water BRUNICK, MCELHANEY & KENNEDY District: Steven M. Kennedy

Counsel for amicus curiae Upper LEMIEUX & O’NEILL San Gabriel Valley Municipal Steven P. O’Neill Water District:

Counsel for Defendants and KEKER, VAN NEST & Peters LLP Appellants San Diego County Water John W. Keker Authority: Daniel Purcell Dan Jackson Warren A. Braunig

SAN DIEGO COUNTY WATER AUTHORITY Mark J. Hattam

A146901, A148266

3 Filed 6/21/17 (unmodified version) CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION

SAN DIEGO COUNTY WATER AUTHORITY, Plaintiff and Appellant, A146901, A148266

v. (City & County of San Francisco METROPOLITAN WATER DISTRICT Super. Ct. Nos. OF SOUTHERN CALIFORNIA et al., CFP-10-510830, CFP-12-512466) Defendants and Appellants.

Metropolitan Water District of Southern California (Metropolitan) appeals a judgment holding that the rate it charges for transporting water, or “wheeling,” violates numerous provisions of law and awarding the San Diego County Water Authority (Water Authority) substantial damages for having charged that rate in breach of a water exchange agreement between the two agencies. The Water Authority cross-appeals, disputing the trial court’s decision upholding a provision in water conservation program contracts between the two parties that penalizes it for participating in litigation or supporting legislation to challenge or modify Metropolitan’s existing rate structure. The central issue in dispute is one of cost allocation: May the charge Metropolitan imposes for wheeling water purchased from a third party include an amount calculated to recover Metropolitan’s allocable transportation costs over the California Aqueduct, part of the State Water Project, or must the charge be limited to costs allocable to transportation costs over those parts of its system that it owns and utilizes in the particular transaction? In Metropolitan Water Dist. v. Imperial Irrigation Dist. (2000) 80 Cal.App.4th 1403 (Imperial Irrigation) it was held, and the parties do not dispute, that the

1 “wheeling statutes” (Wat. Code, § 1810 et seq.) do not as a matter of law prohibit the allocation of system-wide transportation costs to reasonable wheeling charges, so that wheeling rates need not be limited to the marginal cost of transporting water over the facilities used in a particular transaction. The trial court here held that although Metropolitan is required to pay its pro rata share of the costs of maintaining the California Aqueduct, these costs may not be considered in calculating Metropolitan’s wheeling charges, essentially because Metropolitan does not own the aqueduct. We conclude this was error. The inclusion of Metropolitan’s system-wide transportation costs, including transportation charges paid to the State Water Project, in the calculation of its wheeling rate does not, as the trial court held, violate the wheeling statutes, Proposition 26 (Cal. Const., art. XIIIC, § 1, subd. (e)), Government Code section 54999.7, subdivision (a), the common law, or the terms of the parties’ exchange agreement.1 We do agree with the trial court that the allocation of “water stewardship” charges to the wheeling rate is improper and that the Water Authority is entitled to recover the overcharges that resulted from inclusion of those charges in the rate charged by Metropolitan. With respect to the cross-complaint, we conclude that the trial court correctly held that the condition in the water conservation program contracts penalizing the Water Authority for exercising its right to seek judicial relief from the imposition of unlawful rates is an unconstitutional condition, but that the court erred in holding that the Water Authority lacks standing to challenge that condition. Therefore, it is necessary to remand the matter to the trial court for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

1 In the trial court, the Water Authority also contended that the rate violates parts of Proposition 13 (Gov. Code, §§ 50075, 50076) and the Metropolitan Water District Act (Wat. Code Appen., § 109-134 [all citations to Water Code Appendix section are to uncodified acts reprinted at 72B West’s Annotated Water Code Appendix]). The trial court deemed these provisions inapplicable and the Water Authority does not contest that conclusion on appeal.

2 I. Factual Background2

Metropolitan imports water from Northern California and the Colorado River along hundreds of miles of aqueducts and delivers it to a voluntary collective of public agencies, including the Water Authority. The Water Authority, in turn, delivers the water to retail water agencies serving households and businesses in San Diego County. To put the present controversy between the two agencies in proper perspective, it is necessary to begin with some history and an explanation of the manner in which the fixing of wholesale water rates has evolved.

A. California’s Water Supply

“The history of California water development and distribution is a story of supply and demand” marked by an “uneven distribution of water resources” by region and season. (United States v. State Water Resources Control Bd. (1986) 182 Cal.App.3d 82, 98.) Regionally, most of California’s rain and snow falls in the north while most of the demand arises in the south. (Ibid.) There is also an unequal distribution by season as precipitation occurs in the winter while demand is highest in the hot and dry summer months. (Ibid.) Precipitation also varies widely year to year.

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