Upper Black Squirrel Creek Ground Water Management District v. Cherokee Metropolitan District

2015 CO 47, 351 P.3d 408, 2015 Colo. LEXIS 535, 2015 WL 3826724
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJune 22, 2015
DocketSupreme Court Case No. 13SA330
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 2015 CO 47 (Upper Black Squirrel Creek Ground Water Management District v. Cherokee Metropolitan District) 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
Upper Black Squirrel Creek Ground Water Management District v. Cherokee Metropolitan District, 2015 CO 47, 351 P.3d 408, 2015 Colo. LEXIS 535, 2015 WL 3826724 (Colo. 2015).

Opinions

JUSTICE COATS

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

1 Upper Black Squirrel appealed from an order of the water court interpreting an earlier stipulated decree, to which it and Cherokee Metropolitan .were parties, concerning the latter's rights to ground water in the Upper Black Squirrel Basin and, particularly, its right to export water for use outside the basin. Upper Black Squirrel sought a declaration that a provision of the stipulation, which required Cherokee to deliver wastewa-ter returns back into the basin for recharge of the aquifer, barred Cherokee and Meridian, another metropolitan district with which [411]*411Cherokee had entered into an intergovernmental agreement, from claiming eredit for these wastewater returns as replacement water, for purposes of acquiring the right to additional pumping from Cherokee's wells in the basin. The water court ruled instead that nothing in the stipulation, and particularly not its use of the word "recharge," implied abandonment or forfeiture of any right Cherokee might otherwise have to claim future credits with the Ground Water Commission.

T2 Although the water court found that Meridian, as a nonparty, was not bound by the stipulation in any event, it assessed costs and attorney fees against Meridian for pursuing frivolous defenses. Meridian eross-ap-pealed the water court's order imposing costs and attorney fees.

1 3 Because the water court properly interpreted the stipulation, and because it did not abuse its discretion in ordering costs and fees, its orders as to which error has been assigned on appeal and cross-appeal respectively are affirmed.

I.

14 In 2009, Upper Black Squirrel Creek Ground Water Management District ("UBS"), a governmental body statutorily charged with managing ground water in the Upper Black Squirrel Creek Ground Water Basin, filed a pleading with the water court styled "Motion for Declaratory Judgment Regarding Previous Stipulation of the Parties Entered in this Case No. 98CW80." Case No. 98CWS8O0 began with the filing of an "Application for Sextennial Finding of Reasonable Diligence" by Cherokee Metropolitan District, a statutorily formed and operated special district, with regard to certain of its conditional water rights known as "the Sweetwater wells" A number of disputes concerning Cherokee's ground water rights in the Upper Black Squirrel Creck Basin were resolved by a 1999 stipulation, entered into by Cherokee, UBS, the State and Division Engineers, and the Colorado Ground Water Commission. See Cherokee Metro. Dist. v. Meridian Serv. Metro. Dist. (Cherokee III), 266 P.3d 401, 403-04 (Colo.2011) (recapping tortured history of the proceedings up to that point); see also Cherokee Metro. Dist. v. Upper Black Squirrel Designated Ground Water Mgmt. Dist. (Cherokee II), 247 P.3d 567 (Colo.2011); Cherokee Metro. Dist. v. Simpson (Cherokee I), 148 P.3d 142 (Colo.2006).

15 More particularly, the 2009 motion by UBS referenced an application for replacement plan filed with the Colorado Ground Water Commission by Cherokee and Meridian Service Metropolitan District, another statutory district with which Cherokee had entered into an intergovernmental agreement concerning a new wastewater treatment plant to process wastewater from both service areas. UBS opposed this application before the Commission; moved for a declaration by the water court to the effect that the terms of the 1999 stipulation prohibited Cherokee and Meridian from claiming credit for the wastewater returns Cherokee was obligated to deliver back into the basin; and sought to enjoin Cherokee from asserting such a claim in an application for replacement plan before the Commission. The water court granted a preliminary injunction as requested; denied Meridian's motion to intervene; and declared that the stipulation prohibited Cherokee or any other persons from claiming a credit in Cherokee's replacement plan application for the wastewater returns it delivered back into the basin.

T6 Cherokee appealed the declaration to this court, and after determining that the water court erred in denying Meridian's motion to intervene, we vacated the water court's declaration and ordered it to permit Meridian to participate in any further proceedings. See Cherokee III, 266 P.3d at 408. Upon remand, UBS filed an amended motion for declaratory judgment, and the parties and intervenor were permitted to rebrief the issue. Following the retirement of the water judge who made the initial rulings, a different water judge ruled on the basis of the new briefs, disagreeing in significant part with the earlier ruling by concluding that the 1999 stipulation does not preclude Cherokee from making a claim for return flow credits as part of its replacement plan pending before the Ground Water Commission.

[412]*412T7 More particularly, the water court emphasized the narrowness and formality of its ruling. In its written order on remand, it made clear that the only question before it involved the interpretation of paragraph 5 of the stipulation, which was entitled, "RECHARGE," and consisted of two sentences:

Cherokee will use its best efforts to deliver wastewater returns from Sunset, Paintbrush, and Woodman Hills subdivision, Falcon Air Force Base and any other subdivisions it services back into the Upper Black Squirrel Creek Designated Basin for recharge of the aquifer. Cherokee shall recharge any wastewater returns from the Sunset Plant in the aquifer.

While the water court agreed that paragraph 5 clearly requires the return by Cherokee of certain recycled wastewater to the basin, rather than putting it to successive uses or permitting its return to the stream in the receiving basin, it found nothing in the language of the stipulation precluding Cherokee from making a claim for return flow credits with the Commission. however, it specified that its order implied nothing about the merits of the application of Cherokee/Meridian, and that the Ground Water Commission remained completely free to determine whether the proposed replacement plan would meet the burden imposed on applicants to replace the amount of designated ground water withdrawn. By the same token, -

18 In addition, the court concluded that Meridian was not a party to the 1999 stipulation, and accordingly, it could not, in any event, preclude Meridian from claiming replacement credit. In a subsequent order, however, the water court did grant attorney fees and costs to UBS in the amount of $7,600, as the result of what it found to be substantially frivolous and groundless arguments advanced by Meridian concerning the jurisdiction of the court.

19 UBS appealed from the water court's order denying its motion for declaratory judgment, and Meridian cross-appealed concerning the court's award of costs and fees.

II.

110 Although the question before us is ostensibly, as it was in the water court, one of interpreting the 1999 stipulation, there is surprising agreement among the parties about not only the applicable principles of interpretation but even the meaning of the relevant terms and provisions of the stipulation.

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2015 CO 47, 351 P.3d 408, 2015 Colo. LEXIS 535, 2015 WL 3826724, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/upper-black-squirrel-creek-ground-water-management-district-v-cherokee-colo-2015.