In these cases involving two federal reclamation projects in
California, the Supreme Court of California refused to confirm
certain contracts entered into between the United States, on the
one hand, and two state irrigation districts and a state water
agency, on the other hand, because it found them invalid on several
grounds. Taking the position that § 8 of the Reclamation Act
of 1902 required the application of state law, it held that §
5, providing generally that no right to the use of water shall be
sold for lands in excess of 160 acres in single ownership, was
inapplicable because in conflict with state law, and that,
therefore, the excess lands provisions of the contracts were
invalid. It also held that the provisions pursuant to § 9 of
the Reclamation Project Act of 1939 for repayment to the United
States of part of the funds expended on the construction and
operation of reclamation works were invalid on the grounds that no
provision was made for repayment of a stated amount within 40 years
or for transfer of title to the distribution systems to the
respective districts after payment thereof, and that no permanent
right to receive water was vested in the respective districts and
their members. On review by this Court,
Held: the judgments are reversed. Pp.
357 U. S.
277-300.
1. This Court does not have jurisdiction on appeal, because the
decisions were based on the construction of a federal statute, not
on a holding that federal statutes were unconstitutional. However,
treating the papers as petitions for certiorari, 28 U.S.C. §
2103, certiorari is granted. Pp.
357 U. S. 279,
357 U. S.
289-290.
2. The judgments did not rest upon an adequate state ground,
because state law was invoked only by the interpretation the Court
gave to § 8 of the Reclamation Act of 1902. P.
357 U. S.
290.
Page 357 U. S. 276
3. Congress did not intend that § 8 of the Reclamation Act
of 1902 would, under the application of state law, make the excess
lands provision of § 5 inapplicable to the Central Valley
Project. Pp.
357 U. S.
290-294.
4. Section 5 of the Reclamation Act of 1902 and §46 of the
Omnibus Adjustment Act of 1926, providing generally that no right
to the use of water shall be sold for lands in excess of 160 acres
in single ownership, are not invalid under the Fifth and Fourteenth
Amendments, because they do not amount to a taking
of vested property rights in land or irrigation district water
without just compensation and they do not deny equal protection of
the laws by discriminating unjustly between small and large
landowners. Pp. 29297.
5. In view of the rations and provisions incorporated in the
amendments contained in the Act of July 2, 1956, there is no room
for objection to the contracts on the ground that they infer that
the water users are not entitled to water rights beyond the 40-year
terms of the contracts, or that the contracts do not make clear
that the districts and landowners become free of indebtedness upon
repayment of their shares of the cost of the project. Pp.
357 U. S.
297-298.
6. The contracts were not invalid because of failure to recite a
definite sum as being the total amount due for the water supply
facilities. P.
357 U. S.
298.
7. The contracts were not invalid because of the absence of any
provision to the effect that the districts would obtain title to
the distribution systems when their obligations therefor had been
totally discharged. Pp.
357 U. S.
298-300.
47 Cal. 2d
597,
681, 695, 699,
306 P.2d 824, 886, 894, 875, reversed.
Page 357 U. S. 277
MR. JUSTICE CLARK delivered the opinion of the Court.
These four cases present issues of basic importance to the
federal reclamation laws. The Supreme Court of California has
refused to confirm certain contracts entered into between two state
irrigation districts and a water agency on the one hand, and the
United States, on the other, [
Footnote 1] finding the contracts invalid on several
grounds.
Ivanhoe Irrigation District v. All Parties and
Persons, 47 Cal. 2d
597, 306 P.2d 824;
Santa Barbara County Water Agency v. All
Persons and Parties, 47 Cal. 2d
699, 306 P.2d 875;
Madera Irrigation District v. All
Persons, 47 Cal. 2d
681, 306 P.2d 886;
Albonico v. Madera Irrigation
District, 47 Cal. 2d
695, 306 P.2d 894. Specifically involved are parts of two
statutory enactments: Section 5 of the Reclamation Act of 1902,
[
Footnote 2] providing
Page 357 U. S. 278
generally that no right to the use of water shall be sold for
lands in excess of 160 acres in single ownership, and § 9 of
the Reclamation Project Act of 1939, [
Footnote 3] providing,
inter alia, for the
repayment to the United States of funds expended on the
construction of reclamation works, and authorizing the Secretary of
the Interior to make contracts to furnish reclamation water at
appropriate rates for irrigation. The opinion of the Supreme Court
of California turned on an interpretation of a third provision,
§ 8 of the Reclamation Act of 1902. [
Footnote 4]
Page 357 U. S. 279
That section provides that the Act is not to be construed as
interfering with state laws "relating to the control,
appropriation, use, or distribution of water used in irrigation."
It further provides that, in administering the Act, the Secretary
of the Interior "shall proceed in conformity with such laws. . . ."
The California court held that this provision required the
application of California law, and, finding the provisions of the
contracts contrary thereto, it refused confirmation. The water
districts and agency involved, joined by the State of California,
appealed, and we postponed the question of jurisdiction to the
merits. 355 U.S. 803 (1957). We have concluded, for reasons
hereinafter set forth, that we have no jurisdiction over the
appeals. Treating the papers as petitions for certiorari, 28 U.S.C.
§ 2103, we grant certiorari. On the merits, we deem the
contracts controlled by federal law, and valid as against the
objections made.
