CA Water Assn. v. St. Water Resources Control Bd. ( 2018 )


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  • Filed 3/2/18
    CERTIFIED FOR PUBLICATION
    IN THE COURT OF APPEAL OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA
    THIRD APPELLATE DISTRICT
    (Sacramento)
    ----
    NORTHERN CALIFORNIA WATER
    ASSOCIATION et al.,
    Plaintiffs and Respondents,
    C075866
    v.
    (Super. Ct. No. 03CS01776)
    STATE WATER RESOURCES CONTROL BOARD
    et al.,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    CALIFORNIA FARM BUREAU FEDERATION
    et al.,
    Plaintiffs and Respondents,
    v.                                              (Super. Ct. No. 04CS00473)
    STATE WATER RESOURCES CONTROL BOARD
    et al.,
    Defendants and Appellants.
    1
    APPEAL from a judgment of the Superior Court of Sacramento County, Raymond
    M. Cadei, Judge. Reversed.
    Kamala D. Harris and Xavier Becerra, Attorneys General, Kathleen A. Kenealy
    Acting Attorney General, Robert W. Byrne, Senior Assistant Attorney General, Eric M.
    Katz, Helen G. Arens, and Carol A. Z. Boyd, Deputy Attorneys General, for Defendants
    and Appellants.
    Somach Simmons & Dunn, Stuart L. Somach, Daniel Kelly, Robert B. Hoffman,
    Brittany K. Lewis-Roberts, and Lauren D. Bernadett for Plaintiffs and Respondents.
    This appeal involves challenges to the State Water Resources Control Board’s
    (Board) imposition of a new annual fee on water right permit and license holders in fiscal
    year 2003-2004 to cover a portion of the costs of the Board’s Division of Water Rights
    (Division or Water Rights Division).
    In 2003, the Legislature enacted Water Code1 section 1525, which requires the
    holders of permits and licenses to appropriate water to pay an annual fee according to a
    fee schedule established by the Board. (§ 1525, subd. (a).) At the same time, the
    Legislature enacted sections 1540 and 1560, which allow the Board to allocate the annual
    fee imposed on a permit or license holder who refuses to pay the fee on sovereign
    immunity grounds to persons or entities who contracted for the delivery of water from
    that permit or license holder.
    To implement section 1525’s fee requirement, the Board adopted California Code
    of Regulations, title 23, sections 1066 and 1073 (regulation 1066 & regulation 1073).
    Regulation 1066 sets forth a fee formula for permit and license holders. Regulation 1073
    sets forth a formula for allocating the annual fee “for projects within the Central Valley
    1      Further undesignated statutory references are to the Water Code.
    2
    Project” (CVP) when the Board determines that the United States Bureau of Reclamation
    (USBR), which operates the CVP, will not pay the fee. (Regulation 1073, subd. (b).)
    Plaintiffs Northern California Water Association, California Farm Bureau
    Federation, and individual fee payors claimed that the annual fee imposed in fiscal year
    2003-2004 constituted an unlawful tax, as opposed to a valid regulatory fee, under article
    XIII A, section 3, of the California Constitution (Proposition 13)2 because it required fee
    payors to pay more than a de minimis amount for regulatory activities that benefited non-
    fee-paying right holders. Plaintiffs also claimed that the fees allocated to the water
    supply contractors violated the supremacy clause of the United States Constitution
    because they exceeded the contractors’ beneficial interests in the USBR’s water rights.
    Our Supreme Court has already ruled that sections 1525, 1540, and 1560 are
    constitutional on their face. (California Farm Bureau Federation v. State Water
    Resources Control Bd. (2011) 
    51 Cal.4th 421
    , 428 (Farm Bureau II).) The court,
    however, found that the record was unclear as to (1) “whether the fees were reasonably
    apportioned in terms of the regulatory activity’s costs and the fees assessed,” and (2) “the
    extent and value of the [contractors’ beneficial] interests.” (Id. at p. 428.) Accordingly,
    the court directed this court to remand the matter to the trial court to make findings on
    those issues. (Ibid.)
    Following a 10-day bench trial, the trial court issued a statement of decision that
    determined inter alia that the statutory scheme as applied through its implementing
    regulations imposed a tax, as opposed to a valid regulatory fee, by allocating the entire
    cost of the Division’s regulatory activities to permit and license holders, while non-
    paying-water-right holders who benefit from and place burdens on the Division’s
    2       California Constitution, article XIII A, section 3, was originally approved by
    initiative as Proposition 13, on June 6, 1978.
    3
    activities pay nothing.3 The trial court likewise found that the fees passed through to the
    water supply contractors in fiscal year 2003-2004 pursuant to regulation 1073 ran afoul
    of the supremacy clause “because the allocation of fees [was] not limited to the
    contractors’ beneficial or possessory use of the [USBR’s] water rights.” In addition, the
    trial court found that the fee regulations were invalid because they operated in an
    arbitrary manner as to a single payor, Imperial Irrigation District. Accordingly, the trial
    court invalidated regulations 1066 and 1073, “as adopted by Resolution 2003-0077 in
    2003-2004.”4
    The Board appeals, contending the trial court erred in invalidating the fee
    regulations.
    We shall conclude that the trial court’s central premise -- that the Board allocated
    the entire cost of the Division’s regulatory activities to permit and license holders -- is
    wholly incorrect because it fails to recognize the role that general fund money played in
    fiscal year 2003-2004. That year the Legislature appropriated roughly $9 million dollars
    for the Water Rights Division, roughly 51 percent of which was paid from the Water
    Rights Fund (fee revenue), while 43 percent was paid from the state’s general fund, and 6
    percent from reimbursements and other funds. Moreover, the record shows that roughly
    90 percent of the Division’s costs were attributable to permit and license holders, while
    10 percent were attributable to non-fee-paying right holders. Thus, the fees assessed on
    3      At the remand trial, the parties and trial court agreed that the Supreme Court had
    directed the trial court to make findings concerning “[t]he fee structure and the
    administrative actions taken as of 2003 and 2004, not the current state of affairs.”
    Accordingly, the trial court limited its findings and the judgment to the fee regulations
    “as adopted by Resolution 2003-0077 in 2003-2004.”
    4       The trial court also invalided regulation 1071, which sets forth a fee formula for
    activities involving the diversion or use of water for the purpose of diverting water for
    hydropower generation. (Cal. Code Regs., tit. 23, § 1071.)
    4
    permit and license holders were proportionate to the benefits derived by them or the
    burdens they placed on the Division. Plaintiffs’ assertion that the water right fee was
    imposed for the second half of the fiscal year is at odds with the evidence and the
    language of section 1525, subdivision (e), which provides that the fees “imposed pursuant
    to this section for the 2003-04 fiscal year shall be assessed for the entire 2003-04 fiscal
    year,” and section 1552, which states that “moneys in the Water Rights Fund are
    available for expenditure, upon appropriation by the Legislature.” (Italics added.)
    We shall further conclude that the Board’s decision to allocate all of the USBR’s
    annual fee for projects within the CVP to the water supply contractors was reasonable.
    The record and the case law establish that the USBR provides the contractors with all
    available water after satisfying its obligations under state and federal law. Because the
    CVP contractors received everything the USBR had to give under its CVP permits and
    licenses, the Board reasonably valued the CVP contractors’ beneficial interest in those
    permits and licenses at 100 percent. Finally, we shall conclude that the trial court erred in
    determining that the fee regulations were invalid based on their application to a single
    payor. Accordingly, we shall reverse the judgment invalidating the fee regulations.
    5
    FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND5
    “The water in California belongs to the people, but the right to use water may be
    acquired as provided by law.” (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 428, citing
    §§ 102, 1201, italics omitted.) The Board is responsible for the “orderly and efficient
    administration of the water resources of the state” and exercises “the adjudicatory and
    regulatory functions of the state in the field of water resources.” (§ 174, subd. (a).) The
    Water Rights Division administers the water rights program, but its authority is limited.
    (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at pp. 429-430.) The Board regulates all
    appropriative water rights6 acquired since 1914 through a system of permits and licenses.
    5       Plaintiffs moved to strike portions of the Board’s opening brief on the ground that
    the brief “cites to and relies on materials, as substantive evidence, that were not before
    the Trial Court.” Having deferred ruling on the motion pending assignment of a panel
    and filing of the opinion in this court, we now deny it. All of the materials that are the
    subject of the motion to strike are from the appendix for the prior appeal in this case,
    which, in turn, are from the original trial court writ proceedings. As the trial court
    acknowledged, the remand trial was not a “separate trial,” it was a “further trial” on the
    writ. Moreover, California Rules of Court, rule 8.124(b)(2) provides that “[a]n appendix
    may incorporate by reference all or part of the record on appeal . . . in a prior appeal in
    the same case.” It also bears noting that while plaintiffs’ motion to strike addresses
    several items, the focus of the motion is on one document, an April 15, 2004, letter from
    Arthur G. Baggett, Jr., to Assemblymember Joseph Canciamilla (Baggett Letter). As the
    Board correctly notes in its opposition to the motion to strike, the Board does not rely on
    the Baggett Letter as substantive evidence in its opening brief. And we have not
    considered the Baggett Letter for any purpose in resolving the issues raised in this appeal.
    Plaintiffs also moved to strike portions of the Board’s supplemental letter brief.
    We shall deny the motion as moot because we did not rely on either parties’ supplemental
    briefs in determining the issues raised in this appeal.
