Nesbitt v. Jones

344 P.2d 949, 140 Colo. 412, 1959 Colo. LEXIS 365
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 13, 1959
Docket18344
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 344 P.2d 949 (Nesbitt v. Jones) 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
Nesbitt v. Jones, 344 P.2d 949, 140 Colo. 412, 1959 Colo. LEXIS 365 (Colo. 1959).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Doyle

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff in error was plaintiff in the district court in an action in which he sought to quiet title to certain lands and water rights in Larimer County, Colorado. He named five defendants, but only one of these, the Pleasant Valley and Lake Canal Company, appeared and defended. That company is a mutual ditch company incorporated' in 1879. It holds decreed' priorities from the Cache La Poudre River aggregating 57.15 cubic feet per second of time which are dated as early as 1861.

At ,the .trial the parties stipulated that the only con *414 troverted issue was that of title to a certain undivided one-fourth interest in 300 inches of water granted by an instrument dated July 28, 1879, and duly recorded in Larimer County. Trial was to the court and the findings and judgment were in favor of the defendant. The court ordered dismissal of the plaintiffs complaint and held that the defendant had acquired title to the water in question by adverse possession. Plaintiff seeks review of this judgment.

There are two distinct rights which were conveyed by the Canal Company to Post. The first of these was by agreement dated July 28, 1879, in which the Canal Company agreed that four people, Swan, Post, Harrington and Blackstock, were to “have and retain the right to take from said parties (sic) Ditch not exceeding three hundred inches of water at any and all times when said parties of first part shall so desire to do, said water to be used on the following land * * * ”

The plaintiff is the successor in interest to Post, and he claims a preferred 75 inches of water upon the basis of this agreement. The other right granted Post 150 inches of water and is not directly in dispute. This right was exchanged in 1928 for 5 shares in the Canal Company and that exchange transaction, to the extent that it bears on title to the 75 inches of water, will be discussed in detail hereinafter. This was acquired by Post individually as a result of a conveyance dated April 13, 1880, to him from the Canal Company and it seemingly resulted from work and labor performed by Post in the construction of ditches for the purpose of utilizing water from the Cache La Poudre River. The consideration for this was payment of $100.00 and the release by Post to the Canal Company dated July 26, 1879, which stated:

“I do hereby sell, give, grant and release unto the said Pleasant Valley and Lake Canal Company and their successors and assigns all the right, title and interest which I now have in and to any share, shares, privilege or surplus credit for and on account of any work or labor per *415 formed on account of the same in the irrigating ditch known and described as the Pleasant Valley Irrigating Ditch Company, and hereby give and grant to the said Pleasant Valley and Lake Canal Company the right to enter upon and enlarge the said ditch where the same crosses my land, hereby granting a perpetual right of way fifty feet wide for said ditch over and through my said land where said Pleasant Valley Irrigating ditch crosses my land.”

On the death of William M. Post his farm was inherited by his wife, Emmeline E. Post, and on her death in 1925 her daughter, Lillian E. Griffin, was the successor owner. Mrs. Griffin was declared a mental incompetent on February 24, 1926, and she continued in this status until her death in 1952. Harvey Griffin was the husband of Lillian E. Griffin and was Conservator of her estate and upon her death became Administrator.

On April 18, 1953, Harvey Griffin executed an Administrator’s Deed conveying the farm to the plaintiff. As originally executed, the deed failed to mention water rights. However, a correction deed which was also dated April 18, 1953, provided:

* * * together with all water and water rights, ditches and ditch rights, used in connection therewith or appurtenant thereto, and especially five shares of the capital stock of the Pleasant Valley and Lake Canal Company.”

Evidence with respect to disposition of the water here in issue is meager. The only document indicating recognition by the Canal Company of this right in Post is an entry in the minute book of the company for December 1, 1888, relating to assessment against holders of water deeds; it mentions an assessment against Post’s right to 150 inches, that which was granted in 1881, and in addition, it specifies that the 300 inches held by Blackstock, Post, Harrington and Swan is excepted from the assessment.

Harvey Griffin was shown to have managed the farm *416 after 1924, and he testified that in his belief' the 150 inches of water was the only water right that ■ Post owned. The witnesses for the company were unable to supply information as to whether the right to the 75 inches of water had been exercised prior to 1924. In the year 1928, Griffin, as Conservator for his wife Lillian, conveyed back to the company the 150-inch right and in return received $3500.00, together with five shares in the Canal Company. The language of this grant is significant and it reads as follows:

“The water right appurtenant to the farm * * * which said water right consists of a perpetual right to use and enjoy 150 cubic inches of water per second of time for the irrigation of said premises of and from the canal of The Pleasant Valley and Lake Canal Company as and when water is available therefor under the decreed priorities of said company.”

Griffin testified that prior to this exchange the farm had ample water derived from the 150-inch right, but afterwards there was often a shortage of water and that the tenant complained of this shortage. It can be concluded from this that during the period that Griffin managed the farm for the benefit of his wife, his assumption was that the only right the estate owned was the 150 inches or the five shares in the Canal Company. He said that he had never heard of any other right. The findings of the trial court are in part as follows:

“The evidence shows that plaintiff’s predecessors in title never claimed such additional water rights. This appears from the evidence although at times in the 26 years after the 1928 deed they needed more water and the tenant was clamoring for more. The stockholders of the Company, certainly for more than 26 years, were exclusively and continuously getting that water. The presumption follows that all right to additional water than that on the five shares of stock had been relinquished, either back to the Company, or in the deed to the City *417 of Greeley in 1905, or by long lapse from non use as an appurtenance to the land in question.

“Neither in the Lillian Griffin administrators deed to the plaintiff, nor the Correction deed from her heirs is there included, in reciting the water rights sold, an un-' divided one-fourth (%) in 300 inches or a 175 inches of water additional to the five shares of stock. A search to find it enumerated there is in vain.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
344 P.2d 949, 140 Colo. 412, 1959 Colo. LEXIS 365, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nesbitt-v-jones-colo-1959.