Arizona v. California
Arizona v. California is a set of United States Supreme Court cases, all dealing with disputes over water distribution from the Colorado River between the states of Arizona and California. It also covers the amount of water that the State of Nevada receives from the river as well.
When a dispute arises between two states, the case is filed for exclusive original jurisdiction with the United States Supreme Court. This is one of the very limited circumstances where the Court has original jurisdiction as a trial court and no lower may hear the case. In all other cases, the Court acts as the highest level appellate court in the United States.
The cases involved were all named Arizona v. California, and were decided in 1931, 1934, 1936, 1963, 1964, 1966, 1979, 1983, 1984, and 2000.
The original decision,, specified the amount of water to which Arizona was entitled under the Colorado River Compact of 1922.
Since then, the case has been relitigated several times because of Arizona's claims that California is using more water than it is entitled to.
The court determined that the Secretary of the Interior was not bound by Prior-appropriation water rights in allocating water among the states, within the 1964 decree.
- : Arizona argued that the Colorado River Compact was unconstitutional.
- : Arizona requested that the Supreme Court:
- *specify an amount of Colorado River water for Arizona's use
- *limit the amount allotted to California
- : The court specified the amount of water to which each state in the Colorado River Compact was entitled.
- : The court adjusted the amounts of water specified in 373 US 546.
- : The court adjusted its previous decree.
- : The court adjusted the specified amounts of water for all parties to the case.
- : The court issued a decree regarding unadjudicated rights of Indian tribes to Colorado River water.
- : The court adjusted its previous decree.
- : The court adjusted the specified amounts of water for several parties to the case.
- : The court approved a consolidated decree.
The 1962 oral arguments set a modern record for the Supreme Court: 16 hours over four days.