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Ecology v. Bureau of Reclamation
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[No. 57563-1. En Banc. April 9, 1992.] THE DEPARTMENT OF ECOLOGY, Respondent, v. THE UNITED STATES BUREAU OF RECLAMATION, Defendant, QUINCY-COLUMBIA BASIN IRRIGATION DISTRICT, ET AL, Appellants.
[1] Waters - Water Rights - Appropriation - Permits - Administrative Discretion. The Department of Ecology's decision to issue a water appropriation permit under RCW 90.03.290 is reviewed under the abuse of discretion standard.
[2] Administrative Law - Judicial Review - Abuse of Discretion - What Constitutes. An administrative agency abuses its discretionary authority by exercising its discretion in a manner that is manifestly unreasonable or on untenable grounds or for untenable reasons.
[3] Administrative Law - Judicial Review - Question of Law - Standard of Review. An appellate court may substitute its determination of an issue of law for that made by an administrative agency, although the agency's interpretation of the law is entitled to substantial weight.
[4] Waters - Water Rights - Appropriation - Scope of Right. Once a holder of a water- right diverts water and brings it under control and possession, the holder of the water right owns the water as personal property.
[5] Waters - Water Rights - Irrigation Water - Rights in Waste, Seepage, or Return Flow Water. A holder of a water right who appropriates water and uses it for irrigation retains the right to recapture and reuse the waste, seepage, or return flow water left over after the irrigation.
[6] Waters - Water Rights - Appropriation - Duration - Boundaries of Appropriator's Property - Effect. An appropriator of water retains its right to use the water so long as the water remains within the boundaries of the appropriator's property. Only when the water has left the boundaries of the appropriator's property does the appropriator's right to the water depend on the appropriator's intent to recapture the water, whether downstream on another piece of property or otherwise.
762 Apr. 1992
[7] Waters - Water Rights - Irrigation Water - Federal Irrigation Project - Decisionmaking Authority. Only federal agencies and those entities with whom they contract have authority to make decisions regarding the distribution of water within a federal irrigation project.
Nature of Action: The State sought review of a decision by the Pollution Control Hearings Board rescinding a permit issued by the Department of Ecology. The permit authorized a landowner to appropriate water from a stream that carried federal irrigation waste, seepage, or return flow water over his land.
Superior Court: The Superior Court for Grant County, No. 85-2-00174-1, Evan E. Sperline, J., on August 16, 1990, reversed the decision of the Board and remanded the case to the Board for further factfinding.
Supreme Court: Holding that the Department of Ecology had abused its discretion in issuing the permit, the court reverses the judgment and reinstates the decision of the Board.
Lemargie & Whitaker, by Richard A. Lemargie; Baird & White, by John W.
Baird, for appellants.
Kenneth O. Eikenberry, Attorney General, and Thomas McDonald,
Assistant, for respondent.
JOHNSON
JOHNSON, J.- The Washington State Department of Ecology (Department)
granted to J.M. Hanson a permit to appropriate water from a stream running
across his property. Hanson's property is located within the boundaries of a
federal irrigation project and the stream carries, at least in part, water that
the project diverted from the Columbia River pursuant to the federal
government's own rights of appropriation.
A federal agency and three irrigation districts appealed the
Department's action to the Pollution Control Hearings Board (PCHB), arguing that
the permit interfered with the federal government's prior appropriated rights in
the water. The PCHB decided on summary judgment that the federal government's
rights prevented reappropriation to
763 Apr. 1992
another party. The Superior Court reversed the PCHB and remanded for further
factfinding. The irrigation districts appealed directly here.
We hold the Department erred in granting Hanson's permit. The water
in Hanson's stream is still subject to the federal government's right of
appropriation, as it has not yet left the boundaries of the irrigation project,
and it cannot be reappropriated to another. We reverse the Superior Court and
reinstate the PCHB's summary judgment.
I
The Columbia River Basin Irrigation Project is a massive federal project
providing irrigation water for lands along the Columbia River. 1 In order to
undertake this project, the federal government acquired appropriation rights in
the Columbia River. The federal government then built the facilities necessary
to divert that water and make it available to farmers in the Columbia River
basin. The federal government, through the United States Bureau of Reclamation,
contracted with local irrigation districts to operate and maintain the
facilities and to deliver the water to the basin's farmlands. The contracts
provide for repayment of the federal government's costs of constructing the
facilities.
