Opinion
I. Introduction
We granted review to determine whether a trial court may definitively resolve water right priorities in an overdrafted basin with a “physical solution” that relies on the equitable apportionment doctrine but does not consider the affected owners’ legal water rights in the basin. 1 We conclude it may not, and affirm the Court of Appeal judgment in that respect. In the second part of this opinion, we address whether the Court of Appeal erred in concluding that the trial court abused its discretion when it determined that a water producer who desired to stipulate to the physical solution was fairly apportioned its share of water. We conclude the Court of Appeal erred on this point. We therefore affirm in part and reverse in part the Court of Appeal judgment. 2
II. Background
The Mojave River originates in the San Bernardino Mountains, where rain and snow runoff give rise to the West Fork of the Mojave River and Deep Creek. These tributaries join at the mountain foothills in an area called The Forks to form the Mojave River. From The Forks, the Mojave River flows approximately 90 miles north to Victorville and Helendale, northeast to Barstow, east to Afton, and finally to its terminus in Soda Lake.
The Mojave River Basin area extends approximately 3,600 square miles and encompasses several cities, including Victorville, Hesperia, Apple Valley, Adelanto, and Barstow. 3 The Mojave River Basin is divided into five hydrologic subareas: The Helendale Fault separates the Alto and Centro *1234 Basin subareas; the Waterman Fault separates the Centro and Baja Basin subareas; the Oeste Basin subarea is west of the Alto Basin subarea; and the Este Basin subarea is east of the Alto Basin subarea and south of the Centro Basin subarea. Because these basins are interconnected, some of the surface inflow to one basin is outflow from another. The groundwater and surface water within the entire Mojave River Basin constitute a single interrelated source.
The Mojave River, cyclically replenished from rainfall in the San Bernardino Mountains, is the main water source for the Mojave River Basin. The river’s flow in the downstream area, however, has decreased in recent years. Groundwater extractions in the Alto Basin have lowered the water table, increasing the Alto Basin’s storm flow absorption. As more water is absorbed in the Alto Basin, less water reaches the downstream area.
Before the 1950’s, the Mojave River Basin economy primarily relied on transportation, mining, military, and agriculture. The economy and investment in the area soon grew and, by the mid-1950’s, demand for water in the basin exceeded the natural supply, resulting in an overdraft condition. Development continued, particularly during the 1970’s and 1980’s. By 1990, the basin’s population was approximately 235,000, more than 10 times the population in 1950. The largest increase in overdraft in the basin occurred between 1970 and 1980. During that time, well levels and water quality experienced a steady and significant decline. If overdraft conditions continue, the basin’s water supply will experience significant depletion.
III. Facts and Procedure
In 1990, the City of Barstow and the Southern California Water Company (plaintiffs) filed this action against the City of Adelanto, the Mojave Water Agency (MWA), 4 and other upstream water producers, claiming that their groundwater production was adversely impacting plaintiffs’ water supply, and that they contributed to the entire Mojave River Basin overdraft. 5 Plaintiffs sought an average annual flow of 30,000 acre-feet of water to the Barstow area and a writ of mandate to compel the MWA to import supplemental water from the State Water Project.
*1235 In 1991, the MWA served over 1,000 persons with an amended cross-complaint that joined substantially all water producers within the Mojave River Basin, except for certain small producers. The cross-complaint requested a declaration that the available native water supply was inadequate to meet producer demands within the Mojave River Basin and asked the court to appоrtion water rights among the various water producers.
The trial court stayed the litigation while a committee, composed of attorneys and engineers representing numerous water producers throughout the Mojave River Basin, met to negotiate settlement terms and to develop a physical solution to the water shortage problem. After negotiating for two years, the committee submitted a draft physical solution to the trial court.
The physical solution’s stated purposes are (1) to ensure that downstream producers are not adversely affected by upstream use, (2) to raise money to purchase supplemental water for the area, and (3) to encourage local water conservation.
Regionally, the physical solution requires each subarea within the basin to provide a specific quantity of water to the adjoining downstream subarea. The solution places no limits on the amount of water a party can withdraw. Instead, each party is allotted a certain quantity of water—a “free production allowance” based on its prior use—which it can use at no cost. When a party uses water in excess of its free production allowance, it is charged a fee to purchase “replacement” water for that subarea.
The physical solution also sets a “base annual production” amount for each party, determined by the producer’s maximum annual production for the five-year period from 1986 to 1990. The solution defines a producer’s base annual production right as “the relative right of each producer to the free production allowance within a given subarea, as a percentage of the aggregate of all producers’ base annual production in the subarea.” The higher the base annual production right, the more water a producer can sell under transfer provisions and produce free of a replacement assessment.
Significantly, the physical solution did not apportion production rights on the basis of preexisting legal water rights. The drafters of the physical solution believed such apportionment would lead to inequitable water allocation. In fact, the trial court expressly held that the parties were “estopped and barred from asserting special priorities or preferences.” The court further concluded that allocating water based on asserted legal priorities would be “extremely difficult, if not impossible.”
