1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 E. Stewart Johnston (Bar #158651) 1363 West Main Street Santa Maria, CA 93458 (805) 680-9777 (Phone) stewartjohnston@mac.com Robert E. Dougherty (Bar # 41317) Covington & Crowe, LLP 1131 West Sixth Street Ontario, CA 91762 (909) 983-9393 (Phone) (909) 391-6762 (Fax) rdougherty@covcrowe.com 11 Richard Zimmer (Bar #107263) Clifford and Brown 1430 Truxtun Ave, Suite 900 Bakersfield, CA 93301-5230 (661) 322-6023 (Phone) (661) 322-3508 (Fax) rzimmer@clifford-brownlaw.com 12 Attorneys for Landowner Group Parties (LOG) 9 10 13 14 SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA COUNTY OF SANTA CLARA 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 SANTA MARIA VALLEY WATER CONSERVATION DISTRICT ) ) ) ) Plaintiff, ) vs. ) ) CITY OF SANTA MARIA, et al., ) ) Defendants ) ____________________________________ ) ) ) AND RELATED CROSS-ACTIONS ) CONSOLIDATED FOR ALL PURPOSES ) ) ) ) ) ) ) ) Santa Maria Groundwater Litigation Lead Case No. 1-97-CV770214 [Consolidated With Case Numbers: CV784900 CV784921 CV784926 CV785509 CV785511 CV785515 CV785522 CV785936 CV786971 CV787150 CV787151 CV787152 CV790597 CV790599 CV790803 CV 790741 San Luis Obispo County Superior Court CV790597 CV790599 CV790803] Assigned For All Purposes To Judge Komar LOG Reply to Purveyor Trial Brief For Phase 5 Date: July 17, 2006 Time: 9:00 AM 28 Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 1 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 2 3 4 5 INTRODUCTION The Public Water Producers ("Purveyors") assert, without appropriate legal or factual basis, that the landowner quiet title actions should be dismissed. The Purveyors claim that declaratory relief is the only proper cause of action to resolve this lawsuit. The only declaratory relief cause of action being asserted in this lawsuit is asserted by the 6 Purveyors. Nevertheless, the Purveyors wrongfully attempt to shift to the landowner 7 8 9 10 11 parties the burden of proving the declaratory relief claims the Purveyors are asserting. The Purveyors improperly claim that only Twitchell participants have the exclusive right to Twitchell yield. Apparently pursuant to their declaratory relief causes of action, the Purveyors 12 also claim that rights in the basins several supply sources should be quantified and 13 declared. However, they failed to present facts and expert testimony in this lawsuit to 14 prove the nature and extent of such rights. 15 The Purveyors seek imposition of a physical solution. However, they presented 16 no evidence to support injunctive relief such as a physical solution. Additionally, they 17 18 19 failed to properly recognize priority water rights. The Purveyors claim that a comprehensive judgment should be entered 20 adjudicating all interests of all water users in the basin. They assert that non-parties 21 have no rights. This lawsuit never was intended to include all water users in the Santa 22 Maria groundwater basin. Further, insufficient evidence was presented by the Purveyors 23 to comprehensively adjudicate all interests of all users and potential users in the basin. 24 Glaringly, the Purveyors have carefully selected and taken out of context 25 statements and dictum in groundwater case law which has been evolving over the past 26 one hundred years. They failed in any significant way to recognize and rely upon the 27 28 most recent articulation of California groundwater rights in City of Barstow v. Mojave Water Agency (2002) 23 C.4th 1224. (“Mojave”) This case reviewed voluminous prior Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 2 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 groundwater law and in great detail carefully explained the California priority water law 2 system, prescriptive rights, attempts to equitably apportion water rights and attempts by 3 4 stipulating parties to impose the terms and effects of their stipulation on non-stipulating parties. The Mojave case is very similar to the case before this Court in terms of what 5 the Purveyors are attempting to accomplish. Examination of the court’s decision in 6 7 8 Mojave clearly shows that the Purveyors’ proposed approach in this case is based upon a misconstruction of California groundwater law. 9 PURVEYORS’ ARGUMENTS 10 11 12 Claim That Declaratory Relief is the Appropriate Remedy and Quiet Title Claims Should 13 be Dismissed. 14 15 16 The Purveyors continue to assert that the Court must determine rights in this case by declaratory relief in lieu of quiet title. They suggest that quiet title is not appropriate unless it quiets title as against all the world. A simple comparison of 17 California Civil Code §732.010 (which provides for a limited quiet title action against 18 "persons having adverse claims to the title of the plaintiff against which determination is 19 20 21 sought" with §762.060(a) which provides for quiet title against "all persons unknown claiming any legal equitable right, title, state, lien or interest" proves their assertions are 22 without any merit. Where relief is sought pursuant to section 732.010, only the limited 23 parties against whom quiet title is requested must be joined. 