Utah Code § 73-1-4

Reversion to the public by abandonment or forfeiture for nonuse within seven years
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-- Saved water -- Written plan standards for future water -- Nonuse application.
(1) As used in this section:
(a) "Lower basin" means the same as that term is defined in Section 73-12a-2.
(b) "Public entity" means:
(i) the United States;
(ii) an agency of the United States;
(iii) the state;
(iv) a state agency;
(v) a political subdivision of the state; or
(vi) an agency of a political subdivision of the state.
(c) "Public water supplier" means an entity that:
(i) supplies water, directly or indirectly, to the public for municipal, domestic, or industrial use;
and
(ii) is:
(A) a public entity;

(B) a water corporation, as defined in Section 54-2-1, that is regulated by the Public Service
Commission;
(C) a community water system:
(I) that:
(Aa) supplies water to at least 100 service connections used by year-round residents; or
(Bb) regularly serves at least 200 year-round residents; and
(II) whose voting members:
(Aa) own a share in the community water system;
(Bb) receive water from the community water system in proportion to the member's share
in the community water system; and
(Cc) pay the rate set by the community water system based on the water the member
receives; or
(D) a water users association:
(I) in which one or more public entities own at least 70% of the outstanding shares; and
(II) that is a local sponsor of a water project constructed by the United States Bureau of
Reclamation.
(d) "Saved water" means the same as that term is defined in Section 73-3-3.
(e) "Shareholder" means the same as that term is defined in Section 73-3-3.5.
(f) "Water company" means the same as that term is defined in Section 73-3-3.5.
(g) "Water conservancy district" means the same as that term is defined in Section 73-10-32.
(h) "Water supply entity" means an entity that supplies water as a utility service or for irrigation
purposes and is also:
(i) a municipality, water conservancy district, metropolitan water district, irrigation district, or
other public agency;
(ii) a water company regulated by the Public Service Commission; or
(iii) any other owner of a community water system.
(2)
(a) Except as provided in Subsection (2)(b) or (e), when an appropriator or the appropriator's
successor in interest abandons or ceases to beneficially use all or a portion of a water right
for a period of at least seven years, the water right or the unused portion of that water right is
subject to forfeiture in accordance with Subsection (2)(c).
(b)
(i) An appropriator or the appropriator's successor in interest may file an application for nonuse
with the state engineer.
(ii) A nonuse application may be filed on all or a portion of the water right, including water rights
held by a water company.
(iii) After giving written notice to the water company, a shareholder may file a nonuse
application with the state engineer on the water represented by the stock.
(iv)
(A) The approval of a nonuse application excuses the requirement of beneficial use of water
from the date of filing.
(B) The time during which an approved nonuse application is in effect does not count toward
the seven-year period described in Subsection (2)(a).
(v) The filing or approval of a nonuse application or a series of nonuse applications under
Subsection (3) does not:
(A) constitute beneficial use of a water right;
(B) protect a water right that is already subject to forfeiture under this section; or
(C) bar a water right owner from:

(I) using the water under the water right as permitted under the water right; or
(II) claiming the benefit of Subsection (2)(e) or any other forfeiture defense provided by law.
(c)
(i) Except as provided in Subsection (2)(c)(ii), a water right or a portion of the water right may
not be forfeited unless a judicial action to declare the right forfeited is commenced:
(A) within 15 years from the end of the latest period of nonuse of at least seven years; or
(B) within the combined time of 15 years from the end of the most recent period of nonuse
of at least seven years and the time the water right was subject to one or more nonuse
applications.
(ii)
(A) The state engineer, in a proposed determination of rights filed with the court and prepared
in accordance with Section 73-4-11, may not assert that a water right was forfeited unless
the most recent period of nonuse of seven years ends or occurs:
(I) during the 15 years immediately preceding the day on which the state engineer files the
proposed determination of rights with the court; or
(II) during the combined time immediately preceding the day on which the state engineer
files the proposed determination of rights consisting of 15 years and the time the water
right was subject to one or more approved nonuse applications.
(B) After the day on which a proposed determination of rights is filed with the court a person
may not assert that a water right subject to that determination was forfeited before the
issuance of the proposed determination, unless the state engineer asserts forfeiture in
the proposed determination, or a person, in accordance with Section 73-4-11, makes an
objection to the proposed determination that asserts forfeiture.
(iii) A water right, found to be valid in a decree entered in an action for general determination
of rights under Chapter 4, Determination of Water Rights, is subject to a claim of forfeiture
based on a seven-year period of nonuse that begins after the day on which the state
engineer filed the related proposed determination of rights with the court, unless the decree
provides otherwise.
(iv) If in a judicial action a court declares a water right forfeited, on the date on which the water
right is forfeited:
(A) the right to beneficially use the water reverts to the public; and
(B) the water made available by the forfeiture:
(I) first, satisfies other water rights in the hydrologic system in order of priority date; and
(II) second, may be appropriated as provided in this title.
(d) Except as provided in Subsection (2)(e), this section applies whether the unused or
abandoned water or a portion of the water is:
(i) permitted to run to waste; or
(ii) beneficially used by others without right with the knowledge of the water right holder.
(e) This section does not apply to:
(i) the beneficial use of water according to a written, terminable lease or other agreement with
the appropriator or the appropriator's successor in interest;
(ii) a water right if the water right's place of use is contracted under an approved state
agreement or federal conservation fallowing program;
(iii) those periods of time when a surface water or groundwater source fails to yield sufficient
water to satisfy the water right;
(iv) a water right when water is unavailable because of the water right's priority date;