Certain farmlands (known as "farm units") receive a direct water
supply from the irrigation districts. In return, the farm units pay a
proportionate share of the cost of the facilities.
After these farm units use the water for irrigation, significant
amounts of the water seep through the land and accumulate, either above or below
ground, within the project's borders. The parties refer to this water as "waste,
seepage or return flow water", abbreviated as "WSRF water".
These WSRF waters are addressed in the contract between the United
States Bureau of Reclamation and the
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1 The record in this case contains little direct evidence. Accordingly, much of the factual description here relies on uncontradicted statements made in the parties' briefs and in opinions from the Superior Court and the PCHB.
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764 Apr. 1992
local irrigation districts. That contract expressly reserves these waters for use by the project:
The United States does not abandon or relinquish any of the waste, seepage, or return flow waters attributable to the irrigation of the lands to which water is supplied under this contract. All such waters are reserved and intended to be retained for the use and benefit of the United States as a source of supply for the project. . . .
Amendatory, Supplemental and Replacement Repayment Contracts SS 24(a);
Supplemental Clerk's Papers, at 107.
Although some of the WSRF water returns to the Columbia River
without being used for further irrigation, the project does recapture and reuse
a portion of the used water. The irrigation districts enter into "water service
contracts" with area landowners granting the landowners the right to divert the
previously used water for purposes of further irrigation. These landowners pay a
portion of the project's construction and maintenance costs, but a smaller
portion than that charged to the landowners who used the water initially. The
landowners entering into water service contracts pay for their own costs of
capturing and diverting the runoff water.
J.M. Hanson owns farmland within the boundaries of the federal
project and he receives water from the project to irrigate portions of his land.
In the early 1980's, Hanson became interested in obtaining more water to
irrigate an additional 30 acres of his land. Particularly, he wanted to divert
water from an unnamed stream flowing across his property.
A significant portion of the water in Hanson's stream is WSRF water
from other project lands. The stream originates in a spring that arises from the
ground on Hanson's property, approximately 1,500 feet upstream from his proposed
point of diversion, which in turn is fed by underground water that has drained
off from the irrigation of other farmland in the project.
The stream carries the water across Hanson's land and then, within
a mile of his proposed point of diversion,
765 Apr. 1992
empties into the Columbia River. The land downstream from Hanson's is
undeveloped and currently has no use for project waters. The project currently
has no facilities in place along this stream with which it could recapture this
WSRF water, and it currently has no intention of building such facilities in the
future.
Because the stream contains WSRF water from the project, Hanson
first inquired at his local irrigation district - the Quincy-Columbia Basin
Irrigation District - about obtaining a water service contract. According to
Hanson, the irrigation district "discouraged" his attempt to obtain water. 2
Hanson then applied to the Department of Ecology in order to obtain
his own independent rights of appropriation in the stream. The United States
Bureau of Reclamation opposed Hanson's application. The Bureau argued that the
WSRF water in Hanson's stream had already been appropriated to the federal
government, thereby precluding any further reappropriation.
The Department investigated Hanson's application and the Bureau's
objection. It determined that the statutory requirements for granting the permit
were met: public surface water was available for appropriation for a beneficial
use; the water was to be put to a beneficial use (irrigation); and appropriation
would not impair existing rights or be detrimental to the public welfare. See
RCW 90.03.290. Accordingly, the Department granted Hanson's permit application.
The Bureau of Reclamation appealed the Department's decision to the
Pollution Control Hearings Board. Joining in the appeal were the Quincy-Columbia
Basin Irrigation District and two neighboring irrigation districts. 3
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2 The record is unclear as to whether the irrigation district formally denied an application for a water service contract, or whether instead Hanson was merely discouraged from making a formal application.
3 The other districts are the East Columbia Basin Irrigation District and the South Columbia Basin Irrigation District.
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766 Apr. 1992
The PCHB concluded that the project's WSRF water in Hanson's stream was
still subject to the federal government's appropriation rights. Because
appropriated water is not public water and it cannot be reappropriated, the PCHB
issued a summary judgment reversing the permit's issuance.
