Appellants are customers of respondent East Bay Municipal Utility District (the District) who seek to invalidate the water rate structure design enactéd by the District in April 1991 as part of a comprehensive drought management program. Appellants petitioned for writ of mandate and sought declaratory and injunctive relief. The petition alleged: (1) the inclining block rate structure at issue constitutes an invalid “special tax” in violation of article XIII A, section 4, of the California Constitution; (2) the adoption of the rate structure was arbitrary, capricious and not rationally related to any legitimate legislative or administrative objective; and, (3) the rate structure unreasonably discriminates against customers “residing in the hot climate areas east of the Berkeley-Oakland hills.”
Appellants claim on appeal that the trial court erred in denying the petition and issued an inadequate statement of decision.
Factual and Procedural Background
The District is a public agency created pursuant to the Municipal Utility Act (Pub. Util. Code, § 11501 et seq.) and governed by an elected board of directors. The board determines all questions of policy, including the establishment of water rates. (Pub. Util. Code, § 12809.) The District supplies water to over 1,100,000 residents in portions of Alameda and Contra Costa Counties. Ninety-five percent of the District’s water supply is obtained from the Mokelumne River’s 575-square mile watershed on the western slope of the Sierra Nevada. The District’s diversion of this water to the Bay Area occurs at Pardee Reservoir on the Mokelumne River. Further downstream is the Camanche Dam and Reservoir. The combined storage of the Pardee and Camanche reservoirs is approximately 641,000 acre-feet (AF). 1
Since the District water supply from the Mokelumne River is subject to the entitlements of other users, the District relies on the storage capacity of the two reservoirs to make the river’s yield more dependable. Storage in Camanche Reservoir is used to meet the District’s downstream obligations, including releases for irrigation, stream flow regulation, flood control, fishery needs, and the senior rights of other riparian and appropriative entitlements.
Storage capacity is essential to the District’s operation. In dry years the runoff from the Sierra foothills is less than needed to meet demand and the
The District conveys water stored in Pardee Reservoir to the Bay Area through three 82-mile long pipelines. Five terminal reservoirs are maintained within the East Bay. These reservoirs are used: (1) to reregulate the District’s Mokelumne River supply in the winter and spring, when Sierra runoff occurs and for uses during the high demand period of the summer months; (2) as emergency standby in case of extended drought or damage to the tunnels, pumping plants, or the aqueducts which cross delta areas that are vulnerable to flooding and earthquakes; (3) to store local runoff; and (4) for environmental and recreational benefits.
Rapid population growth and uncertain climatic conditions have required the District to seek additional sources of water supply. Currently the District has a contract with the United States Bureau of Reclamation for 150,000 AF per year of American River water to be diverted at the Folsom Dam and transported through the Folsom South Canal, the major portion of which has yet to be constructed. The District is required to pay substantial annual fees for maintaining the contract rights to the American River water. Other water supply options include the construction of Bay Area dams and reservoirs and the transfer of American and Mokelumne River water for storage in underground aquifers in San Joaquin County. The various options under consideration are in response to the increasing demands for water. The anticipated costs of these additional sources substantially exceed the costs of present supplies.
From 1986 to 1992, Northern California experienced extreme drought conditions which challenged the capacity of the District to guarantee sufficient water for “human consumption, sanitation, and fire protection.” (Water Code, § 350. 2 )
On April 9, 1991, the District adopted Resolution No. 32473 which created the “Drought Management Program for 1991.” Reciting that “five consecutive dry years have resulted in limited availability of water to meet
An inclining block rate structure imposes higher charges per unit of water as the level of consumption increases. Effective May 1, 1991, the District’s inclining block rate structure for single-family residential customers was as follows:
Gallons Per Day Price Per CCf-748 Gallons
0 to 250 $ .91
251 to 750 .99
751 to 1,200 1.50
Over 1,200 3.00
Effective June 11, 1991, the rate structure was modified as follows:
Gallons Per Day Price Per CCf-748 Gallons
0 to 250 $1.05
251 to 750 1.30
751 to 1,200 1.97
Over 1,200 3.94
Resolution No. 32473 provided for hardship, health, and safety exceptions for those consumers adversely affected by the rate structure.
