Case Information
*1 In the United States Court of Federal Claims Nоs. 1-591L; 7-194C; 7-19401C; 7-19402C; 7-19403C; 7-19404C; 7-19405C; 7-19406C; 7-19407C; 7-19408C; 7-19409C; 7-19410C; 7-19411C; 7-19412C; 7-19413C; 7-19414C; 7-19415C; 7-19416C; 7-19417C; 7-19418C; 7-19419C; 7-19420C
Filed: December 21, 2016 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * *
KLAMATH IRRIGATION, et al., and * JOHN ANDERSON FARMS, INC., * et al., *
Plaintiffs, * *
v. * Water Rights; Physical vs. Regulatory * UNITED STATES, Takings; Endangered Species Act; * Motions in Limine. v. * * Defendant, * *
PACIFIC COAST FEDERATION OF *
FISHERMEN’S ASSOCIATIONS,
*
Defendant-Intervenor. * *
* * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * Nancie G. Marzulla , Marzulla Law, LLC, Washington, DC for plaintiffs. With her was Roger G. Marzulla , Marzulla Law, LLC. Of counsel was William M. Ganong , Special Counsel, Klamath Irrigation District, Klamath Falls, OR.
Kristine S. Tardiff , Trial Attorney, Natural Resources Section, Environment and Natural Resources Division, United States Department of Justice, Concord, NH, for defendant. With her was John C. Cruden , Assistant Attorney General, Environment and Natural Resources Division, and Stephen M. MacFarlane and Edward C. Thomas , Natural Resources Section, Environment and Natural Resources Division, United States Department of Justice.
Todd D. True , Earthjustice, Seattle, WA for defendant-intervenor.
O P I N I O N
HORN, J.
FINDINGS OF FACT
Before the court are the parties’ cross-motions in limine regarding the proper legal
framework for analyzing plaintiffs’ takings claims in the above-captioned cases. Plaintiffs in the above-captioned cases are individual landowners, irrigation districts and similar government agencies, and private corporations in Oregon and California who allege that the defendant, acting through the United States Bureau of Reclamation, effected a taking of their alleged water rights in 2001. In the motions presently before the court, defendant argues that plaintiffs’ takings claims should be analyzed as regulatory takings, while plaintiffs argue that their claims should be analyzed as physical takings.
Plaintiffs are users of water in the Klamath River Basin. “Located in southern
Oregon and northern California, the Klamath River Basin is the drainage basin of the
Klamath River, the Lost River, and the Link River, as well as various other rivers.” Klamath
Irr. Dist. v. United States, 635 F.3d 505, 508 (Fed. Cir. 2011). The Klamath Irrigation
Project (the Klamath Project), an irrigation project straddling the southern Oregon and
northern California borders, supplies water to hundreds of farms, comprising
approximately 200,000 acres of agricultural land, including those in the Klamath River
Basin. The Klamath Project is managed and operated by the United States Bureau of
Reclamation. Water is generally diverted and delivered by the Klamath Project pursuant
to state law (to the extent it is not inconsistent with federal law) and pursuant to perpetual
repayment contracts between the Bureau of Reclamation and irrigation districts. See
Klamath Irr. Dist. v. United States,
“In light of its dual purposes of serving agricultural uses and providing for the needs
of wildlife, the Klamath Project is subject to the requirements of the Endangered Species
Act.
See
Pub.L. No. 93–205, 87 Stat. 884 (1973) (codified, as amended, at 16 U.S.C. §
1531 et seq.) (the ‘ESA’).” Klamath Irr. Dist. v. United States,
“For decades, Klamath Basin landowners generally received as much water for
irrigation as they needed. In severe drought years, they simply received somewhat less.”
Klamath Irr. Dist. v. United States, 67 Fed. Cl. at 512. As the Bureau of Reclamation
developed its operating plan for the 2001 water year, however, water supply forecasts
indicated that it would be a “critically dry” year due to drought conditions. See Kandra v.
