Nippel v. Forker

26 Colo. 74
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 15, 1899
DocketNo. 3752
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 26 Colo. 74 (Nippel v. Forker) 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
Nippel v. Forker, 26 Colo. 74 (Colo. 1899).

Opinion

Chief Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was decided in favor of the defendants below [75]*75(the appellees here) by the district court of Garfield county, and its judgment was affirmed by the court of appeals, whose opinion is reported in 9 Colorado Appeals, 106. The action relating to a freehold, in the sense of the term as employed in our court of appeals act, our jurisdiction has been properly invoked by the plaintiff below, the appellant in the court of appeals, to review the judgment of the latter tribunal.

The pleadings give a tolerably clear notion of the nature of the controversy, which, we are constrained to say, appellant’s original brief does not materially tend to elucidate. The conceded facts, and as found by the trial court, which the evidence supports, may thus be stated:

The land in controversy, originally part of the Ute Reservation, is situate in Spring valley, Garfield county, Colorado. This valley is about a mile wide lying hr a basin on the mesa near the town of Glenwood Springs. It is comparatively level, sloping to the westward, being drained at the west end by a deep ravine called Red canon. Near the lower end and above the head of the canon there is a slight elevation of the land, about eight feet high at the highest point.

William E. Forker made the first settlement in this valley in July, 1881, long before the government survey, filing upon a 160 acre tract as a pre-emption, and continuously occupied and cultivated it until November, 1888, when he sold his possessory rights to one Graham, who continued in the possession and cultivation of the tract for about four years, when he sold his possessory rights only to the appellee; George H. Forker, who continuously thereafter occupied and cultivated the tract until the present time. In November, 1884, E. P. Gibson, the deceased husband of the appellee Til-lie Gibson, settled in the valley and located under the preemption laws a quarter section of land adjoining that of Forker. At this time the land had not been surveyed, and it was not thrown open for filing until April, 1885, on which day William E. Forker and E. P. Gibson made their preemption declaratory statements for their respective claims, and surrounded both tracts with a good substantial fence, [76]*76and the same have remained thus inclosed from that time until the present.

In August, 1885, the survey of this township was suspended by order of the commissioner of the general land office on account of an erroneous survey, and it remained suspended for nearly eight years, or until June 29,1893; Gibson, Forlcer and the successors of their possessory rights in the mean time continuing the occupation and cultivation of their respective claims.

In October, 1887, Gibson died, and his widow continued to occupy what was formerly his pre-emption claim and cultivated the same, intending to file upon it as a pre-emption in her own right as soon as she could do so under the rules and regulations of the land department. This she did on the 29th of June, 1893, and on October 7, 1893, proved up on the land, and obtained the receiver’s receipt therefor. George H. Forker, being in the possession of his tract, filed on it August 7, 1893, and on February 12, 1894, proved up and got a receipt from the receiver of the land office. .

In order to draw off from these two tracts of land the water from melting snow and natural drainage that flowed, and stood, upon them, the occupants in 1882 jointly dug a ditch through the elevated portion at the lower end of the valley, by means of which such water was carried, ultimately, down the canon.

. In April, 1889, while these two tracts of enclosed land were in the possession and occupancy of the respective claimants, Edward Nippel, the plaintiff, began the construction of, or selected a site for, a reservoir upon public lands of the United States lying in the valley west of the land and ditch claimed by the defendants, for the purpose of impounding water to use for irrigating agricultural crops on lands owned, or to be acquired, by him lying farther down the valley. He prepared a statement and a map of this reservoir and its accompanying ditches, which he filed with the county clerk and recorder of Garfield county, and apparently proceeded as if seeking to acquire a priority of right to. the use of water for purposes of irrigation under the state statutes applicable thereto.

[77]*77The reservoir, as originally planned, was wholly upon the unoccupied public domain, and covered about four or five acres, and in no wise interfered with the defendants’ claims. In August, 1889, Nippel conceived the idea of enlarging his reservoir, and prepared and signed a notice not verified, but acknowledged before a notary public, claiming therein the right to use for reservoir purposes several thousand acres of the unsurveyed public domain in Spring valley, including the lands claimed by these defendants.

We do not understand from the record that, as a matter of fact, he enlarged his reservoir to cover the lands described, but it seems that he did spend some money in running a ditch to draw the water from it, but if he made a beneficial application of the water through his ditch, and if so, to what extent, the evidence in this record fails to show it.

After the passage of the act of congress of March 3, 1891, in regard to right of way for ditches, reservoirs, etc., on the public domain, Nippel attempted to perfect -his rights under its provisions, and, in pursuance of such intention, prepared a map and statement of his reservoir and ditches in which his claims are fully set out. Therein he declares that he makes the filing in order to get the benefit of the act of 1891, and he also claims the benefits of sections 2339 and 2340, Revised Statutes of the United States. He filed this map and statement in the local United States land office at Glenwood Springs on August 11, 1893, and the same was approved by the secretary of the interior October 18, 1894, subject, however, to the right of way of the Glenwood High Line Railroad, and all other valid existing rights.

At the time Nippel began the construction of his small reservoir, the defendants notified him not to interfere with their enclosed land, and until a short time before the beginning of this suit none of his acts caused any injury to it. Shortly before the beginning of this action, by enlarging, or raising the dam of his reservoir, the plaintiff caused the water from it. to be set back through their ditch and cover a number of acres of land claimed by these defendants, and they thereupon cut the [78]*78dam, and did other acts, so that the water thus backed up on their lands was allowed to pass off, and the plaintiff thereupon brought this action to enjoin the defendants from further like interference with his reservoir, which they threatened. In the separate answers were cross-complaints asking affirmative relief restraining the plaintiff from any acts in connection with his reservoir which would cause the water therefrom to cover defendants’ lands.

1. Yery much of the argument of both parties here has been upon propositions of law not germane to the real questions involved under the facts of the case.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
26 Colo. 74, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/nippel-v-forker-colo-1899.