Hardesty Reservoir, Canal & Land Co. v. Arkansas Valley Sugar Beet & Irrigated Land Co.

277 P. 763, 85 Colo. 555
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 6, 1929
Docket12,040
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 277 P. 763 (Hardesty Reservoir, Canal & Land Co. v. Arkansas Valley Sugar Beet & Irrigated Land Co.) 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
Hardesty Reservoir, Canal & Land Co. v. Arkansas Valley Sugar Beet & Irrigated Land Co., 277 P. 763, 85 Colo. 555 (Colo. 1929).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is a review of a decree of the district court of Bent county rendered February 3, 1927, in a statutory proceeding for adjudicating water rights in water district No. 17, division No. 2, both for direct irrigation and storage. It is the same decree which was considered by us in Holbrook District v. Ft. Lyon Co., 84 Colo. 174, 269 Pac. 574. The opinion in that case should be read in connection with this as some of the questions here presented were there decided. This record shows that there hate been several adjudications in this district. The first decree was made in 1897; the second in 1905; the third August 30, 1922, which was thereafter, in a supplemental *557 proceeding, and on November 13, 1923, seasonably reopened for further amendment and was, as amended, incorporated, or merged, pito a decree of February 3,1927. The decree last mentioned and that of August 30, 1922, are the ones that are the special object of attack by plaintiffs on this review, although the August 30, 1922 decree was, as stated, embodied in that of February 1927, which, except as to the modifications therein mentioned, is the same as the 1922 decree. In the opinion in the Holbrook case this court, speaking by Mr. Justice Adams, at page 180 of the opinion, said that the court there was now “reviewing one case on a record and supplemental record four years apart.” It seems that a similar situation confronts us on this review. Our examination of this record satisfies us that the district court was justified under the statute in reopening the decree of August 30, 1922. We are satisfied also that whatever changes were made, by the decree of February 3, 1927, of the 1922 decree, were warranted by the evidence, and that none of the objections or assignments of error in this case are tenable, as we now proceed to show.

1. Plaintiffs here made the same objection that the Holbrook irrigation district did in the case above referred to, that the trial court erred in its order of December 17,, 1923, reopening its previous general decree of August 30, 1922. We said in that case that the Holbrook district which made objections there, itself had previously asked the trial court for the same thing and might not, therefore, complain of the court’s action in reopening the 1922 decree at the request of others. Plaintiffs in the action now under review, themselves had also asked the trial court to reopen the same 1922 decree as the Holbrook district did. Therefore, for a similar reason to that we gave in the Holbrook case, plaintiffs may not now complain of the very thing which they, themselves, asked to have done. This disposes of much of the argument and contention of the plaintiffs. Apparently their chief reliance is upon their unwarranted assumption that the 1922 decree was *558 improperly reopened and, therefore, the decree of February 3, 1927, in so far as it amended or corrected the former decree, is wrong.

2. Plaintiffs, however, further, say that even if they are now estopped, and for the reasons stated, to question the reopening of the 1922 decree, the trial court upon the hearing, following the reopening, improperly fixed in the 1927 decree the dates of priorities both of plaintiffs and defendants’ reservoirs, so that’they antedated the last date of priorities decreed in earlier proceedings of the same court in the same district, including the decree of August 30, 1922.

'We pause here to observe that it is unusual for one appropriator, as here, voluntarily to relinquish a decreed priority on the ground that it was wrongfully awarded, and at the same time to sue other appropriators under the same decree, to whom at the same time similar improper awards were made, but which do not injure the former, to compel the latter over their objection to abandon their priority. This observation is pertinent in connection with other contentions made in the briefs, and which tend to sustain the assertion of defendants, that the present attempt of plaintiffs is not in their own interests as appropriators in the same water district, but in the interests of appropriators or owners of priorities in some other district who were not and cannot be made parties to this suit. An additional reason for this observation is the fact that the 1927 decree, which awarded these priorities, explicitly states that no decree thereby made is to be taken to be in conflict or superior to any other decree or decrees theretofore made in that district. If plaintiffs desired to rid themselves of these decreed priorities, which they say were not justified, they could have accomplished their object without resort to this expensive litigation, and left appropriators, outside the district, to' protect themselves. If appropriators, not within this water district No. 17, or the water division No. 2, have a grievance, they cannot urge it here under the disguise, *559 and through the instrumentality, of plaintiffs, who are appropriators within the district, and who are in no wise injured by the decreed priorities of the defendants.

First, we say that the 1922 decree was reopened for such changes, if any, as the parties petitioning for the reopening might by evidence show should be legally made, and in so far as there is any inconsistency between the 1922 decree and that of 1927, assuming that both are valid decrees, the latter prevails as the final decree in the matter. But if plaintiffs intend to assert that, if the reservoir priorities in the 1927 decree antedate the priorities in the district awarded in decrees pronounced earlier than 1922, and they have been injured by the same, they are in a position to complain, and, if their complaint is good, they may be entitled to relief. The record, however, discloses that some of the objections plaintiffs now make are not available to them, and other objections are without foundation. Assuming, as they do — and it is the law of this jurisdiction — that in distributing water to appropriators, all adjudicating proceedings in a given water district are to be taken as connected, and'must be considered in their entirety, and that after the first proceeding each supplemental one is inferior as to priorities to the next preceding one, and that no priority in any supplemental adjudication may be given a number or a date earlier than the last numbered priority and date of the lowest or last priority in the next preceding adjudication, let us examine the contention of plaintiffs on this assignment.

If the district court in its 1927 revised decree refused to conform to this requirement as to dates and numbering of the priorities awarded, an appropriator in the same district who has been injured by it may be given appropriate relief. But plaintiffs, at least some of them, are not of the class who may complain. By the decree of 1922 and also that of 1927, with its modifications of the former, the priorities of plaintiffs are earlier in time and number than the priorities of the defendants, of which *560 the former now complain. In times of scarcity of water —and then only or chiefly is priority important — the priorities of reservoirs of plaintiffs must first be satisfied before those of the inferior reservoir rights of the defendants are supplied. By both decrees, that of 1922 and that of 1927, plaintiffs — owners of Mallet reservoirs Nos.

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Bluebook (online)
277 P. 763, 85 Colo. 555, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hardesty-reservoir-canal-land-co-v-arkansas-valley-sugar-beet-colo-1929.