The Department appealed to the Grant County Superior Court, 4 which
reversed the PCHB. The superior court judge ruled that federal rights of
appropriation in specific particles of water end when the project is no longer
able, willing or intending to beneficially use the water and has lost effective
control over it, even if that water is still within the project's physical
boundaries. Applying this principle to the present case, the Superior Court
concluded that the project's WSRF water is public water available for
appropriation when three circumstances concurrently exist:
a) At the proposed point of diversion, the water is bound in its course for immediate departure from the project;
b) The Bureau of Reclamation and irrigation districts have no downstream recapture facilities and no intention to recapture the water; and
c) The proposed location for use of the water is on land ineligible for service by the Bureau or districts.
The court found that the first two circumstances existed, but remanded to
the PCHB for factfinding on the third circumstance.
Quincy-Columbia and the other two irrigation districts appealed
directly to this court. The Bureau of Reclamation did not join in the appeal.
II
As a general matter, water in this state is publicly owned. See RCW 90.03.010 ("[s]ubject to existing rights all waters within the state belong to the public . . ."). Private individuals and organizations, however, may acquire a right to use these public waters. RCW 90.03.010. This is known as a water right or a right of appropriation.
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4 Hanson did not join in the Department's appeal, and consequently is not involved in the proceedings in this court.
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767 Apr. 1992
The statute governing water appropriation permits is RCW 90.03.290. Under
that statute, the Department must issue a permit if water is "available for
appropriation for a beneficial use, and the appropriation thereof as proposed in
the application will not impair existing rights or be detrimental to the public
welfare . . .". If these conditions are not present, however, the Department
must deny the application. More specifically, if water has already been
appropriated to one entity, it cannot be reappropriated to another. RCW
90.03.290.
[1-3] The Department's decision to issue water appropriation
permits under RCW 90.03.290 is discretionary and will not be reversed "absent a
clear showing of abuse". See Schuh v. Department of Ecology, 100 Wn.2d 180, 186,
667 P.2d 64 (1983). A party seeking a reversal under this standard must show
that "the discretion was exercised in a manner which was manifestly unreasonable
or exercised on untenable grounds or for untenable reasons." Schuh, at 186. On
issues of law, an appellate court may substitute its judgment for that of the
agency, but the agency's interpretation of the law is given substantial weight
due to the agency's special expertise. Schuh, at 183-84.
Accordingly, we must decide whether the Department abused its
discretion in interpreting RCW 90.03.290. At particular issue is whether the
water in Hanson's stream is still subject to the federal government's prior
right of appropriation. If the federal right still applies to this water, then
the Department may not grant any conflicting appropriation rights in the water.
5
[4] The holder of a water right owns no title to any molecules of
water until that water is diverted. Once an appropriator diverts water and
brings it under his control and possession, the appropriator owns it as personal
property. Madison v. McNeal, 171 Wash. 669, 674, 19 P.2d 97 (1933). This
principle is generally held throughout the
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5 We make no comment on whether the Department would be authorized to issue "nonconsumptive" appropriation rights in water already appropriated to another. See AGO 8 (1968).
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768 Apr. 1992
Western States. See 1 S. Wiel, Water Rights in the Western States SS 35 (3d ed.
1911); 2 C. Kinney, Irrigation and Water Rights and the Arid Region Doctrine of
Appropriation of Waters SSSS 773, 774 (2d ed. 1912); 1 W. Hutchins, Water Rights
Laws in the Nineteen Western States 144 (1971).
[5] The appropriator's rights in the particular molecules of
diverted water do not necessarily end when the water has been used once for
irrigation. See Ide v. United States, 263 U.S. 497, 506, 68 L. Ed. 407, 44 S.
Ct. 182 (1924). An appropriator has a right to recapture and reuse this WSRF
water, even under certain circumstances, when the water has left the
appropriator's land and entered a natural watercourse. Ide; Jensen v. Department
of Ecology, 102 Wn.2d 109, 114-15, 685 P.2d 1068 (1984).
This much the parties agree on. Where the parties differ is with
regard to when the appropriator's rights in particular molecules of water end. 6
The irrigation districts cite to a line of cases holding that an
appropriator's rights in particular water molecules extend at least as long as
the water remains within the boundaries of the appropriator's property. We refer
to this theory as the "geographical" test. In Miller v. Wheeler, 54 Wash. 429,
434-35, 103 P. 641 (1909), the court stated that landowners who irrigate using
appropriated water retain the right to WSRF water while it remains on their
land. This rule is also the law in other jurisdictions. One of the clearest
statements of this rule is from Nevada:
*So long as [waste] water exists upon [the plaintiffs] lands, it is their property,* and they may consent to others acquiring rights therein upon their property and in ditches thereupon for the purpose of conveying such waters to the lands of such other parties.
