IN EQUITY C-125-B: UNITED STATES OF AMERICA V. WALKER RIVER IRRIGATION, ET AL.

Filing 2223

ORDER denying 2160 Motion to Dismiss; granting 2161 Motion to Dismiss and 2164 Joinder thereto; directing Clerk to enter judgment and close the case. Signed by Judge Robert C. Jones on 5/28/2015. (Copies have been distributed pursuant to the NEF - KR) (Walker River Water Case Display Page)

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1 2 3 4 UNITED STATES DISTRICT COURT 5 DISTRICT OF NEVADA 6 UNITED STATES OF AMERICA et al., 7 Plaintiffs, 8 vs. 9 10 WALKER RIVER IRRIGATION DISTRICT et al., 11 Defendants. ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) 3:73-cv-00127-RCJ-WGC In Equity No. C-125-B ORDER 12 This is Sub-file B of a ninety-one year old case concerning the adjudication and 13 continuing supervision of water rights in the Walker River Basin. There are three “sub-files” in 14 the case, each with their own administrative existence, in which various parties have asked for 15 further amendments to the Decree governing the waters. Pending before the Court are two 16 motions to dismiss and a joinder to the latter motion. For the reasons given herein, the Court 17 denies the first motion and grants the second motion in part. 18 I. FACTS AND PROCEDURAL HISTORY1 19 A. Facts 20 The Walker River Basin covers approximately 4050 square miles. The basin stretches in 21 a northeasterly direction from its origins in the southwestern elevations of the Sierra Nevada 22 Mountains to the basin’s terminus, Walker Lake. Between the headwaters of the Walker River in 23 24 1 25 The Court has taken much of the background information herein from Mineral County v. Nevada ex rel. Department of Conservation and Natural Resources, 20 P.3d 800 (Nev. 2001). 1 Mono County, California, and its terminus at Walker Lake in Mineral County, Nevada, the 2 Walker River Basin includes portions of Nevada’s Douglas, Lyon, and Churchill Counties. 3 Approximately 25% of the Walker River Basin lies within California, and this portion of the 4 basin accounts for the majority of the precipitation feeding the system and is the primary source 5 of the basin’s surface water flows. On the other hand, the vast majority of consumptive water 6 use within the basin and loss through evaporation from surface waters takes place in Nevada. 7 The basin’s principal agricultural water use occurs in the Bridgeport and Antelope Valleys in 8 Mono County, California and in the Smith and Mason Valleys in Lyon County, Nevada. 9 The Walker River system consists of two forks, the West Walker River and the East 10 Walker River. The West Walker River has its origins below the divide that separates the Walker 11 River Basin from Yosemite National Park. From its origin, the West Walker River flows north 12 through Leavitt Meadow and into Antelope Valley. Before reaching Nevada, water from the 13 West Walker River is partially diverted into Topaz Reservoir for storage.2 The East Walker 14 River is fed by waters in the high Sierras north of Mono Lake. Water draining from Virginia 15 Lakes flows north and joins with water from Green, Robinson, Summers, and Buckeye Creeks. 16 These flows are impounded at Bridgeport Reservoir.3 The two forks meet approximately seven 17 miles upstream from Yerington, Nevada at the south end of Mason Valley. The river flows 18 further north before turning south, entering the Walker River Paiute Indian Reservation (the 19 20 21 2 22 23 24 Topaz Reservoir, which straddles the California–Nevada border, was constructed in 1922 by the Walker River Irrigation District (“WRID”), which was organized by irrigation users in the Smith and Mason Valleys in 1919 and which provides surface and storage water rights for approximately 80,000 acres of agricultural land located primarily in the Smith and Mason Valleys in Lyon County, Nevada. 3 25 WRID constructed Bridgeport Reservoir in 1923 to provide storage for downstream users. Page 2 of 18 1 “Reservation”), flowing through Campbell Valley, and entering Weber Reservoir.4 From Weber 2 Reservoir, it continues south for approximately twenty-one miles before entering Walker Lake. 3 Walker Lake is a remnant of the Pleistocene Lake Lahontan that covered much of 4 northern Nevada. As the climate dried, Lake Lahontan receded and many closed valleys became 5 isolated dry lakebeds. However, several major rivers draining from the eastern slopes of the 6 Sierras continued to support lakes and wetlands in some of these closed valleys, including 7 present day Walker Lake. See D.K. Grayson, The Desert’s Past: A Natural Prehistory of the 8 Great Basin (Smithsonian Institution Press, 1993). Walker Lake is a “terminal lake,” meaning 9 there is no outflow from the lake and all surface runoff terminates in the lake. Walker Lake is 10 approximately thirteen miles long, just over five miles wide, approximately ninety feet deep, and 11 contains approximately two million acre-feet5 of water. The shores of Walker Lake are almost 12 entirely devoid of major plant growth, due in part to the extreme fluctuations in water level. The 13 waters of