O'Neil v. Fort Lyon Canal Co.

39 Colo. 487
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 15, 1907
DocketNo. 4804
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 39 Colo. 487 (O'Neil v. Fort Lyon Canal Co.) 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
O'Neil v. Fort Lyon Canal Co., 39 Colo. 487 (Colo. 1907).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Caswell

delivered the opinion of the court:

During the years 1884 to 1886, both inclusive, a corporation known as The Arkansas Biver Land, [490]*490Town & Canal Company constructed an irrigating canal from the headgate thereof, which is situate in Otero county on the Arkansas river (from which the canal is supplied), to Horse creek, a distance of about thirteen miles. The headgate of said canal was about 60 ft. in width, but the canal as constructed between the points mentioned was about 12 ft. in width on the bottom, and its capacity was 164.64 cubic ft. of water per second of time-, being sufficient to irrigate about 12,000 acres of land lying under it and west of Horse creek.

The record shows that at the time of the construction of the headgate and a portion of the ditch as described, a larger canal was contemplated, which was subsequently constructed through the counties of Bent and Prowers- to its present terminus, a distance of about 113 miles from the headgate.

On March 1, 1887, The Arkansas River Land, Reservoir & Canal Company succeeded to' the property, rights and franchises of the town and canal company aforesaid, and went into possession of the canal and enlarged the same from its headgate to Horse creek, and extended the same along the established right of way to its present terminus. It would seem that later the canal became the property of The La Junta & Lamar Canal Company, and subsequently became the property of the defendant, The Fort Lyon Canal Company, but the title as vested in the La Junta company need not be considered in the determination of this controversy. At the June term of the district court, 1895, a decree in adjudication proceedings was entered, based upon certain findings. From the findings and decree it appears that The Arkansas River Land, Reservoir. & Canal Company was the owner of the canal bearing its own name at the time of the original adjudication; that The Arkansas River Land, Town & Canal Company [491]*491had owned the canal and constructed it as far as Horse creek, which was the furthest point to which the canal was extended in 1884; that it was constructed over the same line of canal as the Reservoir & Canal Company’s canal; that “the said canal so constructed was constructed with due diligence, and the amount of 164.64 cubic ft. of water per second of timé was applied to the irrigation of lands from the canal as then and afterwards constructed within a reasonable time”; that the Reservoir & Canal Company, by lawful deeds of conveyance, became the owner of all the canal, headgates, right, title and interest, rights of priority inchoate and acquired, and all the franchises of the Town & Canal Company on the 1st day of March, 1887, and began the extension of said canal, which in this finding and the decree herein is known as The Arkansas River Land, Reservoir & Canal Company’s canal, and excavated the said canal from the headgate to a capacity equal to that of the headgate, and extended the said canal with diminishing-capacity according to the amount of water drawn off for irrigation to the length of 113 miles, and completed the entire extension before the spring of 1889; that the said extension so begun on the first day of March, 1887, was substantially the same enterprise begun and partially executed in 1884, and that there was little irrigation in the years 1884, 1885 and 1886, and that there were financial, difficulties in the way of immediate extension of the said canal.

It was decreed that The Arkansas River Land,. Reservoir & Canal Company have priority No. 3 for 164.64 cubic ft. of water per second of time, on account of appropriation made on the 15th day of April, 1884, and that it have priority No. 5 in addition to the above for the amount of 597.16 cubic ft. [492]*492of water per second of time, on account of the appropriation made on the 1st day of March, 1887. •

The appellants herein, who were plaintiffs below, brought suit against The Fort Lyon Canal Company, a corporation, and Frank Ereyball and John C. Davidson, and “other users of water and water rights from the Fort Lyon canal east of Horse creek, who are similarly situated as to the use of water from the Fort Lyon canal.” The plaintiffs claim that priority No. 3, as of March, 1884, was decreed to and belongs to the lands west of Horse creek; that the plaintiffs and others living on the lands west of Horse creek are entitled to the benefit of such priority No. 3, and that the waters flowing into the ditch under and by virtue of priority No. 3. should not be pro-rated with the consumers residing on lands east of Horse creek. That should it become .necessary because of the scarcity of water to pro-rate at all, then such pro-rating of the waters flowing into the ditch by virtue of priority No. 3 should be confined to. the settlers and consumers on the lands west of Horse creek. Appellants further contend that for a long period of years the consumers west of Horse creek had the full benefit of all the waters flowing into the ditch by virtue of said priority No. 3.

We do not think the contention of appellants can be sustained under the law or under the facts presented in this case. It has frequently been decided in this state that the decrees under the adjudication statutes determine the priorities and the amount of appropriations to the several ditches in the irrigation districts in which such decrees are entered, and are not intended to designate the person or persons entitled to the use of water thus appropriated.—Ind. Ditch Co. v. Agri. Ditch Co., 22 Colo. 513-524; Oppenlander v. Left Hand Ditch Co., 18 Colo. 142; [493]*493Combs v. Farmers’ High Line Canal & Res, Co., 38 Colo. 420. As aptly stated in the latter case: “While no ascertainment is made as to who are consumers under any particular ditch, necessarily the relative rights of ditch owners and all consumers are determined.” This rule, however, is intended to govern contentions between different ditch owners taking water from the same stream, and does not determine the rights of the consumers in a ditch as between themselves, nor determine their relative priorities, and the decree in this case determines only the priority and the amount of appropriation to the ditch as such, and does not attempt to determine the rights of the consumers excepting incidentally as against other ditch owners; neither does it attempt to attach the priorities to any particular lands. “While it is true that the priority decree is awarded to the ditch or ditch company which carries the water, yet in reality the thing decreed is a completed appropriation. Such appropriation consists of two acts: a diversion of water from .a natural stream, and the successful application thereof, within a reasonable time thereafter, to some beneficial use. Where the consumer of water makes the diversion himself, a completed appropriation is made by the same person; but where the diversion is made by a carrier, and the successful application is made by another who is a consumer, a completed appropriation is the result of their combined acts.”—Combs v. Canal & Res. Co., supra. It is, of course, necessary in making proof to show that water has been actually applied to lands, but it is nevertheless the act of the consumer in beneficially applying it that completes the appropriation, and his right to a prior use of water cannot rest upon his purchase of any particular tract of land and the use of water thereon to the [494]

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Bluebook (online)
39 Colo. 487, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/oneil-v-fort-lyon-canal-co-colo-1907.