Estes v. Crann

216 P. 517, 73 Colo. 438, 1923 Colo. LEXIS 371
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 4, 1923
DocketNo. 10,369
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 216 P. 517 (Estes v. Crann) 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
Estes v. Crann, 216 P. 517, 73 Colo. 438, 1923 Colo. LEXIS 371 (Colo. 1923).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a controversy over water rights. The decree of the court was on defendants’ motion for judgment on the pleadings. The amended complaint has two causes of action. The first cause, admitting that defendants’ adjudicated priority right was for 40 cubic second feet, alleged that the decree, which awarded the same, was conditional, not absolute; and that the condition upon which the right to the use of water depends has been complied with by defendants only to the extent of 5 cubic feet per second of time, which the plaintiffs conceded the defendants were entitled to divert and use as against their adjudicated subsequent priorities. The object of this first cause pf action seems to be, as stated by the plaintiffs in their brief, “to avoid or, at least, scale down to not exceeding 5 second cubic feet,” defendants’ priority. The second cause of action alleges that the decree, the one set forth in the first cause of action, is void and of no effect as against the plaintiffs, because defendants’ statement of claim filed in the adjudication proceedings was not verified as required by the governing statute, and therefore, the district court, in which the proceedings were pending, was without jurisdiction to take any step whatever therein. The relief sought under the second cause is a decree declaring void defendants’ adjudication decree, except as to the 5 second feet conceded by the plaintiffs to the defendants.

[440]*440It will be observed that the two causes of action are inconsistent and ’ repugnant. The second cause is also inconsistent with itself, for if the court had no jurisdiction to render any decree at all, the award of 5 feet is as void as the award for the other 35 feet, yet plaintiffs say the 5 feet award is valid. To this complaint the substance of the answer is a plea to both causes of the adjudication decree in its entirety. The replication does not put in issue the material allegations of the answer, or deny the rendition of the decree. We must, therefore, consider the decree a verity, if the court rendering it had jurisdiction. There appeared in the answer an admission by the defendants that of the full volume of their priority of 40 cubic feet they had used only 14.2 cubic feet.

We first dispose of the second cause of action. It is insufficient and subject to a general demurrer. Inconsistent defenses are allowed, but each separate cause of action must be consistent with itself. Here in this second cause one averment declares defendants’ decree to be void. It is coupled with another averment that this decree, one, inseparable and indivisible, is valid as to 5 of the 40 cubic feet awarded. One allegation destroys the other and leaves the entire cause hopelessly bad. Even if this conclusion is not sound, the second cause of action wholly fails in its avowed purpose to disclose a lack of jurisdiction by the district court, in which the defendants’ decree was pronounced. It is said the court did not have jurisdiction because defendants’ statement of claim filed therein was not verified as the governing statute requires. Our attention is not directed to any provision of this statute which requires, in a supplemental proceeding, that such statement of claim should be verified as a condition precedent to any action thereon by the court. Section 1755 C. L. 1921 does contain a requirement that statements filed in the original proceeding for the general decree, be verified and that they must be filed before June 1, 1881. That can not apply to proceedings thereafter initiated, but if there was such a requirement as to veri[441]*441fication in all supplemental proceedings, the omission of verification of the statement is not jurisdictional. This court has held that these statements are analogous to a complaint in a civil action. In this supplemental proceeding of 1893, in which defendants’ decree was rendered, the court certainly had jurisdiction of the subject matter. It was expressly given.by the statute. The statute required a statutory notice directed to all persons that would be affected by the decree. The plaintiffs say they were affected by it, and, if so, they were duly notified and were parties to that proceeding whether or not they actually appeared therein. The omission of the verification was nothing more than an irregularity in a pleading. If plaintiffs had any objection to the lack of verification, it was their duty at the time the proceeding was pending to interpose it. They might waive it if they saw fit. They may not be heard here. The court in that proceeding certainly had the power to decide that the omission of the verification was not important. Moreover, at this late day, long after the expiration of the time designated in our limiting statutes applicable to such cases, these plaintiffs are not in a position in this action to say that defendants’ supplemental decree is not binding upon them.

The second cause of action, therefore, being eliminated, the decree here for review, if it has any foundation at all, must be, as it purports to be, based on the first cause of action. Plaintiffs therein rely upon allegations supposed to show that defendants’ decree 'of adjudication was conditional, not absolute, and that the conditions upon which their rights depend have never been complied with, except as to 5 second cubic feet, and, as to that part of defendants’ adjudicated priority, plaintiffs admit that the same is superior to their subsequent appropriation. If this decree was absolute, not conditional, plaintiffs’ entire case under the first cause of action falls. Turning to the decree as pleaded in the answer and admitted in the replication, we find that on its face it is absolute, not conditional. Nothing was left open for future determination. [442]*442If plaintiffs’ case, therefore, as they themselves contend, depends upon the principle announced in Drach v. Isola, 48 Colo. 134, 109 Pac. 748, it finds no support in this record. The Drach case is not applicable, for the decree there under consideration was clearly and unquestionably a conditional decree that had never been complied with. The decree in the instant case being absolute, unless the same has been modified or changed in a subsequent statutory proceeding within two years, or by an independent action within four years, as authorized by the statute in question, becomes a verity and all persons, not applying for such relief within the time fixed, are deemed to acquiesce in and are bound by the same. Arnold v. Roup, 61 Colo. 316, 157 Pac. 206.

In reaching this conclusion we base it upon the face of the decree as shown by its adjudicating clause. Plaintiffs, however, seek to bring this case within the doctrine of the Drach case, because in the supplemental decree of 1893 there is a separate clause which, in effect, says that the findings and decree in the supplemental proceedings shall be subject to the same conditions and provisions as are contained in the earlier general decree of 1888; and, as in the 1888 decree there is a clause that priorities, though established by that decree, are, nevertheless, restricted, and the water shall flow into the ditches in such ratio and proportion as the lands under said ditches respectively shall be brought under practical cultivation with reasonable diligence, therefore, this provision of 1888 is read into, and becomes part of, the supplemental decree of 1893 and makes the same conditional, not absolute. We can not agree with such a strained construction.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Loshbaugh v. Benzel
291 P.2d 1064 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1956)
Pelelas v. Caterpillar Tractor Co.
113 F.2d 629 (Seventh Circuit, 1940)
Quigley v. McIntosh
103 P.2d 1067 (Montana Supreme Court, 1939)
Hicks v. Cramer
277 P. 299 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1929)
Hinderlider v. Town of Berthoud
238 P. 64 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1925)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
216 P. 517, 73 Colo. 438, 1923 Colo. LEXIS 371, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/estes-v-crann-colo-1923.