Putnam v. Curtis

7 Colo. App. 437
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1896
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 7 Colo. App. 437 (Putnam v. Curtis) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Putnam v. Curtis, 7 Colo. App. 437 (Colo. Ct. App. 1896).

Opinion

Thomson, J.,

delivered the opinion of the court.

In the year 1883 Mr. Craig and Mr. Johnson were the owners of a ditch taking its supply of water from the North Fork of the South Arkansas river, in Chaffee county. Mr. Johnson afterwards abandoned the land upon which he used the water, and it reverted to the United States, leaving Mr. Craig in the sole possession of the ditch. Craig’s title was purchased by W. H. Allen. In 1888 D. P; Owen, Samuel Groover, Wesley King, B. J. King, Wilford King and George Curtis, occupants of land which could be irrigated from the ditch, in pursuance of an agreement with Mr. Allen, enlarged the ditch, and received interests therein as follows: Owen one fifth, Groover one fifth, Curtis one fifth, and the three [438]*438Kings one fifth, or one fifteenth each, the remaining one fifth being retained by Allen. The ditch after being enlarged was called the “ Hoosier Ditch.” On March 7,1889, a receiver’s duplicate receipt was issued to Mr. Allen for his land, and on the 27th day of August, 1889, receiver’s receipts were issued to the three Kings for the tracts occupied by them respectively. On March 18, 1889, Allen executed a deed of trust, conveying his land and water rights to C. N. Craig, trustee, to secure his promissory note to Crippen, Lawrence & Co., for $67.50; and on the 3d day of September, 1889, each of the three Kings executed a deed of trust, conveying his land and water rights to the same trustee, to secure his promissory note to the same firm for $105. Default was made by each of the parties in the payment of his note; and his land was sold in pursuance of his deed of trust, Henry J. Putnam, the plaintiff in error, being the purchaser. The deed to him for the Allen tract was executed November 15, 1890, the deeds for the tracts of Wilford E. and B. J. King on December 16,1891, and the deed for the Wesley King tract on November 23, 1892. On the 18th of February, 1893, the defendant in error, Kate Finley, became the owner of the land of D. P. Owen; and the Rollins Investment Company seems to have succeeded to the title of Groover, but at what time does not appear. In 1890, in a proceeding instituted in the district court of Chaffee county, in pursuance of section 1766 of the General Statutes, a decree was rendered determining and establishing the relative priority of right by appropriation of water of the Hoosier ditch, as between it and other ditches in the same water district, and the amount of water to which, by such appropriation, it was entitled. No part of the expense of the decree was borne by Allen and the Kings, or either of them, and it may be inferred that none of them was present at the hearing. Each of the three Kings used water from the ditch to irrigate his land, from the time when he acquired his water interest, down to, and including, the year immediately preceding that in which his title was divested, the last year of [439]*439use of water by any of them being 1891. Allen used the water every year from 1885 to and including 1889. After 1889 neither the Kings, nor any person or persons claiming under them, contributed towards maintaining the ditch, but it does not appear that they were ever requested to do so. During 1891, 1892 and 1893, the plaintiff made continuous effort to rent his land; but on accouut of the declarations of Curtis that it had no water, he failed, until 1893, when he procured a tenant for a portion of it. The crop of this tenant, by reason of the acts of Curtis in depriving him of water, was a failure.

The complaint set forth the respective rights of Allen and the Kings in the ditch, and in the water flowing through it, the conveyance to the plaintiff Putnam of their lands, and their ditch interests and water rights, and averred that during the irrigating season of 1893 his tenant was violently prevented from taking water from the ditch by the defendants, who threatened a continuance of their acts, so that the plaintiff was and would be unable to raise a crop on his land. The prayer was for a decree establishing the plaintiff’s right to an interest of two fifths in the ditch, and in the water which it carried, and for an injunction restraining the defendants from depriving him of the use of the water. The answer of Curtis and Finley, after denying the plaintiff’s title, set up the decree in the priority proceeding, averring that in that proceeding the same cause of action involved in this suit was adjudicated and determined by awarding to the defendants the entire ditch and all its water, and alleging that whatever rights the plaintiff or his grantors may have had were lost by abandonment. The Rollins- Investment Company disclaimed, averring that it had conveyed its entire interest to Caroline Lovejoy. The plaintiff’s replication admitted the conveyance, and it was thereupon stipulated that neither the company nor its grantee had done any act in denial of the plaintiff’s rights. Upon the hearing the court found the issues against the plaintiff, and dismissed [440]*440his bill. He has prosecuted error to this court from the judgment rendered.

None of the defendants is represented here. A brief has been filed by John S.'Mosby, Jr., Esq., as attorney for one J. Trefethan, who is said to have succeeded to the interest of Owen pending the suit. The record shows Finley to be the owner of the Owen title. No mention is anywhere made of Trefethan, and he is a stranger to the case; but Mr. Mosby’s argument is the only one in opposition to the claim of the plaintiff that has been presented, and we shall regard him as appearing amicus curice, and give his argument due consideration. There is no material conflict in the evidence, and the question is whether upon the undisputed facts the judgment is right.

The answer sets up the former decree as an adjudication of the questions involved in this suit, and by which the plaintiff is barred. In other words, it is claimed that by reason of that decree this cause of action is res adjudicata. The further defense is that whatever rights the plaintiff or his grantors may have had have been extinguished by abandonment. Mr. Mosby does not insist that the decree determined the rights of the owners of the Hoosier ditch as among themselves, although he refuses to concede that it did not, but he urges the failure of the plaintiff’s grantors to appear and claim their rights in that proceeding as a fact tending to prove an abandonment. That decree was not and could not be an adjudication of any right or claim of the plaintiff’s grantors, as between them and the other owners of the same ditch. It does not purport to determine what persons owned the ditch, or what their respective interests in it, or the water which it carried, were; but if the court had, in that proceeding, undertaken to adjust the rights and proportionate interests of the several claimants of the ditch, as against each other, its judgment would have been to that extent a nullity. The proceeding in which the decree was rendered was a special one, provided by the statute for the sole purpose of ascertaining and adjudicating the [441]*441priorities of right to the use of water between the several ditches, canals and reservoirs in the same water district. The statute invests the court with jurisdiction to establish the rank of the several ditches with relation to each other, based upon the different dates of appropriation of water, the quantity appropriated, and the means employed to utilize it; and to award to each the priority to which it may be entitled; but it does not authorize inquiry into the relative rights of coclaimants in the same ditch, or any adjustment of their disputes amongst themselves.

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Bluebook (online)
7 Colo. App. 437, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/putnam-v-curtis-coloctapp-1896.