Jarndyce
v. Jarndyce in the Wild, Wild West
Or how this derelict
old hydro plant from the 1900’s in the middle of nowhere caused a 27 yearlong
lawsuit involving more than 158,000 claims and costing the state of Idaho more
than $93 million (and, unlike the Dickens’ story, is deservedly hailed by
everyone as a great achievement)
Having a vague memory of my involvement with water rights in
Idaho many years ago, both Janell and Andy sent me links to a recent story they
picked up on NRP about Idaho’s recent completion of its 27-yearlong project to
adjudicate all the water rights in the Snake River.
Here are links to the Boise public radio and to a couple of
articles in the Idaho Statesmen.
http://boisestatepublicradio.org/post/why-it-took-27-years-and-94-million-complete-idaho-water-rights-adjudication
http://www.idahostatesman.com/2014/08/24/3338784/idaho-completes-massive-water.html,
http://www.idahostatesman.com/2014/08/27/3343222/panel-parched-west-can-learn-from.html.
The completion of this water right adjudication, including
the complicated and politically sensitive Indian and federal claims, and the
negotiations and settlement agreements that lead to it, is an achievement
Idahoans should properly be very proud of. It also is, in my view, an example
of how sometimes very good things (as well as a lot of work and fees for
lawyers) can come from otherwise obscure events and (again in my view) an
incorrectly decided court decision.
This massive litigation emerged from the convergence of a largely
forgotten piece of Idaho history, a geographic quirk in course of the Snake
River and a little political game of tit for tat that then inadvertently
created what was truly a legal water right crisis in Idaho of epic significance
(and in which I happened to have had a early minor “cameo” appearance).
I think it is a great
story and I enjoy telling it more than any of you have any interest in reading it.
Nevertheless, here it is:
Prior Appropriation –
Western Water Rights
Our legal traditions, namely the English common law, were
developed in areas such as the UK and the eastern US where there was generally
lots of water. The traditional common law rules on a person’s right to use
water, typically referred to as “riparian rights,” were based on a landowner
having the right to make reasonable use of water flowing across or adjacent to
the landowner’s property.
The more arid parts of the western United States were
settled by miners, Mormon pioneers and others well in advance of the formal
establishment any government or legal institutions from the East. But the taming
of the West necessitated that rules governing the use of water be settled well
before those Eastern legal institutions, along with their “riparian rights”
doctrine, could firmly take hold. From
these early mining camps and pioneer settlements a set of rules emerged based
on the principle of “first in time, first in right” that, not surprisingly, had
some parallels with the rules on mining claims that were developing around the
same time in Western mining camps. Essentially, the first person to take water
from a stream and use it (an act of appropriation) has a right to continue to use
that water superior to someone who may later take and use water from the same
stream. This system of water rights is
usually referred to as the “prior appropriation” doctrine and some variant of
it is the rule in all western states, including Idaho.
The doctrine of prior appropriation is one of the very few areas
of law in the US that is not borrowed from the English (or in the case of
Louisiana, French civil law) or developed first in the eastern states, but
developed solely out of the common needs and practical experience of early
settlers in the West – a uniquely Western form of common law.
How it works
Assume farmer Jones starts diverting 10 cubic feet per
second (cfs) of water on July 24, 1847, from a stream into a ditch that takes
that water to his property a mile away where he uses the water to irrigate his
farm. Farmer Jones has a water right of
10 cfs with a priority date of July 24, 1847. Later, miner Smith on January 24,
1848, begins to divert 10 cfs from the same stream a mile upstream from where
farmer Jones diverts water, and miner Smith uses that water in his gold mine
located on his land that is crossed by that stream. Miner Smith has a water
right of 10 cfs with a priority date of January 24, 1848.
As long as the total stream flow is 20 cfs or more, Smith and
Jones are each able to use the full amount of their respective water rights.
