Greeley & Loveland Irrigation Co. v. Huppe

155 P. 386, 60 Colo. 535, 1915 Colo. LEXIS 375
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 6, 1915
DocketNo. 8297
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 155 P. 386 (Greeley & Loveland Irrigation Co. v. Huppe) 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
Greeley & Loveland Irrigation Co. v. Huppe, 155 P. 386, 60 Colo. 535, 1915 Colo. LEXIS 375 (Colo. 1915).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Garrigues

delivered the opinion of the court.

For convenience we will designate the Greeley & Love-land Irrigation Company plaintiff, and defendants in error defendants. At the first adjudication,' in 1883, in the District Court of Boulder county settling the relative priorities of ditches for irrigation upon the Thompson river — water district No. 4 — decrees were entered awarding the Louden ditch 194 cubic feet, and the Handy ditch 172 cubic feet, of water per second. In 1890 another adjudication was had in this water district by which the priorities of reservoirs for direct storage from the river were settled as follows: Lone Tree reservoir, storage priority No. 1, for 400 million cubic feet; Mariana reservoir, storage priority No. 3, for 200 million cubic feet; Donath Lake reservoir, storage priority No. 2, for 50 million cubic feet. These were the only decreed reservoirs on the river prior to the decree of 1912.

[537]*537In 1893 the Greeley & Loveland Irrigation Company constructed, and since has owned and operated, the Loveland & Greeley reservoir, known as Lake Loveland, which, since its construction the various water commissioners have recognized and filled, as having the next storage right, or reservoir priority No. 4, while defendants’ nineteen reservoirs have not been known or considered by the commissioners. No demand was made for water to fill them, and none was delivered from the river by the commissioners for that purpose. A third statutory adjudication, begun in 1904, resulted in a decree in 1912, upon evidence taken by the referee and filed in court, by which priority numbers were given to the divers reservoirs, commencing with the next consecutive number after Donath Lake priority No. 3 of the former decree. By the decree of 1912, defendants’ nineteen reservoirs are given dates, numbers and priorities from the river, • superior to and antedating those allowed plaintiff’s reservoir, so that instead of having the fourth reservoir priority, as theretofore recognized by the water commissioners since its construction, its storage rights were made junior to those of these nineteen reservoirs, which were placed ahead of it in the decree. The present proceeding to review the decree, pertains to these twenty reservoirs, one belonging to plaintiff, and nineteen to the various defendants. The decree awards the Loveland & Greeley reservoir, in round numbers 620 million cubic feet, and for the nineteen reservoirs an amount aggregating in round numbers 370 million cubic feet is allowed.

1. The Louden and Handy ditches are owned and operated by mutual irrigation ditch companies, the water being divided pro rata among the stockholders upon their stock, which stands for and represents the consumers’ interest in the ditch and water. Sixteen of the reservoirs in question lie under the Handy, and three under the Louden, all being filled through laterals from the two ditches, which [538]*538are in charge of and under the control of a superintendent, who distributes the water to the laterals at their headgates. No question of diligence, use or application, date of priority, or amount of appropriation is involved. Neither is the right to store water diverted on the appropriations of the ditches, as an incident to its use thereafter for irrigation, involved. The only question is whether in this adjudication proceeding, defendants are entitled to reservoir decrees for direct storage from the river, for any of these reservoirs. The decree awards them appropriations with priorities ahead of plaintiff’s reservoir, amounting to over 370 million cubic feet, which is an evident injury and damage to plaintiff, unless defendants are entitled to such storage decrees, because the water commissioner is commanded by statute to enforce the decree, in times of scarify, and cannot permit plaintiff to store water in its reservoir, if the decree stands, until after the nineteen reservoirs of defendants have been supplied.

The irrigation acts clearly indicate two classes of appropriations for irrigation, one by ditches diverting water directly from the natural stream for immediate use, the other by reservoirs for the storage of water from the stream, to be subsequently used for irrigation. The statute requires that ditch and reservoir decrees shall be separately numbered, and we are of the opinion that the storage of water decreed to a ditch for direct irrigation cannot be made the basis of an independent storage decree under the statute; neither can the storage of the unused portion of water diverted upon the decreed appropriation of a ditch, for direct and immediate irrigation, constitute the basis of such a decree in a statutory adjudication proceeding such as this, to settle the priorities of reservoirs on the stream, for storage.

We have examined all the evidence taken and filed in court affecting these reservoirs of defendants, and find it [539]*539insufficient to warrant the action of the lower court in awarding them decrees. Taken in its entirety and carefully considered and analyzed, it discloses no substantial conflict. The nineteen reservoirs are small natural depressions, or basins, lying along or near laterals from these ditches, through which they are filled, and in some instances the laterals pass through the reservoirs. Water was not diverted from the river and stored in any of these reservoirs during the non-irrigating season, or when it was not diverted on the irrigation decree; on the contrary, the storage occurred when the water was available for irrigation, and when the ditches were actually carrying the decreed appropriations turned out to them by the water commissioner, and their consumers were either using, or entitled to use it for immediate irrigation. There is no substantial evidence that the ditches diverted or carried additional or other water for storage, independent of the decreed ditch appropriation. In fact, it is disclosed by the testimony that when the direct irrigation appropriations were being carried by the ditches, there was no additional carrying capacity in the ditch, which could be utilized for the conveyance of storage water.

The water commissioner is the stream police-officer, and the control and distribution of water through the river headgates into all ditches and canals both for irrigation and storage, is under his direction and supervision. At the beginning of the season, as soon as water was available for irrigation, usually about April first, these ditches called upon him fo.r their appropriations, which he delivered, and when once in the ditches such water as was not used for immediate irrigation the ditch superintendent permitted to be stored in the reservoirs. Such storage usually occurred between the first of April and October, principally in April, kfay and June, and always after water had been called for and was being diverted on the irrigation ' appropriations of the ditches, and while they were carrying no other water. [540]*540A plausible attempt is made to justify the .decree awarding; storage priorities to these reservoirs, upon the ground that the water impounded was flood, excess, surplus or waste water, which was flowing in the ditches, or at least that it was different and distinct from the decreed irrigation ditch water. This claim is futile.

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Related

Handy Ditch Co. v. Greeley & Loveland Irrigation Co.
280 P. 481 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1929)
Holbrook Irrigation District v. Fort Lyon Canal Co.
269 P. 574 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1928)
Greeley & Loveland Irrigation Co. v. Handy Ditch Co.
240 P. 270 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1925)

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Bluebook (online)
155 P. 386, 60 Colo. 535, 1915 Colo. LEXIS 375, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/greeley-loveland-irrigation-co-v-huppe-colo-1915.