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H. Jess Senecal (CSB #0) EXEMPT FROM FILING FEES UNDER Thomas S. Bunn III (CSB #0) GOVERNMENT CODE LAGERLOF, SENECAL, GOSNEY & KRUSE, LLP 01 N. Lake Avenue, th Floor Pasadena, CA 01- Telephone: () -00 Facsimile: () -00 Attorneys for Defendant and Cross-Complainant, Palmdale Water District SUPERIOR COURT OF THE STATE OF CALIFORNIA FOR THE COUNTY OF LOS ANGELES CENTRAL DISTRICT 1 1 1 1 1 1 0 Coordination Proceeding Special Title (Rule (b)) ANTELOPE VALLEY GROUNDWATER CASES Judicial Council Coordination Proceeding No. 0 [Assigned to The Honorable Jack Komar, Judge Santa Clara County Superior Court, Dept. 1] Santa Clara Court Case No. 1-0-CV-00 REPLY IN SUPPORT OF PROPOSED STATEMENT OF DECISION IN RESPONSE TO CROSS-DEFENDANTS OBJECTIONS Date: July, 0 Time: :00 a.m. Dept: 1, Central Civil West 1 I. OVERVIEW At the close of an extensive Phase Three trial, the Court, taking all of the evidence presented by the parties under submission, entered its Tentative Decision on May, 0. The two issues central to the dispute adjudged by the Court during Phase Three (and the subject of its Tentative Decision) were: (1) overdraft and () safe yield. Specifically, as concerned overdraft, the Public Water Suppliers (and other parties) asserted that the Basin had reached a condition of overdraft. The landowner parties 1

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 (herein Cross-Defendants ) disagreed, maintaining that, while the Basin may have been in overdraft in prior years, the Basin had normalized and a finding of overdraft could not lie. The Public Water Suppliers, mindful of the overdraft condition, requested that this Court determine the safe yield of the Basin and impose a physical solution, or some other remedy, to help achieve some level of sustainability for the Basin for the long-term. Cross-Defendants, on the other hand, maintained that the absence of an overdraft condition precluded the Court from making a single safe yield determination, and sought, instead, a range of values representing the Basin s safe yield. Both overdraft and safe yield are highly technical inquiries, to determine these inquiries requires the Court to weigh the physical evidence adduced during trial and consider the theories and analyses advanced by the parties own hydrologist and geologist expert witnesses, who opined on precipitation and runoff, streamflow, evapotranspiration, and other hydrologic conditions in the Basin. Ultimately, the Court decided that the Public Water Suppliers had, by a preponderance of the evidence, established that the Basin was currently in overdraft and had been in overdraft for at least 1 years. The Court also considered all of the evidence informative to the Court regarding the proper safe yield calculation (variables include but are not limited inputs such as natural recharge, runoff, and stream flow). Here, again, the Court concluded that the Public Water Suppliers had established, by a preponderance of the evidence, that the safe yield should be approximated at 0,000 acre-feet per year. The basis for these findings, and more, was discussed in the Court s Tentative Decision. On May 1, 0, Bolthouse Properties, LLC and Wm. Bolthouse Farms, Inc. ( Bolthouse ) requested that the Court issue a Statement of Decision explaining the factual and legal basis for its Tentative Decision in accordance with Code of Civil Procedure section. (Request at.) Several of the other landowner parties joined in this Request. The Court subsequently directed Los Angeles County Waterworks District 0 ( District 0 ) to draft the Statement of Decision, which District 0 prepared and filed on June, 0. (Cal. Rules of Court, Rule.0(c),(f).) Objections to the proposed Statement of Decision ensued. As discussed infra, the proposed Statement of Decision, based on the findings set forth in the Tentative Decision, more than adequately addresses the material issues adjudicated during Phase Three, those of overdraft and safe yield, and sets forth the principal factual and legal bases underlying the

