United States v. Black Canyon Irrigation Dist ( 2017 )


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  •                   IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO
    Docket No. 44635
    In Re: SRBA CASE NO. 39576                               )
    SUBCASE NOS. 65-23531 and 65-23532.                      )
    -------------------------------------------------------- )
    UNITED STATES OF AMERICA,
    )
    Boise, November 2017 Term
    Appellant,                                       )
    )
    2017 Opinion No. 131
    v.                                                       )
    )
    BLACK CANYON IRRIGATION                                       Filed: December 21, 2017
    )
    DISTRICT, STATE OF IDAHO and                             )
    SUEZ WATER IDAHO, INC.,                                       Karel A. Lehrman, Clerk
    )
    Respondents.                                     )
    )
    Appeal from the Snake River Basin Adjudication, State of Idaho. Hon. Eric J.
    Wildman, District Judge.
    District court judgment on preclusion, affirmed.
    United States Department of Justice, Boise, for appellant. John L. Smeltzer
    argued.
    Hon. Lawrence G. Wasden, Idaho Attorney General, Boise, for respondent State
    of Idaho. Michael C. Orr, Deputy Attorney General argued.
    Sawtooth Law Offices, PLLC. and McDevitt & Miller, Boise, for respondent
    Black Canyon Irrigation District. Andrew J. Waldera appeared.
    Givens Pursley, LLP, Boise, for respondent for Suez Water Idaho, Inc. Michael
    P. Lawrence argued.
    _________________________________
    BURDICK, Chief Justice.
    This water rights appeal flows from two consolidated subcases, numbers 65-23531 and
    65-23532, litigated in the Snake River Basin Adjudication (SRBA). The subcases concern the
    United States’ late claims (Late Claims) filed in January 2013, which assert “supplemental
    1
    beneficial use storage water rights” claims under the constitutional method of appropriation to
    store water in priority after flood-control releases. The special master recommended that the
    State’s motion for summary judgment be granted, concluding the Late Claims should be
    disallowed because, as the Director of the Idaho Department of Water Resources (Director)
    recommended, the Late Claims assert rights that had not been claimed when the underlying
    water rights were adjudicated and decreed. Alternatively, the special master concluded the Late
    Claims should be disallowed because, as intervenor Black Canyon Irrigation District (BCID)
    asserted, the decreed water rights already authorize the rights the Late Claims now assert, and
    hence, the Late Claims are unnecessary. The district court agreed with the special master insofar
    as the Late Claims were precluded. However, the district court rejected the special master’s
    alternative recommendation that the Late Claims were duplicative of the rights already decreed
    and unnecessary. The district court entered judgment reflecting these conclusions. The United
    States timely appeals the district court’s ruling on preclusion, and we affirm for the reasons
    below.
    I. FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND
    The United States has been decreed rights to 700,000 AFY in Cascade Reservoir, and
    163,000 AFY in Deadwood Reservoir. These water rights were decreed in the Payette
    Adjudication, and when that adjudication was consolidated with the SRBA, they were decreed
    again in the SRBA. The Payette Adjudication and the SRBA were both general adjudications. 1
    No objection was made to the water rights as they were decreed in the Payette Adjudication and
    the SRBA.
    The specific decrees provide in relevant part as follows 2:
    1
    “ ‘General adjudication’ means an action both for the judicial determination of the extent and priority of the rights
    of all persons to use water from any water system within the state of Idaho that is conclusive as to the nature of all
    rights to the use of water in the adjudicated water system, except as provided in section 42-1420, Idaho Code, and
    for the administration of those rights.” I.C. § 42-1401A(5).
    2
    As relevant to understanding the tables that follow in the text above, we have previously explained:
    The purpose of use element of a storage water right generally contains at least two authorized
    purposes of use. The first authorizes the storage of water for a particular purpose (i.e., “irrigation
    storage,” or “power storage”). The second authorizes the subsequent use of that stored water for an
    associated purpose, which is often referred to as the “end use” (i.e., “irrigation from storage,” or
    “power from storage”). Each purpose of use is assigned its own quantity and period of use, which
    may or may not differ from one another. With respect to storage rights for irrigation, for example,
    it is typical for the “irrigation storage” purpose of use to be a year-round use (January 1 to
    December 31), and the “irrigation from storage” purpose of use to be limited to the irrigation
    season (e.g., March 15 to November 15).
