City of Lafayette v. New Anderson Ditch Co.

962 P.2d 955, 1998 WL 373306
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 14, 1998
Docket97SA2
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 962 P.2d 955 (City of Lafayette v. New Anderson Ditch 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 Lafayette v. New Anderson Ditch Co., 962 P.2d 955, 1998 WL 373306 (Colo. 1998).

Opinion

Justice BENDER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

In this case, we review upon direct appeal the decision of the district court for Water Division 1 (water court) in which the water court continued a decree for conditional wa *958 ter rights but declined to make portions of these conditional rights absolute. The water court held that the applicant, the City of Lafayette (Lafayette), demonstrated reasonable diligence in developing conditional rights to a number of exchanges acquired under a 1987 decree and was entitled to a continuation of the decree. The water court denied Lafayette’s request to have portions of some of these conditional rights, those involving use of the Anderson Ditch, decreed absolute because Lafayette allowed its contractual rights to use the ditch to expire and thus discontinued the diversion of water from these exchanges. Although our analysis differs somewhat from that of the water court, we agree with the water court’s determination that Lafayette’s conditional rights should continue for another diligence period and should not be decreed absolute. Giving effect to a provision in the conditional decree, we hold that Lafayette’s conditional rights were not perfected since Lafayette had no legal right to use the point of diversion identified in the proposed absolute decree. Hence, we affirm the judgment of the water court.

I.

In an effort to maintain an adequate water supply for its citizens, Lafayette initiated a large project to augment its existing water supply by taking water from Boulder Creek and placing it in the city’s water storage and treatment facilities. This project involved the creation of an elaborate system of exchanges. 1 Completion of this project involved substantial expense and various tasks including the acquisition of numerous water rights, the procurement of agreements with various entities for the right to divert water from local ditches and streams, and the development and construction of means of transporting and storing water.

In March of 1983, Lafayette submitted an application for the determination of seventeen conditional appropriative rights of exchange in connection with this plan. These conditional rights included the right of exchange to the headgate of the Anderson Ditch, which was under the ownership of the New Anderson Ditch Company (New Anderson), a nonprofit mutual ditch company. Among the opponents to Lafayette’s application was the City of Boulder (Boulder), which is the majority shareholder of New Anderson. Lafayette and Boulder later entered into a stipulation consenting to a proposed decree.

The water court granted Lafayette’s application in March of 1987. Paragraph eleven of the final decree included the following language, which was drafted and inserted by Lafayette and Boulder:

At the present time, Applicant does not possess any legal rights to transport the water described herein through the Anderson Ditch.... Applicant has agreed that this decree shall not be construed as an enhancement of Applicant’s existing rights to utilize said facilities. Applicant has further agreed that no water will be conveyed through or stored in said structures in contravention of its existing rights until a legal right to utilize each facility has been lawfully obtained. Applicant has further agreed with the City of Boulder that if a legal right to use the Anderson Ditch as a point of diversion has not been lawfully obtained by April 25, 1993, the approval of the Anderson Ditch as a point of diversion shall terminate.

(Emphasis added.)

In May of 1987, Lafayette and New Anderson entered into an agreement to allow Lafayette to convey water through the Anderson Ditch in exchange for an annual fee. The agreement was to terminate on December 31, 1991; however, the parties later amended the agreement and extended the term through December 31, 1994. During the seven and one-half year period that this agreement was in effect, Lafayette continually diverted water using the Anderson *959 Ditch and made payments to New Anderson for the use of the ditch. At the end of the contract period, the agreement expired and Lafayette discontinued the diversion of water from its Anderson Ditch exchanges.

In addition to its activities relating to the Anderson Ditch portion of the exchange project, Lafayette consistently diverted water from other exchanges in its plan for augmentation. Lafayette also substantially developed other portions of the exchange project. Lafayette constructed the Lafayette-Goose Haven Reservoir Complex; acquired a contract for the completion of a preliminary design of a pipeline and pump station; constructed numerous improvements and additions to its water utility system, including constructing a five million gallon water tank, increasing the capacity of an existing tank, and completing approximately 7,500 feet of water main extensions; completed preliminary designs on new ditches and coordinated with the United States Army Corps of Engineers regarding a permit for one of the ditches; worked with the Colorado Department of Transportation on the application of raw water to the landscaping along a proposed highway; processed applications in other water law cases and perfected some of these rights; entered into agreements with other entities in furtherance of the overall plan; and proceeded with the design and construction of a municipal golf course that would be irrigated in part by water supplied by the exchanges in this plan. In sum, Lafayette spent approximately $3,000,000.00 in developing its plan for augmentation.

On March 25, 1993, Lafayette filed an application for a determination of water rights, requesting the water court to make portions of some of its exchanges absolute and to continue the conditional status of the remaining portions of those exchanges and the conditional status of its other exchanges for another diligence period. Five of the exchanges of which portions would become absolute involved use of the Anderson Ditch. New Anderson opposed Lafayette’s application, arguing that the water court should cancel all of the Anderson Ditch exchanges because Lafayette failed to satisfy the condition in paragraph eleven of the 1987 decree that “if a legal right to use the Anderson Ditch as a point of diversion has not been lawfully obtained by April 25, 1993, the approval of the Anderson Ditch as a point of diversion shall terminate.”

The case proceeded to trial before the water court on March 17, 1995. The water court found that Lafayette’s progress in completing other portions of the exchange project demonstrated reasonable diligence and continued the conditional decree of Lafayette’s rights to these exchanges. The water court also made portions of some of the conditional exchanges absolute. With respect to the exchanges to the Anderson Ditch, however, the water court denied Lafayette’s requests to make portions of these exchanges absolute and ruled that the exchanges would remain conditional for another diligence period. Thus, the water court provided Lafayette an opportunity to negotiate a new contract with New Anderson or establish an alternative means of exercising its appropriative right of exchange.

The water court noted that Lafayette had allowed its contract with New Anderson to expire and had ceased diversions for a time accordingly.

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Bluebook (online)
962 P.2d 955, 1998 WL 373306, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-lafayette-v-new-anderson-ditch-co-colo-1998.