I
. THE BACKGROUND OF THE LITIGATION
This litigation involves a dispute between landowners, on the
one hand, and the combined State and Federal Governments, on the
other. As the Attorney General of California points out, there is
no clash here between the United States and the State of
California. Quite to the contrary, the United States and the
various state agencies, with commendable faith and steadfastness to
one another, have embarked upon and nearly completed a most
complicated joint venture known as the Central Valley Project.
There have, at times, been differences, but these are inevitable in
the everyday implementation of
Page 357 U. S. 280
such a giant undertaking. On the whole, the parties have kept
the ultimate goal firmly centered in their joint vision.
Central Valley is the largest single undertaking yet embarked
upon under the federal reclamation program. It was born in the
minds of far-seeing Californians in their endeavor to bring to that
State's parched acres a water supply sufficiently permanent to
transform them into veritable gardens for the benefit of mankind.
Failing in its efforts to finance such a giant undertaking,
California, almost a quarter of a century ago, petitioned the
United States to join in the enterprise. The Congress approved and
adopted the project, pursuant to repeated requests of the State,
and thus far has expended nearly half a billion dollars. The total
cost is estimated to be as high as a billion dollars.
The saga of this project is fascinating. California has two
somewhat parallel ranges of mountains running south from its
northern border for two-thirds the length of the State. Known as
the Sierra Nevada on the east and the Coast Range on the west, they
converge on the north at Mount Shasta, and are joined by the
Tehachapi Mountains on the south, thereby forming the Central
Valley Basin. The basin extends almost 500 miles between these
ranges, from Shasta to Bakersfield, and has an average width of 120
miles, including more than a third of the area of California. The
main valley floor, comprising about a third of the basin area, is
an alluvial plain some 400 miles long and averaging 45 miles in
width. The Sacramento River, with headwaters near Mount Shasta,
flows south into San Francisco Bay, draining the northern portion
of the basin. The San Joaquin River, which rises above Friant in
the south, runs first west, then north, to join the Sacramento
River in the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta, both finding a common
outlet to the ocean
Page 357 U. S. 281
through San Francisco Bay.
See United States v. Gerlach Live
Stock Co., 339 U. S. 725
(1950).
Rainfall on the valley floor comes during the winter months --
85% from November to April -- and summers are quite dry. At Red
Bluff, just south of Mount Shasta, the average is 23 inches, while
south, at Bakersfield, a scant 6 inches fall. The climate is ideal,
with a frost-free period of over seven months and a mild winter
permitting production of some citrus as well as deciduous fruits
and other specialized crops. The absence of rain, however, makes
irrigation essential, particularly in the southern region.
In the mountain ranges, precipitation is greater, and the
winters more severe. The Northern Sierras average 80 inches of
rainfall, and the Southern 35 inches. The Coast Range experiences
much less. In the higher recesses of the mountains, precipitation
is largely snow, which, when it melts, joins the other runoff of
the mountain areas to make up an annual average of 33,000,000
acre-feet of water coming from the mountain regions. Nature has not
regulated the timing of the runoff water, however, and it is
estimated that half of the Sierra runoff occurs during the three
months of April, May, and June. Resulting floods cause great
damage, and waste this phenomenal accumulation of water, so vital
to the valley's rich alluvial soil. The object of the plan is to
arrest this flow and regulate its seasonal and year-to-year
variations, thereby creating salinity control to avoid the gradual
encroachment of ocean water, providing an adequate supply of water
for municipal and irrigation purposes, facilitating navigation, and
generating power. The plan is now nearing completion, and is
actually in partial operation in some areas.
The completed project is built around these two great rivers,
and includes a series of dams, three of which --
Page 357 U. S. 282
Shasta, Folsom, and Trinity River -- will furnish electric
power. The state water plan contemplates that, eventually, 38 major
reservoirs scattered at various points in this part of the State
will store an estimated 30,000,000 acre-feet of water. The Shasta
Dam and Reservoir sits at the head of the table on the north. With
a capacity of 4,500,000 acre-feet of water, it, along with
tributary dams and reservoirs, will control the floods from that
area. The Trinity River, with headwaters west of Shasta on the
western slope of the Coast Range, drains into the Pacific Ocean. A
dam now under construction near Lewiston will impound some
three-quarters of a million acre-feet of water which, by means of a
tunnel, will be partially diverted into and supplement the waters
of the Sacramento River lying to the east and across the mountains.
The water supply facilities along the Sacramento River will
regulate its flow, store surplus winter runoff for use in the
Sacramento Valley, maintain navigation in the channel, protect the
Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta from salt intrusion from the Pacific,
provide a water supply for the Contra Costa and Delta-Mendota
Canals, and generate a great deal of hydroelectric energy. The
Contra Costa Canal services the south shore of Suisun Bay from
Antioch to Martinez with water from the Delta for domestic,
industrial, and irrigation use. The Delta-Mendota Canal transports
surplus Sacramento River water to Mendota Pool on the San Joaquin
River, 120 miles south of the Delta. The water is pumped from the
Delta to the canal along the foothills of the Coast Range, and, by
gravity, it runs to the pool at Mendota. This exchange of water
replaces that diverted from the San Joaquin by the dam at Friant.
