Schluter v. Burlington Ditch, Reservoir & Land Co.

188 P.2d 253, 117 Colo. 284, 1947 Colo. LEXIS 244
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedNovember 3, 1947
DocketNo. 15,692.
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 188 P.2d 253 (Schluter v. Burlington Ditch, Reservoir & Land 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
Schluter v. Burlington Ditch, Reservoir & Land Co., 188 P.2d 253, 117 Colo. 284, 1947 Colo. LEXIS 244 (Colo. 1947).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Stone

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was brought by plaintiffs Schluter to quiet title to seep water rising in the Burlington ditch, and to enjoin interference with the use thereof. Defendant company, the owner of the Burlington ditch, is a mutual irrigation company. The ditch extends northerly from its headgate on the South Platte river, from which it has a decreed water right. Near its north and lower end, the ditch runs for some distance near the westerly end of Barr Lake and a 'channel extends approximately at right angles from the ditch easterly 1870 feet to the lake. *286 This channel, which is referred to in the record as the segment, was formerly used as an intake ditch for filling Barr Lake until about 1912 when the Farmers Reservoir and Irrigation Company raised the dam of the lake and constructed the O’Brien ditch easterly from the Burlington and on a higher grade, since which time Barr Lake has been filled by means of the O’Brien ditch. For several years thereafter the segment was used for diverting storage water from the lake to certain users under the Burlington ditch, but such use was virtually abandoned a number of years prior to the trial of this case. The segment has grown up to swamp vegetation, and seepage water from Barr Lake rises therein. Seepage also rises in the lower end of the main channel of the Burlington ditch, apparently having its source in part from Barr Lake and in part from Third Creek, a tributary of the Platte river, which is crossed by the Burlington ditch some three-quarters of a mile south of its lower terminus. These seepage waters so arising in the segment and in the lower main ditch are the subject of this controversy.

Forty-five feet above the lower end of the Burlington ditch, according to plaintiffs’ plat, or twenty-five feet according to his testimony, is located the headgate of the Schluter lateral through which is diverted water belonging to plaintiffs and other stockholders using thereunder. At the very end of the ditch and a few feet north of the west end of the segment, is the headgate of the Brighton lateral ditch which is used for carriage of a much larger amount of water to Burlington stockholders using thereunder, and is operated by a separate company. Through most of the season water is distributed through the Burlington ditch in sections in order to give greater head. Accordingly, when water is being distributed to the upper sections, the lower end of the ditch is dry except for the seep water here involved and any water which may spill over the barrier placed in the stream to permit sectional diversion. This latter is re *287 ferred to as “slop over” water, and sometimes it flows down and mingles with the seep water arising in the segment and lower ditch. Each section usually receives its water for forty-eight hours at a time. The Schluter lateral constitutes one section and the Brighton lateral usually from three to six. Accordingly when stockholders’ water, decreed to the ditch, is being run in the lower sections, it is there continuously from eight to fourteen days. During such times the seep water is necessarily commingled with the river water.

In 1928 plaintiff William Schluter, as claimant, filed a map and statement in the office of the state engineer making claim to four cubic feet per second of seep water arising in the segment, and in 1930 he filed similar claim to three cubic feet per second arising in the lower main Burlington ditch, and from that time on has made open claim to ownership of these seep waters and apparently obtained and used them until shortly before the bringing of this action, when such use was prevented by the officers of defendant company. The method of use when the ditch was otherwise empty was by closing the head-gate of the Brighton lateral, as a result of which the water accumulated and backed up in the lower end of the ditch until it reached the level of the Schluter lateral when it was taken by plaintiff and conveyed down that lateral to his own farm lands. Whenever decreed river water was about to be run through the lower'end of the ditch, measurement would be taken of the amount of seep then running from the segment and from the main ditch, and the amount so determined was claimed and generally obtained by plaintiffs. Such measurement at best was very inaccurate both from the fact that there might be “slop over” water mingled with the seep and from the further fact that the amount of seepage decreased very rapidly as water was being run from the lake so that the amount measured prior to running sections in the lower ditch might be very greatly in excess of the seepage available before the lower ditch runs were *288 completed. This practice continued from 1928 to 1944 when it was prevented by defendant, and plaintiffs brought this action, alleging use of the seep water since ■1919; the filing thereon in 1928 and 1930; that the water is not tributary to any natural stream; and twenty years’ beneficial use and prescriptive right thereby. Defendant answered making general denial and asking that plaintiffs be enjoined from interference with its ditch.

Following trial of the issues the court found that the seep water was tributary to a public stream and not subject to independent appropriation; that plaintiffs had failed to sustain the burden of proof as to prescriptive right; that neither party was entitled to a decree quieting title; that plaintiffs had not acquired any right for storage or transportation of water in defendant’s ditch other than their proportionate share as stockholders, and that neither party had made sufficient showing to be entitled to injunctive relief. Accordingly judgment of dismissal was rendered.

The points specified by plaintiffs as grounds for reversal and argued in their briefs may be summarized under three contentions:

1. That the court erred in holding that the seep waters are tributary to a natural stream when in fact they are not so tributary but are subject to appropriation under our statute providing for appropriation of seepage and waste water and plaintiffs’ acquired prior right by virtue of filing maps and statements and beneficial use thereunder. As to this contention plaintiffs pleaded, and defendant in its answer admitted, that these seep waters were not tributary to a natural stream. However, there was substantial evidence introduced by both parties tending to establish that it was so tributary and the evidence received without objection, rather than the pleading, properly determined the finding of the court. Plaintiff largely bases his claim upon his maps and statements filed as aforesaid, in each of which it is recited that the source of supply is, “seepage which is *289 tributary to the South Platte river and from which it derives its supply of water.” The engineer who prepared the claim statement and who for many years had been employed by the Farmers Reservoir and Irrigation Company and was necessarily familiar with conditions, testified as witness for plaintiff that this seep water is tributary to the river. It is undisputed that in the winter when the seepage is not used it backs up in the ditch to its intersection with Third Creek whence it is spilled into that creek and carried to the river, and the only evidence even conjecturally to the contrary was that of plaintiff William Schluter who testified: “Well, I don’t know if it would reach the Platte river.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
188 P.2d 253, 117 Colo. 284, 1947 Colo. LEXIS 244, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/schluter-v-burlington-ditch-reservoir-land-co-colo-1947.