    2
    Right           Reservoir     Purpose                      Period of Use     Quantity       Priority
    65-2927A        Cascade       Irrigation Storage           01-01 to 12-31    697,500 AFY 12/24/1937
    Irrigation from Storage      01-01 to 12-31    697,500 AFY 12/24/1937
    Power Storage                01-01 to 12-31    697,500 AFY 12/24/1937
    Power from Storage           01-01 to 12-31    697,500 AFY 12/24/1937
    65-2927B        Cascade       Municipal Storage            01-01 to 12-31    2,500 AFY      12/24/1937
    Municipal from Storage       01-01 to 12-31    2,500 AFY      12/24/1937
    65-9483         Deadwood Irrigation Storage                01-01 to 12-31    163,000 AFY 12/31/1926
    Irrigation from Storage      04-01 to 11-01    163,000 AFY 12/31/1926
    65-2917         Deadwood Power Storage                     01-01 to 12-31    163,000 AFY 12/31/1926
    Power from Storage           01-01 to 12-31    163,000 AFY 12/31/1926
    The decrees grant the United States rights to water in specific quantities, which are “essentially
    equal to the active capacit[ies] of Cascade and Deadwood Reservoirs.”
    Cascade and Deadwood Reservoirs are on-stream reservoirs created by dams. Annual
    stream flows frequently exceed the Reservoirs’ capacities, and accordingly, the United States,
    through the Bureau of Reclamation (BOR), manages flood-control releases. Flood-control
    releases generated disputes in the SRBA and led to Basin-Wide Issue 17, where water rights
    holders sought resolution of what “effect flood control releases have on storage water rights”
    where the decrees lack “refill” remarks. See In re SRBA, 
    157 Idaho 385
    , 390, 
    336 P.3d 792
    , 797
    (2014). While Basin-Wide Issue 17 was being litigated in the district court, on January 31, 2013,
    the United States filed the Late Claims at issue here. The Late Claims assert “supplemental
    beneficial use storage water rights” claims under the constitutional method of appropriation as
    follows:
    Subcase      Reservoir      Purpose                       Period of Use     Quantity        Priority
    65-23531     Cascade        Irrigation Storage            10-01 to 09-30    1,066,653 AFA   09/30/1965
    Irrigation from Storage       01-01 to 12-31    697,500 AFA     09/30/1965
    Power Storage                 10-01 to 09-30    1,066,653 AFA   09/30/1965
    Power from Storage            01-01 to 12-31    697,500 AFA     09/30/1965
    Municipal Storage             10-01 to 09-30    1,066,653 AFA   09/30/1965
    Municipal from Storage        01-01 to 12-31    2,500 AFA       09/30/1965
    65-23532     Deadwood Irrigation Storage                  10-01 to 09-30    268,113 AFA     09/30/1965
    In re 
    SRBA, 157 Idaho at 389
    , 336 P.3d at 796.
    3
    Irrigation from Storage         04-01 to 11-01     163,000 AFA          09/30/1965
    Power Storage                  10-01 to 09-30     268,113 AFA          09/30/1965
    Power from Storage             01-01 to 12-31     163,000 AFA          09/30/1965
    The Late Claims surfaced after the Idaho Department of Water Resources (IDWR)
    shifted to a computerized water accounting system in 1993. That shift brought about the change
    from a “physical fill” system of accounting to a computerized “paper fill” system of accounting.
    The physical fill system is summarized as follows:
    Upon completion of the flood control releases, the reservoirs refill with spring
    runoff to the point of maximum physical fill. When the dam has refilled, typically
    in early June to mid-July, the stored water, including the “refill” water, is
    allocated to those holding storage rights in the reservoirs and is available for
    irrigation purposes.
    In a paper fill system, by contrast,
    All water entering the . . . Reservoirs is counted toward the initial paper
    fill of the reservoirs. When flood control water is passed through the reservoirs
    the water passed for flood control is not deducted from the storage accounting of
    the reservoir, even though it is no longer physically stored in the reservoir.
    The United States filed the Late Claims to assert “supplemental beneficial use storage
    water rights – separate water rights with a junior priority – which, in conjunction with existing
    storage water rights, would allow Reclamation to complete one physical fill of its reservoirs in
    years when it must release water for flood control.” The district court granted the filing of the
    Late Claims on May 22, 2013. On December 30, 2013, the Director issued its reports
    recommending disallowance of the Late Claims for the sole reason that they were “not claimed
    in prior adjudication.” On March 20, 2014, the United States timely objected, and on August 26,
    2014, the district court entered an order retaining jurisdiction over the subcases pertaining to the
    Late Claims. On November 14, 2014, the district court granted Suez Water Idaho, Inc.’s (Suez) 3
    motion to participate “on a limited basis for purposes of participating in proceedings related to
    the application of law” because that limited participation resulted in no “undue delay or prejudice
    to the existing parties.” Thereafter, on January 9, 2015, the district court referred the subcases to
    the special master and assigned the power “to conduct all proceedings necessary to issue a
    recommendation . . . .”