United States, 145 F. Supp. 2d 1192, 1198 (D. Or. 2001). In response, the Bureau of
Reclamation performed a biological assessment of the Klamath Project’s operations on
the Lost River sucker and the shortnose sucker, and a similar assessment regarding the
SONCC coho salmon. See Klamath Irrigation Dist. v. United States,
On April 5, 2001, the FWS, acting in furtherance of its statutory duties under the Endangered Species Act, issued a final biological opinion concluding that the proposed 2001 operation plan for the Klamath Project threatened the continued existence of the shortnose and Lost River sucker fish. The next day, April 6, 2001, the NMFS issued a final biological opinion concluding that the proposed operation plan threatened the SONCC coho salmon. As required by the Endangered Species Aсt, 16 U.S.C. §1536(b)(3)(A) (2012), the biological opinions of both agencies included “reasonable and prudent alternatives” to address the threat to the three fish species. FWS’s reasonable and prudent alternative required, among other actions, that the Bureau of Reclamation “not divert water from UKL [Upper Klamath Lake] for irrigation purposes if surface elevations are anticipated to go below [certain minimum levels], regardless of inflow year *4 type.” The NMFS’s reasonable and prudent alternative required that the Bureau of Reclamation operate the Klamath Project in such a way so as to provide certain levels of “minimum IGD [Iron Gate Dam] water releases” into the Klamath River between April and September 2001. [1]
On April 6, 2001, the Bureau of Reclamation issued a revised operation plan that
incorporated the reasonable and prudent alternatives proposed by the FWS and the
NMFS. With regard to deliveries to Klamath Project water users, the 2001 operation plan
stated that “[d]ue to the requirements of the biological opinions and the ESA and the
current drought conditions, only limited deliveries of Project water will be made for
irrigation.” On the same day, the Department of the Interior issued a news release stating
that based on the FWS and NMFS opinions “and the requirements of [the] Endangered
Species Act, the Bureau of Reclamation announced today that no water will be available
from Upper Klamath Lake to supply the farmers of the Klamath Project.” Ultimately, the
delivery of irrigation water from Upper Klamath Lake to the plaintiffs in the above-
captioned cases was totally terminated until July 2001, when the Bureau of Reclamation
was able to release approximately 70,000 acre-feet of water, an amount that plaintiffs
allege came too late in the growing season to allow them to grow crops. Klamath Irrigation
Dist. v. United States
,
The procedural history of the above-captioned cases is long and complicated. The
plaintiffs in Klamath Irrigation, et al. v. United States, case number 1-591L, a mixture of
irrigation districts, corporations, and individual landowners, filed thеir initial complaint on
October 11, 2001, an amended complaint on March 24, 2003, and a second amended
complaint on January 31, 2005. The case was initially assigned to Judge Diane G. Sypolt,
but was re-assigned to Judge Francis Allegra on December 9, 2004. In their second
[1]
“In addition, at this time, the Bureau was subject to a preliminary injunction order issued
by the U.S. District Court for the Northern District of California in the
Pacific Coast
[
Federation of Fishermen's Associations v. United States Bureau of Reclamation,
138
F.Supp.2d 1228 (N.D. Cal. 2001)] case.” Klamath Irr. Dist. v. United States, 635 F.3d at
509. “The order barred the delivery of Klamath Project water for irrigation purposes when
water flow was below certain minimum levels, until the Bureau complied with ESA
consultation requirements.” Id. (citing Pac. Coast Fed'n of Fishermen's Ass'ns v. United
States Bureau of Reclamation
,
1. Assuming that Klamath Basin water for the Klamath Reclamation Project “may be deemed to have been appropriated by the United States” pursuant to Oregon General Laws, Chapter 228, § 2 (1905), does that statute preclude irrigation districts and landowners from acquiring a beneficial or equitable property interest in the water right acquired by the United States? 2. In light of the statute, do the landowners who receive water from the Klamath Basin Reclamation Project and put the water to beneficial use have a beneficial or equitable property interest appurtenant to their land in the water right acquired by the United States, and do the irrigation districts that receive water from the Klamath Basin Reclamation Project have a beneficial or equitable property interest in the water right acquired by the United States?
