Concerning the Application for Plan for Augmentation of the City & County of Denver Ex Rel. Board of Water Commissioners v. City & County of Denver

44 P.3d 1019, 2002 WL 257826
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 29, 2002
Docket00SA302
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 44 P.3d 1019 (Concerning the Application for Plan for Augmentation of the City & County of Denver Ex Rel. Board of Water Commissioners v. City & County of Denver) 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
Concerning the Application for Plan for Augmentation of the City & County of Denver Ex Rel. Board of Water Commissioners v. City & County of Denver, 44 P.3d 1019, 2002 WL 257826 (Colo. 2002).

Opinion

Justice MARTINEZ

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

The City of Thornton ("Thornton") appeals the order of the District Court for Water Division No. 1 ("water court") denying Thornton's petition to extend the period of retained jurisdiction, see § 37-92-804(6), 10 C.R.S. (2001), agreed to by Thornton and the City and County of Denver, acting by and through its Board of Water Commissioners ("Denver"), in a stipulated decree later approved by the water court. Thornton filed a timely petition seeking to invoke the retained Jurisdiction provision. The petition requested that the water court reconsider its finding of non-injury to Thornton and other senior water appropriators in light of the actual operation of Denver's Augmentation Plan. Specifically, Thornton alleged that the effluent discharged from the Bi-City Wastewa-ter Treatment Plant ("the Bi-City plant"), as a substitute water supply under Denver's Augmentation Plan, was unsuitable for Thornton's use as a municipal water supply. The water court denied the petition without a hearing. We conclude that the water court had an obligation to reconsider the question of injury to Thornton and other senior appropriators. Therefore, we reverse the water court's decision not to hold a hearing to address Thornton's alleged injury from the operation of Denver's Augmentation Plan, or in the alternative, to extend the period of retained jurisdiction pending resolution of common water quality issues in the Denver exchange case that the water court currently has before it.

I. Facts and Procedural History

In April 1991, Denver petitioned for an augmentation plan to allow for out-of-priority diversions from the South Platte River for the irrigation of the Overland Park Golf Course. Denver's Proposed Augmentation Plan provided for a substitute supply using effluent from the Bi-City plant. Thornton, the Centennial Water and Sanitation District, the City of Englewood, Henrylyn Irrigation District, and the City of Aurora filed timely Statements of Opposition. Because Thornton diverts water from the South Platte River downstream from the Bi-City plant for its own water supply system, Thornton alleged potential water quality injuries. 1 In particular, Thornton expressed concern regarding *1023 the effect of Denver's Proposed Augmentation Plan on the concentration of pollutants in the river at Thornton's point of diversion. Thornton chose not to proceed to trial, at which Denver would have had to prove the absence of injury resulting from Denver's Proposed Augmentation Plan. Instead, on March 11, 1998, Thornton stipulated to the entry of a decree granting Denver's application for an augmentation plan, 2 provided that the terms of the decree were "not less restrictive" than the attached proposed decree. At that time, Thornton agreed to the substitution of Platte River water for Bi-City effluent and agreed the effluent adequately met its lawful requirements so that Denver's Augmentation Plan would not injuriously affect Thornton's vested water rights.

On May 24, 1993, the water court approved the terms of Denver's Augmentation Plan. At the request of both parties and pursuant to section 37-92-804(6), the water court retained jurisdiction over the case for seven (7) years. See § 37-92-304(6). On May 28, 2000, Thornton filed a timely Petition Invoking Retained Jurisdiction. Thornton claimed that changes in the operation of the Bi-City plant since 1993 have increased the levels of phosphorous, nitrate, nitrite, harmful types of dissolved organic carbon and microbiological contaminates in the Bi-City effluent, making the water supply unsuitable for Thornton's normal use as a municipal water supply. The petition requested that the water court extend the period of retained jurisdiction in this case (1CW28) until the resolution of another ongoing dispute between Denver and Thornton (the Denver exchange case-96CW145). The Denver exchange ease concerns Thornton's alleged injury from Denver's use of Bi-City effluent and other water sources as a substitute supply. Thornton argues the current case and the Denver exchange case present parallel allegations of injury and common factual issues, including the suitability of Bi-City effluent as a substitute supply for a downstream user who is a municipal water supplier. Specifically, the Denver exchange case concerns "the health effects of pollutants contained in Bi-City effluent."

Similarly, Thornton's Petition to Invoke Retained Jurisdiction contended:

Since the entry of the decree in this case in 1993, the injury to Thornton from the operation of Denver's Overland Park augmentation plan, and particularly the use of Bi-City effluent, has become apparent. For example, the use of Bi-City effluent has caused injurious water quality effects that include, but are not limited to, increasing concentrations of phosphorous, nitrate and nitrite, [and] harmful types of dissolved organic carbon and microbiological contaminates.

R. at 104-05. Thornton continued:

The nature and extent of Thornton's injury from Denver's use of Bi-City effluent was not fully known when the decree was entered in this case.... [HJlowever, the health effects of pollutants contained in Bi-City effluent have come to be better understood, and the injury produced by the use of Bi-City effluent as a substitute supply has become a central issue in the ongoing litigation between Denver and Thornton in Case No. 96CW145 (the Denver exchange case).... [There has been substantial evidence that Denver's use of Bi-City effluent as a substitute supply injures Thornton. Certainly the nonoceur-rence of injury has not been conclusively established.

R. at 105. Thornton therefore requested that the water court hold proceedings on the necessity for modification of Denver's Augmentation Plan, or alternatively, extend the period of retained jurisdiction and defer the question of injury until the resolution of common factual questions raised by the Denver exchange case.

The water court refused to extend the period of retained jurisdiction for the resolution of the Denver exchange case, noting that Thornton had stipulated to Denver's use of Bi-City effluent as part of Denver's Augmentation Plan. R. at 189. The water court found that better understanding of the detri *1024 mental water quality effects of wastewater treatment plant effluent was not the type of injury the general assembly intended the retained jurisdiction statute to address. R. at 189. The court stated:

To allow jurisdiction to be retained, pending the factual findings of a later case, would frustrate the final judgments of the Water Court, as well as the justifiable reliance of the parties on the finality of the prior proceedings. If new light has been shed on the injurious effects of effluent upon other users, the proper forum in which to address this potential injury is to oppose subsequent applications that implicate such injury.

Id. The water court therefore denied Thornton's motion to extend the period of retained jurisdiction. 3 Id.

II. Legal Background

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
44 P.3d 1019, 2002 WL 257826, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/concerning-the-application-for-plan-for-augmentation-of-the-city-county-colo-2002.