Thompson v. Colorado Ground Water Commission

575 P.2d 372, 194 Colo. 489, 1978 Colo. LEXIS 686
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJanuary 23, 1978
Docket27459
StatusPublished
Cited by22 cases

This text of 575 P.2d 372 (Thompson v. Colorado Ground Water Commission) 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
Thompson v. Colorado Ground Water Commission, 575 P.2d 372, 194 Colo. 489, 1978 Colo. LEXIS 686 (Colo. 1978).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE ERICKSON

delivered the opinion of the Court.

On February 13, 1974, Gordon L. Thompson (plaintiff) filed an application with the Colorado Ground Water Commission (commission) seeking a permit to construct a well and to appropriate designated ground water from the Northern High Plains Designated Ground Water Basin in Yuma County. The commission denied the application on the basis that the proposed appropriation would unreasonably impair existing water rights. In reaching its decision, the commission used its three-mile test as modified by its state-line policy to determine the availability of unappropriated water. The plaintiff requested and was granted a hearing before the commission, which sustained the denial of the plaintiffs application on July 7, 1975.

The plaintiff thereafter appealed the commission’s decision to the district court in and for Yuma County and a trial de novo was held pursuant to statute. Section 37-90-115, C.R.S. 1973. Expert witnesses appeared on behalf of both the plaintiff and the commission. On April 14, 1976, the district court entered a judgment denying the application because unappropriated water was not available when the application was considered under the commission’s guidelines. The district court subsequently amended its judgment to include additional findings of fact and denied the plaintiffs motion for a new trial on July 29, 1976. This appeal was then perfected.

The plaintiff alleges as grounds for reversal that: (1) the state-line policy is a rule adopted by the commission in violation of the provisions of the Administrative Code; (2) the state-line policy contravenes statutory and constitutional provisions concerning the use and conservation of Colorado waters; (3) the commission failed to determine the actual quantity of [493]*493prior existing rights; (4) the commission failed to consider statutory factors in the three-mile test on a local basis; (5) evidence of water use and aquifer depletion in areas distant from the plaintiffs proposed well location was improperly admitted, and (6) the commission used a 25-year aquifer life as of the date of the application in its three-mile test. We reverse and remand for proceedings not inconsistent with this opinion.

I.

The plaintiffs first allegation of error is that the state-line policy is a rule adopted by the commission in violation of the provisions of the Administrative Code. We rejected this argument when directed at the commission’s three-mile test in Fundingsland v. Colorado Ground Water Commission, 171 Colo. 487, 468 P.2d 835 (1970):

“The function of this Court is not to review the decision of the commission, but to review the judgment of the district court handed down in the trial de novo. The provisions of Article 16 of the Administrative Code do not apply to the judicial branch of government. C.R.S. 1963, 3-16-1(1 )(b). It is beyond the scope of this review to question whether the commission, in its denial of the plaintiffs application, used the three mile test as an administrative rule or as a tool with which to resolve the facts.”

The district court in this case properly considered the commission’s three-mile test as modified by the state-line policy to determine whether the plaintiffs application should be granted. The use of the commission’s policy guidelines by the district court in the trial de novo, therefore, permits the plaintiff and amicus curiae to challenge the underlying policies.

II.

Both the district court and the commission based their respective decisions on the commission’s three-mile test as modified by its state-line policy. We held that the three-mile test evidenced a reasonable method of administering ground water in Fundingsland v. Colorado Ground Water Commission, supra.

The three-mile test requires that a circle with a radius of three miles be drawn around the proposed point of diversion. Calculations are then made to determine the volume of water available for appropriation within the circle. This test takes into account all of the factors specified by statute. Section 37-90-107(5), C.R.S. 1973. Additionally, the commission considers the saturated thickness of the aquifer in the three-mile circle, the number of wells in the circle, and the yield of the wells within the circle. The total appropriation from within the circle is determined by adding the yield of all existing well rights. Finally, as noted in Fundingsland v. Colorado Ground Water Commission, supra:

“A rate of pumping is determined which would result in a 40% depletion of the available ground water in that area over a period of 25 years. If that rate of pumping is being exceeded by the existing wells within the circle, then the application for a permit to drill a new well may be denied.”

[494]*494When the three-mile test was conducted in the plaintiffs case, 24% of the circle fell in Nebraska. That resulted in the modification of the three-mile test by the commission’s state-line policy. Dewayne R. Schroeder, a water resource engineer and staff member of the commission, explained the state-line policy to the court. Schroeder testified that when a circle extends into an adjoining state, only the saturated thickness of the Colorado portion of the formation is used in calculations utilizing the three-mile test to determine the volume of water contained within the circle. The amount of water subject to appropriation in the entire circle is then multiplied by the percentage of the circle in Colorado to produce the amount of water which can be appropriated by Colorado appropriators. Finally, the number of Colorado wells and the total quantity of their rights is calculated to determine the level of existing appropriation. Unless excess water exists under the three-mile test as modified, the application is denied.

If the commission had ignored the state-line policy, the commission concedes that the plaintiffs application would have been granted. While the Colorado portion of the plaintiffs circle was overappropriated under the three-mile test, the circle, when considered as a whole, and with cognizance of the development in Nebraska, was not overappropriated.

The plaintiff contends that the commission’s refusal to consider the saturated thickness of the entire circle and the number of wells in Nebraska is in violation of the state engineer’s and the commission’s duty to insure that Colorado waters are conserved and made available for use by Colorado citizens. Sections 37-81-102, 37-90-136, C.R.S. 1973. This argument rests upon the undisputed fact that the Ogallala formation slopes and flows in a northeasterly direction toward Nebraska. The plaintiff also asserts that the Ogallala formation is thicker in Nebraska and is being charged with water which flows from Colorado. Colorado water, it is argued, is, therefore, leaving the state to the detriment of Colorado residents and contrary to statutory provisions. The plaintiff further contends that the state-line policy denies his constitutional right to divert unappropriated water. Colo. Const., Art. XVI, Sec. 6. An amicus curiae brief asserts that the state-line policy denies applicants their rights to the equal protection of the laws. U. S. Const., Amend. XIV.

We are in agreement with the district court’s conclusion that the state-line policy is a matter properly within the legislatively delegated powers of the commission.

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Thompson v. Colorado Ground Water Commission
575 P.2d 372 (Supreme Court of Colorado, 1978)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
575 P.2d 372, 194 Colo. 489, 1978 Colo. LEXIS 686, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-colorado-ground-water-commission-colo-1978.