In support of the Drought Management Program, Resolution No. 32473 set forth 27 findings, including the following:
“1. For the fifth consecutive year, precipitation and runoff have been below normal in the Mokelumne basin, which produces 95% of the District’s water supply. Precipitation as of April 1, 1991 has totalled 27 inches, which is 64% of the amount normally received by this time.
“2. As of April 1, 1991, total water storage in the District’s Mokelumne and East Bay Reservoirs is 54% of capacity, compared to 66% of capacity for the same time last year, and 66% of the amount of water stored under average conditions.
“5. On May 9, 1989, in light of evidence that total system storage was only 50% of capacity, total runoff for the 1988-89 water year was projected to be 580,000 AF, and total water storage was projected to be 463,000 AF on September 30, 1989, 162,000 AF less than average, the Board determined that the District’s water supply had not been fully replenished, and that the Water Shortage Emergency Condition should continue and a Drought Management Program, including inclining drought rates, be adopted to achieve an overall 15% curtailment (19% for single family residential customers) in total water use. This Program was also successful and resulted in water savings in excess of the 15% goal established by the Board.
“6. On September 12, 1989, based upon information that precipitation and runoff conditions, combined with water savings from the Drought Management Program, would result in the District’s water supply on September 30, 1989 being 74% of average, the Board of Directors determined that the water shortage emergency period had ended and adopted a voluntary water conservation program with the objective of reducing water consumption by 15%, which savings would provide a buffer in the event of a fourth dry year.
“7. On February 26, 1991, based upon a thorough review of precipitation and runoff data, as well as projected storage conditions, the Board converted the 15% voluntary conservation program into a 15% mandatory conservation program, and after a duly noticed public hearing, amended the District’s regulations regarding water use during this time of shortage.
“9. In light of data presented by staff concerning availability of water to meet demand, the Board hereby finds that a 15% curtailment in total water
“10. The limited success in achieving significant voluntary water conservation in 1987 with a program limited to public information efforts, and demonstrated results from 1977 and 1988-89 mandatory drought management efforts described above, cause the Board to hereby find that an inclining rate structure, in combination with an effective public information program, is necessary to focus public attention on the drought situation, and achieve the desired consumption reduction.
“11. District consumption records regarding water consumption by all single family residential consumers in February, 1986, a very wet month, indicated that a 200 gpd average closely approximated ‘interior’ uses for ‘human needs’, and use throughout the District did not vary significantly from this level.
“13. The Board hereby finds that the use of water in excess of the adjusted winter average of 250 gpd is primarily for uses outside the home, and further finds such uses to be more discretionary in character than ‘interior’ uses. The Board further finds that the necessary reductions in water use can be achieved by reduction in the demand for water for these exterior uses.
“14. The Board finds that in normal water years, 11% of single family residential customers use more than 750 gpd and account for 35% of all water sold to such customers, and that 3.5% of single family residential customers use more than 1,200 gpd and account for 17% of all water used by such customers.
“15. In order to cover normal District costs, to achieve overall revenue neutrality, and to establish an economic incentive to conserve water for single family residential customers who use between 250 and 750 gpd, the Board hereby finds and determines that a drought surcharge approximately 9% higher than the rate for 250 gpd or less is appropriate and reasonable.
“16. To focus public attention on the water shortage and the need to reduce water usage, and to encourage water conservation by single family residential consumers, the Board hereby finds and determines that an inclining block rate structure calling for a price of $.99 per unit for all water
Discussion
L
The Inclining Block Rate Structure Does Not Violate the California Constitution
Appellants contend that the inclining block rate structure adopted by the District constitutes a “special tax” prohibited by article XIII A, section 4, of the California Constitution absent two-thirds voter approval. Article XIII A was enacted by the voters in 1978 and is commonly referred to as Proposition 13. It is comprised of four major elements, a real property tax rate limitation (§1), a real property assessment limitation (§2), a restriction on state taxes (§ 3) and a restriction on local taxes (§ 4).
