Title: Holden v. Weece

State: idaho

Issuer: Idaho Supreme Court (civil)

Document:

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IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF IDAHO 
Docket No. 44944 
 
 
 
 
 
IN RE SRBA CASE NO. 39576      
SUBCASE NO. 61-12301 
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RICKY C. HOLDEN and KIMBERLY M. 
HOLDEN, 
 
       Objectors-Appellants, 
v. 
 
JACKIE WEECE and TERESA WEECE, 
 
       Claimants-Respondents. 
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Boise, December 2017 Term 
 
2018 Opinion No.  22 
 
Filed: March 7, 2018 
 
Karel A. Lehrman, Clerk 
 
Appeal from the Snake River Basin Adjudication, State of Idaho.  
Hon. Eric J. Wildman, District Judge. 
 
The judgment of the district court is affirmed. Attorney fees and  
costs on appeal are awarded to respondents. 
 
Thomas J. Katsilometes, P.L.L.C., Boise, for Objectors-Appellants.  
Thomas J. Katsilometes argued. 
 
Hall, Friendly & Ward, Mountain Home, Claimants-Respondents. 
Brian B. Peterson argued. 
 
                     _______________________________________________ 
 
BEVAN, Justice. 
 
Ricky and Kimberly Holden (“the Holdens”) appeal from an order of partial decree granting 
a water right to their neighbors Jackie and Teresa Weece (“the Weeces”). The Holdens claim the 
district court erred in adopting the findings of fact and conclusions of law contained within a special 
master’s Report and Recommendation and that the priority date of the Weeces’ water right, 
recommended by the special master and adopted by the district court, was clearly erroneous. We 
affirm the district court’s order. 
 
 
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I. FACTS AND PROCEDURE 
The Holdens own residential property in Mountain Home, Idaho. In 1999, the Holdens 
constructed a well on a portion of their property (Lot 17) and obtained a licensed water right. In 
2000, the Holdens built a residence on another portion of their property (Lot 16) which included a 
sewage disposal system connected to the well.  On May 10, 2001 the Holdens sold Lot 16 to a 
friend, Loree Saunders (“Saunders”).  As an accommodation for the sale, the Holdens and Saunders 
entered into a joint well use agreement allowing Saunders to utilize the well on the Holden’s 
property. Later, in 2001, Saunders’s lender bank foreclosed Lot 16.  The Weeces acquired Lot 16 
from the lender bank on May 20, 2005. The Holdens and the Weeces continued to follow the joint 
well use agreement to provide water to Lot 16; however, a dispute arose in 2015 regarding the 
Weeces use of such water. 
On March 12, 2015, the Weeces filed a Motion in the Snake River Basin Adjudication 
(SRBA) for Determination of Deferred De Minimus Domestic or Stock Water Use. The Weeces 
claimed a right to use the well on Lot 17 because of a prior physical diversion of water and its 
application to domestic beneficial use with a priority date of February 9, 2000. 
On June 8, 2015, the Idaho Department of Water Resources filed its Director’s Report of 
Deferred De Minimus Domestic and/or Stock Water Use (“Report”) regarding the Weeces’ claim. 
The Report recommended a priority date of March 13, 2000. This date was based upon a Central 
District Mortgage Report for Sewage and Water Systems which indicated that the sewage disposal 
system on Lot 16 was inspected on March 13, 2000. The Director’s Report accepted March 13, 2000 
for priority, inferring that water was then available to the home, since the waste disposal system was 
inspected and found operable. 
On August 3, 2015, the Holdens filed a Standard Form 1 Objection to the director’s Report, 
objecting that the water right “should not exist.”  The Objection did not include an objection to the 
priority date.  Trial was then held before the special master and the Holdens were allowed to amend 
their Objection during trial to also object to the recommended priority date of March 13, 2000. 
Notwithstanding their stated objection, the Holdens initially maintained that the priority date was 
“unknown.” Later during trial they asserted that the priority date could be no earlier than when the 
Weeces acquired Lot 16 on May 20, 2005, even though Saunders began living in the home in May 
2001.  
 
