United States v. Tulare Lake Canal Company

535 F.2d 1093
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit
DecidedJune 7, 1976
Docket72-2322
StatusPublished

This text of 535 F.2d 1093 (United States v. Tulare Lake Canal Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Ninth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
United States v. Tulare Lake Canal Company, 535 F.2d 1093 (9th Cir. 1976).

Opinion

535 F.2d 1093

6 Envtl. L. Rep. 20,487

UNITED STATES of America, Plaintiff-Appellant,
v.
TULARE LAKE CANAL COMPANY, a corporation, Defendant-Appellee,
Tulare Lake Basin Water Storage District and Salyer Land
Company, acorporation, Intervenors-Defendants-Appellees.

No. 72-2322.

United States Court of Appeals,
Ninth Circuit.

April 5, 1976.
Rehearing and Rehearing En Banc Denied June 7, 1976.

Douglas N. King, Atty. (argued), Land and Natural Resources Div., U. S. Dept. of Justice, Washington, D. C., for appellant United States.

Alvin J. Rockwell (argued), of Brobeck, Phleger & Harrison, San Francisco, Cal., for appellee Tulare Lake Canal Co.

J. Thomas Crowe (argued), of Crowe, Mitchell & Crowe, Visalia, Cal., for amicus curiae.

OPINION

Before BROWNING, DUNIWAY, and WALLACE, Circuit Judges.

BROWNING, Circuit Judge:

This action was brought by the United States to determine two questions regarding the application of the reclamation laws, and particularly section 46 of the Omnibus Adjustment Act of 1926,1 to private lands receiving irrigation benefits from the Pine Flat Dam, a multiple-purpose dam on the Kings River, which flows into the San Joaquin River Basin in the Central Valley of California.

Section 46 of the 1926 Act bars delivery of reclamation project water to private land in excess of 160 acres in one ownership unless the owner executes a recordable contract with the Secretary of the Interior obligating him to sell the excess land at a price excluding incremental value resulting from the existence of the project. Section 46 also requires the United States to enter into contracts with irrigation districts organized under state law in the area to be served by the reclamation project. In exchange for the government's promise to supply water, the districts undertake to reimburse the United States for an allocated portion of the cost of constructing the project and to withhold water from excess lands within their boundaries for which recordable contracts have not been executed.

The requirement that the owner of private land within a reclamation project agree to dispose of any excess over 160 acres at ex-project prices was intended to serve much the same purposes as the historic restriction on the amount of public land an entryman may obtain from the United States under the homestead acts, the original reclamation act, and other public land laws. As explained in more detail in Part II of this opinion, these purposes are to open private land to settlement by farmers of modest means, to insure wide distribution of the benefits of the federal investment in the reclamation project, and to prevent private landowners from realizing a disproportionate windfall advantage from enhanced productivity and land values because of the project.

Construction of Pine Flat Dam was authorized by the Flood Control Act of 1944,2 and substantially completed by 1954. Efforts to negotiate repayment contracts pursuant to section 46 for the portion of construction costs allocated to irrigation were unsuccessful. Private owners of excess lands contended that the Flood Control Act of 1944 exempted the Kings River project from the reclamation laws, including section 46. They also contended that even if those laws applied, owners of more than 160 acres of project land could avoid executing a recordable contract for the sale of their excess holdings and receive water for those lands if construction charges were repaid.

Opposition to the acreage limitations came primarily from large landowners in the Tulare Lake Basin, a flat, low-lying region. The Basin contains about 20 percent of the one million acres in the Kings River service area the area supplied with Kings River water from Pine Flat Dam. It includes the bulk of the service area's more than 280,000 acres of excess holdings. More than 157,000 of the 188,000 acres within the boundaries of the Tulare Lake Basin Water Storage District, which covers most of the Basin, are held in tracts of more than 160 acres. These excess holdings average 2,600 acres each, including one tract of more than 60,000 acres owned by a single company.

In 1957, Elmer F. Bennett, Solicitor of the Department of the Interior, formally determined that the reclamation laws were applicable to lands served by Pine Flat Dam, rejecting the landowners' argument that the Flood Control Act of 1944 exempted Pine Flat from these laws. 65 I.D. 525 (1957). Attorney General William P. Rogers rendered a formal opinion to the same effect in the following year. 41 Op.A.G. 377 (1958).

By 1957 Interior Department officials had negotiated a repayment contract with the Kings River Conservation District, a service-area-wide entity created to contract with the United States. On the advice of Solicitor Bennett, 64 I.D. 273 (1957), the Secretary of the Interior declined to sign the contract because it would have relieved individual landowners of the section 46 requirement that they execute recordable contracts to dispose of excess lands if they paid all construction costs allocated to their individual holdings.

Negotiations were then resumed between the United States and the various irrigation and water storage districts and canal companies in the Kings River service area. Under contracts proposed in 1961, owners of excess land would have been relieved of the recordable contract requirement if the irrigation district or canal company through which they received project water exercised an option to repay the share of overall construction costs allocated to the landowners served by the district or company. Solicitor Barry concluded that the requirements of section 46 could not be avoided in that manner. 68 I.D. 372 (1961). His opinion on the repayment issue was submitted to the Department of Justice by the Secretary of the Interior and was formally approved by Attorney General Robert F. Kennedy in December 1961. As a result, the proposed contracts were not executed.

The United States and the landowners agreed to submit the disputed issues to the courts. Tulare Lake Canal Company entered into a repayment contract with the United States in which it agreed to withhold delivery of project water from all lands in excess of 160 acres in single ownership unless the owner had executed a recordable contract for the sale of the excess land. However, the repayment contract provided that the recordable contract requirement would be void if it were determined in the test case that the Kings River project is exempt from section 46, or that section 46 may be avoided by repayment of construction charges. To enable it to test the latter theory, the Canal Company paid its share of the total irrigation cost of the Pine Flat Dam. The other districts and canal companies in the Kings River service area agreed to be bound by the outcome of the test case.

The United States then brought this suit, seeking an injunction prohibiting defendant Tulare Lake Canal Company from delivering "project water"3

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United States v. Tulare Lake Canal Co.
535 F.2d 1093 (Ninth Circuit, 1976)

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