(Amador Valley Joint Union High Sch. Dist.
v.
State Bd. of Equalization
(1978)
Section 4 of article XIII A of the State Costitution provides: “Cities, counties, and special districts by a two-thirds vote of the qualified electors of such districts, may impose special taxes on such district, except ad valorem taxes on real property or a transaction tax or sales tax on the sale of real property within such City, County or special district."
Subsequent to article XIII A’s passage, the California Legislature enacted enabling legislation at Government Code section 50075 et seq. 4 Section 50075 provides: “It is the intent of the Legislature to provide all cities, counties, and districts with the authority to impose special taxes, pursuant to the provisions of Article XIII A of the California Constitution.”
Section 50077, subdivision (d), provides: “As used in this section ‘district’ means an agency of the state, formed pursuant to general law or special act, for the local performance of governmental or proprietary functions within limited boundaries.”
The District argues that the inclining block rate structure is not a “special tax” and that it is not a “special district” as these terms are defined in the enabling legislation and subsequent judicial interpretation.
A. The District is not a "special district. ”
In 1982, two decisions of the California Supreme Court substantially illuminated the scope and application of California Constitution, article XIII A, section 4. In
Los Angeles County Transportation Com.
v.
Richmond
(1982)
In dissent, Justice Richardson noted that LACTC came precisely within the definition of a “district” under section 50077, and expressed his concern that “[governmental entities may be expected, instinctively, to pour through the opening seeking the creation of similar revenue-generating entities in myriad forms which will be limited only by their ingenuity.”
(Los Angeles County Transportation Com.
v.
Richmond, supra,
In
City and County of San Francisco
v.
Farrell
(1982)
Again applying rules of strict construction to an ambiguous phrase, the court concluded that the term “special taxes” means “taxes which are levied for a specific purpose rather than ... a levy placed in the general fund to be utilized for general governmental purposes.”
(City and County of San Francisco
v.
Farrell, supra,
In
Rider
v.
County of San Diego
(1991) 1 Cal ,4th 1 [
The Supreme Court accepted the express finding of the trial court that the agency “ ‘was created solely for the purpose of avoiding the strictures of Proposition 13’ ” and the observation of the Court of Appeal that the agency was an “ ‘empty shell’ ” used by the county “to exercise its own fiscal discretion.”
(Rider
v.
County of San Diego, supra,
Considering “the probable intent” of the framers of California Constitution article XIII A, the court held that “ ‘special district’ would include any local taxing agency created to raise funds for city or county purposes to replace revenues lost by reason of the restrictions of Proposition 13.”
(Rider
v.
County of San Diego, supra,
We view
Rider
as dispositive. While effectively overruling
Richmond
as to all districts formed subsequent to the adoption of California Constitution, article XIII A in 1978,
Rider
unmistakably carves out an exception for those local agencies which were in existence before 1978 and which lack the power to levy property taxes as a means of replacing the loss of tax revenues
We conclude that the reasoning of Richmond as to pre-1978 agencies enjoys the imprimatur of Rider and is controlling here. Because the District was formed prior to the passage of Proposition 13, and is not empowered to levy real property taxes, it is not a “special district” as defined in the enabling legislation and the cases interpreting that legislation. 6
B. The inclining block rate structure is not a special tax.
Relying on California Constitution, article XIII A, section 4, appellants urge that the inclining block rate structure is a “special tax” rather than a mere “user fee” permitted under section 50076. They contend that the incremental cost imposed on the consumption of more than 250 gallons per day (gpd) is merely punitive and bears no reasonable relationship to the “cost of providing the services or regulatory activity for which the fee is charged.” (§ 50076.)
Preliminarily, the District relies upon
City & County of San Francisco
v.
