Southeastern Colorado Water Conservancy District v. Shelton Farms, Inc.

529 P.2d 1321, 187 Colo. 181
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 20, 1975
Docket26420, 26432
StatusPublished
Cited by32 cases

This text of 529 P.2d 1321 (Southeastern Colorado Water Conservancy District v. Shelton Farms, 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
Southeastern Colorado Water Conservancy District v. Shelton Farms, Inc., 529 P.2d 1321, 187 Colo. 181 (Colo. 1975).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE DAY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from two judgments and decrees awarding appellees Shelton Farms and Colorado-New Mexico Land Company (“the Company”) water rights free from the call of any and all senior decreed water rights on the Arkansas River.

This case, so far as we are advised, is of first impression in the United States, dealing with whether the killing of water-using vegetation and the filling of a marshy area to prevent evaporation can produce a superior water right for the amount of water not transpired or evaporated. The Pueblo district court held it could, and granted both Shelton and the Company such a water right.

The facts differed slightly in each case. However, the issues presented were so similar that the cases were consolidated before us on appeal, brought by the objectors Southeastern Water Conservancy District (“the District”) and others in the Shelton case, and the District as sole objector in the Company case. We hold for the objectors, and reverse each judgment and decree.

I.

To comprehend the importance of this lawsuit, it is necessary to understand the Arkansas River and its tributaries.

In 1863 there were virtually no “water-loving” trees along the banks of the river. Their growth was prevented when the great [184]*184roaming buffalo herds ate the saplings, and the native Indians used most of the timber. In the next 40 years both the buffalo and the Indians were decimated. Phreatophytes (water consuming plants) and cottonwood began to. appear along the Arkansas. After the great Pueblo flood of 1921 the river bottom became thickly infested with tamarisk or salt cedar, a highly phreatophytic growth.

Since 1863 all surface flow of the river has been put to beneficial use, until today the Arkansas is greatly over-appropriated. There is not enough flow to satisfy decreed water rights. The phreatophytes have hindered the situation, for they have consumed large quantities of subsurface water which would otherwise have flowed in the stream and been available for decreed use.

In 1940, appellee Shelton bought 500 acres of land on the Arkansas River. Since then, he has cleared two land areas of phreatophytes, and filled in a third marshy area. Shelton claimed he had saved approximately 442 acre-feet of water per year, previously consumed by phreatophytes or lost to evaporation, which is now available for beneficial use. Shelton had 8 previously decreed wells. He asked for the right to augment his previous water rights with the salvaged water, to use during those times when pumping is curtailed by the State Engineer.

The objectors Southeastern Water Conservancy District, and others, moved to dismiss the augmentation application. The motion was denied and trial was held. The lower court awarded Shelton 181.72 acre-feet of water, free from the call of the river. The lower court analogized to the law of accretion, stating that the capture and use by another of water which ordinarily would be lost is not detrimental to prior holders. The decree contained a comprehensive series of safeguards to protect the prior vested interests. In an amendment to the decree, the trial court held that although 1971 Perm. Supp., C.R.S. 1963, 148-21-22 requires that later water rights adjudicated should be junior to prior decreed water rights, the provision did not apply in this case.

Appellee Colorado-New Mexico Land Co., Inc., received a similar award of 181 acre-feet of water, not to exceed 161 acre-feet in any one year, free from the call of the river. One Phelps [185]*185had removed phreatophytes from his land, and obtained a conditional decree. The claimant Company acquired the land from Phelps, applied to have the decree made final, and the application was approved. The facts in this case differ only because there was no plan of augmentation, as there was with Shelton. In addition, the hearing before the water referee was uncontested, and that ruling was subsequently approved by the district judge without opposition. The Water Conservancy District learned of the Company decree 20 days later, but took no action until the filing of other similar applications. The District then contested the final judgment. It also appealed the Shelton award, together with other objectors, Fort Lyons Canal Company and Holbrook Mutual Irrigation Company.

II.

The facts in each case are not disputed. Before this Court is totally a question of law. The issue can be stated very simply: May one who cuts down water-consuming vegetation obtain a decree for an equivalent amount of water for his own beneficial use free from the call of the river?

Appellees state that the Water Right Determination and Administration Act (“the Act”), 1969 Perm. Supp., C.R.S. 1963, 148-21-1 et seq., permits augmentation or substitution of water captured. Those are flexible terms. Thus, appellees feel that the source of water so provided — whether developed or salvaged — is immaterial, so long as prior vested rights are not injured. They insist that but for their actions the salvaged water would have been available to no one, so now they may receive a water right free from the call of prior appropriators, who are in no way harmed. Appellees conclude that their actions provide maximum utilization of water, protect vested rights, and encourage conservation and waste reduction in the water-scarce Arkansas River Valley.

Also appearing here is the Colorado Water Protection and Development Association, which has filed an amicus brief in support of both judgments below. The Association is presently developing and implementing a plan for augmentation, similar to Shelton’s, to permit its member wells to continue pumping, allegedly without injury to vested senior rights on the river.

[186]*186The objectors assert that the lower court’s resolution of the issue does violence to Colorado’s firm appropriation doctrine of “first in time — first in right” on which the priority of previous decrees is bottomed. They point out that the existing case law in Colorado, which was not changed by statute, limits the doctrine of “free from call” to waters which are truly developed and were never part of the river system. They argue that appellees’ claims were not for developed water, and thus must come under the mandates of the priority system. Furthermore, a priority date free from the call of the river will impinge the entire scheme of adjudication of water decrees as required by the Act.

There is no legal precedent squarely in point for either denying or approving these claims. The answer requires consideration of judicial precedent relating to “developed” and “salvaged” water, as well as consideration of the provisions of the Water Act. Also squarely before us is the equally serious question of whether the granting of such a unique water right will encourage denuding river banks everywhere of trees and shrubs which, like the vegetation destroyed in these cases, also consume the river water.

m.

We first consider existing case law. There is no question that one who merely clears out a channel, lines it with concrete or otherwise hastens the flow of water, without adding to the-existing water, is not entitled to a decree therefor. Buckers Irrigation Co. v. Farmers Ditch Co., 31 Colo. 62, 72 P. 49 (1903); Comstock v. Ramsay, 55 Colo. 244, 133 P. 1107 (1913); Bieser v. Stoddard, 73 Colo. 554, 216, P. 707 (1923); Comrie v. Sweet, 75 Colo. 199, 225 P.

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Bluebook (online)
529 P.2d 1321, 187 Colo. 181, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/southeastern-colorado-water-conservancy-district-v-shelton-farms-inc-colo-1975.