24 The Purveyors cite Taliaferro v. Riddle (1958) 166 Cal.App.2d 124 in support of 25 their position. In that case, the plaintiffs sought a judgment against a person who was 26 not a named defendant. Clearly, the Talaferro plaintiff was pursuing quiet title under 27 what is now C.Civ.P. §762.060. LOG is seeking relief pursuant to section 732.010 28 Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 3 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 which requires limited joinder of parties. Accordingly, Talaferro is not applicable to this 2 case. 3 4 Quiet title has been used as against limited parties in the water context for over a hundred years. The Purveyors cannot force the landowners to claim more extensive 5 relief than that which they have requested, nor force them to prove what is not 6 7 8 9 necessary for the limited relief they have requested. The landowners have properly requested quiet title to pump and reasonably use groundwater on their properties as against the named cross-defendant parties. They are not seeking quantification of water 10 rights nor a complete adjudication of all rights as to all water users in the Santa Maria 11 basin. By contrast, the Purveyors are requesting more extensive relief based upon their 12 declaratory relief causes of action. They cannot properly force the landowners to prove 13 the declaratory relief actions being asserted by the Purveyors. The Purveyors had the 14 burden to prove their declaratory relief claims, if at all, in Phase 4. They failed to do so. 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 Claim That Landowners have Burden of Proving Self-Help. Review of the Mojave case reveals this assertion is without any merit. The Mojave Court states, "…… 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 non-surplus waters. Mojave 1242 The Mojave Court further states: "as against potential Purveyors, the Court noted that the five year period for establishing prescriptive rights to non-surplus water may be interrupted by the overlying owners' pumping of their non-surplus water." Mojave 1248 26 27 28 Additionally, the Mojave Court states: "however, overlying pumpers are not under an affirmative duty to adjudicate their groundwater rights, because they retain them by pumping." Mojave 1253 Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 4 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 2 On the same page the Court states: 3 5 "the Court of Appeal properly recognized that the Cardozo appellants retained their overlying rights by pumping and that no claim of prescription had been asserted to reduce those retained overlying rights." Mojave 1253 6 It is clear that pumping by landowners interrupts the five years of continuous 4 7 concurrent elements necessary to prove prescription. The Mojave case does not 8 discuss or sanction a so-called “quantified overlying right” created by the Purveyors. In 9 an attempt to invent this so-called right, the Purveyors reach back into cases which were 10 decided during the evolution of groundwater law. They take small statements and/or 11 dictum out of context in an attempt to create a correlative type quantified right which 12 13 14 15 would extinguish the common law overlying right and replace it with a new kind of right of their own invention. However, their approach is not consistent with the legal concept of self-help. Self-help is an alternate means of interrupting the continuous elements of 16 17 prescription whereby the true owner acts in such a way that nullifies the acts of the 18 trespassor without resort to the legal process. The self-help discussion by the Supreme 19 Court in Mojave does not support an alleged Quantified Overlying Right as proposed by 20 the Purveyors. Mojave affirms that self-help, as traditionally understood, interrupts the 21 running of an adverse possession claim and defeats the claim entirely. 22 23 24 LOG is claiming self-help in the traditional sense, as discussed in Mojave, and not in the 25 sense that self help as a form of mutual prescription was being discussed in the 26 ‘Pasadena case.. LOG is claiming self-help as it has traditionally operated in common 27 law. 28 Mojave replaces and or nullifies self-help, as traditionally understood in water cases, as Nothing suggests that the mutual prescription type of self help discussed in Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 5 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 an alternate to legal action to protect a water right. The Purveyors have cited no 2 authority indicating that traditional self-help in no longer operative. Moreover, mutual 3 4 prescription has been applied only in cases where elements of prescription have been stipulated to by all parties. No such stipulation exists in this case. Finally, mutual 5 prescription style self help cannot possibly operate either legally and or factually in this 6 7 case because no prescription can occur against public entities such as the Purveyors. 8 9 In an attempt to create a "quantified overlying right”, the Purveyors use dictum 10 and statements from case law which has evolved during the evolution of groundwater 11 law. They take this dictum out of context and attempt to create a "quantified overlying 12 right". Once again, the California Supreme Court's decision in Mojave does not support 13 this construction. Their attempt to create a quantified right begins with Pasadena, a 14 case that involved mutual prescription and an attempt by the Court to equitably apportion 15 rights based upon the theory that all parties were pumping during a period of overdraft. 