    3
    Suez’ former name was United Water Idaho, Inc. However, on November 9, 2015, it formally changed its name to
    Suez Water Idaho Inc. For consistency, the entity is referred to as Suez, even though it was actually named United
    Water when it moved to participate.
    4
    On May 11, 2015, BCID moved to participate. BCID, an irrigation district, is the
    principal spaceholder in Cascade Reservoir and has beneficial interests in the United States’
    decreed water rights. See United States v. Pioneer Irrigation Dist., 
    144 Idaho 106
    , 115, 
    157 P.3d 600
    , 609 (2007). The special master permitted BCID’s participation. Unlike Suez, BCID was
    granted party status.
    On August 25, 2015, the State moved for summary judgment, contending, in part, that the
    Late Claims were precluded. BCID responded by contending summary judgment should be
    granted in its favor as the non-movant, asserting the decreed water rights already authorize the
    rights the Late Claims now assert, and hence, the Late Claims are unnecessary. On November
    19, 2015, the special master entered an order recommending the State’s motion for summary
    judgment be granted, concluding the Late Claims were precluded. The special master did not
    reach BCID’s contention that summary judgment should be granted in its favor as the non-
    movant. The parties then filed motions to alter or amend the special master’s order. As relevant
    here, BCID contended the Late Claims were unnecessary because, as BCID asserted, the existing
    rights already authorize the water rights asserted in the Late Claims. On April 22, 2016, the
    special master affirmed his recommendation that the Late Claims were precluded; however, the
    special master agreed with BCID that the existing rights already authorize the water rights
    asserted in the Late Claims. Accordingly, the special master ultimately recommended
    disallowance of the Late Claims because (1) they were precluded, and (2) as “an additional basis
    for disallowance,” they were unnecessary because the existing rights already authorize the water
    rights asserted in the Late Claims.
    When the parties challenged different recommendations of the special master, the district
    court adopted the special master’s recommendation that the Late Claims were precluded.
    However, the district court rejected the special master’s “alternative basis for disallowance”
    recommendation, reasoning that the special master lacked the power to address BCID’s
    arguments implicating the scope of the existing decrees. The United States timely appeals the
    district court’s ruling that the Late Claims are precluded. 4
    4
    Although the United States makes additional, alternative arguments on appeal that the Late Claims are unnecessary
    as duplicative of the existing rights, it waived this argument by failing to raise this argument below. Kirk v. Wescott,
    
    160 Idaho 893
    , 899, 
    382 P.3d 342
    , 348 (2016) (“Hence, issues not raised below but raised for the first time on
    appeal will not be considered or reviewed.” (quoting Whitted v. Canyon Cnty. Bd. Of Comm’rs, 
    137 Idaho 118
    , 122,
    
    44 P.3d 1173
    , 1177 (2002))). Accordingly, we do not address this argument.
    5
    II. ISSUES ON APPEAL
    1.      Are the Late Claims precluded?
    2.      Are the State and Suez entitled to attorney fees on appeal?
    III. STANDARD OF REVIEW
    The district court may appoint a special master in any general adjudication
    and shall specify the special master’s powers and duties in the order of reference.
    Subcases referred to a special master are governed by the I.R.C.P. and the Idaho
    Rules of Evidence (I.R.E.).
    The special master’s findings which the court adopts are considered to be
    the findings of the court. The special master’s conclusions of law are not binding
    upon the district court, although they are expected to be persuasive. To the degree
    that the district court adopts the special master’s conclusions of law, they are also
    the conclusions of the court.
    The question of compliance with the rules of procedure and evidence is
    one of law. This Court freely reviews conclusions of law.
    State v. Hagerman Water Right Owners, Inc., 
    130 Idaho 736
    , 740, 
    947 P.2d 409
    , 413 (1997)
    (citations omitted).
    This Court has explained that, when it reviews a summary judgment on appeal,
    it does so under the same standards employed by the district court. “The fact that
    the parties have filed cross-motions for summary judgment does not change the
    applicable standard of review, and this Court must evaluate each party’s motion
    on its own merits.” Summary judgment is proper “if the pleadings, depositions,
    and admissions on file, together with the affidavits, if any, show that there is no
    genuine issue as to any material fact and that the moving party is entitled to a
    judgment as a matter of law.” Idaho R. Civ. P. 56(c).[5] Where the case will be
    tried without a jury, “the trial court as the trier of fact is entitled to arrive at the
    most probable inferences based upon the undisputed evidence properly before it
    and grant the summary judgment despite the possibility of conflicting inferences.”
