Tongue Creek Orchard Co. v. Town of Orchard City

280 P.2d 426, 131 Colo. 177, 1955 Colo. LEXIS 394
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedFebruary 21, 1955
Docket17487
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 280 P.2d 426 (Tongue Creek Orchard Co. v. Town of Orchard City) 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
Tongue Creek Orchard Co. v. Town of Orchard City, 280 P.2d 426, 131 Colo. 177, 1955 Colo. LEXIS 394 (Colo. 1955).

Opinion

Mr. Justice Lindsley

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Petitioner herein, defendant in error, sought a change of point of diversion of a water right, and plaintiffs in *178 error appeared as objectors thereto. We shall refer to the parties as they appeared in the trial court.

Petitioner, Orchard City, is an incorporated town situated in the County of Delta, State of Colorado. In the latter part of 1953 petitioner purchased from Earl A. Johnson and Nellie E. Johnson certain ranch property located in Delta county. This property is hereinafter referred to as the Johnson Ranch. With this purchase was included forty-nine (49) shares of the capital stock of the Lake Fork Ditch Company, which is a mutual ditch company organized for the purpose of conveying irrigation waters to the stockholders thereof.

The Lake Fork Ditch Company, in the general adjudication proceedings of 1889 in Water District No. 40, State of Colorado, was awarded priority Number 8, for the ri'ght to use 10.15 cubic feet of water per second of time from Ward Creek, and for 4.35 second feet of water from Kiser Creek, both tributaries of Forked Tongue Creek.

Petitioner shortly after the purchase of the Lake Fork ditch stock, above mentioned, initiated proceedings in the district court of Delta county to change the point of diversion of the water represented by forty (40) of the forty-nine (49) shares of the1 capital stock of the Lake Fork Ditch Company; to wit, approximately one cubic foot of water per second of time, from the headgates of the Lake Fork Ditch on Ward and Kiser Creeks into the petitioner’s pipeline, the headgate of which is on Ward Creek and Kiser Creek, and also for a change in the place and manner of use to domestic and municipal purposes, as well as irrigation purposes; the remaining nine (9) shares, and the use of the water appurtenant thereto, to remain upon the Johnson Ranch.

To this petition for a change of point of diversion the objectors, all owners of junior decrees from the Forked Tongue Creek basin, filed a protest, asserting that the removal of approximately one cubic foot of water from the Johnson Ranch would injuriously affect objectors’ decrees.

*179 Forked Tongue Creek comes into existence at the junction of Dirty George Creek and Ward Creek, and above and below this juncture there are numerous decrees for water, a majority of which are owned by objectors.

Objectors own ia total of twenty-two irrigation decrees from the Forked Tongue drainage basin and tributaries thereof, which are junior to the Lake Fork Ditch decree. These decrees total 50.94 cubic feet of water per second of time. Fifteen of these decrees are from Dirty George Creek for 33.62 cubic feet of water, four are from Forked Tongue Creek proper for 8.35 cubic feet, and the remaining three decrees are from Happy Hollow Gulch for 8.97 cubic feet. It should be noted at this point that Happy Hollow Gulch has no head waters of its own and depends for its source of supply upon waste, seepage, and drainage from the irrigation in the area involved.

Intermingled with objectors’ decrees are a number of other decrees senior to that of objectors. Except for periods in exceptionally wet years there is not sufficient water in the Forked Tongue Creek and its tributaries to satisfy all decrees. In many seasons, some of the objectors obtain no water at all under their decrees.

Forked Tongue Creek, and its tributary Happy Hollow Gulch which has no head waters of its own, converge near the lower end of the irrigated areas.

The Johnson Ranch is located upon ia mesa situated between Forked Tongue Creek and Happy Hollow Gulch, a short distance above the confluence of Happy' Hollow Gulch and Tongue Creek. The east and west sides of the Johnson Ranch slope off sharply into the respective watersheds in between which there is an irrigated mesa.

There is no objection to the diversion from one head-gate to another by any objector situated between the present headgates and the proposed new headgates, the objection being the loss of return flow or seepage and waste water after it is used at the present place of irrigation. There likewise is no objection that the diversion *180 itself would increase the “duty” or enlarge the use of the water.

The trial court found that 60 per cent of the water used upon the Johnson place was discharged therefrom as waste water, one-third of which flowed to the west and two-thirds to the east.

The trial court also found that the one-third of the waste water flowing to the west did not reach Forked Tongue Creek itself, but was intercepted by the Perkins Ditch, which lay between the Johnson Ranch and Forked Tongue Creek, and that this interception of the Johnson waste water was below the headgate of the Perkins Ditch upon the Forked Tongue Creek, and that said water constituted no part of the Perkins Ditch decree.

The court further found that the two-thirds of the waste water from the Johnson Ranch, which flowed easterly into the Happy Hollow Gulch, was a “small amount”; that previous diversions of like water had not affected the supply in said Happy Hollow Gulch; that there would be no substantial injury or damage to the objectors; and that approximately one-half of the water users served by the pipeline of the Town of Orchard, into which the petitioner seeks to divert about one cubic foot of Johnson water, are so situated that the return and waste water from their system actually returns to Tongue Creek basin.

The court also found that a majority of the water users of petitioner would use the water for domestic and livestock purposes during the winter months while water tributary to the natural streams in this area, including the proposed Johnson water, would be stored in the reservoir of petitioner far upstream to the tributaries of Tongue Creek, and thereby eliminate the necessity of releasing said reservoir water during the winter months to the ditches and streams, which, under the objectors’ decrees, are for livestock and domestic purposes.

The court further found that the fact that these objectors may have used such waste water from the Johnson *181 Ranch in the past, gives them no right or control over the same. Neither does it obligate the owner to continue to maintain conditions so as to supply appropriators of waste water at any time or any quantity when acting in good faith.

Objectors specify error to the findings and conclusion of law of the trial court to the effect: 1'. That the objectors have no vested right in the return waters from the Johnson Ranch. 2. That the loss of the return water to Happy Hollow Gulch would not injure the objectors. 3. That the Johnson Ranch waste water flowing towards Tongue Creek was intercepted by the Perkins Ditch and forms no part of the decreed rights of the Perkins Ditch.

As to the first specification of error, that the objectors have no vested right in the return waters from the Johnson Ranch, the court correctly announced and applied the law. There is no obligation upon an owner to continue to maintain conditions so as to supply water to appropriators of waste water at any time or in any quantity when acting in good faith.

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Bluebook (online)
280 P.2d 426, 131 Colo. 177, 1955 Colo. LEXIS 394, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/tongue-creek-orchard-co-v-town-of-orchard-city-colo-1955.