Grand Valley Water Users Ass'n v. Busk-Ivanhoe, Inc.

2016 CO 75, 386 P.3d 452, 2016 Colo. LEXIS 1229, 2016 WL 7077633
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 5, 2016
DocketSupreme Court Case 14SA303
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 2016 CO 75 (Grand Valley Water Users Ass'n v. Busk-Ivanhoe, Inc.) 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
Grand Valley Water Users Ass'n v. Busk-Ivanhoe, Inc., 2016 CO 75, 386 P.3d 452, 2016 Colo. LEXIS 1229, 2016 WL 7077633 (Colo. 2016).

Opinions

JUSTICE MÁRQUEZ

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 This appeal from the water court in Water Division 2 challenges certain rulings relevant to the historic consumptive use quantification of transmountain water rights that are the subject of a change application.

¶2 The City of Aurora, Colorado (“Aurora”), is the sole owner of the capital stock of Busk-Ivanhoe, Inc. (“Busk-Ivanhoe”). Busk-Ivanhoe owns a one-half interest in water rights decreed in 1928 to the Busk-Ivanhoe System for supplemental irrigation in the Arkansas River Basin by Garfield County District Court in Civil Action No. 2621 (the “2621 Decree”). The Busk-Ivanhoe System is a transmountain diversion from the Colorado River Basin on the western slope in Water Division 5, through the Ivanhoe Tunnel at the Continental Divide, to the Arkansas River Basin on the eastern slope in Water Division 2.

¶3 The 2621 Decree confirmed absolute and conditional appropriations to divert water from tributaries of the Roaring Fork River, and includes a priority for storage of 1,200 acre-feet of the diverted water in the Ivanhoe Reservoir on the western slope. Under the terms of the decree, the diverted water is exported through the Ivanhoe Tunnel to the eastern slope—some amounts on an immediate basis and some after storage in the Ivanhoe Reservoir (on the western slope). The decree, however, contains no reference at all to storage of the exported water on the eastern slope prior to its decreed use for supplemental irrigation in the Arkansas River Basin. Nevertheless, transmountain water decreed to the Busk-Ivanhoe System has been stored in reservoirs on the eastern slope before being put to beneficial use.

¶4 In 1987, at Aurora’s direction, Busk-Ivanhoe began to put its water rights to municipal use in Aurora in Water Division 1. However, Busk-Ivanhoe did not file an application to change the type and place of use of these rights until 2009. That change application is the subject of this appeal.

¶5 In its May 27, 2014, Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Order (“May 2014 Order”), the water court for Water Division 2 approved Busk-Ivanhoe’s change application to allow use of the subject water rights within Aurora’s municipal system. It confirmed these rulings in its August 15, 2014, Judgment and Decree (“August 2014 Judgment [457]*457and Decree”) approving the change application.

¶6 The issues raised in this appeal concern the water court’s quantification of the water rights to be changed under the application. Relevant here, the water court concluded that: (1) storage of the water rights on the eastern slope prior to use was lawful despite the 2621 Decree’s silence on the issue, and, therefore, the quantification of the historic consumptive use of those rights should include water used for its decreed purpose after release from storage on the eastern slope; (2) volumes of exported water paid to rent storage on the eastern slope should also be included in the historic consumptive use quantification of the water rights; and (3) the twenty-two-year period of undeereed use of the water rights for municipal purposes must be excluded from the representative study period when calculating the historic consumptive use of the decreed rights. Op-posers-Appellants—who include the State Engineer and Division Engineers for Water Divisions 1, 2, and 6 (collectively, the “Engineer Opposers”), as well as several entities located in the Colorado River Basin (collectively, the “Western Slope Opposers”)1— challenge the water court's conclusions.

¶7 As set forth more fully below, we hold as follows. First, the water court erred when it concluded that storage of the Busk-Ivanhoe rights on the eastern slope prior to use was lawful. On remand, the water court must requantify the water rights subject to change; to the extent that unlawful storage of the water on the eastern slope prior to use expanded the decreed rights, such amounts cannot be included in the historic use quantification of those rights.

¶8 Second, because storage of the subject water rights in the basin of import was unlawful, the water court erred in including the volumes of exported water paid as rental fees for storage on the eastern slope in its historic consumptive use quantification of the water rights.

¶9 Finally, the water court erred in concluding that it was required to exclude the twenty-two years of undeereed use of the subject water rights from the representative study period. In this case, the period of undecreed use reflects twenty-two years of non-use of the decreed rights. Because unjustified non-use of a decreed right should be considered when quantifying historic consumptive use for purposes of a change application, we remand the case to the water court to determine whether the years of non-use of the Busk-Ivanhoe rights for their decreed purpose were unjustified. If so, the water court should consider including the years of unjustified non-use in the representative study period as “zero-use” years for purposes of its historic consumptive use analysis. Accordingly, we reverse the water court’s May 2014 Order and August 2014 Judgment and Decree and remand to Water Division 2 for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

I. Facts and Procedural History

¶10 The water rights at issue in this ease are an undivided one-half interest in the Busk-Ivanhoe - System water rights. The Busk-Ivanhoe System water rights were originally adjudicated to A.E. and L.G. Carlton in Water District 38 on January 9, 1928, by the Garfield County District Court in Case No. 2621, and were decreed for supplemental irrigation on 80,000 acres of land in the Arkansas River Basin. At the time of the appropriation, the Arkansas River Basin was over-appropriated and junior water rights did not provide sufficient water during the entire irrigation season. By contrast, the Colorado River Basin had water available for appropriation.

¶11 The Busk-Ivanhoe System is composed of three ditches (Lyle Ditch, Pan Ditch, and Hidden Lake Creek Ditch), the Ivanhoe Reservoir, and the Ivanhoe Tunnel. The ditches divert spring runoff from small tributaries to the Roaring Fork River in the Colorado River Basin. The ditches deliver this water to the Ivanhoe Reservoir, an on-channel reser[458]*458voir that also captures the entire natural flow of Ivanhoe Creek. The 2621 Decree adjudicates absolute direct flow rights for waters from Ivanhoe Creek and Lyle Ditch, and conditional direct flow rights for waters from Pan Ditch and Hidden Lake Creek Ditch.2 The 2621 Decree provides that these direct flow rights flow through the Ivanhoe Reservoir to the Ivanhoe Tunnel. The 2621 Decree also adjudicates an absolute right for storage of 1,200 acre-feet of water from Ivanhoe Creek and the ditches in the Ivanhoe Reservoir on the western slope. The Ivanhoe' Tunnel carries both the direct flow water and the water released from storage in the Ivanhoe Reservoir “onto the Eastern Slope of said Continental Divide where the same is discharged at the east portal of said tunnel into Lake Fork Creek, a tributary of the Arkansas River, and later. diverted from said streams and used in the irrigation of lands within the State of Colorado lying along said streams and susceptible of irrigation therefrom.” 2621 Decree, ¶ 6.

¶12 The 2621 Decree makes no reference to storage of the water on the eastern slope prior to being put to its decreed use for supplemental irrigation.

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Grand Valley Water Users Ass'n v. Busk-Ivanhoe, Inc.
2016 CO 75 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 2016)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 CO 75, 386 P.3d 452, 2016 Colo. LEXIS 1229, 2016 WL 7077633, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/grand-valley-water-users-assn-v-busk-ivanhoe-inc-colo-2016.