    6      An appropriative right is the right to take water from a watercourse that does not
    run adjacent to a landowner’s property. (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 429.)
    6
    (Id. at p. 429.) It does not have jurisdiction to regulate riparian,7 pueblo,8 and pre-1914
    appropriative rights (RPP right). (Id. at p. 429.) It does, however, “have authority to
    prevent illegal diversions and to prevent waste or unreasonable use of water, regardless of
    the basis under which the right is held.” (Ibid.; see also § 275.) At all relevant times
    herein, RPP right holders accounted for approximately 38 percent of all surface water
    rights, the USBR accounted for 22 percent, and permit and license holders (other than the
    USBR) accounted for 40 percent.
    Prior to fiscal year 2003-2004, the operation of the Water Rights Division was
    supported primarily by the state’s general fund, with less than one percent of Division
    costs covered by fees. The Governor’s budget proposal for fiscal year 2003-2004
    proposed expenditures of $8.7 million to support the water rights program, $7.2 million
    of which was to be payable from the general fund. In its analysis of the fiscal year 2003-
    2004 budget bill, the Legislative Analyst’s Office (LAO) recommended that general fund
    support for the water rights program be fully replaced with “a new annual compliance fee
    assessed on all water rights holders under the board’s jurisdiction.” The Board opposed
    the LAO’s recommendation, arguing that the LAO’s analysis incorrectly assumed that
    “all water right actions benefit . . . the regulated community (water right permit and
    license holders)” and failed to take into account water-right holders outside of the
    Board’s jurisdiction who also benefit from the Division’s activities but would not be
    assessed a fee (i.e., RPP right holders).
    7     “Under the common law riparian doctrine, a person owning land bordering a
    stream has the right to reasonable and beneficial use of water on his or her land.” (Farm
    Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 429, fn. 7.)
    8      “ ‘A pueblo water right . . . is the paramount right of an American city as
    successor of a Spanish or Mexican pueblo (municipality) to the use of water naturally
    occurring within the old pueblo limits for use of the inhabitants of the city.’ ” (Farm
    Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 429, fn. 8.)
    7
    The final budget act, which took effect on August 2, 2003, appropriated roughly
    $9 million for the Water Rights Division, $4.4 million of which was payable from the
    Water Rights Fund, which had yet to be established. The final change book to the
    Governor’s fiscal year 2003-2004 budget stated in pertinent part: “Adopt trailer bill
    language to establish an annual water right fee. Fee revenues would be deposited in the
    newly created Water Rights Fund and used to offset General Fund expenditure
    reductions.” (Italics added.)
    In September 2003, the Legislature passed Senate Bill No. 1049 (2003-2004 Reg.
    Sess.) (Senate Bill 1049) by a simple majority (53 percent). (Stats. 2003, ch. 741, p.
    5549 et seq.) Senate Bill 1049 was signed by the Governor on October 8, 2003, and took
    effect on January 1, 2004. Senate Bill 1049 repealed certain sections of the Water Code
    and enacted sections 1525 through 1560, which among other things, imposed an annual
    fee on water right permit and license holders (§ 1525) and established the Water Rights
    Fund (§§ 1550 & 1551).
    As relevant here, section 1525, subdivision (a) requires water right permit and
    license holders to pay an annual fee according to a fee schedule established by the
    Board.9 Subdivision (c) of section 1525 requires the Board to set the fee schedule “so
    that the total amount of fees collected pursuant to this section equals that amount
    necessary to recover costs incurred in connection with” the Division’s activities.10
    Subdivision (d)(1) of section 1525 directs the Board to adopt the fee schedule as
    emergency regulations in accordance with section 1530, while former subdivision (d)(3)
    required the Board to “set the amount of total revenue collected each year through the
    9      Subdivision (b) of section 1525 sets forth a series of mandatory filing fees. Those
    fees are not at issue in this appeal.
    10     Subdivision (c) of section 1525 sets out “recoverable costs” in substantial detail,
    but the costs recoverable are “not limited to” the activities identified.
    8
    fees authorized by this section at an amount equal to the revenue levels set forth in the
    annual Budget Act for this activity.”11 Finally, subdivision (e) of section 1525 specifies
    that “[a]nnual fees imposed pursuant to this section for the 2003-04 fiscal year shall be
    assessed for the entire 2003-04 year.”
    Section 1540 allows the Board to allocate the annual fee (or a portion thereof) of a
    person or entity who refuses to pay it based on sovereign immunity to persons or entities
    who have contracts for the delivery of water from the person or entity upon whom the fee
    was initially imposed. Section 1560 sets out the options that may be pursued when the
    United States or an Indian tribe declines to pay the annual fee by relying on sovereign
    immunity.
    Sections 1550 and 1551 establish the Water Rights Fund into which all fees,
    expenses, and penalties collected by the Board must be deposited. Section 1552 sets
    forth the purposes for which the money in the Water Rights Fund may be used and
    provides that such funds are available for expenditure “upon appropriation by the
    Legislature.”
    To establish a fee schedule as directed in section 1525, the Board began with the
    $4.4 million figure set forth in the fiscal year 2003-2004 budget -- the amount of the
    Division’s $9 million budget that was to be paid from the Water Rights Fund. The Board
    determined that most of the fee revenue should come from annual fees because it
    believed that annual fees would provide a more stable funding source, and most of the
    Division’s work is related to overseeing and protecting water rights.
    11      Subdivision (d)(3) was amended in 2011. As amended, it provides that the Board
    “shall set the amount of total revenue collected each year through the fees authorized by
    this section at an amount equal to the amounts appropriated by the Legislature for
    expenditure for support of water rights program activities from the Water Rights Fund
    established under Section 1550, taking into account the reserves in the Water Rights
    Fund.” (Stats. 2011, ch. 579, § 9.)
    9
    The Board assumed that 40 percent of permit and license holders would not pay
    the annual fee because 40 percent of permit and license holders failed to comply with the
    existing mandatory reporting requirements. To account for the estimated 40 percent
    noncollection rate, the Board divided $4.4 million by 0.60, which generated a revised
    billing target of over $7 million.
    The Board elected to apportion the fees among permit and license holders based
    on the face value of their permits and licenses, i.e., the total annual amount of diversion
    authorized by the permit or license,12 reasoning that the more water held under a permit
    or license, the greater the regulatory burden to the Division because larger projects
    generally have greater environmental impacts, involve more controversial issues, and
    affect a greater number of people. The Board elected not to base the fees on the water
    actually used because it did not have complete or reliable records concerning actual water
    used. As previously noted, only 60 percent of permit and license holders complied with
    annual reporting requirements, and the Board had no way of accurately monitoring use.
    The Board also rejected a fee-for-service approach as too costly, beyond the capability of
    its accounting system, and unpredictable.
    The Board reduced the face value of the permits and licenses for hydroelectric
    projects because the Division expends fewer resources administrating those water
    12     More precisely, the face value of a permit is the amount of water the applicant has
    estimated it can put to beneficial use, including reasonable conveyance losses (Cal. Code
    Regs., tit. 23, § 696), while the face value of a license--the perfected water right--is the
    amount of water the Board has determined the licensee was able to put to beneficial use
    (§ 1610).
    10
    rights.13 As a result of these reductions, the face value of all water right permits and
    licenses was reduced from 322 million to 200 million acre-feet.
    After running several calculations, the Board set annual fees at the greater of $100
    or $0.03 per acre-foot based on the face value of the permit or license.14
    The Board used the same methodology for calculating the USBR’s annual water
    right fee as it did for other permit and license holders. The face value of all the USBR
    permits and licenses was 116 million acre-feet. After adjustments for hydropower, the
    face value of the USBR’s permits and licenses was reduced to 86 million acre-feet, which
    in fiscal year 2003-2004 amounted to an annual fee of roughly $2.58 million (86 million
    acre-feet multiplied by $0.03).
    Once the Board determined that the USBR would not pay the fee based on
    sovereign immunity, the Board elected to allocate the portion of the USBR’s fee
    attributable to its CVP permits and licenses, 81.7 million acre-feet, to the CVP
    contractors. (§§ 1540, 1560, subd. (b)(2).) The 81.7 million-acre feet amounted to $2.45
    million in annual fees (81.7 million acre-feet multiplied by $0.03). The Board divided
    the $2.45 million among the projects within the CVP according to each project’s water
    rights, and using records provided by the USBR, the Board grouped the CVP contractors
    by the project serving them. It then assessed the CVP contractors a prorated share of the
    13    The face value of permits and licenses for projects licensed by the Federal Energy
    Regulatory Commission (FERC) was reduced by 70 percent, and the face value of
    permits and licenses for non-FERC projects was reduced by 50 percent.
    14     The Board also imposed one-time filing fees on applications for new permits and
    licenses and petitions to change terms and conditions of existing permits and licenses.
    (See Cal. Code Regs., tit. 23, §§ 1062, 1064.) It assumed that filing fees would generate
    $207,400 annually, which correspondingly reduced the amount of revenue to be assessed
    through annual fees.
    11
    amount of fees associated with the projects serving them, based on the amount of water
    specified in their contracts.
    To implement the fee schedule as directed in section 1525, the Board adopted
    regulation 1066 and regulation 1073. Regulation 1066 applies to water right permit and
    license holders. Regulation 1066, former subdivision (a), provided: “A person who
    holds a water right permit or license shall pay an annual fee that is the greater of $100 or
    $0.03 per acre-foot based on the total annual amount of diversion authorized by the
    permit or license.” (Reg. 1066, subd. (a), Register 2003, No. 52 (Dec. 23, 2003).)