Farrell, supra,
As with
Richmond, Farrell
also must be viewed in light of
Rider. Rider
refused to extend the rationale of
Farrell
to those agencies, created after
Appellants rely on
Beaumont Investors
v.
Beaumont-Cherry Valley Water Dist.
(1985)
In
Beaumont Investors,
the parties either stipulated to or defaulted on those issues most relevant to the instant inquiry. The parties, for example, stipulated that the water district was within the ambit of Proposition 13. They stipulated that the facilities fee could fall within the scope of section 50076. And the water district failed utterly to provide evidence of any reasonable relationship between the cost and the fee. In
Knox
v.
City of Orland
(1992)
The case of
San Diego Gas & Electric Co.
v.
San Diego County Air Pollution Control Dist.
(1988)
In response to the argument that the emission-based fees thwarted the purpose of Proposition 13, the court commented: “Proposition 13’s goal of providing effective property tax relief is not subverted by the increase in fees or the emissions-based apportionment formula. A reasonable way to achieve Proposition 13’s goal of tax relief is to shift the costs of controlling stationary sources of pollution from the tax-paying public to the pollution-causing industries themselves . . . .”
(San Diego Gas & Electric Co.
v.
San Diego County Air Pollution Control Dist., supra,
There is a sustainable analogy between the rate structure issue presented in
San Diego Gas
&
Electric Co.,
and the present case. Just as the regulatory scheme set forth by the APCD was designed to achieve a legislatively mandated ecological objective, so is the inclined block rate structure of the District a response to state-mandated water-resource conservation requirements. Article X, section 2, of the California Constitution provides: “It is hereby declared that because of the conditions prevailing in this State the general welfare requires that the water resources of the State be put to beneficial use to the fullest extent of which they are capable, and that the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use of water be prevented, and that the conservation of such waters is to be exercised with a
As of the enactment of the inclining block rate structure, Water Code section 375 permitted adoption and enforcement of water conservation programs. In 1993, Water Code section 375 was amended to address just those issues currently before this court. As amended, Water Code section 375 provides: “(a) Notwithstanding any other provision of the law, any public entity which supplies water at retail or wholesale for the benefit of persons within the service area or area of jurisdiction of the public entity may, by ordinance or resolution adopted by a majority of the members of the governing body after holding a public hearing upon notice and making appropriate findings of necessity for the adoption of a water conservation program, adopt and enforce a water conservation program, to reduce the quantity of water used by those persons for the purpose of conserving the water supplies of the public entity, [f] (b) With regard to water delivered for other than agricultural uses, the ordinance or resolution may specifically require the installation of water-saving devices which are designed to reduce water consumption. The ordinance or resolution may also encourage water conservation through rate structure design(Italics added.)
In pursuing a constitutionally and statutorily mandated conservation program, cost allocations for services provided are to be judged by a standard of reasonableness with some flexibility permitted to account for system-wide complexity.
(San Diego Gas & Electric Co., supra,
Moreover, in the present context the constitutional mandate of water conservation contained in article X, section 2 of the California Constitution is at least as compelling as the objectives of article XIII A, section 4. Indeed, even if article XIII A, section 4, is applicable to the instant rate structure, we agree with
San Diego Gas & Electric Co.
court that shifting the costs of environmental degradation from the general public to those most responsible is consistent with the objectives of Proposition 13. The inclining block rate structure is a reasonable reflection of the fact that it is in part the profligate usage of water which compels the initiation of regulated conservation measures, including those public education programs designed to encourage conservation. Intuitively, it can be seen that such measures are necessitated predominately by those citizens least inclined toward conservation. In our view, it is reasonable to allocate rate costs based on the premise that the more unreasonable the water use, “the greater the regulatory job of the district.”
(San Diego Gas & Electric Co.
v.
