In the Matter of Water Rights as Applied for by Meridian Service Metropolitan District: Meridian Service Metropolitan District v. Ground Water Commission

2015 CO 64
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 16, 2015
Docket14SA302
StatusPublished

This text of 2015 CO 64 (In the Matter of Water Rights as Applied for by Meridian Service Metropolitan District: Meridian Service Metropolitan District v. Ground Water Commission) 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
In the Matter of Water Rights as Applied for by Meridian Service Metropolitan District: Meridian Service Metropolitan District v. Ground Water Commission, 2015 CO 64 (Colo. 2015).

Opinion

The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado 
2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203


2015 CO 64


Supreme Court Case No. 14SA302 
Appeal from the District Court 
El Paso County District Court Case No. 13CV31263
Honorable Larry Edward Schwartz, Judge
Ground Water Commission, Case No. 12GW10


In the Matter of Water Rights as applied for by Meridian Service Metropolitan District

PlaintiffAppellant: 
Meridian Service Metropolitan District,

v.

DefendantsAppellees:
Ground Water Commission, a/k/a Colorado Ground Water Commission; Dick Wolfe in his
capacity as the Colorado State Engineer and as ex officio Executive Director of the Ground
Water Commission; Steven J. Witte in his capacity as Engineer for Water Division 2; Upper
Black Squirrel Creek Ground Water Management District; Edna Farmer; Dan Farmer; Jerry
Farmer; Joe Farmer, Jr.; Teresa Farmer; Farmer Pipeline Company, LLC; Cherokee
Metropolitan District; Paint Brush Hills Metropolitan District; Woodmen Hills Metropolitan
District; Wayne E. Booker; Frances Booker; and Staff of the Ground Water Commission.


Order Affirmed 
en banc

November 16, 2015


Attorneys for PlaintiffAppellant:
W.B. Schroeder Law Office, LLC
Wayne B. Schroeder

Boulder, Colorado

Attorneys for DefendantAppellee Ground Water Commission:
Cynthia H. Coffman, Attorney General
Susan Schneider, First Assistant Attorney General
Derek L. Turner, Assistant Attorney General
Patrick E. Kowaleski, Senior Assistant Attorney General

Denver, Colorado

Attorneys for DefendantAppellee Upper Black Squirrel Creek Ground Water Management District:
Trout, Raley, Montaño, Witwer & Freeman, P.C.
Lisa M. Thompson
Douglas M. Sinor
April H. Killcreas

Attorneys for DefendantsAppellees Edna Farmer; Dan Farmer; Jerry Farmer; Joe Farmer, Jr.; Teresa Farmer; and the Farmer Pipeline Company, LLC:
MacDougall & Woldridge, P.C.
Julianne Woldridge

Colorado Springs, Colorado

No appearance by or on behalf of: Dick Wolfe in his capacity as the Colorado State Engineer and as ex officio Executive Director of the Ground Water Commission; Steven J. Witte in his capacity as Engineer for Water Division 2; Cherokee Metropolitan District; Paint Brush Hills Metropolitan District; Woodmen Hills Metropolitan District; Wayne E. Booker; and Frances Booker.

JUSTICE GABRIEL delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1         In this case, plaintiff–appellant Meridian Service Metropolitan District (Meridian) appeals the district court’s order finding that Meridian sought to appropriate designated ground water that was subject to the jurisdiction of the Colorado Ground Water Commission (the Commission). Meridian principally asks us to decide whether storm runoff may be classified as “designated ground water” subject to administration and adjudication by the Commission, or whether such water is in or tributary to a natural stream, vesting jurisdiction in the local water court pursuant to the Water Right Determination and Administration Act of 1969, §§ 37-92-101 to -602, C.R.S. (2015) (the 1969 Act). We conclude that because this case presented a question as to whether the water at issue met the statutory definition of “designated ground water,” the Commission had jurisdiction to make the initial determination of the issue presented. We further conclude that the Commission, and the district court on de novo review, correctly found that a portion of the water at issue met the statutory definition of “designated ground water” and was therefore subject to administration by the Commission.

¶2         Meridian also challenges the district court’s order on claim preclusion, issue preclusion, stare decisis, and public policy grounds, and it asserts that the Colorado Groundwater Management Act, §§ 37-90-101 to -143, C.R.S. (2015) (the Management Act), is unconstitutional. We conclude that these arguments are not supported by the record or applicable law.

¶3         Accordingly, we affirm.

I. Facts and Procedural History

¶4         Throughout 1967 and into 1968, the Commission held hearings in the matter of the determination of a designated ground water basin in the Upper Black Squirrel Creek Basin (the Basin). Objectors raised numerous challenges to the proposed designation, including that the ground water in the proposed basin did not meet the statutory definition of “designated ground water.”

¶5         On May 1, 1968, the Commission entered its findings of fact, conclusions of law, and final order (the 1968 Order). As pertinent here, the Commission found that although “at some remote prehistoric time the channel of Black Squirrel Creek continued southerly to the Arkansas River,” during past geologic ages, wind and alluvial deposits had created a dam on the lower part of the channel, and this dam had created “a sizeable underground reservoir” in the upper and lower reaches of the stream. As a result, “virtually all” of the water in the basin was underground water, and water flowed on the surface only “during and immediately following” periods of heavy rainfall from summer storms. Because this water was “in an area not adjacent to a continuously flowing natural stream,” the Commission concluded that the water met the statutory definition of “designated ground water” and that the Basin therefore qualified as a designated ground water basin.

¶6         In 2011, Meridian filed an application in the District Court for Water Division No. 2 (the water court) for surface water rights in an “[u]nnamed tributary to the Upper Black Squirrel Creek.” Specifically, it claimed conditional rights to divert five cubic feet per second at four locations and to store 169 acre-feet of this water.

¶7         Several opposers challenged the water court’s jurisdiction over the matter. They claimed that the water that Meridian sought to appropriate, which they characterized as “storm run-off water that is a direct source of recharge” for the Basin, was designated ground water subject to administration by the Commission, rather than by the water court. The water court found that the opposers had “raised a valid issue” as to whether Meridian sought to appropriate water within the Basin that the Commission was required to allocate and administer. The court thus stayed its proceedings until the necessary proceedings before the Commission had been completed.

¶8         Meridian then initiated proceedings before the Commission, which referred the matter to a hearing officer.

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