Farmers Irrigating Ditch & Reservoir Company, a Colorado Mutual Ditch Company v. Nick Kane

845 F.2d 229, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 5253, 1988 WL 35246
CourtCourt of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit
DecidedApril 22, 1988
Docket85-2917
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 845 F.2d 229 (Farmers Irrigating Ditch & Reservoir Company, a Colorado Mutual Ditch Company v. Nick Kane) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals for the Tenth Circuit primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Farmers Irrigating Ditch & Reservoir Company, a Colorado Mutual Ditch Company v. Nick Kane, 845 F.2d 229, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 5253, 1988 WL 35246 (10th Cir. 1988).

Opinion

McWILLIAMS, Circuit Judge.

This interpleader action has its genesis in a flood. Farmers Irrigating Ditch & Reservoir Company, a Colorado mutual ditch company with its principal place of business in Loveland, Colorado (hereinafter referred to as “Farmers”), was the owner of a reservoir known as Lawn Lake in Larimer County, Colorado. On July 12, 1982, an embankment of the Lawn Lake Reservoir broke and released a great amount of water which flowed down and through a natural channel known as Fall River into and through the Town of Estes Park and thereafter into Lake Estes, where it was contained. The flooding caused several deaths and great property damage in and around Estes Park, some estimates of the latter being as high as $170,000,000. Several civil actions against Farmers, its shareholders, directors, employees, and others were filed in the state courts of Colorado by persons who suffered damages in the flood. 1 The Colorado Supreme Court by order consolidated these several state actions in a single multi-district action in the District Court of Larimer County.

It was in this general setting that the present complaint in interpleader was filed in the United States District Court for the District of Colorado, pursuant to 28 U.S.C. §§ 1335, 1397, and 2361. There were three sets of plaintiffs, so to speak: (1) two insurance companies, Millers’ Mutual Insurance Association of Illinois and Iowa National Mutual Insurance Company, each of which had issued a policy of liability insurance to Farmers; (2) Farmers; and (3) twenty-eight named individuals, all of whom were shareholders, directors or employees of Farmers. The defendants in the complaint for intervention were a great number of persons or business entities described and identified by name, as well as all “other persons” who suffered or claimed to have suffered damages as a result of the Lawn Lake flood.

*231 The two insurance companies tendered to the court the sum of $1,400,000, which was the maximum coverage provided Farmers under the combined policies. Farmers, admitting “potential liability” in a sum in excess of $8,500,000, tendered $465.88 in cash, 500 pounds of copper sulfate of a value of approximately $400.00, and unpaid shareholder assessments valued at $1,233.32. Additionally, Farmers had a pending cause of action in the District Court of Larimer County against the City of Loveland, and others, which Farmers offered to tender into the registry of the court. Farmers placed an approximate value of $241,954.00 on its pending suit against the City of Loveland. Finally, Farmers stated that it owned, “as the totality of its corporate assets, fee interests and easement interests in the real estate within the State of Colorado which constitute the land upon which Lawn Lake Reservoir, a diversion structure, and irrigation ditches are situated,” having “no known value” but a “replacement value of $1,000,000.00.” Farmers did not tender certain water rights, title to which it had received from its shareholders, and that was, and is, a major controversy between the parties.

Contemporaneous with the filing of their complaint in interpleader, the plaintiffs filed a motion for a preliminary injunction and asked that the district court enjoin the defendants from instituting, or prosecuting, actions against any of the plaintiffs for damages arising out of the flood. The district court, however, only enjoined the defendants from instituting, or prosecuting, any action “affecting the property involved in this case,” and, as we understand it, did not enjoin the claimants from instituting or prosecuting other actions against the plaintiffs.

The defendants filed a motion to dismiss, which, after hearing, was granted as to the shareholders, directors, and employees of Farmers, who were accordingly dismissed from the case. However, the motion to dismiss was denied as to the two insurance companies and Farmers. In refusing to dismiss Farmers from the interpleader proceeding, the district court stated in its June 20, 1983, order that “interpleader is ... an equitable solution to the problem created when claims against a debtor exceed the debtor’s assets. If the debtor does not contest liability, or if he wishes to resolve the claims, he places his assets in the hands of the court. The court then provides an equitable distribution for the creditor claimants and a haven for the debtor [by] injunctive relief.” 2

Previously, the two insurance carriers had delivered $1,400,000.00 to the registry of the court, and ultimately Farmers paid over to the court $2,405.93 in cash, which amounts were ordered to be prorated among the claimants. The district court rejected the non-cash tenders by Farmers, i.e., its lawsuit against the City of Loveland and the land upon which the reservoir was located, which land was apparently heavily encumbered. The final orders were that both the insurance companies and Farmers were discharged from any further liability for damages caused by the flood, and the preliminary injunction, which applied only to the interpleaded property, was made permanent. The claimants now appeal the several orders of the district court as they relate to Farmers only.

As just indicated, the shareholders, directors, and employees of Farmers have not appealed the district court’s order granting the claimants’ motion to dismiss them from the proceeding, nor have the claimants appealed the district court’s order prorating the proceeds from the two insurance policies among the claimants and discharging the insurance companies from any further liability for damages caused by the flood. The only appeal is by the claimants from the district court’s order discharging Farmers from any further liability for damages caused by the flood.

*232 Also, as earlier stated, a major dispute in the trial court was whether the water rights of the individual shareholders who had assigned their respective titles to Farmers (1) constituted assets of Farmers which should have been tendered by Farmers in the interpleader proceeding, or (2) remained the property of the individual shareholders. The district court held that these water rights belonged to the shareholders and were not assets of Farmers, relying on such cases as Jacobucci v. District Court, 189 Colo. 380, 541 P.2d 667 (1975). The claimants challenge the correctness of that ruling, and ask that if we do not reverse the district court’s ruling, we at least certify the question to the Colorado Supreme Court for resolution. In the view we take of the matter, we need not here concern ourselves with the ownership of the water rights, since we hold Farmers was not a proper party in interpleader, and the district court erred in denying claimants’ motion to dismiss Farmers from the interpleader proceeding.

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845 F.2d 229, 1988 U.S. App. LEXIS 5253, 1988 WL 35246, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/farmers-irrigating-ditch-reservoir-company-a-colorado-mutual-ditch-ca10-1988.