This latter dam forces the entire flow of the San Joaquin into
Millerton Lake, which has a capacity of 520,000 acre-feet of water.
It is diverted from the lake by the Madera Canal to
Page 357 U. S. 283
the north and the Friant-Kern Canal to the south. The former
extends about 37 miles in length, and services the Madera District,
while the latter supplies water to the Ivanhoe District and others
to the south. It will extend south about 160 miles to a point near
Bakersfield, which sits at the foot of the Central Valley's
enormous table.
The power facilities of the project will, when finally
completed, have a capacity of near a million kilowatts.
Transmission lines, steam plants, and other essential facilities
will be constructed so as to obtain the maximum utilization. It is
estimated that, through the sale of this power, the United States
will receive reimbursement for over half of its total reimbursable
expenditures.
The over-all allocation of these enormous costs has not been
definitely determined. That portion of the costs ultimately
allocated to power facilities will be reimbursed at 4% interest,
but that allocated to irrigation facilities will be reimbursed at
no interest. Moreover, the Federal Government will receive no
reimbursement for that portion of the cost allocated to numerous
aspects of the project, such as navigation, flood control, salinity
prevention, fish and wildlife preservation, and recreation. The
irrigators will, therefore, be chargeable with but a small fraction
of the total cost of the project.
We hasten to correct any impression that lands in the Central
Valley had not been reclaimed and irrigated at the inception of the
project. On the contrary, since California entered the Union, it
has worked diligently to bring water to its arid lands. Working
largely through state irrigation districts, private interests have
been ingenious in constructing smaller reservoirs, tapping
underground sources, and attempting to prevent saline encroachment
which would destroy the soil for agricultural purposes. Water has
been called "the lifeblood of the State." Competition for this
vital natural resource has provoked such
Page 357 U. S. 284
controversy that it has required amendments to the Constitution
and continual legislative activity. It is not at all surprising,
therefore, that, in putting together the mosaic of Central Valley,
some litigation would ensue.
See United States v. Gerlach Live
Stock Co., supra.
II
. SCOPE OF THE APPEALS AND NATURE OF THE CONTRACTS
These four appeals contest the right of the United States and
California to complete the venture and reap the rewards therefrom
as provided by their respective laws.
It should be noted that the appeal involving the Santa Barbara
County Water Agency, No. 125, does not involve the Central Valley
Project, as it does not lie within that area. It concerns a project
to supply water for irrigation and municipal uses along the south
coastal area of Santa Barbara County. It includes a dam on the
Santa Ynez River impounding water in Cachuma Reservoir. This river
rises on the western slopes of the Coast Range, and runs into the
Pacific. The Tecolote Tunnel will deliver water across the coastal
range of mountains to the Santa Barbara County Agency through the
lateral distribution systems of the Goleta and Carpenteria County
Water Districts. The adoption of the project by the Congress in
1948 was based on the recommendation of the State Division of Water
Resources Report stating that there was
"an urgent and immediate need for substantial supplemental
municipal and irrigation water supplies. . . . The city of Santa
Barbara has a critical water supply situation at this time. . . .
The underground water supplies in the county water districts are
being seriously overdrawn. In some localities . . . , wells are
being damaged by salt water intrusion."
H.R.Doc. No. 587, 80th Cong., 2d Sess. 10. While the contract is
authorized
Page 357 U. S. 285
under § 9(c) of the 1939 Act, [
Footnote 5] for our purposes, it is identical to the
others, and will be discussed with them.
The remaining appeals involve areas in the southern portion of
the Central Valley Basin. The Madera District includes the Friant
Dam and Millerton Lake, the sites for which the United States has
purchased outright. Water rights surrounding these areas were
involved in
United States v. Gerlach Live Stock Co.,
supra, and have been acquired by the United States. These
installations are, of course, vital to the operation of the project
in the south of the valley. The Madera District will be furnished
water from Millerton Lake by the Madera Canal. The Ivanhoe District
is south of Friant, and will be supplied water through the
Friant-Kern Canal. It is interesting to note that irrigators in
this district receive water diverted from the San Joaquin in which
they never had nor were able to obtain any water right.
The contracts to which the Supreme Court of California took
exception provide, in outline, that the United States will, after
construction of the water supply facilities and the lateral
distribution system for the irrigation districts, furnish water to
the districts and the Santa Barbara County Agency for a period of
40 years. Incorporating the requirements of § 5 of the
Reclamation Act of 1902, [
Footnote
6] the contract provides that project water shall not be
furnished to lands in excess of 160 acres in single ownership. This
limitation applies only to "project water," and previously existing
water supplies are unaffected thereby. "Large landowners,"
i.e., those who own excess land who wish that excess to
have the benefit of project water, must agree to sell their excess
to other than large landowners within 10 years at a price, fixed by
three
Page 357 U. S. 286
appraisers, which will exclude potential enhancement of the
price by reason of project water being available. Large landowners
electing not to sell their excess may use existing water supplies
in underground sources. Moreover, if they designate which of their
holdings shall be considered nonexcess, the district would furnish
water to that land under the terms provided in the contracts.
The repayment provisions as to the "distribution systems"
require liquidation of the maximum stated expenditure of the United
States by installments spread over 40 years, without interest, in
accordance with § 9(d) of the Reclamation Project Act of 1939.
