State v. Series ( 2021 )


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  •                       NOTICE: NOT FOR OFFICIAL PUBLICATION.
    UNDER ARIZONA RULE OF THE SUPREME COURT 111(c), THIS DECISION IS NOT PRECEDENTIAL
    AND MAY BE CITED ONLY AS AUTHORIZED BY RULE.
    IN THE
    ARIZONA COURT OF APPEALS
    DIVISION ONE
    STATE OF ARIZONA ex rel. ARIZONA STATE LAND DEPARTMENT,
    Plaintiffs/Appellants/Cross-Appellees,
    v.
    SERIES 5, LLC, et al., Defendants/Appellees/Cross-Appellants.
    No. 1 CA-CV 20-0203
    FILED 3-2-2021
    Appeal from the Superior Court in Maricopa County
    No. CV2017-015782
    The Honorable Rosa Mroz, Judge
    AFFIRMED
    COUNSEL
    Arizona Attorney General’s Office, Phoenix
    By David Jacobs, Paul A. Katz, Laurie A. Hachtel
    Counsel for Plaintiffs/Appellants/Cross-Appellees
    Snell & Wilmer LLP, Phoenix
    By Kevin J. Parker, L. William Staudenmaier III
    Counsel for Defendants/Appellees/Cross-Appellants
    STATE, et al. v. SERIES, et al.
    Decision of the Court
    MEMORANDUM DECISION
    Presiding Judge Jennifer M. Perkins delivered the decision of the Court, in
    which Judge Randall M. Howe and Judge Maria Elena Cruz joined.
    P E R K I N S, Judge:
    ¶1           The State challenges the superior court’s ruling that the State
    did not obtain sovereign title to a disputed land parcel. For the following
    reasons, we affirm.
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    ¶2            This appeal concerns a dispute over ownership of a land
    parcel (“Property”) adjacent to the Colorado River in the Mohave Reach, an
    area south of Bullhead City. Series 5, LLC (“Series”) is the record title holder
    to the Property. The State initiated a quiet title action in 2017. It claimed to
    have acquired sovereign title to the Property because the parcel previously
    sat “within the beds and banks of the Colorado River” following significant
    flooding between 1912 and 1915.
    ¶3            Both parties moved for summary judgment. Series argued in
    part the flooding constituted a “series of avulsions” under which “the
    riparian land boundaries do not move with the river (and thus ownership
    does not change).” It contended avulsion occurs “when a river’s movement
    is sudden and rapid such that its banks visibly disintegrate.” But the State
    argued avulsion requires a “lateral channel migration . . . when the River
    rapidly abandons its old channel, cuts a new channel, and leaves
    undisturbed land in between the old and new channels.” Under that
    standard, it argued the 1912 to 1915 flooding constituted accretion and, if
    so, “the boundary of the State’s property moved eastward with the OHWM
    [ordinary high-water mark] to encompass the Subject Property as of 1959.”
    ¶4            The superior court accepted Series’s definition of avulsion,
    quoting State v. Bonelli Cattle Co., 
    107 Ariz. 465
    , 467 (1971) (“Bonelli I”)
    (citations omitted) (emphasis added):
    It is common knowledge that rivers move
    sometimes so slowly as to be imperceptible
    during the lifetime of any single individual, and
    sometimes so rapidly by floods that the river’s
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    STATE, et al. v. SERIES, et al.
    Decision of the Court
    banks visibly disintegrate. Where the change is
    sudden and rapid, the change is said to be by
    avulsion. Erosion, on the other hand, is the
    eating away of the soil by the river’s current,
    and is a gradual, imperceptible process. Where
    the river moves by erosion, the boundary moves
    with the stream, but where the river moves by
    avulsion, the boundary remains in the center of
    the old channel.
    Applying this definition, the court found factual disputes as to “whether
    the Property came within the River’s boundary, post-statehood, through
    avulsion or accretion” and denied both motions.
    ¶5            The case proceeded to a bench trial, at which the parties
    agreed “if the Subject Property came within the Colorado River’s boundary
    through accretion, then the private property owner loses ownership of the
    Subject Property to the State.” And “if the Subject Property came within the
    Colorado River’s boundary through avulsion, then the private property
    owner does not lose ownership of the Subject Property to the State.” Both
    sides presented expert testimony that the Colorado River submerged the
    Property after two major floods in 1912 and 1914. But the experts disagreed
    as to whether this flooding constituted avulsion or accretion.
