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WSP06827
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Last modified
1/26/2010 2:24:31 PM
Creation date
10/12/2006 1:53:57 AM
Metadata
Fields
Template:
Water Supply Protection
File Number
8407.400
Description
Platte River Basin - River Basin General Publications - Nebraska
State
NE
Basin
South Platte
Water Division
1
Date
1/1/1983
Author
Nebraska Natural Res
Title
Policy Issue Study on Selected Water Rights Issues - Property Rights in Groundwater
Water Supply Pro - Doc Type
Report/Study
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<br />( I'" <br />DISCUSSION OF <br />THE ALTERNATIVES <br /> <br />Alternative #1: Make no change in <br />present pOlicy <br /> <br />Description and Methods of Implementa- <br />tion <br /> <br />Alternative ~, provides for no additional legls- <br />[ative action specifically designed to define the <br />nature or extent of individual property rights in <br />groundwater. Existing case law would be allowed <br />to stand as would the provisions of LB 375.8 <br />Occasional interpretations and refinements of <br />current policy could be expected through <br />supreme court decisions. Probably the best <br />expressions of current policy are found in two <br />supreme court cases and one Nebraska statute <br />which respectively provide as follows: <br /> <br />" ....the owner of land IS entitled to appropriate <br />subterranean waters found under his land. but <br />he cannot extract and appropriate them In <br />excess of a reasonable and beneficial use <br />upon the land which he owns. especially if <br />such use is injurious to others who have sub. <br />stantial rights to the waters, and if the natural <br />underground supply is Insufficient for all <br />owners. each is entitled to a reasonable pro- <br />portion of the whole..." Olson v. City of WahooQ <br /> <br />The public. through legislative action. may <br />grant to private persons the right to the use of <br />publicly owned [ground] waters for private <br />purposes; but. , the publiC may limit or deny <br />the right of private parties to freely use the <br />water when it determines that the welfare of <br />the state and its citizens is at stake." Stale Ex <br />rpl. Douglas v Sporhase 10 <br /> <br />"Every landowner shall be entitled to a reason- <br />able and beneficial use of the groundwater <br />underlying his or her rand. subject to the pro- <br />visions of Chapter 46. article 6. and the cor- <br />relative rights of other landowners when the <br />groundwater supply is insufficient for all <br />users" LB 375.1982 Nebraska Legislature." <br /> <br />Additional discussions of current policy and its <br />effects can be found In Chapters One and Two. <br /> <br />Socia-Economic Impacts <br /> <br />Current pOlicy provides landowners with a <br />considerable degree of certainty while also <br />retaining a level of flexibility for future publiC <br />actions if deemed necessary. Basically. the land- <br /> <br />owner's rights to use the water supply publicly <br />owned IS subject only to the correlative rights of <br />others and to publiC decisions made by or <br />through the authority of the legislature. Certainty <br />in use diminishes where groundwater is being <br />mined or where conflicts are occurring. <br />Decisions to limit or deny use of the water in such <br />situations can result in an economic loss to the <br />landowner eIther in a previously made invest- <br />ment in equipment or perhaps even in the value <br />of the land itself <br /> <br />Physical-Hydrologic and Environmental <br />Impacts <br /> <br />Under currenl poliCY. development of ground- <br />water can be expected to continue in those areas <br />where supplies 8re adequate. Development will <br />depend more on economics. water supply. and <br />availahility of energy than it will on the nature or <br />extent of the individual"s property right in the <br />groundwater. <br /> <br />Alternative #2: Adopt the English <br />Rule of Absolute Ownership as the <br />definition of groundwater <br />property rights in Nebraska. <br /> <br />Description and Methods of <br />Implementation <br /> <br />The English Rule provides that landowners <br />have an ahsolute right to capture and use water <br />found beneath their lands. It is popularly viewed <br />as giving overlying landowners complete owner- <br />Ship of the water found beneath their lands. If <br />that were literally true. no landowner would have <br />the right to pump water that reached his well by <br />percolation from beneath a parcel olland owned <br />by another since to do so would be to take <br />another's property tn fact. the English Rule is a <br />pure rule of capture more properly viewed as a <br />rule of non-ownerShip. a withdrawal of law rather <br />than a rure of law Landowners can hardly be said <br />to "own" water found beneath their land if courts <br />give such landowners no remedies against the <br />acts of adjoining landowners. Given the total <br />withdrawal of law under the English Aule. con- <br />siderable doubt exists whether Nebraska could. <br />at least by statute. adopt the English Aule. <br />The English Rule was developed before men <br />had a clear understanding of groundwater <br />principles. Indeed. the fact that groundwaters <br />moved beneath the soil out of sight of men was <br />cited by the court in the leading case of Acton v. <br />Blundell12 as justification for adopting a pure rule <br />of capture as the definition of a groundwater <br />property right Not surprisingly. a majority of <br /> <br />3-3 <br />
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