City of Denver v. Mullen

7 Colo. 345, 4 Colo. L. Rep. 617
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1884
StatusPublished
Cited by39 cases

This text of 7 Colo. 345 (City of Denver v. Mullen) 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. Mullen, 7 Colo. 345, 4 Colo. L. Rep. 617 (Colo. 1884).

Opinion

Stone, J.

The defendants in error, J. K. Mullen, Dennis Mullen and Charles E. Davis, who were the plaintiffs below, applied to the judge of the district court for relief, by way of injunction, against the city of Denver, the mayor and the street commissioner thereof, to restrain the said parties from interfering with the flow of water in a certain irrigating and mill ditch, known as the Platte and Denver Ditch, which conveys water to the flouring mills of said complainants, situate in that portion of the city known as West Denver. The bill of complaint averred that the ditch was constructed in 1865 by a corporation incorporated in 1864 under the general incorporation law of the then territory of Colorado; that the complainants were lessees of the said ditch company, possessing as such lessees the right to the usé of the said water in operating the two flouring mills owned by the said Mullens and Davis respectively; that the grinding capacity of said Mullen mill is one thousand one hundred and fifty bushels of wheat, and that of the Davis mill about si± hundred bushels each twenty-four hours; that said mills are run chiefly by water power from said ditch; that complainants had a right to the flow and use of said water for the purpose aforesaid, without interference by the defendants; that defendants had, with force and violence, torn out a certain flume in the said ditch and diverted the water therefrom, and were' threatening to continue such diversion of the water, to the great and irremediable damage of complainants, and said complainants therefore prayed a writ of injunction to restrain the said acts of defendants, and for all proper relief in the premises.

The answer of defendants below denied severally the allegations of plaintiffs’ bill, and set up ownership in [348]*348fee by the city of the streets and alleys therein, denied the right of plaintiffs to obstruct the same by the ditch wherever it crossed the same, and averred that the interference with the ditch was attempted and asserted only upon refusal of plaintiffs to bridge the streets at the ditch crossings, so as to permit the free and convenient use of said streets by the public. The defense further set out, by way of cross-complaint for affirmative relief, that the ditch in question runs through and across the following named streets in Hunt’s addition to the city, to wit: Oar-son, Martin, Bear, Buffalo, Moose, Deer, Olive, Capitol, South Tenth, South Ninth, South Eighth, and half of Colfax avenue, together with the intervening alleys; and also the following named streets within that portion of the original limits of the city known as the congressional grant, to wit: Champa, Curtis, Lawrence, Larimer, Hoiladay, Wazee, Wynkoop, Eighth, Ninth, and a portion of Colfax avenue, together with the intervening alleys; that the said ditch and the conveyance of water therein is an obstruction to the public and necessary use of the streets; that the crossings of the said ditch in the streets, where the same are not bridged, are inconvenient and dangerous to the public; that the city rightfully owns and controls said streets, with authority to control and regulate the use of the same, and prays that the said ditch be abated, the water turned off and the ditch filled up, so as to prevent the further obstruction to the public use of the streets, and for full relief, etc.

To this answer a replication was filed denying the right of the city to interfere with the said ditch, so as to prevent the flow of water to the mills of the plaintiffs, and averring that the grantors of plaintiffs had a right to said ditch and the use of the water therein, prior in time and superior in law to any claim of the city in respect to the streets and alleys where the same cross said ditch; that they have been in the undisturbed exercise of such right for neaiiy eighteen years; that the owners of the [349]*349land through which the ditch runs, as well as the said city of Denver, have authorized and licensed the plaintiffs and their grantors to use the said ditch, and convey the water through the same for the purpose of operating said flouring mills, and that therefore the plaintiffs are not bound to bridge the ditch where the streets cross the same; that the ditch is used to irrigate a large extent of farming country along its line above the mills.

In reply to the matter of the cross-complaint of the defendants, the plaintiffs admit that the ditch, together with the waste water below the mills, runs through or across the streets mentioned in defendants’ answer, but aver that, as to all the streets and alleys in Hunt’s addition, the ditch company acquired its right of way long-prior to the time when said lands became a part of the city; that the ditch was constructed and used for more than ten years prior to said lands becoming an addition to the city; that said lands became a part of the city and were accepted by the city as such addition with full ■ knowledge of all the existing prior rights of said ditch company therein, and, therefore, that plaintiffs were not bound to bridge said ditch where streets crossed the same in said addition; that in respect to the streets and alleys crossing said ditch within that part of the city included in the congressional grant, plaintiffs reply that they had a vested right to said ditch, and to the flow of water therein, long prior to the time when the city acquired or had any right to or authority over the said streets and alleys, or any title to the lands embraced in the said congressional grant, and have exercised such prior rights, unmolested by the city, and with the leave and license of said city, for the period of more than seventeen years, and hence are not bound to bridge the streets within the limits aforesaid.

A preliminary injunction was issued in accordance with the prayer in the complaint, and afterwards, in support of the respective allegations in the pleadings, [350]*350proofs were taken before a referee, and tbe canse coming on to be heard upon the said pleadings and proofs, the court decreed that as to the defendants, the mayor of the city and the street commissioner, they were not necessary parties to the action, and the same was, therefore, dismissed as to them.

The court further decreed as follows, to wit:

“And the court doth further find, order, adjudge and decree as to the defendant, the city of Denver, that the plaintiffs are lawfully and of right entitled to the full, unobstructed flow of the water through and along the Denver and Platte ditch to the mills of the said plaintiffs, respectively, without any let, hindrance or obstruction of the water in said ditch, and without any interference with said ditch by said city of Denver, or its agents or employees; and doth further order, adjudge and decree, that the said city of Denver, its agents, attorneys and employees, be forever restrained and enjoined from cutting down or destroying or injuring the banks or flumes of the said Denver and Platte ditch, and from filling up or obstructing the said ditch or any part thereof, and from in anywise or manner interfering with said ditch or the water therein, so as to obstruct the flow of the water to the mills of the plaintiffs aforesaid, and from in anywise or manner diverting or turning the water from said ditch.

“And the court doth further order, adjudge and decree, .

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Bluebook (online)
7 Colo. 345, 4 Colo. L. Rep. 617, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-denver-v-mullen-colo-1884.