    This Court freely reviews the entire record that was before the district court to
    determine whether either side was entitled to judgment as a matter of law and
    whether inferences drawn by the district court are reasonably supported by the
    record.
    Borley v. Smith, 
    149 Idaho 171
    , 176–77, 
    233 P.3d 102
    , 107–08 (2010) (citations omitted).
    IV. ANALYSIS
    A.      The Late Claims are precluded.
    We first address whether res judicata bars the Late Claims. Whether res judicata applies
    is a question of law over which this Court exercises free review. Ticor Title Co. v. Stanion, 144
    5
    Effective July 1, 2016, Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure 56 was amended. The relevant portion of the rule now
    provides: “The court must grant summary judgment if the movant shows that there is no genuine dispute as to any
    material fact and the movant is entitled to judgment as a matter of law.” I.R.C.P. 56(a).
    
    6 Idaho 119
    , 122, 
    157 P.3d 613
    , 616 (2007). Res judicata consists of claim and issue preclusion.
    Hindmarsh v. Mock, 
    138 Idaho 92
    , 94, 
    57 P.3d 803
    , 805 (2002).
    Claim preclusion “bars a subsequent action between the same parties upon the
    same claim or upon claims ‘relating to the same cause of action.’ ” Under this
    doctrine, a claim is also precluded if it could have been brought in the previous
    action, regardless of whether it was actually brought, where: (1) the original
    action ended in final judgment on the merits, (2) the present claim involves the
    same parties as the original action, and (3) the present claim arises out of the same
    transaction or series of transactions as the original action.
    Berkshire Invs., LLC v. Taylor, 
    153 Idaho 73
    , 81, 
    278 P.3d 943
    , 951 (2012) (citations omitted).
    We agree with the district court that the undisputed facts show that claim preclusion bars
    the Late Claims, making summary judgment proper on this issue. The first requirement—a final
    judgment on the merits—is satisfied. The Payette Adjudication resulted in a partial decree in
    January 1986, which was certified as a final judgment under Idaho Rule of Civil Procedure
    54(b). That final judgment incorporated the relevant parts of the Director’s Proposed Findings of
    Water Rights in the Payette River Drainage Basin, and those findings encompassed the water
    rights decreed in this case. As the Proposed Findings, which the Payette Decree incorporated,
    state:
    This recommended decree includes all of the rights established before
    October 19, 1977 to the waters of the Payette River and its tributaries including
    groundwater, and upon its adoption supercedes all prior judgments of the Court.
    Any water user who heretofore diverted surface water or groundwater from within
    the boundaries as described in Exhibit 1, or who owns lands to which previously
    established rights were appurtenant and who, upon being joined to this action,
    failed to claim such water rights has forfeited such rights as provided in Section
    42-1411, Idaho Code.
    Additionally, when the Payette Adjudication was consolidated with the SRBA, the SRBA court
    decreed the water rights in 2003 and certified the partial decrees as final judgments under Idaho
    Rule of Civil Procedure 54(b). The partial decrees were incorporated into the SRBA’s final
    unified decree, which “is binding against all persons . . . .” No objection was made to the water
    rights as they were decreed in the Payette Adjudication and the SRBA. Instead, the Late Claims
    were not asserted until January 31, 2013.
    Claim preclusion’s second requirement looks to the identity of the parties. We note at the
    outset that we have never analyzed the identity of parties requirement as it arises in a general
    adjudication. Generally, claim preclusion reaches to “the same parties or their privies[.]” Ticor
    
    Title, 144 Idaho at 124
    , 157 P.3d at 618. We have acknowledged this principle as it applies to a
    7
    private adjudication, Hagerman Water Right 
    Owners, 130 Idaho at 742
    , 947 P.2d at 415 (“A
    Prior Decree Entered in a Private Adjudication is Binding Only Upon Parties and Privies to that
    Decree.”), which finds support in the statutory definition of “private adjudication.” I.C. § 42-
    1401A(8) (explaining that a private adjudication “binds only those persons joined in the action”).
