The City not only asserts the reasonableness of its own water use, it has cross-complained against other entities who also draw water from the Ventura River watershed, alleging that their water use is unreasonable. The first amended cross-complaint (Cross-Complaint) against seven named cross-defendants and hundreds of "Doe" cross-defendants (collectively Cross-Defendants) seeks to curtail these other entities' water use affecting the flow of the Ventura River. The question before this court is whether the trial court abused its discretion in striking the City's Cross-Complaint. We hold that it did, because the water that the Cross-Complaint seeks to prevent Cross-Defendants from using is effectively the same water that Channelkeeper
FACTS AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
The Ventura River watershed drains a fan-shaped area of about 220 square miles. The river has five reaches and several major tributaries. In Reach 4, about six miles upstream from the mouth of the river, the City diverts water with a subsurface dam and extracts groundwater that would otherwise flow into the river. Flow in any particular reach of the river is affected by the amount of water withdrawn from the river, the amount of water in underlying groundwater basins, and seasonal variations. During the summer dry seasons from 2001 to 2008, flows declined to less than 1 cubic foot per second (cfs) in Reach 4, and also in Reach 3 just below it. This flow level impairs the river's use as habitat, including for endangered, spawning, and young fish.
The Ventura River and its tributaries have been designated as critical habitat for the remaining population of Southern California steelhead trout, an endangered species whose numbers in the Ventura River had plummeted by the 1990s. In 2007, the National Marine Fisheries Service (NMFS) issued a Draft Biological Opinion finding that, to avoid jeopardizing the steelhead's continued existence, flows near Reach 4 of the Ventura River should not fall below 11 to 12 cfs. In 2013, the City conducted its own study, which
These are the allegations in the Complaint for Declaratory Relief and Verified Petition for Writ of Mandate (Complaint) that Channelkeeper filed on September 19, 2014. The Complaint's first count, the only one against the City, seeks a declaratory judgment that the City's use of Reach 4 is unreasonable from "April through October, and after water levels in the River fall below levels determined to be critical minimum levels required to protect steelhead." Counts two through five are directed against the State Water Resources Control Board (Board) for failing to limit the City's use of the Ventura River, which Channelkeeper alleges is a dereliction of the Board's mandatory duties under the California Constitution, section 275 of the Water Code, and the public trust doctrine. Against the Board, the Complaint seeks a writ of mandate directing it to analyze the City's use of the river, but against the City the Complaint seeks only declaratory relief.
The City answered the Complaint, denying that its use of waters from the Ventura River was unreasonable, then cross-complained. The Cross-Complaint brings into the case as Cross-Defendants numerous named and Doe entities who also extract water from the Ventura River, its tributaries, a lake filled with water diverted from the river, and the watershed's groundwater basins. The Cross-Complaint alleges that these water sources are all hydrologically connected, so that the Cross-Defendants' water use diminishes the surface and/or subsurface water flow of the Ventura River. The Cross-Complaint also alleges that the Cross-Defendants' water use is not reasonable or beneficial, and violates the public trust doctrine. Count four seeks
Channelkeeper moved to strike the Cross-Complaint, a motion the trial court granted on September 18, 2015. The court found, "the reasonable use
The City timely appealed, and on December 14, 2015, this court denied a motion to dismiss the appeal. We determined that the "September 18, 2015 order striking the First Amended Cross-Complaint is a final judgment," and that to the extent any portion of it is non-appealable, we would treat it as a writ petition.
DISCUSSION
I. Legal Background
We begin with a brief review of California water law and of applicable principles of civil procedure.
