SL GROUP, LLC v. Go West Industries, Inc.

42 P.3d 637, 2002 Colo. LEXIS 222, 2002 WL 372870
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedMarch 11, 2002
Docket00SA398
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 42 P.3d 637 (SL GROUP, LLC v. Go West Industries, Inc.) 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
SL GROUP, LLC v. Go West Industries, Inc., 42 P.3d 637, 2002 Colo. LEXIS 222, 2002 WL 372870 (Colo. 2002).

Opinion

Justice COATS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

SL Group, LLC, appealed directly to this court from an order of the water court in Division No. 4 dismissing SU's verified petition to correct substantive errors in a judgment and decree adjudicating water rights in favor of Go West Industries, Inc. The water judge dismissed the petition without reconsidering the merits of its earlier adjudication on the grounds that SL's allegations were insufficient to demonstrate that its failure to protest the application at the appropriate time was due to mistake, inadvertence, or excusable neglect. Under the circumstances of this case, including that SL's petition alleged that it was unaware of the published resume of the application and further alleged facts sufficient to demonstrate that it was entitled to identification in Go West's application to the water court and a mailed copy of the resume from the clerk, the water court abused its discretion in summarily dismissing the petition for reconsideration for failure to show excusable neglect. The water court's order is therefore reversed.

L.

This water dispute originates in a remote desert area about a one-hour drive outside of Nucla, Colorado where the appellant, SL (Group, and the appellee, Go West Industries, own adjoining properties. Prior to 1985, both properties comprised an undivided parcel owned by Philip and Francis Lawhead. The Lawheads and their predecessors in title irrigated portions of their property from the Meadows Ditch and two extensions. In March 1998, Go West filed an application for surface water rights to the Meadows Ditch Extension to West Shavano Creek (West Shavano Extension), seeking a decree based upon historic appropriation for irrigation beginning July 1, 1988.

*639 The Go West application identified the United States Forest Service as the owner of the land upon which the point of diversion was located and identified itself as the owner of the land on which the referenced stock pond was located, but it did not make reference to SL Group in any way. Pursuant to section 37-92-302@B)(c)(T), 10 C.R.S. (1998), the water clerk in Division No. 4 prepared and published a resume of the application in a local newspaper and mailed a copy of the resume to Go West and the Forest Service. No statements of opposition were filed. After an on-site inspection of the property, the referee entered a ruling on January 29, 1999 granting an absolute water right to Go West for stockwater and irrigation from the West Shavano Extension with an appropriation date of July 1, 1988 and an adjudication date of 1998. No protest having been filed, the water court approved the ruling on February 22, 1999.

On September 5, 2000, approximately a year and a half later, adjoining land owner SL Group filed a Verified Petition for Reconsideration, seeking to have the court correct substantive errors in Go West's decree. See § 37-92-304(10), 10 C.R.S. (2001). Claiming to be a party entitled to receive mailed notice of the action according to section 37-92-302(8)(c)(I), and not to have otherwise been aware of the application, SL Group alleged that its failure to protest was due to "mistake, inadvertence, or excusable neglect."

More specifically, SL's motion alleged that between 1985 and 1991, in a series of transactions, the Lawheads transferred the irrigated portion of their property to the Nelsons, along with the associated water rights. That parcel, the western portion of the property, allegedly contained the only irrigated acreage within the original Lawhead property. In July 1996, the Nelsons transferred their property and water rights to SL Group. In that same year, the Lawheads transferred to Go West their remaining property, the eastern portion, consisting mainly of non-irrigated grazing land, located up-slope from the water delivery system.

According to the petition, the purchase of the SL Group property included the Law-head's water rights that originally had a 1988 priority to the West Shavano Extension. These water rights, however, had been placed on the 1984 abandonment list. Although the Lawheads continued to use the West Shavano Extension for irrigation on what would become the SL Group property, they failed to object to its inclusion on the abandonment list, and the West Shavano Extension was decreed abandoned in 1989.

In Go West's 1998 application, the legal description of the historically irrigated acreage included the entire former Lawhead property-an area encompassing both the Go West and SL Group parcels. According to SL Group's verified petition, the Go West property had never been irrigated, and Go West did not list SL Group as an "owner of land on which points of diversion or places of use are located," as required by the application form. The petition also alleged that the stock pond represented in the application as being located on Go West property is actually located on SL's property. The affidavit of a former ranch hand of the Lawheads, which was attached as support for Go West's application and which affirmed that he had continuously irrigated the Lawhead fields from 1972 through 1989 in spite of the abandonment decree, in fact described the entire original Lawhead parcel, making no distinetion between the Go West and the SL Group properties. In an affidavit accompanying SL's petition for reconsideration, the water commissioner who performed the field inspection indicated that SL's petition correctly set forth the location of the land irrigated by the West Shavano Extension and that it was his understanding at the time of the field inspection that Go West was the sole landowner in the area.

Some time after the ruling was approved by the water court, SL Group discovered that its use of the water had been compromised by the Go West adjudication and filed its petition for reconsideration. In Go West's responsive pleadings, it denied a number of SL's assertions, including the fact that the water at issue had historically been used exclusively on property now owned by SL. It also attached correspondence between SL Group and Go West evidencing a dispute over the use of water from the West Shavano *640 irrigation ditch, only weeks before Go West's application. Go West opposed SL's petition for reconsideration, arguing that SL had not shown excusable neglect and that SL was not a party whose rights had been adversely affected by the adjudication because the Lawhead's former decree had been ruled abandoned. Without a hearing, the water court dismissed SL's petition by minute order, concluding that publication had been proper and that there had been no showing of mistake, inadvertence, or excusable neglect as required by section 37-92-304(10). SL Group appealed that order directly to this court. 1

IL.

It is well-established that water rights vest upon a completed appropriation and application of water to beneficial use, see Shirola v. Turkey Cañon Ranch L.L.C., 937 P.2d 739, 744 (Colo.1997), and the General Assembly long ago established a system for settling the conflicting priorities to water rights through a process of adjudication and decree. South Adams County Water & Sanitation Dist. v. Broe Land Co., 812 P.2d 1161

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Bluebook (online)
42 P.3d 637, 2002 Colo. LEXIS 222, 2002 WL 372870, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/sl-group-llc-v-go-west-industries-inc-colo-2002.