San Antonio v. Special Improvement District No. 1 of Rio Grande Water Conservation District

270 P.3d 927, 2011 Colo. LEXIS 986, 2011 WL 6318977
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 19, 2011
DocketNo. 10SA224
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 270 P.3d 927 (San Antonio v. Special Improvement District No. 1 of Rio Grande Water Conservation District) 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
San Antonio v. Special Improvement District No. 1 of Rio Grande Water Conservation District, 270 P.3d 927, 2011 Colo. LEXIS 986, 2011 WL 6318977 (Colo. 2011).

Opinion

Justice HOBBS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

INDEX OF OPINION

Introduction and Holding ... keer ea keke aa aka a aaa kes 931

I.

ne e 932

IL.

HoldiAQ salas aaa k r ee bene k den e e arn k edn a ee de ae e e ed dae ea n d ern ee es 935

A. Standard of Review. lle alr errr kaa rear kee ekle es 985

B. Constitutional and Statutory Prior Appropriation Setting .................... 936

C. Statutory Criteria for Subdistrict Plan Approval. 937

1. State Engin@@r .k kerr kkk kkk ka kake eka ekke e eka 938
2. The Trial COUPR kkk keer eee eer era e eae ee kkk} 939

a. State Engineer Approval of a Ground Water Management Plan Pursuant to Section 387-92-501(4)(@) ............................. 939

b. Official Plan of a Subdistrict . lke lek. .l 940

D. Application to this Case seers kere reek kerk keke es 941

1. The Plan's PrOVISIOMS lls veer errs eek. kk. 941

2. The Decree's Additional Terms and Conditions ......................... 944

3. The Objectors' Contentions 945

a. The augmentation and no-injury finding objections .................. 945

b. The State Engineer lacks authority objection ....................... 948

c. The trial court lacks authority objection 948

d. The delay of implementation objection ............................. 949

e. The recharge decrees Objection .. 949

f. The contract ObJ@@tiOM . errr erk erea kaa kk} s 950

g. The Closed Basin Project replacement water objection ............... 951

h. The phreatophyte objection lk... ..}. 951

(el 952

IIL. 952

ApPp@AGIX . ..... ...ll ly ll sa aa k y ae a aa e e aa en aa e n aan e aan bean ba ae n bae ee a ae eae eee kes 952

[931]*931Introduction and Holding

This appeal is from a judgment and decree of the District Court for Water Division 8 ("water court") and the Alamosa County District Court in two consolidated cases tried before Judge John Kuenhold, Chief Judge and Water Judge ("trial court"). In combination, these two cases involve an amended plan for water management ("Plan") adopted by Special Improvement District No. 1 of the Rio Grande Water Conservation District ("Subdistrict").

The Plan as decreed is the product of an iterative public process of adoption, review, revision, and approval by the Rio Grande Water Conservation District ("District"), the Subdistrict, the State Engineer and the trial court. The District and any of its subdis-tricts are political subdivisions of the state created by statute to carry out water planning and management functions within the San Luis Valley.

Section 37-48-101, C.R.S (2011), the legislative declaration to the Rio Grande Water Conservation District Act, states its purpose, in part, to be

the conservation of the water of the Rio Grande and its tributaries for beneficial use and the construction of reservoirs, ditches, and works for ... the growth and development of the entire area and the welfare of all its inhabitants and ... to safeguard for Colorado all waters to which the state of Colorado is equitably entitled.

The Subdistrict's Plan implements both longstanding statutory provisions for management of the ground and surface water resources of the Rio Grande Basin within Colorado's San Luis Valley, such as sections 37-48-108, -128 and -126, C.R.S. (2011), of the Rio Grande Water Conservation District Act, and statutes enacted in the first decade of the twenty-first century, in particular seetion 87-92-501(4), C.R.S. (2011), of the Water Right Determination and Administration Act. These and ancillary statutory provisions introduce into Colorado water law a basin-specific mechanism for optimizing the conjunctive use of tributary groundwater and surface water within Water Division No. 3, the use of which is subject to the Rio Grande Compact under section 87-66-1011, C.R.S. (2011).

As summarized in section 37-92-501(4), the General Assembly's purpose is to maintain a "sustainable water supply" in the confined and unconfined aquifers underlying the San Luis Valley, while permitting "the continued use of underground water consistent with preventing material injury to senior surface water rights" and consistent with the state's obligations under the Rio Grande Compact. Subdistrict No. I's Plan may be the predecessor to like plans which, in conjunetion with State Engineer rules, will comprise a comprehensive water management framework for Water Division No. 3.

Objectors-appellants San Antonio, Los Pi-nos and Conejos River Acequia Preservation Association; Save Our Senior Water Rights, LLC; Richard Ramstetter; and Peter Atkins (collectively, "Objectors") challenge the Plan1 Issues they raise center on alleged [932]*932trial court failures to abide by Colorado statutory and case law applicable to augmentation plans. However, the General Assembly has plainly established criteria for approval and decree of the Subdistrict's Plan that differ from those applicable under the augmentation plan statutes.

We hold that Subdistrict No. I's Plan as decreed complies with the special statutory provisions applicable to its development and implementation. Accordingly, we affirm the trial court's judgment and decree.

Facts

In Simpson v. Cotton Creek Circles, LLC, 181 P.3d 252 (Colo.2008), we addressed and affirmed State Engineer rules regarding new withdrawals from the confined aquifer. In doing so, we discussed the hydrogeology of the San Luis Valley, the Rio Grande Compact, evolving steps taken by the State Engineer to study, propose, and adopt rules for administration of surface and groundwater rights in Water Division No. 3, the General Assembly's enactment of legislation for development of the Rio Grande Decision Support System, and the State Engineer's development of a computerized groundwater model (the RGDSS model) to simulate groundwater and surface water interaction.

The San Luis Valley lies between two mountain ranges in south-central Colorado.2 Stretching around ninety miles from north to south and fifty miles at its greatest width, the valley is bordered on the east by the jagged and dramatic Sangre de Cristo Mountains, rising to over 14,000 feet, and on the west by the San Juan, Saguache, Conejos, and La Garita ranges. The remarkably level valley floor sits at an elevation ranging between 7500 and 8000 feet and receives an average of 7.5 inches of precipitation per year. See Cotton Creek Circles, 181 P.3d at 255. The stream system has been over-appropriated since the early 1900s, used primarily for irrigation.

Consistent with the Rio Grande Compact, the State Engineer administers the Rio Grande and Conejos rivers based on annual projected runoff and other criteria related to the apportionment of the interstate stream among Colorado, New Mexico and Texas. See generally William A. Paddock, The Rio Grande Compact of 1938, 5 U. Denv. Water L.Rev. 1 (2001); Colo. Found. for Water Educ., Citizen's Guide to Colorado's Interstate Compacts (2010).

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
270 P.3d 927, 2011 Colo. LEXIS 986, 2011 WL 6318977, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-antonio-v-special-improvement-district-no-1-of-rio-grande-water-colo-2011.