Wyatt v. Larimer & Weld Irrigation Co.

1 Colo. App. 480
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedJanuary 15, 1892
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 1 Colo. App. 480 (Wyatt v. Larimer & Weld Irrigation Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wyatt v. Larimer & Weld Irrigation Co., 1 Colo. App. 480 (Colo. Ct. App. 1892).

Opinion

Reed, J.

At the very outset of the investigation we are embarrassed by want of data—by the failure of the pleader to state in the complaint certain important facts necessary to a proper understanding of the case and the equities of the parties. We should have been informed of the average volume of water flowing in the stream during the irrigating season, of the amount taken by appropriation prior to the appropriation of appellee in 1879,—whether there had been an adjudication and decree under the provisions of the statute, and the relative rights of priority and supply determined. We should also have been informed of the size, grade and estimated carrying capacity of the canal, and as near as practicable of the estimated loss of water in transmission by seepage and evaporation. These are all important factors in arriving at the equities of the parties and the construction of the contracts. Thej are, evidently, all elements and conditions that were known to the respective parties at the time of entering into the contracts, and it is presumed they were made with reference to such premises and existing conditions, but these facts were deemed by the pleader unimportant, hence, we are not informed.

It is alleged in the complaint, and urged and relied upon in argument, that The Larimer & Weld Irrigation Company (appellee), was and is a common carrier of water for irrigating purposes, and that its rights, duties aud obligations are to be determined on the assumption that that is its status. This theory is supposed to be asserted in and supported by the supreme court of this state in Wheeler v. Irrigation Co., 10 Colo. 582; Coffin v. Utah Co., 6 Colo. 448; Farmers etc. Co. v. Southworth, 13 Colo. 111, and Strickler v. Colo. Springs, 16 Colo. 61.

The law declared in those cases must be construed as applying only to the established facts of each ease. To attempt to generalize and give it application to all corporations [490]*490delivering water to consumers would be doing injustice to the court and the law. The application of the terra “ Com-, mon Carrier ” to such corporations was perhaps unfortunate. The name was probably adopted for want of a better. The anomalous and peculiar status of such corporation in some, aspects, or of some corporations in the functions exercised, approaching more nearly those of-a common carrier than any thing else, the name was applied. No competent court could or would attempt to assert that the functions, attributes and responsibilities of a canal company were identical with those of a common carrier, and in the opinion, the court in Wheeler v. Irrigation Co. (supra) guarded itself against this injustice in construction by saying

“ The Colorado doctrines of ownership and appropriation [as declared in the constitution, statutes and decisions), necessarily give the carrier of water an exceptional status; a status differing, in some particulars, from that of the ordinary common carrier. Certain peculiar rights are acquired in connection with the water diverted. It is unnecessary now, however, to enumerate these rights in detail. For the present it suffices to say that they are dependent, for their birth and continued existence, upon the use made by the consumer.” In a case like the present the facts and conditions stated in the complaint divest the appellee of every legal element necessary to constitute it a common carrier. Take the earliest definitions of a common carrier and we have:
“ To render a person liable as a common carrier he must exercise the business of carrying as a public employment, and must undertake to carry goods for all persons indiscriminately, and hold himself out as ready to engage in the transportation of goods for him as a business.” Coggs v. Bernard, 2 Ld. Raym. 909; Ingate v. Christie, 3 Car. & Kir. 61; Chit. on Carriers, § 15, adopted and recognized as correct in 1 Kent’s Com., § 40, p. 498; Story on Bail., § 495; Saterlee v. Groot, 1 Wend. (N. Y.) 272; Citizens Bank v. Nantucket Steamboat Co., 2 Story 17, and generally in all subsequent American decisions.

[491]*491And’s L. Die.—“Common Carrier, one who undertakes for hire or reward to transport the goods of such as choose to employ him, from place to place.” See Dwight v. Brewster, 1 Pick. (Mass.) 53.

“ If the carrier be employed in carrying for one or a definite number of persons byway of special undertaking he is only a private carrier.” Red. on Carriers, § 19.

These definitions are so elementary that they would not be stated, except for purposes of illustration to show that in the case presented the corporation is not brought within the definition, in any respect;' of either a common or private carrier, coming nearer the definition of private than common carrier, but lacking several, indispensable elements of either. In order to constitute a carrier of either class,—

1st. The goods or thing to he carried must be the property of the bailor.

2d. The thing must be delivered by the bailor to the carrier to he transported.

3d. The carrier must transport and deliver to the consignee the identical goods delivered to him for transportation.

4th. A person who contracts to transport and deliver to another at a given place a certain portion of a common lot of material to be separated from it at the place of the consumer, to which the consumer had no title prior to transportation and delivery, is in no legal sense a carrier, but a vendor of the commodity. Now, applying these axiomatic principles to the facts as pleaded, and we find that neither of appellants are alleged to have had any right or title by purchase, prior appropriation, application to a beneficial use, or otherwise, to any of the water appropriated, diverted and carried by the canal company at any time prior to the construction of the canal or prior to bringing suit that he could, or attempted to, deliver to the company for transportation. The water supply of the canal company (appellee) which it was to carry and deliver under its respective contracts was obtained by it, first, by the purchase and absorption of the [492]*492water rights formerly held by appropriation by the parties interested in old canal No. 10. (Neither the time when such rights were acquired, the relative priority of such rights nor the extent of such appropriations are stated.) Second, by the appropriation of any unappropriated water flowing in the river at the date of commencing the construction of the canal in March, 1879.

The right of appellant Thompson to water, as alleged in the complaint, is predicated upon the purchase of two water rights by contracts with the canal company; one executed by the company in April, 1880, of which he became the owner by purchase in December, 1881, the other acquired directly from the canal company, executed in February, 1882. The alleged rights of the Wyatts, appellants, to equitable relief are based upon the purchase by them of twenty-four water right contracts from the canal company, acquired in December, 1887. It is alleged that Thompson acquired the land upon which water was used in December, 1881, two years and a half after the appropriation of the water by the canal company, and the Wyatts became the owners of their land on the 16th of December, 1887, eight and one half years after such appropriation.

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1 Colo. App. 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wyatt-v-larimer-weld-irrigation-co-coloctapp-1892.