    A general adjudication, by contrast, is “conclusive as to the nature of all rights to the use
    of water in the adjudicated water system, except as provided in section 42-1420,[6] Idaho Code,
    and for the administration of those rights.” I.C. § 42-1401A(5) (emphases added). The
    Legislature’s definition of general adjudication thus appears to give the identity of parties
    requirement little relevance, if any, in this context. The Legislature’s distinction between a
    general adjudication and a private adjudication finds support in the various doctrines governing
    jurisdiction. Like a general adjudication under section 42-1401A(5), a final judgment in a
    proceeding where the court has in rem jurisdiction bars subsequent proceedings arising from the
    same transaction or occurrence already litigated, absent an identity of parties requirement,
    because in rem proceedings are brought against property, not parties. 50 C.J.S. Judgments § 1387
    (2017); Restatement (Second) of Judgments § 30 (1982); Restatement (First) of Judgments § 79
    cmt. d (1942) (stating that “[i]n proceedings in rem, however, persons who have not been named
    or specifically described in the proceedings, are nevertheless bound as to the subject matter by a
    valid judgment, although they are not parties”). A general adjudication, like an in rem
    proceeding, is brought against property, not parties. See Nevada v. United States, 
    463 U.S. 110
    ,
    144 (1983) (“[W]ater adjudications are more in the nature of in rem proceedings”); Mont. Trout
    Unlimited v. Beaverhead Water Co., 
    255 P.3d 179
    , 194 (Mont. 2011) (concluding certain
    interpretation of statute “comport[ed] with the nature of water right adjudication as in rem
    proceedings”). Conversely, like a private adjudication under section 42-1401A(8), a final
    judgment in a proceeding where the court has either in personam or quasi in rem jurisdiction
    6
    Idaho Code section 42-1420 enumerates certain exceptions from the conclusive effect of a decree entered in a
    general adjudication. Although the exceptions are irrelevant to this case, the exceptions include: (1) “a water right
    for domestic use or stock watering use, specifically excluded from the general adjudication by court order;” (2) “a
    water right application for permit filed under chapters 2 or 15, title 42, Idaho Code;” (3) “a water right permit issued
    under chapters 2 or 15, title 42, Idaho Code, unless the director required the permit holder to file a notice of claim in
    accordance with subsection (7) of section 42-1409, Idaho Code;” (4) “a water right license issued under chapter 2 or
    15, title 42, Idaho Code, if proof of beneficial use had not been filed on the date of commencement of the general
    adjudication, unless the director required the license holder to file a notice of claim in accordance with subsection
    (7) of section 42-1409, Idaho Code;” and (5) “a claim to a water right established under federal law, if the priority of
    the right claimed is later than and junior to the date of entry of the order commencing the general adjudication.” I.C.
    § 42-1420(1). None of these apply here.
    8
    precludes only the “same parties or their privies” from bringing subsequent proceedings arising
    from the same transaction or occurrence already litigated. See Ticor 
    Title, 144 Idaho at 124
    , 157
    P.3d at 618; Restatement (First) of Judgments § 79 cmt. d (1942). A private adjudication, like in
    personam or quasi in rem proceedings, is brought to define the rights of specific parties. I.C. §
    42-1401A(8) (stating that a private adjudication “binds only those persons joined”); Restatement
    (First) of Judgments § 79 cmt. d (1942) (“In proceedings quasi in rem, as in proceedings in
    personam, only those persons who are parties as that term is herein used are thereby bound.”).
    However, we need not conclusively decide the applicability of the identity of parties
    inquiry in this context because it is so clearly satisfied in this case. The United States was a party
    to the Payette Adjudication and the SRBA, and in those adjudications, it was decreed the
    underlying water rights. Thus, assuming the identity of parties requirement applies here, it is
    satisfied.
    We turn finally to claim preclusion’s third requirement. This inquiry asks whether “the
    present claim arises out of the same transaction or series of transactions as the original action.”
    Berkshire 
    Invs., 153 Idaho at 81
    , 278 P.3d at 951. “A critical component in deciding whether
    claims are the same for purposes of res judicata is that the subsequent or present claim must be
    one that arose out of the same cause of action and should have been litigated in the first suit.”
    Maravilla v. J.R. Simplot Co., 
    161 Idaho 455
    , 459, 
    387 P.3d 123
    , 127 (2016); accord Joyce v.
    Murphy Land & Irrigation Co., 
    35 Idaho 549
    , 553, 
    208 P. 241
    , 242–43 (1922) (explaining that
    claim preclusion bars “every matter which might and should have been litigated in the first
    suit”). The Late Claims arise from the same transaction already litigated, as they assert
    “supplemental beneficial use storage water rights” that would work “in conjunction with existing
    storage rights[.]” And since the Late Claims assert a priority date of September 30, 1965, the
    Late Claims indisputably predate both the Payette Adjudication and the SRBA and should have
    then been asserted. City of Pocatello v. Idaho, 
    152 Idaho 830
    , 841, 
    275 P.3d 845
    , 856 (2012)
    (explaining that a beneficial use water “right dates from the application of the water to a
    beneficial use” (quoting Crane Falls Power & Irrigation Co. v. Snake River Irrigation Co., 
    24 Idaho 63
    , 82, 
    133 P. 655
    , 661 (1913))). We conclude the district court was correct to observe, “If
    the late claims now asserted were ever valid, the plain language of the final judgment
    extinguished those claims and expressly barred any future assertion of those same claims.”