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 Court s determination, as required by law. Cross-Defendants discontent with the outcome of Phase Three, as evidenced by their Objections, is not properly addressed here. Indeed, the Objections largely invite the Court to revisit a myriad of ancillary evidentiary claims already determined at trial and appropriately treated briefly by (or excluded from) the Statement of Decision, also as instructed by law. (Lynch v. Cook () Cal.App.d, 0; see also People v. Casa Blanca Convalescent Homes, Inc. () Cal.App.d 0, [the judge is not required to make minute findings as to individual items of evidence ].) Although the principles set forth above are sufficient to respond to most of the Objections, the discussion below also addresses several specific issues raised by the Objections. II. ARGUMENT A. The Court Is Not Required To Make Findings On Subsidiary Issues Upon request, the Court will issue a Statement of Decision, the objective of which is to set forth the factual and legal basis for the Court s decision as to each of the principal controverted issues. (Code of Civ. Proc., [emphasis added]; Cal. Rules of Court, Rule.0(d); Muzquiz v. City of Emeryville (000) Cal.App.th 0, [ Muzquiz ].) As expressly set forth in the governing statute, and as further underscored by case law, a Statement of Decision requires findings on principal issues only; subsidiary issues need not be addressed. (Code of Civ. Proc., ; Wolf v. Lipsy () 1 Cal.App.d,.) A principal issue is a material issue that is relevant and essential to the judgment and closely related to the ultimate issues in the case. (Kuffel v. Seaside Oil Co. () Cal.App.d, [ Kuffel ].) Findings are simply not required on every subsidiary matter on which evidence has been received at trial, even though the subsidiary matter may be relevant to the ultimate issues of fact. (Id.) In preparing a statement of decision, the ultimate (and not the evidentiary) facts are presented in narrative form, the reasoning of the court is succinctly stated, and the analytical route traveled by the court must be exposed. (See Lynch v. Cook () Cal.App.d, 0; see also People v. Casa Blanca Convalescent Homes, Inc. () Cal.App.d 0, [ Casa Blanca ].) The Statement of Decision in this case appropriately disclosed the factual and legal bases upon which this Court decided the material issues of overdraft and safe yield issues well within the scope of the Phase Three trial striking a reasonable balance between the level of detail demanded by some of

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 the parties with what the law requires. To provide the parties with an adequate roadmap of the evolution of the legal issues, the Statement of Decision: reiterated the parties positions, set forth the experts views on the multitude of factors dutifully weighed by this Court, devoting several pages to the reasoning employed in finding there was overdraft and in calculating safe yield. Cross-Defendants Objections challenge the essence of the Statement of Decision, seeking disclosure of specific evidentiary findings. A party s request may ask for the legal or factual basis for the judgment, but it may not interrogate the judge on evidentiary matters. (Casa Blanca, supra, Cal.App.d at.) Toward this end, Cross-Defendants Objections exemplify the very kind of inquisition and rehearing of evidence disfavored by and unsupported in law. (In re Marriage of Balcof (00) Cal.App.th, [finding improper a request for statement of decision that inappropriately sought answers to questions and findings on evidentiary facts]; Muzquiz, supra, Cal.App.th at [a statement of decision does not resolve evidentiary conflicts, or respond point by point to all of the issues presented in a party s proposal]; Hellman v. La Cumbre Golf & Country Club () Cal.App.th 1, [the court is not required to address each question in the parties proposals].) One party would have this Court needlessly sort through volumes of expert evidence evidence accumulated over the course of the entire Phase Three trial to identify the specific testimony that the Court found credible in reaching its decisions on overdraft and safe yield. (Bolthouse Objection at :-1; see also Bolthouse Objection, Exhibit A.) The detail requested from this same party, and others, in its proposal on the type of material to be included in the Statement of Decision, e.g., all facts and specific testimony on some 0 issues (see, generally, Bolthouse Proposal), is unfounded. Another party would have this Court make findings regarding specific numerous subsidiary facts to its ultimate decision regarding the Court s determination of pumping. (See, generally, AGWA Proposal.) Similar to Bolthouse, AGWA asks the Court to respond to over 0 requests regarding specific testimony. (Id.) A statement of decision is deemed adequate if it sufficiently disposes of all the basic issues in the case. (Bauer v. Bauer () Cal.App.th 0,.) The Statement of Decision for this case plots the analytical path traversed by this Court, disclosing the material issues in dispute at the Phase Three trial (Statement of Decision at 1), the burden of proof (id. at : -), the definition of overdraft

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 and safe yield (id. at :-), the extensive expert testimony presented at trial for overdraft and safe yield (id. at :-), and a detailed narrative of the factual bases for finding overdraft (id. at -) and safe yield (id. at -). A review of Cross-Defendants Objections shows a request for disclosure of subsidiary facts remote in the chain of determination of the ultimate fact, which do not require special findings, and thus were not appropriately addressed here. (South Bay Irr. Dist. v. California-American Water Co. () 1 Cal.App.d, ; Kuffel, supra, Cal.App.d at.) There is simply no evidence that the Court failed to make findings on material issues sufficient for reversible error to result. (Kazensky v. City of Merced () Cal.App.th,.) B. The Court Used The Proper Burden Of Proof [E]xcept as otherwise provided by law, the burden of proof requires proof by a preponderance of the evidence. (CA Evid. Code, ). Here, the law does not provide for a higher burden of proof and the Court properly found that the burden of proof was met by a preponderance of the evidence. Preponderance of the evidence results in a roughly equally sharing of risk and between all parties. (In re Marriage of Peters () Cal.App.th, 0). Requiring a higher burden of proof demonstrates a preference to one party over the other. (Id.) Thus, a higher burden of proof is generally only applied in instances where the consequences of the outcome affect particularly important individual interests or rights, which are more substantial than the loss of money. (People ex rel. Monterey Mushrooms, Inc. v. Thompson (00) 1 Cal.App.th, ; Baxter Healthcare Corp. v. Denton (00) Cal.App.th, ; Bookout v. Nielsen (00) 1 Cal.App.th 1, 1). Here the scope of the Phase III trial was safe yield and overdraft, which do not affect any one party s rights, but rather assist the Court in determining the condition of the Basin. Thus, the Court correctly applied the preponderance of the evidence standard. C. The Court Should Make Findings As To Native Safe Yield, Supplemental Safe Yield, and Return Flow Percentages The proposed Statement of Decision adds findings as to the native safe yield, supplemental safe yield, and return flow percentages (Statement of Decision at ). These findings were added for three reasons.