    ¶6              Series’s expert Rich Burtell testified the 1912 and 1914 floods
    constituted avulsion because the floods transformed the river “from a
    relatively narrow meandering system to a broad shallow system” and were
    “perceptible by somebody there at the time.” In contrast, the State’s expert
    Michael Kellogg testified Series could not show the flooding caused a
    “sudden change in flow alignment . . . leaving an identifiable upland area
    between the abandoned channel and the new channel,” which he testified
    was necessary to show avulsion. He also contended Series could not
    establish: (1) the date of the first avulsive event after Arizona became a state
    on February 14, 1912; (2) the location of the left1 OHWM before that
    avulsive event; and (3) the location of the left OHWM following that event.
    On that basis, he testified the court had to conclude that any rapid erosion
    caused by these floods constituted accretion.
    ¶7           Following trial, the court entered findings of fact and
    conclusions of law. Citing Bonelli I and State v. Jacobs, 
    93 Ariz. 336
     (1963),
    1Riverbanks (left vs. right) are identified from a downstream perspective;
    Arizona’s bank of the Colorado River is the left bank.
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    STATE, et al. v. SERIES, et al.
    Decision of the Court
    the court defined accretion as “the gradual, imperceptible addition to land
    forming the banks of a stream by the deposit of waterborne solids or by the
    gradual recession of water which exposes previously submerged terrain”
    and avulsion as “a sudden and perceptible event.” Finding that “[t]he June
    1912 flood, either separately or in combination with the June 1914 flood,
    caused a major transformation of the Colorado River in the Mohave
    Valley,” the court concluded the movement of the river’s eastern boundary
    was “caused by avulsion.” The court thus ruled Series owned the Property.
    The court awarded Series attorneys’ fees, expert witness fees, and costs
    under A.R.S. § 12-348(A).
    ¶8           The State timely appealed and Series timely cross-appealed.
    We have jurisdiction pursuant to A.R.S. § 12-2101(A)(1).
    DISCUSSION
    ¶9              On appeal from a bench trial, we review legal questions de
    novo but review the superior court’s factual findings for clear error. Castro
    v. Ballesteros-Suarez, 
    222 Ariz. 48
    , 51–52, ¶¶ 11–12 (App. 2009). A finding of
    fact is not clearly erroneous if substantial record evidence supports it, even
    if there is substantial conflicting evidence. Id. at ¶ 11. Evidence is substantial
    if it allows a reasonable person to reach the superior court’s result. Id. at 52,
    ¶ 11. We view the evidence and reasonable inferences from that evidence
    in the light most favorable to Series as the prevailing party. See FL
    Receivables Tr. 2002-A v. Ariz. Mills, L.L.C., 
    230 Ariz. 160
    , 166, ¶ 24 (App.
    2012).
    ¶10          The State challenges the court’s determination that the
    changes to the river’s course, resulting from the 1912 and 1914 floods,
    constituted avulsion. The State argues the changes amount to accretion.
    Before addressing the specifics of this case, we review existing Arizona law
    regarding these two processes.
    I.            Background
    ¶11           “By congressional enactment, the State of Arizona owns title
    to the beds of all navigable streams within its borders. . . . Since the
    Colorado River is not wholly within Arizona’s borders, but is, itself, the
    border, Arizona’s title extends from the center of the channel eastward to
    the river’s high water line.” Bonelli I, 
    107 Ariz. at 467
     (citation omitted).
    “Beyond argument, title to and ownership of the lands beneath the
    Colorado River is in the State of Arizona from the Nevada boundary up to
    the ordinary high water mark in the natural channel as it existed prior to
    the taming of the river in 1938 by the completion of the Hoover Dam and
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    STATE, et al. v. SERIES, et al.
    Decision of the Court
    the subsequent lowering of the channel by dredging.” State v. Bonelli Cattle
    Co., 
    108 Ariz. 258
    , 259 (1972) (“Bonelli II”), rev’d, Bonelli Cattle Co. v. Arizona,
    
    414 U.S. 313
     (1973), overruled by Oregon ex rel. State Land Bd. v. Corvallis Sand
    & Gravel Co., 
    429 U.S. 363
     (1977).
    ¶12            Our supreme court has addressed the distinction between
    accretion and avulsion twice before. In Jacobs, a criminal defendant
    challenged whether he could be tried in Arizona for crimes allegedly
    committed on land near Haughtelin Lake, that before 1920 had been part of
    the main channel of the Colorado River. 
