Nevada Code § 533.060

Right to use limited to amount necessary; loss or abandonment of rights; no acquisition of prescriptive right; reservation of rights by State
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1. Rights to the use of water must be
limited and restricted to as much as may be necessary, when reasonably and
economically used for irrigation and other beneficial purposes, irrespective of
the carrying capacity of the ditch. The balance of the water not so
appropriated must be allowed to flow in the natural stream from which the ditch
draws its supply of water, and must not be considered as having been
appropriated thereby.
2. Rights to the use of surface water
shall not be deemed to be lost or otherwise forfeited for the failure to use
the water therefrom for a beneficial purpose.
3. A surface water right that is
appurtenant to land formerly used primarily for agricultural purposes is not
subject to a determination of abandonment if the surface water right:
(a) Is appurtenant to land that has been
converted to urban use; or
(b) Has been dedicated to or acquired by a water
purveyor, public utility or public body for municipal use.
4. In a determination of whether a right
to use surface water has been abandoned, a presumption that the right to use
the surface water has not been abandoned is created upon the submission of
records, photographs, receipts, contracts, affidavits or any other proof of the
occurrence of any of the following events or actions within a 10-year period
immediately preceding any claim that the right to use the water has been
abandoned:
(a) The delivery of water;
(b) The payment of any costs of maintenance and
other operational costs incurred in delivering the water;
(c) The payment of any costs for capital
improvements, including works of diversion and irrigation; or
(d) The actual performance of maintenance related
to the delivery of the water.
5. A prescriptive right to the use of the
water or any of the public water appropriated or unappropriated may not be
acquired by adverse possession. Any such right to appropriate any of the water
must be initiated by applying to the State Engineer for a permit to appropriate
the water as provided in this chapter.
6. The State of Nevada reserves for its
own present and future use all rights to the use and diversion of water
acquired pursuant to chapter 462, Statutes of Nevada 1963, or otherwise
existing within the watersheds of Marlette Lake, Franktown Creek and Hobart
Creek and not lawfully appropriated on April 26, 1963, by any person other than
the Marlette Lake Company. Such a right must not be appropriated by any person
without the express consent of the Legislature.

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