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 First, native safe yield, supplemental safe yield, and return flow percentages are necessary components of the Court s ultimate conclusion that the safe yield of the Basin is 0,000 acre-feet per year. While the expert witnesses called by the Public Water Suppliers, City of Los Angeles, and United States used different methods to come to their opinions that the natural recharge of the Basin was 0,000 acre-feet per year, Mr. Scalmanini then added the return flows from native and imported water to arrive at his ultimate opinion that the total safe yield of the Basin was 0,000 acre-feet per year. (Scalmanini Testimony 00.) As such, the return flow amounts and percentages are ultimate facts necessary to reach the safe yield conclusion, and can be considered principal issues. As discussed above, a principal issue is a material issue that is relevant and essential to the judgment and closely related to the ultimate issues in the case. (Kuffel v. Seaside Oil Co. () Cal.App.d,.) Further, the need to use these factors in the calculation of the total safe yield means that they are not outside the scope of the Phase Three trial, as some Objections have argued. Second, the inclusion of findings as to native safe yield, supplemental safe yield, and return flow percentages now will avoid an expensive and time-consuming retrial of those issues later. The Public Water Suppliers contend that the yield attributable to return flows from imported water belongs to the importers. (See Los Angeles v. San Fernando () 1 Cal.d,.) While water rights were specifically excluded from the scope of the Phase Three trial, a finding now as to the amount of return flows from imported water will enable a simple calculation of those rights later, should the Court agree with the Public Water Suppliers. Third, the testimony at the trial showed that while natural recharge remains relatively constant over time (being itself based on a long-term average), the return flows change depending on land use and irrigation practices. Findings as to return flow percentages will enable the calculation of the amounts of return flows going into the future. This will be important in the implementation of the physical solution as ultimately determined by the Court. Copa de Oro s objection to the finding on supplemental safe yield is based on the uncertainty of State Water Project (imported) water in the future. The first response to Copa de Oro s objection is that the evidence regarding imported water return flows, and the resulting calculation of supplemental safe yield and total safe yield, did not deal with the future availability of imported water at all. It was based

1 1 1 1 1 1 0 1 on what Mr. Scalmanini called current conditions. The second response is that the variability of imported water in the future will be of critical importance in formulating a physical solution. In that regard, it is necessary for the Court to make findings now as to return flow percentages and how those enter into the calculation of supplemental safe yield, so that return flows can be calculated on a year-byyear basis in the future. D. Editorial Changes to the Tentative Decision Were Made For Clarity, and Do Not Change The Substance of the Court s Decision The Statement of Decision reflects some changes to the terminology and wording of the Tentative Decision. These changes were made for clarity and do not affect the substance of the Court s decision. For example, the term aquifer was changed to Basin to reflect the testimony at trial and to avoid confusion. While the word aquifer is often used to describe a formation yielding groundwater to wells, testimony in this case established that the Basin contained multiple aquifers. (See, e.g., RT /1/,.) The Court s decision affected the Basin as a whole, not individual aquifers within the Basin. Similarly, the word safe yield was removed in reference to subareas, because the term safe yield is used in the case law for basin-wide concepts such as water rights and safe yield. (Statement of Decision at ; see Los Angeles v. San Fernando, supra, 1 Cal. d at -.) The Court correctly found that similar concepts of sustainable pumping will be necessary with respect to subareas in the physical solution, and the revised wording of the Statement of Decision does not change the substance of that finding. Finally, the word hydro-conductivity was changed to hydraulic connectivity to reflect the term used in the industry and at the Phase Two trial. III. CONCLUSION For the reasons set forth above, the Court should adopt the proposed Statement of Decision. Dated: July 1, 0 LAGERLOF, SENECAL, GOSNEY & KRUSE, LLP By: Thomas S. Bunn III Attorneys for Defendant and Cross-Complainant Palmdale Water District