UNITED STATES v. DISTRICT COURT IN AND FOR WATER DIVISION NO. 5 ET AL.
No. 812
Supreme Court of the United States
Argued March 2, 1971—Decided March 24, 1971
401 U.S. 527
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, though joining in the opinion, filed a concurring statement, post, p. 530.
Deputy Assistant Attorney General Kiechel argued the cause for the United States. With him on the briefs were Solicitor General Griswold, Assistant Attorney General Kashiwa, Samuel Huntington, and Edmund B. Clark.
MR. JUSTICE DOUGLAS delivered the opinion of the Court.
This is a companion case to the Eagle County case, ante, p. 520, and involves an action brought under a different state statute1 in the District Court of Colorado for Water Division No. 5.2 That court was given responsibility for water rights determinations affecting “all lands in the state of Colorado in the drainage basins of the Colorado river and all of its tributaries arising within Colorado, with the exception of the Gunnison river,”3 which includes the area of the Eagle River system.
Notice was served on the United States pursuant to
The area covered by this suit includes vastly more extensive water rights than those involved in the Eagle County case. The Forest Service administers four separate national forests in the area: the White River, Arapaho, Routt, and Grand Mesa-Uncompahgre. The Department of the Interior, through the Bureau of Reclamation, the National Park Service, the Bureau of Land Management, the Bureau of Mines, and the Bureau of
The major issue—the scope of the consent-to-be-sued provision in
It is emphasized, however, that the procedures under the new Act are much more burdensome on the Government than they were under the older Act. It is pointed out that the new statute contemplates monthly proceedings before a water referee on water rights applications. These proceedings, it is argued, do not constitute general adjudications of water rights because all the water users and all water rights on a stream system are not involved in the referee‘s determinations. The only water rights considered in the proceeding are those for which an application has been filed within a particular month. It is also said that the Act makes all water rights confirmed under the new procedure junior to those previously awarded.
It is argued from those premises that the proceeding does not constitute a general adjudication which
Affirmed.
MR. JUSTICE HARLAN, concurring.*
I join in the opinions of the Court in these cases, explicitly disclaiming, however, the intimation of any view as to the existence and scope of the so-called “reserved water rights” of the United States, either in general or in the particular situations here involved.
*This statement applies also to No. 87, United States v. District Court in and for the County of Eagle et al., ante, p. 520.