    The Board adopted regulation 1073 to implement sections 1540 and subdivision
    (b)(2) of section 1560, which among other things, authorized the Board to allocate an
    annual fee imposed on the United States to persons or entities who contract with the
    United States for the delivery of water when the United States declines to pay the annual
    fee based on sovereign immunity. As relevant here, regulation 1073 provides that if the
    USBR declines or is likely to decline to pay fees or expenses for projects within the CVP,
    the Division Chief shall allocate those fees or expenses to the USBR’s water supply
    contractors. (Regulation 1073, subd. (b)(2).) The regulation further provides that “[t]he
    fee or expense for projects of the [CVP] shall be prorated among the contractors for the
    [CVP] based on either the contractor’s entitlement under the contract or, if the contractor
    has a base supply under the contract, the contractor’s supplemental supply entitlement.” 15
    (Regulation 1073, subd. (b)(2).)
    15      “ ‘Base supply’ means the amount of water delivered to a water user by USBR
    from the Central Valley Project that is designated as base supply in a water supply
    contract between the user and the USBR.” (Regulation 1073, subd. (e)(1).)
    “ ‘Supplemental supply entitlement’ means the amount of water exceeding base supply
    delivered from the Central Valley Project to a water user.” (Regulation 1073, subd.
    (e)(2).)
    12
    In January 2004, the Board of Equalization16 sent fee notices to water right permit
    and license holders and to those who contracted with the USBR for the delivery of CVP
    water. (§§ 1536 & 1537, subd. (a).) The Division collected nearly $7.4 million in fees
    but expended just over $4.6 million of that amount. The remainder was deposited into a
    new fund and became the starting balance of the Water Rights Fund for the next fiscal
    year.
    The Division’s actual adjusted operational costs and funding sources for fiscal
    year 2003-2004 were as follows:
    WATER RIGHTS
    State Operations
    General Fund                                                                     $3.865*
    Public Resources Account, Cigarette and Tobacco Products Sales Tax               $0.355
    Federal Trust Fund                                                               $0.150
    Reimbursements                                                                   $0.088
    Water Rights Fund                                                                $4.608
    Totals, State Operations                                                  $9.066
    * Dollars in millions
    Roughly 51 percent of the Division’s costs were paid from the Water Rights Fund,
    while 43 percent were paid from the state’s general fund, and 6 percent from
    reimbursements and other funds.
    Plaintiffs challenged the imposition of the annual water right fee, seeking
    declaratory and injunctive relief and a writ of mandate. They alleged that the statutory
    scheme enacted by the Legislature was unconstitutional on its face and “as applied”
    through the emergency regulations adopted by the Board. The trial court initially denied
    the writ of mandate, ruling that the money collected constituted valid regulatory fees,
    rather than taxes. It also rejected plaintiffs’ other constitutional claims.
    16     The Board of Equalization has since been reorganized and for purposes of this
    appeal is now the California Department of Tax and Fee Administration.
    13
    We reversed in part, holding that the statutory scheme was constitutional on its
    face, but that it was unconstitutional as applied through the fee formulas set forth in the
    emergency regulations. (California Farm Bureau Federation v. California State Water
    Resources Control Bd. (2007) 
    146 Cal.App.4th 1126
    , 1132 (Farm Bureau I).) We
    therefore remanded the matter to the trial court with instructions to order the Board to
    adopt valid fee formulas. (Id. at pp. 1160-1161.)
    Our Supreme Court affirmed our judgment holding that the statutory scheme was
    constitutional on its face, but reversed our determination that the statutes were
    unconstitutional as applied through the regulations. (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th
    at p. 428.) The court found that the record was inadequate and that the trial court’s order
    lacked sufficient factual findings and remanded the matter to this court with directions to
    remand the matter to the trial court to make additional findings. (Id. at pp. 428, 437, 441-
    442, 446-447.)
    Following a 10-day bench trial, the trial court issued a statement of decision that
    concluded inter alia that “the statutory scheme and its implementing regulations
    improperly require the permit and license holders to pay more than a de minimis amount
    for regulatory activities that benefit non-paying water right holders, or that result from
    burdens non-paying water right holders placed on the Water Rights Division” and
    therefore must be invalidated. The court also determined that plaintiffs “demonstrated
    that the allocation of the [USBR’s] fees to [CVP] contractors is unconstitutional under
    the supremacy clause, because the allocation of fees is not limited to the contractors’
    beneficial or possessory use of the [USBR’s] water rights.” The Supreme Court’s
    decision in Farm Bureau II and the trial court’s findings on remand are set forth in more
    detail below in the discussion of the Board’s claims on appeal.
    14
    DISCUSSION
    I
    The Trial Court Erred in Determining That the Water Right Fee Imposed in Fiscal Year
    2003-2004 Pursuant to Regulation 1066 Was Not Properly Allocated, and Thus,
    Constituted an Unlawful Tax
    The trial court determined that the annual water right fee imposed in fiscal year
    2003-2004 operated as a tax, not a valid regulatory fee, because “the evidence establishes
    that the statutory scheme and its implementing regulations do not provide a fair,
    reasonable, and substantially proportionate assessment of all costs related to the
    regulation of affected payors.” The trial court’s determination is predicated on its finding
    that “the statutory scheme and its implementing regulations improperly require the permit
    and license holders to pay more than a de minimis amount for regulatory activities that
    benefit [RPP] right holders, or that result from burdens [RPP] right holders place on the
    Water Rights Division.”
    The Board does not dispute that RPP right holders were not assessed any water
    right fees even though they benefited from and placed burdens on the Division’s
    activities. Rather, the Board claims that the trial court ignored substantial evidence in the
    record that established that only 10 percent of the Division’s costs were attributable to
    RPP right holders, and that there was more than enough “non-fee” support for the
    Division to cover such costs. According to the Board, had the trial court considered such
    evidence, it would have concluded that holders of permits and licenses were not required
    to pay for costs attributable to RPP right holders. The Board therefore contends that the
    trial court erred in determining that the statutory scheme and its implementing regulations
    do not provide a fair, reasonable, and substantially proportionate assessment of all costs
    related to the regulation of affected payors. The Board is correct.
    A.     Applicable Law
    “The California Constitution provides that any act to increase taxes must be passed
    by a two-thirds vote of the Legislature. On the other hand, statutes that create or raise
    15
    regulatory fees need only the assent of a simple majority.” (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51
    Cal.4th at p. 428, fns. omitted.) Senate Bill 1049 “passed the Legislature with only a 53
    percent majority. Thus, if the amount charged under section 1525 [(as applied through
    the fee schedule in regulation 1066)] is a tax, it is invalid. If it is a regulatory fee, it is not
    . . . .” (Farm Bureau II, at p. 437.)
    “ ‘[F]ees charged in connection with regulatory activities which fees do not exceed
    the reasonable cost of providing services necessary to the activity for which the fee is
    charged and which are not levied for unrelated revenue purposes’ ” are valid regulatory
    fees. (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 441, quoting Sinclair Paint Co. v. State
    Bd. of Equalization (1997) 
    15 Cal.4th 866
    , 876 (Sinclair Paint).) “[T]o determine the tax
    or fee issue, . . . courts [must] examine the costs of the regulatory activity and determine
    if there was a reasonable relationship between the fees assessed and the costs of the
    regulatory activity.” (Farm Bureau II, at p. 441, citing Sinclair Paint, 
    supra,
     15 Cal.4th
    at pp. 870, 878.) “A regulatory fee does not become a tax simply because the fee may be
    disproportionate to the service rendered to individual payors. [Citation.] The question of
    proportionality . . . is measured collectively, considering all rate payors.” (Farm Bureau
    II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 438.)
    “[A] regulatory fee, to survive as a fee, does not require a precise cost-fee ratio. A
    regulatory fee is enacted for purposes broader than the privilege to use a service or to
    obtain a permit. Rather, the regulatory program is for the protection of the health and
    safety of the public. The legislative body charged with enacting laws pursuant to the
    police power retains the discretion to apportion the costs of regulatory programs in a
    variety of reasonable financing schemes. An inherent component of reasonableness in
    this context is flexibility.” (California Assn, of Professional Scientists v. Department of
    Fish and Game (2000) 
    79 Cal.App.4th 935
    , 950.)
    “The plaintiff challenging a fee bears the burden of proof to establish a prima facie
    case showing that the fee is invalid.” (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 436.)
    16
    “[O]nce plaintiffs have made their prima facie case, the state bears the burden of
    production and must show ‘ “(1) the estimated costs of the service or regulatory activity,
    and (2) the basis for determining the manner in which the costs are apportioned, so that
    charges allocated to a payor bear a fair or reasonable relationship to the payor’s burdens
    on or benefits from the regulatory activity.” ’ ” (Id. at pp. 436-437, quoting Sinclair
    Paint, 
    supra,
     15 Cal.4th at p. 878.)
    “Whether section 1525 imposes a tax or a fee is a question of law decided upon an
    independent review of the record.” (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 436.) We
    review the trial court’s foundational factual findings for substantial evidence. (City of
    Arcadia v. State Water Resources Control Bd. (2011) 
    191 Cal.App.4th 156
    , 170.)
