Colorado Water Conservation Board v. Upper Gunnison River Water Conservancy District

109 P.3d 585, 2005 Colo. LEXIS 201, 2005 WL 579511
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 14, 2005
DocketNo. 04SA44
StatusPublished
Cited by119 cases

This text of 109 P.3d 585 (Colorado Water Conservation Board v. Upper Gunnison River Water Conservancy District) 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
Colorado Water Conservation Board v. Upper Gunnison River Water Conservancy District, 109 P.3d 585, 2005 Colo. LEXIS 201, 2005 WL 579511 (Colo. 2005).

Opinion

RICE, Justice.

Appellants the Colorado Water Conservation Board (CWCB or “the Board”) and the State and Division No. 4 Engineers appeal the water court’s order and decree granting a recreational in-channel diversion (RICD) conditional water right to Applicant Upper Gunnison River Water Conservancy District. We reverse. ■

Upon review, we hold that both the CWCB and the water court erred. In Senate Bill 01-216 (SB 216 or “the bill”), Ch. 305, 2001 Colo. Sess. Laws 1187 (codified at §§ 37-92-102(5), (6), 37-92-103(4), (7), (10.3), 37-92-305(13)-(16), C.R.S. (2004)), the General Assembly established a procedure for the adjudication of instream diversions by local government entities for recreational uses. The CWCB was granted initial, limited fact-finding authority on enumerated factors as applied strictly to an applicant’s claimed stream flow and intended recreation experience. By considering stream flow amounts and recreation experiences other than those intended by Applicant, the CWCB exceeded this authority-

SB 216 charged the water court, in contrast, with adjudication of a RICD application, requiring it to consider five statutory factors-^-compact impairment, stream reach appropriateness, access availability, instream flow rights injury, and maximum utilization— and treat the CWCB’s factual findings on these same factors presumptively. Should any party produce evidence contrary to the CWCB’s findings', the presumption is rebutted, and the water court must weigh the [589]*589evidence before it under a preponderance of the evidence standard.

In addition, the water court must determine whether a RICD application is limited to the minimum stream flow necessary for an objectively reasonable recreation experience in and on the water because any appropriation in excess of the minimum stream flow for a reasonable recreation experience in and on the water does not put water to beneficial use. Since it did not consider whether Applicant’s intended in-channel recreational diversion was in fact a RICD as defined by SB 216, the water court erred when it awarded Applicant a decree in the claimed stream flow amounts.

I. Facts and Procedural History

This case concerns the first RICD decreed as a conditional water right under SB 216, which the General Assembly enacted in 2001. Applicant is constructing a whitewater course along the Gunnison River near the town of Gunnison. The course has been designed to be “conducive to many types of whitewater boating for a variety of different skill levels,” as Applicant hopes to draw both locals and tourists, host competitions, enhance Western State College’s outdoor recreation program, and strengthen the region’s overall economy. Seeking to acquire decreed water rights for the course’s stream flow requirements, Applicant filed an application for a RICD in March 2002.

In its RICD filing, Applicant claimed variable, daytime stream flows ranging from 270 to 1500 cubic feet per second (cfs).1 These variable flows totaled approximately 157,000 acre feet annually — over 41 percent of the Gunnison River’s available stream flow. Applicant claimed the highest flows only during the last two weeks of June and the first two weeks of July, when water supplies were ample. The course was designed with diversion structures incorporating both low flow and high flow channels in order to maximize use of the whitewater course by all skill levels throughout the recreational boating season, even as stream flows decreased. Applicant claimed no water for the months October through April.

The CWCB reviewed Applicant’s claimed RICD, accepting both oral and written comments from Applicant and other interested parties. Following deliberations, the CWCB issued written findings and recommendations to the water court. The CWCB did not evaluate the application strictly as submitted by Applicant, but rather found that “the RICD stream flow will create whitewater features sufficient to attract experienced whitewater kayakers and therefore will be for the minimum stream flow necessary to provide a reasonable recreation experience in and on the water if those stream flow amounts are as follows: 250 cfs during May through September, and 0 cfs during the rest of the year.”

Applicant then proceeded to the water court for adjudication. After hearing testimony and reviewing the CWCB’s findings and conditional recommendation, the water court issued a decree awarding a RICD in the higher flow amounts Applicant claimed and not the 250 cfs recommended by the CWCB. In doing so, the water court acknowledged that Applicant’s was “the first application to be addressed under” SB 216. Therefore, the water court began its analysis by examining the language of the statute, leading it to conclude that it was to treat the CWCB’s findings of fact as a rebuttable presumption. The water court then addressed what it determined to be the “primary issue” — “whether Applicant has overcome the rebuttable presumption that 250 cfs for the entire rafting season is the appropriate quantity of water for its proposed whitewater park recreational use.” As the water court explained, “once [the] CWCB concluded that 250 cfs for the entire rafting season was appropriate, Applicant had the burden of going forward to demonstrate why any greater [590]*590amount is appropriate.” “Based on the totality of the evidence presented,” the water court concluded “that Applicant ha[d] met its burden of proof to overcome the rebuttable presumption.”

Upon concluding that Applicant was entitled to more than 250 cfs, the water court then faced another issue — whether the CWCB had made any findings regarding stream flow amounts above 250 cfs that it should treat as presumptively valid. The water court noted that the “CWCB does not find that the amounts applied for either do or do not comport with the [statutory] factors,” and it “does not find that 250 cfs is the maximum quantity which could comport with the [statutory] factors.” Although the water court entertained “the possibility that there [are] at least ... implicit findings” regarding 250 cfs being the maximum flow, the water court concluded that the CWCB made no presumptively valid findings concerning stream flows above 250 cfs.

The water court then attempted to determine the meaning of the phrase “ ‘minimum’ stream flow for a reasonable recreational experience as utilized in the statute.” The water court concluded that the “language must be read in context with all of the other provisions.” Emphasizing that “[u]nder traditional water law principles, maximum utilization and beneficial use are balanced against speculation and waste,” the water court explained that “[h]ad the legislature intended to deviate from that balance in Senate Bill 216, they would have said so.” For these reasons, the water court was “reluctant to intervene to usurp Applicant’s-determination of the size and scope of a RICD, subject to the traditional criteria of speculation and waste.” Examining Applicant’s requested stream flows, the water court found “that the amount sought in this instance does not reach the level of speculation or waste.”

The water court finally analyzed Applicant’s requested stream flows under the statutory factors' — compact impairment, stream reach appropriateness, access availability, in-stream flow rights injury, and maximum utilization — having concluded that the CWCB did not make any presumptively valid findings regarding these factors as applied to flow amounts above 250 cfs.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
109 P.3d 585, 2005 Colo. LEXIS 201, 2005 WL 579511, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/colorado-water-conservation-board-v-upper-gunnison-river-water-conservancy-colo-2005.