Hinderlider v. Everett

19 P.2d 211, 92 Colo. 159, 1933 Colo. LEXIS 285
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 23, 1933
DocketNo. 12,736.
StatusPublished

This text of 19 P.2d 211 (Hinderlider v. Everett) 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
Hinderlider v. Everett, 19 P.2d 211, 92 Colo. 159, 1933 Colo. LEXIS 285 (Colo. 1933).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Our General Assembly in 1929 (S. L. 1929, p. 415), passed an act providing for the installation of self-registering devices for measuring the flow of water in the streams of the state and thereby amended previous statutes on the same subject enacted in 1921 and 1925. In section 1 of the 1929 Act it is provided that whenever, by reason of present or prospective litigation or adjustment respecting the diversion and use of the waters of any interstate stream, it may become advisable or necessary to make a comprehensive and detailed study and record of the flow of water in, or of diversions from, or of return of water to any part or section of such stream, upon the filing with the state engineer of a petition requesting such a study and record, signed by a majority of the owners of the decreed appropriations diverting water from any such section of such stream, the canal owners affected shall install and thereafter maintain and operate, at the owner’s expense, self-registering* automatic gage height recording* instruments for the recording* of diversions or return flow, when ordered so to do by the state engineer by notice for that purpose served upon such owner or owners. The section further provides that such self-registering devices may be removed at the conclusion of the period of such river study and by order of the state engineer. The section also provides, and it is the part of the statute which is material in the pending case, that the state engineer may also order the installation of such self-registering device upon any ditch, canal, flume, pipe line or other means used for diverting water fr'om any natural stream, where he deems the same necessary for the proper distribution of water from such natural stream, or for the compilation of accurate records,. Such self-registering device shall be in *161 stalled at the expense of the owner when ordered so to do by the state engineer by notice for that purpose served upon him or upon the superintendent, headgate keeper or representative of such canal or means of diversion, either in person or by registered mail. Said instruments shall be installed within thirty days after the receipt of such notice as aforesaid. Provided, however, that the owner or owners or duly authorized representative of any such ditch, canal, flume, or pipe line, may request a review of such order by the state engineer if made to him in writing’ within the thirty-day limit hereinabove mentioned. Thereupon the state engineer shall fix a place and date for the hearing of the matters complained of. At such hearing the complainant or' complainants may be represented in person or by counsel. The state engineer shall, as soon thereafter as practicable, enter his final ruling’ in the matter and so notify the complainant or complainants in writing. When in such ruling the state engineer shall sustain, in whole or' in part, the order or orders so reviewed, such complainant or complainants, or any one or more of them, may appeal from such decision of the state engineer in so far as it affects him or them, to the district court for the county or’ counties, or one of them, wherein the dispute arose, by giving notice of such appeal to the state engineer within thirty days after the making of such decision, and executing a bond to the people of the state of Colorado, with sufficient security, to be approved by the clerk of said court, conditioned for the payment of all costs that shall be adjudged against appellant. In the event that such appeal is taken, the state engineer' is required to file his decision and all papers in the case in his possession, with the clerk of said district court, and the appellant or appellants shall, within ten days after such notice shall have been served upon the state engineer, file a complaint as in other cases, in the district court, copy of which shall be served upon the state engineer, and answer shall be made as in other cases. Upon the failure of such com *162 plainant or complainants to appeal from such decision of the state engineer, or in the event that the decision of the state engineer be sustained by the district court, the state engineer shall have power to require immediate compliance with his orders, and upon failure of the owner or owners or representatives of such owners to comply therewith, the state engineer may refuse to permit any water to be diverted by any such ditch, canal, flume or pipe line until such owner or owners or representatives of such owners shall have complied with the orders of the state engineer and the provisions of this act.

The state engineer, acting upon the authority which the 1929 statute above referred to conferred upon him, in January, 1930, ordered the plaintiffs in the action now under review — ranchmen who own lands and ditches located in water district No. 11 in this state, situate in Chaffee county, Colorado, whose water priorities were decreed to them in the pertinent statutory adjudication proceedings — to purchase, install and maintain in then respectve ditches the self-registering automatic gage heig’ht recording’ instruments hereinabove described, and in such order specified the kind of instrument to be installed, and demanded of them compliance with the other requirements of the state engineer’s office as contemplated by the 1929 statute, such installation and maintenance thereof to be at' their expense. The statute, and the notices of the state engineer, required compliance with such order within thirty days after the notice was served. The defendants in error, asserting’ their financial inability to comply with the order, and denying the rig’ht of the state engineer to impose upon them, for the benefit of all water users in water division No. 2, and for the benefit of his office, burdens not shared by any other property owners and water users of the same class and in the same water division, failed and refused to comply with the state engineer’s orders and did not purchase or install such self-registering devices. No further action *163 on the part of the state engineer was taken in this matter until April 21, 1930, when he issued orders to the water commissioner of the water district to close the headgates of the ditches of designated owners of water priorities and to lock or nail the headgates by means of heavy nails so the same could not be readily opened, and to post on the headgates a notice to the effect that such headgates were closed by order of the state engineer under authority g’ranted to him by chapter 116 of the Session Laws of 1929 above referred to, for failure to install an automatic water and recording instrument in accordance with his previous order of January 20, 1930. All persons were warned not to molest the headgates or remove the notice. The water commissioner obeyed the orders of the state engineer and closed the ditches as directed, thereby cutting off the water supply which the defendants in error claim to be indispensable for the preservation of their crops and livestock.

The statute in question, purporting to authorize such action on the part of the state engineer and water officials, it is claimed by the water owners affected, makes no provision for a hearing by the state engineer or his determination in such matters, and in this case no hearing or determination that the water owners were in default in the premises was made.

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Bluebook (online)
19 P.2d 211, 92 Colo. 159, 1933 Colo. LEXIS 285, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hinderlider-v-everett-colo-1933.