However, if the total stream flow is reduced to only 15 cfs, the stream would
be considered “over appropriated” - meaning the total water rights in the
stream exceed the water in the stream - and in that event Smith would have to
curtail his use and allow 10 cfs to flow down to Jones, leaving Smith with only
5 cfs to use in his mine on his property. Similarly, if the river flow were 10
cfs or less, Smith could divert nothing, but would have to allow the entire
stream to flow down to Jones. The point is that in a shortage the more senior
right is filled in full before a junior right is permitted to take anything and,
unlike riparian rights, there is no right to use water from the stream simply
because the stream crosses your property.
It you reflect on this for a while you’ll realize why this
approach works better in the development of the arid West with frequent
droughts than would the riparian rights rule. It is simple and provides
certainty as to the amount of your water rights when there is a shortage (and clear,
well defined property rights are, as economists teach us, a necessary to
condition to the economic development). Unlike riparian rights, prior
appropriation permits the use of water for the benefit of non-riparian lands,
and allows for the capital investment in dams and irrigation canals and similar
large-scale projects necessary for the development of arid lands, including the
irrigation of non-riparian lands.
While the prior appropriation theory is simple to
understand, when applied to a watershed the size of the Snake River (basically
all of southern Idaho) with over 158,000 water rights, it becomes fairly
complicated to administer. In Idaho, the Department of Water Resources
administers the water rights. Essentially, a water user submits a water right
application to DWR and, if certain conditions are met, DWR issues a water right
permit defining the amount and priority date. This water right permit is really
only a provisional “prima facie” right. Eventually, DWR or other parties may
commence a formal water right adjudication, a court proceeding before a judge, involving
all parties with water right permits and claims in a designated watershed. The end result of the court proceeding is a
final judicial decree on each water right that determines its appropriation
date and quantity (a “decreed water right”), which is final and conclusively
binding against any other claimants.
A little bit of Idaho
History
In the late 1890s and early 1900s, the mines in Silver City
(southwest of Nampa - we’ve all been there) were still operating and needed a
source of energy. They were largely dependent on wood for fuel and there wasn’t
much of that left, especially on the arid side of the mountains where they were
mining. A young Boise engineer named
A.J. Wiley identified Swans Falls on the Snake River as a suitable site for a
hydroelectric plant to provide power to Silver City. With some financial
backing from Consolidated Trade Dollar, a Silver City mining company, a
hydroelectric generating plant was built at Swan Falls in 1901. If you drive
from Nampa due south until you run into the Snake River (which flows across southern
Idaho) you’ll be just a little west of Swan Falls. The original dam and plant
were added to in subsequent years and later renovated in 1936 so what you see
in the picture above is not the original dam.
In building the Swan Falls power plant the owners obtained water
rights commonly known as “flow rights,” meaning they had the right to have a
certain minimum amount of water flow across the dam for use in generating electricity
(as compared to a right to divert water out of the river, e.g. for irrigation).
These water rights had priority dates between 1900 and 1919. In time the mines
in Silver City closed. Although the power from this plant was used in Boise and
Nampa for a while, the Swan Falls plant eventually ceased to be used or to have
any significant role in power generation in Idaho and was largely forgotten. The
company that owned the Swan Falls plant eventually became part of what is now
Idaho Power Company. The Swan Falls plant became for the most part a forgotten
and largely inconsequential historical part of Idaho Power’s system.
In the 1950s and early 1960s Idaho Power built its Hell ‘s
Canyons complex, one of the country’s largest hydropower projects, on the Snake
River along the western edge of Idaho. The complex consists of a reservoir and
a series of three dams with hydroelectric plants. Three things here are important for this
story. First hydropower is cheap and
every other source of power is expensive, and cheap hydropower is important to
Idaho’s economy. Second, the Hell’s Canyon plants are Idaho’s largest and most
important source of cheap hydropower and, third, they are downstream from Swan
Falls.
In the 1950’s and 1960’s thousands of acres of farmland were
put in to production based on a newly developed irrigation technology that
involved “high lift” pumping from the Snake River. When I was in high school I
worked at a farm (Kondo Farms) with huge pumps taking water directly from the
Snake River, which ran through a gorge below, up to the farmland on the Snake
River plain above. The development of this pumping technology also lead to
pumping groundwater from aquifers that fed springs that in turn fed the Snake River
and its tributaries. Also, farmers started pumping from alluvial areas with a
hydrological connection the Snake River or its tributaries. Much of the farmland between Twin Falls to
the east and Kuna on the west was developed based on such pumping.
