Colorado Land & Water Co. v. Rocky Ford Canal, Reservoir, Land, Loan & Trust Co.

3 Colo. App. 545
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1893
StatusPublished

This text of 3 Colo. App. 545 (Colorado Land & Water Co. v. Rocky Ford Canal, Reservoir, Land, Loan & Trust Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Colorado Land & Water Co. v. Rocky Ford Canal, Reservoir, Land, Loan & Trust Co., 3 Colo. App. 545 (Colo. Ct. App. 1893).

Opinion

Reed, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from the decision of the district court establishing priorities to water of different irrigating canals taking water from the Arkansas river.

The controversy arose between the canals, respectively, of the parties to this suit on appeal. It appears that the proceeding was under the statute, embracing a large number of ditches. The testimony was taken before a referee, which, with his finding of facts, was filed in court.

It was found by the referee that the date of appropriation of water by appellant was April 10,1889; that appellee made its appropriation of water January 6, 1890; that appellant’s number as to priority was 50 ; that of appellee 52. To which report exceptions were taken by appellee. On hearing, the finding of the referee was reversed. The date of appellee’s appropriation was fixed as by the referee, while that of appellant was fixed as of June 9, 1890, and Rocky Ford canal was given priority number 60, and appellant’s canal number 52.

It is claimed that the decree is erroneous.

The initial points or headgates of the respective canals at the Arkansas river are practically the same, or within short distances of each other, both being near the junction of Boone creek with the Arkansas river, in Pueblo county, the canal of appellant taken out on the north side of the river, running in a general northeasterly direction, length about 70 miles— the canal of the appellee taken out on the south side of the [547]*547river, running in a general southeasterly course — length about 80 miles.

As to the dates at which appellee’s company was organized, made its appropriation of water, commenced actual construction, and the time of the completion of its canal, there is no controversy whatever, the facts appear to be conceded. The questions presented are those in regard to the appellant.

As established by the evidence the facts appear to be :

Some time in the year 1889 certain parties became incorporated as The Colorado Land & Canal Company, and on the second day of July of that year filed the statement required by law and plat, by which it declared its intention to construct a canal for irrigating purposes, taking water from the Arkansas river at or near the junction of Boone creek with the river.

By the plat filed, of which it is said in the certificate: “ Hereby declares that the said plat accurately shows the proposed line of the said caual and the subdivisions of land through which it passes,” it is shown that from the initial point of the canal as located, to Jones’ point, a distance of 23 or 24 miles, the land was barren and non-irrigable; from that point on its course, northeasterly, was good, arable land to be covered by the canal.

Prior to the 28th day of December, 1889, The Colorado Land & Canal Company had expended, as shown by the evidence, the gross sum of about $3,471, of which sum about $2,650 had been spent in field work, preliminary surveys, platting, office work and incidental expenses, and after location and platting, the sum of about $780 was spent in grading or construction on the line. On the 28th day of December, 1889, The Colorado Land & Canal Companj- entered into an executory contract or memorandum in writing with one T. C. Henry, by which it agreed for the sum of $10,000 to be by him paid, on certain contingencies at some indefinite subsequent time, to convey or transfer to him all of its capital stock, and contained a stipulation that no title should pass until the payment of the $10,000, and delivered to the said [548]*548T. C."Henry the plat, field notes and data of its proposed canal, and allowed the said Henry to take possession of its proposed line of canal as surveyed and staked. Thereupon, The Colorado Land & Canal Company withdrew from its possession, stopped all operations in the way of construction, and abandoned and surrendered the same to Henry.

On April 21, 1890, a deed was made by the Canal Company to Mr. Henry in accordance with the contract, the deed was not delivered, the papers were placed in escrow and were to be void and inoperative if Henry failed to comply with his contract. He made failure, and at some subsequent time the deed was delivered to the grantor and canceled.

The Colorado Land & Water Company (appellant) entered upon the line of canal as platted by the Canal Company, but, as shown by the evidence, not for the purpose of construction upon the line as designated and platted, and only using the surveyed line as the basis or as data from which it could locate another line more satisfactory to itself. Taking Jones’ Point as the initial or base, a point to the north of the original line some ten chains distant was taken —such point being about six feet higher than the original line. From such point the survey was made westerly at a greater elevation, to connect such point with a point for the reception of water at the Arkansas river. This new alignment and greater elevation carried the head of the ditch some three quarters of a mile above the junction of Boone creek with the Arkansas river — the proposed initial point as established byr the Canal Company. A survey of the proposed canal to be constructed by The Colorado Land & Water Company was also made from Jones’ Point northerly and easterly. While from Jones’ Point to the river the two lines as established were of necessity nearly parallel and but short distances apart, after entering upon the irrigable land from Jones’ Point the two lines were in no manner identical or parallel, the line of The Colorado Land & Water Company (upon which the canal was subsequently constructed) diverging rapidily to the north from the location of the Canal [549]*549Company, and in its course and alignment northeasterly continuing to diverge to the north, until at points near the terminus of the survey and plat of the Canal Company it was several miles north of that line. The line as surveyed by the Canal Company ended near the center, east and west, of Otero county; the line of canal of the Water Company, as constructed, was continued far to the north and east through the northern part of Kiowa county to near the eastern line of such county.

It is established by the evidence and conceded, that after the filing of its plat by The Colorado Land & Water Company, the work of construction upon its line was entered upon and vigorously prosecuted. The canal is 70^ miles in length, 55 of which was completed in October and November 1890, and the balance — 151 miles in July, 1891. Water was first turned in on the 29th day of August, 1890.

The appellant became incorporated January 18, 1890. It will be observed that the contract between the Canal Company and Mr. Henry was made before the incorporation of the Water Company- — -it bears date December 28, 1889. On •the 24-th of October 1891, some fifteen months after the completion of the greater portion of its canal and the appropriation of water under its charter, the Water Company by a new contract of purchase, secured from the Canal Companj'- a deed of the supposed rights of the Canal Company.

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Bluebook (online)
3 Colo. App. 545, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-land-water-co-v-rocky-ford-canal-reservoir-land-loan-coloctapp-1893.