3. With respect to surface water rights where appropriation was initiated under Oregon law prior to February 24, 1909, and where such rights are not within any previously adjudicated area of the Klamath Basin, does Oregon State law recognize any property interest, whether legal or equitable, in the use of Klamath Basin water that is not subject to adjudication in the Klamath Basin Adjudication?
Klamath Irrigation Dist. v. United States,
On remand, the Court of Federal Claims should proceed as follows: First, it should determine, for purposes of plaintiffs' takings and Compact claims, whether plaintiffs have asserted cognizable property interests. . . . To the extent the Court of Federal Claims determines that one or more plaintiffs have asserted cognizable property interests, it then should determine whether, as far as the takings and Compact claims are concerned, those interests were taken or impaired. That determination will turn on existing takings law.
Klamath Irr. Dist. v. United States,
2. Under Oregon law, whether plaintiffs acquired an equitable or beneficial property interest in the water right turns on three factors: whether plaintiffs put the water to beneficial use with the result that it became appurtenant to their land, whether the United States acquired the water right for plaintiffs' use and benefit, and, if it did, whether the contractual agreements between the United States and plaintiffs somehow have altered that relationship. In this case, the first two factors suggest that plaintiffs acquired a beneficial or equitable property interest in the water right to which the United States claims legal title, but we cannot provide a definitive answer to the court's second question because all the agreements between the parties are not before us.
3. To the extent that plaintiffs assert only an equitable or beneficial property interest in the water right to which the United States claims legal title in the Klamath Basin adjudication, plaintiffs are not “claimants” who must appear in that adjudication or lose the right. As a general rule, equitable or beneficial property interests in a water right to which someone else claims legal title are not subject to determination in a state water rights adjudication.
Klamath Irrigation Dist v. United States,
Fed. Cl. 688 (2013). On June 3, 2014, Judge Allegra, at plaintiffs’ request, dismissed all remaining plaintiffs’ contract claims, without prejudice. The plaintiffs in John Anderson Farms, et al., v. United States, case numbers 7-
194C, 7-19401C, 7-19402C, 7-19403C, 7-19404C, 7-19405C, 7-19406C, 7-19407C, 7- 19408C, 7-19409C, 7-19410C, 7-19411C, 7-19412C, 7-19413C, 7-19414C, 7-19415C, 7-19416C, 7-19417C, 7-19418C, 7-19419C, 7-19420C, who are all individual landowners, filed their original complaint on March 22, 2007. The cases were initially assigned to Judge Allegra. On August 2, 2007, Judge Allegra stayed the cases pending resolution of the appeal in Klamath Irrigation, et al. v. United States. The stay was lifted on August 25, 2011 and an amended complaint was filed on October 4, 2011. In their amended complaint, the John Anderson Farms plaintiffs alleged that the government’s actions constituted breach of contracts between the government and the plaintiffs and a taking of plaintiffs’ property, in the form of their water rights, without compensation in violation of the Fifth Amendment to the United States Constitution. On March 13, 2014, Judge Allegra granted plaintiffs’ motion to voluntarily dismiss their breach of contract claims with prejudicе.
On June 25, 2015, after significant discovery had already been taken, the above- captioned cases were re-assigned to the undersigned judge, and are scheduled to go to trial in January 2017. Defendant has filed motions in limine in both of the above captioned cases, in which it requests that the court find that “plaintiffs’ takings claims in both cases should be analyzed as regulatory takings, rather than physical takings.” Intervenor- defendant Pacific Coast Federation of Fishermen’s Associations (PCFFA) also filed a memoranda in support of defendant’s motions. Plaintiffs have filed oppositions to defendant’s motions and cross-motions in which they request that the court deny defendant’s motions in limine and, instead, find that “the proper legal framework for analyzing Klamath’s water rights takings claim is the per se or physical taking test” in both cases. Defendant filed replies in support of its motion and oppositions to plaintiffs’ cross- motions, and PCFFA filed a reply in support of defendant’s motions in limine. Thereafter, plaintiffs filed a reply in support of their cross-motions.
