Willows Water District v. Mission Viejo Co.

854 P.2d 1246, 1993 WL 242291
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 26, 1993
Docket92SA205
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 854 P.2d 1246 (Willows Water District v. Mission Viejo Co.) 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
Willows Water District v. Mission Viejo Co., 854 P.2d 1246, 1993 WL 242291 (Colo. 1993).

Opinion

Justice ERICKSON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

The appellant, Willows Water District (Willows), appeals from an order of the District Court, Water Division 1 (water court). The water court made a final determination of the water rights of Willows in each of the eight Phipps-Arapahoe wells (the PA wells) that are identified in letter agreements and prior applications for permits. The PA wells withdraw nontributary ground water underlying the Highlands Ranch property owned by Mission Viejo Company (Mission Viejo), and affect the water rights of Mission Viejo, Highlands Ranch Development Corporation, and Centennial Water and Sanitation District (collectively referred to as the “Highlands Ranch group”). 1 In addition to the final *1248 decree 2 determining the amount of water that Willows may withdraw from each of the eight PA wells, the water court found that Willows was entitled to permits to construct “additional wells” to access its finally decreed water rights, but any additional wells would be subject to the terms and conditions imposed in the decree.

We hold that the water court properly resolved the question of the amount of water that Willows may withdraw from the PA wells. We also conclude that the water court properly placed terms and conditions on Willows’s ability to obtain permits for additional wells in order to preserve the contractual relationship of the parties to the extent possible and to prevent enlargement of Willows’s water rights to the detriment of the water rights of the Highlands Ranch group. Accordingly, we affirm the orders of the water court.

I

The State Engineer has issued permits to Willows for the eight PA wells drawing water from an aquifer, commonly referred to as the Arapahoe formation, which underlies Highlands Ranch. 3 Highlands Ranch is located in Douglas County and was owned at one time by Lawrence C. Phipps, Jr. and the Estate of Lawrence C. Phipps, Jr. (“Phipps”). The rights of Willows to withdraw the ground water from the Arapahoe formation are contractually based on a complex series of transactions. 4

The basic documents evidencing Phipps’s consent allowing Willows to construct the eight PA wells are two letter agreements. Under the first letter agreement, Phipps granted permission to the Crow Western Corporation to construct two wells, wells PA1 and PA2, and to use seventy-five percent of the ground water produced therefrom. In return, Phipps retained the right to receive the remaining twenty-five percent of the water produced by the two PA wells. 5 A similar letter agreement was entered into between Phipps and the Phipps 1527 Company with respect to wells PA5 to PA8. 6 By a series of intermediate transfers, Willows obtained all of the interests of the developers of the eight PA wells. Willows also subsequently acquired the twenty-five percent interest which *1249 Phipps had retained under the two letter agreements from Mission Viejo, who in turn had acquired the twenty-five percent interests when it purchased Highlands Ranch from Phipps. 7

Willows subsequently sought and obtained judicial decrees adjudicating final water rights to three of the eight PA wells; and a combination of final and conditional rights to the other five. 8 Willows also obtained final decrees for all eight PA wells allowing each well to withdraw a set amount of water annually from the Arapahoe formation. 9

To address problems it anticipated with the withdrawal of water from the eight PA wells, Willows applied to the State Engineer in 1988 for permits to construct additional wells on Highlands Ranch to supplement the original eight PA wells. 10 Willows sought permits to construct additional wells that would enable Willows to produce water from the Arapahoe formation at an increased rate, but would not increase the total annual production beyond the amounts specified in the original permits and decrees. 11

In response, the Highlands Ranch group initiated a declaratory judgment action in the water court, case number 88CW079, seeking a determination that Willows had no right to construct the additional wells without Mission Viejo’s consent. The Highlands Ranch group also sought an injunction to prevent Willows from construct- ' ing any additional wells.

In a separate proceeding, Willows and the State Engineer asked the water court to invoke its retained' jurisdiction in the actions in which Willows had obtained decrees for the eight PA wells, case numbers W-8284-76 and W-9310-78, to determine whether Willows was entitled to the additional wells. The water court granted the motion to invoke its retained jurisdiction.

Case numbers 85CW163 and 85CW170 in which Willows sought final decrees for water rights previously adjudicated condition *1250 ally to five of the original eight PA wells were also simultaneously pending in the water court. 12 In June 1989, the water court consolidated all of the foregoing cases for trial.

The water court heard the consolidated cases between August 29, 1989, and September 7, 1989. On April 3,1990, the court issued a memorandum of decision and order for the consolidated cases. The court’s findings and conclusions related almost entirely to the legal requirements for obtaining a final decree for the conditional water rights and the quantification of such rights in a final decree in case numbers 85CW163 and 85CW170. The water court ordered Willows to submit a proposed final decree with respect to three of the five PA wells for which a final decree had not been obtained earlier and directed a further hearing to address an unresolved issue as to the final decree for the other two PA wells. The Highlands Ranch group sought review before this court of the water court's determination concerning Willows’s right to permits for additional wells by taking separate appeals from one of the retained jurisdiction actions, case number W-8284-76, and the declaratory and injunctive action, case number 88CW079. 13

On appeal, we decided that the water court had not finally determined all of the issues contained in the consolidated cases, and had not specifically determined, pursuant to C.R.C.P. 54(b), that there was no just reason for delaying an appeal by the Highlands Ranch group. We therefore dismissed both appeals because we lacked jurisdiction to consider the merits of the water court’s order on the additional wells issue. Mission Viejo Co. v. Willows Conservation Dist., 818 P.2d 254, 262 (Colo.1991).

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854 P.2d 1246, 1993 WL 242291, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/willows-water-district-v-mission-viejo-co-colo-1993.