16 17 18 In this case, mutual prescription does not apply since the Purveyors are public entities against which prescription cannot apply. Likewise, the Mojave Court very clearly 19 stated that equitable apportionment is inappropriate as between parties with different 20 priority rights under the California groundwater priority water right system. For example, 21 the Mojave Court states that 22 23 "…… no California Court has ever applied the doctrine of equitable apportionment to involve an intrastate water conflict". Mojave Note 12 24 25 26 27 The Mojave Court further states "case law simply does not support applying an equitable apportionment to water use claims unless all claimants have correlative rights; …” Mojave 1248 28 Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 6 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 Claim That Landowners Must Prove Reasonable and Beneficial Use 2 3 4 The Purveyors claim that the landowners must prove reasonable beneficial use of water. Article 10, Section 2 of the California Constitution clearly gives the Purveyors 5 the right to stop unreasonable use of water. However, there was no proof by the 6 Purveyors at any stage of these proceedings of any unreasonable use of water. Proof in 7 Phase 3 was to the contrary. Additionally, historical records and evidence before the 8 Court indicate that water used for farming, is a reasonable use of water. 9 Claim That Twitchell Participants Have Exclusive Rights to the Twitchell Yield. 10 This claim was factually and legally argued at length in Phase IV. One cannot 11 create a right that one does not have simply by entering into a contract with a third party 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 claiming to own someone else's rights. The Purveyors claim the Conservation District conveyed rights to the Twitchell yield to the stipulating parties. The Santa Maria Valley Water Conservation District pointed out the obvious stating recently "to the extent that the public water suppliers are asserting that the conservation district, by entering into the stipulation conveyed Twitchell project water rights to the Public Water Suppliers or other parties, the Conservation District simply desires to point out to the Court that it has no right to convey that which it does not own". Conservation District filing of March 14, 2006 This Court correctly concluded in Phase 4 that the Twitchell participants do not have the 21 exclusive right to Twitchell yield. 22 23 Claim That The Parties' Respective Rights in the Basin's Several Supplies Should be 24 Quantified and Declared. 25 The Purveyors clearly had the right, pursuant to their declaratory relief causes of 26 27 28 action, to request that rights to various water supplies should be quantified and declared. However, they had the burden of proof on these issues. They failed to prove these issues based on the Tulare standard of showing all water uses in the basin and Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 7 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 quantifying the same. Further, they have defined "native supply" in the same way they 2 did in their Stipulation which is inconsistent with case law. They failed to prove their right 3 4 to Twitchell yield and they failed to prove any net augmentation to the water supply caused by return flows in a time of overdraft. 5 All parties agree that the Purveyors would have a priority right to water imported 6 7 8 9 10 during a time of long term destructive overdraft. However, there was no proof in this case that water was imported during a period of long-term destructive overdraft. Further, net augmentation was not shown. Claim that Imposition of Physical Solution is Authorized. 11 As argued heretofore in great detail, a physical solution does not exist on its own 12 without a proper cause of action which supports the basis for this type of injunctive relief. 13 No such cause of action has been proved. Even if an appropriate cause of action was 14 proved, a physical solution only is appropriate where there is a shortage of water and 15 where the physical solution is being used in an attempt to rectify the shortage. Most 16 17 importantly, the physical solution cannot change the priorities of the water rights holders. In this case, the Purveyors are in essence attempting to create correlative equal 18 19 water rights as between the Purveyors and the landowners. The quantified overlying 20 right is an attempt to do this. Further, they suggest that a physical solution should 21 equitably apportion water rights as between the water users in the Santa Maria water 22 basin. 23 The facts in the present case are very similar to those in the Mojave case. In 24 Mojave, various parties stipulated to a physical solution, as some of the parties did in 25 this case. As in Mojave, the Purveyors in this case now are attempting to impose the 26 27 28 liabilities and duties of that physical solution (and not the benefits) on the non-stipulating parties in this case. The California Supreme Court in the Mojave case clearly articulated that this is not appropriate. Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 8 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 "We agree that, within limits, a trial court may use its equitable powers to implement a physical solution provided they protect the one enjoying paramount rights …… The Court observed that a physical solution is generally a practical remedy that does not affect vested rights". Mojave 1249-1250 (citations omitted) 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 simply cannot ignore the priority rights of the parties asserting them. In ordering a physical solution, therefore, a Court may neither change priorities among the water rights holders nor eliminate vested rights in applying the solution without first considering them in a relation to the reasonable use doctrine. Respondents unpersuasively argue for imposition of an equitable physical solution that disregards priority legal water rights. Mojave 1250 (citations omitted) Respondents simply failed to produce compelling authority for their argument that courts can avoid prioritizing water rights and instead allocate water based entirely on equitable principles. Mojave 1251 12 Claim that the Judgment Should Adjudicate all Interests of All Users 13 The stipulating parties entered into a contract with one another setting forth the 14 15 16 nature and extent of their groundwater rights as between each other. In doing so, they define terms to be used for purposes of enforcement of their contract, which do not 17 parallel common law groundwater rights as set forth in case law. The parties are free to 18 do this. As the Court noted, 19 20 21 "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." Mojave 1252 22 23 24 25 26 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 non-stipulating parties were respected. The Court of Appeal directed the trial court to exclude the Cardozo appellants from the judgment 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" Mojave 1252-1253 27 The landowners in this case are not parties to the Stipulation and not boud by the terms 28 thereof. The landowners in this case, as in Mojave, are requesting that this Court quiet Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 9 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 title to their appurtenant right to pump and reasonably use groundwater on the properties 2 in rem before the Court and to grant them injunctive relief protecting their overlying 3 4 water rights to the current and prospective reasonable and beneficial need for water on their respective properties. 5 Based upon the foregoing, it is clear that parties can contractually alter their 6 7 8 9 10 groundwater rights by entering into a contract with one another. However, it is equally clear that the contract provisions cannot be asserted against non-stipulating or noncontracting parties. The judgment in this case should not blur the lines between the rights arising out 11 of the Settlement Stipulation with the rights of non-stipulating parties arising out of the 12 common law. The stipulating parties will be governed by the definitions, terms and 13 interpretation of the Stipulation to which they agreed. The non-stipulating parties will be 14 governed by California groundwater law and the rulings based thereon by this Court. 15 The Stipulation is not a Restatement of California groundwater law and cannot, and 16 17 18 should not, be used in any manner either by incorporation into any judgment or otherwise to set forth rights of non-stipulating parties. The judgment in this case, to the 19 extent that it mentions the Stipulation at all, should simply set forth that the rights of the 20 non-stipulating parties are governed by contract (stipulation) between them and that the 21 rights of the non-stipulating parties are governed by the Court's judgment. 22 23 Claim That Rights, If Any, of Landowners Who have Failed to Demonstrate Self Help 24 During The Prescriptive Period Are Junior 25 The Purveyors request pursuant to their declaratory relief claims that all rights of 26 27 28 all water users in the SMWB be declared. However, clearly this relief cannot be given since all water users in the SMWB are not, and never were, parties to this action. Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 10 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 2 3 4 The Purveyors further assert that unexercised overlying rights during the prescriptive period should be deprioritized. This requested relief would have the effect of extinguishing past unexercised overlying rights. The Purveyors point out that the court in Wright reversed a lower court finding that exercised overlying rights had a priority over 5 unexercised rights.. The Wright court found that the trial court improperly limited the 6 7 8 9 unexercised overlying rights of landowners without notice. The Purveyors cite no authority for their claim that unexercised overlying rights are lost during a period of prescription. The purveyors refer to footnote 13 in the Mojave decision. This footnote 10 raises the issue of whether a court could limit future overlying water rights below 11 unreasonable or wasteful usage. The footnote makes clear that the Mojave court did not 12 address this question. Nevertheless, the footnote does not raise the question of 13 whether past unexercised overlying rights would be lost during a period of prescription 14 as proposed by the Purveyors in this case. Accordingly, the footnote is meaningless and 15 certainly not authority for the claim made herein by the Purveyors. Finally, there has 16 17 18 19 been no proof in this case of alleged unreasonable use or waste The Purveyors Attempt to Replace The California Priority Water Law System With A Deprioritization Scheme 20 In adverse possession, as envisioned by purveyors, any adverse 21 22 23 24 25 possession, no matter how small, has the effect of substituting common law rights with a ‘de-prioritized right’ the scope of which is based upon pumping during an alleged period of overdraft.. The purveyors cite no authority for this approach.. Correctly analyzed under current case law, adverse