Broadmoor Dairy & Live Stock Co. v. Brookside Water & Improvement Co.

24 Colo. 541
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1898
DocketNo. 3469
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 24 Colo. 541 (Broadmoor Dairy & Live Stock Co. v. Brookside Water & Improvement Co.) 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
Broadmoor Dairy & Live Stock Co. v. Brookside Water & Improvement Co., 24 Colo. 541 (Colo. 1898).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Goddard

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was originally brought by appellants in the district court of El Paso county to restrain appellees from diverting, through and by means of a certain pipe line, the water flowing in Cheyenne creek, a natural stream situate in El Paso county. The material facts, as they appear from the pleadings and evidence, are in brief as follows :

The appellants, through various conveyances, are the present owners of the Cheyenne ditch, constructed in 1860 (and alleged to have been enlarged in 1862) for the purpose of diverting and appropriating the waters of said creek to the irrigation of certain lands lying thereunder. In a proceeding in the district court of El Paso county, for the adjudication of priorities to the use of water in water district No. 10, [543]*543■which is coextensive with El Paso county, this ditch was, on February 15, 1882, decreed the first and third priorities to water flowing in Cheyenne creek, to an amount sufficient to irrigate four hundred acres of land. The Brookside Water & Improvement Company, through various conveyances, is the owner of the following named ditches, to wit: the Wolfe ditch, the John Wolfe ditch, the Lowry ditch, a one-third interest in the Alvord ditch, a one-tenth interest in the Harris ditch, which ditches, in the same proceeding, were adjudged certain priorities, subsequent and subject to those'of the Cheyenne ditch. The original owners of these ditches were riparian owners of the land on Cheyenne creek, and had used the waters of that creek for domestic purposes continuously from 1858 and 1859. The company claims that it has succeeded to the right of its grantors to use the water for domestic purposes; and that the adjudication of priorities of the water rights in no way affects its right to the use of water for such purpose; that it constructed its pipe line for the purpose of utilizing this right, and also for conveying the waters which had theretofore been carried in said ditches, for that and other legitimate purposes. It admits that the Cheyenne ditch has, by reason of prior construction and appropriation, a right to the water of Cheyenne creek, to the amount that was actually appropriated thereby at the time it was originally constructed, for irrigation purposes only; but denies its enlargement in 1862, and alleges that the decree of February 15, 1882, adjudging the first and third priorities to the Cheyenne ditch, was null and void because the court was without jurisdiction either of the subject-matter or of the claimants of the ditches now owned by it. First. By reason of the insufficiency of the statements of claim filed in the adjudication proceedings. Second. Because it was not shown that section 1 of the act of 1881 was published as provided by section 2 of that act.

For these reasons, and also because of the indefiniteness and uncertainty of the decree itself, the court was asked to declare the same null and of no effect, and to readjudicate the priorities as between the respective ditches.

[544]*544The court below held, that the claim of defendant company to the water, based upon the rights acquired by its grantors as riparian owners to the use of the same for domestic purposes, could not be adjudicated in this proceeding, nor the company decreed the right to divert it for that purpose, through its pipe line; held that the requirements of section 2 of the act of 1881 were directory merely, and that the court had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and of the parties; but decided the decree void for uncertainty and proceeded to re-adjudicate the priorities of the several ditches taking water out of the Cheyenne creek, and rendered a decree accordingly. From this decree plaintiffs below prosecute this appeal, and complain of the action of the court in annulling the decree of February 15, 1882, and in readjudicating the priorities to water flowing in Cheyenne creek. Appellees, by the assignment of cross-errors, challenge the ruling denying the right of the Brookside company to avail itself of the use enjoyed by its grantors as riparian owners, through and by means of its pipe line; and in holding that the district court of El Paso county had jurisdiction of the subject-matter and the parties in the matter of the adjudication of the priorities of water rights.

Other errors are assigned and elaborately argued, but in the view we take of the controversy, it becomes necessary to consider only those that challenge the rulings of the court below upon matters touching the validity of the decree of February 15, 1882, since the rights of the respective parties depend upon the solution of this question. We will consider these objections in their inverse order. Did the court err in holding that the publication of a certified copy of section 1 of the act of 1881, as provided in section 2, was not a necessary condition precedent to the vesting of jurisdiction in the district court of El Paso county to entertain the proceeding instituted for the adjudication of the priority of water rights in district No. 10; that this provision is directory merely, and the failure of the secretary of state to comply with it did not affect the jurisdiction of the district court over the subject-matter ?

[545]*545Prior to the irrigation acts of 1879 and 1881 the district courts of the state were, by section 11, article 6 of the constitution, clothed with “ original jurisdiction of all causes, both at law and in equity; ” and therefore had full and complete jurisdiction to hear and determine water priorities. These acts were passed for the purpose of establishing a system of procedure whereby the appropriators of water on any particular stream could have their priorities and rights determined in one proceeding; and they do not attempt to limit or extend the jurisdiction of the district court as to such rights. The evident purpose of the provisions of section 2 in regard .to the publication of section 1 was to advise parties of its enactment, that they might protect their right to the use of water, by filing a statement of claim as therein provided; but nothing therein indicates that a failure to file such statement should in any way prejudice their rights, or preclude them from thereafter filing the same in any proceeding that might be instituted under section 4 of the act. It is specially provided in section 6 that notice shall be given to all parties interested as owners in any ditch, of the time appointed for any hearing, to appear in court or before the referee, at the time so appointed, and file a statement of claim under oath, in case no statement had theretofore been filed. It appears from the evidence in this case that the referee gave notice as required, and that the grantors of defendant company appeared and became parties to the adjudication proceeding; statements of their respective claims were filed, and most of them testified before the referee. We think, therefore, it clearly appears as found by the court below, that the district court of El Paso county had jurisdiction both of the subject-matter and of the parties.

Upon the question of the right of appellees to divert the water for domestic use, based on the fact that their grantors, as riparian owners, had enjoyed such use since their first settlement upon the stream, the court below held that such claim could not be sustained; and that the right to use the water for such purpose must be exercised in connection with [546]*546riparian ownership. This holding is in accord with the views expressed in the recent case of The Montrose Canal Company v.

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Bluebook (online)
24 Colo. 541, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/broadmoor-dairy-live-stock-co-v-brookside-water-improvement-co-colo-1898.