Holbrook Irrigation District v. Fort Lyon Canal Co.

269 P. 574, 84 Colo. 174
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 14, 1928
DocketNo. 10,631.
StatusPublished
Cited by18 cases

This text of 269 P. 574 (Holbrook Irrigation District v. Fort Lyon Canal 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
Holbrook Irrigation District v. Fort Lyon Canal Co., 269 P. 574, 84 Colo. 174 (Colo. 1928).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Adams

delivered the opinion of the court.

This case is before us on review of a statutory adjudication of water rights in water district No. 17, irrigation division No. 2. The sole parties to the case in this court are the Holbrook Irrigation District and The Fort Lyon Canal Company, hereinafter respectively designated as the district or the Holbrook district, and the company. The district sued out a writ of error to review that part of the decree which awards certain priorities to the company. In doing this, the district followed our rule 25, and filed a petition for alignment of parties, in which it named itself and the company as owners that may be adversely affected by the proceedings in this court.

The structures owned by the district to which decrees were awarded in this proceeding are the Dye reservoir, and the Holbrook reservoir, or reservoir No. 1. These decrees are not contested. They are as follows: To Dye reservoir, by original construction, priority dated October 10,1903, for 600 second feet from the Arkansas river, limited to the amount and extent of 4,500 acre feet; to Dye reservoir, by enlargement, priority dated September 3, 1909, 400 second feet from Arkansas river, limited to 3,486 acre feet; to Holbrook or reservoir No. 1, by enlargement, priority dated September 15, 1909, 600 second feet from Arkansas river, limited to 3,196 acre feet.

The company carries water to its stockholders, and operates on a mammoth scale. It owns the Fort Lyon *177 canal, in the Arkansas river valley, for which canal it appears the company has a decree, obtained in another proceeding, for over 900 cubic feet of water per second of time. The Fort Lyon canal is not here involved, except by way of explanation. As early as 1900, the company felt the need of storage rights to supplement direct irrigation on the lands of its stockholders, and the system involved in this proceeding is the result. It was gradually added to from time to time, until it attained its present proportions. The structures owned by the company to which decrees were awarded in this proceeding-are for the irrigation of 100,000 acres of land. They consist of the Irrigating and Storage Canal, formerly known as the Storage Canal, the Horse creek reservoir, the Adobe creek reservoir, and the Thurston reservoir. The district is contesting such decrees. In this proceeding, the company obtained a decree for the irrigating- and storage canal, by original construction, with priority dated September 29, 1902, for 400 second feet of water from the Arkansas river for direct irrigation. In addition thereto, the following table will show the decrees awarded to the company’s structures for storage rights:

Horse Creek Reservoir,

By original construction.

The water from Horse creek comes through a feeder known as the supply canal. The water from the Arkansas river to above reservoir is conveyed from the river to the irrigating and storage canal, thence to the bed of Horse creek, thence to the supply canal, thence to Horse creek reservoir, and from thence to an outlet ditch for irrigation. Horse creek is often dry but is subject to floods.

*178 Horse Creek Reservoir,

By enlargement.

Adobe creek, like Horse creek, often has little if any water in it, bnt is subject to floods. Water from the Arkansas river • to Adobe creek reservoir, is carried through the irrigating and storage (canal. The outlet of this reservoir is a continuation of such canal, that is, as outlined, the reservoir not only contains storage water, but is also used as a conduit for a very small part of the canal.

Adobe Creek Reservoir,

*179 History of this proceeding. A brief account thereof is necessary to an understanding of our opinion. This adjudication was regularly initiated in 1911 on the petitions of other claimants to the use of water in water district No. 17. Hearings, pursuant to notice, were held before successive referees appointed by the trial court. The parties hereto and others filed their statements of claims, offered evidence, and had their claims allowed. On September 20, 1921, Atwood, the last referee, reported his findings and proposed decree to the trial court. ■ The district filed objections and exceptions to such findings and proposed award in favor of the structures of the company. After argument, the court on August 30, 1922, overruled all objections, approved the referee’s report and caused final decree to be entered. November 8, 1922, the district filed a motion for a rehearing and for a new trial of the issues involved. The court denied it, and the district thereupon proceeded to perfect its case for review in this court.

In March, 1923, the Holbrook district had the case docketed in this court on writ of error. It was duly prosecuted, abstract and brief were filed, and the case set for oral argument, but the order therefor was later vacated on motion of the company, over the objections of the district. This was done on a showing that while the case was pending here on writ of error, the trial court, under date of December 17, 1923, had ordered the August 30, 1922, decree reopened at the request of the company and other claimants, and had referred the matter back to the referee for additional evidence. To this the district objected and excepted. Additional evidence was taken concerning the claims of the company for its reservoirs, and no move was made in this court by either party for over four years.

After the additional evidence had been completed, the referee made another report of his findings and proposed decree as to the company’s reservoirs, in some particulars modifying the former decree. It was approved by the trial court, and on February 3,1927, a modified decree *180 as to such reservoirs was entered accordingly. This was also unsatisfactory to the district, and in November, 1927, it came back to this court with a supplemental record and assignments of error, covering the proceedings last had in the trial court. We are now reviewing one case on a record and supplemental record four years apart, and events that have taken place either in the field or in court during the past twenty-seven years.

The company’s first exhibit is its Exhibit A, which shows its present structures. It is entitled, “Map showing Canals and Reservoirs of the Fort Lyon System— Property of the Fort Lyon Canal Company — -Otero, Bent Kiowa and Prowers Counties Colorado * * * May, 1910, B. F. Powell, Chief Engineer.” The so-called' “reservoir canal,” for which a filing was made in the office of the state engineer, but which was never constructed, is not shown on this map. It is fully discussed hereafter.

The sketch herewith shows, in a general way, the locations of the company’s canals and reservoirs referred to in the opinion. The line of the survey for the “reservoir canal,” which was never built, is indicated by a dotted line. It was testified that the Fort Lyon Canal is approximately a little oyer one hundred miles long.

Between 1900 and 1910, the company filed eight maps and statements in the office of the state engineer. It *181

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Bluebook (online)
269 P. 574, 84 Colo. 174, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/holbrook-irrigation-district-v-fort-lyon-canal-co-colo-1928.