Perry Park Water & Sanitation District v. Cordillera Corp.

818 P.2d 728, 15 Brief Times Rptr. 1349, 1991 Colo. LEXIS 621, 1991 WL 185339
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 23, 1991
Docket90SA157
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 818 P.2d 728 (Perry Park Water & Sanitation District v. Cordillera Corp.) 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
Perry Park Water & Sanitation District v. Cordillera Corp., 818 P.2d 728, 15 Brief Times Rptr. 1349, 1991 Colo. LEXIS 621, 1991 WL 185339 (Colo. 1991).

Opinion

Justice KIRSHBAUM

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Appellant Perry Park Water & Sanitation District (the District) appeals the judgment of the District Court, Water Division No. 1 (the water court), granting a motion for partial summary judgment filed by appel-lees, Cordillera Corporation and Larkspur Properties (hereafter Cordillera). The motion asserted that the District lacked authority to appropriate certain underground nontributary ground water lying beneath land owned by Cordillera. The water court agreed, holding that a resolution passed by the District in 1985 (the 1985- Resolution) upon which the District relied for its authority to appropriate the disputed ground water failed to comply with notice requirements contained in section 37-90-137(8), 15 C.R.S'. (1990) (the Act). We affirm the water court’s ruling.

I

The material facts are not disputed. On September 30, 1981, the District filed an application with the water court requesting entry of a decree awarding it underground nontributary water rights to water in the Arapahoe aquifer located in Douglas County. On May 20, 1982, and May 28, 1982, the District filed two similar applications requesting the appropriation of underground nontributary water rights to water in the Denver and Laramie-Fox Hills aquifers located in Douglas County. On December 16, 1981, the water court referee denied the Arapahoe application because the District neither owned nor controlled the land overlying the subject ground water. The three applications were later consolidated.

Subsequently the General Assembly adopted the Act which by its terms became effective on July 1, 1985. Ch. 285, sec. 3, § 37-90-137(8), 1985 Colo.Sess.Laws 1160, 1169. The Act established procedures authorizing special districts and other governmental entities to adopt implied consent resolutions effectively waiving the requirement of obtaining a landowner’s consent to appropriate nontributary ground water underlying the landowner’s property.

On June 19, 1985, at a regularly scheduled meeting held after the adoption of the Act but prior to its effective date, the District adopted the 1985 Resolution. In so doing, it noted the passage by the General Assembly of Senate Bill 5, which legislation *730 contained the substantive provisions of the Act. The 1985 Resolution asserted, inter alia, appropriation by the District of all nontributary ground water in the Dawson, Denver, Arapahoe, and Laramie-Fox Hills aquifers underlying the land within its boundaries, effective July 11, 1985. Some 550 acres of land owned by Cordillera lies within the boundaries of the District. 1

In June 1986, the District filed amended applications in the water court, asserting that pursuant to the Act and the 1985 Resolution it had acquired control of the nontributary ground water described in its original applications. Cordillera objected to the amended applications. Cordillera and the District subsequently filed cross-motions for partial summary judgment on the issue of the validity of the 1985 Resolution. On March 9, 1988, the water court entered an order granting Cordillera’s motion. The water court concluded that by failing to give notice of its intent to adopt an implied consent resolution prior to its June 19, 1985, adoption of the 1985 Resolution, the District failed to comply with the notice requirements of the Act.

On May 2, 1988, pursuant to the Act, the District adopted a second implied consent resolution appropriating the nontributary ground water underlying all property within the District’s boundaries. The District later amended that resolution to exclude ground water underlying Cordillera’s property. On March 6, 1990, the water court entered a decree granting the District’s amended applications. Oh appeal, the District asserts that the water court erred in holding the 1985 Resolution invalid.

II

Cordillera argues that this appeal should be dismissed as moot because the resolution adopted by the District on May 2,1988, as amended, superseded the 1985 Resolution. Cordillera asserts that the District no longer has an interest in the water court’s conclusion with respect to the validity of the 1985 Resolution. We disagree.

A case becomes moot when any judgment rendered therein can have no practical legal effect upon the controversy. Van Schaack Holdings, Ltd. v. Fulenwider, 798 P.2d 424 (Colo.1990); Tippett v. Johnson, 742 P.2d 314 (Colo.1987); Barnes v. District Court, 199 Colo. 310, 607 P.2d 1008 (1980). See Lininger v. City of Sheridan, 648 P.2d 1097 (Colo.App.1982). The District contends, in essence, that if the water court rejected its applications because of the erroneous conclusion that the 1985 Resolution was invalid, the District is entitled to a hearing and a judgment on the merits of the claims set. forth in those applications — claims that included ground water beneath Cordillera’s land. By adopting the 1988 Resolution, the District did not abandon its right to appeal the water court’s ruling on the validity of the 1985 Resolution. In the event this court were to reverse the water court’s ruling that the 1985 Resolution was not valid, Cordillera would be entitled to assert other grounds in opposition to the District’s applications. Thus the adoption of the 1988 Resolution did not end the controversy between the parties.

Ill

In adopting the 1985 Resolution the District relied upon the. following provisions of the Act:

Therefore, wherever any existing municipal or quasi-municipal water supplier is obligated either by law or by contract in effect prior to January 1, 1985, to be the principal provider of public water service to landowners within a certain municipal or quasi-municipal boundary in existence on January 1, 1985, said water supplier may adopt an ordinance or resolution, after ten days’ notice pursuant to the provisions of part 1 of article 70 of title 24, C.R.S., which incorporates ground water from the Dawson, Denver, Arapahoe, Laramie-Fox Hills, or Dakota aquifers underlying all or any specified portion of such municipality’s or quasi-municipality’s boundary into its actual mu *731 nicipal service plan. Upon adoption of such ordinance or resolution, a detailed map of the land area as to which consent is deemed to have been given shall be filed with the state engineer. Upon the effective date of such ordinance or resolution, the owners of land which overlies such ground water shall be deemed to have consented to the withdrawal by that water supplier of all such ground water. ...

§ 37-90-137(8), 15 C.R.S. (1990). The ten days’ notice referred to in the Act must be published “once each week for three successive weeks in any daily, weekly, semiweekly, or triweekly newspaper....” § 24-70-106(2)(a), 10B C.R.S. (1988).

The District adopted the 1985 Resolution on June 19, 1985, effective July 11, 1985.

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818 P.2d 728, 15 Brief Times Rptr. 1349, 1991 Colo. LEXIS 621, 1991 WL 185339, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/perry-park-water-sanitation-district-v-cordillera-corp-colo-1991.