The trial court ordered all parties either to stipulate to the physical solution, file an answer to the cross-complaint, or suffer default. Over 200 *1236 parties stipulated to the physical solution. Minimal producers within the Mojave River Basin—those that produced 10 acre-feet of water or less annually—were exempt from the physical solution’s terms, and instead were subject to administration under the MWA. The trial court entered an interlocutory judgment imposing the physical solution on the stipulating parties. It then held a trial to adjudicate the individual rights of the nonstipulating parties, including the City of Adelanto, the Cardozo appellants, who were generally described as alfalfa and dairy farmers with legal water rights, and appellants Jess Ranch Water Company (Jess Ranch), property owners that raised trout and engaged in some agricultural pursuits. In contrast to the Cardozo appellants, Jess Ranch wanted to participate in the physical solution and interlocutory judgment. Jess Ranch challenged only the judgment’s allocation of acre-feet of water to it, not the physical solution’s legality.
The trial court identified the following issues for determination during the nonstipulating parties’ trial: (1) characterization of water rights; (2) priority, if any; (3) uses of the water; (4) whether those uses were reasonable; and (5) the amount of reasonable and beneficial use. Other trial issues included identification of the subareas, whether the physical solution created an equitable apportionment of water, and whеther it satisfied the requirements of article X, section 2 of the California Constitution, which mandates that water be put to reasonable and beneficial use. 6
Trial was lengthy, with numerous witnesses testifying. The stipulating parties presented evidence of the Mojave River Basin’s hydrogeology and established that the overdraft existed. The stipulating parties also presented *1237 evidence regarding the Mojave River Basin’s economic development during the overdraft period.
The Cardozo appellants demonstrated they owned land in the basin and that they had been pumping water from wells on that land. Although the Cardozo appellants initially claimed that they held riparian water rights, they did not produce evidence in their properties’ chain of title to support that claim. Therefore, they relied on their overlying rights based on the groundwater underneath their property. 7
In its statement of decision, the trial court recited the case’s procedural history and the facts in detail. The court concluded that the constitutional mandate of reasonable and beneficial use dictates an equitable apportionment of all water rights when a river basin is in overdraft. The court found it unnecessary to adjudicate individual legal water rights and instead concluded that the proposed physical solution, incorporating a free production allowance without regard to overlying and riparian water rights holders, would be fair and equitable to nonstipulating farmers and would best satisfy the use policy set forth in Water Code section 106 (domestic use has the highest priority, followed by irrigation).
Several factors influenced the trial court’s decision to enforce the physical solution. For example, the court noted the overdraft had existed for several years, the parties disputed the asserted water rights priorities, and a mechanical allocation of legal water rights could lead to an inequitable apportionment and impose undue hardship on many parties. For these reasons and more, the trial court enjoined all parties from asserting special priorities or preferences.
The trial court concluded that in the face of severe overdraft of an interrelated water source, all use was unreasonable, whether or not a user held riparian or overlying rights. The court reasoned that several factors *1238 justified the water right allotment on a nonpriority basis, including the climate, the impact of overdraft on interrelated surface and groundwater basins, and the importance of protecting the economy. The court concluded that the doctrine of reasonable and beneficial use, as established by article X, section 2 of the California Constitution, required an equitable apportionment of all rights when a basin is in overdraft. The City of Adelanto stipulated to the judgment following trial.
The Cardozo appellants 8 appealed the trial court judgment. They argued that the physical solution was invalid because it failed to recognize their preexisting and paramount legal water rights under California water law and therefore amounted to a taking without due process. Specifically, they attacked the physical solution on grounds that: “(1) it fails to recognize and protect their water rights; (2) it imposes a burdensome expense on them, with the intention to reduce or eliminate agricultural uses; (3) it encourages waste of water; (4) it encourages unlawful transfer of water; (5) it fails to bind all producers in the basin; (6) it has other harmful and inequitable effects.”
The City of Barstow, the MWA, and other parties to the stipulation responded that the Cardozo appellants had failed to prove they had any water rights that the judgment adversely affected. They further argued that any water rights the Cardozo appellants did possess were limited by the principle of reasonable and beneficial use under article X, section 2 of the California Constitution, which, they argued, required the court to apportion water equitably among users in the overdrafted areа. They also asserted that the trial court had properly considered the relevant factors before imposing a physical solution.
The Court of Appeal disagreed with these arguments and reversed the trial court judgment against the Cardozo appellants, directing the trial court to enter its order excluding them from its judgment and granting them injunctive relief to protect their water rights. The court concluded that the trial court erred in failing to consider the farmers’ potential riparian or overlying water rights when adjudicating water allocation in the overdrafted basin. The court held that it was not required to reverse the entire judgment or in any way to disturb the physical solution as to the stipulating parties, despite the trial court’s error. As the Court of Appeal correctly observed, “We see no reason why the parties cannot stipulate to a judgment incorporating the physical solution, nor do we see any reason why a stipulated [solution] *1239 entered into by a large number of water producers in the Mojave Basin should be totally reversed when the rights of the Cardozo Appellants can be fully protected by appropriate trial court orders on remand. [Citations.] . . . HQ Thus, we protect the rights of the Cardozo Appellants while also respecting the rights of the stipulating parties to agree to a [solution that] wаives or alters their water rights in a manner which they believe to be in their best interest.” (Fn. omitted.)
