In July 2019, the Utah Supreme Court
issued a decision in the case of
Rocky Ford Irrigation Company v. Kents Lake Reservoir Company. Following that decision, both parties filed Petitions for Rehearing, which the Court granted. After additional briefing from the parties (and the Utah State Engineer) and additional oral arguments, the Court withdrew its prior decision and issued a new decision.
This case focuses on the issues of water efficiency savings, impairment
of others' water rights, and obligations to measure water diversions.
Rocky
Ford and Kents Lake are two irrigation companies on the Beaver River
system. Both irrigation companies have various direct flow water rights
and storage water rights with varying priority dates. In 1931, the Fifth
District Court issued the Beaver River Decree, which divided the Beaver
River system into an upper portion and a lower portion. Upper water
users were allowed to divert water prior to lower water users, despite later priority dates, in part because the lower water users benefitted
from return flows from the upper water users' flood irrigation. The
Decree also required that all points of diversion be equipped with
measuring devices.
In the 1930s and 1940s, Kents Lake
filed two applications (a
change application and an application to appropriate) with the State Engineer to construct Three Miles
Reservoir in the upper portion of the Beaver River system. Rocky Ford
protested the applications, but the State Engineer ultimately approved
the applications. In 1953, Rocky Ford and Kents Lake entered into an
agreement in which Rocky Ford agreed not to protest future change
applications associated with Three Mile Reservoir, and Kents Lake agreed
not to oppose Rocky Ford's expansion of its reservoir located in the
lower portion of the Beaver River system. Kents Lake later filed a
change application, and Rocky Ford did not protest it. Kents Lake later
certificated this change application with the State Engineer.
Beginning
in the 1970s, Beaver River water users began converting from flood
irrigation to sprinkler irrigation. Rocky Ford alleged that it was being
harmed due to the reduced return flows from upper water users and due
to Kents Lake storing the "saved" water from the efficiency gains in its
reservoir. In 2010, Rocky Ford filed a lawsuit against Kents Lake seeking damages, declaratory relief, injunctive relief, and rescission of the 1953 Agreement, based on allegations of water right interference, conversion of water rights, and
negligence. Rocky Ford asserted that its water rights had been injured by the actions of Kents Lake, including the storage change
application and the failure to measure water diversions. In one decision, the district court concluded that Rocky Ford had effectively waived some of its claims based on prior rights due to the 1953 Agreement. Following this decision, Rocky Ford stipulated to dismiss its damage claims. The remaining claims went forward to trial, and the district court ruled in favor of Kents Lake. The district court also awarded attorney fees to Kents Lake. Rocky Ford then
appealed the case to the Utah Supreme Court. The Utah Supreme Court focused its decision on answering five questions, which are discussed below.
1. Did the district court err in denying Rocky Ford's motion for summary judgment?
The Court determined that there was a legitimate dispute about which of Rocky Ford's water rights were subject to the 1953 Agreement, and that the district court therefore erred in granting summary judgment on its interpretation of the 1953 Agreement.
The Court confirmed the principle that a "change maintains its original priority only so long as it does not harm preexisting rights." Thus, the Court determined that Kents Lake's changed storage rights maintained their original priority date of 1890
only if Kents Lake's changed water storage did not injure Rocky Ford's preexisting water rights.
The Court then explored the issue of impairment vs. interference. This was a central issue of dispute in the case. Rocky Ford asserted that impairment and interference meant the same thing, whereas Kents Lake asserted that the two terms have different meanings and contexts. The Court agreed with Kents Lake, and clarified the distinction between the two terms (while also noting that some of the Court's prior decisions were causes for the confusion due to the Court using the two terms interchangeably). The Court clarified that
impairment claims are statutory claims made with the State Engineer during the application approval process. If a water user thinks their prior rights will be injured by a new application, the water user asserts impairment by filing a protest in the application proceedings (and, if necessary, by seeking judicial review of the State Engineer's decision). The standard of review is that the State Engineer should approve the application if there is "reason to believe" that the application will not impair existing water rights.
Interference claims, on the other hand, are common law claims that are brought after an application has been approved and actual injury has been inflicted on prior rights. When interference claims are brought to a court, the opponent of the change must show, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the change has interfered with its water rights. The Court also clarified that a water user may bring an interference claim even if they did not file a protest and assert impairment during the application process. The Court concluded that Rocky Ford had waived its
impairment claim when it failed to protest Kents Lake's change application, and that Rocky Ford had waived its
interference claim when it dismissed its damage claim prior to trial.
2. Did the district court err in refusing to declare that Kents Lake could not store its efficiency gains?
The district court had concluded that Rocky Ford had failed to establish that any injury to its water rights was caused by Kents Lake's storage changes, rather than by intervening causes -- such as the impact of groundwater pumping or the conversion to sprinkler irrigation by water users other than Kents Lake. Based on the record of the district court, the Court affirmed the district court's decision.
3. Did the district court err in refusing to declare that Kents Lake must measure its water usage?
The Court next examined Kents Lake's
obligations to measure its water diversions. Kents Lake asserted--and
the district court had agreed--that even though Kents Lake did not
measure all of its diversions, it was compliant because it did all
measuring required by the State Engineer. But the Court noted that both
Utah law (
Utah Code section 73-5-4)
and the Beaver River Decree require Kents Lake to measure all of its
diversions. Thus, the Court reversed the district court on this point.
4. Did the district court err in refusing to rescind the 1953 Agreement?
Rocky Ford had asserted that the 1953 Agreement should be rescinded because Kents Lake had breached material provisions of the agreement. The Court determined that the alleged breaches were not material terms to the agreement, and therefore concluded that the district court had correctly refused to rescind the 1953 Agreement.
5. Did the district court err in awarding attorney fees to Kents Lake?
The Court finished its opinion by determining that the district court had not provided sufficient detail to support its conclusion to award attorney fees against Rocky Ford based on bad faith. Accordingly, the Court reversed this determination.
To read the full opinion,
click here.