    The United States attempts to overcome claim preclusion’s fatal resolution of the Late
    9
    Claims by contending the Late Claims are excepted from claim preclusion. As it elaborates,
    “where a change in fact or law gives rise to a new claim that could not have been brought at the
    time of the initial action, claim preclusion does not apply.” The United States is correct that, for
    claim preclusion to apply, the claim must be one that “might and should have been litigated in
    the first suit.” 
    Joyce, 35 Idaho at 553
    , 208 P. at 242–43. More specifically, this Court has
    explained:
    Ordinarily, efficiency requires that all claims to relief based upon the same
    underlying transaction be pursued in a single action. This is because matters
    common to the several components of the action need be addressed only once,
    rather than several times in greater or lesser detail. However, sometimes a single
    trial covering all aspects of the case will be neither desirable nor feasible.
    Evidence bearing upon one aspect of a case may be unduly prejudicial with
    respect to another. Or certain matters may be ripe for trial while consideration of
    others would be premature.
    Duthie v. Lewiston Gun Club, 
    104 Idaho 751
    , 758, 
    663 P.2d 287
    , 294 (1983) (quoting Heaney v.
    Bd. of Trs. of Garden Valley Sch. Dist. No. 71, 
    98 Idaho 900
    , 902–03, 
    575 P.2d 498
    , 500–01
    (1978)).
    According to the United States, the Late Claims “are dependent on material operative
    facts that post-date the Payette Adjudication, namely: IDWR’s accounting procedures for Basin
    65, which were not developed until 1993 . . . .” In support, the United States cites to U.S.
    National Bank Association v. Kuenzli, 
    134 Idaho 222
    , 
    999 P.2d 877
    (2000), to contend the Late
    Claims are not barred by claim preclusion. In Kuenzli, the Kuenzlis and Dennett entered into an
    agreement under which the Kuenzlis were to purchase Dennett’s farm for $300,000. 
    Id. at 224,
    999 P.2d at 879. As part of that agreement, Dennett reserved an option allowing him to
    repurchase the farm at any time during escrow. 
    Id. During escrow,
    the Kuenzlis learned that the
    farm had significantly appreciated in value and, accordingly, began moving to sell the property
    to a third party for $975,000. 
    Id. Dennett swiftly
    responded by exercising his repurchase option.
    
    Id. The Kuenzlis
    disputed Dennett’s right to do so, but Dennett obtained a judgment for specific
    performance in his favor. 
    Id. The judgment
    was affirmed on appeal, 
    id. (citing Dennett
    v.
    Kuenzli, 
    130 Idaho 21
    , 24, 
    936 P.2d 219
    , 222 (Ct. App. 1997)), and Dennett then “took
    possession of the property on May 15, 1997, and an escrow contract was signed by the Kuenzlis
    on June 10, 1997.” 
    Id. Thirteen days
    later—on June 23, 1997—the Kuenzlis prepared a notice of default,
    alleging that Dennett was in default for failing to making three installment payments of $30,000
    10
    in 1994, 1995, and 1996, the three years after he exercised his repurchase option. 
    Id. at 225,
    999
    P.2d at 880. Dennett then paid the installment payments, plus interest, “under protest” to the
    escrow agent, U.S. Bank. 
    Id. U.S. Bank
    responded by lodging an interpleader action to determine
    who was entitled to the funds. 
    Id. In the
    interpleader action, Dennett cross-claimed for a
    declaratory judgment that he was not in default, and sought “other relief.” 
    Id. The district
    court
    ruled in Dennett’s favor, concluding the only enforceable contract for installment payments was
    entered into on June 10, 1997, and nothing required Dennett to make installment payments for
    1994, 1995, and 1996. 
    Id. When the
    Kuenzlis appealed, this Court addressed their argument that claim preclusion
    barred Dennett’s cross-claim since it was not asserted in the initial proceeding. 
    Id. at 226,
    999
    P.2d at 881. This Court explained that “[i]t would have been impossible” for Dennett to assert
    rights to the funds in the initial proceeding because the Kuenzlis did not assert he was in default
    “until after the earlier litigation had run its course.” 
    Id. Thus, Dennett’s
    cross-claim was not then
    ripe, as his “right to the money deposited with U.S. Bank could not have been asserted during the
    earlier litigation.” 
    Id. And, while
    the Kuenzlis pointed to the Restatement’s “transactional
    approach,” this Court clarified that the Kuenzlis’ reliance on the Restatement did not assist them.
    
    Id. The Restatement
    explains that:
    Material operative facts occurring after the decision of an action with respect to
    the same subject matter may in themselves, or in conjunction with the antecedent
    facts, comprise a transaction which may be made the basis of a second action not
    precluded by the first.