 
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The special master then issued a special master’s Report and Recommendation 
(“Recommendation”) on December 16, 2016. The special master found that the Holdens had failed 
to rebut the presumption of correctness which was afforded to the Report.  The special master 
therefore found that the priority date for the water right claimed by the Weeces was as set forth in the 
Report: March 13, 2000.  
The district court then served a notice on all parties, pursuant to SRBA Administrative Order 
1, Section 13, indicating that they had until January 28, 2017, to file a Motion to Alter or Amend the 
Report. The notice further provided:  “Failure of any party in the adjudication to pursue or 
participate in a Motion to Alter or Amend the SPECIAL MASTER’S RECOMMENDATION shall 
constitute a waiver of the right to challenge it before the Presiding Judge.”   
Neither party objected to the special master’s Report.  The district court thereafter adopted 
the special master’s findings as its own. The Holdens appeal, claiming the district court erred in 
adopting the Report and that the priority date, found by the special master and adopted by the district 
court, was not supported by substantial and competent evidence. 
 
II. 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.”  In re SRBA, 149 Idaho 532, 536–
37, 237 P.3d 1, 5–6 (2010) (citing I.C. § 42–1422). Subcases referred to a special master are 
governed by the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure (I.R.C.P.), the Idaho Rules of Evidence (I.R.E.); 
Idaho Code § 42–1411(5); and SBRA Administrative Order 1 (AO1).  See AO1 §§ 9(b), (11)(d); see 
also In re SRBA Case, No. 39576, 128 Idaho 246, 265–66, 912 P.2d 614, 633–34 (1995).  “The 
procedures in AO1 ‘supplement the I.R.C.P., I.R.E., I.A.R. and any other applicable laws or orders 
of this court only to the extent necessary to allow for the fair and expeditious resolution of all claims 
or issues in the SRBA.’ ” In re SRBA, 149 Idaho at 537, 237 P.3d at 6 (quoting AO1 1(b)).  Idaho 
Code section 42–1412(5) allows the SRBA district court or special master to conduct a trial without 
a jury on any water right objections pursuant to the Idaho Rules of Civil Procedure. 
The special master’s findings which the court adopts are considered to be the 
findings of the court. I.R.C.P. 52(a); . . . 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. . . . 
 
 
 
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State v. Hagerman Water Right Owners, Inc., 130 Idaho 736, 740, 947 P.2d 409, 413 (1997) 
(citations omitted).   
This Court determines whether the findings of fact by the special master and SRBA district 
court are supported by substantial, competent evidence.  Clear Springs Foods, Inc. v. Clear Lakes 
Trout Co., 136 Idaho 761, 765, 40 P.3d 119, 123 (2002).  This Court freely reviews the SRBA 
district court’s conclusions of law.  Id. at 764, 40 P.3d at 122. 
III. ANALYSIS 
A. The Holdens waived any claim that the priority date was clearly erroneous by failing to 
object pursuant to SRBA Administrative Order 1. 
 
The Holdens argue the priority date recommended by the special master and adopted by the 
district court was clearly erroneous. We find the Holdens waived this issue on appeal by failing to 
file a motion to alter or amend the special master’s Recommendation, pursuant to AO1, section 
13(a), which provides:   
The Special Master shall prepare and file with the court a Special Master’s 
Recommendation which shall be served on the parties to the subcase. . . .  Any party 
to the adjudication, including parties to the subcase, may file a Motion to Alter or 
Amend within 21 days from the date the Special Master’s Recommendation appears 
on the Docket Sheet. . . . Failure of any party in the adjudication to pursue or 
participate in a Motion to Alter or Amend the Special Master’s Recommendation 
shall constitute a waiver of the right to challenge it before the Presiding Judge. 
 