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6 As the Department of Ecology stresses in its brief, we are not being asked to determine whether the federal government has abandoned its water rights. Abandonment of water rights has broader consequences than abandonment of water molecules. Abandoning water molecules, as opposed to abandoning water rights, does not affect the party's right to change its practices so as to recapture future supplies of diverted water. See Stevens v. Oakdale Irrig. Dist., 13 Cal. 2d 343, 350, 90 P.2d 58 (1939).
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769 Apr. 1992
These waters, while upon the lands of the plaintiffs Bidleman, were certainly not subject to appropriation by the defendants. . . .
(Citation omitted. Italics ours.) Bidleman v. Short, 38 Nev. 467, 471, 150 P.
834 (1915). Similar pronouncements are found in cases from other Western States.
See Barker v. Sonner, 135 Or. 75, 79, 294 P. 1053 (1931) (water is not even
considered waste water until it has left the land of the original appropriator);
Smithfield West Bench Irrig. Co. v. Union Cent. Life Ins. Co., 105 Utah 468,
472-73, 142 P.2d 866 (1943); Jones v. Warmsprings Irrig. Dist., 162 Or. 186,
198-99, 91 P.2d 542 (1939) (an irrigation district's water becomes free,
unappropriated water when it leaves lands within an irrigation district and
returns to the stream from which its was diverted, absent any attempt by
landowners in the district to control it).
Here, the water in Hanson's stream is still within the boundaries
of the irrigation project. Therefore, under the irrigation districts' theory,
the water would still be appropriated to the project.
The Department counters that an appropriator's rights do not depend
on the water's geographical location. It instead cites a number of authorities
for the proposition that the duration of an appropriator's rights in particular
molecules of water depends on continued control and possession of the water. One
of the cases cited by the Department describes the test as follows:
When possession of the actual water, or corpus, has been relinquished, or lost by discharge without intent to recapture, property in it ceases. This is not the abandonment of a water right, but merely an abandonment of specific portions of water, i.e., the very particles which are discharged or have escaped from control.
(Italics omitted.) Stevens v. Oakdale Irrig. Dist., 13 Cal. 2d 343, 350, 90 P.2d 58 (1939). See also Rock Creek Ditch & Flume Co. v. Miller, 93 Mont. 248, 17 P.2d 1074 (1933). General statements of this standard seem to be fairly well accepted in the Western States. See 1 S. Wiel, Water Rights in the Western States SS 37 (3d ed. 1911).
770 Apr. 1992
The Department of Ecology argues that under its theory the water
molecules in Hanson's stream are no longer appropriated to the federal
government. According to the Department, once the water reaches Hanson's
proposed point of diversion, the irrigation project has discharged the water
without intent to recapture, as the water is headed toward the project's outer
boundary and the project has no current plans to recapture this water.
[6] It appears that both the Department's "control and possession"
test and the irrigation districts' geographical test are well founded in the
water law of the Western States. We therefore strive to construe these lines of
authority so as to give greatest possible effect to each. We conclude that an
appropriator's rights in particular molecules of water do not end while the
water remains within the boundaries of the appropriator's property, and that
after water has left those boundaries, the termination of the appropriator's
rights depends on the "control and possession" test. Accordingly, once an
appropriator has discharged water from his or her own property, then the issue
becomes whether the appropriator nevertheless retains an intent to recapture
that water, whether downstream on another piece of property or otherwise.
Our synthesis of the two tests does not appear to violate any of
the holdings of the cases cited by the Department. We have been unable to locate
any cases in which the Department's "control and possession" test has been
applied in a case like the present one, where the water under consideration is
still within the boundaries of the original appropriator's land. The cases cited
by the Department in support of its proposed standard of "control and
possession" each involved circumstances where the water left the original
appropriator's property. The PCHB noted as much, and the Department has not
challenged this conclusion in any of the briefs it filed during this litigation.
For example, in Rock Creek, the company originally appropriating
the water allowed it to flow from the company lands into a natural stream.