Walker Lake are characterized by high concentrations of total dissolved solids (“TDS”) 14 consisting mainly of salts, high temperatures, low dissolved oxygen, and the presence of 15 hydrogen sulfide. The lake also tends to support large blooms of planktonic blue-green algae, 16 which, when combined with the high TDS concentrations and low dissolved oxygen, create an 17 inhospitable environment for fish. 18 The cause of Walker Lake’s low water level is disputed. Due to the highly variable 19 hydrology of the Walker River Basin, Walker River has rarely produced “average” inflows to 20 Walker Lake. It is clear, however, that Walker Lake currently has less water than it had when 21 22 23 24 25 4 Weber Reservoir was constructed on the Reservation by the United States for the benefit of the Walker River Paiute Indian Tribe (the “Tribe”). This is the only reservoir on the main stem of the Walker River. 5 An acre-foot is an agricultural unit of measurement equal to a volume of water with an area of one acre and a depth of one foot. A square covering an acre of area is just under seventy yards on a side. An acre-foot of volume is just under one-third of a million gallons. Page 3 of 18 1 initial recordings were taken in 1882. As of March 1996, Walker Lake had only 50% of its 1882 2 surface area and 28% of its 1882 volume. The situation has declined since then. The ultimate 3 cause of the decline is potentially attributable to a number of factors, including, but not limited 4 to, overconsumption, declining precipitation levels, and natural lake recession over time. In 5 November 1994, Public Resource Associates, a public interest group concerned with the 6 protection of Walker Lake, prepared a report describing the status of the lake and its wildlife. 7 The report indicated that Walker Lake supports a fragile balance of algae, zooplankton, small 8 crustaceans, insects, and three endemic fish species: the tui chub, Lahontan cutthroat trout, and 9 Tahoe sucker. Walker Lake is also an important habitat for a wide variety of migratory birds. 10 B. 11 The Walker River and its tributaries in the Walker River Basin have been the object of Procedural History 12 litigation for over a century. In 1902, Miller & Lux, a cattle and land company, brought an action 13 in this Court against Thomas Rickey and others to enjoin interference with Miller & Lux’s use of 14 the Walker River, and in October 1904, Rickey Land & Cattle Co. began two actions in a 15 California state court against Miller & Lux to establish its prior right to waters on the East and 16 West Walker Rivers. See Rickey Land & Cattle Co. v. Miller & Lux, 218 U.S. 258 (1910) 17 (Holmes, J.); Miller & Lux v. Rickey, 146 F. 574 (C.C.D. Nev. 1906) (Hawley, J.); Miller & Lux 18 v. Rickey, 127 F. 573 (C.C.D. Nev. 1904) (Hawley, J.). In 1906, Miller & Lux and other 19 defendants sought to enjoin the proceedings in the California actions on the grounds that this 20 Court had acquired prior exclusive jurisdiction. The Supreme Court agreed, and enjoined the 21 California actions. See Rickey Land & Cattle Co., 218 U.S. 258. The Court entered a final decree 22 in 1919. See Pac. Livestock Co. v. Thomas Rickey, In Equity No. 731, Final Decree (D. Nev. 23 1919). 24 25 In 1924, the United States brought an action, In Equity No. C-125, in this Court seeking to establish water rights for the Reservation and to settle all surface water rights on the Walker Page 4 of 18 1 River system. This litigation resulted in the 1936 Decree by Judge St. Sure, and in 1940 the 2 Decree was amended to conform to the Court of Appeals’s ruling that the Department of the 3 Interior’s creation of the Reservation in 1859 impliedly reserved waters for the Tribe despite the 4 lack of any treaty making an express reservation. The Decree formalized the ownership of 5 surface water rights from the Walker River that had been acquired pursuant to Nevada’s common 6 law doctrine of prior appropriation. It did not explicitly address groundwater rights. The Decree 7 created the Walker River Commission and the United States Board of Water Commissioners (the 8 “Board”), members of which were appointed by the Court to administer the Decree. 9 In September 1987, the Tribe sought to intervene in the C-125 Case to establish rules and 10 regulations concerning applications to change the allocation of water rights subject to the Decree. 11 Judge Reed granted the motion to intervene on March 2, 1988; as a result, the Nevada State 12 Engineer is now required to review change applications, subject to this Court’s approval pursuant 13 to its continuing jurisdiction over the waters of the Walker River Basin. 14 In 1991, the California State Water Resources Control Board (“CSWRCB”) issued 15 restrictions on water licenses held by WRID, requiring it to maintain minimum flows and pools 16 in its reservoirs. As a result of the decision by CSWRCB, WRID filed a petition for declaratory 17 and injunctive relief in the C-125 Case. Judge Reed designated the motion as “Sub-file 18 C-125-A” of the C-125 Case, and it was assigned case number 3:73-cv-126. The Tribe served an 19 answer, counterclaim, and cross-claim. In 1992, the United States filed a motion for leave to file 20 a counterclaim, which Judge Reed permitted and designated as “Sub-file C-125-B” of the C-125 21 case, and which was assigned case number 3:73-cv-127. That is the present case, in which the 22 United States and the Tribe seek additional rights under federal law beyond those previously 23 adjudicated in the Decree. 