Application for Water Rights

731 P.2d 665
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 20, 1987
Docket84SA543
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 731 P.2d 665 (Application for Water Rights) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Application for Water Rights, 731 P.2d 665 (Colo. 1987).

Opinion

731 P.2d 665 (1987)

Concerning the Application for WATER RIGHTS OF the CITY OF AURORA, Colorado and the City of Colorado Springs, Colorado in the Eagle River or its Tributaries, Tributaries Involved: Homestake Creek and Cross Creek, in Eagle County.
VAIL VALLEY CONSOLIDATED WATER DISTRICT, Objector-Appellant,
v.
The CITY OF AURORA, Colorado and the City of Colorado Springs, Colorado, Applicants-Appellees, and
The City and County of Denver, Acting By and Through its Board of Water Commissioners, Appearant-Appellee.

No. 84SA543.

Supreme Court of Colorado, En Banc.

January 20, 1987.

*666 Calkins, Kramer, Grimshaw & Harring, Wayne B. Schroeder, P.C., T. Shaun Sullivan, David C. Hallford, Denver, for objector-appellant.

Horn, Anderson & Johnson, Louis Johnson, Gregory L. Johnson, Michael J. Gianunzio, James J. DuBois, Colorado Springs, for applicants-appellees.

*667 Wayne D. Williams, Michael L. Walker, Casey S. Funk, Denver, for appearant-appellee.

KIRSHBAUM, Justice.

Objector, Vail Valley Consolidated Water District (Vail Valley), appeals a portion of a decree of the water court granting Applicants, City of Aurora and City of Colorado Springs (the Cities), a quadrennial finding of reasonable diligence in the development of a conditional appropriation.[1] Vail Valley asserts: (1) that the Cities intentionally abandoned four of their conditional water rights; and (2) that the four conditional rights are no longer part of an integrated project and, therefore, diligence work to develop the project as a whole cannot be attributed to those four rights. We affirm the judgment of the water court.

The water rights at issue constitute four of many conditional rights associated with the Homestake Project, a transmountain diversion project which collects water from tributaries of the Eagle River on the western slope of the Continental Divide and transfers it to the eastern slope cities of Aurora and Colorado Springs, joint developers of the project.[2]

The project generally consists of two collection components: (1) Eagle-Arkansas, collecting water from tributaries generally on the east side of the Eagle River; and (2) Homestake, collecting water from tributaries on the west side of the Eagle River. As originally planned, the project entailed three phases: the Eagle-Arkansas Phase and two phases for development of the Homestake component, denominated Phase I and Phase II. Phase I, completed in 1967, consists of diversion facilities for four tributaries,[3] as well as a storage and delivery system which includes Homestake Reservoir, Homestake Tunnel (a five and one-half mile tunnel beneath the Continental Divide), a diversion dam across the Arkansas River, a pumping station and a delivery conduit.

Phase II was originally planned to include diversions from eight creeks in the Eagle River watershed, all within the White River National Forest. In 1974, because portions of the White River National Forest were being considered for designation as a wilderness area, the Bureau of Land Management suspended the right of way necessary for construction of the Cities' Phase II diversion facilities. In 1980, Congress enacted a law designating the area a protected wilderness, but expressly exempting from proscription the Homestake Project rights. See Act of Dec. 19, 1980, Pub.L. No. 96-560, § 102(a)(5), 94 Stat. 3265, 3266. In conjunction with their successful efforts to obtain Congressional approval of construction of diversion facilities in the wilderness area the Cities adopted a new engineering plan, "Plan B," in lieu of the Phase II plan. Plan B envisions minimizing environmental impact on the wilderness by utilizing a system of tunnels to develop half of the original Phase II water rights.[4] Four conditional water rights originally intended for Phase II construction will not be part of the Plan B development.

The Cities applied for a Special Use Permit from the U.S. Forest Service for construction of Plan B facilities and, in 1981, submitted a revised Environmental Impact Report to the Forest Service. The permit was not granted until May of 1983.

In 1982, the Cities filed an application for a quadrennial finding of reasonable diligence *668 in the development of their Homestake Project conditional rights for the period beginning June 1, 1978, and ending May 31, 1982.[5] Vail Valley filed a statement of opposition,[6] asserting, among other arguments, that the Cities had intentionally abandoned and had failed to develop with reasonable diligence the four water rights not included under Plan B (the four rights)—rights to divert and put to beneficial use water from Whitney Creek, Peterson Creek and two unnamed creeks. The water court found that the Cities did not intend to abandon the four rights and that reasonable diligence had been applied in the development of the rights, the latter ruling based upon a finding of reasonable diligence in the Homestake Project as a whole and the attribution of that finding to the four rights as a part of the integrated Homestake Project.

Vail Valley appeals the ruling of the water court that the Cities did not intend to abandon the four rights not included in Plan B, asserting that the water court applied an incorrect test in resolving the issue. Vail Valley also asserts that a finding of reasonable diligence as to the four rights is erroneous because diligence work on the Homestake Project as a whole cannot be attributed to those particular rights.

I

At trial, Vail Valley asserted that the Cities demonstrated an intent to abandon the four rights by agreeing with Congress to permanently forego development of the rights, by agreeing with the Forest Service to relinquish the easement which could be used to develop the four rights and by failing to include the four rights in any written plans. The water court ruled that there was no affirmative indication that the Cities intended to abandon the rights. On appeal, Vail Valley argues that the water court applied an erroneous test for abandonment by placing the burden on Vail Valley to prove the Cities' intent to abandon the four rights.

An absolute water right is deemed abandoned only when the owner thereof intends to discontinue permanently the use of the water available under that right. See § 37-92-103(2), 15 C.R.S. (1973). In contrast, a conditional water right may be deemed abandoned upon a determination that the owner thereof failed to act with reasonable diligence to develop that right. Section 37-92-301(4), 15 C.R.S. (1973), provides in pertinent part:

In every fourth calendar year after the calendar year in which a determination is made with respect to a conditional water right, the owner or user thereof, if he desires to maintain the same, shall obtain a finding by the referee of reasonable diligence in the development of the proposed appropriation, or said conditional water right shall be considered abandoned.

Section 37-92-103(1), 15 C.R.S. (1973), also provides:

"Abandonment of a conditional water right" means the termination of a conditional water right as a result of the failure to develop with reasonable diligence the proposed appropriation upon which such water right is to be based.

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Related

Application for Water Rights
799 P.2d 33 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1990)
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