Pagosa Area Water & Sanitation District v. Trout Unlimited

170 P.3d 307, 2007 WL 3053321
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedOctober 22, 2007
Docket06SA338
StatusPublished
Cited by17 cases

This text of 170 P.3d 307 (Pagosa Area Water & Sanitation District v. Trout Unlimited) 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
Pagosa Area Water & Sanitation District v. Trout Unlimited, 170 P.3d 307, 2007 WL 3053321 (Colo. 2007).

Opinions

Justice HOBBS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Opposer-Appellant Trout Unlimited appeals a judgment and decree entered by the District Court for Water Division No. 7.1 The decree confirms for the Pagosa Area Water and Sanitation District ("PAWSD") and San Juan Water Conservancy District ("SJWCD") a conditional water storage right for a planning period extending to the year 2100 for 29,000 acre-feet of water, along with the right to fill and refill the reservoir continuously to achieve a total annual amount of stored water of 64,000 acre-feet, with the right of reuse, utilizing a 100 eubic foot per second ("cfs") diversion. The decree also confirms for the districts a direct flow 80 cfs diversion right independent from the storage right.

Trout Unlimited asserts that the districts did not carry their burden of proving their intent to make a non-speculative conditional appropriation. 'It argues that the water court should not have adjudicated conditional water rights in amounts premised on demands projected nearly one hundred years into the future. It also argues that the districts intend to sell some of the water to customers outside their boundaries, and that the districts do not have a specific plan and intent for the recreation, fish and wildlife, and aesthetic uses listed in the decree.

In response, the districts contend that the conditional decree does not violate Colorado's anti-speculation doctrine and that their one hundred year planning period, their population projections, their per capita water use figures, and their water demand projections for the one hundred year period are all reasonable.

We hold that a governmental water supply agency has the burden of demonstrating three elements in regard to its intent to make a non-speculative conditional appropriation of unappropriated water: (1) what is a reasonable water supply planning period; (2) what are the substantiated population projec[310]*310tions based on a normal rate of growth for that period; and (8) what amount of available unappropriated water is reasonably necessary to serve the reasonably anticipated needs of the governmental agency for the planning period, above its current water supply. In addition, it must show under the "can and will" test that it can and will put the conditionally appropriated water to beneficial use within a reasonable period of time. In the case before us, we determine that the water court has not made sufficient findings of fact enabling our review of its judgment and decree. Accordingly, we set aside the decree, reverse the judgment, and remand this case to the water court for further proceedings. The water court, in its discretion, may take additional evidence and argument as it deems appropriate on remand.

L.

A water and sanitation district,2 PAWSD operates a municipal water supply system that currently provides potable water to most of the existing Archuleta County population. It also supplies nearly all of the current commercial water demand of Archuleta County, and provides irrigation water for parks, athletic fields, and golf courses.

In 2005, PAWSD provided approximately 2,000 acre-feet of treated water to the 9,500 people in its service area, plus about 900 acre-feet of raw water for irrigation and related demand. PAWSD currently obtains water from four reservoirs with a total storage capacity of approximately 3,000 acre-feet, as well as two direct diversions from the San Juan River with a total rate of 6.9 efs.

Local voter approval established the SJWCD 3 in 1987. SJWCD aims to conserve, maximize, and utilize the water resources of the San Juan River and its tributaries for the benefit of property and residents within its boundaries. The SJWCD includes much of Archuleta County, including the Town of Pa-gosa Springs, and most of the PAWSD service area.

The districts have much in common. There is significant geographic overlap between the districts, but there are also places of exclusive coverage, such as an area known as Aspen Springs that only the SJWCD encompasses. The districts also share leadership, including board members who serve both districts and the PAWSD manager who is on the board of the SJWCD.

The districts have joint meetings to discuss water resource issues several times a year, and they are generally united on their approach to issues. There is an administrative services agreement between the districts, according to which they work together and share services such as accounting, office space, and administrative support. Their overlap is complemented by the fact that they operate under different governmental grants of authority because PAWSD is a water and sanitation district and SJWCD is a water conservancy district SJWCD defers to PAWSD in the arena of water and sewer service and does not plan to operate the facilities.

The SJWCD currently holds a conditional decree for water diversion from the San Juan River and storage of 6,800 acre-feet of water for the proposed Dry Gulch Reservoir, an off-stream reservoir to be constructed approximately one and one-half miles above the town of Pagosa Springs towards Wolf Creek Pass. In 2002, the water court issued to the SJWCD a diligence decree for 6,300 acre-feet of water, conditional, for domestic, municipal, industrial, recreation, and piscatorial purposes with an appropriation date of July 22, 1967. In 2004, the two districts passed a resolution to make an additional conditional appropriation for the Dry Gulch Reservoir. The districts' engineer, Steve Harris, had prepared and submitted a 2008 report to the board of directors of both districts that documented a water storage need of approximately 12,000 acre-feet in the Dry Gulch Reser[311]*311voir to meet the 2040 annual demand of the districts' users.

Harris's testimony at trial in the water court includes the following statement about the year 2040 Dry Gulch storage need and diversion rate to meet the districts' projected demand.

Okay. Also in this report [the 2008 Harris report] we looked at several different places to have direct diversions out of the river and several different options for reservoir storage. And out of that I conelud-ed or recommended that the Dry Gulch pump station would be the best location for the 18 and a half additional efs that's needed....
dock
Yes, There are eight storage alternatives: two sizes of Dry Gulch Reservoir, a 4,000 acre-foot and a Dry Gulch Reservoir at 12,000 acre-foot, Stevens Enlargement, the West Fork Reservoir, Turkey Creek Reservoir-that was an old reservoir studied by the town back in the '80s by Western Engineers-and the Martinez Reservoir, which is up in the neighborhood of Hatch-er, up in the Stollsteimer Basin, and the East Fork Reservoir, which at that time there were some water rights and that one's probably not an option any longer. And of those, either-Dry Gulch Reservoir was the least expensive at any size of those options.

As Harris and the districts' legal counsel turned to preparing the 2004 water court application in this case, Harris recommended that the districts apply for conditional water rights sufficient to fill the Dry Gulch Reservoir to the maximum possible size this off-channel location would provide.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
170 P.3d 307, 2007 WL 3053321, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pagosa-area-water-sanitation-district-v-trout-unlimited-colo-2007.