24 25 On October 25, 1994, Mineral County filed a motion to intervene in the C-125 Case. Judge Reed designated the motion as “Sub-file C-125-C” of the C-125 Case, and it was assigned Page 5 of 18 1 case number 3:73-cv-128. Mineral County argues that because Walker Lake is held in trust 2 pursuant to Nevada’s public trust doctrine, the Decree should be amended to readjust the priority 3 of appropriation of waters in the Walker River Basin that feed Walker Lake. In its prayer for 4 relief, Mineral County asks that the Court modify the Decree by: (1) recognizing the rights of 5 Mineral County to have minimum levels in Walker Lake; (2) ordering the State of Nevada to 6 grant a certificate to Mineral County for the benefit of Walker Lake; and (3) recognizing that 7 minimum flows are necessary to maintain Walker Lake as a “beneficial use and in the public 8 interest and required under the doctrine of maintenance of the public trust.” 9 10 C. The Present Motions The First Amended Counterclaims (“FACC”) forming the basis of Sub-file B were filed 11 by the United States on behalf of itself and the Tribe on July 31, 1997. (See ECF No. 59). There 12 are eleven claims in the United States’ FACC. First, the United States appears to claim—the 13 nature of the claim is not entirely clear—that due to the ability to store water in Weber Reservoir, 14 the Tribe should have the right to use enough water to irrigate more land than the 2100 acres 15 upon which its decreed right to a flow of 26.25 cfs is based. Second, the United States argues 16 that the Tribe is entitled to enough water to irrigate lands added to the Reservation on September 17 25, 1936. Third, the United States claims the right to use groundwater in the basin as necessary 18 to fulfill the rights claimed under the Decree, or in addition to the Decree as necessary to irrigate 19 the additional lands added to the Reservation in 1936. Fourth, the United States claims reserved 20 water for the Yerington Paiute Tribe. Fifth, the United States claims reserved water for the 21 Bridgeport Paiute Indian Colony. Sixth and seventh, the United States claims reserved water for 22 the Garrison and Cluette (Indian) Allotments and for various individual (Indian) allotments. 23 Eighth, the United States claims reserved water for the Hawthorne Army Ammunition Plant. 24 Ninth, the United States claims reserved water for the Toiyabe National Forest. Tenth, the 25 United States claims reserved water for the U.S. Marine Corps Mountain Warfare Training Page 6 of 18 1 Center. Eleventh, the United States claims reserved water for the Bureau of Land Management. 2 The Tribe’s separate FACC, also filed on July 31, 1997, contains three claims. (See ECF 3 No. 58). First, the Tribe claims the right to store water in Weber Reservoir for any legitimate 4 purpose under federal law, with a priority date of April 15, 1936. The Tribe does not claim a 5 right to any particular amount of storage. Second, the Tribe claims a right to use water from the 6 Walker River on the lands added to the Reservation in 1936 for any legitimate purpose under 7 federal law. The Tribe does not claim a right to any particular amount of water. Third, the Tribe 8 claims the right to use groundwater under and adjacent to the Reservation, including the portion 9 of the Reservation added in 1936, for any legitimate purpose under federal law, with a priority 10 date of November 29, 1859. 11 Under a Case Management Order entered by Judge Reed on April 18, 2000, (see ECF No. 12 108), the claims concerning the Tribe’s rights (the Tribe’s three claims and the United States’ 13 first three claims, collectively the “Tribal Claims”) are to proceed first, the remaining federal 14 claims to the water (the claims as to other Indian entities and federal agencies and departments, 15 collectively the “Federal Claims”) are stayed, and after completion of service of process upon the 16 many users of water in the Walker River Basin, certain threshold issues, such as the present 17 jurisdictional issues, are to be decided before addressing the Tribal Claims on the merits. A 18 supplemental Case Management Order requires threshold issues to be addressed under Rule 19 12(b) and directs such motions to address both the Tribal Claims and the Federal Claims. 20 (See ECF No. 1865). Service of process has been completed. The Nevada Department of 21 Wildlife (“NDOW”) and WRID have separately moved to dismiss based on threshold 22 jurisdictional issues. 23 /// 24 /// 25 /// Page 7 of 18 1 II. DISCUSSION 2 A. 3 NDOW asks the Court to dismiss insofar as the FACC seeks injunctions against Nevada Department of Wildlife’s (“NDOW”) Motion 4 groundwater users outside of the reservation. NDOW appears to admit that the Court has 5 jurisdiction over groundwater insofar as groundwater pumping interferes with decreed rights. 