    
    Id. (quoting Restatement
    (Second) of Judgments § 24, cmt. f (1982)). As this Court reasoned,
    “The Kuenzlis’ notice of default and the resultant interpleader action are ‘material operative
    facts’ comprising a second ‘transaction’ and allowing a ‘second action not precluded by the
    first.’ ” 
    Id. Accordingly, claim
    preclusion did not bar Dennett’s cross-claim. 
    Id. Kuenzli does
    not lend support to the United States in this case. In Kuenzli, the dispute
    over the funds did not arise until the first action resolved. In fact, the resolution of the first action
    held an integral role in creating the dispute over the funds because, had Dennett not prevailed in
    the first action, he would not have been able to exercise the repurchase option, and the Kuenzlis
    would have sold the property to the third party for a big profit. Here, by contrast, the Late Claims
    arose before both the Payette Adjudication and the SRBA. The Late Claims assert “supplemental
    beneficial use storage water rights” under the constitutional method of appropriation, with a
    11
    priority date of September 30, 1965. 7 The Late Claims thus required proof “with definite
    evidence” that the claimed water was actually diverted and beneficially used at that time. City of
    
    Pocatello, 152 Idaho at 841
    –42, 275 P.3d at 856–57; accord Joyce Livestock Co. v. United
    States, 
    144 Idaho 1
    , 8, 
    156 P.3d 502
    , 509 (2007) (“The two essentials for obtaining a water right
    under the constitutional method were typically diversion and application to a beneficial use.”).
    This analysis is “focused purely on the actions of the appropriator[.]” Idaho Power Co. v. Idaho
    Dep’t of Water Res., 
    151 Idaho 266
    , 275, 
    255 P.3d 1152
    , 1161 (2011). Therefore, it “would [not]
    have been impossible . . . to have claimed the disputed [water rights]” in the earlier adjudications
    because the Late Claims are clear that the two key elements—diversion and beneficial use—both
    predate the earlier adjudications. But cf. Kuenzli, 134 Idaho at 
    226, 999 P.2d at 881
    . Accordingly,
    the district court was correct to recognize that, “If the Late Claims have any merit now . . . , that
    same merit must have existed during the Payette Adjudication” and the SRBA.
    Nor are we persuaded by the United States’ argument that only with the advent of
    computerized accounting did it have reason to believe proceedings to address flood-control
    administration were necessary. Three threshold considerations invalidate this argument. First,
    this argument erroneously attempts to trade Kuenzli’s clear “impossible to bring” standard for an
    anomalous “did not foresee the need to bring” standard. Second, this Court has been very clear
    that “[r]es judicata precludes the relitigation of the same claim even if there is new evidence to
    support it.” Taylor v. Riley, 
    162 Idaho 692
    , 703, 
    403 P.3d 636
    , 647 (2017) (citing Wolfe v. Farm
    Bureau Ins. Co., 
    128 Idaho 398
    , 403, 
    913 P.2d 1168
    , 1173 (1996)). Third, the United States’
    effort to ascribe operative significance to IDWR’s accounting system ignores the bedrock
    principle that the constitutional method of appropriation is “focused purely on the actions of the
    appropriator[.]” Idaho Power 
    Co., 151 Idaho at 275
    , 255 P.3d at 1161. IDWR’s accounting
    system is therefore irrelevant in this proceeding. 8
    7
    We note that in 1971, the Legislature “amended Idaho Code §§ 42-103 and 42-201 to require compliance with the
    statutory application, permit, and license procedure in order to acquire new water rights.” Joyce Livestock Co. v.
    United States, 
    144 Idaho 1
    , 7, 
    156 P.3d 502
    , 508 (2007); accord United States v. Pioneer Irrigation Dist., 
    144 Idaho 106
    , 110, 
    157 P.3d 600
    , 604 (2007).
    8
    Additionally, the United States’ attempt to inject issues of accounting in this case contravenes our precedent. This
    Court did not equivocate when, in 2014, it explained: “Which accounting method to employ is within the Director’s
    discretion and the Idaho Administrative Procedure Act provides the procedures for challenging the chosen
    accounting method.” In re SRBA, 
    157 Idaho 385
    , 394, 
    336 P.3d 792
    , 801 (2014). The United States has not availed
    itself to the proper administrative procedure to challenge the Director’s method of accounting.