DISCUSSION
The Takings Clause of the Fifth Amendment to the Unitеd States Constitution
provides in pertinent part: “nor shall private property be taken for public use without just
compensation.” U.S. Const. amend. V. The purpose of this Fifth Amendment provision
is to prevent the government from “‘forcing some people alone to bear public burdens
which, in all fairness and justice, should be borne by the public as a whole.’” Palazzolo v.
Rhode Island,
Therefore, “a claim for just compensation under the Takings Clause must be
brought to the Court of Federal Claims in the first instance, unless Congress has
withdrawn the Tucker Act grаnt of jurisdiction in the relevant statute.” E. Enters. v. Apfel,
To succeed under the Fifth Amendment Takings Clause, a plaintiff must show that
the government took a private property interest for public use without just compensation.
See Adams v. United States, 391 F.3d 1212, 1218 (Fed. Cir. 2004), cert. denied, 546
U.S. 811 (2005); Arbelaez v. United States, 94 Fed. Cl. 753, 762 (2010); Gahagan v.
United States,
The United States Court of Appeals for the Federal Circuit has established a two-
part test to determine whether government actions amount to a taking of private property
under the Fifth Amendment. See Klamath Irr. Dist. v. United States,
As further summarized by the United States Court of Appeals for the Federal
Circuit, in a trilogy of cases, International Paper Company v. United States,
The petitioner’s right was to the use of the water; and when all the water that it used was withdrawn from the petitioner's mill and turned elsewhere by government requisition for the production of power it is hard to see what more the Government could do to take the use.
Id. at 407. In Gerlach Live Stock Company, the plaintiffs were holders of riparian rights along
the San Joaquin River who alleged that they were deprived of these rights by the
construction of the Friant Dam in California. Sеe United States v. Gerlach Live Stock Co.,
In the above-captioned cases, defendant asks that this court hold that plaintiffs’
takings claims should be analyzed as regulatory, rather than physical, takings. In support
of this position, defendant characterizes plaintiffs’ claims as being “based on the
restriction on the use of a natural resource—water—resulting from government
regulation.” Defendant states that precedential cases have “consistently applied” a
regulatory takings analysis to restrictions on the use or development of property, including
natural resources. In particular, defendant points to the United States Supreme Court’s
decisions in Penn Central Transportation Company v. City of New York,
Plaintiffs ask this court to reject defendant’s motion and, instead, hold that plaintiffs’ takings claims should be analyzed as physical takings. In support of this position, plaintiffs characterize the government actions at issue as “t[aking] physical control” of the water in Upper Klamath Lake to which plaintiffs held a beneficial right of use, “divert[ing]” some of that water into the Klamath River to support the SONCC coho salmon, and “impound[ing]” the rest of the water in Upper Klamath Lake in order to support the Lost River and shortnose sucker fish. Plaintiffs reject the cases cited by defendant, arguing that defendant has failed to cite “a single case holding that water rights takings cases should be analyzed under a regulatory taking test.” (emphasis omitted). According to plaintiffs, the Supreme Court has, in fact, “uniformly” analyzed takings of water rights as physical, rather than regulatоry takings in its water rights cases, International Paper Company v. United States, Dugan v. Rank, and United States v. Gerlach Live Stock Company. Plaintiffs argues that the facts in the present cases are closely analogous to those the *12 Supreme Court analyzed as physical takings in Dugan v. Rank, and United States v. Gerlach Live Stock Company, because those cases also involved the government “impounding water” and “refusing to release it to irrigators.” Plaintiffs further argue that Casitas Municipal Water District v. United States is “controlling” based on the allegedly similar facts in the present cases. The Federal Circuit’s decision in Casitas Municipal Water District v. United States is a binding precedent on this court, which, as discussed above, interpreted and implemented several, relevant, binding decisions issued by the United States Supreme Court. Casitas concerned an irrigation project in California, the Ventura River Project, which combined water from two sources, the Coyote Creek and the Ventura River, into a reservoir, Lake Casitas. See Casitas Municipal Water District v. United States, 543 F.3d at 1280. The water in the Ventura River was diverted from the river by the Robles Diversion Dam and carried into Lake Casitas via the Robles-Casitas Canal. See id. For the purpose of the Casitas appeal, the government