6 NDOW, however, asks the Court to dismiss the United States’ prayer for injunctive relief against 7 groundwater users, because the issues of whether groundwater pumping affects decreed rights 8 and whether the United States is entitled to increased water under the Decree should be 9 determined in separate actions. 10 The Court does not perceive any particular claim by the United States or the Tribe to 11 enjoin any particular groundwater pumping. Both parties have included pro forma prayers for 12 the Court to enjoin any activity inconsistent with their claimed rights, but a party would have to 13 file a much more particularized motion against particular activity to obtain such an injunction. 14 Even assuming a particularized motion for an injunction had been filed, the administration of 15 such a motion would not depend on whether a separate action had been brought. This Court 16 would preside over any separate action to enjoin groundwater pumping based on interference 17 with decreed rights, and creating another sub-file would only complicate the matter 18 administratively. The Court is capable of addressing motions for modifications to the Decree in 19 the same action as motions for injunctive relief. The Court would address any motion for 20 injunctive relief alleging that groundwater pumping adversely affected the complaining user’s 21 decreed rights based on the then-existing rights of the complaining user. Whether to defer a 22 ruling on such a motion until any pending motions concerning the extent of the complainant’s 23 rights had been adjudicated is not a particularly complex procedural issue. The Court routinely 24 makes those kinds of case management decisions. The Court denies the motion. 25 /// Page 8 of 18 1 B. Walker River Irrigation District’s (“WRID”) Motion 2 1. Jurisdiction Under the Decree and Claim Preclusion 3 WRID first argues that the Court has no jurisdiction to adjudicate additional claims to 4 water because the Court only retained jurisdiction to change the duty or water, to correct or 5 modify the Decree, or to regulate the use of water, e.g., by changing the place of use: 6 7 8 9 The Court retains jurisdiction of this cause for the purpose of changing the duty of water or for correcting or modifying this decree; also for regulatory purposes, including a change of the place of use of any water user, but no water shall be sold or delivered outside of the basin of the Walker River except that appurtenant to the lands of Mrs. J.A. Conway and R.P. Conway . . . . Decree at 74–75. But the Court did not, WRID argues, retain jurisdiction to grant additional 10 rights. The Court disagrees that the Decree is clear on this point, and to the extent it is clear, it is 11 clear in favor of the Tribe’s and the United States’ reading of “modify” to permit the adjudication 12 of yet-unlitigated rights. Continued jurisdiction to “modify” the Decree implies an ability to 13 increase or decrease one’s rights thereunder. The phrase “correcting or modifying this decree” 14 implies that modifications are to be distinguished from corrections, i.e., that changes to the 15 Decree may be based on yet-unlitigated claims in addition to claims that were decided incorrectly 16 or which suffer from scrivener’s errors. Presumably, a “modification” of the Decree, like a 17 modification of a contract, could either increase or decrease one’s rights thereunder. In other 18 words, “correcting” the Decree implies entertaining Rule 60(a)-type motions, and “modifying” 19 the Decree implies entertaining Rule 60(b)-type motions. The Court expressly retained 20 jurisdiction to do either, although the present Civil Rules so enumerating these concepts were not 21 adopted until a year after the Decree was first entered with the relevant language.6 22 WRID analogizes the present counterclaims to a situation where a party seeks to reopen a 23 24 25 6 Civil Rules 60(a) and 60(b) were modeled after, inter alia, previous Equity Rule 72 and California Code of Civil Procedure § 473 (1937), respectively. See Fed. R. Civ. P. 60 advisory committee’s notes. Page 9 of 18 1 closed action in order to bring what amounts to a new action or supplementation of an 2 adjudicated complaint. But the Court has jurisdiction to consider the present claims under either 3 interpretation. If the present Sub-file is part of the C-125 case, i.e., not a new action, the Court 4 can potentially modify the Decree under the standards of Rule 60(b).7 If the present Sub-file is in 5 substance a new action,8 the Court may adjudicate the claims, subject to preclusion principles, 6 laches, etc. In either case, laches probably prevents any claim inconsistent with the 1936 Decree, 7 unless a claimant could show that extraordinary circumstances beyond his control prevented him 8 from bringing his claims until the 1990s, a highly unlikely circumstance. See United States v. 9 Alpine Land & Reservoir Co., 984 