As to the "water supply facilities," such as the dams and
reservoirs, the contracts employ the more liberal provisions of
§ 9(e) of that Act. [
Footnote
7] Repayment, without interest, is to be included in the charge
for water sold to the districts and the agency by the United
States. The contract term runs for 40 years, and, using the
language of § 9(e), the water rate is calculated so as to
return to the United States
"revenues at least sufficient to cover an appropriate share of
the annual operation and maintenance cost and an appropriate share
of such fixed charges as the Secretary deems proper, due
consideration being given to that part of the cost of construction
of works connected with water supply and allocated to
irrigation."
The Congress has now supplemented these terms of the contracts
by the Act of July 2, 1956, 70 Stat. 483. It provides that the
districts and the agency shall be given "credit each year" for
"so much of the amount paid . . . as is in excess of the share
of the operation and maintenance costs of the project which the
Secretary finds is properly chargeable. . . ."
The provision is retroactive, and runs with the contract, and,
when this amount is equal to the amount
Page 357 U. S. 287
owing on the total water supply expenditures allocated to
irrigation, "no construction component shall be included in any
charges made for the furnishing of water. . . ." The Act also
permits renewal of the contract on terms that will reflect any
"increases or decreases in construction, operation, and
maintenance costs and improvement or deterioration in the
(district's) repayment capacity."
In addition, the Act provides that the districts and the
agency
"shall . . . have a first right [to which right the rights of
the holders of any other type of irrigation water contract shall be
subordinate] to a stated share or quantity of the project's
available water supply for beneficial use on the irrigable lands
[within the district] and a permanent right to such share or
quantity upon completion of payment of the amount"
that is due on expenditures for water supply allocated to
irrigation.
III
. ACTION OF THE CALIFORNIA COURTS
In the confirmation suits involving the Ivanhoe District, No.
122, and of the Madera District, No. 123, the trial court found the
contracts and the proceedings leading to their execution invalid.
The court reasoned that § 8 of the 1902 Act required that,
"whenever there is a conflict between the Federal Reclamation laws
and the laws of the State, the law of California must prevail." The
court also found that, in the light of the origin of the Central
Valley Project, the United States was trustee of an express trust
of which the Ivanhoe District and others were among the
beneficiaries. It concluded that all applications to appropriate
water are included in such trust, and the beneficiaries have "an
incomplete, incipient and conditional right in the water applied
for" which is vested and runs with the land. The excess land
provision was declared invalid and unenforceable as conflicting
Page 357 U. S. 288
with both state law and the Reclamation Act. Application of the
excess land provision to an irrigator would, the court found, be
unconstitutional.
The
Albonico litigation, No. 124, was an application
for a mandatory order excluding lands in excess of 320 acres owned
by the Albonicos from the Madera District. The court held that the
excess land provisions were unconstitutional, and that, if applied
to the Albonicos, the mandatory order should issue.
The trial court in the
Santa Barbara confirmation case,
No. 125, contrary to the action in the other cases, upheld the
contract and granted confirmation. The court found that the Master
Contract was ratified and confirmed by the Interior Department's
Appropriation Act for 1951. 64 Stat. 595, 679.
The Supreme Court of California, by a 4-3 vote, reversed the
trial court judgment validating the contract in No. 125, the
Santa Barbara case, and affirmed each of the other
judgments. The principal opinion was in the
Ivanhoe case,
to which we confine our discussion. The majority agreed with the
trial court that § 8 of the 1902 Act required the application
of state law. It found that the excess lands provision was
inapplicable and improper under state law, and that the contract
was therefore invalid. This conclusion was posited on a trust
theory of California water law, which placed a trust on the State
and the irrigation districts for the benefit of water users. In
administering this trust, the United States, the majority held,
stood in the shoes of the State. The § 9(e) provisions of the
contract were found invalid on the grounds that no provision was
made for repayment of a stated amount within 40 years or for
transfer of title to the distribution systems to the respective
districts after payment thereof, and that no permanent right to
receive water was vested in the respective districts and their
Page 357 U. S. 289
members. The court appears to have reached this conclusion by
finding that the contract created a "debtor-creditor" relationship,
and that the United States was acting as a public utility without
conforming to state law.
IV
. THE JURISDICTIONAL QUESTION.
We first face the dual aspects of the jurisdictional question:
has California's Supreme Court held a federal statute
unconstitutional, and does its decision rest on an adequate state
ground?
Flournoy v. Wiener, 321 U.
S. 253,
321 U. S.
262.
As we read the reasons, heretofore mentioned, upon which the
Supreme Court of California invalidated the contracts, we conclude
that they rest upon neither ground. As to the rights and duties of
the United States under the contracts, these are matters of federal
law on which this Court has final word,
Clearfield Trust Co. v.
United States, 318 U. S. 363
(1943). Our construction of the contract might dispel any features
thereof found offensive. The other ground, namely, the 160-acre
limitation, alone requires further consideration.