    B.     The Proceedings on Remand
    In Farm Bureau II, our Supreme Court concluded that it could not resolve the
    “ ‘tax or fee’ question” because the trial court’s order lacked sufficient factual findings
    for it to determine “whether the fees, as imposed, were reasonably proportional to the
    costs of the regulatory program.” (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 441.)
    Accordingly, it remanded the matter and directed the trial court “to make detailed
    findings focusing on the Board’s evidentiary showing that the associated costs of the
    regulatory activity were reasonably related to the fees assessed on the payors.” (Id. at p.
    442.) More particularly, the trial court was instructed to make findings on (1) whether
    “the fees are reasonably related to the total budgeted cost of the Division’s ‘activity’ (see
    § 1525, subd. (c))” and (2) whether “the statutory scheme and its implementing
    regulations provide a fair, reasonable, and substantially proportionate assessment of all
    costs related to the regulation of affected payors.” (Ibid.)
    On remand, the trial court determined that plaintiffs did not establish a prima facie
    case that the fees collected exceeded the total budgeted cost of the Division’s operations,
    while “the Board presented evidence demonstrating that the total amount raised in fees
    was less than the cost of supporting the Water Rights Division.” In doing so, the court
    17
    observed that plaintiffs “did not focus their challenge on the actual cost of the Division’s
    regulatory activities in comparison to the aggregate amount of fees raised under the
    regulations. Instead, they focused on the distinct issue of whether the fees were properly
    apportioned to and among the payors (actual and potential), contending that the fees
    allocated to payors did not bear a fair and reasonable relationship to those payors’
    burdens on or benefits from the regulatory activity.”
    As to that issue, the trial court found that plaintiffs “established a prima facie case that
    the statutory scheme and its implementing regulations do not ‘provide a fair, reasonable,
    and substantially proportionate assessment of all costs related to the regulation of affected
    payors’ ” by producing evidence that RPP right holders, whose rights accounted for 38
    percent of all water rights in the state and who are not charged fees, “receive a benefit
    from the Division’s regulatory activities, and also impose some burden on the agency.”
    The trial court further determined that the Board failed to rebut plaintiffs’ prima facie
    case by producing evidence that showed “ ‘the estimated costs of the service or
    regulatory activity [and] the basis for determining the manner in which the costs are
    apportioned, so that the charges allocated to a payor bear a fair or reasonable relationship
    to the payor’s burdens on or benefits from the regulatory activity.’ ” More particularly,
    the trial court found that “there is no documentary evidence that would support any
    particular estimate or finding regarding the proportion of the Division’s resources that are
    devoted to water right holders other than the holders of permits and licenses.” It also
    determined that “the Board did not present any evidence that established that funds other
    than fees paid for regulatory activities related to non-fee paying rights holders,” and
    “absent any evidence that could quantify the amount of such activities as a proportion of
    the Division’s total regulatory activities, it would not be possible to make any such
    showing.”
    18
    C.     Analysis
    The salient question is not whether “non-fee paying rights holders,” i.e., RPP right
    holders, received something for nothing, but whether the fees allocated to the affected
    payors, i.e., permit and license holders, were reasonable and substantially proportionate
    to all costs related to the regulation of those payors. (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th
    at p. 442.) That RPP right holders were not charged fees but benefited from or placed
    burdens on the Division’s regulatory activities is relevant only if the regulatory costs
    attributable to RPP right holders necessarily were allocated to the affected fee payors. If
    other sources of funding, such as the state’s general fund, were sufficient to cover the
    regulatory costs attributable to RPP right holders, it does not matter that RPP right
    holders were not charged a fee. To the extent the trial court based its determination that
    plaintiffs established a prima facie case by producing evidence that “holders of water
    rights that are not charged fees nevertheless receive a benefit from the Division’s
    regulatory activities, and also impose some burden on the agency,” it erred.
    In any event, the Board presented evidence that at most 10 percent of Division
    resources were spent on matters involving RPP right holders, and that funding sources
    other than water right fee revenue more than covered the Division’s expenditures on such
    matters. To support its assertion that the administration of the water right permit and
    license system constituted the vast majority of the Division’s activities, the Board relied
    on a draft report prepared by consultants for Westlands Water District (Westlands), a
    plaintiff herein, and correspondence between Victoria Whitney, chief of the Water Rights
    Division, and Thomas Birmingham, general counsel and general manager of Westlands,
    concerning that draft report. The draft report states in pertinent part: “An estimate from
    [Board] staff . . . indicates that the [Board] may spend as much as 10 percent of Division
    time on riparian and pre-1914 water rights. This time may more appropriately be funded
    by others or the general fund.” Westlands submitted a copy of the draft report to the
    Board for the purpose of “initiat[ing] discussions about a resolution to the issues that [it]
    19
    hoped would avoid this litigation.”17 Whitney responded to the report in a letter to
    Birmingham, stating in relevant part: “ . . . Westlands discusses the Division’s activities
    involving riparian and pre-1914 water rights . . . . The report discusses why these
    activities should be paid by the General Fund. Westlands identified specific percentages
    of Division time spent on activities. These percentages may be incorrect because they
    include activities related directly to an existing permit or license.” Birmingham replied to
    Whitney’s comments by letter, stating in relevant part: “Our consultants have spent
    considerable time working with the [Board] and the Division. They provided their best
    estimate of time the Division spend[s] working on riparian and pre-1914 water right
    issues. We do believe though that whatever time spent on these issues should not be
    charged to the water appropriators. We have provided an educated estimate of 10% of the
    Division’s time is spent on these and related issues. We recognize that the Division does
    not keep an account of time spent on these issues, but it would be helpful for the [Board]
    to submit an estimate for use in our report if you disagree with ours.” (Italics added.)
    Shortly thereafter, Westlands provided the Board with a revised draft report, which states
    in pertinent part: “Unfortunately the Division does not have an accurate method for
    determining the amount of time spent on riparian and pre-1914 water rights . . . .
    However a rough estimate from [Board] staff indicates that the [Board] may spend as
    much as 10 percent of Division time on riparian and pre-1914 water rights. In addition,
    our consultants, who have spent considerable time working with the [Board] and the
    Division, concur with the 10% estimate.”
    The trial court failed to discuss any of this evidence in its statement of decision.
    Plaintiffs assert that the trial court rejected the Board’s reliance on the draft report
    17     Birmingham testified that he thought “the report was in sufficient form and
    content that we could transmit it to the Water Board to initiate discussions about a
    resolution to the issues that we hoped would avoid this litigation.”
    20
    because the court “recognized that the Draft Report was not even a ‘Westlands’ report,
    accepting Mr. Birmingham’s testimony that he and the Westlands Water District actually
    disagreed with certain aspects of the Draft Report.”18 We need not determine whether
    the trial court rejected the Board’s reliance on the draft report because even assuming for
    argument’s sake that it did, Birmingham, in his capacity as Westland’s general counsel
    and general manager, adopted the consultants’ “educated estimate of 10%” in his letter to
    Whitney. That letter is evidence the Division devoted 10 percent of its resources to RPP
    right holders. Thus, the trial court’s finding that “there is no documentary evidence that
    would support any particular estimate or finding regarding the proportion of the
    Division’s resources that are devoted to water right holders other than the holders of
    permits and licenses” is not supported by substantial evidence.19
    18     Birmingham testified that the first draft report was prepared by outside technical
    consultants retained by Westlands, and that the views contained therein were those of the
    individuals who prepared it. During the Board’s cross-examination of Birmingham
    concerning the draft report, the trial court observed: “You’re asking [Birmingham] to
    interpret what somebody else’s words mean in a document that’s in evidence and the
    document speaks for itself, and regardless of what you and he think it means, the court
    will consider what the words in a document in evidence means.”
    19      Citing evidence of “Board decisions involving [RPP] water rights,” the trial court
    found that plaintiffs “demonstrate[ed] that the Division devotes an unquantified, but
    clearly non-trivial, proportion of its resources to issues involving those classes of fee-
    exempt water right holders.” The Board disputes the trial court’s finding that the
    decisions involved RPP water rights and argues that 9 of the 11 decisions were outside
    the relevant time period. We need not address the Board’s claims because the trial
    court’s finding that the “Division devotes an unquantified, but clearly non-trivial,
    proportion of its resources to issues involving . . . [RPP] right holders” is consistent with
    evidence the Division devotes 10 percent of its resources to RPP right holders.
    Moreover, the trial court relied on the Board decisions in finding that plaintiffs
    established a prima facie case that the fees were not properly allocated. At that point, the
    burden of production shifted to the Board (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at pp. 436-
    437), which the Board satisfied in part by producing evidence the Division devotes 10
    percent of its resources to RPP right holders.
