City of Thornton v. Bijou Irrigation Co.

926 P.2d 1, 1996 Colo. LEXIS 492, 1996 WL 589213
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 15, 1996
DocketNo. 94SA66
StatusPublished
Cited by108 cases

This text of 926 P.2d 1 (City of Thornton v. Bijou Irrigation 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 Thornton v. Bijou Irrigation Co., 926 P.2d 1, 1996 Colo. LEXIS 492, 1996 WL 589213 (Colo. 1996).

Opinions

Justice LOHR

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

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[18]*18[[Image here]]

[19]*19This case involves the City of Thornton’s Northern Project, one of the largest municipal water projects to come before this court in recent memory. Thornton appeals, and various objectors who oppose the Northern Project cross-appeal, from portions of a decree entered by the District Court for Water Division No. 1 in four consolidated cases, .case nos. 86CW401, 86CW402, 86CW403, and 87CW332. The trial court approved, subject to numerous terms and conditions, Thornton’s applications for adjudication of new conditional water rights (including exchanges) and for changes in use of existing water rights. Together, the rights so decreed provide the foundation for the Northern Project, which is expected to yield in excess of 50,000 acre feet of water to Thornton per year. We affirm the trial court’s entry of the decree granting Thornton’s applications for adjudication of the conditional rights and the changes of use. We also affirm the majority of the terms and conditions imposed by the trial court. However, we conclude that certain of the terms and conditions imposed in the decree are invalid or unwarranted. Thus, we reverse the trial court with respect to those terms and conditions and remand to that court for proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. Facts and Procedural History A. Facts

The City of Thornton, the applicant in this case, is a municipal corporation of the State of Colorado. Thornton is a suburban community located north of the City and County of Denver on the South Platte River just north of, or downstream from, the confluence of that river with Clear Creek. The city owns and operates a municipal water and sewer system for the benefit of its citizens as well as certain additional consumers not located within the current municipal boundaries. The population served by Thornton’s water system at the time of trial was approximately 78,000 people.

Thornton currently derives the majority of the water it provides to its customers from water rights on the South Platte River and Clear Creek. Because Thornton is located downstream from other municipal and industrial users in the Denver metropolitan area, much of the water available for diversion under Thornton’s junior rights is polluted by runoff and effluent discharges before it reaches Thornton’s diversion points. Not surprisingly, the quality of this water has been gradually deteriorating, resulting in present or projected future problems for Thornton in complying with the standards set in the federal Safe Drinking Water Act, 42 U.S.C. §§ 300f to 300j-26 (1994). Thornton projects that as little as 10,000 acre feet of the expected future annual dry year yield of 26,000 acre feet from its current raw water rights will be available for potable use in the future.

Compounding the city’s water quality problems, projections developed by Thornton and its consultants indicate that Thornton’s population can be expected to rise steadily and substantially over the next fifty years, greatly increasing the demand on the city’s water supply system. These reports suggest that demand within Thornton’s water service area may exceed 93,000 acre feet by the year 2056. In the early 1980s, Thornton officials became increasingly concerned about the city’s ability to meet these projected demands and began investigating the potential use of a variety of sources to meet the city’s future needs. Ultimately, Thornton settled on the Cache La Poudre River (sometimes referred to as the Poudre River) as its intended water source of the future and began to generate plans for what would eventually become the Northern Project.

In late 1985 and 1986, Thornton set the Northern Project in motion by purchasing a 47.23% interest (283.354 out of 600 outstanding shares) in the Water Supply and Storage Company (WSSC), a mutual ditch company organized pursuant to Colorado law. At the same time, Thornton purchased a 5.21% interest (1.25 out of 24 outstanding shares) in the Jackson Ditch Company (JDC), which is also a mutual ditch company. The activities of JDC are coordinated with those of WSSC due to WSSC’s ownership of a substantial portion of the JDC shares.1 Along with its purchase of these shares, Thornton acquired [20]*20approximately 100 farms comprising over 21,000 acres on which the majority of the acquired shares had been historically used for irrigation. The total cost to Thornton of this acquisition was approximately 55 million dollars.

The water rights acquired through the purchase of WSSC shares are the backbone of the Northern Project. WSSC owns water rights in the Poudre basin on the eastern slope and in the adjoining Michigan, Laramie, and Colorado River basins on the western slope. These water rights include direct flow, storage, transmountain, seepage, and river exchange rights. A study of the water years 1950 through 1985 by Thornton’s engineering consultant identified three major sources for water diverted by WSSC for distribution to its shareholders: (1) trans-mountain water, which originated on the western slope and was diverted through one of WSSC’s four transmountain diversion structures (average annual diversion of approximately 30,000 acre feet); (2) native water that is obtained by exercise of the direct flow and storage rights owned by WSSC (average annual diversions of approximately 31,500 acre feet); and (3) Colorado-Big Thompson (CBT) water diverted by virtue of WSSC’s leasing of water produced by the CBT project (average annual diversions of approximately 14,000 acre feet).2 The WSSC shares acquired by Thornton have been used by Thornton and its predecessors to irrigate the farms of WSSC shareholders in Larimer and Weld Counties north and east of Fort Collins. The change of use of these rights from irrigation to municipal uses will provide Thornton with access to a high quality source of raw water for its future municipal needs.

To effect the diversion and distribution of these waters to its shareholders, WSSC utilizes a wide variety of structures and facilities. WSSC operates the Larimer County Canal (sometimes referred to as the LCC), which has a capacity of approximately 750 cubic feet per second at its headgate and extends approximately fifty-eight miles from its point of diversion on the Cache La Poudre River near Ted’s Place in Larimer County to U.S. Highway 85 between the towns of Pierce and Ault in Weld County. In addition to the LCC, WSSC operates and utilizes eleven reservoirs, three transmountain ditches, one transmountain tunnel, the Jackson Extension Ditch, the aforementioned shares in JDC, and units in the CBT project. Three major laterals, the Pierce Lateral, the Collins Lateral, and the Lone Tree Lateral, branch out from the LCC and supply water to WSSC shareholders, but these laterals are not owned by WSSC. In exchange for monetary and other considerations, Thornton has secured WSSC’s permission to use all of the above facilities in the exercise of its newly acquired rights.

Thornton plans to construct the Northern Project in three phases, incrementally increasing its municipal water supply to meet its projected needs. The planned operation of the Northern Project involves a complex interrelationship of water acquisition and distribution methods, including diversion, exchange, storage, augmentation, and physical transportation.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
926 P.2d 1, 1996 Colo. LEXIS 492, 1996 WL 589213, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/city-of-thornton-v-bijou-irrigation-co-colo-1996.