San Diego County Air Pollution Control Dist., supra,
The inclining block rate structure bears none of the indicia of taxation which California Constitution, article XIII A purported to address. The rate structure was not designed to replace property tax monies lost in consequence of the enactment of California Constitution, article XIII A. The rates were levied against water consumers in accordance with patterns of usage, and at no cost to taxpayers generally. The incremental rate was not compulsory to the extent that any consumer had the option of reducing his or her consumption.
At the time of the enactment of California Constitution, article XIII A, the structure, procedure and standards for utility rate assessment were firmly established. Public Utilities Code section 12809, enacted in 1951, provided, for example, that “[t]he rates and charges for commodities or service furnished by a district shall be fixed by the board. As far as possible utilities shall be self-supporting but the board is not required to fix a rate which in its opinion is unreasonably high, nor to cover by rates large expenditures and the interest thereon required thereon for future needs and developments.”
As in
Alamo Rent-a-Car,
the “prior submission of the proposed
fee to the
voters for approval would be nonsensical.”
(Alamo Rent-a-Car, Inc.
v.
Board of Supervisors, supra,
Significantly, there is nothing in the legislative history of California Constitution, article XIII A which would remotely suggest an intention to accomplish a wholesale revision of the Public Utilities Code as to ratemaking procedure. Nor can the argument be made that an intended result of article XIII A was to subvert article X, section 2 of the California Constitution which mandates water conservation and precludes “the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use of water.”
For these reasons, we conclude that the rate structure enacted by the District is not a “special tax” requiring two-thirds voter approval by the local electorate. 8
II.
The Rate Structure Is Not Arbitrary, Capricious, Discriminatory or Lacking in Evidentiary Support
Appellants’ remaining claims, (1) that the inclining block rate structure is arbitrary, capricious, and lacking in evidentiary support and not rationally related to any legitimate policy objectives and (2) that the rate structure unreasonably discriminates against certain consumers residing in “hot climate areas” east of the Berkeley-Oakland hills are logically and legally intertwined and will be considered as a single issue.
Appellants adduce the following facts and figures to establish the alleged caprice of the inclining block rate structure. Appellants are single-family residential customers residing in District regions 6 and 7, described as “hot climate areas east of the Berkeley-Oakland hills.” During the summers of 1988 and 1989 when drought rates were in effect, single-family residential customers in the region used less than 50 percent of the total water provided to the District’s single-family residential customers but paid over 75 percent of the drought surcharges. The penalties had no appreciable effect on water consumption levels, which ran about 30 percent lower than base levels for all District regions which were established in 1986. In response to a related lawsuit filed in Contra Costa County Superior Court (Water v. East Bay Municipal Utility Dist., No. C-88-02986) challenging the 1988-1989 rate structures, the District temporarily suspended the inclining block rate structure. During the summers of 1988 and 1989 single-family residence consumers in region 5 achieved the “nearly identical percentage reductions” as those in regions 6 and 7.
From the foregoing, appellants argue variously that (1) “when [the District’s] stated conservation goals are juxtaposed against its customers record of voluntary conservation in the absence of an inclining block rate structure, it is clear that the rates cannot be rationally justified on the basis of promoting conservation”; (2) that the board’s “motivation” for the inclining block rate structure was “revenue recoupment” rather than conservation; and (3) that the inclining block rate structure was unreasonable because it is based neither upon the “cost of service” nor upon any other rational basis.
Given the quasi-legislative nature of the District’s enactment of the rate structure design, review is appropriate only by means of ordinary mandate (Code Civ. Proc., § 1085) where the court “ ‘is limited to a determination of whether District’s actions were arbitrary, capricious or entirely lacking in evidentiary support .... [Citations.].’ ”
(Carlton Santee Corp.
v.
Padre Dam Mun. Water Dist.
(1981)
Such limited review “is grounded on the doctrine of the separation of powers which (1) sanctions the delegation of authority to the agency and (2) acknowledges the presumed expertise of the agency.”
(Garrick Development Co.
v.
Hayward Unified School Dist.
(1992)
In
Hansen
v.