    93 Ariz. at 338
    . The evidence
    suggested the river “altered its course to the east” in 1920, “forming and
    flowing through what is now the main channel of the river in that area,”
    but that the crime scene was “never under water.” 
    Id.
     at 338–39. Contending
    that courts presume “changes in the courses of rivers . . . occur by accretion
    and not by avulsion,” the defendant argued the crime scene was in
    California when the offenses were committed, meaning Arizona lacked
    jurisdiction to try him. 
    Id. at 339
    . Our supreme court disagreed:
    Accretion is the gradual, imperceptible addition
    to land forming the banks of a stream by the
    deposit of waterborne solids or by the gradual
    recession of water which exposes previously
    submerged terrain . . . Where, however, as in
    this case, the stream changes its course
    suddenly or in such a manner as not to destroy
    the identity of the land between the old and new
    channels, the change is termed an avulsion.
    
    Id.
     (citations omitted). The court thus concluded Arizona had jurisdiction
    to try the defendant. 
    Id. at 340
    .
    ¶13             The court revisited the distinction eight years later in Bonelli
    I. The Bonelli Cattle Company sought quiet title to lands adjacent to the
    Property at issue in this case. Bonelli I, 
    107 Ariz. at 466
    . The evidence
    presented showed the Colorado River’s east bank was approximately one-
    quarter of a mile west of the disputed land as of 1902 and 1903, but “[n]o
    evidence was produced as to the course of the river thereafter until 1938,”
    when the Hoover Dam was completed. 
    Id. at 467
    . As noted above, supra ¶
    4, the Bonelli I court distinguished between avulsion and erosion. 
    107 Ariz. at 467
    . Noting it lacked sufficient evidence to determine whether the river’s
    eastward movement between 1903 and 1938 constituted avulsion or
    accretion, the court stated “in the absence of clear evidence to the contrary,
    the movement of the river will be presumed to be by erosion.” 
    Id. at 468
    .
    5
    STATE, et al. v. SERIES, et al.
    Decision of the Court
    The court then ruled “[a]s the river moved eastward, engulfing most of
    Section 3 in the channel of the river, the land to which plaintiff held title
    decreased so that, by 1938, the owners of the east one-half of Section 3 had,
    by the operation of natural forces, lost most of it to Arizona.” 
    Id.
    ¶14             On that basis, the Bonelli I court directed the superior court to
    quiet title in the State from the Nevada boundary to the high water mark
    even though the river had been moved artificially when it was channelized
    in the late 1950’s. 
    Id.
     at 468–69. One year later, the court in Bonelli II clarified
    the State held title “from the Nevada boundary up to the ordinary high
    water mark in the natural channel as it existed prior to the taming of the
    river in 1938 by the completion of the Hoover Dam and the subsequent
    lowering of the channel by dredging.” Bonelli II, 
    108 Ariz. at 259
    .
    II.            Bonelli I Defines Avulsion Under Arizona Law
    ¶15            The superior court relied on Bonelli I to conclude avulsion
    exists when a sudden and perceptible change occurs. See 
    107 Ariz. at 467
    .
    Arguing on appeal for a narrower definition, the State contends, under
    Jacobs, that avulsion occurs “only when the river’s channel avulses to an
    entirely new channel alignment, leaving the prior channel behind and dry
    land between the old and new channels.” But Jacobs states that avulsion
    occurs when “the stream changes its course suddenly or in such a manner
    as not to destroy the identity of the land between the old and new
    channels.” 
    93 Ariz. at 339
     (emphasis added).
    ¶16            The State, through Kellogg, also relies on a Bureau of Land
    Management (“BLM”) manual that defines avulsion as a “sudden change
    in flow alignment . . . to a new channel, leaving an identifiable upland area
    between the abandoned channel and the new channel.” But the manual also
    notes that “some State courts have established different definitions.” And
    Kellogg conceded that Bonelli I established a broader definition that does
    not require identifiable land between the old and new channels. Bonelli I
    instead stated avulsion occurs when a river moves “so rapidly by floods
    that [its] banks visibly disintegrate.” 
    107 Ariz. at 467
    .