There are three important things here for the story:
First, the pumps that so revolutionized irrigation and
farming in Idaho and made this all possible were powered by electricity and
such irrigation was economically viable in large part because of the cheap hydropower
in Idaho, which mostly came from the Hell’s Canyon plants. In the 1950s and
1960s Idaho Power actively promoted such pumping as a source of new customers
and revenues. Idaho Power used to give farmers who put in such pumps free Christmas
trees and Christmas lights the way banks used to give away toasters for new
deposits.
Second, this pumping, of course, reduced flows in the Snake
River. Farmers pumping directly from the Snake River or a tributary would need to
and did secure water right permits, but with relatively late priority
dates. Although groundwater pumping along
the Snake River Plain clearly had an affect on surface flows in the Snake
River, Idaho water law and it water rights administration system was not set up
to recognize that fact and ground water pumping was not really incorporated
into the administration of surface water rights. Nonetheless, at this time the
Snake River was generally considered “under appropriated” meaning there was
still water in the Snake River available for future growth. For farmers and
Idaho Power, life was good and the future bright.
Third, the farmlands developed through this new high lift
pumping were largely located upstream of Swan Falls. Because of geology and the
course of the Snake River there were few opportunities to develop additional
farmland with high lift pumping downstream of Swan Falls and there were as a
practical matter no suitable sites in Idaho to divert significant amounts of
water from the Snake River below Swan Falls. In short, water that made it to
Swan Falls would flow on through the Hell’s Canyon’s hydroelectric plants down
to the Columbia river in Oregon and Washington and out to the Pacific Ocean.
Power rates and the
Crisis
In the late 1970’s Idaho Power was still subject to rate
regulation (this was years before the sweeping de-regulation of utilities in in
the 1990s) and Idaho Power’s rates were set by the Idaho Public Utility
Commission through a public administrative rate making proceeding. At this time
there was a drought with the Snake River flows running well below normal. This,
of course, resulted in a reduction in the river flows at the Hell’s Canyon
plants and a corresponding reduction in hydropower generation. Because of the
reduced hydropower generation at Hell’s Canyon, Idaho Power was forced to
purchase more expensive electricity from other sources, such as coal-fired
power plants, and in the ratemaking proceeding it sought a rate increase to
compensate for those additional costs.
Now we need another brief digression into some more Idaho
history. The 1970s was a period of great economic growth in Idaho and since
there were no available hydro power sites, Idaho Power proposed to meet its
growing energy needs by building a large coal fired power plant southeast of
Boise, to be known as the Pioneer plant. Construction of such plant would
require PUC approval. This was also a
time of a small but growing environmental movement in Idaho. The Pioneer plant proposal galvanized that
movement, which then set about to mount a very vocal and effective opposition
to the proposal. Some Idaho farmers, recognizing that the effect of the coal
fired plant would be substantial increases in power costs and that much of their
land was only profitable because of the low cost hydropower, also opposed the
proposed plant. This became a very public and bitter battle in Idaho.
Ultimately, the decision rested with the PUC. Cecil Andrus, the governor at the time,
testified before the PUC in opposition to the Idaho Power proposal. While the
PUC is an independent agency, two of its members were appointed by Andrus and
in the end after lengthy hearings and political maneuvering by all participants,
the PUC voted down the proposal. This
was a surprising defeat for Idaho Power, given its political influence in the
state.
Exhausted from this bitter fight over Pioneer, a PUC
commissioner resigned and Andrus appointed a Boise attorney and something of a
political gadfly named Matthew Mullaney to fill the open seat. Andrus then left
Idaho to be President’s Carter’s Secretary of Interior. Mullaney’s appointment,
however, required legislative approval, and with some lobbying by Idaho Power,
still smarting from the Governor’s opposition to Pioneer, the Legislature
rejected Mullaney as unqualified and too closely tied to environmental groups. Mullaney, out of a job as a PUC commissioner, decided to spend some time researching
Idaho Power’ water rights (and perhaps plotting his revenge). Now, back to the story and Idaho Power’s
ratemaking proceeding.