conceded that the plaintiff, the Casitas Municipal Water District (Casitas), had “a right both to divert 107,800 acre-feet of water” from the Ventura River Project and “to use 28,500 acre-feet of such diverted water.” Id. at 1288. In 2003, in order to comply with its obligations under the Endangered Species Act to protect the endangered West Coast steelhead trout, the Bureau of Reclamation issued a directive ordering Casitas to: “(1) construct a fish ladder facility . . . located at the intersection of the Ventura River, Robles Diversion Dam, and the Robles–Casitas Canal; and (2) divert water from the Project to the fish ladder, resulting in a permanent loss to Casitas of a certain amount of water per year.” Id. at 1282. Casitas complied with this directive, but subsequently filed suit against the government alleging that the government’s actions constituted a compensable taking of its water rights. See id. The government in Casitas argued that its actions were distinguishable from those the Supreme Court had found to be physical takings in International Paper Company, Gerlach Live Stock Company, and Dugan because “it did not seize, appropriate, divert, or impound any water, but merely required water to be left in the stream.” Id. at 1290. The Federal Circuit rejected this argument, finding that:
the government did not merely require some water to remain in stream, but instead actively caused the physical diversion of water away from the Robles–Casitas Canal—after the water had left the Ventura River and was in the Robles–Casitas Canal—and towards the fish ladder, thus reducing Casitas’ water supply.
Id. at 1291-92. In coming to this conclusion, the court specifically noted that the operation of fish canal involved closing an “overshot gate” located in the Robles–Casitas Canal, which diverted water out of the canal and into the fish ladder. Id. at 1291. The court also noted that “the appropriate reference point in time to determine whether the United States caused a physical diversion” was not, as the government argued, “before the construction of the [Ventura River] Project but instead the status quo before the fish ladder was operational,” at which point water had been flowing down the Casitas-Robles Canal “since the late 1950s.” Id. at 1292 n.13. The court also rejected the government’s argument that its actions were distinguishable from the Supreme Court’s trilogy of water rights takings *13 cases because it had not appropriated “the water for its own use or for use by a third party,” finding that there was “little doubt” that the purpose of the government’s actions, “the preservation of the habitat of an endangered species,” constituted a government and public use of Casitas’s water. Id. at 1292. Based on these determinations, the Federal Circuit held that “[t]he government requirement that Casitas build the fish ladder and divert water to it should be analyzed under the physical takings rubric.” Id. at 1296. The facts in the present cases are very similar to those in Casitas. Although there
remain outstanding questions regarding plaintiffs’ water rights in the cases presently
before the court, to the extent plaintiffs held such rights, all parties agree that plaintiffs’
rights would have been to use water from the Klamath Project. Thus, as in Casitas, in
Klamath Irrigation and John Anderson Farms, the government has taken an action that
had the effect of preventing plaintiffs from enjoying the right to use water provided by an
irrigation project, to the extent they held such rights. As in Casitas, the plaintiffs in the
present cases had been able to use these water rights more or less fully for years prior
to the government’s action. Further, in both Casitas and the present cases, the
government’s action was implemented by a similar physical means, in Casitas, by closing
an “overshot gate” to divert water out of the canal used by the plaintiffs, see id. at 1291,
and, in the present cases, by using the Klamath Project works to prevent water from
travelling out of Upper Klamath Lake and the Klamath River and into project canals used
by the plaintiffs. Finally, the water ultimately was used for the same purpose in each of
the cases, to preserve the habitat of certain fish and meet the government’s obligations
under the Endangered Species Act. In Casitas, the Federal Circuit stated plainly that
“there is little doubt that the preservation of the habitat of an endangered species is for
government and third party use—the public—which serves a public purpose.” Id. at 1292
(citing Kelo v. City of New London,
[t]he petitioner's right was to the use of the water; and when all the water
that it used was withdrawn from the petitioner's mill and turned elsewhere
by government requisition for the production of power it is hard to see what
more the Government could do to take the use,
the Federal Circuit stated “[s]imilar to the petitioner in
