SRJ I VENTURE v. Smith Cattle, Inc.

820 P.2d 341, 1991 WL 231961
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedDecember 9, 1991
Docket90SA333
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 820 P.2d 341 (SRJ I VENTURE v. Smith Cattle, 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
SRJ I VENTURE v. Smith Cattle, Inc., 820 P.2d 341, 1991 WL 231961 (Colo. 1991).

Opinion

Chief Justice ROVIRA

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This appeal was initiated by Smith Cattle, Inc. (Smith) and Reid Cattle Co. (Reid), defendants below, to review a decision of the District Court, Water Division No. 2. The water court granted judgment for Travelers Insurance Company (Travelers), denying Smith and Reid’s request for a curtailment of Travelers’ decreed water rights in order to preserve the natural subirrigation, seepage and springs on Smith’s property. The court also denied Smith and Reid’s request to enjoin Travelers, a junior water rights holder, from pumping water from certain wells. The water court also determined that certain of Smith’s water rights were abandoned or partially abandoned. We affirm.

I

We primarily rely on the trial court findings for distillation of the following facts. The dispute in this case centers around water rights located in Horse Creek Basin, an area of over 1,000 square miles located in parts of El Paso, Elbert, Lincoln, and Crowley Counties, Colorado. The Nuss-baum Alluvium is the principal water source for the basin formed by Little Horse Creek and the Steels Fork Creek. The degree of irrigation in the basin varies widely — some areas receive full water supply while other areas are marginally irrigated and receive water only after flooding.

The Nussbaum Alluvium discharges water to the surface along a continuous line of seeps and springs. On the Smith Ranch, below this seep line, lies a “bog” area where a substantial amount of natural vegetation is supported by water discharged from the Nussbaum formation. Travelers’ wells and those of Rodney J. Preisser lie in the southeastern part of the Nussbaum Alluvium and are the closest wells to the seeps and springs which provide the flow to Steels Fork Creek, the East Branch of Steels Fork, and Little Horse Creek. Preis-ser owns the absolute and conditional water rights decreed to wells numbered 5, 6, and 11 through 15. Travelers is the owner of the absolute and conditional water rights decreed to wells numbered 1 through 4 and 7 through 10. All of these wells withdraw groundwater from the Nussbaum Alluvium. Both Smith’s and Reid’s water rights, including surface and ground water rights, are senior to those decreed to Travelers’ and Preisser’s wells. Smith and Reid both divert water from Little Horse Creek and Steels Fork Creek downstream from the Nussbaum Alluvium.

From April until October, most of the water discharge from the Nussbaum is consumed by evapotranspiration 1 from naturally occurring vegetation. During this growing season, the water discharge is also diverted and consumed by Smith, greatly diminishing the surface flow leaving the ranch. After the growing season, beginning in November each year, Smith’s reservoirs are filled to active storage capacity over a period of 45-70 days. Once Smith’s reservoirs are filled, Steels Fork Creek flows southeast toward Reid’s ranch, *343 where it is diverted by the Brooks Ditch, which is owned by Reid.

Little Horse Creek also receives discharge from the Nussbaum Alluvium. The flow of Little Horse Creek is subject to evapotranspiration losses during the seven-month growing season and to surface diversions from three ditches owned by Reid and from two reservoirs owned by parties not involved in this suit. Except when heavy rainstorms occur, water does not flow on the surface of either Steels Fork or Little Horse Creek downstream from Reid’s Ranch.

Approximately 52 wells have been constructed in the Nussbaum Alluvium since 1948. In two previous cases, W-2545 and W-3890, the water court found, inter alia, that there was water available for appropriation by wells 1 through 15 in the amount set forth in the decrees, and the withdrawal of any ground water by those wells would not injuriously affect any vested water rights.

This action was commenced when the original plaintiff, SRJ I Venture (Venture), filed a complaint seeking a declaratory judgment that the Arkansas River Rules 2 were inapplicable to the wells located in the Nussbaum Alluvium because the Nuss-baum was independent of the Arkansas River. Venture also sought a declaration that operation of their wells was not injurious to the senior water rights of Smith and Reid. The state and division engineers had been attempting to apply the Arkansas River Rules to Venture’s wells, thus requiring well permit conditions and administration. Venture, therefore, also requested that the court enjoin the engineers from administering Venture’s ground water rights as a result of a call 3 that the engineers had placed on Little Horse Creek and Steels Fork Creek. Venture also sought to enjoin Smith and Reid from placing calls for their decreed senior water rights on those two streams.

Smith and Reid filed an answer and a counterclaim requesting an injunction against the pumping of certain Venture wells. The state and division engineers answered the original complaint and asserted that the Arkansas River Rules applied to Venture’s wells.

Travelers, as owner of wells 1-4 and 7-10, moved to intervene as plaintiff, and the motion was granted. On May 29,1987, the court entered a partial summary judgment in favor of Travelers and Venture, holding that the Arkansas River Rules do not apply to their wells. This ruling was certified as final in accordance with C.R.C.P. 54(b), was appealed to this court, and we affirmed in State Engineer v. Smith Cattle, Inc., 780 P.2d 546 (Colo.1989).

After the May 1987 grant of partial summary judgment, Preisser, who held a first deed of trust on Venture’s water rights, succeeded to the entire interest in the water rights after Venture defaulted on its obligation. Preisser moved to intervene as plaintiff and the motion was granted.

On September 12, 1988, Smith and Reid filed an amended answer and counterclaim in which they requested that both Preisser and Travelers be enjoined from pumping their wells because of the detrimental effect the pumping had on Smith’s and Reid’s ability to meet the needs of their senior water rights.

Pursuant to an agreement among the parties the state was ordered to prepare a *344 proposed plan for administration of the subject water rights, as well as other water rights that could be affected under a plan for administration in the Horse Creek Basin. The state engineer filed such a plan in February 1989. The first phase of the proposed plan was to conduct investigations and issue orders to correct newly discovered illegal and improper uses of water in the Horse Creek Basin. Phase II of the plan was to curtail pumping by well owners to maximize beneficial use of both underground water tributary to the surface streams and surface water rights in the basin. Phase III involved monitoring water use and water levels in the basin to determine if the desired effect was being achieved.

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820 P.2d 341, 1991 WL 231961, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/srj-i-venture-v-smith-cattle-inc-colo-1991.