PUC ratemaking proceedings involved large numbers of
participants in addition to the utility and the PUC staff, such as major
industrial ratepayers, associations representing various groups of similarly
situated ratepayers and the occasional individual citizen, all are arguing over
the minutia of Idaho Power’s costs and profits and why someone else should pay
a greater share of them.
In this particular ratemaking proceeding Mullaney
appeared on his own and on behalf of several other private citizen ratepayers,
and made a rather audacious (and very clever) complaint. Mullaney alleged that
Idaho Power had failed to protect and preserve its Swan Falls water rights and
that, by so doing, Idaho Power had wasted its assets and overstated its capital
investment, thus resulting in overcharges to its ratepayers. So in Mullaney’s
view not only should Idaho Power not be granted a rate increase, but ratepayers
should be given credit for past overcharges.
It is important to note that Mullaney’s claim had nothing to
with the amount of power, if any, that actually was or that could be generated
at Swan Falls – actual power generation at Swan Falls was not the point. Rather,
Mullaney argued that because of the early priority dates of Idaho Power’s water
rights at Swan Falls, Idaho Power had the right to require that the river flow
at Swan Falls be increased to the full amount of its relatively large flow
rights at Swan Falls. Those increased flows at Swan Falls would then necessarily
result in increased flows downstream at Hell’s Canyon and hence more low cost
hydro power generated at Hell’s Canyon and less need for Idaho Power to
purchase more expensive coal fired generated power.
The fact was that over the 70 years or so since the Swan
Falls was built and its water rights obtained, thousands of acres of farmland
had gone into production. In particular the more recent high lift pumping from
the Snake River had significantly reduced the flows at Swan Falls below Idaho
Power’s nominal flow rights at that place. If the flow rights at Swan Falls
were enforced more water would reach Hell’s Canyon, providing ratepayers with increased
amounts of cheap hydropower, but under Idaho’s prior appropriation water law
doctrine enforcement of Idaho Power’s flow rights at Swan Falls would require
that hundreds of Idaho farmers (and Idaho power customers) lose their water.
This complaint, not surprisingly, caused something of a stir
in the normally tediously boring ratemaking proceeding. There was a lot of
legal squabbling about how to handle the complaint since any decision on the
complaint would necessarily require an interpretation of Idaho Power’s water
rights and, except for Mullaney and a few PUC staff members, there was general
agreement that a PUC ratemaking proceeding was not the best forum to adjudicate
water rights.
This PUC ratemaking proceeding eventually resulted in Idaho
Power bringing a lawsuit in the district court in Ada County against the state
of Idaho (and in particular the Department of Water Resources, which was
responsible for administering water rights) and most other water right holders
in the Snake River to determine its water rights at Swan Falls.
My brief cameo
appearance
At that time I was a Deputy Attorney General in Idaho
working in the Department of Water Resources and handled case for DWR. Government
agencies tend to have a “constituency” and the DWR was no different – ours was
the water users – we were on the side of the farmers, not Idaho Power or its
ratepayers. Also, DWR had been issuing
water right permits for years to farmers upstream of Swan Falls without regard
to the earlier flow rights at Swan Falls (and agencies really do not like to
admit mistakes, especially of this magnitude). The Idaho Attorney General
Office through David Leroy, the Attorney General at the time and several Deputy
Attorneys General, such as myself, was on all sides of every issue. Another Deputy
Attorney General representing the Public Utilities Commission, appeared the
case in favor of ratepayers, and yet another Deputy Attorney General appeared
on behalf of the Department of Wildlife (and I don’t recall their position but
that department was normally pro-fish and anti-dams and against reductions in
stream flows).