(Emphasis removed). 
AO1 also provides a detailed framework for the process which must be followed in the 
SRBA in order to preserve objections to a special master’s report for appeal.  For example, if a party 
files a Motion to Alter or Amend a special master’s report, the special master must then decide the 
motion “with or without a hearing.”  Id. § 13(b).   After the special master issues a decision on a 
Motion to Alter or Amend, a party may then file a Notice of Challenge to the decision within 
fourteen days. Id. § 13(c). Such Notice must include a “detailed statement of the issue(s) and a 
detailed description, including hearing dates and times, of any transcript(s) requested.”  Id.  It is 
incumbent upon the moving party to pay for such transcript(s).  Id. § 13(d). 
By filing a Notice of Challenge the objecting party accomplishes two things:  first, that party 
initiates a process which provides procedural fairness for judicial review; and second, the Notice of 
Challenge provides the SRBA judge with a suitable record with which to review the sufficiency of 
 
 
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the special master’s findings.  See generally id. §§ (d)–(e).  Once filed, all issues raised in the Notice 
of Challenge are briefed by each party and oral arguments are held, at which point the district court 
will rule on the issues raised. Id. § 13(e).  
The Holdens failed to avail themselves of any of these procedural safeguards/requirements.  
The Holdens filed their objection to the Weece’s motion on August 3, 2015 and were thereby joined 
as parties to the subcase.  See I.C. § 42-1401A(6); AO1 §2(n) (an objector is “a party to the 
adjudication.”); AO1 § 2(p) (a party to a subcase is “any objector or respondent to a water right 
recommendation. . . .”).   However, once the special master issued his Recommendation, the Holdens 
sat on their rights and failed to file a motion to alter or amend the Recommendation.  As such, they 
are barred from asserting error in those findings before this Court. 
The SRBA judge had nothing other than the special master’s Recommendation to go on.  
Because the Holdens waived any right to challenge the Recommendation, they have failed to 
establish the requisite basis to make that challenge on appeal.   
It is axiomatic that a party challenging any action by a lower tribunal must follow the 
procedural requisites to provide a record for review.  See, e.g., Jacklin Land Co. v. Blue Dog RV, 
Inc., 151 Idaho 242, 249, 254 P.3d 1238, 1245 (2011) (quoting Western Community Ins. Co. v. 
Kickers, Inc., 137 Idaho 305, 306, 48 P.3d 634, 635 (2002) (“The appellant has the obligation to 
provide a sufficient record to substantiate his or her claims on appeal. In the absence of a record that 
is adequate to review the appellant's claims, we will not presume error below.”) (citation omitted); 
Greenfield v. Smith, 162 Idaho 246, 395 P.3d 1279, 1286 (2017) (quoting Belk v. Martin, 136 Idaho 
652, 661, 39 P.3d 592, 601 (2001) (“In the absence of an adequate record on appeal to support the 
appellant’s claims, we will not presume error.”).  These principles are equally applicable before the 
SRBA for those parties wishing to challenge the findings of a special master.1 
Accordingly, because there was no Notice of Challenge, the district court rightly deduced 
both parties agreed with the priority date within the special master’s Recommendation. In the context 
of summary judgement we have stated, “the trial court is not required to search the record looking 
for evidence that may create a genuine issue of material fact; the party opposing the summary 
judgment is required to bring that evidence to the court’s attention.”  Vreeken v. Lockwood Eng’g, 
                                                 
1 The Holdens argued before this Court that they apparently had financial constraints which limited their ability to pay 
for a Notice of Challenge.  Nevertheless, they never made application to waive such costs before the SRBA court, 
pursuant to Idaho Code section 31-3220, and there is nothing in the record to support such claims.  Consequently, we do 
not address their alleged financial inability to pay in this appeal. 
 