(v) a water right to store water in a surface reservoir, or an aquifer in accordance with Chapter
3b, Groundwater Recharge and Recovery Act, if the water is stored for present or future
beneficial use;
(vi) a water right if a water user has beneficially used substantially all of the water right within
a seven-year period, provided that this exemption does not apply to the adjudication of a
water right in a general determination of water rights under Chapter 4, Determination of
Water Rights;
(vii) except as provided by Subsection (2)(g), a water right:
(A)
(I) owned by a public water supplier;
(II) represented by a public water supplier's ownership interest in a water company; or
(III) to which a public water supplier owns the right of beneficial use; and
(B) conserved or held for the reasonable future water requirement of the public, which is
determined according to Subsection (2)(f);
(viii) a supplemental water right during a period of time when another water right available to
the appropriator or the appropriator's successor in interest provides sufficient water so as to
not require beneficial use of the supplemental water right;
(ix) a period of nonuse of a water right during the time the water right is subject to an approved
change application where the applicant is diligently pursuing certification;
(x) a water right to store water in a surface reservoir if:
(A) storage is limited by a safety, regulatory, or engineering restraint that the appropriator or
the appropriator's successor in interest cannot reasonably correct; and
(B) not longer than seven years have elapsed since the limitation described in Subsection (2)
(e)(x)(A) is imposed;
(xi) a water right subject to an approved change application for use within a water bank that has
been authorized but not dissolved under Chapter 31, Water Banking Act, during the period
of time the state engineer authorizes the water right to be used within the water bank;
(xii) subject to Subsection (2)(h), that portion of a water right that is quantified as saved water
in a final order from the state engineer approving a change application, but not to exceed
the amount subsequently verified by the state engineer in a certificate issued under Section
73-3-17; or
(xiii) a water right or a portion of a water right that a water conservancy district:
(A)
(I) uses or diverts within the lower basin;
(II) has an approval or a certificate from the state engineer to use or divert within the lower
basin; or
(III) plans to use or divert within the lower basin, as demonstrated by an affidavit signed by
the water conservancy district's general manager; and
(B)
(I) owns, including as a beneficial owner of a water right conveyed to the state, acting
through the Board of Water Resources or Division of Water Resources, in connection
with a loan agreement;
(II) leases; or
(III) is contractually entitled to use.
(f)
(i) The reasonable future water requirement of the public is the amount of water needed in the
next 40 years by:

(A) the persons within the public water supplier's reasonably anticipated service area based
on reasonably anticipated population growth; or
(B) other water use demand.
(ii) For purposes of Subsection (2)(f)(i), a community water system's reasonably anticipated
service area:
(A) is the area served by the community water system's distribution facilities; and
(B) expands as the community water system expands the distribution facilities in accordance
with Title 19, Chapter 4, Safe Drinking Water Act.
(iii) In accordance with Subsection 73-2-1(4) and Title 63G, Chapter 3, Utah Administrative
Rulemaking Act, the state engineer shall make rules to establish standards for a written plan
under this Subsection (2)(f) that:
(A) determines the reasonable future water requirement of the public for a public water
supplier; and
(B) a public water supplier shall complete to demonstrate compliance with this Subsection (2)
(f).
(iv) The state engineer shall present rules developed under Subsection (2)(f)(iii), before the
rules take effect, to:
(A) if the Legislature is not in session, the Natural Resources, Agriculture, and Environment
Interim Committee; or
(B) if the Legislature is in session, the House and Senate Natural Resources, Agriculture, and
Environment standing committees.
(v) The rules that the state engineer makes to establish standards for a written plan in
accordance with Subsection (2)(f)(iii) shall include a standard for determining:
(A) a population estimate, including anticipated population growth, consistent with an estimate
or methodology under Title 63C, Chapter 20, Utah Population Committee;
(B) an impact of current and future drought conditions;
(C) an anticipated loss of a water source due to a natural disaster, including an earthquake or
a change in climate;
(D) an impact of a water conservation activity described in a public water supplier's water
conservation plan described in Section 73-10-32;
(E) the amount of water a public water supplier needs per capita; and
(F) any other factor relevant to establishing the reasonable future water requirement of the
public for a public water supplier.
(g) For a water right acquired by a public water supplier on or after May 5, 2008, Subsection (2)
(e)(vii) applies if:
(i) the public water supplier submits a change application under Section 73-3-3; and
(ii) the state engineer approves the change application.
(h) Saved water does not retain the protection of Subsection (2)(e)(xii) and any period of nonuse
for saved water begins to run the day on which:
(i) the underlying water right that serves as the basis for the saved water is declared by court
decree to have been lost due to forfeiture under this section; or
(ii) the title of a right to saved water segregated under Section 73-3-27 is conveyed
independent of the underlying water right.
(3)
(a) The state engineer shall furnish a nonuse application form requiring the following information:
(i) the name and address of the applicant;
(ii) a description of the water right or a portion of the water right, including the point of diversion,
place of use, and priority;

(iii) the quantity of water;
(iv) the period of use;
(v) the extension of time applied for;
(vi) a statement of the reason for the nonuse of the water; and
(vii) any other information that the state engineer requires.
(b)
(i) Upon receipt of the application, the state engineer shall publish a notice of the application
once a week for two successive weeks:
(A) in a newspaper of general circulation in the county in which the source of the water supply
is located and where the water is to be beneficially used; and
(B) as required in Section 45-1-101.
(ii) The notice shall:
(A) state that an application has been made; and
(B) specify where the interested party may obtain additional information relating to the
application.
(c) An interested person may file a written protest with the state engineer against the granting of
the application:
(i) within 20 days after the notice is published, if the adjudicative proceeding is informal; and
(ii) within 30 days after the notice is published, if the adjudicative proceeding is formal.
(d) In a proceeding to determine whether the nonuse application should be approved or rejected,
the state engineer shall follow Title 63G, Chapter 4, Administrative Procedures Act.
(e) After further investigation, the state engineer may approve or reject the application.
(4)
(a) The state engineer shall grant a nonuse application on all or a portion of a water right for
a period of time not exceeding seven years if the applicant shows a reasonable cause for
nonuse.
(b) A reasonable cause for nonuse includes:
(i) a demonstrable financial hardship or economic depression;
(ii) a physical cause or change that renders use beyond the reasonable control of the water
right owner so long as the water right owner acts with reasonable diligence to resume or
restore the use;
(iii) the initiation of water conservation or an efficiency practice, or the operation of a
groundwater recharge recovery program approved by the state engineer;
(iv) operation of a legal proceeding;
(v) the holding of a water right or stock in a mutual water company without use by a water
supply entity to meet the reasonable future requirements of the public;
(vi) situations where, in the opinion of the state engineer, the nonuse would assist in
implementing an existing, approved water management plan; or
(vii) the loss of capacity caused by deterioration of the water supply or delivery equipment if the
applicant submits, with the application, a specific plan to resume full use of the water right
by replacing, restoring, or improving the equipment.
(5)
(a) Sixty days before the expiration of a nonuse application, the state engineer shall notify the
applicant by mail or by a form of electronic communication through which receipt is verifiable,
of the date when the nonuse application will expire.
(b) An applicant may file a subsequent nonuse application in accordance with this section.

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