City & Cty. of Denver v. Consol. Ditches of Water Dist. No. 2

2019 CO 68, 444 P.3d 278
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 1, 2019
DocketSupreme Court Case 16SA291
StatusPublished

This text of 2019 CO 68 (City & Cty. of Denver v. Consol. Ditches of Water Dist. No. 2) 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 & Cty. of Denver v. Consol. Ditches of Water Dist. No. 2, 2019 CO 68, 444 P.3d 278 (Colo. 2019).

Opinion

JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 This appeal from the water court in Water Division 1 represents the latest chapter in litigation over a 1940 water use agreement (1940 Agreement) between the City and County of Denver, acting by and through its Board of Water Commissioners (Denver) and the ditch company members of Consolidated Ditches of Water District No. 2 (Consolidated Ditches). 1 The purpose of the 1940 Agreement was to resolve the parties' disputes regarding seepage and evaporation losses from three of Denver's streambed reservoirs located on the South Platte River. Under the 1940 Agreement, in lieu of making releases from the streambed reservoirs to replace seepage and evaporation losses, Denver agreed not to reuse or successively use 2 return flows from water imported from the western slope and used in Denver's municipal water system.

¶2 Earlier litigation in Case No. 81CW405 established that this reuse prohibition in the 1940 Agreement applies only to return flows derived from decreed water rights from Colorado River sources with appropriation dates before May 1, 1940 (the date Denver entered into the agreement); Denver may therefore use return flows derived from sources that were appropriated or acquired after that date. City & Cty. of Denver v. Consol. Ditches Co. of Dist. No. 2 (Consolidated Ditches) , 807 P.2d 23 , 38 (Colo. 1991). The question in this appeal is whether the 1940 Agreement prohibits Denver from using return flows from water imported from the Blue River system under exchange and substitution operations that use water stored in the Williams Fork Reservoir under a 1935 priority as a substitute supply.

¶3 This issue arose out of Denver's application in Case No. 04CW121 to adjudicate and quantify reusable lawn irrigation return flows (LIRFs) for use as a substitute supply in exchanges and augmentation plans. In its application, Denver sought confirmation that it could include among its sources of LIRFs the return flows from water imported through the Roberts Tunnel under Blue River exchange operations using the Williams Fork Reservoir as a substitute supply. Consolidated Ditches objected to Denver's inclusion of these return flows, arguing that their reuse is prohibited under the 1940 Agreement.

¶4 The water court bifurcated the issues involving the applicability of the 1940 Agreement into this separate case, No. 12CW05. Denver filed a C.R.C.P. 56(h) motion for determination of a question of law, and Consolidated Ditches filed a competing C.R.C.P. 56(c) motion for summary judgment, both raising essentially the same question: whether the 1940 Agreement prevents Denver from using return flows from water imported through the Roberts Tunnel under Blue River exchange and substitution operations using Williams Fork Reservoir water as a substitute supply.

¶5 In a written order, the water court resolved these competing motions in Denver's favor, ruling that Denver's Blue River system water, which was decreed in 1955 with an appropriation date of June 24, 1946, is a source of water that was not owned, appropriated, or acquired by Denver prior to May 1, 1940, and therefore is not subject to the 1940 Agreement. The court reasoned that Blue River system water is imported through the Roberts Tunnel under a 1946 priority date, whether it is imported after diversion in priority, or after out-of-priority diversions enabled by Denver's exchange operations using water released from Williams Fork Reservoir as a substitute supply. The water court thus held that Denver may reuse or successively use imported water attributed to the Blue River system. The water court later entered its findings of fact, conclusions of law, judgment, and decree, which incorporated its earlier order on the parties' competing C.R.C.P. 56 motions. Consolidated Ditches and other opposers appealed.

¶6 Consolidated Ditches contends that the 1940 Agreement applies to prevent Denver from reusing or successively using water imported through the Roberts Tunnel under Blue River exchange and substitution operations. It argues that under the so-called "character of exchange rule," the water diverted by exchange takes on the "character" of the substitute supply-here, the water stored in the Williams Fork Reservoir under a 1935 priority. Thus, it contends, the return flows from the water imported through the Roberts Tunnel are derived from a source with an appropriation date before May 1, 1940. Denver responds that the water court correctly concluded that the 1940 Agreement does not apply to prohibit Denver from reusing or successively using water imported under the Blue River exchange operations because those operations were decreed in 1955 and are administered under a 1946 priority. In other words, the return flows are derived from a source that was acquired by Denver after May 1, 1940.

¶7 We agree with Denver. At the time it entered the 1940 Agreement, Denver could not import water through the Roberts Tunnel by exchange (or otherwise). Denver's ability to divert water from the Blue River system by exchange or substitution using Williams Fork Reservoir water as a source of substitute supply was adjudicated in 1955, and the exchange is administered under a June 24, 1946 priority, consistent with the appropriation date of Denver's rights in the Blue River system. Thus, for purposes of the 1940 Agreement, we hold that the water imported through the Roberts Tunnel under Blue River exchange and substitution operations is a source acquired by Denver after May 1, 1940. Accordingly, the return flows from those operations are not subject to the 1940 Agreement and Denver may reuse or successively use those return flows.

¶8 We disagree with Consolidated Ditches that the so-called "character of exchange rule" requires a different result here. The character of exchange concept has emerged as an unofficial, permissive practice recognized by the State Engineer, but it does not appear in statute, nor have we expressly applied it in case law or defined its scope. We therefore decline to adopt a mandatory character of exchange "rule" that applies rigidly to all exchange operations. Whatever its scope or applicability in other circumstances, the character of exchange principle is unnecessary here to ensure that the purpose of the 1940 Agreement is fulfilled or to avoid injury to Consolidated Ditches. It is undisputed that current importations of water through the Moffat Tunnel under pre-1940 priorities more than fully offset the streambed reservoir seepage and evaporation losses that prompted the 1940 Agreement. If anything, application of the character of exchange principle to bar Denver's reuse of water imported through the Roberts Tunnel by exchange or substitution would only enlarge the existing windfall in Consolidated Ditches' favor.

¶9 Accordingly, we affirm the judgment and decree of the water court.

I. Background

¶10 Given the complexity of the factual and legal background in this case, it is necessary to set both out in detail to understand the issues before us. First, we describe the relevant aspects of Denver's transmountain water systems at issue. We then discuss the background and content of the 1940 Agreement.

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Bluebook (online)
2019 CO 68, 444 P.3d 278, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-cty-of-denver-v-consol-ditches-of-water-dist-no-2-colo-2019.