City of San Buenaventura
(1986)
Hansen noted that “[a] showing that rates lack uniformity is by itself insufficient to establish that they are unreasonable and hence unlawful. To be objectionable, discrimination must ‘draw an unfair line or strike an unfair balance between those in like circumstances having equal rights and privileges. . . . “It is only unjust or unreasonable discrimination which renders a rate or charge unreasonable ....”’ [Citation.]” (Hansen v. City of San Buenaventura, supra, 42 Cal.3d at pp. 1180-1181.)
In
Carlton Santee Corp.,
plaintiff residential developer challenged a requirement that fees for water and sewage connections be paid upon the determination of availability rather than upon the actual furnishing of the service. Under the circumstances of that case, plaintiff was required to make immediate payment of $2.9 million in connection fees notwithstanding that the developer had yet to obtain approval of the tentative subdivision map, the final subdivision map, and the necessary building permits. Again noting the impropriety of courts substituting “ ‘ “their [own] judgment or notions of
Significantly, the court found that even if the commitment for a connection could not be considered the furnishing of a service, the district acted reasonably in promulgating the rule. “The district is burdened with the substantial responsibility of securing and expanding sewage facilities and capacities ... as well as fairly allocating this vital finite resource for the benefit of the entire populace within the District when faced with a demand greater than the capacity of the system. Inherent within the statutory authority to acquire, construct and operate facilities for treatment and disposal of sewage and waste ... is the necessarily implied power ... to promulgate regulatory means which guarantee the fair, nondiscriminatory distribution of sewage service based upon need, where the demand exceeds the capacity of the system.” (Carlton Santee Corp. v. Padre Dam Mun. Water Dist, supra, at p. 26.)
While the issue in
Swanson
v.
Marin Mun. Water Dist.
(1976)
Relying also upon the language of Water Code section 71640, 10 the court concluded that the resolution and implementing ordinances were reasonable responses of the water district to the threatened water shortage.
We consider the factual allegations of appellants in light of Hansen, Carlton Santee Corp. and Swanson, article X, section 2, of the California Constitution and its correlative statutory authority.
That the single-family residence customers in regions 6 and 7 used less than 50 percent of the total water provided to the District’s single-family consumers but paid over 75 percent of the drought surcharges affords no support to appellants’ claim of discrimination. Appellants do not represent the entire population of regions 6 and 7, but merely those who utilized a higher rate of water consumption. In terms of evaluating use patterns, the more interesting statistic is that in normal water years, 89 percent of all single-family residence customers used less than 750 gpd and that the other 11 percent consumed 35 percent of all water sold to single-family residence customers. During the period at issue, only 4.1 percent of all residential customers chose to consume more than 750 gpd.
Appellants’ suggestion that the entire population of regions 6 and 7 has been victimized by disproportionate rates which fail to account for peculiar climatic circumstances, is not supported by the record. Only a distinct minority of consumers in regions in 6 and 7 have failed to temper their habits of consumption. Further, indoor water use in regions 6 and 7 exceeded that of the other regions during applicable periods by an average of 30 to 50 percent. It is difficult to see how indoor water consumption is dependent upon the climatic variables of the Bay Area. In the District’s view, based upon appropriate data, reasonable water needs throughout the District could be accommodated by water consumption of less than 750 gpd per customer and that water use above that amount was discretionary, and in the context of drought conditions, “excessive.”
The authority of the District “to promulgate regulatory means”
(Carlton Santee Corp.
v.
Padre Dam Mun. Water Dist., supra,
Appellants’ argument that the inclining block rate structure was designed, not to address drought conditions, but rather to replenish a budget depleted by a pattern of “over conservation” is merely speculative. Again, there is a
Reiterating the factual basis from which the argument is made that the inclining block rate structure was a “special tax” violative of article XIII A of the California Constitution, appellants urge that “[the District] has not shown . . . that the cost of delivering water above 250 gpd is greater than delivering water below that level of consumption.” We note again that the burden of proof of overcoming the presumption of reasonableness is upon “the assailant,”
(Carlton Santee Corp.
v.
