San Luis Valley Irrigation District v. Prairie Ditch Co.

268 P. 533, 84 Colo. 99
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMay 28, 1928
DocketNo. 11,864.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 268 P. 533 (San Luis Valley Irrigation District v. Prairie Ditch 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
San Luis Valley Irrigation District v. Prairie Ditch Co., 268 P. 533, 84 Colo. 99 (Colo. 1928).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Walker

delivered the opinion of the court.

*101 In a statutory proceeding for the adjudication of priorities of water rights in water district No. 20, the district court decreed to the Prairie'Ditch a priority for forty cubic feet per second of time, from the drainage waters running in the outlet canal of the Rio Grande Drainage District.' The priority was numbered one. The waters were found by the court to be a new and independent source of supply, and the appropriation effected by the .Prairie Ditch was decreed to be independent of prior appropriations out of the Rio Grande river, into which stream the outlet canal emptied. Plaintiffs in error filed objections to the claim of the Prairie Ditch for such appropriation. Their contention was that the waters running into the outlet ditch were waters which before the installation of the drainage system returned by underground flow to the Rio Grande Del Norte river, and constituted a part of the supply to which the appropriators from that river were entitled; and that, although the headgates of plaintiffs in error were above the mouth of the outlet ditch, they would be affected by the decree, because the waters involved, if allowed to flow into the-river, could be used to supply priorities senior to those of plaintiffs in error having headgates below the mouth of the outlet canal. Yoluminous evidence was introduced on both sides in the court below.

The principal contentions of the plaintiffs in error in this court are that the court below erred in admitting certain testimony on behalf of the defendants in error; that there is no sufficient competent testimony in the record to support the decree; and that as a matter of law the waters running in the outlet canal had, prior to the appropriation of the Prairie Ditch, become a part of the Rio Grande river supply.

The Rio Grande Drainage District, comprising about 30,000 acres in Rio Grande county, lies to the north of the Rio Grande Del Norte river, and is irrigated by the waters of that river, taken out through the canal of the Rio Grande Land & Canal Company, one of the plaintiffs *102 in error. The general course of the river is southeasterly from Del Norte to Alamosa. The general grade or fall of the country is to the east for several miles beyond the district, until what is called the trough of the San Luis Valley is reached. In 1917 the drainage system of the defendant in error drainage district was completed, by which the water table in the lands within the drainage district was controlled. The outlet ditch of this district runs southeasterly, but considerably more south than east, to the Rio Grande river. The waters flowing in this outlet ditch are tapped by the Prairie Ditch after leaving the drainage district, and by it used in addition to other waters for the irrigation of about 9,000 acres lying to the east of the drainage district. The waters running in the outlet ditch are incapable of being used on the lands within the district itself. The first diversion of these waters by the Prairie Ditch appears to have been made in 1917. The decree in this cause was entered in 1926. The trial court specifically found: ‘ ‘ That the water claimed, and which the evidence shows has heretofore been taken from said outlet ditch or canal of The Rio Grande Drainage District into the Prairie Ditch and through said ditch applied upon lands lying thereunder, does not now, and never did, constitute a part of the flow of the Rio Grande Del Norte and did not reach said river through underground channels or water courses or by percolation so as to add to the flow thereof, and never was, and is not, water to which any of the hereinbefore mentioned ditches are entitled for the supply of the several appropriations claimed by said ditches or either of them. ’ ’

And the court further found: “That notwithstanding the diversion of part of the water flowing out of said' outlet ditch or canal of the Rio Grande Drainage District by The Prairie Ditch Company through the Prairie Ditch, a considerable part of said water is permitted to flow into the said Rio Grande Del Norte from said outlet ditch or canal, and that such water so added to the *103 river is in excess, perhaps greatly in excess, of any water which reached the said river by percolation from the seeped territory now embraced within 'The Rio G-rande Drainage District prior to the creation of said district and excavation of its several lateral ditches «and outlet ditch or canal.”

1. The testimony, of whose admission plaintiffs in error complain, is that given by Royce J. Tipton, who testified as an engineering expert on behalf of the Prairie Ditch claimants. If however, there was sufficient competent testimony to sustain the finding of the court upon the issue of fact, without considering the testimony of Tipton, the admissibility of Tipton’s testimony becomes a question which need not be considered on this review. Rogers v. Nevada Canal Co., 60 Colo. 59, 151 Pac. 923; Selfridge v. Leonard-Heffner, 51 Colo. 314, 117 Pac. 158; Nelson v. Lunt, 74 Colo. 265, 220 Pac. 1006; Lewis v. Winslow, 77 Colo. 95, 234 Pac. 1070; McDonald v. McFerson, 80 Colo. 4, 249 Pac. 496. And in determining this question we are not obliged to disregard certain documentary evidence which was admitted as having original probative effect, although offered in connection with Tip-ton’s testimony. These exhibits have not been abstracted by the plaintiffs in error, and we must therefore assume that they were properly admitted, and we cannot assume that they were without probative value. San Miguel C. G. M. Co. v. Bonner, 33 Colo. 207, at page 213, 79 Pac. 1025, 4 C. J. 392, 393, 394. We may also add here that while the court in making its findings indicates that he considered the documentary evidence referred to, he does not affirmatively indicate that he was influenced by the testimony of Tipton, and therefore this case affords no exception to the general rule regarding the harmlessness of error in the admission of testimony when the cause is tried to the court without a jury.

As to the slope of the ground, which would probably control the flow of the underground waters, T. G. Robb, Mark Watrous an engineer, and W. W. Reilly, all wit *104 nesses for plaintiffs in error, testified that the general grade was to the east, which, would be away from the river. Watrous testified that there was one hundred and ten feet fall on the Prairie Ditch from the drainage district east to the railroad, a distance of several miles, and that the general fall of the ground was seven to ten feet to the mile to the east, after leaving the drainage district, five feet to the mile, and that the fall from the lowest point in the drainage district to the San Luis Lakes in the trough of the valley was seventy-five feet, • and that water five feet below the surface at the northeast corner of the drainage district would be controlled by a fall to the east at an average grade of five to seven feet per mile, as against a fall to the south at an average grade of two feet to the mile. Reilly testified that the water, if not brought back, would go to the trough of the valley, that a surface ditch would take it to the trough of the valley, from whence it would strike the river near Hansen Bluff, a point below Alamosa. John E.

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Bluebook (online)
268 P. 533, 84 Colo. 99, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/san-luis-valley-irrigation-district-v-prairie-ditch-co-colo-1928.