LoPresti v. Brandenburg

267 P.3d 1211, 2011 Colo. LEXIS 932, 2011 WL 6147058
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 12, 2011
DocketNo. 10SA191
StatusPublished

This text of 267 P.3d 1211 (LoPresti v. Brandenburg) 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
LoPresti v. Brandenburg, 267 P.3d 1211, 2011 Colo. LEXIS 932, 2011 WL 6147058 (Colo. 2011).

Opinion

Justice EID

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This appeal addresses orders of the District Court for Water Division No. 2 regarding the administration of water on Alvarado Creek in Custer County. Applicants-Appellants Catherine Boyer LoPresti and Peter LoPresti ("LoPrestis") and Opposers-Appel-lants City of Fountain and Widefield Water and Sanitation District ("Fountain & Wide-field") claim the water court erred in voiding a rotational no-call agreement titled the "Beardsley Decree." Opposers-Appellees John Brandenburg, Douglas and Nancy Brandon, Dilley Family Trust, James D. Hood, Ronald Keyston, Arlie Riggs, Schneider Enterprises, Inc., Dr. Charles Schneider, and Mund Shaikly (collectively "Brandenburg") argue that the Beardsley Decree was an improperly noticed change in water rights, and as such the water court correctly declared it void.

We now hold that the Beardsley Decree is a valid rotational no-call agreement because, by its plain language, it does not sanction a change in water rights. Accordingly, we reverse the judgment of the water court.

I.

Alvarado Creek flows east from the Sangre de Cristo Mountains and splits into two distributary channels at a fork. The southern channel is called Alvarado Creek and the northern channel is called the North Fork of Alvarado Creek ("North Fork")1 The channels upstream and downstream of the fork are collectively known as the "stream system." The North Fork dries up before it can reach any other stream. By contrast, Alvarado Creek flows through tributaries into the Arkansas River. There is no separate source stream that joins either of the channels. The first appropriations of water on the stream system began in the 1870s. By the 1890s, appropriations totaled 46.63 cubic feet per second ("e.f.s."). Despite the cumulative appropriation of 46.63 e.f.s., the maximum flow rate rarely exceeds 12 c.f.s. in the spring, although the flow has allegedly reached 18 ef.s. at times, and the flow rate declines below 2-8 ef.s. by late summer. The stream system has always been adjudicated as though it were one stream with a common source of supply.2 To assist in administering water rights on the [1213]*1213stream system, the State's Water Division engineer installed, in 1999, a control structure at the fork where Alvarado Creek and the North Fork split. Each channel on the stream system downstream of the control structure is supplied with water from Alvarado Creek.

Four water rights along the stream system are at issue in this appeal: W.A. Bell No. 1 ("Bell No. 1"), Legard No. 5, Legard No. 11, and Legard No. 12 (Bell No. 1, Legard Nos. 5, 11, and 12, collectively the "Four Ditches"). These four water rights were adjudicated on March 12, 1896, in what was formerly known as Water District No. 18. All four water rights are located downstream of the control structure. For each decreed water right at issue, the source's name and the claimant's name have changed since the 1896 adjudication as described by Table 1.3

In 1908, George Beardsley (then owner of the Legard Nos. 5, 11, and 12), sued Allen Bates (then owner of the Bell No. 1), the Water Commissioner, and others to resolve a dispute over the use of his water rights. Beardsley alleged that Alvarado Creek and the North Fork were distinct stream systems.4 Bates denied this allegation, arguing that Alvarado Creek and the North Fork are one and the same streams and, therefore, the water rights on both streams should be administered in priority against each other as adjudicated in 1896. Prior to trial, the parties to the litigation offered a settlement agreement into evidence. The court reviewed the proposed settlement and entered a decree (the "Beardsley Decree" or "Decree") on December 16, 1908, which stated in relevant part:

rotation of use in point of time of the waters of said streams, as decreed to the [Four] ditches ... is [] lawful .... [AJH of the waters naturally flowing in said creeks ... to the extent that the same have been decreed in and by the decree of the District Court ... to the [Four] ditches, severally and respectively, shall ... be treated as waters of one stream; [the water] shall be ... rotated as follows: Beardsley shall have, as against [Bates], the right to the use of all of said waters, and he shall have the right to divert the same, and all thereof, from said streams, and any and all of them, and flow and conduct the same to such a point, or points, of use as he may desire the same for his lawful uses [and Bates shall have the same rights for alternating four day periods]. ...

The Beardsley Decree prevented litigation over water rights decreed to the Four Ditches for almost eighty-eight years. But long-[1214]*1214running disputes between water rights owners on the over-appropriated stream system finally spawned this litigation.

This appeal involves two water court cases. First, in Case No.1996CW228, the LoPrestis filed an application for a change of several water rights on the stream system including the Legard Nos. 5, 11, and 12. Several parties opposed the LoPrestis' application. On August 3, 2000, John Brandenburg filed a motion for partial summary judgment seeking to void the Beardsley Decree by arguing it was an improperly noticed change in water rights.5

On October 12, 2000, the water court granted the motion for partial summary judgment in a written order that declared the Beardsley Decree void ("2000 Order"). The 2000 Order found that the Beardsley Decree "constitutes judicial sanction of Beardsley and Bates switching water back and forth between streams to meet their own needs, with the consequent changes in points of diversion from those specified in their respective decrees. This was not in accord with [applicable law because} the notice provision of the then controlling statute [relating to a change in water rights] was not fulfilled."

The second case, 1999CWT77, filed by John Brandenburg, Arlie Riggs, Frank Dilley, and Ronald Keyston.6 against the State of Colorado ("State"), Division Engineers, the Water Commissioner, the LoPrestis, and others, sought to enjoin the control structure from being installed where Alvarado Creek splits at the fork on John Brandenburg's property. In his complaint, Brandenburg alleged (as Beardsley did in 1908) that an artificial channel had been constructed to connect Alvarado Creek and the North Fork.

Based on this allegation, Brandenburg argued that water rights holders on Alvarado Creek downstream of the control structure should not be able to call for the delivery of water that would naturally have flowed into the North Fork. Brandenburg took this position even though the 1896 adjudication of water rights on the stream system decreed priorities under the assumption that Alvarado Creek and the North Fork shared a common source of supply. Brandenburg lost at the injunction hearing, and the water court granted the State's request for a mandatory injunction to install the control structure on his property.

Because 1996CW228 and 1999CWT7 shared some common issues, the water court consolidated those issues in one trial to the court on March 14-15, 2001. After trial, the water court took the case on advisement. By an order dated December 5, 2001 ("2001 Order"), the water court determined that Alvarado Creek and the North Fork have a common source of supply based on the evidence presented at trial.7

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Bluebook (online)
267 P.3d 1211, 2011 Colo. LEXIS 932, 2011 WL 6147058, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lopresti-v-brandenburg-colo-2011.