The Jess Ranch matter presents different issues. At trial, Jess Ranch introduced evidence to show it pumped over 18,000 acre-feet of water per year from 1986-1990 to support its trout-raising operation and ancillary agricultural properties. The stipulating parties contested the amount of water Jess Ranch put to beneficial use. The trial court found that Jess Ranch failed to establish that its substantial use of water was reasonable and beneficial. The court therefore calculated Jess Ranch’s base annual production at a lesser quantity. The court concluded that for purposes of Jess Ranch’s joining the stipulated physical solution, it would calculate the amount used annually at 7,480 acre-feet, an amount Jess Ranch challenged.
On appeal, Jess Ranch argued that its water allocation should be increased, because its annual production rights were not calculated on the same basis as those of other producers. The Court of Appeal agreed and reversed the judgment as it applied to Jess Ranch. The court found that Jess Ranch was not given a base annual production amount based on its actual production. The court further stated that the doctrine of reasonablе and beneficial use did not justify treating Jess Ranch differently from other producers.
We granted petitions for review filed by the City of Barstow, the Southern California Water Company, the MWA, and other participants in the physical solution and judgment (collectively respondents). 9 The principal question we address is whether the trial court could disregard legal water rights in order *1240 to apportion on an equitable basis water rights to all producers in an overdrafted groundwater basin. We also address respondents’ contention that the Court of Appeal erred in concluding the trial court treated Jess Ranch inequitably in its water allocation under the proposed solution and judgment.
IV. Discussion
A. Principles and Policies of California Water Law
1. Water Rights
Courts typically classify water rights in an underground basin as overlying, appropriative, or prescriptive.
(California Water Service Co., supra,
*1241 In contrast to owners’ legal priorities, we observe that “[t]he right of an appropriator . . . depends upon the actual taking of water. Where the taking is wrongful, it may ripen into a prescriptive right. Any person having a legal right to surface or ground water may take only such amount as he reasonably needs for beneficial purposes .... Any water not needed for the reasonable beneficial use of those having prior rights is excess or surplus water and may rightly be appropriated on privately owned land for non-overlying use, such as devotion to public use or exportation beyond the basin or watershed [citation]. When there is a surplus, the holder of prior rights may not enjoin its appropriation [citation]. Proper overlying use, however, is paramount and the rights of an appropriator, being limited to the amount of the surplus [citation], must yield to that of the overlying owner in the event of a shortage, unless the appropriator has gained prescriptive rights through the [adverse, open and hostile] taking of nonsurplus waters. As between overlying owners, the rights, like those of riparians, are correlative; [i.e.,] each may use only his reasonable share when water is insufficient to meet the needs of all [citation]. As between appropriators, however, the one first in time is the first in right, and a priоr appropriator is entitled to all the water he needs, up to the amount he has taken in the past, before a subsequent appropriator may take any [citation].
“Prescriptive rights are not acquired by the taking of surplus or excess water. [But] [a]n appropriative taking of water which is not surplus is wrongful and may ripen into a prescriptive right where the use is actual, open and notorious, hostile and adverse to the original owner, continuous and uninterrupted for the statutory period of five years, and under claim of right.” (California Water Service Co., supra, 224 Cal.App.2d at pp. 725-726.)
Even these acquired rights, however, may be interrupted without resort to the legal process if the owners engage in self-help and retain their rights by continuing to pump nonsurplus waters. (See
Hi-Desert County Water Dist.
v.
Blue Skies Country Club, Inc.
(1994)
2. 1928 Constitutional Amendment
Article X, section 2 was added to the California Constitution in 1928 as former article XIV, section 3. The provision limits water rights to reasonable and beneficial uses. (Cal. Const., art. X, § 2.) “[T]he rule of reasonable use as enjoined by . . . the Constitution applies to all water rights enjoyed or asserted in this state, whether the same be grounded on the
*1242
riparian right or the right, analogous to the riparian right, of the overlying land owner, оr the percolating water right, or the appropriative right.”
CPeabody v. City of Vallejo
(1935)
The constitutional amendment thereforе dictates the basic principles defining water rights: that no one can have a protectible interest in the unreasonable use of water, and that holders of water rights must use water reasonably and beneficially. Crucial to our own determination here is the fact that the amendment carefully preserves riparian and overlying rights, while abolishing “that aspect of the common law doctrine which entitled a riparian, as against an upstream appropriator, to enforce his right to the entire natural flow of a stream even if his use of the water was wasteful or unreasonable.”
(Pleasant Valley Canal Co. v. Borror
(1998)
B. Equitable Apportionment
1. Past Cases
In previous cases resolving regional water uses, courts allocated water according to preexisting legal rights and relationships. For example, in
Fleming v. Bennett
(1941)
As noted
ante,
at page 1242, in
Tulare,
we outlined a water allocation method in a case in which the plaintiffs’ water rights had different priorities. We also observed that “[t]he trial court. . . must fix the quantity required by each [right holder] for his actual rеasonable beneficial uses, the same as it would do in the case of an appropriator.”
(Tulare, supra,
Thus, water right priority has long been the central principle in California water law. The corollary of this rule is that an equitable physical solution must preserve water right priorities to the extent those priorities do not lead to unreasonable use. In the case of an overdraft, riparian and overlying use is paramount, and the rights of the appropriator must yield to the rights of the riparian or overlying owner.
(Burr
v.
Maclay Rancho Water Co.
(1908)
2. Equitable Apportionment in Cases Involving Correlative Rights or Rights Established by Mutual Prescription
Respondents rely on two cases to support their contention that article X, section 2 of the California Constitution requires the courts to apportion all water rights equitably, regardless of preexisting priorities:
City of Pasadena
v.
