Farmers' High Line Canal & Reservoir Co. v. White

32 Colo. 114
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1904
DocketNo. 4366
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 32 Colo. 114 (Farmers' High Line Canal & Reservoir Co. v. White) 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
Farmers' High Line Canal & Reservoir Co. v. White, 32 Colo. 114 (Colo. 1904).

Opinion

Chief Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

In 1860 the Golden canal was constructed to divert the water of Clear Creek with which to irrigate agricultural lands. In 1872 the structure was enlarged to carry an additional supply. In 1884, in [116]*116statutory proceedings brought for that purpose in the appropriate court, a first priority was awarded the canal for 39.8 cubic feet of water per second of time as of the date of original construction, and a second priority of 154 cubic feet of water per second of time as of the date of the first enlargement. In 1885 the defendant The Farmers’ High Line Canal and Reservoir Company was incorporated to purchase the rights and franchises of the canal, which it acquired soon after its organization.

The plaintiffs are consumers of water, which they had utilized through the medium of the Golden canal before its purchase by the defendant company. From the allegations of the complaint it is not certain whether plaintiffs claim any part of the first priority of 1860, but the averments assert a priority not later than the year 1872, though there is uncertainty both in statement and proof as to the origin of their rights. The complaint alleges that after the defendant company acquired the canal it enlarged the same at different times, and by divers methods obtained, or claimed to have secured, for carriage therein a large quantity of water in addition to that represented by its first two priorities, and in times of scarcity, and when the water commissioner has cut out the later appropriations, that, entirely disregarding their priority, it has compelled, and threatens hereafter to compel, the plaintiffs to pro-rate the water of the first two appropriations, in which they are owners, with its stockholders whose rights attached not earlier than the spring of 1886, at the time of the second enlargement of the canal, and which are not traceable at all to either of the earlier appropriations.

The plaintiffs own about 870, out of about 7,000 or 8,000 cubic inches of water per second of time' belonging to the first two priorities, but they say they sue in behalf of themselves and all others simi[117]*117larly situated. With the ditch company the plaintiffs joined as defendants some of its stockholders and the complaint alleges that the names and places of residence of all of them are unknown to the plaintiffs, hut they are so numerous that it is practically impossible to make all of them parties defendant. They ask, therefore, for an order of court, under the authority of section 12 of the civil code, that defendant stockholders who have been made parties shall defend for the benefit of all.

The complaint, the substance of which, so far as the questions to be determined on this appeal are concerned, has been above summarized, was attacked by a motion containing several grounds which was in part sustained and partly overruled-. The defendants then interposed a demurrer, containing about all of the grounds enumerated in the code of civil procedure, and when this demurrer was overruled, they filed an answer substantially denying the material allegations of the complaint, and containing a number of special defenses, such as estoppel, laches, the statute of limitations, acquiescence in the prorating complained of, and waiver.

Upon the trial before the court the issues of fact were found in favor of plaintiffs, and a decree rendered which, among other things, enjoined the defendant company during a shortage of water from compelling plaintiffs to pro-rate the water of the first two priorities to which they are entitled with its stockholders who became users of water subsequent to January 11, 1886.

It will be observed from the foregoing statement that the controversy is not one between different ditches, but between consumers of water from the same ditch. In Farmers’ High Line, etc., Co.v.Southworth, 13 Colo. 111, a similar case was considered, in which each of the three members of the court, as then [118]*118constituted, wrote a separate opinion, from which it would appear that no one of the learned judges was in entire accord with either of the others as to the main question discussed. That case really went off upon a question of pleading, though in connection with the point decided each of the judges expressed,' at some length, his views upon the constitutionality of the so-called pro-rating statute of 1883, and the majority were of opinion that the pro-rating it provided for, if enforced literally and irrespective of the priorities of the several consumers,-was inhibited by the constitution. Mr. Justice Helm disagreed with his associates as to the case made by the complaint, as well as in some of his views upon the subject of pro-rating, and declared that the question involved in the case was this: ‘ ‘ May the legislature provide that, in times of scarcity, water shall be pro-rated among consumers having priorities of the same date?” Upon this proposition, and in view of his construction of the complaint, he was of opinion that the so-called pro-rating statute was applicable to the case as made.

In Nichols v. McIntosh, 19 Colo. 22, it was said that a majority of the court'in the Southworth ease held that appropriations of water by the consumers who received the same through the same ditch do not necessarily relate to the same time, but, on the contrary, such consumers may have different priorities of right. In Ditch Co. v. Ditch Co., 22 Colo. 513, 521, this court, speaking through Chief Justice Hayt, in summarizing certain doctrines that had been theretofore established, and which were supposed to have some bearing upon the issues then under consideration — though such statement, as well as a similar one in the Nichols case, may have been obiter — said that appropriators of water from the same stream [119]*119through the same ditch may have different priorities of right to the use of such water, based upon the time of the several appropriations. In Brown v. Canal & Reservoir Co., 26 Colo. 66, in a case which seems to have been the forerunner of the case at bar and involving practically the same legal questions, the court, speaking by Goddard, Justice, again in effect declared the same doctrine. It therefore may he considered as stare decisis in this jurisdiction that there may he circumstances in which water consumers from the same ditch may not be compelled to pro-rate with each other. It is upon this doctrine that plaintiffs rely, and they attempted to establish at the trial that they are not within the purview of the pro-rating statute, or, if so, that it is invalid as to them.

A number of objections to the decree and to the various proceedings below have been argued, with many of which we are not at present concerned. We are of opinion that the decree cannot stand upon several grounds which we will presently proceed to consider. First, however, it is to he observed that vehement declamation and estreme and indiscriminate criticism of the rulings of the trial court are not helpful to, nor do they specially commend themselves to the consideration of, an appellate tribunal, unless grounded upon a more solid foundation than appears in the present case. Some of the objections of counsel for plaintiffs in error, however, are good, and these we now take up.

1. The evidence of plaintiffs ’ witnesses does not furnish sufficient definite data on which to predicate a favorable decree in a 'matter of such importance.

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