Padre Dam Mun. Water Dist., supra,
Appellants’ supposition that the cost of delivering “water above 250 gpd” cannot exceed that of delivering a lesser amount is entirely without foundation. Urban water pricing is a vastly complex mechanism depending greatly upon the source and use of the water.
For example, the cost of diverting water from a river and using it on adjacent lands can be less than $5 AF. The cost of seawater desalinization can exceed $2,000 AF. For now, the District depends upon its Mokelumne River source, but is actively investigating other sources, including the
In the District’s system, those 11 percent of single-family residence consumers who use 35 percent of all water sold to the single-family market are placing a disproportionate strain upon a frail resource. Swanson encourages the responsibility of water districts to anticipate future water shortages and to regulate existing supplies accordingly. To the extent that certain consumers overutilize the resource, they contribute disproportionately to the necessity for conservation, and the requirement that the District acquire new sources for the supply of domestic water.
As noted by the Association of California Water Agencies who submitted an amicus curiae brief in this case: “In addition to the potential for drought-related shortages, increasing environmental concerns, including water quality, salt water intrusion and the needs of water-dependent wild life have begun to compete with municipal, industrial and agricultural uses for water supplies
(United States
v.
State Water Resources Control Bd.
(1986)
When the District exceeds that margin of safety required to guarantee water for “human consumption, sanitation and fire protection,” requiring the declaration of a water shortage supply condition (Wat. Code, § 350) and the regulation and restriction of the delivery and consumption of water (Wat. Code, § 353) it may be argued persuasively that the attendant costs, both in monetary and societal terms, constitute a subsidy borne by the more responsible majority.
Here, the District’s multifaceted Drought Management Program was not merely reasonable, but may have been compelled by the mandates of article X, section 2 of the California Constitution and the requirements of Water Code sections 350 and 353, among others.
Article X, section 2 was enacted as an amendment to the California Constitution in 1928, pursuant to an electoral initiative designed to reform California water law. In
Gin S. Chow
v.
City of Santa Barbara
(1933)
For a time, California Constitution, article X, section 2 and the correlative doctrine of reasonable use lay dormant due in large part to the development of major reclamation projects like the Central Valley Project, the State Water Project, the Hetch Hetchy System of San Francisco and the Owens Valley Project for Los Angeles. For over 40 years, these projects “alleviated most of California’s water supply problems,” precluding the necessity for judicial involvement in the accommodation of competing water uses. (See Gray, “In Search of Bigfoot”: The Common Law Origins of Article X, Section 2 of the California Constitution (1989) 17 Hastings Const. L.Q. 225, 269.)
By the 1980’s, however, environmental and social circumstances have compelled a dramatic resurgence of the reasonable use doctrine emanating from California Constitution, article X, section 2. First, “. . . it became widely recognized that the statewide demand for water for consumptive purposes was nearing the limits of existing developed supplies.” (17 Hastings Const. L.Q.,
supra,
at p. 270, fn. omitted.) Second, as exemplified by
National Audubon Society
v.
Superior Court
(1983)
As noted in
Environmental Defense Fund, Inc.
v.
East Bay Mm. Utility Dist.
(1980)
In viewing the totality of circumstances pertaining to the instant case, we are impressed by the findings of the District in support of the resolution which adopted the inclining block rate structure. Rather than waiting passively for potentially apocalyptic drought conditions to occur, the District considered the climatic and hydrological conditions, actively pursued other sources of supply, and intelligently developed a drought management program designed to conserve the water supply with the least disruption to domestic, industrial and agricultural consumers. As in
Swanson,
the District “need not empty its reservoir before undertaking conservation measures.”
(Swanson
v.
Marin Mun. Water Dist., supra,
In our view, the inclining block rate structure is one small and modest component of a well-conceived and eminently reasonable drought management program.
III.