    12
    Moreover, the propriety of the United States’ reliance on IDWR’s accounting system is
    belied by the record. Displayed in the record are certain water claims filed in June 1983, seeking
    a “[s]econd refill right” in American Falls Reservoir, a right permitting “actual multiple fill or
    refill of [Palisades] Reservoir[,]” a right to provide “optimum Project benefits including flood
    control” in Island Park Reservoir, and a right permitting “refill or second fill of [Arrowrock]
    reservoir capacity[.]” The record thus shows that issues of refill rights and flood-control
    administration were previously relevant and should have been raised during the Payette
    Adjudication or the SRBA, both of which post-dated the claims just referenced. Cf. Rangen, Inc.
    v. Idaho Dep’t of Water Res., 
    159 Idaho 798
    , 806, 
    367 P.3d 193
    , 201 (2016) (“If Rangen wanted
    its water rights to be interpreted differently, it should have timely asserted that in the SRBA.”).
    These issues were nonetheless not raised until this proceeding. As such, the decrees authorize
    specific, measurable quantities of water, not a certain number of reservoir “fills.” The quantities
    set forth in the decrees are binding and must control. It cannot now reasonably be contended that
    the specific, measurable quantities of water decreed are anything less than determinative, as the
    record demonstrates that as far back as 1934, it was recognized that decreed water rights would
    “no doubt be governed by the amount set out in the . . . decree[.]”
    In sum, we conclude the undisputed facts show that claim preclusion bars the Late
    Claims, making summary judgment proper on this issue. We thus hold that claim preclusion bars
    the United States in this proceeding from seeking to litigate issues of refill and flood-control
    administration, and from attempting to supplement the water rights already decreed with
    quantities of water in excess of the quantities already decreed. See supra Part I. Absent the
    United States undertaking appropriate proceedings to set aside a final judgment under Idaho Rule
    of Civil Procedure 60(b), we emphasize that the decrees are conclusive and final, which
    comports our general reluctance to allow already-decreed water rights to be relitigated. See, e.g.,
    City of Blackfoot v. Spackman, 
    162 Idaho 302
    , ___, 
    396 P.3d 1184
    , 1190 (2017) (“Furthermore,
    it is equally clear from the plain language of the decree that recharge is not listed as an
    authorized use under the purpose of use element of 181C. Claiming, at this stage, that recharge is
    an authorized use of 181C, is nothing more than an impermissible collateral attack . . . .”); Idaho
    Ground Water Assoc. v. Idaho Dep’t of Water Res., 
    160 Idaho 119
    , 128, 
    369 P.3d 897
    , 906
    (2016) (“Allowing IGWA to collaterally attack this determination would severely undermine the
    purpose of the SRBA and create uncertainty in water rights adjudicated in that process.”);
    13
    
    Rangen, 159 Idaho at 806
    , 367 P.3d at 201 (“Any interpretation of Rangen’s partial decrees that
    is inconsistent with their plain language would necessarily impact the certainty and finality of
    SRBA judgments and, therefore, requests for such interpretations needed to be made in the
    SRBA itself.”); State v. Nelson, 
    131 Idaho 12
    , 16, 
    951 P.2d 943
    , 947 (1998) (“Finality in water
    rights is essential.”). Finality is for good reason, especially in water law; otherwise, the
    approximate $94 million the State expended in judicial and administrative costs during the
    SRBA would be jeopardized as mere wasteful expenditures. See Ann Y. Vonde et al.,
    Understanding the Snake River Basin Adjudication, 
    52 Idaho L
    . Rev. 53, 56 (2016).
    Because we affirm the district court’s ruling on summary judgment that claim preclusion
    bars the Late Claims as a matter of law, we need not reach whether the Late Claims are
    additionally precluded by issue preclusion, the Payette Decree, and Idaho Code section 42-1411
    (1969).
    B.        We decline to award attorney fees on appeal.
    The United States did not request attorney fees on appeal. The State and Suez request
    attorney fees on appeal under section 12-117, which provides in relevant part:
    Unless otherwise provided by statute, in any proceeding involving as
    adverse parties a state agency or a political subdivision and a person, the state
    agency, political subdivision or the court hearing the proceeding, including on
    appeal, shall award the prevailing party reasonable attorney’s fees, witness fees
    and other reasonable expenses, if it finds that the nonprevailing party acted
    without a reasonable basis in fact or law.
    I.C. § 12-117(1).
    Based on the above, the State and Suez are the prevailing parties on appeal. However, the
    United States did not act without a reasonable basis in fact or law. Instead, the United States
    advanced complex arguments in good faith. We therefore decline to award attorney fees on
    appeal.
    V. CONCLUSION
    For the reasons above, we affirm the district court’s ruling that claim preclusion bars the
    Late Claims. We award costs on appeal, but not attorney fees, to the State and Suez.
    Justices HORTON, BRODY, BEVAN and WALTERS, J. Pro Tem, CONCUR.
    14