Appellants claim that California's Supreme Court has held
unconstitutional the federal statutes, § 5 of the Reclamation
Act of 1902, as reenacted in § 46 of the Omnibus Adjustment
Act of 1926, relating to the 160-acre limitation. It appears to us,
however, that the opinion actually turned on the court's
interpretation of § 8 of the 1902 Act. In effect, the court
held that this section overrides all other sections of the Act,
requiring that it be construed as not affecting state laws
"relating to the control, appropriation, use, or distribution of
water used in irrigation." Turning to state law, the court, by
applying a "trust theory," held that the Federal Government could
acquire no title to appropriative water rights free of a trust in
the State of California for the benefit
Page 357 U. S. 290
of the people of the State. This "limited measure of control" of
the appropriative water, the court said, 47 Cal. 2d at 620, 306
P.2d at 837, prevented the imposition of the 160-acre limitation
because the beneficiaries of the trust, namely, the people of the
State, and particularly those in the districts involved, would be
deprived by the acreage limitation of a right to the use of the
water in the district. We think it plain that this was a
construction of federal law, and not a holding of
unconstitutionality. This, of course, provides no basis for an
appeal, but the importance of the case, as we earlier noted,
requires that certiorari be granted.
We deem it equally clear that the judgments do not rest on an
adequate state ground. The construction the opinion gave to §
8 of the 1902 Act nullified the specific mandate of § 5, as
well as its reenactment in the 1926 Act, and even though, in the
doing, a state law may have been called into play, this would not
immunize it from this Court's review. Basically it is the
interpretation of the Federal Act that opens the door to the
application of the state law and leads to the striking down of the
contracts made by the Secretary.
Nor would the suggestion that state law prevented the water
districts and agencies of the State from entering into the
contracts change this conclusion. We need not determine whether a
State could in that manner frustrate the consummation of a federal
project constructed at its own behest. The fact remains that the
state law was, in fact, invoked only by the interpretation the
court gave § 8.
V
. APPLICATION OF THE RECLAMATION LAWS TO THE CONTRACTS.
At the outset, we set aside as not necessary to decision here
the question of title to or vested rights in unappropriated water.
Cf. Nebraska v. Wyoming, 325 U. S. 589
(1945),
Page 357 U. S. 291
325 U. S.
611-616. If the rights held by the United States are
insufficient, then it must acquire those necessary to carry on the
project,
United States v. Gerlach Live Stock Co., supra,
at
339 U. S. 739,
paying just compensation therefor, either through condemnation or,
if already taken, through action of the owners in the courts. As we
see it, the authority to impose the conditions of the contracts
here comes from the power of the Congress to condition the use of
federal funds, works, and projects on compliance with reasonable
requirements. And, again, if the enforcement of those conditions
impairs any compensable property rights, then recourse for just
compensation is open in the courts.
As we have noted, the Supreme Court of California first
concluded that the provisions of § 8 of the 1902 Act as to the
application of state law were absolute, and controlled all
provisions of the Act and other reclamation statutes having to do
with "the control, appropriation, use, or distribution of water
used in irrigation, or any vested right acquired thereunder. . . ."
We believe this erroneous insofar as the substantive provisions of
§ 5 of the 1902 Act are concerned. As we read § 8, it
merely requires the United States to comply with state law when, in
the construction and operation of a reclamation project, it becomes
necessary for it to acquire water rights or vested interests
therein. But the acquisition of water rights must not be confused
with the operation of federal projects. As the Court said in
Nebraska v. Wyoming, supra, at
325 U. S.
615:
"We do not suggest that, where Congress has provided a system of
regulation for federal projects, it must give way before an
inconsistent state system."
Section 5 is a specific and mandatory prerequisite laid down by
the Congress as binding in the operation of reclamation projects,
providing that "[n]o right to the use of water . . . shall be sold
for a tract exceeding one hundred and sixty acres to any one
landowner. . . ."
Page 357 U. S. 292
We read nothing in § 8 that compels the United States to
deliver water on conditions imposed by the State. To read § 8
to the contrary would require the Secretary to violate § 5,
the provisions of which, as we shall see, have been national policy
for over half a century. Without passing generally on the coverage
of § 8 in the delicate area of federal-state relations in the
irrigation field, we do not believe that the Congress intended
§ 8 to override the repeatedly reaffirmed national policy of
§ 5.
From the beginning of the federal reclamation program in 1902,
the policy as declared by the Congress has been one requiring that
the benefits therefrom be made available to the largest number of
people, consistent, of course, with the public good. This policy
has been accomplished by limiting the quantity of land in a single
ownership to which project water might be supplied. It has been
applied to public land opened up for entry under the reclamation
law, as well as privately owned lands, which might receive project
water.
See Taylor, The Excess Land Law: Execution of a
Public Policy, 64 Yale L.J. 477.
Significantly, where a particular project has been exempted
because of its peculiar circumstances, the Congress has always made
such exemption by express enactment.