City of Alhambra
(1949)
In City of Pasadena, extractors had been taking nonsurplus groundwater for over 30 years, creating an overdraft condition in the basin on which Pasadena relied as a water source. (City of Pasadena, supra, 33 Cal.2d at pp. *1244 921-922.) Even after the overdraft occurred, all parties continued to pump the groundwater, creating a greater overdraft and interfering with everyone’s ability to pump in the future. (Id. at p. 922.)
The plaintiff city and its chief water producer sued to determine the groundwater rights in the area and to enjoin the alleged overdraft to prevent the water supply’s depletion.
(City of Pasadena, supra,
Without mentioning equitable apportionment, Chief Justice Gibson’s majority opinion affirmed the trial court’s judgment, enforcing the stipulation’s terms against all parties, including the utility. (City of Pasadena, supra, 33 Cal.2d at pp. 916, 933.) This court discussed the nature of prescriptive groundwater rights in which rights of adverse users do not completely overtake owners’ rights. It concluded that the pumpers had established prescriptive rights in part of the water supply. The court observed “that such rights were acquired against both overlying owners and prior appropriators, [and] that the overlying owners and prior appropriators also obtained, or preserved, rights by reason of the water which they pumped . . . .” (Id. at p. 933.) Applying the mutual prescription doctrine, this court concluded that all claimants had equal priority and agreed the trial court had appropriately reduced each party’s production to achieve safe yield. (Ibid.)
In reaching its conclusion, City of Pasadena observed: “Although the law at one time was otherwise, it is now clear that an overlying owner or any other person having a legal right to surface or ground water may take only such amount as he reasonably needs for beneficial purposes. [Citations.] Public interest requires that there be the greatest number of beneficial uses which the supply can yield, and water may be appropriated for beneficial uses subject to the rights of those who have a lawful priority. [Citation.] Any water not needed for the reasonable beneficial usеs of those having prior rights is excess or surplus water. In California surplus water may rightfully be appropriated on privately owned land for nonoverlying uses, such as devotion to a public use or exportation beyond the basin or watershed. [Citations.]
“It is the policy of the state to foster the beneficial use of water and discourage waste, and when there is a surplus, whether of surface or ground *1245 water, the holder of prior rights may not enjoin its appropriation. [Citations.] Proper overlying use, however, is paramount, and the right of an appropriator, being limited to the amount of the surplus, must yield to that of the overlying owner in the event of a shortage, unless the appropriator has gained prescriptive rights through the taking of nonsurplus waters.” (City of Pasadena, supra, 33 Cal.2d at pp. 925-926.)
Several decades later, Los Angeles sued to establish a prior right to groundwater in the upper Los Angeles River area in
City of San Fernando, supra,
This court reasoned: “The pueblo right gives thе city holding it a paramount claim to particular waters only to the extent that they are required for satisfying its municipal needs and those of its inhabitants. ‘It thus insures a water supply for an expanding city [citation] with a minimum of waste by leaving the water accessible to others
until such time as the city needs it.’
[Citation.]”
(City of San Fernando, supra,
This court rejected the defendants’ contention that the mutual prescription doctrine developed in
City of Pasadena
was a “beneficent instrument for conservation and equitable apportionment of water in ground basins which are subjected to extractions in excess of the replenishment supply.”
(City of San Fernando, supra,
Respondents claim this footnote provides the basis for the trial court’s use of equitable apportionment to allocate water in an overdraft basin without regard to the owners’ water priorities. (See
Hi-Desert County Water Dist., supra,
We find no conflict.
City of San Fernando
distinguished
City of Pasadena, supra, 33
Cal.2d 908, where a “restriction to safe yield on a strict priority
*1247
basis might have deprived parties who had been using substantial quantities of ground water for many years of all further access to such water.” (City
of San Fernando, supra,
As the
City of San Fernando
court itself observed, “[Principles governing appropriative and prescriptive water rights will be relevant to the determination on remand of the conflicting interests of the parties in the water of the [overdrafted] Sylmar basin.”
(City of San Fernando, supra,
Thus, one could read footnote 61 in
City of San Fernando
to suggest that if prioritization of rights results in denying recent appropriative users the right to produce water, some type of equitable appropriation may be implemented in intrastate water matters. But the case is not precedent for wholly disregarding the priorities of existing water rights in favor of equitable
*1248
apportionment in this state, where water allocation has been based on an initial consideration of owners’ legal water rights. Case law simply does not support applying an equitable apportionment to water use claims unless all claimants have correlative rights; for example, when parties establish mutual prescription. Otherwise, cases like
City of San Fernando
require that courts making water allocations adequately consider and reflect the priority of water rights in the basin.
(City of San Fernando, supra,
3. Equitable Apportionment After City of San Fernando
Respondents claim that after
City of San Fernando, supra,
For example, in
Hi-Desert County Water Dist.,
the Court of Appeal stated: “Left unresolved in
[City of
]
Pasadena,
however, was whether by continuing to pump, an overlying user
in an overdrafted basin
retained its original overlying rights or obtained new ones by prescription. [Citations.] In 1975, in its most comprehensive statement of water law, our Supreme Court in
[City of San Fernando, supra,
In
Wright,
overlying owners in a groundwater basin sued to determine relative water rights in that basin. The Court of Appeal found the trial court
*1249
еrred in holding that a water district’s appropriative rights had a higher priority than the overlying owners’ unexercised rights. (Wright,
supra,
174 Cal.App.3d at pp. 78, 82.) The court also held that the trial court could not define or otherwise limit an overlying owner’s future unexercised groundwater rights, in contrast to this court’s limitation of unexercised riparian rights.