    21
    The trial court’s reliance on a memorandum Whitney prepared, dated April 7,
    2004, entitled “Errata to Memorandum Dated December 29, 2003 Regarding the Water
    Right Fee Program Summary and Recommended Fee Schedule for Fiscal Year 2003-
    2004,” for the proposition that the Division spends “significantly more than five percent”
    of its time on resources or activities that benefit RPP right holders, is misplaced. That
    memorandum states in pertinent part: “In fact, as a portion of the Division’s overall
    administration of water rights, approximately one-third of the Division’s time is spent for
    the purpose of protecting the environment and the public interest and two-thirds of the
    time is spent on activities that protect prior right holders. Some of the Division’s time is
    spent on efforts to protect parties who claim and appear to have water rights that are not
    within the [Board]’s permitting authority. Furthermore, once a permit or license is
    issued, most of staff’s efforts are associated with ensuring that the permit or license
    holder complies with the conditions of the water right permit and with issuing a license to
    water right permit holders.” Whitney’s statement that some of the Division’s time is
    spent on activities that protect RPP right holders does not suggest that any particular
    amount of time on such efforts, only that it spends some time. To the extent the trial
    court equated “prior right holders” with RPP right holders, and interpreted Whitney to
    suggest that the Division spends two-thirds of its time on activities that protect RPP right
    holders, such an interpretation is unsupported in the record or the law. In the
    memorandum, Whitney distinguishes between “prior right holders” and “parties who
    claim and appear to have water rights that are not within the [Board]’s permitting
    authority,” i.e., RPP right holders. Moreover, while the term “prior right holder” may
    include RPP right holders, it is by no means limited to those right holders. It also may
    include permit and license holders. (See generally El Dorado Irrigation Dist. v. State
    Water Resources Control Bd. (2006) 
    142 Cal.App.4th 937
    , 961-962 [discussing rule of
    priority].) The memorandum supports a finding that the Division spends some time on
    efforts to protect RPP right holders, a fact the Board does not dispute.
    22
    Having found that the Board produced evidence the Division devoted roughly 10
    percent of its resources to RPP right holders, we now turn to whether those resources
    came from the water right fee assessed in fiscal year 2003-2004. To support its assertion
    that the Division received substantial funding from sources other than the challenged
    water right fees, the Board relied on the Governor’s proposed budget for fiscal year 2003-
    2004, the final budget act for fiscal year 2003-2004, and related documents. The
    Governor’s proposed budget for fiscal year 2003-2004, which ran from July 1, 2003,
    through June 30, 2004, and was presented prior to the enactment of Senate Bill 1049,
    proposed $8.7 million for the water rights program, $7.2 million of which was to come
    from the state’s general fund. Under the final budget act, the program’s total
    appropriation was increased to $9 million, and $4.4 million of that amount was to come
    from the new Water Rights Fund, thereby reducing the amount payable from the state’s
    general fund. As explained in the final change book to the Governor’s fiscal year 2003-
    2004 budget, “[f]ee revenues would be deposited in the newly created Water Rights Fund
    and used to offset General Fund expenditure reductions.” (Italics added.) In fiscal year
    2003-2004, the Division’s actual costs totaled $9.066 million. Roughly 51 percent of that
    amount was paid for by water right fees ($4.608 million), 43 percent from the state’s
    general fund ($3.865 million), and the remaining 6 percent from the tobacco tax fund
    ($355,000), federal trust fund ($150,000), and reimbursements ($88,000). Thus, the
    water right fee reduced, but did not replace, general fund support for the Division’s
    regulatory activities in fiscal year 2003-2004, and there was more than enough general
    fund support to cover the costs attributable to RPP right holders.
    Plaintiffs dispute the Board’s claim that the water right fee accounted for only half
    of the Division’s budget for fiscal year 2003-2004, arguing that “[t]he fees were imposed
    for the second half of the fiscal year after [Senate Bill] 1049 was enacted.” Plaintiffs,
    however, fail to point to any evidence in support of their argument. Rather, they cite the
    following statement from the factual and procedural background in Farm Bureau II:
    23
    “The proposal called for General Fund support for the first half of the 2003-2004 fiscal
    year with fee increases covering the second half of the year.” (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51
    Cal.4th at p. 430, fn. 10, italics added.) The statement refers to the LAO’s proposal,
    which recommended “that legislation be enacted that . . . establishes a new annual
    compliance fee assessed on all water rights holders under the board’s jurisdiction, in
    order to fully replace the General Fund support proposed for the board’s water rights
    program.” The proposal says nothing about general fund support being used for any part
    of the year.20 To the contrary, the proposal recommended reducing general fund support
    for the water rights program in fiscal year 2003-2004 to zero. Moreover, what the LAO
    proposed and what the Legislature in fact did are not the same thing. As detailed above,
    the water right fee did not fully replace general fund support for the Division’s regulatory
    activities in fiscal year 2003-2004.21
    20      Plaintiffs also cite to a document entitled “Frequently Asked Questions Regarding
    Water Right Fees,” which says nothing about the fees being imposed to support the
    second half of the fiscal year. Rather, it states in pertinent part: “In an effort to reduce
    the state’s current budget deficit, the Legislature this year decreased General Fund
    support for the water right program by almost 30 percent. In addition, the Legislature
    determined that the funding source for almost half the remaining allocation in Fiscal Year
    2003-2004 should be shifted from the General Fund to a special fund financed by water
    right holders.” This is consistent with the Board’s claim that the water right fee
    accounted for roughly half of the Division’s budget for fiscal year 2003-2004.
    21     The factual and procedural background in Farm Bureau II “is largely adopted”
    from our opinion in Farm Bureau I (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 428, fn. 4),
    which states that “[t]he LAO proposed that the General Fund support the water rights
    program for the first half of the fiscal year, and fee increases cover the $ 4.4 million
    needed for the second half of the fiscal year” (Farm Bureau I, supra, 146 Cal.App.4th at
    p. 1137.) As set forth above, the proposal says nothing about general fund support for
    any portion of the year. While this court may have assumed such was the case based on
    the timing of the passage of Senate Bill 1049, evidence presented during the 10-day
    remand trial establishes otherwise. (At p. 24, post.)
    24
    In addition, plaintiffs’ claim that the fees were imposed for the second half of the
    fiscal year is at odds with the language of section 1525, subdivision (e), which provides:
    “Annual fees imposed pursuant to this section for the 2003-04 fiscal year shall be
    assessed for the entire 2003-04 fiscal year.” (Italics added.) It is also inconsistent with
    section 1552, which states in pertinent part that “moneys in the Water Rights Fund are
    available for expenditure, upon appropriation by the Legislature . . . .” (Italics added.)
    In fiscal year 2003-2004 money in the Water Rights Fund was appropriated and available
    for expenditure on August 2, 2003, the day the final budget took effect, which was well
    within the first half of the fiscal year, which ran from July 1, 2003, through June 30,
    2004. Thus, while the fee was not assessed until the second half of the fiscal year, the
    monies appropriated by the Legislature for the Water Rights Fund were available for
    expenditure in the first half of the fiscal year. At the remand trial, the Board produced
    evidence showing that Division expenditures were charged against the Water Rights
    Fund appropriation during the first half of fiscal year 2003-2004, and that as of December
    31, 2003, 56.7 percent of that appropriation had been spent. The Board’s budget officer
    explained that it is common for expenses to be paid from a “clearing account” until
    special fund revenues are received.
    Plaintiffs’ reliance on statements by the Board to support their assertion that the
    water right fee was used solely to support the Division’s activities in the second half of
    fiscal year 2003-2004 is misplaced. Whether the water right fee imposed in fiscal year
    2003-2004 accounted for all or nearly all of the Division’s funding in the second half of
    the fiscal year is determined by examining the statutory language and evidence related to
    appropriations and expenditures from the Water Rights Fund, not by the Board’s
    musings.22
    22     In any event, none of the statements relied on by plaintiffs explicitly states that the
    water right fee was in fact used to support the Division’s activities in the second half of
    25
    Finally, we reject the trial court’s finding that the Board failed to consider
    “proportional allotment in enacting the fee regulations,” and that the annual fee is invalid
    on that basis alone. The record shows that the Board did consider whether the fee
    represented a fair, reasonably, and substantially proportionate assessment of all costs
    related to the regulation of affected payors. When the LAO recommended that general
    fund support for the water rights program be fully replaced with “a new annual
    compliance fee” assessed permit and license holders, the Board objected on the ground
    that allocating Division costs entirely to permit and license holders was unfair because
    permit and license holders would necessarily be paying for costs attributable to RPP right
    holders, who also benefited from the Division’s activities but would not be assessed a fee.
    As detailed above, general fund support for the water rights program was not fully
    replaced by the new annual fee in fiscal year 2003-2004. Under the final budget act, the
    Division’s total appropriation was $9 million, only $4.4 million of which was payable
    from the new Water Rights Fund. The remainder of the Division’s funding came
    primarily from the state’s general fund. The trial court appears to have faulted the Board
    for failing to consider that permit and license holders necessarily would be paying for
    costs attributable to RPP right holders -- a situation that did not exist. In any event, even
    assuming for argument’s sake that the Board had failed to consider proportionality in
    developing the fee regulations, that alone would not be a sufficient basis on which to
    fiscal year 2003-2004. The statements are as follows: “In practical effect, the budget
    provided general fund support for the first six months of the year, with fee support for the
    balance of the fiscal year.” (Italics added.) “[T]he general funding to support the
    Division will expire as of December 31st.” “In an effort to reduce the state’s current
    budget deficit, the Legislature this year decreased General Fund support for the water
    right program by almost 30 percent. In addition, the Legislature determined that the
    funding source for almost half the remaining allocation in Fiscal Year 2003-2004 should
    be shifted from the General Fund to a special fund financed by water right holders. As a
    result, the Legislature has directed the [Board] to implement fees to raise revenues of
    $4.4 million.”