See Act of September
3, 1954, 68 Stat. 1190, exempting the Santa Maria Project from the
applicability of "excess land laws." [
Footnote 8] With respect to the Central Valley Project,
the Congress has again and again reaffirmed the specific
requirements of § 5 and the action taken by
Page 357 U. S. 293
the Secretary thereunder. As late as 1944, on consideration of
the Omnibus Rivers and Harbors Bill, the Senate refused, after
vigorous debate, to concur in a conference report that would have
exempted this project from the excess land requirements of §
5. 90 Cong.Rec. 9493-9499. At the next Session of the Congress, the
disputed exemption was deleted from the bill, and it was promptly
passed. Likewise, the Secretary reported to the Congress from time
to time the execution of contracts, similar to those involved here,
wherein "the excess land limitations and other requirements of law
are fully incorporated in the Central Valley contract form." His
annual report for 1950 and 1951 related the execution of the
Madera, Ivanhoe, and Santa Barbara contracts involved here. In the
latter report, he mentions individual contracts with water users
under the excess land laws, advising that these laws were
"given active attention. Five recordable contracts providing for
delivery of Central Valley Project water to 3,570 acres of excess
land are the first to be executed on the project."
During this period, the Congress reauthorized the project,
additional units were added,
see Act of October 14, 1949,
63 Stat. 852; H.R.Doc. No. 416, 84th Cong., 2d Sess., pp. 620-622;
Act of September 26, 1950, 64 Stat. 1036, and the Act of August 12,
1955, 69 Stat. 719; H.R.Doc. No. 416, pp. 937-940, and large
appropriations of funds thereto were granted annually.
In light of these congressional actions, it cannot be said that
Congress intended that § 8 would, under the application of
state law, make inapplicable the excess land provisions of § 5
of the Reclamation Act of 1902 to the Central Valley Project. That
possibility is foreclosed by subsequent and continuing action by
the Congress ever since the inception of the project. Such a record
constitutes ratification of administrative construction, and
confirmation and approval of the contracts.
Page 357 U. S. 294
Fleming v. Mohawk Wrecking & Lumber Co.,
331 U. S. 111,
331 U. S. 119
(1947);
Brooks v. Dewar, 313 U. S. 354,
313 U. S. 361
(1941);
Swayne & Hoyt Ltd. v. United States,
300 U. S. 297,
300 U. S. 302
(1937).
VI
. THE CONSTITUTIONAL ISSUES
Appellees urge, however, that the federal statutes requiring
insertion of these provisions in the contracts are unconstitutional
as a denial of due process and equal protection of the law under
the Fifth and Fourteenth Amendments. They assert that the excess
acreage provisions amount to a taking of vested property rights
both in land and irrigation district water, and discriminate
between the nonexcess and the excess landowner. We cannot
agree.
There can be no doubt of the Federal Government's general
authority to establish and execute the Central Valley and Santa
Barbara County projects. As we said in
United States v. Gerlach
Live Stock Co., supra, the Congress "elected to treat it (the
Central Valley Project) as a reclamation project." 339 U.S. at
339 U. S. 739.
We upheld its power to pursue the project as "clear" and "ample,"
an exercise of the general power "to promote the general welfare
through large-scale projects for reclamation, irrigation, or other
internal improvement."
Id. at
339 U. S. 738.
The Santa Barbara Project is supportable on the same grounds.
Cf. United States v. Butler, 297 U. S.
1,
297 U. S. 65-67
(1936). In developing these projects, the United States is
expending federal funds and acquiring federal property for a valid
public and national purpose, the promotion of agriculture. This
power flows not only from the General welfare Clause of Art. I,
§ 8 of the Constitution, but also from Art. IV, § 3,
relating to the management and disposal of federal property. As
this Court said in
United States v. San Francisco,
310 U. S. 16,
310 U. S. 29-30
(1940), this "power over the public land thus entrusted
Page 357 U. S. 295
to Congress is without limitations. . . . And it is not for the
courts to say how that trust shall be administered. That is for
Congress to determine."
See also United States v.
California, 332 U. S. 19
(1947), and
Alabama v. Texas, 347 U.
S. 272,
347 U. S.
273-274 (1954).
Also beyond challenge is the power of the Federal Government to
impose reasonable conditions on the use of federal funds, federal
property, and federal privileges.
See Berman v. Parker,
348 U. S. 26
(1954), and
Federal Power Comm'n v. Idaho Power Co.,
344 U. S. 17
(1952). The lesson of these cases is that the Federal Government
may establish and impose reasonable conditions relevant to federal
interest in the project and to the over-all objectives thereof.
Conversely, a State cannot compel use of federal property on terms
other than those prescribed or authorized by Congress.
Public
Utilities Comm'n of California v. United States, 355 U.
S. 534 (1958). Article VI of the Constitution, of
course, forbids state encroachment on the supremacy of federal
legislative action.
In considering appellees' specific constitutional contentions,
it is well to recapitulate. The Central Valley Project is
multi-purpose in nature. That portion of the project expense
attributable to navigation, flood control, salinity prevention,
recreation, and fish and wildlife preservation is nonreimbursable.
The remainder of the total expense, and the only part that is
reimbursable, is divided between two main sources. The first is
hydroelectric power, which estimates indicate will be chargeable
with over 50 percent of the reimbursable expense, plus interest on
the part representing electric plants in service. The other is
irrigation, which pays the rest without interest charge. In short,
the project is a subsidy, the cost of which will never be recovered
in full. Appellees argue that the same reasoning applies to power
facilities, but
Page 357 U. S. 296
there, the Government is operating the generating facilities
itself, and the base rate upon which the power is sold includes an
item for interest on the amount of expenditures allocated to that
purpose. Hence, the true relationship of debtor-creditor is
maintained. In the light of these facts, we believe that the
language of the Court in
Wickard v. Filburn, 317 U.
