State of Arizona, complainant, vs. State of California, Palo Verde Irrigation District, Imperial Irrigation District, Coachella Valley County Water District, Metropolitan Water District of Southern California, City of Los Angeles, California, City of San Diego, California, and County of San Diego, California, defendants : United States of America, intervener : State of Nevada, intervener : State of New Mexico, impleaded : State of Utah, impleaded : [transcript of arguments]
Transcript of oral arguments before the Supreme Court of the United States on January 8-11, 1962. Attorneys presenting arguments were Stanley Mosk, Northcutt Ely, Mark Wilmer, Charles H. Reed, Archibald Cox, R.P. Parry, Dennis McCarthy, Earl E. Hartley, Claude S. Mann.
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Summary: | Transcript of oral arguments before the Supreme Court of the United States on January 8-11, 1962. Attorneys presenting arguments were Stanley Mosk, Northcutt Ely, Mark Wilmer, Charles H. Reed, Archibald Cox, R.P. Parry, Dennis McCarthy, Earl E. Hartley, Claude S. Mann. Case summary: "Arizona v. California was a 12-year epic battle including three years of trial in front of a special master appointed by the U.S. Supreme Court. The trial involved 106 witnesses and hundreds of volumes of exhibits, ultimately producing a 433-page final report from the Master in December of 1960. Proceedings at the U.S. Supreme Court required two oral arguments, producing a 5-3 decision in 1963 with two dissenting opinions, with the majority opinion implemented by a decree in 1964. The case was an original action in the U.S. Supreme Court, with Arizona seeking to clarify its rights to the use of Colorado River basin water. It was filed 30 years after the seven basin states drafted the Colorado River Compact, which apportioned the waters of the basin roughly equally between the states of the Upper and Lower Divisions, but did not apportion shares to individual states. In addition to Arizona and California, Nevada, New Mexico, and Utah were party to the case because they had lands located within the Lower Basin. The United States was also party to the case because of the federal water projects and lands located within the Lower Basin. It was perhaps the most high profile water case ever to be decided by the U.S. Supreme Court and produced considerable commentary."-- Lawrence J. MacDonnell, Arizona v. California Revisited, 52 Nat. Resources J. 363, 365-66 (2012) (quoted with permission of the author) |
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Item Description: | Cover title. "No. 8 original." "Following preparation of the original transcript of the oral argument, Arizona v. California, suggested corrections were solicited from all parties. The transcripts being forwarded herewith are copies embodying only corrections submitted on the part of the States of California and Utah and by Mr. George Reed on behalf of the State of Arizona. Corrections have not been submitted on behalf of: State of Nevada; State of New Mexico; Mr. Wilmer, State of Arizona; Solicitor General of the United States. Very truly yours, Ward & Paul, Reporters, March 2, 1962."--Cover letter inside front cover of [Volume 1] Consecutively paged transcript is divided into 4 sections that are called "volumes," but bound as 1 physical volume. |
Physical Description: | 605 leaves ; 29 cm |