{In re Waters of Long Valley Creek Stream System
(1979)
C. The Physical Solution
Respondents argue that article X, section 2 of the California Constitution mandates that we accept the trial court’s proposed physical solution. The trial court found as follows: “Having found that all rights are correlative, a just and fair result is achieved by establishing a physical solution which limits each user to a proportionate equitable share of the total amount available.” The court estopped all parties from asserting special priorities or preferences. It concluded it had “the authority to draft and impose a physiсal solution which requires all users to share equitably in the cost and reduction of use, to safe yield.”
We agree that, within limits, a trial court may use its equitable powers to implement a physical solution. (See, e.g.,
Peabody, supra, 2
Cal.2d at pp. 383-384 [court has power to make reasonable regulations for water use,
*1250
provided they protect the one enjoying paramount rights].) In
City of Lodi v. East Bay Mun. Utility Dist.
(1936)
Other cases hold that a physical solution may not violate the constitutional principle that requires water to be put to beneficial use to the fullest extent possible.
(Hillside Water Co.
v.
Los Angeles
(1938)
Thus, although it is clear that a trial court may impose a physical solution to achieve a practical allocation of water to competing interests, the solution’s general purpose cannot simply ignore the priority rights of the parties asserting them. (See
City of San Fernando, supra,
Respondents unpersuasively argue for imposition of an equitable physical solution that disregards prior legal water rights. They cite the principle that the State Constitution requires the greatest number of beneficial users that the water supply can support, but they omit the requirement that this use be subject to the rights of those with lawful priority to the water. In addition, respondents rely on
Vail
to support their contention that a physical solution
*1251
should be based on the trial court’s broad equitable powers. But
Vail
concerned a conflict between riparian right holders, not a situation where one party’s rights were paramount to the other’s.
(Vail, supra,
Respondents also rely on
Imperial Irrigation Dist. v. State Wat. Resources Control Bd.
(1990)
D. Appellants’ Water Rights
In the trial court, respondents contended that neither the Cardozo appellants nor Jess Ranch sustained their burden of proving they possessed any water rights. The trial court agreed as to the Cardozo appellants. The court acknowledged that Jess Ranch testified as to its riparian, overlying, and appropriative rights, and, as the Court of Appeal observed, the evidence showed overlying rights, but the trial court found it unnecessary to determine the effect of those rights on its decision. The Court of Appeal concluded that Jess Rаnch need not rely on those rights in order to participate in the physical solution and judgment.
1. Cardozo Appellants
After concluding that several Cardozo deeds had not reserved riparian rights on behalf of the Cardozo appellants, the Court of Appeal nevertheless disputed the trial court’s finding that they had no overlying rights. Here, the Court of Appeal reasoned, “overlying rights are a property right appurtenant to the land, and are based on ownership. [Citations.] Although limited to the amount needed for beneficial use, irrigation for agriculture is clearly such a use, and respondents did not claim otherwise. [Citations.]”
After pointing out that overlying rights are dependent on land ownership over groundwater, and are exercised by extracting and using that water, the Court of Appeal concluded: “Having shown ownership, extraction and beneficial use of the underground water here, the Cardozo Appellants established overlying rights, and the contrary finding of the trial court is without evidentiary or legal support. [1Q . . . R[| We repeat the guiding principle: ‘Under California law, “[p]roper overlying use ... is paramount, and the right of an appropriator, being limited to the amount of the surplus, must
*1252
yield to that of the overlying owner in the event of a shortage
unless the appropriator has gained prescriptive rights through the taking of nonsurplus
waters.” [Citation.]’
(Hi-Desert County Water Dist.
v.
Blue Skies Country Club, Inc., supra,
Although the Court of Appeal agreed with the Cardozo appellants in doubting the legal propriety of some aspects of the physical solution, the court did not agree that it should reverse the entire judgment without regard to the rights of the stipulating parties. The Court of Appeal explained, “While we share the Cardozo Appellants’ doubts as to the legal propriety of various aspects of the trial court’s physical solution, such as allowing transfer of water produced in accordance with riparian or overlying rights to nonriparian or nonoverlying lands, we do not need to consider those aspects of the physical solution. We see no reason why the parties cannot stipulate to a judgment incorporating the physical solution, nor do we see any reаson why a stipulated judgment entered into by a large number of water producers in the Mojave Basin should be totally reversed when the rights of the Cardozo Appellants can be fully protected by appropriate trial court orders on remand. [Citations.] ... [ID Thus, we protect the rights of the Cardozo Appellants while also respecting the rights of the stipulating parties to agree to a judgment which waives or alters their water rights in a manner which they believe to be in their best interest.”