Regardless of the bureaucratic bias of the DWR and the
potential benefits to ratepayers, the economic (and political) consequences of
cutting off Snake River water to hundreds of Idaho farmers and the loss of the
use of this water to the state of Idaho were unimaginable.
The legal issue
The legal issues raised were many and complex, including
questions under Idaho Power’s federal licenses for its hydropower projects and
the underlying federal statutes under which they were granted, questions on Idaho
public utility laws on the disposition or loss of utility assets and questions whether
Idaho Power had abandoned or forfeited its Swan Falls water rights or should be
equitably “estopped” from enforcing them. But those were largely on the
periphery of the key issue, which was whether Idaho Power through its water
rights at Hell’s Canyon had previously “subordinated” its Swan Falls water
rights. Here a bit more history is necessary.
Hell’s Canyon Project
– A bit more Idaho history
When Idaho Power proposed its Hell’s Canyon project in the
1950s it was competing against another project proposed by the United States Army
Corp of Engineers. This was during the heyday of dam building by the US Bureau
of Reclamation (for irrigation projects) and the US Army Corps of Engineers
(for flood control) and with hydroelectric plants added to their irrigation and
flood control projects the federal government was getting in the power
generation business. Idaho Power, a
private, investor owned public utility, was anxious to build its proposed
project and keep the government power projects off its turf.
To prevail in this competition the political support of the
state of Idaho was critical. Idaho did not oppose a hydro project at Hell’s
Canyon, but was concerned that the flow rights for the project would limit the
future upstream diversions from the Snake River and growth and development in
Idaho. The ACOE offered Idaho a qualified water right subordination. That is,
the ACOE would subordinate the flow rights at Hell’s Canyon to future upstream
diversions (that is the water rights for the dam would be deemed to be junior
in priority to any future upstream rights to divert water from the Snake River),
but on the condition that such future upstream diversions were not “unreasonable.”
Idaho Power, however, offered to
unconditionally subordinate its water rights to future upstream diversions.
Idaho Power got Idaho’s support, its project was built and its water rights at
Hell’s Canyon were subordinated to future diversions from the Snake River and
its tributaries.
The legal question raised now by Idaho Power’s lawsuit was
whether this subordination of Idaho Power’s water rights at Hell’s Canyon had
the effect of also subordinating its water rights upstream at Swan Falls. The
problem for DRW (and Idaho water users) was that the water rights for Swan
Falls issued in the early 1900’s did not contain a subordination provision and
the Hell’s Canyon rights made no specific reference to Swan Falls (a surprising
and monumental legal oversight by Idaho back in the 1950s given how shrewd and effective
Idaho had otherwise been politically).
Since there were not then, and everyone knew there never
would be in the future, any significant water diversions between Swan Falls and
Hell’s Canyon, the subordination in the Hell’s Canyon water rights would have been
meaningless unless it was also interpreted to include the subordination of the
water rights at Swan Falls. In addition, Idaho Power operated its dams along
the Snake River (including the CJ Strike Dam upstream from Swan Falls and the
Hell’s Canyon dams downstream from Swan Falls) as a single system so there was
some operational logic in applying the subordination provision more generally
to Idaho Power’s system in order to prevent Idaho Power from circumventing the
intent of the subordination. Anyway that
was our principal argument to the district court. We also argued that Idaho
Power over the course of time had abandoned or forfeited its water rights or
should be “estopped” from asserting them adverse to these farmers (including
lots of references to its promotion of high lift pumping upstream of Swan Falls
to the very farmers who would not be shut off).
I drafted the state’s answer and prepared and argued a
motion for summary judgment to the district court. I remember it being a rather
frightening experience. It was the first summary judgment motion I had ever
argued (and that alone was source of terror), but the case was of also some
importance and the courtroom was full of the “deans” of the Idaho water rights
bar among others (adding to the stress level and potential for unredeemable
professional embarrassment). In the end the argument went well enough and the
district court granted our motion concluding that the subordination in the
Hell’s Canyon water rights was effective to also subordinate the Swan Falls’
rights. Shortly after that we moved to Denver and I exit the story with a win.
