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News - Local

Wednesday, Oct. 03, 2012

High court wades into flood control

- Sun-Star Washington Bureau

WASHINGTON -- In a case closely watched by farmers in the San Joaquin Valley and beyond, the U.S. Supreme Court wrestled Wednesday with tough questions about when the federal government must pay landowners for temporary flooding damages.

How the court answers could help property owners in general and the Los Banos-based Wolfsen Land and Cattle Co. in particular. The prominent business owns land alongside the long-dry San Joaquin River channel, which the government is preparing to fill with water and salmon.

The case arises from Arkansas, and the justices spent an hour Wednesday morning jousting over when river flooding becomes a "taking." Wolfsen and other farmers filed separate friends-of-the-court briefs in hopes of swaying the outcome.

Conservative justices already seem to share the landowners' belief that they're owed compensation for even temporary flooding from an Army Corps of Engineers facility.

"So if the government comes in and tells a landowner, 'Every March and April we're going to flood your land, so you can't use it from now on,' ... that's not a taking?" a clearly skeptical Chief Justice John Roberts Jr. pressed the Obama administration's lawyer.

"I must be slow today," Justice Sonia Sotomayor told Deputy Solicitor General Edwin Kneedler, "because I'm having significant problems with your articulation of your test" for when a taking occurs and payment is due.

The case heard Wednesday has national implications, though it arises out of specific set of incidents along the Black River in Arkansas. From 1993 to 2000, the Army Corps of Engineers released so much water from the Clearwater Dam in Missouri that the resulting flooding downstream destroyed or damaged more than 100,000 trees.

When the government takes private property, it owes compensation under the Fifth Amendment. There's no question that creating a reservoir by flooding land behind a new dam amounts to a taking for which payments are due. In the Arkansas case, though, a lower court reasoned that the downstream Black River inundation was different because it was a temporary, albeit repeating, affair in which the waters eventually receded.

In California, the Wolfsen Land and Cattle Co. likewise owns property alongside a river that's potentially subject to inundation as a consequence of federal actions, which is why the company cares about how the court rules. In a legal brief, Wolfsen says the farmers "currently face having their prime agricultural land, buildings and crops repeatedly flooded" because of San Joaquin River restoration efforts.

Under a lawsuit settlement and a 2009 law, state and federal officials are endeavoring to restore water flows and a viable salmon population to the San Joaquin River.

In a separate lawsuit that's still under way, Wolfsen and other farming companies seek compensation for the resulting flooding of nearly 13,000 acres in western Fresno and Merced counties.

A decision is expected by June.

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