 
 
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B.V., 148 Idaho 89, 104, 218 P.3d 1150, 1164–65 (2009). The same rule applies in the circumstances 
presented here. A district court is not required to “scour the record” (limited though it was in this 
case) in order to determine if there is any evidence that contradicts any un-objected-to finding of 
fact. Quemada v. Arizmendez, 153 Idaho 609, 616, 288 P.3d 826, 833 (2012). Nor is the court 
required to create the record by sua sponte ordering a transcript.  Indeed, there is no basis for the 
court to do so where the objecting party bears the burden of providing a transcript and paying for it.  
AO1 § 13(d).   
The Holdens claim they should be allowed to circumvent the procedures required by AO1 
and challenge the priority date for the first time on appeal pursuant to Idaho Rule Civil Procedure 
52(a), which sets forth that “[a] party may raise the question of the sufficiency of the evidence to 
support the findings [of a lower tribunal] whether or not the party raising the question . . . made an 
objection to the findings or a motion to amend them. . . .”  We disagree.  
Parties to the SRBA are bound by the procedural requirements of AO1 notwithstanding the 
provisions of Rule 52(a).  This is so because of the unique nature of the SRBA court.  The Idaho 
Legislature modified procedures “for the adjudication of rights to the use of water” in order to 
“provide a more efficient method for adjudications,” and to “assure that state laws and procedures 
provide a fair and impartial forum for the adjudication of the rights of all claimants. . . .”  I.C. § 42-
1401(1)–(3).  The SRBA court has managed hundreds of thousands of water right claims pursuant to 
procedures which require precision and exactness.  Ad hoc exceptions to the procedural 
requirements in AO1 would be impractical and unmanageable.  We therefore hold that the Holdens 
waived the right to challenge the findings of the special master, which were later ordered in a partial 
decree by the district court. 
B. Weeces are entitled to attorney fees on appeal. 
 
The Weeces request attorney fees pursuant to Idaho Code section 12-121. To obtain attorney 
fees under this statute the following standard applies: 
An award of attorney fees under Idaho Code § 12–121 is not a matter of right to the 
prevailing party, but is appropriate only when the court, in its discretion, is left with 
the abiding belief that the case was brought, pursued, or defended frivolously, 
unreasonably, or without foundation. When deciding whether attorney fees should be 
awarded under I.C. § 12–121, the entire course of the litigation must be taken into 
account and if there is at least one legitimate issue presented, attorney fees may not 
be awarded even though the losing party has asserted other factual or legal claims 
that are frivolous, unreasonable, or without foundation. 
 
 
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Michalk v. Michalk, 148 Idaho 224, 235, 220 P.3d 580, 591 (2009) (citation omitted).  
The issues raised by the Holdens on appeal were waived when the Holdens failed to follow 
procedures which are clearly mandated by AO1.  It is the burden of the party challenging the 
findings of a special master to rebut those findings with admissible evidence and facts.  The Holdens 
did not present such evidence to the special master, and they continue to advocate that this Court 
remand this case to allow the special master to take another shot at it.  This is simply a request to 
second guess those findings without facts to establish their position.  The appeal was brought 
frivolously, unreasonably, or without foundation.  As such, the Weeces are awarded attorney fees on 
this appeal. 
C. The Holdens are not entitled to attorney fees on appeal.  
 
In one sentence at the end of their briefing, the Holdens “request and seek . . . all cost and 
attorney fees.” Under Idaho Appellate Rule 35(a), “If the appellant is claiming attorney fees 
on appeal the appellant must so indicate in the division of issues on appeal that appellant is claiming 
attorney fees and state the basis for the claim.” The Holdens failed to satisfy either of these 
requirements. They failed to indicate a request for attorney fees within its division of issues on 
appeal and they did not state a legal basis for such an award. Beyond that, they are not the prevailing 
party on this appeal.  Accordingly, the Holdens are not entitled to attorney fees on appeal. 
 
IV. CONCLUSION 
For the reasons set forth above, the order of partial decree issued by the district court is 
affirmed by this Court.  The Weeces are awarded costs and attorney fees on appeal. 
Chief Justice BURDICK, Justices JONES, HORTON, and BRODY, CONCUR.