Kendrick v. Twin Lakes Reservoir Co.

58 Colo. 281
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1914
DocketNo. 8045
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 58 Colo. 281 (Kendrick v. Twin Lakes Reservoir 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
Kendrick v. Twin Lakes Reservoir Co., 58 Colo. 281 (Colo. 1914).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Garrigues

delivered the opinion of the court:

1. This action involves the legality of a tax assessed and levied upon a reservoir system storing water for irrigation in Lake county, to be used upon lands in Crowley county. After the complaint, answer and replication were filed, the cause was submitted to the court by agreement, and the facts settled, in the main, by an agreed statement in open court, the right to maintain the action not being questioned.

The Twin Lakes Reservoir Company, defendant in error, is a mutual corporation organized under the laws of Colorado for the purpose of acquiring the site known as Twin Lakes in Lake county, for a reservoir, storing water therein for irrigation, and conducting it to where it is to be applied for the exclusive use of its stockholders in Otero, now Crowley county. Lake creek is the old outlet or natural water course connecting Lower Twin Lake with the Arkansas river. . In utilizing the reservoir, a solid dam was built across this channel from bank to bank, and a new canal about a mile long, called the outlet canal, constructed from the margin of lower Twin Lake to Lake Creek. The stored water is conducted through this canal from the Lower Lake into Lake creek, thence into the Arkansas river and down this stream through the counties of Lake, Chaffee, Fremont and Pueblo to the river headgate of the Colorado canal in Pueblo county, thence through the canal into Crowley county, where it is distributed pro rata to its stockholders who use it exclusively for irrigating their lands in that county. The corporation is purely a mutual reservoir company, in which the capital stock stands for and represents the consumer’s interest in the reservoir, canal and water rights. The benefit derived from owning the stock, is the exclusive use of the water it represents. It is not [283]*283a dividend corporation, a dividend has never been declared, and under its charter, never can be declared on its capital stock. All expenses and obligations of the company, including the cost of operation and maintenance of its works, are paid by annual assessments on the capital stock, pro rata, voted by the stockholders, and it has no other means or raising revenue.

In 1907, the assessor of Lake county added to the tax schedule turned in by the company, the following item: “A structure known as a dam and gate across the present outlet of lower lake,” and fixed and assessed the value thereof at $50,000.00; also “A dam across the lower outlet of lower lake,” and fixed and assessed the value thereof, at $5,000.00. These two items were added by the assessor to the tax schedule for the years 1908, 1909, 1910, 1911 and 1912. • The $5,000.00 item added by the assessor, is the dam across Lake creek, which is the old outlet or natural channel from Lower Twin Lake. The company constructed and maintained in the outlet canal, called the “present outlet,” steel headgates, 400 feet from the margin of the lake, resting on a concrete foundation, with stone and concrete retaining walls between the sides of the gates and the sides of the canal, which gates can be raised and lowered, and are used for the purpose of retaining, regulating, and drawing water from the reservoir. This structure constitutes the $50,000.00 item added by the assessor on “A structure known as a dam and gate across the present outlet.” These works are located on a tract of land comprising about 35 acres listed as lot 3 in the NE% SE%, 22-11-80, the assessed valuation of which, for 1907 was $147.00, the tax levied and assessed against it amounting to $4.62. The company paid all the taxes on all its property in Lake county for 1907 and all prior and subsequent years except the two items added to the schedules, and lot 3. [284]*284It tendered the tax on this lot, which tender the treasurer refused to accept unless it also paid the taxes on these disputed items.

The agreed statement of facts contains, inter alia, the following:

“That the plaintiff has each year, within the time provided by law, turned in to the county assessor of Lake county, its sworn tax schedule covering all of its property subject to taxation in said county and has paid the taxes thereon each year, except only that it has not included in such tax schedule the dam and the gates in the outlet canal, the taxability of whch is an issue in this case, but that the company in its various tax schedules included the land on which the earth dam is situate and the outlet gates located, that in and for the year 1907, the then county assessor of Lake county added to the tax schedule of plaintiff company that year, an item in the following language: ‘a structure known as a dam and gate across the present outlet of Lower Lake’ and fixed the value thereof at $50,000; and by adding a further item to plaintiff’s tax schedule for that year in the following language: ‘A dam across the lower outlet of Lower Lake’ and assessed and fixed the alleged value at $5,000; and that the county assessor of Lake county has each and every year thereafter down to the present time added similar items in substantially the same language, and placing the value at the same amount each year, that is $5,000 for the earth embankment and $50,000 for the gates in the outlet canal. And these two items áre the items of taxation that are involved in the litigation for the years 1907 to 1912 inclusive; that plaintiff made tender each year of the amount of tax on the sub-division or sub-divisions of land upon which the dam and gates are located, but without including in such tender the tax on the two items of dispute; and that such tender [285]*285was refused because of plaintiffs not including in the tender the tax on the two items so in dispute; so that plaintiff is not in default in the payment of any of its taxes except on those two items in dispute.”

These two items were not, and were not intended to be additional assessments upon lot 3, but were items added to the schedule by the assessor after they had been returned, in addition to the valuation of the land.

On the trial of the case, the county took the position that the tax levied on the dam and headgates was intended to be, and was in fact a mode or method pursued by the officials in assessing and levying a tax upon the reservoir system as a whole, and especially upon the impounded water and water rights therein, which were the principal assets of value, and the case is argued here upon that theory. Witness Grildea, who as assessor added the two items, when asked what property they were intended to cover, said:

“It would be my understanding in assessing that as a dam that that would include all that a reservoir means. At least to my mind a dam would not just mean that barrier or that gate that was erected to impound these waters. I would take it to mean that .reservoir with all those waters in it. * * * Those two items are the assessment of the reservoir, as I understand it.”

T. A. G-oldner, one of the assessors who also added the two items to the tax schedules, testified substantially to the same effect, saying that the added assessment and levy on the dam and gates was intended as a mode or manner of assessing the water rights and the right to impound water in the reservoir, which was the valuable asset.

The dam across Lake creek and the headgates mentioned as being in the present outlet canal have no utility or value other than holding and retaining the water [286]*286in the reservoir, and regulating its discharge therefrom.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
58 Colo. 281, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kendrick-v-twin-lakes-reservoir-co-colo-1914.