    ¶17           The State also argues the Bonelli I court’s reliance on Nebraska
    v. Iowa, 
    143 U.S. 359
     (1892) and Hirt v. Entus, 
    224 P.2d 620
     (Wash. 1950)
    suggest that it intended to apply the avulsion definition identified in those
    cases. But Bonelli I cited Nebraska for the general proposition that boundaries
    move with accretion but not avulsion. Bonelli I, 
    107 Ariz. at 467
    . And in Hirt,
    the Washington Supreme Court stated avulsion occurs when “a stream . . .
    suddenly abandons its old channel and creates a new one, or suddenly
    6
    STATE, et al. v. SERIES, et al.
    Decision of the Court
    washes from one of its banks a considerable body of land and deposits it on
    the opposite bank.” 224 P.2d at 623. Washington’s Supreme Court also
    stated “[t]his sudden and rapid change is termed . . . an avulsion, and
    differs from an accretion in that the one is violent and visible, while the
    other is gradual, and perceptible only after a lapse of time.” Id. at 623–24
    (emphasis added). Like Jacobs, Hirt stands for the proposition that a
    “channel jump” is an example of avulsion but not the only way avulsion
    can occur. We therefore reject the State’s argument that avulsion requires a
    “channel jump.”
    III.          The Bonelli I Presumption of Accretion Does Not Apply
    ¶18            The State also contends the superior court failed to apply the
    Bonelli I presumption that “in the absence of clear evidence to the contrary,
    the movement of the river will be presumed to be by erosion.” 
    107 Ariz. at 468
    . Notably, it argues Series “never presented any evidence—much less
    any clear evidence—to demonstrate when and where any avulsion, as the
    State properly defined that term, had occurred within the Mohave Reach
    at or near the Subject Property.” As discussed above, the State’s proffered
    definition is inconsistent with Bonelli I. See Bade v. Ariz. Dep’t. of Transp.,
    Motor Vehicle Div., 
    150 Ariz. 203
    , 205 (App. 1986) (“This court is bound by a
    decision of the Arizona Supreme Court and has no authority to overrule or
    disregard it.”).
    ¶19            We also note the Bonelli I court applied this presumption
    because it lacked evidence to determine “whether the eastward movement
    of the Colorado River between 1903 and 1938 was by avulsion or erosion.”
    Id. at 467. That is not the case here. Burtell compiled historical accounts
    between 1858 and 1916 that “depict a river whose channel shifted quickly
    and widely following flood events.” He also opined the 1912 and 1914
    floods likely transformed the Colorado River “from a relatively narrow
    meandering system to a broad shallow system,” widening it from
    approximately one-quarter of a mile to “something well over a mile.” He
    testified these floods were “extraordinary,” citing downriver gauge data
    that suggests each flood generated approximately ten times the typical or
    median flow. He also cited 1915 survey notes indicating the river was
    rapidly cutting to the east and that all boundaries and survey monuments
    placed nine years earlier had been “obliterated by the river.”
    ¶20         On this evidence, he opined the changes to the river’s course
    were sudden and rapid:
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    STATE, et al. v. SERIES, et al.
    Decision of the Court
    [E]ven though the banks of the river in the Mohave
    Valley are relatively erodible—sands, gravels, and
    silts—there’s also vegetation on them that provides
    some anchoring. But when you have so much flow for
    so much time, it’s kind of like testifying in a court trial.
    The pressure just constantly on you, it’s going to erode
    those banks. And this river system, when you have 20
    days of flows that are greater than 10 times the typical
    flows, it’s putting such an extraordinary stress on the
    banks of the river and whatever’s trying to hold the
    banks, and after a while something’s going to give.
    And in my opinion this river system, because it was
    rising up, it was alluvial, it was prime to change, and
    we—we—Mother Nature hit it with two very large
    floods of high magnitude and high duration.
    And in my opinion the system transformed based on
    all that. It was a remarkable change agent.
    ¶21            Kellogg largely agreed the 1912 and 1914 floods caused the
    Property to become submerged but opined the changes to the river’s course
    should be classified as accretion. Yet his opinion hinges, on the same
    narrow avulsion definition the State argues for on appeal. Indeed, the 1977
    study Kellogg cites as evidence that no avulsive changes occurred,
    described avulsion as a process “in which the river abandoned its bed and
    sought a new channel with undisturbed lands lying between.” Again,
    Bonelli I draws the line between accretion and avulsion elsewhere. 