F.2d 1047, 1049 (9th Cir. 1993) (reversing as an abuse of 10 discretion Judge Thompson’s grant of a 1991 Rule 60(b)(6) motion to modify the 1980 Alpine 11 Land Decree) (“Rule 60(b)(6) has been used sparingly as an equitable remedy to prevent manifest 12 injustice. The rule is to be utilized only where extraordinary circumstances prevented a party 13 from taking timely action to prevent or correct an erroneous judgment. . . . [T]here is no reason 14 for holding litigants in complex water rights litigation to any lesser standard than litigants in 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 7 That is not to say that any given claim can succeed. Under Rule 60(c)(1), the only subsections of Rule 60(b) available at all as to the Decree are Rules 60(b)(4)–(6). Rules 60(b)(4) and 60(b)(5) would seem to have no application here, and Rule 60(b)(6)—the only subsection of the rule plausibly available in the present context—is an equitable rule, and laches will bar any claim where the claimant has slept on his rights. 8 The United States and the Tribe can also reasonably be viewed as having in substance filed a new case. Judge Reed gave this case its own administrative existence many years ago. The fact that the present case has been called a “Sub-file” of the original case and the claims made herein called “counterclaims” is not critical. The claims are called “counterclaims” because they originated in the C-125 case before Judge Reed ordered them assigned to a new, separate case. Service of process has been independently (and painstakingly) accomplished as to the FACCs in its own right. Any modification to the Decree based on the FACCs in this case therefore need not even be viewed as a modification of the existing Decree without jurisdiction—as noted, supra, modification of the Decree to add new rights is not clearly improper, in any case—but could in substance be viewed as a new decree, just as the 1936 Decree was a new decree as to the existing decree from Pacific Livestock Co. v. Rickey, In Equity No. 731 (1919). Page 10 of 18 1 other proceedings.”). The only real difference between the two approaches—and the United 2 States argues that WRID characterizes the present Sub-file as a new action for the purpose of 3 invoking it—is claim preclusion, i.e., res judicata. 4 WRID admits that the Court has jurisdiction to entertain new claims to water based on 5 federal law—which is the basis of the United States’ and the Tribe’s claims— but it argues that a 6 new action must be brought. On balance, the Court believes the present action is in fact a new 7 action, and that the present claims are therefore precluded. The Decree prevents the United 8 States (like all parties) from claiming any additional rights beyond those adjudicated therein, 9 whether based on state law or federal law. See Decree at 73. The Sub-files were given their own 10 administrative existences, so they are independent cases at least in form,9 although their 11 characterization by Judge Reed as “Sub-files” provides a non-frivolous argument that he intended 12 them to be part of the same case in substance. 13 14 In summary, the Court will dismiss the claims for lack of jurisdiction. The present case is best characterized as an independent case with jurisdiction supported under 28 U.S.C. §§ 1331 15 9 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Judge Reed’s order creating the first sub-file, Sub-file A, made clear that a new case was being opened and that it was being designated as a “sub-file” of the C-125 Case because it was “a related action” as to that case. (See Min. Order, Jan. 3, 1992, ECF No. 250 in Case No. 3:73-cv125). At that time, the Court’s docket was still purely physical, and Judge Reed ordered that the original copy of the petition be removed from the file of the C-125 case and placed into the docket of the new case. (See id.). On March 18, 1992, the Tribe filed its Answer to the First Amended Petition, Counterclaims, and Crossclaims (“FAPCC”) in the C-125 case. Judge Reed then ordered the present case opened as a separate case, originally consisting only of the counterclaims, via Minute Order on May 18, 1992. (See Min. Order, May 18, 1992, ECF No. 2). A copy of the FAPCC, as opposed to the original, was filed in the present case, because there was of course only one original, and part of the FAPCC (the answer and crossclaims) remained operative in the C-125 case. The United States later intervened to plead its own “counterclaims,” although that pleading should probably have been titled as a complaint in intervention, seeing as the pleading had been filed in the present case, and not in the C-125 case. The Court rejects the United States’ argument that the present Sub-file could not possibly be a new case because the United States has not consented to be sued in a new case. If characterized as a new case, the United States would be properly characterized as a Plaintiff or a Plaintiff-in-Intervention. The United States voluntarily brought the present claims. Indeed, the present case, C-125-B, 3:73-cv127, lists the United States as the