Kountz v. Olson

29 P.2d 627, 94 Colo. 186, 1934 Colo. LEXIS 380
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 22, 1934
DocketNo. 13,045. No. 13,046.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 29 P.2d 627 (Kountz v. Olson) 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
Kountz v. Olson, 29 P.2d 627, 94 Colo. 186, 1934 Colo. LEXIS 380 (Colo. 1934).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Holland

delivered the opinion of the court.

The parties appear herein in the same order as in the court below.

Case No. 13045 was consolidated with case No. 13046. The two actions were tried together and are so considered here. They involve ditch and water rights under an early decree on the Huerfano river in Huerfano county, Colorado.

Plaintiffs in case No. 13045 are the owners of 120 acres of land particularly described in their complaint, and plaintiff in case No. 13046 is the owner of 200 acres, all of which land was formerly operated as a unit by one Thomas Lamb. This land lies to the east of the land owned by defendants herein. All of the land, of both plaintiffs and defendants, is or can be served by Martin Ditch No. 4 from the Huerfano river, which runs from west to east, with headgate on the land of one of the defendants.

*188 The district court of Huerfano county in 1889 adjudicated the priorities of right to the use of water in this ditch by what is referred to herein as the Read decree. This decree awarded 1.40 cubic feet per second of time by priority No. 4, sufficient to irrigate 70 acres of land, as of date July 16, 1862, and 1.60 cubic feet per second of time by priority No. 11, sufficient to irrigate 80 acres of land, as of date April 1, 1866, making- a total of 3 cubic feet of water per second of time sufficient to irrigate 150 acres. The claimants named in this decree were Allan McLean, E. G. Miller, Ramon Trujillo, David Manchego, Juan Baca, Encarnación Martinez, Carpió Archuletta, Francisco Josephy, Juan Garcia and Delores Luna. The plaintiffs claim through Francisco Josephy, Carpió Archuletta and Delores Luna.

After the ownership by Thomas Lamb of what is now plaintiffs’ land, the various tracts have been owned by different persons, down to the present plaintiffs, and the water applied severally to the different tracts, but since the ownership by the plaintiffs, the water has been applied as a unit on all of the tracts.

Plaintiffs, by their complaint, make claim under three causes of action: (1) General ownership; (2) ownership by possession and adverse use for more than 30 years; (3) an adverse use under claim and color of title under the seven-year statute of limitations.

Plaintiffs contend that each of the 10 original appropriated of water was understood for many years to be an owner of an equal one-tenth interest in the ditch and priorities of right to the use of water by an agreement between themselves, and that they were actually appropriated and users, and that by contract, if not originally, they became the owners of an equal interest.

Plaintiffs further contend that they and their predecessors have claimed the right to use and have used said water in a continuous, open, notorious and adverse manner for more than 30 years, and have so used said water on the lands now owned by plaintiffs and that for more *189 than 10 years, plaintiffs and their predecessors have paid taxes on some of this land as irrigated land which was irrigated by means of water decreed under the aforesaid priorities, and because of the use thereof.

Plaintiffs also allege that by decree of the district court of Huerfano county entered March 14, 1914, in the matter of Pedro A. Gomez v. ¥m. Miller and Abel Cordora, it was determined that Pedro Gomez was the owner of an undivided one-half interest in said ditch and water rights and of its priorities to the use of water, and that plaintiffs are successors in interest to Pedro A. Gomez, and that ¥m. Miller is the same ¥m. Miller who is now one of the defendants herein; that Miguel A. Pino, another defendant herein, is successor in interest to Abel Cordora.

Defendants filed their answer generally denying plaintiffs ’ alleged interest in and to the ditch, right of way, water and water rights, and alleged that each of the defendants claims a right, title, and interest therein prior, superior and paramount to the alleged interest of plaintiffs and for further answer, generally alleged that plaintiffs have no right, title or interest in and to Martin Ditch No. 4, and alleged that any interference claimed by plaintiffs to have been made by defendant Fowler with the use of water from the Martin Ditch, has not been an interference with any of plaintiffs’ rights because plaintiffs had no rights; alleged that Martin Ditch No. 2 is an enlargement of, and ah extension beyond the terminus of, Martin Ditch No. 4, and is designed, among other things, to convey water to the lands claimed by plaintiffs; that by the adjudication of water rights by a decree of the district court dated February 23, 1898, known as the Killian decree, Martin Ditch No. 2 was awarded an appropriation as priority No. 143, as of date July 16, 1889, of one cubic foot of water per second of time for 50 acres of land; that the defendants, other than J. T. Thorne, are the absolute owners of Martin Ditch No. 4, and the priorities therefor, numbered 4 and *190 11, and pray by their answer that the plaintiffs be forever enjoined and barred from asserting any claim in or to Martin Ditch No. 4 or priorities numbered 4 and 11.

The terms of the Read decree indicate that the three predecessors in interest of plaintiffs herein, being three of the ten claimants named in the decree, actually appropriated three-tenths of the water awarded by the decree. This was so understood among them and so considered, and by actual oral contract the ten claimants fixed the amount that the ten original appropriators and claimants were each entitled to have as an equal share or one-tenth interest each. This is shown by the undisputed testimony of Bucci and Lamb. For a period of more than 30 years, at least from the time of the ownership of these lands by Thomas Lamb, the owners of the lands demanded and used the water, and at all times, as is clearly shown by the evidence, they did their proportionate share of the maintenance of the ditch, and this maintenance was apportioned according to their ownership in the ditch and water rights. It appears from the undisputed evidence, that for the last ten years, plaintiffs and their predecessors under color of title have paid taxes on the lands here in question as irrigated lands.

According to the well settled rule, the Read decree determined only the amount of water to which the Martin Ditch was entitled; however in that decree certain parties, among whom were the predecessors in interest of the plaintiffs, were named as claimants. This, in connection with other facts, is persuasive that the parties so named in the proceeding, which ripened into a decree, had an interest in, and title to, the water involved. It was the appropriation of these claimants as consumers, that fixed the amount of water allotted to the ditch, and the relative rights determined. In the case before us, the claimants or consumers named, made the diversion themselves, thereby completing the appropria *191 tion after a showing that the water was applied in a reasonable time to a beneficial nse.

As shown before, Lnna, Arelruletta and Josephy, predecessors in interest of the plaintiffs herein, were named as claimants in the Bead decree.

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Bluebook (online)
29 P.2d 627, 94 Colo. 186, 1934 Colo. LEXIS 380, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kountz-v-olson-colo-1934.