City of Denver v. Colorado Land & Livestock Co.

279 P. 46, 86 Colo. 191
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 17, 1929
DocketNo. 12,057.
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 279 P. 46 (City of Denver v. Colorado Land & Livestock 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
City of Denver v. Colorado Land & Livestock Co., 279 P. 46, 86 Colo. 191 (Colo. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Burke

delivered the opinion of the court

Plaintiff in error is hereinafter referred to as “the city” or “the plaintiff,” and defendants in error as “the defendants. ’ ’

The city has a decreed priority, as of date 1860, for certain water for power and irrigation purposes. This is diverted from the South Platte river through the head-gate of the Bough and Beady ditch, located near Little-ton, the county seat of Arapahoe county. It brought this action under sections 1706 and 1707, C. L. 1921, for a decree moving the diversion point of 14.1 second feet of its power appropriation and .27 second feet of its irrigation appropriation several miles upstream, splitting the appropriation, using part of it to replace leakage from a reservoir and dividing the remainder and using it in different places to supply losses in the operation of different filters. The several defendants in error appeared by answer, generally also denominated “protest, objection and demurrer. ’ ’ The demurrers were overruled and the cause tried to the court. Findings generally were for defendants and specifically that “the evidence shows that said change would injuriously affect the vested rights of other appropriators. ” To review the judgment entered accordingly, the city prosecutes this writ. The 14 assignments amount to nothing more than that the decree is not supported by the evidence.

The burden was upon the city to show that the *193 proposed change would not impair vested rights. Cache la Poudre Res. Co. v. Water S. & S. Co., 25 Colo. 161, 53 Pac. 331, 46 L. R. A. 175, 71 Am. St. Rep. 131; New Cache la Poudre Irr. Co. v. Water S. & S. Co., 49 Colo. 1, 111 Pac. 610.

Junior appropriators have a vested right in the continuance of conditions existing on the stream at the date of, and subsequent to, their appropriations, as against injurious changes. Vogel v. Minn. Canal & Res. Co., 47 Colo. 534-541, 107 Pac. 1108; Farmers’ High Line & Res. Co. v. Wolf, 23 Colo. App. 570-578, 131 Pac. 291.

When an appropriation has been diverted, used and returned, it becomes again a part of the stream in which junior appropriators below acquire a vested right. Vogel v. Minn. Canal & Res. Co., supra.

An appropriator will not be permitted to take his headgate upstream past a material portion of his former water supply. Id.

This plaintiff already owns certain consumptive appropriations now being diverted at the points to which the change here in question is sought. Its power, water, here involved, having been heretofore devoted to milling purposes, we refer to it as the “mill dam appropriation.” These defendants represent the owners of almost 100 ditches and reservoirs having’ appropriations which they contend are threatened by the contemplated change. These projects lie in various irrigation districts, and their headgates are widely scattered. They range from far below the present point of diversion of the water in question to far above those to which the city would move it.

After a careful and extended study of the record and briefs in this cáse, and of the authorities cited by the several parties, our conclusion is that the judgment must be affirmed, and that, irrespective of all other questions raised in argument, it must be so affirmed on the facts and findings of the trial court. Furthermore, we can discover no useful purpose to be served by going at length *194 herein into the various ramifications of the evidence and the numerous contentions of the respective parties.

If the city has failed to establish by this record that no single defendant has a single vested right which the proposed change will injuriously affect, or that such effect can be prevented by terms and conditions which could reasonably be imposed by the court, then the change was properly denied and the judgment must be affirmed. We think the city has so failed as to numerous vested rights of numerous defendants. A few illustrations will suffice to make clear our position.

If the circumstances and conditions of the leakage in plaintiff’s reservoir are such that others have obtained a vested right in the escaping water, then the decree sought by the city would increase its appropriation to the irreparable injury of vested rights. If not, and the loss can be obviated by a repair of the reservoir, the city must make that repair. If the loss cannot be so obviated, then the city is in the position of being obliged to turn a portion of its consumptive appropriation at the reservoir into a nonconsumptive use in order to secure the remainder. In other words, the operating conditions are such as to make it impossible for the city to use its entire consumptive appropriation. If it be now permitted to change the point of diversion of part of its nonconsumptive appropriation to remedy this condition the decree would add to its consumptive use by that exact amount, and to that exact extent must be detrimental to other appropriators.

What has been said applies with equal force to that portion of the water in question which, if the change be granted, is to be used for' the operation of the city’s filters. Under present conditions it requires a nonconsumptive use of a portion of its consumptive appropriation to render the remainder available. If it be permitted to substitute therefor, by change of point of diversion, a portion of its nonconsumptive appropriation of I860, its consumptive appropriation at the filters will be increased *195 to that extent, and, to that exact extent, other appropriators on the stream will he damaged.

There is evidence that this nonconsumptive appropriation of 1860 is supplied, at least at times and in part, by waters flowing into the stream between the city’s present and proposed diversion points. This supply is, of course, variable. If the change be granted junior appropriators above the proposed diversion point will be deprived, at least of a portion, of their present supply to make up to this senior appropriator what it loses by moving its headgate upstream past a portion of its present source of supply. To that extent the stream conditions will be changed, and the vested rights of such junior appropriators injuriously affected.

A defendant whose consumptive appropriation is senior to those which the city now diverts at its filters and reservoir, but junior to that which it seeks to change, and whose headgate is between the two, would be seriously injured by having this senior appropriator put on the stream above him and permitted to return its non-consumptive appropriation to the stream below him.

A defendant with a junior consumptive appropriation takes his water from the stream below the present return point of plaintiff’s mill dam appropriation and depends thereon for his supply. Upper appropriators, senior to him, have been obliged to permit water to pass their headgates to supply this mill dam appropriation. If its diversion point be now moved above the headgates of those seniors such a change in stream conditions results as works tremendous and irreparable damage to that defendant. ......

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279 P. 46, 86 Colo. 191, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-denver-v-colorado-land-livestock-co-colo-1929.