City & County of Denver v. Walker

45 Colo. 387
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1909
DocketNo. 5532; No. 3207 C. A.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 45 Colo. 387 (City & County of Denver v. Walker) 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
City & County of Denver v. Walker, 45 Colo. 387 (Colo. 1909).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court:

Plaintiffs, who are owners of two' adjoining, five-acre tracts of land situate in the city of Denver,designated in the record as lots 5 and 6, and who also claim to be owners, through their grantors, of an independent appropriation of the right to the use of water for irrigating these tracts, and to utilize the same through a ditch- belonging to the defendant city, brought this action against defendants, the city council of Denver and its board of park commissioners, who have immediate supervision and control of the City ditch, to restrain defendants from doing certain acts which it is alleged they are about to do, or by a mandatory writ compel them to make such changes in their plans already carried out, which, unless the appropriate relief is given, will result in depriving plaintiffs of their alleged water right. The defendants, answering, deny that plaintiffs are appropriators of any water through the City ditch, and allege that defendants ’ threatened, or completed, acts in relation to the City ditch, which plaintiffs charge are wrongful, are only such acts as they, owners and controllers of the same, have a perfect legal right to perform. Upon the final hearing the [389]*389court found the issues for plaintiffs, and the decree went accordingly, from which defendants áre here with this writ of error.

Neither the complaint nor the evidence is definite, or precise, as to the alleged rights of plaintiffs. Assuming, however, as do the attorneys for the city, that the complaint alleges an appropriation of water, and that, as against a general demurrer, it is sufficient, we are entirely clear that the evidence does not sustain its allegations. The complaint alleges that plaintiffs’ grantors, about the year 1867, diverted water from the South Platte river, and by means of what is now the City ditch carried the same to, and used it upon, the premises in controversy, and ever since that time plaintiffs and their grantors have continued so to use water upon the lands for raising agricultural crops. The evidence by which plaintiffs sought to establish their case does not have the probative effect claimed for it; indeed it falls far short of it. There'is not a particle of evidence that plaintiffs’ grantors ever made, or acquired, an appropriation of water from the South Platte river, by any means. Perhaps it inferentially' appears, or is virtually admitted, that, by means of the ditch in question, an appropriation of water was made by the grantor of the city which right, at least after its acquisition by the city, has been applied by the municipal authorities in irrigating lawns, gardens, trees and parks of the city, and of its inhabitants, under appropriate municipal regulations, not shown by the evidence. The main City ditch crossed the corner of one of these lots of plaintiffs. It inay be that from water carried therein plaintiffs’ grantors, through some arrangement with its then owner, irrigated their lands; but as to what that arrangement, if any, was, the record is silent. Some light, however, is thrown upon the custom, or regulation, of [390]*390delivering water after the city acquired the ditch hy the testimony of Mr. Dailey, one of plaintiffs’ witnesses. He says that about 1870 he, and possibly some other residents of the city, constructed, with the consent of the city authorities, a lateral from the main ditch across the tracts of land now owned hy plaintiffs, through which water was used for irrigating trees of the builders lying beyond plaintiffs’ premises. Dailey' testifies that this, so far as concerns the taking of water from the ditch, was with permission of the city council, and not as of right— merely such privilege, or use, as citizens generally were permitted to make of the water therefrom; and apparently plaintiffs’ grantors made no objection to the lateral being built on their land. After plaintiffs acquired their interests it seems that the city authorities desired to build a lateral from the main ditch across their tracts, or to enlarge the lateral already there, for the purpose of conveying water therethrough for use by its inhabitants in certain portions of West Denver, and that the mayor and the city council, or a committee of the council, came to plaintiffs’ premises for the purpose of making the necessary arrangements to carry out the municipal purpose. One of the plaintiffs testifies that the mayor, upon that occasion, said to plaintiffs that if they would permit the lateral to he built, ór enlarged, the city would give them the use of water for their premises; and that the city built the lateral, or flume, and ever since that time plaintiffs have enjoyed the use of the water without compensation.

It should he observed, first, that there is no evidence that this offer was accepted hy plaintiffs, or that the city authorities entered upon their lands and made the necessary’ structures in pursuance of any such arrangement. On the contrary, one of the plaintiffs testifies that she told the mayor that she [391]*391•would much rather pay for the water. This conversation also pretty effectually proves that, up to that time, plaintiffs did not own, or claim that they owned, any water right, or that the city was obliged to deliver water to them without compensation, else they would not be negotiating with the city to secure already existing rights in return for a right of way for the City ditch across their lands, nor would they say they preferred to pay money than to give a right of way as the purchase price of water. We are compelled to conclude, on plaintiffs’ own showing, that they, at this time,' recognized that they were not entitled to the use of the water from the City ditch, because they owned an appropriation, but, if at all, as the result of a contract or permission from the city.

The city attorneys say that under its charter and ordinances, existing at the time, it was beyond the power of the mayor, or committee of the council, thus to make any such contract, if in fact they assumed to do so; that such contracts are positively forbidden, both by its charter and ordinances, and that plaintiffs are presumed to know the law, and that they could not, by any such contract as they claim, acquire the rights which they here assert. That point, however, we are not obliged to decide. If it be assumed that the mayor, and committee of the council, had such power and that it was, in fact, exercised, no such right is asserted or claimed in the complaint., That pleading alleges that plaintiffs are independent appropriators of water and have the right to utilize it through the City ditch. The evidence, if it amounts to anything at all, goes only to the point that the right which plaintiffs allege is about to be infringed was acquired as the result of a contract with the city. Not only is the complaint silent as to any right of plaintiffs to this water by [392]*392contract with the city, but if the right asserted was based on a grant, and not on an appropriation, and so alleged in the complaint, the evidence signally fails to show what the contract is so as to warrant the court in enforcing it. The variance is a substantial and fatal variance. The specific objection was made by defendants in their- motion for a nonsuit, and was renewed at the close of all the evidence.

Again, if plaintiffs, by contract, are entitled to the use of water from the City ditch, the decree is radically wrong.

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Bluebook (online)
45 Colo. 387, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-county-of-denver-v-walker-colo-1909.