possession gives the party 26 proving the adverse possession a priority right in a time of shortage to pump the amount 27 of the adversely possessed water which is superior to the right of the party against 28 whom the adverse possession is proved. Adverse possession does not change the Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 11 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 priority right of the party against whom the adverse possession is proved. For example, 2 a landowner against whom an adverse possession water right is proved, continues to 3 4 have a priority right to pump. However, in a time of shortage, the party obtaining the adverse possession right can limit pumping by the party against whom the right was 5 proved, in the amount adversely possessed. The priority right of the overlying 6 7 8 landowner against whom the adverse possession claim was proved, remains intact in all other respects including priority as to amounts in excess of the adverse possession 9 amount, priority as against other inferior rights holders and with regard to unexercised 10 overlying rights. The correlative right as between overlying lamdowners also remains 11 intact. No rights are “deprioritized”. 12 13 The purveyors have failed to cite any authority for their claim that rights are deprioritized and current case law does not support this theory. For example, as noted 14 above, the California Supreme Court in Mojave clearly explained the California priority 15 water law system and confirmed that the overlying right remains intact, subject to the 16 17 18 amount of the prescription. Accepting the Purveyor approach would if carried to the logical conclusion, 19 extinguish common law rights of both landowners as well as purveyors. For example, in 20 the first of the three possible prescriptive periods discussed by the court, Golden State 21 offered evidence of pumping in a very small amount and Santa Maria was unable to 22 establish any pumping. Golden State’s prescriptive right would be only as to that small 23 amount and Santa Maria would gain no prescriptive right. The law is clear that 24 prescription operates against all senior rights whether overlying or appropriative. 25 Therefore Golden State’s prescription would operate against Santa Maria whose rights 26 27 28 would be ‘de-prioritized’ in the same way and to the same extent that landowner rights are allegedly deprioritized. Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 12 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 2 3 4 Pumpers could avoid de-prioritization only by metering their wells and pumping as much as possible whether the water was needed or not in order to maintain a priority right to pump in the greatest amount possible. This obviously would result in an unconstitutional waste of water under Article 2, Section X of the California Constitution. 5 Further, Santa Maria has no well records for the first alleged prescriptive period which 6 7 8 9 would result in Santa Maria having no priority rights even as against later in time appropriators since it would have a ‘de-prioritized’ right. All parties in the SMWB who could not prove the amount of their pumping, since most do not meter their wells, would 10 loose any priority they otherwise would have under California priority system law. 11 Clearly this is inconsistent with California water law. 12 13 CONCLUSION The non-stipulating landowners are entitled to a judgment on their quiet title 14 actions. These landowners have proved their status as overlying landowners including 15 the appurtenant right to pump and use groundwater reasonably on their properties. As a 16 17 18 19 20 result, they are entitled to "… injunctive relief protecting their overlying water rights to the current and prospective reasonable and beneficial need for water on their respective properties" as articulated in Mojave. Likewise, the Purveyors have a right to judgment on their declaratory relief 21 claims. As noted extensively in this brief and in previous submissions to this Court, the 22 landowners agree that the Purveyors have a right to import water during a time of 23 shortage and long term destructive overdraft and to have priority to use that imported 24 water during that period of shortage. If shortage develops in the future, a Purveyor will 25 need to prove the existence of the shortage, the importation of water during that time of 26 27 28 shortage and the net augmentation to the water supply as a result of that Purveyor’s importation of water. Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 13 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF 1 The landowners contend that the Purveyors have failed to prove any other 2 declaratory relief claim and accordingly have proved no basis for imposition of a physical 3 4 solution. However, this Court may nevertheless retain jurisdiction to resolve future disputes between the Purveyors and the stipulating landowners and disputes between 5 the Purveyors and the non-stipulating landowners. 6 7 8 9 10 The Purveyors have misconstrued California case law as most recently articulated by our California Supreme Court in the Mojave decision. The causes of action they have asserted have not been proved and the relief they are requesting is not appropriate under California law. 11 12 13 Respectfully submitted, 14 July 17, 2006 15 16 Richard Zimmer 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 Stewart Johnston, Esq. Santa Maria, CA 14 LOG REPLY TO PURVEYOR TRIAL BRIEF