    26
    invalidate the regulations. Plaintiffs must show that they were prejudiced by the Board’s
    action. The Board’s adoption of the water right fee regulations involved a quasi-
    legislative action that is reviewed under the standards of ordinary mandamus. (Home
    Builders Assn. of Tulare/Kings Counties, Inc. v. City of Lemoore (2010) 
    185 Cal.App.4th 554
    , 561.) “ ‘[A] party seeking review under traditional mandamus must show the public
    official or agency invested with discretion acted arbitrarily, capriciously, fraudulently, or
    without due regard for his rights, and that the action prejudiced him.’ ” (California
    Public Records Research, Inc. v. County of Yolo (2016) 
    4 Cal.App.5th 150
    , 181, italics
    added, quoting Gordon v. Horsley (2001) 
    86 Cal.App.4th 336
    , 351.) Thus, contrary to
    the trial court’s finding, the failure to consider “proportional allotment in enacting the fee
    regulations” alone is not a basis for invalidating the fee regulations. Plaintiffs must also
    establish that they were prejudiced by the Board’s actions. Because, as detailed above,
    the water right fee represented a fair, reasonable, and substantially proportionate
    assessment of all costs related to the regulation of affected payors, plaintiffs are unable to
    make such a showing here.
    In sum, even assuming that plaintiffs made their prima facie case, the Board
    satisfied its burden of production by producing evidence that the charges allocated to
    permit and license holders in fiscal year 2003-2004 did not exceed the cost of the
    regulatory activities attributable to them. In other words, they were not required to pay
    for activities attributable to RPP right holders who paid no fees. Accordingly, the trial
    court erred in concluding that the water right fee imposed in fiscal year 2003-2004 is a
    tax within the meaning of article XIII A, section 3, of the California Constitution and in
    invalidating the regulations on that basis.
    27
    II
    The Trial Court Erred in Concluding That Regulation 1073 Violated the Supremacy
    Clause
    The trial court determined that regulation 1073, which allocates the USBR’s
    annual fee for projects within the CVP to the CVP contractors, is unconstitutional under
    the supremacy clause because the allocation is not limited to the contractors’ beneficial or
    possessory use of the USBR’s water rights. The Board contends that because CVP
    contractors “get all available project water after all legal requirements are satisfied,” it
    fairly and reasonably valued the CVP contractors’ beneficial interests in those rights at
    100 percent. We agree with the Board.
    A.      The Applicable Law
    “Under established principles of sovereign immunity, the federal government is
    immune from state taxation absent its consent.” (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p.
    443.) A state, however, “may, in effect, raise revenues on the basis of property owned by
    the United States as long as that property is being used by a private citizen or corporation
    and so long as it is the possession or use by the private citizen that is being taxed.”
    (United States v. County of Fresno (1977) 
    429 U.S. 452
    , 462 [
    50 L.Ed.2d 683
    , 692].)
    “To successfully defend a supremacy clause challenge to a tax on persons or entities that
    contract with the federal government, the taxing authority must segregate and tax only the
    beneficial or possessory interest in the property.” (Farm Bureau II, at p. 445.) While we
    concluded above that the annual water right fee is not a tax for purposes of Proposition
    13’s supermajority requirement, “[w]hen conducting a supremacy clause analysis, federal
    courts do not distinguish between fees and taxes.” (Farm Bureau II, at p. 444, fn. 27.)
    B.      The Proceedings on Remand
    In Farm Bureau II, our Supreme Court agreed with the Board “that a fair
    determination of the [CVP] contractors’ beneficial interest must include consideration of
    the system that supports and ensures the delivery of the amount contracted, not just the
    28
    amount of water contracted for delivery.” (Farm Bureau II, supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 446.)
    However, “due to conflicting factual assertions and an inadequate record,” the court
    could not “determine how much of the total water in question is used to support the water
    delivered and can thus be allocated to the [CVP] contractors’ beneficial interest.” (Ibid.)
    Accordingly, the court remanded the matter “for the trial court to determine the
    contractors’ beneficial interest and the value of that interest” and “make findings as to
    whether the Board has fairly evaluated the federal contractors’ beneficial interest, such
    that water not actually under contract for delivery is fairly attributable to the value of the
    delivery contracts themselves.” (Ibid., fn. omitted.)
    On remand, the trial court concluded that (1) plaintiffs “established a prima facie
    case that the fee regulations as applied to [CVP] contractors are invalid because the
    regulations are not based on a fair evaluation of the contractors’ beneficial or possessory
    interests,” and (2) the Board “failed to refute that prima facie case by producing evidence
    that would permit the Court to determine that the contractors’ beneficial or possessory
    interests, in the aggregate, are equal to [the USBR’s] total water rights, and that all water
    not actually under delivery to contractors is fairly attributable to the value of the delivery
    contracts themselves.” In doing so, the court found that there was “no evidence
    whatsoever that the Board considered the beneficial interests of contractors, as defined by
    the Supreme Court, in adopting the fee regulations,” and concluded that “[t]he fee
    regulations must be invalidated on this basis alone.” In addition, the trial court dismissed
    the Board’s assertion that all of the USBR’s CVP water rights above contract amounts
    were necessary to deliver water to the contractors as “an attempt at post hoc validation of
    an arbitrary decision,” noting that “the complete lack of any evidence that could support
    an accurate quantification of the contractors’ beneficial or possessory interests, reinforces
    this impression.” It also rejected the Board’s rationale on the merits, reasoning, “The
    concept of the [CVP] as an integrated project serving multiple uses, with contractors not
    in the highest priority, is not really disputed in this case. But accepting this concept
    29
    really only established that some amount of water not actually under contract may be
    fairly attributable to the value of the contractors’ delivery contracts. It does not
    necessarily follow that 100% of the water not actually under contract should be so
    attributed.” (Fn. omitted.) The court found it significant that the Board had never “done
    an analysis of the contractors’ beneficial or possessory interests in the [USBR’s] [CVP]
    permits,” (fn. omitted) finding that without any such analysis, the Board’s rationale that
    all of the USBR’s water rights were necessary to support deliveries to contractors “lacks
    any convincing evidentiary basis.” Finally, the court concluded that plaintiffs “presented
    significant probative and persuasive evidence that the beneficial or possessory interests of
    the [CVP] contractors could not be valued at 100% of [the USBR’s] water rights for the
    Project” by demonstrating that “the contractors in reality have no actual guaranteed right
    to delivery of any amount of water, regardless of the face amounts of their contracts, and
    . . . frequently receive far less water than those face amounts.” (Fn. omitted.)
    C.     Analysis
    Whether regulation 1073 violates the supremacy clause by allocating the entire
    annual fee for the USBR’s CVP permits and licenses to the CVP contractors turns on
    whether the Board fairly and reasonably valued the CVP contractors’ beneficial interests
    in the USBR’s water rights at 100 percent.
    As a preliminary matter, the trial court’s finding that there is no evidence the
    Board considered the contractors’ beneficial interests in adopting the fee regulations is
    not supported by substantial evidence. The Board’s decision to limit the fees it passed
    through to the contractors to those for projects within the CVP (regulation 1073, subd.
    (b)(2)) shows that it considered the contractors’ beneficial interest in the USBR’s water
    rights in adopting the fee regulations. Moreover, at the remand trial, Whitney testified
    that she considered how much of the USBR’s annual fee for projects within the CVP
    30
    should be passed through to the contractors and recommended 100 percent.23 Since her
    understanding was that the CVP was built as a water supply project, her initial
    recommendation was that 100 percent of the water right fees that support the CVP should
    be passed through to the contractors. After receiving comments at workshops that the
    Board “should not pass through [one] hundred percent of [the USBR’s] fees to the CVP
    contractors,” she solicited information from the USBR concerning the CVP’s allocated
    costs “regarding the various uses for which the CVP had been authorized as compared to
    the uses that [the Board] approved in [its] water rights permits.” Ultimately, however,
    she did not change her recommendation. Both the language of regulation 1073 and
    Whitney’s testimony are evidence the Board considered the contractors’ beneficial
    interests in the USBR’s CVP water rights in enacting the fee regulations. The trial
    court’s contrary finding is not supported by substantial evidence. Moreover, even
    assuming for argument’s sake that the Board had failed to take into account the CVP
    contractors’ beneficial interests in adopting the fee regulations, that alone would not
    warrant invalidating the regulations. As previously discussed, plaintiffs also must
    establish that they were prejudiced by the Board’s actions. (See California Public
    Records Research, Inc. v. County of Yolo, supra, 4 Cal.App.5th at p. 181.) Because, as
    we shall explain, the Board’s decision to allocate all of the USBR’s annual fee for
    projects within the CVP to the water supply contractors was reasonable, plaintiffs are
    unable to make such a showing.
    We now turn to whether the Board fairly and reasonably evaluated the contractors’
    beneficial interest in the USBR’s CVP water rights at 100 percent. An understanding of
    23     To the extent plaintiffs claim that the trial court found all of Whitney’s testimony
    lacked credibility, they are mistaken. The trial court found that her testimony that the
    Division spends approximately five percent of its resources protecting the rights of RPP
    right holders “lack[ed] credibility or any reasonable foundation” due to the lack of
    documentary evidence to support it.
    31
    the history of the CVP, which is well chronicled, is essential to the resolution of this
    issue.