S. 111,
317 U. S. 131
(1942), is apposite: "It is hardly lack of due process for the
Government to regulate that which it subsidizes."
In any event, the provisions under attack are entirely
reasonable, and do not deprive appellees of any rights to property
or water. It is beyond dispute that excess land will be benefited
by delivery of water to neighboring and nearby nonexcess land. This
fact was recognized by the California Supreme Court in the
Santa Barbara case.
47 Cal. 2d
699, 712, 306 P.2d 875, 883. Furthermore, the Chief Engineer of
the Madera District so testified before the Senate Committee on
Public Lands in 1944. [
Footnote
9] The contracts themselves indirectly refer to the benefits
that may accrue, through underground water improvement, to excess
owners, by provisions which declare that such water shall not be
considered as furnished by the project. In other words, any
benefits to the underground water level under excess acreage will
not be chargeable to the owner of such acreage, but still will be
available to his excess land. We therefore find no substance in the
contention that "possible severance" of the excess acreage will
result in damage constituting a taking of property
Page 357 U. S. 297
without just compensation. We deem it unnecessary to discuss
other claims in this area, but repeat in connection therewith that,
if the United States takes any compensable water or property right,
the courts are open for redress.
As to the claim of discrimination in the 160-acre limitation, we
believe that it overlooks the purpose for which the project was
designed. The project was designed to benefit people, not land. It
is a reasonable classification to limit the amount of project water
available to each individual in order that benefits may be
distributed in accordance with the greatest good to the greatest
number of individuals. The limitation insures that this enormous
expenditure will not go in disproportionate share to a few
individuals with large land holdings. Moreover, it prevents the use
of the federal reclamation service for speculative purposes. In
short, the excess acreage provision acts as a ceiling, imposed
equally upon all participants, on the federal subsidy that is being
bestowed.
We also find the other contract provisions reasonable and
necessary. As we have pointed out heretofore the Act of July 2,
1956,
supra, answered most of the objections lodged
against these requirements. That Act requires the Secretary, in all
§ 9(d) and § 9(e) contracts executed after its passage,
(1) to include a renewal provision, (2) to provide that, during the
term of the contract or any renewal thereof, the contracting
parties shall have "first right . . . to a stated share or quantity
of the project's available water supply," and (3) to determine as
soon as feasible the total repayment obligation of the contracting
parties, crediting against that obligation so much of the amount
paid for water supply as is unnecessary for operation and
maintenance costs until, and only until, that obligation has been
liquidated. The Secretary is authorized to negotiate amendments to
existing contracts to incorporate the foregoing amendments.
Page 357 U. S. 298
In view of the declarations and privileges incorporated in these
amendments, we see no room for objection to the contracts on the
ground that they infer that the water users are not entitled to
water rights beyond the 40-year terms of the contracts, or that
they do not make clear that the districts and landowners become
free of indebtedness upon repayment.
That leaves two other objections, the first being the failure of
the contracts to recite a definite sum as being the total amount
due for the water supply facilities. It was not possible at the
time of executing the contracts, nor is it today, to determine the
exact amount of expenditures necessary for dams and reservoirs. The
record shows that original estimates often bore little resemblance
to ultimate cost. The project is only two-thirds completed, and
estimates of the remaining third cannot be accurately made.
Moreover, the Government was not bound to determine in advance of
the project's completion just what proportion of this total cost
should be attributed to irrigation. In view of these uncertainties,
it would have been highly impractical, if not impossible, to recite
any stated amount in the contract. Since no interest is charged on
the amount due, it is difficult to see how harm or inconvenience is
occasioned by the delay. The law now requires that all amounts paid
the Government in excess of its maintenance and operation costs be
credited on the obligations of the respective districts. That is an
entirely adequate protection of the district's interest in not
paying more than its share of the principal facilities.
Second, objection was made to the absence of any provision to
the effect that the districts would obtain title to the
distribution systems when their obligations therefor had been
totally discharged. We do not understand appellees to contend that
the districts and landowners should ultimately obtain title to the
principal dams and
Page 357 U. S. 299
reservoirs. The fact that irrigation interests are bearing but a
small fraction of the cost of the water supply facilities renders
such a suggestion untenable. For related reasons, we see no defect
in the failure to guarantee passage of title to the local
distributing systems at the end of 40 years, when it is
contemplated that the obligation therefor shall have been
discharged. As we have pointed out, even the terms regarding the
distribution systems involve a substantial federal subsidy, because
no interest is charged over the 40-year period during which the
principal amount is repaid. In reality, the districts will never
repay the total cost of these systems. Moreover, it is likely that,
for some time beyond the 40-year period of these contracts, the
districts will remain indebted to the Federal Government for their
share of the cost of the water supply facilities. Under such
circumstances the retention of title to the distribution systems,
at least until the stated obligations of the districts are
discharged, seems entirely consistent with what the state court
thought was a "debtor-creditor" relationship. In view of these
considerations, we think it altogether reasonable for the Federal
Government and the districts and agency involved to defer the
question of title passage to another day.