Accordingly, the Court of Appeal reversed the trial court judgment against the Cardozo appellants, concluding that the trial court could not ignore their preexisting legal water rights. The court did recognize, however, that the stipulating parties could agree to be bound by the physical solution regardless of any water rights they may have had. At the same time, the Court of Appeal concluded: “[A]ny person or entity that produced more than a minimal amount of water in the 1986-1990 period was allowed to stipulate to the judgment, regardless of whether they had any provable water rights. Essentially, they could waive their existing water rights and agree to be bound by the terms of the stipulated judgment, so long as the rights of the nonstipulating parties were respected. [Citation.]” The Court of Appeal directed the trial court to exclude the Cardozo appellаnts from the judgment *1253 and to grant them injunctive relief protecting their overlying water rights to the current and prospective reasonable and beneficial need for water on their respective properties.
The Court of Appeal also reversed the trial court’s May 6, 1996, award of costs to the respondents as the prevailing parties against the Cardozo appellants. The court reasoned that because the Cardozo appellants should have been excluded from the judgment, respondents were no longer prevailing parties. It also directed the trial court to order a refund of any assessments the Cardozo appellants paid under the judgment pending appeal. 14 In all other respects, the court affirmed the trial court judgment as to those appellants.
Respondents principally disagree with the Court of Appeal’s conclusion that the trial court erred in ignoring the Cardozo appellants’ legal water rights in its equitable physical solution and judgment. They initially contend that the Court of Appeal’s resolution of the Cardozo appellants’ appeal gives those parties the right to extract an unlimited amount of water from the basin. We disagree. When the water is insufficient, overlying owners are limited to their “proportionate fair share of the total amount available based upon [their] reasonable need[s].”
(Tehachapi-Cummings County Water Dist.
v.
Armstrong
(1975)
Respondents also argue that overlying pumpers in an overdrafted basin should be required to file an action to adjudicate groundwater rights at the first indication of substantial growth in the area. However, overlying pumpers are not under an affirmative duty to adjudicate their groundwater rights, because they retain them by pumping.
{City of San Fernando, supra,
As overlying owners, the Cardozo appellants have the right to pump water from the ground underneath their respective lands for use on their lands. The overlying right is correlative and is therefore defined in relation to other overlying water right holders in the basin. In the event of water supply shortage, overlying users have priority over appropriative users.
{City of Pasadena, supra,
Likewise, no precedent exists for requiring an overlying user to file an action to protect its right to pump groundwater. The laches doctrine did not bar a plaintiff’s action, for example, even where defendant cities increased their pumping of an overdrafted water supply long before the action commenced, and development relied on the new water рroduction in the interval.
(Orange County Water District
v.
City of Riverside
(1959)
2. Jess Ranch
Although the Court of Appeal was careful not to endorse the physical solution or trial court judgment, it considered whether Jess Ranch had the right to be included in the physical solution on the same terms as some other stipulating parties. The trial court judgment specified free production allowances for the basin’s water producers. For most, this value was set at the producer’s maximum production during the years 1986-1990. Jess Ranch’s free production allowance was calculated differently, and it appealed, contending that it should be allowed to participate in the stipulated judgment on the same terms offered to other producers. Thus, the Jess Ranch appeal presents different issues than does that of the Cardozo appellants. Jess Ranch wishes to participate in the physical solution, but contends it has been prevented from doing so on the same terms offered the other water producers in the Mojave Basin. 15 The Court of Appeal agreed with Jess Ranch, and respondents seek reversal of that judgment.
Specifically, the trial court examined Jess Ranch’s water use and concluded it failed to establish that the use was reasonable and beneficial. During the period for which water production was reviewed, Jess Ranch had *1255 been involved in aquaculture (trout production). Aquaculture requires recirculating water through fishponds, and there is little consumptive use or surface evaporation. Leftover water flows out the other end of the ponds and is applied to irrigation. From a gross annual production of 18,625 acre-feet, the trial court estimated Jess Ranch’s total consumptive use at 7,480 acre-feet. The court used this value to set Jess Ranch’s free production allowance. The judgment allowed Jess Ranch to continue to produce recirculated water for aquaculture, but required it to discharge the water directly to the Mojave River after this use.
In our view, the trial court’s estimate of Jess Ranch’s free production allowance was based on reasonable assumptions. Although Jess Ranch practiced agriculture and aquaculture during the period used for calculating free production allowances, it is in the process of changing its property use to commercial and residential. The trial court estimated its future consumptive use at 1,300 acre-feet per year. It concluded that evidence did not establish the amount of land Jess Ranch had in agriculture. On the basis of expert testimony, the court multiplied an upward estimate, 600 acres, by 10 acre-feet per acre, with the product representing the agricultural water use. This product was added to the estimated amount of water lost from lake evaporation and the amounts needed for home use and greenbelt irrigation. The sum is Jess Ranch’s consumptive use. The court used this value as its free production allowance.
Jess Ranch was not the only party whose free production allowance was set equal to its estimated consumptive use. Twenty-five other parties, including the California Department of Fish and Game, maintained fish hatcheries or recreational lakes; their free production allowances were also set at the level of their consumptive use (total production less recirculated water). 16 Some other recreational lakes were given base production rights based on *1256 actual production, with the contingency that if they ever ceased production, they could only transfer their consumptive use portion of those rights. 17
The trial court exercised its equitable powers in approving the proposed physical solution and entering the judgment, and the Court of Appeal properly reviewed the judgment under the abuse of discretion standard of review.