Plaintiff. Page 11 of 18 1 and 1362, i.e., based on the Tribe’s claim to water rights under federal law. But the claims are 2 precluded. The United States and the Tribe litigated their rights to the waters of the Walker 3 River from 1924 to 1940. See Nevada v. United States (Orr Ditch), 463 U.S. 110, 129–45 (1983) 4 (Rehnquist, J.). Here, the Decree prevents the parties from seeking additional water rights under 5 the Decree, see Decree at 73 (“forever enjoined and restrained from claiming any rights in or to 6 the waters of Walker River and/or its branches and/or its tributaries, except the rights set up and 7 specified in this Decree”), just as the Orr Ditch Decree prevented the parties thereto from seeking 8 additional rights in the waters governed by that Decree, see Nevada, 463 U.S. at 132 (“forever 9 enjoined and restrained from asserting or claiming any rights in or to the waters of the Truckee 10 River or its tributaries, or the waters of any of the creeks or streams or other waters 11 hereinbefore mentioned except the rights, specified, determined and allowed by this decree”). 12 The Supreme Court emphasized this text itself. 13 Even if the present Sub-file were not in substance a new action but better characterized as 14 a Rule 60(b)(6) motion in the original action, laches would almost certainly bar the claims. See 15 Alpine Land & Reservoir Co., 984 F.2d at 1049. In summary, the Court has statutory jurisdiction 16 over pre-Decree claims under §§ 1331 and 1362, but those claims are precluded, and even if 17 characterized as a Rule 60(b)(6) motion under the “modify” prong of the continuing jurisdiction 18 clause of the Decree, laches would bar the claims.10 Post-Decree claims must be made to the 19 state authorities in the first instance, whether based on state or federal law. 20 /// 21 10 22 23 24 25 Any pre-Decree claims to water by the United States will almost certainly be barred by laches regardless of whether asserted via a Rule 60(b)(6) motion as to the Decree or in a new action—it does not appear disputed that the United States owned all the relevant lands for which it now seeks water rights when it brought and litigated the present case from 1924 to 1935 in this Court—and any post-Decree state law appropriative claims to water, even if not barred by laches, would be junior to any decreed rights such that modification of the Decree would not be appropriate any more than it would be appropriate to modify the Decree to recognize other junior “new lands” rights granted by the State Engineer since the Decree issued. Page 12 of 18 1 2. 2 Finally, the Court finds that it has jurisdiction over groundwater for a single purpose. The 3 scope of the Decree does not extend to declaring rights to groundwater, but only to surface water. 4 The Decree concerns adjudication of the waters of the “Walker River and/or its tributaries,” 5 which does not include groundwater. The Court will therefore neither affirm nor deny any 6 party’s right to pump groundwater within or without the basin of the Walker River. However, 7 the Court may adjudicate claims that any person’s pumping of groundwater, within or without 8 the basin of the Walker River, adversely affects decreed rights under the no injury rule. That is 9 the only context under which this Court has jurisdiction under the Decree to say anything about Groundwater 10 groundwater pumping: it may enjoin groundwater pumping (or any activity) by anyone anywhere 11 that interferes with rights adjudicated under the Decree. 12 The Supreme Court has reached this precise result in an original proceeding. See Kansas 13 v. Nebraska, 135 S. Ct. 1042 (2015). In 1943, Congress approved the Republican River 14 Compact (“RRC”) entered into by Kansas, Nebraska, and Colorado in order to allocate waters in 15 the Republican River Basin. Id. at 1049. In 1997, Kansas sued Nebraska in the Supreme Court, 16 arguing that Nebraska’s pumping of groundwater in areas “hydraulically connected to the 17 Republican River and its tributaries” depleted stream flow in the basin and that the amount of 18 depletion should count against Nebraska’s allocation of surface water under the RCC. Id. at 19 1049–50. Nebraska moved to dismiss, arguing that groundwater pumping was outside the scope 20 of the RCC even if it did in fact deplete stream flow. Id. at 1050. The Special Master appointed 21 by the Court agreed with Kansas’ interpretation of the RCC, and the Supreme Court summarily 22 approved the proposed ruling and remanded for further findings. See Kansas v. Nebraska, 120 S. 23 Ct. 2764, 2764 (2000) (denying Nebraska’s motion to dismiss and remanding). 