The Trial Court’s Statement of Decision Is Adequate
Finally, appellant claims that the superior court failed to adequately articulate the basis for its decision pursuant to section 632 of the Code of Civil Procedure.
Code of Civil Procedure, section 632 provides that “upon the trial of a question of fact by the court, written findings of fact and conclusions of law shall not be required. The court shall issue a statement of decision explaining the factual and legal basis for its decision as to each of the principal controverted issues at trial upon the request of any party appearing at the trial.”
“Under section 632, the trial court’s statement of decision need do no more than give reasons which state the grounds upon which the judgments rests. ... A statement of ultimate, not evidentiary, facts is all that has ever been required.”
(Republic Indemnity Co.
v.
Empire Builders Corp.
(1985)
Conclusion
The judgment is affirmed.
Kline, P. J., and Smith, J., concurred.
Appellants’ petition for review by the Supreme Court was denied July 14, 1994.
Notes
Judge of the Alameda Superior Court sitting under assignment by the Chairperson of the Judicial Council.
An acre-foot is 43,560 cubic feet. Colloquially, it is an irrigation-based measurement equalling the quantity of water required to cover an acre of land to a depth of one foot.
Water Code section 350 states: “The governing body of a distributor of a public water supply, . . . may declare a water shortage emergency condition to prevail within the area served by such distributor whenever it finds and determines that the ordinary demands and requirements of water consumers cannot be satisfied without depleting the water supply of the distributor to the extent that there would be insufficient water for human consumption, sanitation, and fire protection.”
Prohibited practices included filling decorative lakes and ponds, washing vehicles without using a shut-off nozzle, washing sidewalks, excessive lawn irrigation, etc.
All further statutory references are to the Government Code unless otherwise indicated.
Justice Mosk in dissent opined that “[i]t is a distortion
of Richmond, supra,
The fact that Public Utilities Code section 13456 authorizes the District to initiate proceedings for the creation of a special district “for sewage disposal or solid waste resource recovery purposes” does not modify our view. Any special districts thus created are to be considered on their own merits in light of Rider.
Water Code section 100 restates article X, section 2 in identical language.
Having concluded that the rate structure does not constitute a special tax, we do not reach the District’s alternative argument that the rate structure constitutes a permissible special assessment under Knox v. City of Orland, supra, and the authorities cited therein. (Knox v. City of Orland, supra, 4 Cal.4th 132, 141.)
According to the draft California Water Plan Update “many water conservation specialists think conservation encouraged by water pricing is one of the most important Best Management Practices for reducing water use.” (Dept. Water Resources Bull. 160-93, p. 152.)
Water Code section 71640 states: “A district may restrict the use of district water during any emergency caused by drought, or other threatened or existing water shortage, and may prohibit the wastage of district water or the use of district water during such periods for any purpose other than household uses or such other restricted uses as the district determines to be necessary. A district may also prohibit use of district water during such periods for specific uses which it finds to be nonessential.’’
Water v. East Bay Municipal Utility Dist., supra, No. C-88-02986.
“At least some of the elements of a new generation of resources policies are now taking form. So-called ‘green-fees’ have received considerable attention in recent years. A prominent example is the proposal to tax energy uses according to the carbon content of the fuel as a means of discouraging carbon dioxide emissions—a major source of concern regarding global climate change. The World Resources Institute has identified an array of charges that would produce environmental benefits and that would also generate considerable revenues for federal, state, and local governments. These include per-bag charges of solid waste disposal, variable toll charges on heavily used roads and highways, charges of toxic releases, water effluent fees, recreation fees in national forests, royalties for hardrock mining on public lands, and full-cost pricing of Bureau of Reclamation—supplied water and timber from national forests.” (MacDonnell & Bates, Natural Resources Policy and Law: Trends and Directions, Rethinking Resources: Reflections on a New Generation of Natural Resources Policy and Law (1993) Natural Resources Law Center, U. of Colo. School of Law, p. 15, fn. omitted.)
