Water Supply & Storage Co. v. Tenney

24 Colo. 344
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedSeptember 15, 1897
DocketNo. 3521
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 24 Colo. 344 (Water Supply & Storage Co. v. Tenney) 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
Water Supply & Storage Co. v. Tenney, 24 Colo. 344 (Colo. 1897).

Opinions

Mr. Justice Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Among the errors assigned is one that the court below erred in sustaining the defendant’s motion to strike out the second reply to the fourth amended defense of the answer. Interesting as the question of pleading sought to be raised may be, inasmuch as the plaintiff was permitted, without objection from the defendants, to introduce in evidence, according to plaintiff’s own admission, the very matters attempted to be set up in this reply, the error is cured, if any there was, in sustaining the motion to strike.

The construction placed by appellant upon that portion of the decree which awards to the defendant company its priority is that whenever there is a scarcity of water in the stream, the date of such priority takes effect, not from the beginning of the work, but from the date of its completion.

Upon the other hand, the various contentions of the defendant corporation with respect to the merits of the case [349]*349are, first, that the decree of 1884 is itself absolute; that it determines the quantity of water to which defendant’s ditch in its entirety is entitled, and fixes with certainty the date of the appropriation as of the time of beginning the work, viz: in 1880; that, were this not so, and the decree merely a conditional one, or that, by .the terms thereof, the priority was to date only from the completion of the work, nevertheless, by reason of the acquiescence upon the part of the plaintiff company, and by its conduct in silently standing by and seeing the water commissioner make distribution of the water upon the basis of the decree as construed by said water commissioner, by which the. defendant’s priority over the plaintiff was acknowledged and recognized, the plaintiff is thereby estopped now from questioning the absolute verity of the decree, and must be held to have waived any superior rights, if any it ever had.

The defendant further contends that, under its certificate of incorporation, plaintiff had no corporate power to acquire the water rights decreed to the Larimer county ditch; and that, under the evidence introduced in this case, even were the entire matter of the adjudication of water rights open for determination, the proof shows that defendant’s rights are superior to those of the plaintiff.

Section 314 of the General Statutes of 1883 (Mills’ Ann. Stats, sec. 573) gives rise to another point of dispute between the parties, the plaintiff claiming that thereunder, unless the ditch or canal of the defendant company was completed within three years from the beginning of the work, the date of priority attaches as of the date of the completion, and not from the beginning, while the contrary of this proposition is maintained by the defendant, it being conceded that the work was not completed and the appropriation of water actually made until more than three years after the work was actually beguu, and until after the decree was rendered.

Much of the evidence introduced by the parties was not pertinent to any issues that could properly be tried in this action. The only bearing some of this evidence had upon [350]*350any possible feature of the case related to issues that were settled and determined years before, when the original decrees were made. While both of the parties to this controversy base their rights in the main upon these decrees, nevertheless there would seem to be indications at the trial below that they supposed some of the matters there determined were still open for adjudication. It is conceded that the contingency anticipated by the decree above quoted (viz: that there might be a scarcity of water) had happened prior to, and continued to exist at, the time this action was begun.

The language of this decree is not, in all respects, free from doubt; but we think the meaning of the district court may be given effect. It will be observed that when the decree was entered, but two miles of the ditch were completed, and for five miles more the work was only partially done. The upper two miles of the ditch was known as the “ Canon Line.” It was built through a rocky, precipitious canon, the sides of which were high, and much time was consumed in its construction. Work was begun on the first of April, 1880, and, according to the statement of the owners, the ditch was intended to be fifty-two miles long. In April, 1882, when the original decree was entered, no part of the ditch had been completed. The rights of these parties are not in any way settled by this original decree, but must be ascertained from the supplemental one of 1884, the portion ■of which applicable to descendant’s ditch has been set out in extenso in the statement of facts.

The carrying capacity of the ditch, as then completed, was computed to be 307 cubic feet of water per second of time. Possibly the decree is susceptible of the interpretation that, if within a reasonable time from its entry, laterals were constructed at any point along the first two miles of the completed ditch, and lands were, within a reasonable time thereafter, irrigated therefrom, an absolute priority was given to such portion of the ditch to its full carrying capacity, to date from the time of the beginning of the work. Certainly, no more favorable interpretation in behalf of the defendant could [351]*351possibly be deduced from the language of the decree. But wlien we come to consider the character and nature of the country through which this completed portion of the ditch ran, and bear in mind that the evidence fails to show that any laterals have ever up to the present time been taken from this portion of the ditch, such an interpretation would be of no practical value to the defendants. Therefore, doubtless for this as well as other reasons satisfactory to themselves, the counsel for appellees insist that the limitation mentioned by which, in times of scarcity, the full priority is to be enjoyed from the then uncompleted portions of the ditch as of the date when the ditch was finished, and not from the beginning of the work, applies only to the storage of water in reservoirs.

To us there seems to be at least two insuperable objections to any such interpretation: first, the language of the decree itself is against it, for this language is “ when said ,clitch and reservoirs are fully completed if there shall be a scarcity of water so that they cannot be filled, then the right to the full use of said priority in said ditch and reservoirs shall date from the time of their completion.” The language of the limitation certainly refers not merely to the reservoirs, but to the ditch. But if there was any doubt about this proposition, still when we consider that by section 2270 of Mills’ Annotated Statutes (Gen. Stats. 1883, sec. 1724) which confers the only authority for filling reservoirs, water for storage in reservoirs can be used only when not needed for immediate domestic and irrigating use, the language employed in the decree must be held to include the ditch as well as the reservoir. It is scarcely conceivable that the district court would deliberately enter a decree giving to a reservoir owner any priority to fill his reservoir which would conflict with any right of a ditch owner to use water for irrigation, even though the priority of the latter was junior in time to the construction of the reservoir.

There may be some uncertainty as to whether, 'under our irrigation statutes, the district court in making these decrees [352]

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Bluebook (online)
24 Colo. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/water-supply-storage-co-v-tenney-colo-1897.