A. California's Dual System of Water Rights
California's water belongs to the people of this state, but the right to use surface water may be acquired, either pursuant to the doctrine of riparian rights or by appropriation. ( United States v. State Water Resources Control Bd . (1986)
Before 1914, one who sought to acquire water rights by appropriation had simply to divert and use that water to perfect a claim. Since 1914, a
Similar principles govern rights to water in an underground basin. First priority goes to the landowner whose property overlies the ground water. These "overlying rights" are analogous to riparian rights in that they are based on ownership of adjoining land, and they confer priority. ( City of Barstow v. Mojave Water Agency (2000)
Whatever their derivation, "once rights to use water are acquired, they become vested property rights." ( United States , supra ,
B. The Rule of Reasonableness and the Public Trust Doctrine
Superimposed on the dual system for defining water rights are two limiting principles. First is the rule of reasonableness: "the overriding constitutional limitation that the water be used as reasonably required for the beneficial use to be served." ( United States , supra ,
The rule of reasonableness was added to the California Constitution by amendment in 1928. ( Light v. State Water Resources Control Bd. (2014)
Beneficial uses are categories of water use. For Reaches 3 and 4 of the Ventura River, the designated beneficial uses are: "municipal and domestic supply, industrial service supply, agricultural supply, ground water recharge, freshwater replenishment, warm freshwater habitat, cold freshwater habitat, wildlife habitat, rare, threatened, or endangered species, migration of aquatic organisms, spawning, reproduction,
What constitutes reasonable use is case-specific. "California courts have never defined ... what constitutes an unreasonable use of water, perhaps because the reasonableness of any particular use depends largely on the circumstances." ( Light , supra ,
Another important limitation on water rights in California derives from the public trust doctrine, an ancient legal principle that California courts have used to protect environmental values. (See Natl. Audubon Society v. Superior Court (1983)
But public trust interests, like other interests in water use in California, are not absolute. "As a matter of practical necessity the state may have to approve
C. Permissive Cross-Complaints
The law allows a defendant in a civil case to cross-complain against entities not originally parties to the action if there is a sufficient subject matter connection between the action and the cross-complaint. Specifically, a defendant "may file a cross-complaint setting forth" any cause of action that either "(1) arises out of the same transaction, occurrence, or series of transactions or occurrences as the cause brought against him or (2) asserts a claim, right, or interest in the property or controversy which is the subject of the cause brought against him." ( Code Civ. Proc., § 428.10, subd. (b) (hereafter Code Civ. Proc., section 428.10(b) ).) The term "transaction" embraces not just commercial contracts "but also whatever may be done by one person which affects another's rights and out of which a cause of action may arise." ( Kittle Mfg. Co. v. Speer (1934)
Both parties rely on Hanes v. Coffee (1931)
D. Standard of Review
The parties agree on the standard of review that governs this case. "An order striking a pleading [citation] is reviewed for abuse of discretion." ( CLD Constr., Inc. v. City of San Ramon (2004)
II. The Complaint and Cross-Complaint Concern a Common Transaction or Occurrence: The Diversion of So Much Water from the Ventura River as to Endanger the Fish .
The trial court struck the Cross-Complaint because the court concluded "the only transaction at issue in Plaintiff's complaint is whether or not the
The starting point in characterizing the "transaction" at issue in the Complaint must be the facts that give rise to the cause of action. ( Hanes v. Coffee , supra ,
Because of how Channelkeeper has framed its Complaint, the court cannot
Instead, the transaction must be defined to include any diversion and pumping of water that leads to allegedly insufficient flow in Reaches 3 and 4 of the river in summer months. This "transaction" is the wrong-doing of which Channelkeeper complains, generalized to include all entities potentially responsible for it.
