Dill v. Yamasaki Ring, LLC

2019 CO 14, 435 P.3d 1067
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 25, 2019
Docket17SA231, 17SA303
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 2019 CO 14 (Dill v. Yamasaki Ring, LLC) 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
Dill v. Yamasaki Ring, LLC, 2019 CO 14, 435 P.3d 1067 (Colo. 2019).

Opinion

JUSTICE SAMOUR delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 This appeal from the water court requires us to travel back in time to the last century. Our destination is January 4, 1909. Upon arrival, we find ourselves in the district court of Fremont County, Colorado, where W. S. Horton and A. W. Alexander are embattled in a water rights dispute. Both are represented by counsel. The Honorable M. S. Bailey is presiding. The centerpiece of the litigation is a water decree entered by Judge Bailey roughly three years earlier (in November 1905) which, among other things, adjudicated Horton's interest in certain water rights for the Campbell Ditch, an irrigation ditch. This 1905 decree, Judge Bailey rules, is "erroneous in the matter of the date fixed therein for the original construction of said Campbell Ditch," and this error, in turn, affects the priorities for the Campbell Ditch's two water rights in Cherry Creek. Therefore, Judge Bailey sets aside and annuls the 1905 decree and enters a new water decree, dated January 4, 1909. But the 1909 decree is not limited to the Campbell Ditch's two water rights in Cherry Creek; rather, consistent with the 1905 decree, it also provides that the Campbell Ditch is "entitled to receive and conduct water" from nine nearby springs.

¶2 It is the water from the nine springs that is at the root of this appeal some 110 years later. The question for us is whether the 1909 decree adjudicates an enforceable water right for the Campbell Ditch in the springs. Yamasaki Ring, LLC, which now owns some of the Campbell Ditch's water rights, asks us to answer the question in the affirmative. The Dills and the Pearces, who own properties where water from the springs has been put to beneficial use since as early as 1903, urge us to answer the question in the negative. In two orders issued in 2016, the water court agreed with the Dills/Pearces and determined that the 1909 decree does not adjudicate a water right in the springs' water because it does not set forth "the necessary information" for adjudication, including an appropriation date, a priority number, or quantification details. Therefore, concluded the water court, the Campbell Ditch's unquantifiable entitlement to "receive and conduct water" from the springs cannot be enforced or administered against any adjudicated water rights. We agree and therefore affirm the water court's judgment.

¶3 We hold that the 1909 decree fails to set forth required indicia of enforceability-including an appropriation date, a priority number, and quantification information-with respect to the springs. Therefore, it does not adjudicate a water right in the springs. Without indicia of enforceability, especially a priority number, the 1909 decree does not adjudicate a water right in the springs that can be enforced or administered vis-à-vis adjudicated water rights. We are not persuaded by Yamasaki Ring's assertion that there was no need for indicia of enforceability because the springs' water was adjudicated as a supplemental/additional source of water for the properly adjudicated water rights that the Campbell Ditch has in Cherry Creek. Without indicia of enforceability, and in particular a priority number, the Campbell Ditch's entitlement to receive and conduct water from the springs cannot be deemed an adjudicated water right that can be enforced or administered against other adjudicated water rights.

I. Facts and Procedural History

A. Overview

¶4 Yamasaki Ring owns some of the Campbell Ditch's water rights. The Campbell Ditch is an irrigation ditch built in 1883 that originates at a headgate along the north bank of Cherry Creek. In 1890, the Campbell Ditch was extended by the Deever's Extension. Some years later, in 1903, the Campbell Ditch was extended again by what later became known as the Horton Extension in order to access water from certain uphill springs. Water from those springs is captured by the Horton Extension and carried downhill to a forty-foot-long metal culvert over Cherry Creek and into a series of ditches that deliver it to the properties owned by the Dills/Pearces. Without the culvert, water from the springs would flow via the Horton Extension directly into Cherry Creek and to the Campbell Ditch headgate, which diverts water from Cherry Creek.

¶5 The dispute between Yamasaki Ring and the Dills/Pearces revolves around the springs' water. The parties disagree about whether the decree issued by the Fremont County district court in 1909 adjudicates an enforceable water right for the Campbell Ditch in the springs' water. To resolve the parties' dispute, we must interpret the 1909 decree. But before doing so, we take a moment to consider the pertinent events that preceded the issuance of that decree.

B. Pertinent Events Preceding the 1905 Decree

¶6 In 1904, Horton filed a "Plat and Statement" ("Plat") of the Campbell Ditch. In the Plat, Horton claimed three water rights: 2.34 cubic feet per second ("c.f.s.") for the Campbell Ditch from Cherry Creek, 2.34 c.f.s. for the Campbell Ditch (by way of the Deever's Extension) from Cherry Creek, and 2.34 c.f.s. for the Horton Extension from the springs. According to the Plat, the appropriation date for the springs' water was September 25, 1903.

¶7 The following year, Horton filed a petition and statement of claim (hereinafter collectively "Statement of Claim"), which alleged ownership of the water flowing through the Campbell Ditch. The Statement of Claim maintained that the Campbell Ditch was extended by the Horton Extension "from the original headgate further up the stream and to certain springs along the bank thereof, the water of which had not [previously] been diverted either by a ditch or by any natural stream." It further asserted that the Horton Extension had a carrying capacity of 2.34 c.f.s., that construction of that extension began on September 25, 1903, and that the springs' water had been appropriated and "used continuously during each and every year since ... by and through ... irrigation ... to the extent of the entire supply afforded by [the] springs."

C. The 1905 Decree Did Not Include Any Indicia of Enforceability with Respect to the Springs

¶8 In 1905, Judge Bailey issued a water decree addressing Horton's Statement of Claim. He found that: (1) all of the springs' water was "appropriated by and through" the Horton Extension, which began to be constructed on or about September 25, 1903; and (2) the evidence supported all the allegations in Horton's Statement of Claim. But these findings were omitted in the concluding paragraphs of the 1905 decree, which set forth Judge Bailey's final orders:

It is by the Court considered, ordered, adjudged and decreed that there be allowed to flow into the said The Campbell Ditch out of the waters of Cherry Creek under and by virtue of an appropriation of date March 1st, 1882 , being Cherry Creek Priority Number 1.5 and Arkansas River Priority Number 263.5 , 2.34 cubic feet of water per second of time for the use and benefit of said W. S. Horton;
That there be further allowed to flow into said ditch under and by virtue of an appropriation by enlargement and extension through the Deever[']s Extension out of the waters of Cherry Creek under an appropriation of date March 1st, 1890 , being Arkansas River Priority No. 384.7

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Related

Mike & Jim Kruse Partnership v. Cotton
2021 CO 6 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2021)
and 17SA303, Yamasaki Ring v. Dill
2019 CO 14 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2019)

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Bluebook (online)
2019 CO 14, 435 P.3d 1067, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/dill-v-yamasaki-ring-llc-colo-2019.