Purgatoire River Water Conservancy District v. Witte

859 P.2d 825, 17 Brief Times Rptr. 1432, 1993 Colo. LEXIS 780, 1993 WL 376557
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 27, 1993
Docket92SA236
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 859 P.2d 825 (Purgatoire River Water Conservancy District v. Witte) 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
Purgatoire River Water Conservancy District v. Witte, 859 P.2d 825, 17 Brief Times Rptr. 1432, 1993 Colo. LEXIS 780, 1993 WL 376557 (Colo. 1993).

Opinion

Justice LOHR delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This appeal arises out of an application filed by Purgatoire River Water Conservancy District (Purgatoire) for a determination of a water right for storage in the Silt Control Section of Trinidad Reservoir. 1 The District Court for Water Division 2 (water court) held trial on the application on April 21, 1992, at which time certain parties opposing Purgatoire’s application moved to limit the evidence that Purgatoire could present as proof that it created this absolute water right. 2 The water court granted the motion on the basis that it had been, determined in previous judicial proceedings that Purgatoire had abandoned a conditional water right for storage in the reservoir and the conditional right had the same date of appropriation as the right Purgatoire was asserting in its present application. Concluding that Purgatoire could not rely on an appropriation date of an abandoned conditional water right to establish a new water right, the water court ruled that it would not consider evidence of an appropriation prior to May 1, 1989, the date on which Purgatoire was deemed to have abandoned its earlier conditional water right. Because Purgatoire could produce no evidence of facts occurring after that date to prove a new appropriation, the court ordered that the application for a determination of a water right be dismissed. We conclude that the water court properly limited the evidence that Purgatoire could present to events that occurred after the conditional water right was abandoned, and therefore affirm the judgment of the water court dismissing Purgatoire’s application.

*828 I

On December 5,1989, Purgatoire filed an application for a determination of a water right to store 39,300 acre-feet of water in what is known as the Silt Control Section of Trinidad Reservoir. Trinidad Reservoir is part of a multi-use project (the Trinidad Project) authorized by Congress in 1958 for flood control, reclamation, and recreation purposes. 3 Located on the Purgatoire River near the city of Trinidad, Colorado, the reservoir has a total storage capacity of 114,500 acre-feet, of which approximately 39,000 acre-feet is allocated to the Silt Control Section for the joint uses óf controlling silt accumulations and retaining flood waters for irrigation. Trinidad Reservoir is operated in accordance with a set of Operating Principles 4 which state that they are designed “to secure the greatest practicable benefits from the regulation and use of the flows of the Purgatoire River consistent with the laws and policies of the State of Colorado and of the United States including the Arkansas River Compact [§§ 37-69-101 to -106, 15 C.R.S. (1990) ].” One provision of these principles, the importance of which will become apparent in the course of our discussion, states that water may be stored in the reservoir’s Silt Control Section only at such times as John Martin Reservoir is reasonably expected to spill and only in such amounts as John Martin Reservoir would spill. 5

It is Purgatoire’s December 5, 1989, application for determination of a right to store water in this Silt Control Section that underlies the appeal before us. The issues concerning the merits of that application center on the effect of an order of the water court canceling a conditional storage right that Purgatoire had previously obtained. Therefore, we must set forth the circumstances surrounding that cancellation order to provide the necessary background for addressing Purgatoire’s present application.

In February of 1971 Purgatoire applied to the water court for a determination of a conditional water right to store 39,300 acre-feet of water in the Silt Control Section. Purgatoire claimed in that application that it had initiated an appropriation for the storage right in May of 1950 and that it sought to develop the right by storing water and applying it to beneficial use for domestic, irrigation, and municipal purposes. On April 27, 1972, the water court approved Purgatoire’s application and therefore entered a judgment and decree confirming that Purgatoire had established this conditional water right. One provision of the decree incorporated the condition set forth in the Operating Principles that water could be stored in the Silt Control Section of the reservoir only at times when John Martin Reservoir is reasonably expected to spill. The decree also provided that Purgatoire must apply the water that it was conditionally decreed to a beneficial use within a reasonable time and must file with the water court biennially an application for a finding of reasonable diligence for as long as it sought to maintain the right or until there was a determination that it had made the right absolute by completing its appropriation. 6

*829 For several years, Purgatoire duly filed the requisite applications to maintain its conditional water right and obtained decrees from the water court finding that it had acted with reasonable diligence in developing the right. However, because of the limited quantities of water available in the streams and the condition that John Martin Reservoir reasonably be expected to spill before there could be storage in the Silt Control Section, it was not until 1985 that Purgatoire was able to store water in that section, and not until June of 1987 when it stored the full 39,300 acre-feet that was conditionally decreed. 7

Subsequent to this storage, Purgatoire’s next application for a finding of reasonable diligence was due on April 30, 1989. Pur-gatoire failed to meet this deadline, however, and did not file an application until May 11, 1989. On that date, Purgatoire applied both for a finding that it had acted with reasonable diligence in developing a water right and for a determination that it had completed the appropriation by virtue of its storage and application of water to beneficial use, thereby making its conditional right absolute. However, based on Purga-toire’s failure to file the requisite application for a finding of reasonable diligence within the prescribed time, the water court entered an order on January 22, 1990, canceling the conditional water storage right. We upheld this order in Fort Lyon Canal Co. v. Purgatoire River Water Conservancy Dist., 818 P.2d 747, 750 (Colo.1991) (hereinafter Purgatoire I), and stated that Purgatoire’s failure to meet the filing deadline “constitute[d] an abandonment of [the] conditional water rights and mandate[s] their cancellation.” 8 See § 37-92-301(4), 15 C.R.S. (1990) (if owner or user of conditional water right fails to file an application for a finding of reasonable diligence within the prescribed time, “said conditional water right shall be considered abandoned”); Broyles v. Fort Lyon Canal Co., 695 P.2d 1136 (Colo.1985) (applying that statute); Town of De Beque v. Enewold,

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Bluebook (online)
859 P.2d 825, 17 Brief Times Rptr. 1432, 1993 Colo. LEXIS 780, 1993 WL 376557, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/purgatoire-river-water-conservancy-district-v-witte-colo-1993.