Epilogue
The case was kicked around in the courts for a few years and
eventually in 1983 the Idaho Supreme Court issued its final decision on appeal.
To most everyone’s surprise the Idaho Supreme Court reversed, holding that the
subordination in the Hell’s Canyon water rights did not extend to Swan Falls
and sent the case back to District Court to determine the abandonment and forfeiture
issues, which the District Court had not addressed.
Here it is important to keep in mind what the Supreme Court
did and did not decide. It decided that Idaho Power’s water rights at Swan
Falls were not subordinated by the Hell’s Canyon subordination provision, but
it did not actually decide anyone’s water rights, and in fact with this
decision no one on the Snake River knew what their rights were. While Idaho Power won on the subordination
issue, it did not know to what extent its Swan Falls rights might yet be
determined to have been forfeited or abandoned. Given absence of consistent
operation of the Swan Falls plant, those rights were vulnerable to challenge on
that basis (and Idaho Power’s prior conduct in shamelessly promoting the electric
powered high lift pumping to many of those it would now be seeking to cut-off
water to, wouldn’t exactly help its case).
Since the Snake River had previously been viewed as
“under-appropriated” (more water than water rights) no one had paid much
attention to the accumulation over the years of many water rights and water
right permits that may not be valid or not now enforceable in their full stated
amounts if at all. So if water users had
to be cut-off in order of priority to fill Idaho Power’s flow rights at Swan
Falls, no one knew with any certainty or confidence how to identify those to be
cut-off and by how much. To further complicate matters, water rights are
usually also defined by time of usage, i.e., a water right holder’s
appropriation right may apply during summer irrigation season but not during
winter months. In other words the water
rights to the Snake River were so numerous and uncertain that there would be no
practical way to determine who was and who was not junior to Idaho Power’s
rights and who should have their diversion reduced and by what amounts and at
what times.
Adding even more uncertainty, under a doctrine known as
“reserved water rights” the federal government and Indian tribes may also have
water rights associated federal lands (BLM and Forest Service) and Indian
reservations and Idaho has a lot of both. Those rights are vague and not clearly
defined, but since they may in many cases be senior to private, state created
water rights, they create an ominous cloud of uncertainty over water rights of
other users.
Hence, the need for a practical, agreed upon resolution, and
to their credit the Idaho leaders at the time managed to do just that. In
today’s more polarized political environment I’m less confident that could be
done today. The settlement agreement, as I understand it, essentially
recognized a certain level of minimum flow rights of Idaho Power at Swan Falls
that was something less that the total amount claimed by Idaho Power. The
amount representing the difference between Idaho Power’s claim and the agreed
upon minimum was placed in a trust with the state having the ability to allocate
those rights.
The settlement agreement also provided for a complete judicial
adjudication of the Snake River and for the first time incorporated groundwater
pumping into the adjudication. As the adjudication developed it also resulted
in settlement agreements with the federal government and Indian tribes
regarding their water rights claims in the Snake River. Those negotiations and
agreements would increase dramatically the complexity and duration of the
project. Reaching any agreement with the federal government or an Indian tribe
on water rights would a grueling effort and significant achievement in its own
right.
So while I still tend to think that the Idaho Supreme Court
got it wrong on the subordination question, the effect of the Court’s decision
(which essentially threw the whole Snake River water rights mess back to the
state, Idaho Power and the water users to sort out) was in the end a very good
thing.
Personal Epilogue
Had I remained in Idaho (whether or not with the AG or DWR)
I could have spent much of my legal career on this adjudication. In fact, one
of the lawyers quoted in the Statesmen article, John Rosholt, a partner in a
prominent firm in Twin Falls that represents most of the larger water users and
irrigation companies in southeastern Idaho, offered me a job while I was with
DWR. I turned him down.
What would our lives had been like had I decided to stay in
Idaho pursuing my interests in water law? Our decision to leave Idaho for a job
in Denver was a complicated one, both professionally and personally, and is the
subject for another story. The short
answer though is I’ve thought carefully
about it and I have no regrets, and I think that’s true for Mom as well.