(In re Marriage of Doud
(1986)
V. Disposition
We affirm the Court of Appeal judgment in all respects except that we reverse its judgment as to the Jess Ranch appeal. We therefore remand the matter to the Court of Appeal for further proceedings consistent with this conclusion.
George, C. J., Mosk, J., Kennard, J., Baxter, J., Brown, J., and Johnson, J., * concurred.
The petition of appellant Jess Ranch Water Company for a rehearing was denied October 25, 2000. Werdegar, J., did not participate therein.
Notes
The trial court used the phrase “physical solution” to refer to its equitable distribution of water use in relation to the many parties who stipulated to it.
Our decision in no way limits the administrative authority of the State Water Resources Control Board, nor does it affect the state board’s authority over surface waters.
A basin is defined as “[t]he tract of country drained by a river, and its tributaries.” (1 Oxford English Diet. (2d ed. 1989) p. 985, col. 1.)
The MWA has statutory authority to maintain a sufficient water supply. “The agency may do any and every act necessary to be done so that sufficient water may be available for any present or future beneficial use or uses of the lands or inhabitants of the agency, including, without limiting the generality of the foregoing, irrigation, domestic, fire protection, municipal, commercial, industrial, and recreational uses.” (Stats. 1959, ch. 2146, § 15, p. 5134; 72A West’s Ann. Wat.—Appen. (1999 ed.) § 97-15, subd. (a), p. 208.)
The term “water producers” is interchangeable with the term “water users,” and refers to entities that use water for any purpose, including, but not limited to, agricultural, aquacultural, domestic, recreational, industrial, and commercial uses.
Article X, section 2 of the California Constitution was originally adopted in 1928 as former article XIV, section 3. As adopted in 1976, it states, “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 view to the reasonable and beneficial use thereof in the interest of the people and for the public welfare. The right to water or to the use or flow of water in or from any natural stream or water course in this State is and shall be limited to such water as shall be reasonably required for the beneficial use to be served, and such right does not and shall not extend to the waste or unreasonable use or unreasonable method of use or unreasonable method of diversion of water. Riparian rights in a stream or water course attach to [sz'c], but to no more than so much of the flow thereof as may be required or used consistently with this section, for the purposes for which such lands are, or may be made adaptable, in view of such reasonable and beneficial uses; provided, however, that nothing herein contained shall be construed as depriving any riparian owner of the reasonable use of water of the stream to which the owner’s land is riparian under reasonable methods of diversion and use, or as depriving any appropriator of water to which the appropriator is lawfully entitled. This section shall be self-executing, and the Legislature may also enact laws in the furtherance of the policy in this section contained.” (Cal. Const., art. X, §2.)
Riparian rights are special rights to make use of water in a waterway adjoining the owner’s property. Overlying rights are special rights to use groundwater under the owner’s property.
(California Water Service Co. v. Edward Sidebotham & Son
(1964)
Manuel and Maria Cardozo, Niel DeVries, Virgil Gorman, Richard and Geneva Leyerly, Jerry Osterkamp, David and Elizabeth Daily, Richard and Elaine Fitzwater, Cornells J. Groen, Robert T. and Barbara T. Older, and Steve Older.
Other defendants and/or cross-defendants to this action are the City of Hesperia and Hesperia Water District, Apple Valley Ranchos Water Company, Victor Valley Water District, Rancho Las Flores Limited Partnership, Baldy Mesa Water District, City of Victor-ville, Lake Arrowhead Community Services District, Jean C. DeBlasis as trustee of the Kemper Campbell Ranch Trust, Southdown, Inc., Mitsubishi Cement Corporation, Silver Lakes Association, Alfredo Arguelles, Richard F. Barak, Charles Bell, Lillian Borgogno, John Thomas Carter, Marshall Chuang, George Ronald Dahlquist, Alan DeJong, Frank T. Duran, Trinidad L. Gaeta, Wayne D. Gesiriech, S. Harold Gold, Ciril Gomez Living Trust, Daniel C. Gray, Karen Gray, Nick Grill, Merlin Gulbransоn Excavating, Scott Hert, Melvin Hill, John Hosking, Jean Hosking, Larry Johnson, Hoon Ho Kim, H. Leslie Levin, J. Peter Lounsbury, Ken Luth, The 160 Newberry Ranch Limited Partnership, Meadowbrook Dairy, Newberry Ranch, George Parker, Ruth Parker, Trinidad Perez, Daniel Pettigrew, Howard Pettigrew, John S. Pettis, Joan C. Randolph, Bill Resseque, Charles Short, Robert A. Smith, *1240 Wayne A. Soppeland, Stanley Stewart, Patricia Stewart, Edward W. Stringer, Thomas Taylor, Carole Taylor, Dale Thomas, Ronald Thomas, James A. Thompson, Cornelius Van Diest, Van Leuwen Family Trust, Albert H. Vogler, Ykema Trust, Ykema Harmsen Dairy, Keith Young, and Margie Young.
