Baker v. City of Pueblo

289 P. 603, 87 Colo. 489, 1930 Colo. LEXIS 256
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 31, 1930
DocketNo. 12,171.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 289 P. 603 (Baker v. City of Pueblo) 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
Baker v. City of Pueblo, 289 P. 603, 87 Colo. 489, 1930 Colo. LEXIS 256 (Colo. 1930).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

The city of Pueblo, and two of its municipal agencies, filed two separate petitions in the district court of Fremont county seeking thereby judicial decrees permitting a change of the points of diversion of certain waters of the Arkansas river which the city had acquired, and to which there had been decreed in the general adjudication proceeding in the water district to the carrying ditches of the grantors of the city priorities of right to the use of such water for irrigating their agricultural lands.

Before the designated hearing of these petitions about forty-five appropriators and users of water from the river and its tributaries in water districts 11, 12 and 13, and whose appropriations are junior in point of time to those of the petitioners, acting for themselves and other junior appropriators .similarly situated, appeared and filed their written objections and protests to the requested changes, upon the ground that, if allowed, necessarily it would be injurious to their vested rights as such junior appropriators. Upon the issues thus joined, the court found for the petitioners in the main and entered permissive decrees which are attacked on this review.

All priority rights in question were originally for irrigating agricultural lands. If the decree stands, the city may use the water for domestic and other municipal purposes continuously, day and night, throughout the year. Our statute conferring upon district courts power to determine the relative rights of appropriators of the waters of our natural streams for irrigation purposes, requires that the decree awarding the same be made to *491 the ditches themselves and not to their respective owners. The five ditches in question whose priorities were originally awarded and used for irrigating lands may, for convenience in discussion, be put into two groups. Group 1 includes the Plannenkratt ditch, the Porter ditch, and the Lester and Atterbury ditch. Group 2 comprises the Orange White ditch and the Banks No. 1 ditch.

By repeated decisions of this court, and our former Court of Appeals, an appropriator of water from a natural stream in this state for the irrigation of agricultural lands, who seeks to change the point of diversion of the same, assumes, and must sustain, the burden of showing that the vested rights of other appropriators, particularly of junior appropriators, are not infringed. Some of our cases so deciding are Bates v. Hall, 44 Colo. 360, 371, 98 Pac. 3; Vogel v. Minnesota Canal C. & R. Co., 47 Colo. 534, 107 Pac. 1108; Fort Lyon Canal Co. v. Chew, 33 Colo. 392, 81 Pac. 37. In the Yogel case, at page 541 of the opinion, Mr. Justice Bailey said: “This court has often said, in substance, that a junior appropriator of water to a beneficial use has a vested right, as against his senior, in a continuation of the conditions on the stream as they existed at the time he made his appropriation. If this means anything, it is that when the junior appropriator makes his appropriation he acquires a vested right in the conditions then prevailing upon the stream, and surrounding the general method of use' of water therefrom. He has a right to assume that these are fixed conditions and will so remain, at least without substantial change, unless it appears that a proposed change will not work harm to his vested rights.”

In Farmers’ Co. v. Wolf, 23 Colo. App. 570, 131 Pac. 291, referring to this declaration of Judge Bailey, Judg*e King, the writer of the opinion, said at page 581: “* * * It is a matter of common knowledge that, except on streams in which the appropriations have not exceeded the constant supply, few instances arise in which the change of place of diversion of large quantities of *492 water, for a long distance, can be made without substantial injury to juniors, and the utmost care and scrutiny [should be exercised] to guard against such injury.”

See also Trinchera Ranch Co. v. Irrigation District, 83 Colo. 451, 462, 266 Pac. 204.

This declaration of Judge King is what, in other decisions, we have declared, and what practical irrig’ators regard as a true statement. This record discloses what is a matter of common knowledge in this state, that the Arkansas river waters are much over-appropriated. The decreed priorities call for a volume of water far beyond the average constant capacity of the river to supply. It is proposed to change the point of diversion of a large quantity of water, about seven cubic feet per second of time, from the original headgates to a point about forty-five miles down the river.

It was the duty of the trial court, as it is our duty, to exercise the utmost care and scrutiny to guard against injury to junior appropriators who, in this case, have filed protest against the proposed change. A careful examination of the record, assisted by the able briefs of counsel convince us that the trial court failed in this requirement, as we proceed now to demonstrate.

These five ditches are all in the same locality, near the town of Florence. Their headgates are practically equally distant from the ditches and reservoirs of the city of Pueblo, into which it proposes to divert the waters of its newly acquired priorities. The junior appropriators strenuously object to the changes. Some of the headgates of the ditches of these junior appropriators in the Arkansas river and its tributaries are below, and some above, the original headgates of the recently acquired ditches of the city. The lands that these five ditches supply with water are of the same character as to soil. They are close to the river and it seems to be agreed by the parties that the quantity of water necessary for the proper irrigation is substantially the same per acre under each ditch.

*493 The trial court in its findings and decree permitted the change in points of diversion of the three ditches in group 1 for the full amount of their decreed priorities, and permitted a change as to the two ditches in group 2 of only one-fourth of the capacity of their decreed priorities. We have not been cited to any evidence in this record, and we are unable to discover any, that warrants the distinction made by the trial court as between the ditches of these two groups. Counsel for defendants, however, call our attention to the language of the respective decrees that contain the awards to the ditches of group 1, as contrasted to the decrees of the ditches in group 2, and they say that it was the result of the court’s misapprehension as to the force and effect of the decrees that accounts for the unwarranted distinction in question as made by the trial court. In the adjudicating decree to each and all of group 1 ditches, after the designation of the lands, and the acreage for' the irrigation of which the priority awards were made, and the quantity of water specified, are these words: ‘ ‘ Continuous flow during the irrigating season.” In the adjudicating decree to the two ditches in group 2, the language as to description of the land, acreage and quantity of water is the same as in group 1. but the continuous flow provision is entirely absent therefrom.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Farmers Reservoir & Irrigation Co. v. City of Golden
44 P.3d 241 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2002)
In Re the Water Rights of Steffens
756 P.2d 1002 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1988)
City of Grand Junction v. Kannah Creek Water Users Ass'n
557 P.2d 1173 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1976)
City of Westminster v. Church
445 P.2d 52 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1968)
Shawcroft v. TERRACE IRRIGATION COMPANY
333 P.2d 1043 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1958)
Farmers Highline Canal & Reservoir Co. v. City of Golden
272 P.2d 629 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1954)
Enlarged Southside Irrigation Ditch Co. v. John's Flood Ditch Co.
183 P.2d 552 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1947)
Flasche v. Westcolo Co.
149 P.2d 817 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1944)
City & County of Denver v. Sheriff
96 P.2d 836 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1939)
Faden v. Hubbell
28 P.2d 247 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1933)
San Luis Valley Irrigation District v. Knowlton
21 P.2d 177 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1933)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
289 P. 603, 87 Colo. 489, 1930 Colo. LEXIS 256, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/baker-v-city-of-pueblo-colo-1930.