Roaring Fork Club, L.P. v. St. Jude's Co.

36 P.3d 1229, 2001 Colo. LEXIS 954, 2001 WL 1456516
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 19, 2001
DocketNo. 00SC372
StatusPublished
Cited by134 cases

This text of 36 P.3d 1229 (Roaring Fork Club, L.P. v. St. Jude's Co.) 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
Roaring Fork Club, L.P. v. St. Jude's Co., 36 P.3d 1229, 2001 Colo. LEXIS 954, 2001 WL 1456516 (Colo. 2001).

Opinion

Justice KOURLIS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

L.

In this case we address the unilateral alteration of irrigation ditches. St. Jude's Company (hereinafter Ranch) owns 240 acres of agricultural land near Basalt, Colorado. Roaring Fork Club, L.P., (hereinafter Club) acquired the neighboring, upgradient property adjoining Ranch's in 1995. Previously, the owner of Club's land had used it for agricultural purposes; however, Club déveloped the property for recreational use by building a private fishing and golf club.

Club and Ranch share an interest in three irrigation ditches that traverse Club's property and serve both properties. Seeking to alter the ditch course in order to accommodate its golf and fishing development, Club attempted to contract with Ranch either to purchase portions of Ranch's easement or to formalize a ditch maintenance arrangement. However, the parties were unable to reach such an agreement. Nevertheless, Club moved forward with construction in and around the ditches.

In 1997 Ranch initiated a trespass action against Club seeking a mandatory and permanent injunction requiring Club to restore the ditches to their original location and course and to remove those improvements that prevented Ranch from maintaining the ditches. The case proceeded before the trial court, acting in equity.

Following three days of trial, the court found that Club had excavated within Raneh's rights-of-way, graded and destroyed ditch banks and portions of ditches, realigned ditch channels, diverted ditch water flows, piped portions of ditches, constructed cabins and golf course greens within the easements, and temporarily piped wastewater into one of the ditches.

[1231]*1231As a result, the trial court concluded that Club had committed trespass on Ranch's easements. The court also stated that because Ranch sought an equitable remedy, the court was required to balance the equities between the parties in fashioning an appropriate remedy. Weighing the equities, the court found that Club never denied Ranch access to the ditches or denied it the opportunity to maintain the ditches; that Ranch had not suffered any diminution in the quantity of water delivered through the system; and that Ranch had not suffered any increased cost in maintenance of the ditches because of the development. The court also found that Ranch's traditional disposition of spoilage and maintenance of the ditches would be inconsistent with Club's use of its property for recreational purposes. Finally, the court found that requiring Club to restore the ditches to their condition prior to trespass would be extremely costly and would substantially interfere with Club's current and ongoing use of its property.

The trial court concluded that Ranch was entitled to injunctive relief in one of two forms. The court held that Club must either remove all of the developments that reasonably interfered with entry, access, and maintenance of the ditches and restore the original ditches as prayed for by Ranch (the "restoration" option), or Club could assume all responsibility for, and expense of, operation and maintenance of the ditches on its property, and would be permanently obligated to deliver, upon demand, water to Ranch in the amount and quality, and at the time consistent with, Ranch's adjudicated rights (the "maintenance and delivery" option). The trial court clarified in a post-trial order that the right to choose between the alternative remedies imposed by the injunction belonged to Club. Club exercised the maintenance and delivery option, and Ranch appealed the trial court's disposition of the case.

On appeal, a majority of the court of appeals reversed, in part, the injunction formulated by the trial court, holding that the maintenance and delivery option did not comply with Colorado law. St. Jude's Co. v. Roaring Fork Club, L.P., 15 P.3d 281, 285 (Colo.App.1999). Further, the court of appeals held the trial court order unjustifiably rewarded Club, a bad faith actor, for deliberate and conscious trespass. Id.

We granted certiorari to determine two issues. The first issue is whether the court of appeals properly applied Valley Development Co. v. Weeks, 147 Colo. 591, 364 P.2d 730 (1961), and Brown v. Bradbury, 110 Colo. 537, 135 P.2d 1013 (1943), to preempt the trial court's exercise of its equitable discretion; and the second is whether the court of appeals erred by requiring the trial court to award injunctive relief.

We now hold that the owner of property burdened by a ditch easement (hereinafter "burdened estate") may not move or alter that easement unless that owner has the consent of the owner of the easement (hereinafter "benefitted estate"); OR unless that owner first obtains a declaratory determination from a court that the proposed changes will not significantly lessen the utility of the easement, increase the burdens on the owner of the easement, or frustrate the purpose for which the easement was created. We further clarify that the right to inspect, operate, and maintain a ditch easement is a right that cannot be abrogated by alteration or change to the ditch. Therefore, we affirm that portion of the court of appeals' judgment upholding the trial court finding of trespass upon Club's unilateral alteration of the easement. However, we remand this case for further proceedings in light of our interpretation of Colorado case law as set forth in this opinion.

IL

Ditches are important to Colorado. They permit a landscape, economy, and history in which fertile valleys prosper. Without them, properties adjacent to or distant from watercourses wither. Colorado is not a riparian state in which only those lands adjacent to the streams and rivers have rights to waters. Rather, as early as the tenure of the territorial legislature, our lawmakers recognized that our arid elimate required the creation of a right to appropriate and convey water across the land of another so that lands not immediately proximate to water could be [1232]*1232used and developed. Colorado Territorial Laws 67 § 2 (1861) reprinted in Gregory J. Hobbs, Colorado Water Low: An Historical Overview, 1 U. Denv. Water L.Rev. 1, 31 (1997) ("That when any person, ... [whose] farm or land, used by him for agricultural purposes, is too far removed from said stream ..., [that person] shall be entitled to a right of way through the farms or tracts of land which lie between him and said stream. ..."). By the time of passage of our constitution, that right was embodied in Article XVI, § 7, which provides, "All persons and corporations shall have the right-of-way across public, private and corporate lands for the construction of ditches, canals and flumes for the purpose of conveying water for domestic purposes, for the irrigation of agricultural lands and for mining and manufacturing purposes, and for drainage, upon payment of just compensation." The statute that the first legislative assembly enacted in 1861 has now become section 87-86-102, to wit: "Any person owning a water right or conditional water right shall be entitled to a right-of-way through the lands which lie between the point of diversion and point of use or proposed use for the purpose of transporting water for beneficial use in accordance with said water right or conditional water right." $ 87-86-102, 10 C.R.S. (2001).

Because ditches are important, so too are the rights attendant upon a ditch easement.

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Bluebook (online)
36 P.3d 1229, 2001 Colo. LEXIS 954, 2001 WL 1456516, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/roaring-fork-club-lp-v-st-judes-co-colo-2001.