    107 Ariz. at 467
    . And the superior court has broad discretion to resolve conflicts in
    expert witness testimony. See In re Gen. Adjudication of All Rights to Use Water
    in Gila River Sys. & Source, 
    198 Ariz. 330
    , 340, ¶ 25 (2000) (“The trial court . . .
    weighs the evidence and resolves any conflicting facts, expert opinions, and
    inferences therefrom.”).
    ¶22          Kellogg also opined Series had to establish where the OHWM
    was immediately before and after the avulsive change to show avulsion.
    But he conceded that neither Bonelli I nor any other case establishes these
    “general guidelines” or requires a party to pinpoint when the avulsive
    event began or ended.
    ¶23           The State also cites Arizona and federal cases addressing the
    area around Yuma to suggest that only one avulsive event had been
    previously found. See Jacobs, 
    93 Ariz. at 339
     (avulsion); Beaver v. U.S., 
    350 F.2d 4
     (9th Cir. 1965) (accretion); State v. Gunther & Shirley Co., 
    5 Ariz. App. 8
    STATE, et al. v. SERIES, et al.
    Decision of the Court
    77 (1967) (accretion). Whether avulsion occurred approximately 200 miles
    downstream from the Property has no bearing on whether the 1912 and
    1914 floods caused avulsion near the Property.
    ¶24           For these reasons, we affirm the judgment in Series’s favor.
    We need not address Series’s argument that the “equal footing” and “public
    trust” doctrines, under which the State holds sovereign title to navigable
    riverbeds, no longer apply to the Property because it has been “dry land”
    since channelization. See, e.g., Ariz. Ctr. for Law in the Pub. Int. v. Hassell, 
    172 Ariz. 356
     (App. 1991).
    IV.            Attorneys’ Fees, Expert Witness Fees, and Costs
    ¶25             The State contends Series cannot recover attorneys’ fees under
    § 12-348(A)(1), citing Lange v. Lotzer, 
    151 Ariz. 260
    , 262 (App. 1986), for the
    proposition that § 12-1103(B) is the exclusive basis for awarding fees in a
    quiet title action. Lange involved a fee award under § 12-341.01(A), which
    states it “shall not be construed as altering, prohibiting or restricting present
    or future contracts or statutes that may provide for attorney’s fees.” See id.
    at 260; see also A.R.S. § 12-341.01(A). That statute, which is not at issue here,
    is subordinate to other fee statutes. See Lange, 
    151 Ariz. at 262
    ; see also Lacer
    v. Navajo Cnty., 
    141 Ariz. 392
    , 395 (App. 1984).
    ¶26            Section 12-348(A)(1), in contrast, states the court “shall award
    fees and other expenses to any party other than this state or a city, town or
    county that prevails by an adjudication on the merits in . . . [a] civil action
    brought by this state or a city, town or county against the party.” A.R.S. §
    12-348(A)(1). In enacting § 12-348, the Legislature expressed its intention to
    “reduce the deterrents and the disparity” of defending claims brought by
    the State “by entitling prevailing parties to recover an award of reasonable
    attorney fees, expert witness fees and other costs.” Roubos v. Miller, 
    214 Ariz. 416
    , 419, ¶ 16 (2007) (quoting 1981 Ariz. Sess. Laws, ch. 208, § 1). We give
    the Legislature’s declaration “special consideration because express
    legislative findings are quite rare in Arizona.” New Pueblo Constructors, Inc.
    v. State, 
    144 Ariz. 95
    , 112 (1985). As such, “[s]o long as the litigation falls
    within one of the categories of subsection A and is not excluded under
    subsection G [now subsection H] an award of fees is proper.” Cortaro Water
    Users’ Ass’n v. Steiner, 
    148 Ariz. 314
    , 317 (1986).
    ¶27           No such exclusion applies here. See A.R.S. § 12-348(H). If the
    Legislature intended to exclude quiet title claims from § 12-348(A)(1), it
    would have done so. Lacer, 
    141 Ariz. at 403
    . We therefore affirm the award.
    9
    STATE, et al. v. SERIES, et al.
    Decision of the Court
    ¶28           Series requests its attorneys’ fees incurred in this appeal
    under A.R.S. § 12-348. For the reasons set forth above, Series may apply to
    recover its reasonable and necessary attorneys’ fees under ARCAP 21. See
    A.R.S. § 12-348(I)(1).
    CONCLUSION
    ¶29          We affirm.
    AMY M. WOOD • Clerk of the Court
    FILED: AA
    10