Pagosa Area Water & Sanitation District v. Trout Unlimited

219 P.3d 774, 2009 WL 3530731
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 23, 2009
Docket08SA354
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 219 P.3d 774 (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, 219 P.3d 774, 2009 WL 3530731 (Colo. 2009).

Opinion

Justice HOBBS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

In this appeal, we review the conditional water right judgment and decree the District Court for Water Division No. 7 entered on remand from our decision in Pagosa Area Water & Sanitation District v. Trout Unlimited ("Pagosa I"), 170 P.3d 307 (Colo.2007). Trout Unlimited contends that the applicant districts, Pagosa Area Water and Sanitation District and the San Juan Water Conservancy District (collectively "Districts"), have failed to meet their burden of demonstrating that the conditionally-decreed amounts of water in the remand decree are reasonably necessary to serve their reasonably anticipated needs for a reasonable water supply planning period. 1

The remand decree provides for a planning period of 50 years, through the year 2055, with an appropriation date of December 20, 2004, for San Juan River diversions at the Dry Gulch Pumping Station in the following amounts: a direct flow right of 100 cubic feet per second ("cfs") into storage at the Dry Gulch Reservoir; a maximum annual storage of 25,300 acre-feet of water in the reservoir; and an independent direct flow right of 50 cfs directly into the Districts' water system for use anywhere in their service area.

*777 Trout Unlimited contends that the Water Court should have adopted a water supply planning period extending to the year 2040. We disagree. We uphold the Water Court's determination that a 50-year water supply planning period to the year 2055 is reasonable. However, in light of the standards we set forth in Pagosa I, we hold that the evidence currently in the record does not support the amounts of water contained in the remand conditional decree. The essential function of the water court in a conditional decree proceeding is to determine the amount of available unappropriated water for which the applicant has established a need, a future intent, the ability to actually use, and, under the "can and will" test, a substantial probability that its intended appropriation will reach fruition. Pagosa I, 170 P.3d at 317. Section 37-92-805(9)(b), C.R.S. (2009), addressing the "can and will" test provides that

[nlo claim for a conditional water right may be recognized or a decree therefor granted except to the extent that it is established that the waters can be and will be diverted, stored, or otherwise captured, possessed, and controlled and will be beneficially used and that the project can and will be completed with diligence and within a reasonable time.

In particular, the existing record in this case lacks sufficient evidentiary support for the following conditional decree provisions: (1) provision no. 11.1.6, which provides for water releases to benefit hypothetical recreational in-channel rights, instream flow rights decreed to the Colorado Water Conservation Board, and/or bypass flow requirements of any federal permits obtained for development of the Dry Gulch Reservoir; (2) provision no. 31, which provides for a direct flow diversion right into Dry Gulch storage of 100 efs to account for the uncertainty of federal bypass flow requirements; (8) provision no. 43, which provides for a direct flow diversion right of 50 cfs into the Districts water system for use anywhere in the Districts' service area; and (4) provision no. 44, which provides for a storage right of 25,300 acrefeet of water annually in Dry Gulch Reservoir.

We had expected our remand order in Pagosa I to result in the Districts' introduction of additional evidence to support their reasonably justified water supply needs, in light of our conclusion that the conditional decree we reviewed there contained "a planning horizon, diversion rates, and a total volumetric annual consumption amount for stored water far in excess of what the districts initially considered to be reasonable for water supply planning purposes." Pagosa I, 170 P.3d at 318. Thus, we returned the case to the Water Court for further proceedings consistent with the standards set forth in our opinion and with leave for the Water Court to take additional evidence in the exercise of its discretion. Trout Unlimited contends that the standards we set forth in Pagosa I required the Districts to introduce additional evidence to support a planning period greater than the year 2040. We agree, but, in light of the Water Court's remand finding that the year 2055 and not a longer period is a reasonable planning period in this case, a finding we uphold, we also determine that the Districts should be allowed an additional opportunity to introduce evidence demonstrating the conditionally-decreed amounts of water reasonably necessary to serve their reasonably anticipated needs for the 2055 planning period.

Accordingly, we reverse the decree of the Water Court and remand this case for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.

1.

On remand from Pagosa I, the Water Court asked the parties whether it should take additional evidence in light of our opinion in the case. Trout Unlimited contended that the Water Court should take additional evidence on the Districts' planning period, future population, per capita water usage, current water supplies, future demand for the Districts' water system, and water rights necessary. 2 The Districts contended that the *778 existing record was sufficient to meet their burden of proof under the standards we set forth in Pagosa I. Instead of taking advantage of the opportunity to introduce additional evidence, the Districts tendered a proposed decree with an appropriation date of December 20, 2004, for a 70-year planning period through 2075 to include: (1) a conditional storage right in the amount of 29,000 acre-feet per year for the off-channel Dry Gulch Reservoir; (2) a direct diversion flow right of 100 cfs from the San Juan River at the Dry Gulch Pumping Station and inflow from Dry Gulch into storage at the Dry (Gulch Reservoir; and (8) a separate direct diversion flow right from the San Juan River of 50 efs for use anywhere in the Districts water supply system. 3

The decree we reversed in Pagosa I was for a 100-year planning period for a right to store 29,000 acre-feet in Dry Gulch Reservoir along with the right to fill and refill the reservoir continuously in order to achieve a total annual storage volume of 64,000 acre-feet; a 100 cfs direct flow right at the Dry Gulch Pumping Station into storage; and a separate 80 cfs direct flow right at the Dry Gulch Pumping Station for use anywhere in the Districts' water system. Id. at 312.

On remand from Pagosa I, the Water Court accepted most, but not all, of the Districts' proposed remand decree provisions.

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Bluebook (online)
219 P.3d 774, 2009 WL 3530731, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/pagosa-area-water-sanitation-district-v-trout-unlimited-colo-2009.