A number of amicus curiae briefs have been filed with this court. The California Water Association filed in support of the City of Barstow; the Santa Clara Valley Water District filed in support of the MWA; Gary A. Ledford filed in support of Jess Ranch and the Cardozo appellants; the Pacific Legal Foundation, the Northern California Water Association, the Cities of Fairfield, Vacaville, and Vallejo, the City and County of San Francisco, the San Joaquin Tributaries Association, the San Joaquin River Exchange Contractors Water Authority, and the Westlands Water District filed in support of the Cardozo appellants. Additionally, the Main San Gabriel Basin Watermaster and the Raymond Basin Management Board filed an amicus curiae brief asking this court to reverse the Court of Appeal decision, and the California Farm Bureau Federatiоn et al. (the Western Growers Association, the Agricultural Council of California, the California Cattlemen’s Association, the Nisei Farmers League, the California Association of Winegrape Growers, the Grower-Shipper Vegetable Association, and the Rice Producers of California) and the Imperial Irrigation District filed in favor of affirming the Court of Appeal decision. Wayne K. Lemieux also filed an amicus curiae brief.
For an extensive discussion of California’s water law, from its adoption of the English common law riparian rights doctrine to the reasonable use limitation, see Attwater and Maride, Overview of California Water Rights and Water Quality Law (1988) 19 Pacific L.J. 957, and Shaw, The Development of the Law of Waters in the West (1922) 10 Cal. L.Rev. 443.
Pueblo water rights, along with riparian (including overlying) and appropriative rights, were the original species of water rights recognized in early California law.
(Pleasant Valley, supra,
Although it allocated priorities between states, the Supreme Court did not adjudicate the relative rights of appropriators
qua
appropriators: “The standard of an equitable apportionment requires an adaptation of the formula to the necessities of the particular situation. We may assume that the rights of the appropriators
inter se
may not be adjudicated in their absence. But any allocаtion between Wyoming and Nebraska, if it is to be fair and just, must reflect the priorities of appropriators in the two states.”
{Nebraska v. Wyoming, supra,
The Wright court refused to apply Long Valley, supra, 25 Cal.3d at page 350, to limit the scope of an overlying owner’s future unexercised groundwater right to a present appropriative use, because the comprehensive legislative scheme applicable to the adjudication of surface water rights and riparian rights is not applicable to groundwater. (Wright, supra, 174 Cal.App.3d at pp. 87-89.) Although we do not address the question here, Wright does suggest that, in theory at least, a trial court could apply the Long Valley riparian right principles to reduce a landowner’s future overlying water right use below a current but unreasonable or wasteful usage, as long as the trial court provided the owners with the same notice or due process protections afforded the riparian owners under the Water Code. (See Wat. Code, § 1200 et seq.; Wright, supra, 174 Cal.App.3d at pp. 87-89.) If Californians expect to harmonize water shortages with a fair allocation оf future use, courts should have some discretion to limit the future groundwater use of an overlying owner who has exercised the water right and to reduce to a reasonable level the amount the overlying user takes from an overdrafted basin.
The Court of Appeal did not find the trial court abused its discretion in requiring the Cardozo appellants to post an undertaking to guarantee the payment of the water assessments for which the judgment provided. It simply found that because the Cardozo appellants were not subject to the judgment, the trial court should order a refund of any assessments they had paid to date. We leave the resolution of any remaining issues involving the assessment question for the court on remand.
Prior to oral argument, we granted Jess Ranch’s motion to take judicial notice of the Fourth Annual Report of the Mojave Basin Area Watermaster, Water Year 1996-1997 (Apr. 1, 1998), the most recent annual report the Mojave Water Agency was required to file with the trial court in its capacity as a watermaster. (See
City of Sacramento
v.
State Water Resources Control Bd.
(1992)
Jess Ranch has highlighted a number of parties that reused water without having their free production allowances adjusted. For example, the Silver Lakes Association reused water on a golf course. These producers are distinguishable from the subgroup of hatcheries and recreational lakes discussed above. With the possible exception of the Hesperia Water District, the trial court assumed that the latter group recirculated unused water to the basin. The Hesperia Water District (Hesperia) maintained an aquaculture operation using 700 acre-feet per year, about 6 percent of its production allowance. It is not clear from the judgment or amended statement of decision why the trial court did not reduce Hesperia’s production allowance to reflect this usage. Certainly aquaculture represents a far smaller percent of Hesperia’s total water use (less than 6 percent) than is the case with Jess Ranch (over 60 percent). This possible exception does not disturb the conclusion that Jess Ranch was treated like the majority of other hatcheries and recreational lakes that recirculated water. This subgroup all returned well over 50 percent of the water they produced to the basin.
Jess Ranch also argues that if we reverse the Court of Appeal judgment in its favor, we must on remand require the trial court to consider its water priorities in determining its prior allocation under the physical solution and trial court judgment. But like the Court of Appeal, we find it unnecessary for the trial court to establish Jess Ranch’s water rights on remand as long as Jess Ranch seeks to participate in the physical solution. As the Court of Appeal observed, the physical solution “establishes a system of water regulation for the stipulating parties that is independent of their water rights, if any, under traditional application of riparian, overlying or appropriative priorities. Since Jess Ranch seeks to participate in the system established by the [physical solution], it must waive its existing water rights in order to do so. Thus, the question of whether it has existing rights is irrelevant for this purpose. If Jess Ranch desires to participate in the [physical solution], it must, for this purpose, refrain from asserting its existing water rights and it must accept all of the terms of the [physical solution] judgment that are applicable to all stipulating parties.”
Associate Justice of the Court of Appeal, Second Appellate District, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6, of the California Constitution.