An analogy to concurrent tortfeasors shows that the law requires this generalizing step, both in defining the "transaction" and in deciding whether the Cross-Complaint is proper. Suppose an accident victim brings a suit alleging negligence against a defendant that is partially responsible for the accident, and the defendant files a counterclaim against another entity, alleging that the counter-defendant, too, is partially responsible for the accident. The transaction at issue would be "the accident," not just the original defendant's contribution to the accident. (See Todhunter v. Smith (1934)
Channelkeeper protests that it "should be able to control [its] case by proceeding against the party or parties whom [it] feels to be most clearly liable." (
Although its procedural posture is different, El Dorado also supports the City's right to cross-complain against other water users. Plaintiff water users in El Dorado had rights dating back to 1927 to appropriate water from the South Fork of the American River. ( EI Dorado , supra ,
In affirming the trial court's decision favoring plaintiff water users, the appellate court discusses the rule of priority, the rule of reason, and the manner in which these two principles interact. ( El Dorado , supra , 142 Cal.App.4th at pp. 961-966,
In order to avoid the same error in this case, the City must be allowed to proceed with its Cross-Complaint. Whether or to what extent the Cross-Defendants' water rights are junior to the City's is not apparent from the pleadings, but Channelkeeper has alleged that the City's right to divert water from the river was first put in use in 1870 so its rights may be senior to some of Cross-Defendants' rights. On the logic of El Dorado , the City is entitled to bring
Channelkeeper discounts the significance of El Dorado and the rule of priority on the ground that this action is for declaratory judgment only. Channelkeeper asserts that in the current case the trial court need not "determine how much water the City can reasonably divert." That issue awaits a "subsequent process" initiated by the Board if the court declares the City's current usage unreasonable, Channelkeeper argues, and only then will "the City's priority compared to other users of the River" become relevant. The problem with this argument is that even if the trial court does not need to quantify precisely "how much water the City can reasonably divert," the entire premise of the current action is that the City cannot divert as much water as it has been diverting. If Channelkeeper succeeds in its declaratory judgment action against the City, it will be because the trial court determines that the City must take less water-or must leave more water in the stream-than in recent years has been its practice. A declaration to that effect,
Channelkeeper argues that reasonableness should be assessed on what it calls "an objective, water-right-by-water-right" basis, meaning without considering the demands and priorities of other water users in a stream system. Channelkeeper cites cases where reasonableness was, in fact, decided with respect to only one water user, but the cases are distinguishable. Tulare and Joslin are Channelkeeper's lead cases, and the unreasonableness in both of those cases consisted of a specific wasteful use of water. No such wasteful practice is alleged here.
Channelkeeper also relies on Forni and Light , two cases in which courts considered the reasonableness of farmers diverting water to spray grapes for frost protection. But these, too, involved allegations of unreasonableness apart from the mere volume of water consumed, and in any event the Board's enforcement efforts in these cases were not aimed at only one water user. In Forni the Board sought to prevent growers from simultaneously diverting water directly from the Napa River when cold weather approached, which the court agreed was an unreasonable use of water in the context of that case. ( Forni , supra , 54 Cal.App.3d at pp. 750-751,
In sum, because the Complaint alleges unreasonableness based solely on the resulting flow in the river channel, the court cannot render even
III. The Cross-Complaint Asserts Vested Water Rights Which Are the Subject of the Complaint, Seeking to Prevent the Cross-Defendants from Interfering with Them .
A separate and independent basis for reversing the trial court's decision striking the Cross-Complaint lies in the "property" prong of Code of Civil Procedure section 428.10(b)'s test. As an alternative to the "same transaction" test, the statute allows the City to cross-complain with a cause of action that "asserts a claim, right, or interest in the property or controversy which is the subject of the cause brought against" it. ( Code Civ. Proc., § 428.10(b).) The trial court found that Channelkeeper's Complaint "does not implicate a property right" since only "unreasonable use of the river is at issue." We disagree.
The property to which the City asserts a claim in its Cross-Complaint is the same water that the City seeks to pump and divert from the river. The Cross-Complaint asserts that the "City is exercising vested water rights" in a manner that "is reasonable and beneficial," and it seeks to limit the Cross-Defendants' water use to a
Thus, the "property" prong of Code of Civil Procedure section 428.10(b) gives the City the right to file its Cross-Complaint, and for this reason, too, the trial court erred in striking it. In determining whether the volume of water the City is diverting and pumping is reasonable, the court must be able to consider the demands on the watershed being made by other water users, at least where other water users take pursuant to rights that are junior to the City's or in amounts that are unreasonable. ( El Dorado , supra ,
DISPOSITION
The judgment against the City on its Cross-Complaint, in the form of the trial court's September 18, 2015 order striking the First Amended Cross-Complaint, is reversed. The case is remanded for further proceedings, and costs on appeal are awarded to the City.
We concur:
Kline, P.J.
Richman, J.
Notes
Judge of the Alameda County Superior Court, assigned by the Chief Justice pursuant to article VI, section 6 of the California Constitution.