International Paper
, Casitas' right
was to the use of the water, and its water was withdrawn from the Robles–Casitas Canal
and turned elsewhere (to the fish ladder) by the government.” Id. at 1292 (emphasis
*14
added) (quoting Int’l Paper Co. v. United States,
States in support of its argument that the Federal Circuit has rejected attempts to
characterize restrictions involving compliance with the Endangered Species Act as a
physical taking. In Boise Cascade, the government, after determining that logging on
plaintiff’s land could harm the endangered spotted owl, sought and received an injunction
barring plaintiff from logging on its property without first receiving an incidental take permit
constitute an appropriation of property for which compensation should be made.’” (quoting
Peabody v. United States, 231 U.S. 530, 538 (1913); and Portsmouth Co. v. United
States,
similar to those in Boise Cascade. In Seiber, the plaintiff owned a parcel that was a habitat of the endangered spotted owl and was denied an incidental take permit by the United [6] The Federal Circuit has described the purpose of an incidental take permit as follows: The Endangered Species Act (“ESA”), 16 U.S.C. §§ 1531–1544 (2000), prohibits the “take” of an endangered species, id. § 1538(a)(1)(B), which includes harassing, harming, pursuing, wounding or killing such an animal, id. § 1532(19). . . . The ESA also provides a permitting mechanism to allow the “incidental take” of an endangered or threatened species in certain circumstances, authorizing “any taking otherwise prohibited . . . if such taking is incidental to, and not the purpose of, the carrying out of an otherwise lawful activity.” 16 U.S.C. § 1539(a)(1)(B).
Seiber v. United States,
States Fish and Wildlife Service authorizing plaintiff to log this land. See Seiber v. United
States,
Finally, both defendant and third party intervenor Pacific Coast Federation of Fisherman’s Associations also cite to Hudson County Water Company v. McCarter, 209 U.S. 349 (1908), for support, with defendant arguing that the case “supports the position of the United States on multiple grounds” and PCFFA arguing that the case contradicts plaintiffs’ argument that the Supreme Court has never treated the taking of a water right as a regulatory taking. In Hudson County, the state of New Jersey passed a law prohibiting the transportation of fresh water from any lakes or rivers in New Jersey into any other state. See id. at 353. The defendant had been found to own riparian rights to a river in New Jersey by a lower court and contracted with New York City to furnish water drawn from that river to Staten Island. See id. at 353-54. After the plaintiff sought to enjoin the defendant from being allowed to draw water, defendant challenged the New Jersey law as unconstitutional including on the grounds that the New Jersey law took property without due process of law. See id. at 354. After noting that “[t]he problems of irrigation have no place here,” Justice Holmes wrote for the Court that “it appears to us that few public interests are more obvious, indisputable, and independent of particular theory than the interest of the public of a state to maintain the rivers that are wholly within it substantially undiminished, except by such drafts upon them as the guardian of the public welfare may permit for the purpose of turning them to a more perfect use.” Id. at 356. According to Justice Holmes such a “public interest” is “fundamental” and “the private property of riparian proprietors cannot be supposed to have deeper roots.” Id. As such, Justice Holmes found “it quite beyond any rational view of riparian rights, that an agreement, of no matter what private owners, could sanction the diversion of an important stream outside the boundaries of the state in which it flows.” Id. The Supreme Court, therefore, upheld the constitutionality of the law at issue. See id. at 358. Justice Holmes’s conclusion that the law did not effect a taking was, thus, premised on his understanding that the contractor, as a holder of riparian water rights, never actually held the right allegedly taken, which would have been “quite beyond any rational view of riparian rights.” Id. at 356. As such, Hudson County concerns the extent of riparian water rights, rather than whether the government’s actions depriving parties of such water rights should be *18 analyzed as a physical or regulatory taking, and is, thus, inapplicable to the present motions. [8]
CONCLUSION
For the reasons discussed above, the United States Court of Appeals for the
Federal Circuit’s holding in Casitas Municipal Water District v. United States, 543 F.3d
1276, and the United States Supreme Court decisions on which Casitas relies, are
controlling in the cases presently before the сourt. As in Casitas, the government’s actions
in the present cases “should be analyzed under the physical takings rubric.” Casitas Mun.