24 25 The Special Master had found that even if he were not to assume as true the alleged hydraulic connection between groundwater pumping and stream flow in the context of the Page 13 of 18 1 motion to dismiss, such a connection was a “well established scientific fact,” with groundwater 2 entering the stream wherever the surrounding water table was at a higher elevation than the 3 relevant segment of the stream and exiting the stream wherever it was lower. See Final Report of 4 the Special Master 2 & n.3, Jan. 28, 2000, available at http://www.supremecourt.gov/ 5 SpecMastRpt/SpecMastRpt.aspx (citing Thomas C. Winter et al., Ground Water and Surface 6 Water: A Single Resource, U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1139 (1998); Bureau of Reclamation, 7 U.S. Dept. of the Interior, Republican River Basin Water Management Study: Colorado, 8 Nebraska, Kansas 41, 43 (1985)). The Special Master noted that the Supreme Court had 9 recognized the connection between wells and surface water as early as 1907. See id. at 24 (citing 10 11 Kansas v. Colorado, 206 U.S. 46, 114–15 (1907)). The RRC defined the “virgin water supply” as “the water supply within the basin 12 undepleted by the activities of man.” Id. at 12. The RCC allocated the annual virgin water supply 13 between the contracting states by sub-basin. Id. at 12–13. In 1961, the Republican River 14 Compact Administration (“RRCA”) began counting groundwater pumped “from the alluvium 15 along the stream channels” against a state’s allocation, equating such pumping to a diversion 16 directly from the stream, i.e., counting 100% of the pumped water against the pumping state’s 17 allocation. Id. 16. “Table-land” wells, however, were discounted altogether because of 18 insufficient data and understanding as to how such pumping affected stream flow. Id. Although 19 the RRCA continued to call for more research, it never incorporated “table-land” groundwater 20 pumping into its allocation formulas. Id. at 17. Kansas sued Nebraska, arguing that any pumping 21 that depleted the “virgin water supply” under the RRC should count against a state’s allocation of 22 virgin water. Id. 23 The Special Master characterized the question before him as: “Does the Compact restrict 24 groundwater pumping that depletes the stream flow in the Republican River Basin?” Id. at 18. 25 The Special Master found that the fact that the RCC did not use the word “groundwater” did not Page 14 of 18 1 matter if groundwater pumping caused a state to receive more of the water governed by the RCC 2 than it was entitled to thereunder. Id. at 21–22.11 Two previous Supreme Court cases interpreting 3 interstate compacts directly supported this result. See id. at 34–36 (citing Kansas v. Colorado, 4 514 U.S. 673, at 691–94 (1995); Texas v. New Mexico, 482 U.S. 124, 127–28 (1987)). The 5 Special Master ruled that the RRC unambiguously provided that groundwater pumping, like any 6 activity, was to be counted against a state’s allocation of water thereunder to the extent the 7 pumping depleted stream flow in the Basin. See id. at 23. He also noted that the subjective intent 8 of the drafters of the RRC had been to govern groundwater pumping that affected stream flow. 9 See id. at 23–31. The RRCA had also interpreted the RRC to govern groundwater pumping that 10 affected stream flow and had only not yet included “table-well” pumping because its effect on 11 stream flow was so difficult to calculate. Id. at 32–34. The Special Master also noted that no 12 state law as to groundwater could control the interpretation of a federal compact, and there was 13 no conflicting law in any case. Id. at 39. 14 Whether the Court has jurisdiction over groundwater pumping in the present case 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 11 This is a commonsense conclusion. Imagine, for example, that one could devise a way to capture the evaporation from a stream in an efficient way. Depleting the water vapor from the air immediately above the stream would, under ordinary principles of thermodynamics, cause more water to evaporate until the water vapor-to-air ratio reached equilibrium at the relevant temperature and pressure. One would not be heard to argue that the two cubic feet per second of water he had taken from the air immediately above the stream in this manner should not count against his five cubic feet per second allocation of water from the stream simply because it had passed through the air between the stream and his field. The user has taken the water in a way that depletes water from the stream. For the same reason, one who filters his water through the soil before using it cannot be heard to argue that this water should not be considered to have come from the stream. Not only is it untrue that the taking of water in this way does not affect the stream in some indirect way, but it is not even true that such water is not taken from the stream itself. Both the pumper and the evaporation capturer have initially taken water that was not in the stream, but only in the surrounding soil and air, respectively, when they began their extractions. But eventually the water being used by both of them is water that was indeed in the stream when they began their respective extractions. It has flowed from the stream, through the soil or air, respectively, and to the extractor’s place of use in a foreseeable, intended, and unbroken path. Page 15 of 18 1 depends on the language of the Decree. That is, just as the Supreme Court in Kansas v. 2 Nebraska examined the language of the RRC in order to determine its reach, the Court here must 3 examine the language of the Decree. Via the Decree, the Court adjudicated the rights of the 4 parties to use certain amounts of water from the Walker River, with priority dates. See Decree at 5 10–11, Apr. 14, 1936. The parties were: 6 7 adjudged to be the owners of the use of the several amounts of water from the several streams as above set forth and are entitled to divert and use such waters of Walker River and/or its tributaries as the case may be, for the beneficial purposes specified, subject to and in accord with the priorities above set forth. 