    “The CVP is a federal reclamation project built within the major watersheds of the
    Sacramento and San Joaquin River systems and the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta
    (Delta), providing water storage and distribution to the Central Valley of California. A
    recent federal opinion noted the following legal and factual background: ‘Reclamation
    projects are indispensible features of agriculture in the Western United States. “The
    Reclamation Act of 1902 set in motion a massive program to provide federal financing,
    construction, and operation of water storage and distribution projects to reclaim arid
    lands in many Western States.” [Citations.] . . . [¶] The [CVP] is “a system of dams,
    reservoirs, levees, canals, pumping stations, hydropower plants, and other infrastructure
    [that] distributes water throughout California’s vast Central Valley.” [Citation.] The
    CVP was originally “taken over and executed” by the United States under the
    Reclamation Act and was reauthorized by the Rivers and Harbors Act of 1937, Pub. L.
    No. 75-392, 
    50 Stat. 844
    , 850 (“the CVP Act”). [Citation.]’ (San Luis Unit Food
    Producers v. U.S. (9th Cir. 2013) 
    709 F.3d 798
    , 801 (San Luis Unit).) The [USBR] is the
    agency within the United States Department of the Interior charged with administering
    the CVP. (Westlands [Water District v. U.S. (9th Cir. 2003)] 337 F.3d [1092,] 1096; San
    Luis Unit, 
    supra, at p. 801
    .)
    “As built and operated, the CVP is ‘the nation’s largest water reclamation project
    and California’s largest water supplier.’ (In re Bay-Delta etc. (2008) 
    43 Cal.4th 1143
    ,
    1154, fn. omitted.) It operates 21 reservoirs, 11 powerplants, and 500 miles of major
    canals and aqueducts. With total storage capacity of more than 12 million acre-feet, the
    CVP delivers approximately seven million acre-feet of water annually to over 250 water
    contractors, primarily for agricultural use in the Central Valley. (Id. at p. 1154, fn. 1.)
    The CVP ‘ “supplies two hundred water districts, providing water for about thirty million
    people, irrigating California’s most productive agricultural region and generating
    32
    electricity at [numerous] powerplants.” ’ (San Luis & Delta-Mendota Water Authority v.
    U.S. (9th Cir. 2012) 
    672 F.3d 676
    , 682 (San Luis & Delta-Mendota), quoting Westlands
    Water Dist. v. U.S. Dept. of Interior (9th Cir. 2004) 
    376 F.3d 853
    , 861.)” (North Coast
    Rivers Alliance v. Westlands Water Dist. (2014) 
    227 Cal.App.4th 832
    , 840 (North
    Coast).)
    “In the original 1937 CVP act, Congress prioritized the purposes of the CVP as ‘
    “first, for river regulation, improvement of navigation, and flood control; second, for
    irrigation and domestic uses; and, third, for power.” ’ (San Luis Unit, supra, 709 F.3d at
    801, quoting the 1937 CVP act, § 2.)” (North Coast, supra, 227 Cal.App.4th at p. 842.)
    In 1978, to take account of the combined effects of the CVP and state water
    project upon the Sacramento-San Joaquin Delta (Delta), the Board modified the USBR’s
    permits to require the USBR to meet new water quality standards in the Delta and Suisun
    Marsh by either releasing water from storage or curtailing diversions, so that outflow
    from the Delta would be sufficient to prevent sea water from intruding into the Delta.
    (United States v. State Water Resources Control Bd. (1986) 
    182 Cal.App.3d 82
    , 97-98
    (U.S. v. SWRCB).) The primary purpose underlying the revised water quality standards
    “was salinity control in order to protect consumptive uses (agricultural, industrial and
    municipal) of the Delta waters.” (Id. at p. 115.) As relevant here, the Court of Appeal
    rejected the USBR’s assertion that the Board-imposed conditions for salinity control were
    inconsistent with congressional directives, holding that river regulation, the first priority
    stated, includes salinity control. (Id. at pp. 135-136.)
    “In 1992, Congress passed the Central Valley Project Improvement Act (the
    CVPIA; Pub.L. No. 102-575 (Oct. 30, 1992) 
    106 Stat. 4706
    ), which, among other things,
    amended the original CVP act to reprioritize the objectives of the CVP. The CVPIA
    elevated the protection of fish and wildlife to one of the main purposes of the CVP,
    alongside of irrigation and domestic uses, and it reserved 800,000 acre-feet of CVP water
    for environmental and wildlife protection purposes. (CVPIA, §§ 3406(a) & (b)(2),
    33
    3404(c); see In re Bay-Delta etc., supra, 43 Cal.4th at p. 1154; San Luis Unit, supra, at
    pp. 801-802.)” (North Coast, supra, 227 Cal.App.4th at p. 842, fn. omitted.) The Central
    Valley Project Improvement Act (Pub.L. No. 102-575 (Oct. 30, 1992) 
    106 Stat. 4706
    ;
    hereafter CVPIA) further required the Secretary of the Interior to provide water to certain
    wildlife refuges in amounts equal to historical water deliveries to the refuges. (CVPIA, §
    3406(d)(1).) These refuges receive between 400,000 and 500,000 acre-feet of CVP water
    each year. “The CVPIA also expressly required the [USBR] to operate the CVP to ‘meet
    all obligations under state and federal law, including but not limited to the federal
    Endangered Species Act, [title] 16 [United States Code section] 1531, et seq., and all
    decisions of the California [Board] establishing conditions on applicable licenses and
    permits for the project.’ (CVPIA, § 3406(b).)” (North Coast, at p. 842, fn. omitted..)
    “As this regulatory overview confirms, the [USBR] operates the CVP and
    allocates CVP water subject to a comprehensive scheme of environmental statutes and
    regulations, including the environmental requirements of the CVPIA, the federal
    Endangered Species Act of 1973 (
    16 U.S.C. § 1531
     et seq.), and various state and federal
    regulations of Delta waterflow and water quality. (San Luis & Delta-Mendota, supra,
    672 F.3d at pp. 682-683 [noting the [USBR’s] control of the CVP water is subject to a
    ‘plethora of federal statutes and regulations governing’ such matters as ‘the CVP yield,’
    ‘water quality,’ and ‘the impact of the releases on the environment and wildlife’]; San
    Luis Unit, supra, 709 F.3d at p. 802.)” (North Coast, supra, 227 Cal.App.4th at p. 843.)
    The USBR operates the CVP under water right permits and licenses issued and
    regulated by the Board, administers CVP water, and enters into contracts to provide that
    water to contractors. (North Coast, supra, 227 Cal.App.4th at pp. 839, 841; U.S. v.
    SWRCB, supra, 182 Cal.App.3d at pp. 102, 105; § 1391.)
    “CVP water is available only through a water service contract between the water
    user and the [USBR]. There are three categories of contracts for the provision of CVP
    federal water supply. The first category is comprised of ‘Exchange Contracts’ that give
    34
    express contractual priority to designated ‘Exchange Contractors’ on the basis of their
    pre-1914 riparian and appropriative rights to the San Joaquin River. [Citation.] These
    Exchange Contractors ‘traded’ their preexisting water rights to the [USBR]. [Citation.]
    The [USBR] obtained water permits from the [Board] that were co-extensive with the
    exchanged water rights. The [USBR] in turn entered into water service contracts with the
    Exchange Contractors for CVP federal water supply on a priority access basis.”
    (Tehama-Colusa Canal Auth. v. United States DOI (9th Cir. 2013) 
    721 F.3d 1086
    , 1091
    (Tehama-Colusa).) The cooperation of the exchange contractors made possible the
    expansion of the CVP and the San Luis Unit. (Westlands Water Dist. v. United States
    (E.D. Cal. 2001) 
    153 F.Supp.2d 1133
    , 1146-1147.) In 2004, the exchange contracts
    totaled roughly 0.84 million acre-feet. The Board did not assess any water right fees on
    exchange contractors because those contractors had exchanged water to which they were
    entitled under pre-existing riparian or pre-1914 appropriative water rights for project
    water.
    “The second category of CVP contracts encompasses ‘Settlement Contracts’ that
    grant a contractual priority to CVP water supply through the inclusion of provisions
    limiting the extent of shortage amounts. These contracts typically arose from pre-
    existing water rights.” (Tehama-Colusa, supra, 721 F.3d at p. 1091.) The settlement
    contractors are entities along the Sacramento River that hold pre-existing direct diversion
    water rights. Prior to Shasta Dam being built, there were high flows in the wintertime
    and low flows in the summertime. Sometimes the flows were so low that junior rights
    holders would not be able to divert any water. Once the Shasta Dam was in place and the
    Sacramento River was regulated, these entities “received a full supply, but [the USBR]
    knew that some of the water that they were diverting under certain circumstances was
    there because of the projects.” Accordingly, the USBR and these entities negotiated
    “settlement contracts” pursuant to which the settlement contractors receive a certain
    amount of “base supply water” annually without any fee, and other “project water” for
    35
    which they do pay a fee. The base supply water may only be reduced by 25% in
    critically dry years, and the duty to deliver it is mandatory. (Id. at p. 1099.) In 2004, the
    base supply for the settlement contracts totaled roughly 1.8 million acre-feet. The Board
    did not assess any water right fees on settlement contractors for base supply water
    because those contractors held pre-existing rights to divert that water before the CVP was
    constructed; it did, however, assess water right fees for any supplemental entitlement, i.e.,
    project water, under those contracts. (Regulation 1073, subd. (b)(2).)
    “The third category contains contracts held by CVP contractors north-of-Delta, in-
    Delta, and south-of-Delta. This category of CVP contractors . . . held no pre-existing
    water rights to offer as consideration, and therefore receives no priority access to CVP
    water supply.” (Tehama-Colusa, supra, 721 F.3d at p. 1091.) The CVP contractors in
    this case are members of this third category.
