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<br />U"~-a' <br />u ~:..:: .~ <br /> <br />for cultivation passed to the owners.' Unfortunately, <br />however, the Powers case was decided on procedural grounds, <br />and the Court did not have the opportunity to shed any <br />additional light upon the extent of the non-Indians' rights to <br />the use of water upon the former allotment (Palma, 1980, <br />pp. 98-99, footnotes omitted). <br /> <br />Palma then reviewed a more recent case involving the transfer of Indian <br /> <br />water rights, Colville Confederated Tribes v. Walton. Although much of the <br /> <br />federal distr ict court's decision in Walton was later reversed by the Ninth <br /> <br />Circuit Court of Appeals, Palma's analysis of the original decision indicates the <br /> <br />extent to which it broke with precedent concerning the transferability of Indian <br /> <br />wa ter rights: <br /> <br />Recently, the law with respect to the rights of <br />transferees of allotted land has become unsettled as a result <br />of the decision in Colville Confederated Tribes v. Walton <br />(460 F. Supp. 1320, EoD. Wash., 1978). There, the tribes <br />sought to enjoin the use of water by Walton, a non-Indian <br />successor in interest to an allotment within the boundaries of <br />the reservation. <br /> <br />. The evidence in the case revealed that the original <br />allottee had not irr iga ted the land, although he later sold it <br />to another Indian who irrigated 32 acres before selling the <br />land to Walton. Walton claimed a reserved right for the <br />entire allotment or, in the alternative, for the 32 irrigated <br />acres of land, on the theory that the reserved water right is <br />appurtenant to the land and thus passes to non-Indian <br />landowners. The state of Washington intervened in order to <br />protect its authority to issue state water rights permits <br />within the boundaries of the reservation and aligned itself <br />with Walton. <br /> <br />The United States and the tribes took contrary positions <br />on the question of alienability of the reserved water right. <br />The federal government argued that Walton obtained a right <br />to the amount of water being put to use at the time of the <br />transfer, while the tribes contended that the reserved right <br />was a tribal right, which could not be alienated to a non- <br />Indian. <br /> <br />Unpersuaded by the contentions of the parties or by the <br />previous holdings in United States v. Hibner and United <br />States v. Powers. the court broke new ground. Although the <br />court agreed that reserved rights are appurtenant to allotted <br />land, it found that reserved water rights exist for the sole <br /> <br />-15- <br />