Northern Colorado Water Ass'n v. Three Peaks Water, Inc.

859 P.2d 836, 17 Brief Times Rptr. 1425, 1993 Colo. LEXIS 772, 1993 WL 376561
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 27, 1993
DocketNo. 92SA175
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 859 P.2d 836 (Northern Colorado Water Ass'n v. Three Peaks Water, Inc.) 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
Northern Colorado Water Ass'n v. Three Peaks Water, Inc., 859 P.2d 836, 17 Brief Times Rptr. 1425, 1993 Colo. LEXIS 772, 1993 WL 376561 (Colo. 1993).

Opinion

Justice LOHR delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Northern Colorado Water Association (NCWA) brings this appeal, challenging those portions of a judgment and decree entered by the District Court for Water Division 1 (water court) under which a conditional water right decreed to a structure known as Well No. 8 was made absolute for municipal purposes and diligence was found in the development of that same conditional water right for irrigation purposes.1 NCWA asserts that in determining [839]*839that the conditional water right decreed to Well No. 8 had been developed with reasonable diligence and had been applied to beneficial use for municipal purposes, the water court improperly attributed to Well No. 8 the production of water from a different well and that, consequently, the conclusions underlying the court’s judgment and decree cannot stand. We agree that the court erred and therefore reverse its judgment insofar as it pertains to Well No. 8 and remand the case for further proceedings so that the court can determine whether reasonable diligence was exercised in developing the conditional water right for irrigation purposes.

I

This case arises out of an application that a well owner filed with the water court in December 1988 for a determination that conditional water rights previously decreed to three of eleven wells that it owned had become absolute, or in the alternative, for a determination of reasonable diligence in the development of those conditional water rights. The wells involved in this case have been transferred several times, both before and during the water court proceedings, and are presently owned by Three Peaks Water, Inc. (Three Peaks), which was substituted as the applicant in this case by court order prior to trial. We begin by describing the somewhat complicated history of the wells, as an understanding of that history is necessary to an analysis of the issues before us.

On December 26, 1980, the water court decreed underground water rights to eleven wells, known as the Busteed Wells Nos. 1-11, which are located in Larimer County, Colorado, near the Wyoming border. The wells are in the South Platte River drainage system and were decreed rights to withdraw tributary groundwater for either irrigation or stockwatering purposes, as specified in the decree. Eight of the eleven wells were decreed absolute water rights, whereas the remaining three, which are the subjects of the application now before us, were decreed conditional water rights.2

The specific well at issue here, Well No. 8, is a hand-dug, uncased well that has never produced water. Well No. 8 was decreed a conditional water right to produce 0.268 cubic feet per second (cfs) of water for irrigation purposes. The right had a February 21, 1951, date of appropriation and was to be developed for the irrigation of seventy-eight acres of surrounding land area.3 The water rights decreed to [840]*840three other Busteed Wells located near Well No. 8 are also relevant to this appeal. The first of these wells, Well No. 5, was decreed an absolute water right in the amount of .0446 cfs for stockwatering purposes. In addition, Well Nos. 2 and 6 were decreed absolute water rights for irrigation purposes.4 The central issue raised in this appeal is whether water that was produced from Well No. 5 and subsequently applied to beneficial use for municipal purposes can be attributed to Well No. 8 so as to make the conditional water right of Well No. 8 absolute for such purposes. Resolution of this issue depends in part on the effect of several events, which we describe below, on the rights originally recognized in the 1980 decree.

In 1962, NCWA was formed to supply potable water to rural residents in northern Colorado for domestic and municipal purposes. Although NCWA had two wells of its own in the same area as the Busteed Wells, it sought an additional source of water to meet the demands of its customers. It therefore leased Well No. 5 from a predecessor to Three Peaks and began delivering water produced from that well to its customers for municipal purposes.5 Because neither Well No. 5 nor any other of the Busteed Wells had been decreed water rights for municipal purposes, the State of Colorado brought administrative proceedings in the early part of 1981 challenging this use of the water and eventually instituted an action in the water court, seeking judicial determination of the well owners’ diligence in bringing the wells into compliance with applicable rules and regulations. This action resulted in a March 19, 1982, order which allowed the eleven Busteed Wells to continue to operate and also allowed water produced from Well No. 5 to be used for municipal purposes. This municipal use was subject to certain conditions, however, one of which provided that “Well No. 5 may pump no more than 300 acre-feet in any one year.”

On June 30, 1981, during the pendency of the State’s action, an application for change of water rights was filed in the water court for the eleven Busteed Wells, in part to provide for the municipal use of the water that was occurring under NCWA’s lease. The application was subsequently withdrawn for seven of the wells but continued to be prosecuted for Wells No. 2, 5, 6, and 8. The specific changes sought in that case included a change in the type of use for Wells 2, 6, and 8 from irrigation to irrigation and year-around municipal use, a designation of Well No. 5 as an alternate point of diversion for Wells 2, 6, and 8, and a designation of Wells 2, 6, and 8 as alternate points of diversion for each other. As will be shown to be critical to resolution of the case now before us, the court did not enter a decree in the change of water rights proceeding until December 29, 1988. The provisions contained in that decree are detailed below.

The application for change of water rights was considered first by the Water Referee for Water Division No. 1, who held a hearing on April 30, 1984, and issued a [841]*841ruling on April 14, 1988. In that ruling, the referee determined that approval of the changes requested in the application would not materially injure others entitled to use water under water rights or decreed conditional water rights so long as the wells were operated in compliance with certain conditions. In particular, the referee determined that the changes would not result in injury if none of the water rights was used for more than one decreed purpose during any given year, if production from Well No. 5 was limited to 300 acre-feet per year and to a rate of 1.444 cfs, if the municipal use of water from Wells 2, 6, and 8 was limited to certain specified amounts representing the average annual consumptive use of water for irrigation purposes historically associated with Wells 2 and 6 and contemplated for Well No. 8, and if Well No. 5 was used as an alternate point of diversion only as long as NCWA’s lease of that well remained in effect. The referee’s ruling also required the owner of the Bus-teed Wells to install and maintain recording devices as required by the division engineer, to institute an accounting system for its water diversions, and to provide the division engineer annually with notice of the use it intended to make of the water rights for Wells 2, 5, 6, and 8 in each upcoming year. The water court confirmed the referee’s determinations and, on December 29, 1988, incorporated the ruling into a judgment and decree.

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859 P.2d 836, 17 Brief Times Rptr. 1425, 1993 Colo. LEXIS 772, 1993 WL 376561, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/northern-colorado-water-assn-v-three-peaks-water-inc-colo-1993.