Any suggestion that the Congress might be arbitrary in the final
accounting, or trample upon any of the rights of appellees, is
highly improbable. It does not seem untoward for the recipients of
a huge federal bounty to have to depend in small measure on the
continued beneficence of their donor. It would be a physical
impossibility to withdraw the facilities. As for the possibility of
discrimination in the administration of those facilities, it seems
farfetched to foresee the Federal Government "turning its back upon
a people who had been benefited by it" and allowing their lands to
revert to
Page 357 U. S. 300
desert. [
Footnote 10] The
prospect is too improbable to figure in our decision.
For the reasons set forth above, the judgments of the Supreme
Court of California are
Reversed.
MR. JUSTICE FRANKFURTER took no part in the consideration or
decision of this case.
* Together with No. 123,
Madera Irrigation District et al.
v. Steiner et al., No. 124,
Madera Irrigation District v.
Albonico et ux., and No. 125,
Santa Barbara County Water
Agency v. Balaam et al., also on appeals from the same
Court.
[
Footnote 1]
Section 46 of the Omnibus Adjustment Act of 1926 requires that
the contracts be confirmed by decree of a court of competent
jurisdiction. 44 Stat. 649, as amended, 70 Stat. 524, 43 U.S.C.
§ 423e. For the applicable California statutes authorizing
such procedure,
see Cal.Water Code, 1956, § 23225
(irrigation districts), and Cal.Stat. 1945, pp. 2780, 2798, as
amended, Cal.Stat.1949, p. 18, West's Ann.Water Code, Appendix
(water agency).
[
Footnote 2]
Section 5:
". . . No right to the use of water for land in private
ownership shall be sold for a tract exceeding one hundred and sixty
acres to any one landowner, and no such sale shall be made to any
landowner unless he be an actual bona fide resident on such land,
or occupant thereof residing in the neighborhood of said land, and
no such right shall permanently attach until all payments therefor
are made."
32 Stat. 389, 43 U.S.C. § 431. This provision was
substantially reenacted in § 46 of the Omnibus Adjustment Act
of 1926, 44 Stat. 649, as amended, 70 Stat. 524, 43 U.S.C. §
423e.
[
Footnote 3]
53 Stat. 1193, as amended, 59 Stat. 75, 43 U.S.C. § 485h.
Section 9(c), the pertinent section in No. 125, authorizes the
Secretary of the Interior to enter into contracts to furnish water
for municipal water supply. Section 9(d) involves contracts with
irrigation districts, and requires repayment within a 40-year
period of construction costs allocated to irrigation. Section 9(e)
authorizes the use of an alternative method of repayment whereby
the Secretary may agree to furnish water for irrigation for a
period of 40 years at rates sufficient
"to cover an appropriate share of the annual operation and
maintenance cost and an appropriate share of such fixed charges as
the Secretary deems proper, due consideration being given to that
part of the cost of construction of works connected with water
supply and allocated to irrigation. . . . [T]he costs of any
irrigation water distribution works constructed by the United
States in connection with the new project, new division of a
project, or supplemental works on a project, shall be covered by a
repayment contract entered into pursuant to said subsection
(d)."
[
Footnote 4]
Section 8:
"That nothing in this Act shall be construed as affecting or
intended to affect or to in any way interfere with the laws of any
State or Territory relating to the control, appropriation, use, or
distribution of water used in irrigation, or any vested right
acquired thereunder, and the Secretary of the Interior, in carrying
out the provisions of this Act, shall proceed in conformity with
such laws, and nothing herein shall in any way affect any right of
any State or of the Federal Government or of any landowner,
appropriator, or user of water in, to, or from any interstate
stream or the waters thereof:
Provided, That the right to
the use of water acquired under the provisions of this Act shall be
appurtenant to the land irrigated, and beneficial use shall be the
basis, the measure, and the limit of the right."
32 Stat. 390, 43 U.S.C. §§ 372, 383.
[
Footnote 5]
See note 3
supra.
[
Footnote 6]
See note 2
supra.
[
Footnote 7]
See note 3
supra.
[
Footnote 8]
The Act recites: "That, in view of the special circumstances of
the Santa Maria project," the excess land laws should not be
applicable thereto "so long as the water utilized on project lands
is acquired by pumping from the underground reservoir."
See H.R.Rep. No. 1098, 83d Cong., 2d Sess. 2-3.
[
Footnote 9]
"There appears to be no doubt, therefore, that, with
introduction of surface irrigation and the consequent cessation of
pumping by those using surface water, excess lands will receive
direct benefits in the way of a higher water table, with consequent
improvement in quality, plus lower pumping costs, and, above all,
reasonable assurance that the water table will not fall to the
danger point."
Hearings before Senate Committee on Public Lands on S. 912, 80th
Cong., 1st Sess. 1221.
[
Footnote 10]
Senator Gore (then Representative) gave this compelling answer
to these trepidations in 1947:
"I cannot conceive of a Government that would spend $384,000,000
building one of the great reclamation-irrigation projects of the
world and suddenly, because some evil agent of Government had
gotten into a bureau, turning its back upon a people who had been
benefited by it and who, in turn, had greatly benefited the Nation
by production of good stuffs and wealth. I just do not conceive of
the United States as being that kind. . . ."
Hearings before the Subcommittee of the House Committee on
Appropriations on the Interior Department Appropriation Bill for
1948, 80th Cong., 1st Sess., p. 737.