Lead Opinion
This is an appeal from an order of the district court which affirmed the director of the Department of Water Resources denial of appellant Jenkins’ application to transfer the point of diversion of his decreed water right. We affirm.
Jenkins is the owner of 280 acres of land near the town of Kilgore in Clark County, Idaho. Appurtenant to that property are two separate water rights, one for 2.4 cfs of water from Cottonwood Creek, and the second for 3.2 cfs of water from Ching Creek. Those water rights were adjudicated by decree of federal court in 1930. Both creeks flow southerly in a generally parallel
In 1978, Jenkins filed an application with the Department of Water Resources, seeking to transfer the point of diversion for his Ching Creek water right to the location of a recently built headgate. At that time an examination of the records indicated that the decreed point of diversion for Jenkins’ Cottonwood right was not located on any stream. Jenkins filed an amended application to transfer the point of diversion of the Cottonwood right and locate that point of diversion on Cottonwood Creek.
Several water users on both Ching and Cottonwood Creeks protested these proposed transfers, and the district water master recommended that the Department deny the transfer of the Cottonwood right. A hearing was held thereon at which all parties were represented by counsel. Thereafter the director of the Department issued an order granting thе transfer of the point of diversion of the Ching Creek right but denying the transfer of the point of diversion of the Cottonwood Creek right. The director found that no water had been diverted from Cottonwood Creek for use on Jenkins’ land for the previous 18 years. He also found that waters of both Ching and Cottonwood Creeks were overappropriаted. He concluded that to allow a resumption of use of the Cottonwood right would represent an enlargement of the use over the prior 18 years, that the water users would be injured thereby, and that I.C. § 42-222 authorized denial of an application in such circumstances. The director relied upon that portion of I.C. § 42-222 which provides fоr the forfeiture of a water right not used for five years.
From that decision of the director, Jenkins appealed to the district court. At the outset Jenkins contended that the Department lacked jurisdiction to determine an abandonment or forfeiture and objected to the district court making such a determination on appeal from a decision of the Department. The district court reserved judgment on that issue and held a trial de novo.
At trial much of the testimony centered on the physical nature of the channels connecting Cottonwood Creek with Ching Creek with appellant’s testimony indicating that water regularly flowed from Cottonwood to Ching Creek, and protestants’ testimony indicating that the physical characteristics of the channel indicated that they carried only spring run off and that the only regular flow of water in the area during the summer occurred in two channels of another creek, tributary to Ching Creek, known as Little Creek.
The trial court found that water from Cottonwood Creek only flowed to Ching Creek irregularly during the spring run off and that any such contribution was not the result of a physical diversion. The court also found that Jenkins took only 3.2 cfs of water from Ching Creek which was the amount he was entitled to under his Ching Creek right, and therefore he received no water in excess of his Ching Creek right, which could be construed as Cottonwood right water. The court also found that there was insufficient water in the two creeks to meet the then present demand. The court held that the director of the Department had jurisdiction to determine the issues of abandonment or forfeiture as a part of his determination of injury to other water rights, and that even if the director was without that jurisdiction, the district court hearing the case de novo did have the necessary jurisdiction to make that determination. The court affirmed the decision of the director of the Department in all respects.
On appeal here Jenkins reasserts his contention that neither the Department nor
“While the question of abandonment as such is to be settled in some other appropriate proceeding (Twin Falls Canal Co. v. Shippen,46 Ida. 787 ,271 Pac. 578 ) in an action involving a change in thе place of diversion, the reasons why the change will or will not injure other appropriators may be considered, as indicated by the latter portion of the case cited.”
“We have rather parenthetically held that the question of abandonment it [sic] not pertinent in a proceeding of this kind. Twin Falls Canal Co. v. Shippen,46 Idaho 787 ,271 P. 578 ; First Security Bank v. State,49 Idaho 740 ,291 P. 1064 ; Harris v. Chapman,51 Idaho 283 ,5 P.2d 733 . Foregoing such рronouncement, to avoid a multiplicity of suits, and since, though respondent timely objected, this issue was presented and passed on, we meet and decide the point without circumlocution.”
Application of Boyer,
“The director of the department of water resourcеs shall examine all the evidence and available information and shall approve the change in whole, or in part, or upon conditions, provided no other water rights are injured thereby and the change does not constitute an enlargement in use of the original right.”