Further downstream, a
771 Apr. 1992
stockholder of the company attempted to "recapture" the water. The court held
that the company lost possession and control of the water when it "permitted the
water, after being used for irrigation, to pass from their lands regardless of
what might become of it." Rock Creek, at 268. Thus, the theories may be fully
reconciled by applying the geographical test until the water has left the
appropriator's lands, and the "control and possession" test after that point
. Additional support for our decision flows from the fact that the
original appropriator here is a federal irrigation project that was formed for
the very purpose of supplying farmers like Hanson with irrigation water.
Supplying this water is an expensive undertaking, and each farmer using the
water - even those using WSRF water - is required to pay a share of the costs of
building and maintaining the project's facilities. Under the Department's
theory, Hanson would be able to obtain the water without having to pay his fair
share of the system's costs.
Moreover, if Hanson is allowed to obtain water rights without
paying his portion of the system's costs, others similarly situated would have
to be similarly treated. Even those landowners who currently obtain WSRF water
through water service contracts - and who therefore currently contribute toward
the payment of the system's costs - could potentially do so as well, for the
water service contracts are terminable by landowners at the end of each year.
The irrigation districts fear these landowners too would seek to avoid the
system's true costs. The Bureau of Reclamation has gone so far as to maintain
that the potential loss of repayment from these sources "seriously jeopardizes
the successful completion of the project." While we cannot independently
determine if this last assertion overstates the impact on the project, the
potential for disruption to the system certainly is present.
[7] We also find it highly significant that under Washington's
statutes the decisions regarding distribution of water within a federal
irrigation project do not belong to the State. Rather, they are to be made by
the Secretary of
772 Apr. 1992
the Interior through the Secretary's representatives: the United States Bureau
of Reclamation and, by contract, the irrigation districts. These decisions are
to be made according to the federal laws, federal regulations and the contracts
between the irrigation districts and the federal government. See RCW 87.03.115
(water obtained by irrigation districts from federal projects is to be
distributed according to federal statutes, regulations and the repayment
contracts); RCW 89.12.040 (the Secretary of the Interior administers the federal
reclamation laws and provides water delivery). 7 If the Department begins
granting appropriation rights in WSRF water within the project's boundaries, it
will in effect be overruling the federal project's distribution decisions. This
it lacks authority to do.
If Hanson is dissatisfied with the federal project's decisions
regarding the distribution of project water, he should pursue whatever
administrative and judicial review is provided in the federal system. He is not
entitled, however, to call on a state agency to make what is a project decision.
Finally, the Department of Ecology argues that policy reasons
support granting appropriation rights to Hanson. The Department notes RCW
90.03.005 establishes a public policy of maximizing the beneficial use of public
water. The Department contends this policy is not fulfilled if the water in
Hanson's stream is allowed to return to the Columbia River without being reused.
This argument mischaracterizes the policy established in RCW 90.03.005. That
statute reads in pertinent part as follows:
It is the policy of the state to promote the use of the public waters in a fashion which provides for obtaining maximum net benefits arising from *both diversionary uses of the state's public waters and the retention of waters within streams and
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7 The Department counters that federal law generally must give way to state law regarding distribution of water in federal irrigation projects. See California v. United States, 438 U.S. 645, 57 L. Ed. 2d 1018, 98 S. Ct. 2985 (1978); 43 U.S.C. SS 383. These authorities, however, would seem to have no applicability here, where the state law expressly yields to federal provisions.
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lakes in sufficient quantity and quality to protect instream and natural values and rights.*
(Italics ours.) RCW 90.03.005.
This language makes clear that the "maximum net benefit" is not
always achieved through diversionary uses such as irrigation. Greater benefits
will sometimes result from retaining the water in its watercourse. The record
does not provide a basis for this court to independently determine the optimal
use of the water in Hanson's stream.
For all these reasons we conclude the Department abused its
discretion in granting Hanson's permit application. We cannot uphold the
Department's interpretation of the law when doing so would run counter to the
most directly applicable principle of western water law and would improperly
extend state jurisdiction over federal matters to the potential detriment of the
federal irrigation project.
We reverse the Superior Court and reinstate the PCHB's summary
judgment decision.
DORE, C.J., and UTTER, BRACHTENBACH, DOLLIVER, ANDERSEN, DURHAM, SMITH, and GUY, JJ., concur.
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