8 Id. at 72. The parties to the case and their successors-in-interest were “forever enjoined and 9 restrained from claiming any rights in or to the waters of Walker River and/or its branches and/or 10 its tributaries, except the rights set up and specified in this Decree . . . .” Id. at 73. The parties 11 were also specifically: 12 13 14 enjoined and restrained from taking, diverting or interfering in any way with the waters of the said Walker River or its branches or tributaries so as to in any way or manner interfere with the diversion, enjoyment and use of the waters of any of the other parties to this suit as set forth in this decree . . . . 15 Id. (emphases added). This passage plainly gives the Court jurisdiction to enjoin groundwater 16 pumping that interferes with decreed rights. Whether a complainant can prove interference is 17 another matter, but there is jurisdiction to resolve such a claim. 18 The Decree declares that certain parties have the right to use certain amounts of water and 19 that no other party may divert water in a way that interferes with those rights. See id. at 72–73. A 20 court always has jurisdiction to enforce its orders by holding those in violation of them in 21 contempt. See, e.g., Davies v. Grossmont Union High Sch. Dist., 930 F.2d 1390, 1393 (9th Cir. 22 1991). It seems clear, therefore, that the Court has jurisdiction to restrain groundwater pumping 23 (or any other activity) by any party to the action (and their successors-in-interest) if the activity 24 “interfere[s] with the diversion, enjoyment and use of the waters of any of the other parties.” 25 And although the Decree does not specifically enjoin non-parties from such interference, it is not Page 16 of 18 1 a close question that the Court may also enjoin non-parties from activity that interferes with the 2 declared rights of the parties. The general principle recounted in Davies permits the Court to use 3 the contempt power to prevent any party from interfering with the rights of the parties as declared 4 by the Court. In summary, the Court has jurisdiction to enjoin any activity by any person that 5 interferes with the rights declared in the Decree. 6 The scientific scholarship makes it clear that groundwater pumping from an aquifer 7 connected to a stream can affect the flow of that stream. See generally Paul M. Barlow & Stanley 8 A. Leake, Streamflow Depletion by Wells—Understanding and Managing the Effects of 9 Groundwater Pumping on Streamflow, U.S. Geological Survey Circular 1376 (2012), available 10 at http://pubs.usgs.gov/circ/ 1376/. The factual connection between groundwater and surface 11 water has been recognized in federal law for over a century. See Kansas, 206 U.S. at 114 (“If the 12 bed of a stream is not solid rock, but earth, through which water will percolate, and, as alleged in 13 plaintiff’s bill, the ‘valley of the river in the state of Kansas is composed of sand covered with 14 alluvial soil,’ undoubtedly water will be found many feet below the surface, and the lighter the 15 soil the more easily will it find its way downward and the more water will be discoverable by 16 wells or other modes of exploring the subsurface.”). 17 The remaining question is whether certain groundwater pumping in fact interferes with 18 any decreed rights. That is a question for another day. As the Tribe notes, no such controversy is 19 currently submitted for decision. But if the United States, the Tribe, or any other party were to 20 allege that groundwater pumping (by any person, including the United States or the Tribe) 21 impaired the complaining user’s rights under the Decree, the Court would have jurisdiction to 22 determine the matter and enjoin the offending activity (or instruct the Water Master to count 23 pumped water against a user’s surface water rights) if interference could be proved. 24 /// 25 /// Page 17 of 18 1 CONCLUSION 2 IT IS HEREBY ORDERED that the Motion to Dismiss (ECF No. 2160) is DENIED. 3 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED that the Motion to Dismiss (ECF No. 2161) and the Joinder 4 (ECF No. 2164) thereto are GRANTED. 5 IT IS FURTHER ORDERED the Clerk shall enter Judgment and close the case. 6 IT IS SO ORDERED. 7 Dated this 12th day of of May, 2015. Dated this 28th day May, 2015. 8 9 10 _____________________________________ ROBERT C. JONES United States District Judge 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Page 18 of 18

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