    The Board’s characterization of the CVP as a “water supply project” was not only
    reasonable, it was accurate. Water delivery is the raison d’être of the CVP. As the cases
    cited above recognize and the United States Supreme Court explained in United States v.
    Gerlach Live Stock Co. (1950) 
    339 U.S. 725
    , 728 [
    94 L.Ed. 1231
    , 1237] (Gerlach), the
    Sacramento River has almost twice as much water as the San Joaquin River but the
    Sacramento Valley has very little tillable soil, while about “three-fifths of the [San
    Joaquin] valley lies in the domain of the less affluent San Joaquin.” “To harness these
    wasting waters, overcome this perversity of nature and make water available where it
    would be of greatest service, the State of California proposed to re-engineer its natural
    water distribution. This project was taken over by the United States in 1935 and has
    since been a federal enterprise.” (Ibid., italics added.) “As built and operated, the CVP is
    ‘the nation’s largest water reclamation project and California’s largest water supplier.’ ”
    (North Coast, supra, 227 Cal.App.4th at p. 840, quoting In re Bay-Delta etc., supra, 43
    Cal.4th at p. 1154; see also Gerlach, 
    supra,
     339 U.S. at p. 728 [describing CVP as “a
    gigantic undertaking to redistribute the principal fresh-water resources of California”].)
    36
    That the CVP has other congressionally authorized purposes, some of which
    Congress has prioritized over irrigation and domestic uses, does not alter CVP’s
    fundamental status as a water supply project. For example, as previously discussed,
    salinity control is prioritized over irrigation and domestic uses (U.S. v. SWRCB, supra,
    182 Cal.App.3d at pp. 135-136), yet no one would describe the CVP as a salinity control
    project. Indeed, the USBR itself recognized this fact in its 2004 CVP operations criteria
    and plan. While recognizing the various “[a]uthorized project purposes” the USBR
    acknowledged that “[t]he primary purpose of the CVP was to provide water for irrigation
    throughout California’s Central Valley.”
    The fact that permit conditions such as those at issue in U.S. v. SWRCB, or other
    obligations imposed on the USBR by the state and federal governments, have reduced the
    amount of CVP water available for delivery to the CVP contractors does not diminish the
    contractors’ beneficial interest in the CVP permits and licenses. As detailed above, the
    USBR operates the CVP and allocates CVP water subject to a comprehensive scheme of
    environmental statutes and regulations, and various state and federal regulations. (North
    Coast, supra, 227 Cal.App.4th at p. 843.) The USBR must comply with these statutes
    and regulations in order to deliver water to the CVP contractors. Stated another way,
    such compliance is necessary to deliver the CVP contractors their water. Moreover, the
    CVP contractors take their interest in the USBR’s water rights subject to these legal
    obligations, (State Water Resources Control Bd. Cases (2006) 
    136 Cal.App.4th 674
    , 806,
    fn. 54), and the USBR cannot give away more than it has. (Ibid.) Because the CVP
    contractors received all available water under the USBR’s CVP permits and licenses after
    meeting its legal obligations, the Board reasonably valued the contractors’ interest in
    those permits and licenses at 100 percent.24
    24     To support their claim that the fees assessed on the CVP contractors exceeded
    their beneficial interest in the CVP permits and licenses, plaintiffs compare the face value
    37
    The trial court erred in concluding that the CVP contractors’ beneficial interest in
    the USBR’s CVP water rights could not be valued at 100 percent because “the
    contractors in reality have no actual guaranteed right to delivery of any amount of water,
    regardless of the face amounts of the contracts, and . . . frequently receive far less water
    than those face amounts.” (Fn. omitted.) The beneficial interest at issue here is in the
    USBR’s water rights, not the water itself. “The issuance of a permit gives [the USBR]
    the right to take and use water only to the extent and for the purpose allowed in the
    permit.” (§ 1381) The right conferred is the “right to use the water -- to divert it from its
    natural course.” (U.S. v. SWRCB, supra, 182 Cal.App.3d at p. 100.) The right is
    usufructuary only and confers no right of private ownership of water in a watercourse. 25
    (People v. Shirokow (1980) 
    26 Cal.3d 301
    , 307; 13 Witkin, Summary of Cal. Law (10th
    ed. 2005) Personal Property, § 1, p. 15; 12 Witkin, supra, Real Property, § 917, pp. 1106-
    1107.) “Unlike real property rights, usufructuary water rights are limited and uncertain.”
    (U.S. v. SWRCB, at p. 104.) That the CVP contractors are not guaranteed any particular
    amount of water under their contracts with the USBR or frequently receive less water
    of the CVP permits and licenses (112 million acre-feet) with the face value of the
    contractors’ contracts (6.6 million acre-feet). Such a comparison is misleading because it
    suggests that CVP has 112 million acre-feet of water available when that is not the case.
    As detailed above, CVP’s total storage capacity is roughly 12 million acre-feet. (In re
    Bay-Delta, etc., supra, 43 Cal.4th at p. 1154, fn. 1; see also North Coast, supra, 227
    Cal.App.4th at p. 840.) At the remand trial, plaintiffs’ expert testified that the annual
    flow of the Sacramento River is around 20 million acre-feet, and the CVP has 9 million
    acre-feet of water available for all of its long-term contracts, including refuge, exchange,
    and settlement contracts. He also testified that “there’s a major quantitative difference
    between the face value of the [USBR’s] permits maintained to operate the CVP on the
    one hand and the amount of water under contract to contractors on the other . . . .” Thus,
    while it is unclear precisely how much water is available for all CVP purposes, it is
    nowhere near 112 million acre-feet.
    25      “Usufructuary” relates to a “usufruct” which is “[a] right to use another’s property
    for a time without damaging or diminishing it . . . .” (Black’s Law Dict. (7th ed. 1999)
    pp. 1542, 1543.)
    38
    than the face value of their contracts has no bearing on the extent of their interest in the
    USBR’s permits and licenses, without which they would receive no water at all. As
    detailed above, the CVP contractors received all available water under the USBR’s CVP
    permits and licenses after it satisfied its legal obligations. Because they received
    everything the USBR had to give under its CVP permits and licenses, the Board
    reasonably valued the CVP contractors’ beneficial interest in those permits and licenses
    at 100 percent.
    In sum, even assuming for argument’s sake that plaintiffs established a prima facie
    case that “the regulations are not based on a fair evaluation of the contractors’ beneficial
    or possessory interests,” the Board refuted that prima facie case by establishing that the
    CVP is a water supply project, and the CVP contractors receive all available project
    water after the USBR satisfies its legal obligations. Accordingly, the trial court erred in
    concluding that the allocation of fees is not limited to the CVP contractors’ beneficial or
    possessory use of the USBR’s water rights, and invalidating regulation 1073 on that
    basis.
    III
    The Trial Court Erred in Concluding That the Fee Regulations Are Invalid Because They
    Operate in an Arbitrary Manner as to One Fee Payor
    The trial court also determined that the fee regulations, as applied to Imperial
    Irrigation District (IID), “operate in an arbitrary and capricious manner as a result of the
    fact that fees are calculated strictly on the basis of the face amount of water covered by
    permits and licenses,” and are invalid on that basis. The trial court based its
    determination on the following: “. . . IID obtains water from the Colorado River and
    transports it though the All-American Canal for eventual delivery to its customers. . . .
    IID does have a permit from the Board for the water it takes from the Colorado River. It
    also has six additional permits from the Board for the same water involving its use for
    hydroelectric power generation at various drop structures along the All-American Canal.
    39
    The Board charges IID a fee based on the face amount of all seven permits, even though
    all seven permits involve the same water originally diverted from the Colorado River. . . .
    [¶] By contrast, . . . the California Department of Water Resources (“DWR”), is treated
    quite differently with regard to the water rights it holds for operation of the State Water
    Project. One of those water rights is a permit allowing DWR to divert and store water
    behind Oroville Dam, release that water from storage, and redivert the same water at 16
    separate diversion facilities from Oroville to Perris Dam, in Riverside County. As the
    water travels southwards, it is used to generate power at nine separate power plants,
    which is quite similar to what IID does with the water in the All-American Canal. In
    DWR’s case, however, the water is covered by a single permit, instead of seven separate
    permits as in the case of IID, and DWR is charged a fee only on the face amount of that
    single permit.” (Fns. omitted.)
    Lack of uniformity alone is insufficient to establish that a regulatory fee is
    unreasonable and thus unlawful. (Brydon v. East Bay Mun. Utility Dist. (1994) 
    24 Cal.App.4th 178
    , 197.) Moreover, as set forth above, “A regulatory fee does not become
    a tax simply because the fee may be disproportionate to the service rendered to individual
    payors. [Citation.] The question of proportionality is not measured on an individual
    basis. Rather, it is measured collectively, considering all rate payors.” (Farm Bureau II,
    supra, 51 Cal.4th at p. 438.) Thus, assuming without deciding that basing the fee
    assessment on the face value of the permit and licenses had a disproportionate impact on
    IID, the trial court erred in invaliding the fee regulations on this basis.
    40
    DISPOSITION
    The judgment invaliding the fee regulations is reversed. The Board is entitled to
    its costs on appeal. (Cal. Rules of Court, rule 8.278(a)(1) & (2).)
    /s/
    Blease, Acting P. J.
    We concur:
    /s/
    Robie, J.
    /s/
    Butz, J.
    41