Water Dist. v. United States,
IT IS SO ORDERED.
s/Marian Blank Horn MARIAN BLANK HORN Judge
Notes
[2] During late June and early July 2001, there were also three unauthorized releases of water from Upper Klamath Lake. In each of the three instances trespassers entered onto federal property at the Link River Dam, opened one of the gates at the head works of the dam, and released water into a Klamath Project canal. After the first incident, the Bureau of Reclamation requested that the Klamath Irrigation District cease the diversion, as Reclamation believed the Irrigation District was required to do under its contract with Reclamation. After the Klamath Irrigation District refused to do so, Reclamation employees closed the gate to the canal. Reclamation employees again shut the gates after the next two releases, and then, ultimately, disabled the gates to prevent future unauthorized releases.
[4] The Oregon Supreme Court answered the Federal Circuit’s three certified questions as follows: 1. The 1905 Oregon act did not preclude plaintiffs from acquiring an equitable or beneficial property interest in a water right to which the United
[5] Defendant attempts to distinguish Gerlach Live Stock Company and Dugan on the grounds that, unlike in the present cases, the landowners in both of those cases held riparian water rights and the government attempted and failed to either purchase plaintiffs’ rights or enter into some sort of an agreement with them. These alleged distinctions, however, cannot lessen the applicability of these two cases, as neither the nature of the alleged water rights, nor the government’s prior attempts to obtain those rights was dispositive for the Supreme Court’s holdings in Gerlach Live Stock Company or Dugan, which instead focused on the government’s appropriation of private water rights for its own use withоut compensation. See United States v. Gerlach Live Stock Co., 339 U.S. at 752-53 (“No reason appears why those who get the waters should be spared from making whole those from whom they are taken. Public interest requires appropriation; it does not require expropriation.”); Dugan v. Rank, 372 U.S. at 625-26 (“[W]hen the Government acted here ‘with the purpose and effect of subordinating’ the respondents' water rights to the Project's uses ‘whenever it saw fit,’ ‘with the result of depriving the owner of its profitable use, (there was) the imposition of such a servitude (as) would
[7] “The Court in
Loretto
held that a permanent physical occupation of property, no matter
how slight, is a per se taking.” Boise Cascade Corp. v. United States,
[8] For the first time in its response and reply to plaintiffs’ cross-motions in limine, defendant
requested, that, “in the event that the Court finds it necessary to determine the nature and
scope of the Plaintiffs’ alleged property rights in order to determine the proper analytical
framework . . . briefing on that contested, threshold legal question be scheduled.” The
court does not find it necessаry to first determine the nature and scope of plaintiffs’ alleged
property rights in order to rule on the cross-motions in limine currently before the court.
In determining whether a physical or a regulatory taking has occurred, “our focus should
primarily be on the character of the government action.” Casitas Mun. Water Dist. v.
United States,