Based on the foregoing decisions and statute, we conсlude that the director of the Department of Water Resources has jurisdiction to determine the question of abandonment and forfeiture and such is required as a preliminary step to performance of his statutory duty in determining whether or not the proposed transfer would injure other water rights. While ordinarily abandonment and forfeiture are to be determined in a separate proceeding, it is clear that when a water right is sought to be transferred and protestors allege that it has been abandoned or forfeited, and that to allow resumption of that right would cause some injury, a determination of abandonment or forfeiture is necessary for the performance of his powers of determining injury. The director is statutorily required to examine all evidence of whether the proposed transfer will injure other water rights or constitute an enlargement of the original right, and evidence which demonstrates that the right sought to be transferred has been abandoned or forfeited, is probative as to whеther that transfer would injure other water rights. If a water right has indeed been lost through abandonment or forfeiture, the right to use that water reverts to the state and is subject to further
Jenkins also argues that I.C. § 42-222(1) speaks of an “enlargement in use of the original right”, and that he is not seeking to enlarge the usе over the decreed amount. While we may concede arguendo that Jenkins is not attempting to enlarge the original use of his decreed right, the statute provides that the director “shall approve” the transfer “provided” two conditions are met, i.e., that no other water rights are injured, and that the original use is not enlarged. Hence if either of the two conditions arе not met, there is no authorization to approve the proposed transfer.
Since we hold that the director of the Department had the necessary jurisdiction to determine questions of abandonment and forfeiture, it is clear that on appeal from that decision the district court acquired jurisdiction over the entire сontroversy. Beecher v. Cassia Creek Irrigation Co.,
Jenkins next asserts that the findings of the district court are insufficient upon which to base a conclusion that his Cottonwood Creek water right was lost through abandonment or forfeiture. We note initially that care must be taken in this type of proceeding to distinguish between abandonment and forfeiture. Each is a related conceрt but each carries with it distinctive requirements. In the past this Court has used the terms interchangeably, resulting in some confusion. That confusion was compounded by a former statute, now repealed, 1932 I.C.A. § 41-216 (1940 Supp.), which stated that water rights would be “lost and abandoned” by five years of failure to apply them to beneficial uses. It was not until 1944 that this Court clearly pointed out the distinction between the two terms in Carrington v. Crandall,
“Abandonment is a common law doctrine involving the occurrence of (1) an intent to abandon and (2) an actual relinquishment or surrender of the water right. Forfeiture, on the other hand, is predicated upon the statutory declaration that all rights to use water are lost where the appropriator fails to make beneficial use of the water for a continuous five year period. I.C. § 42-222(2).”
Intent to abandon must be proved by clear and convincing evidence of un
We then proceed to a determination of whether the findings are sufficient to support a determination of a statutory forfeiture. Jenkins argues that the court below found no point of diversion on Cottonwood Creek for the 2.4 cfs of decreed water, and such was erroneous in view of the decree of the federal court. That decree was an unreported decision of the federal district court in Suave v. Abbot, decided in 1930. That decree establishes that there had been a diversion on Cottonwood Creek and that the water was beneficially used upon the land to which it is appurtenant up to the time of the decree. Morgan v. Udy,
Statutory forfeiture is based upon the legislative deсlaration in I.C. § 42-222(2) that water rights may be lost if they are not applied to a beneficial use for a period of five continuous years. Gilbert v. Smith,
Forfeitures are not favored, and clear and convincing proof is required to support a forfeiture. Gilbert v. Smith,
In abandonment and forfeiture cases, this Court has appliеd the rule that when there is substantial but conflicting evidence to support the findings of the trial court, those findings will not be disturbed on appeal. Carrington v. Crandall,
We have examined Jenkins’ remaining assignments of error and find them to be without merit.
Accordingly, we affirm the order of the district court, which in turn affirmed the decision of the Director of the Department of Water Resourсes which denied the application for the transfer of the point of diversion of Jenkins’ Cottonwood water right. Costs to respondents.
Concurrence Opinion
concurring specially:
I concur in the action of the Court in affirming the district court’s denial of the change in the decreed point of diversion for Jenkins’ Cottonwood right. However, much of what the majority says I cannot agree with in this case, and, therefore, concur only in the result reached by the majority opinion.
