delivered the Opinion of the Court.
These cases are consolidated for issuance of a single opinion to resolve a dispute over recreational use of Empire Reservoir between Bijou Irrigation District (“District”), the entity organized to administer water appropriated and stored in the reservoir, and private parties who own land underlying the reservoir (“Landowners”).
In 1983 the District filed suit against the Landowners in Morgan County District Court for declaratory judgment, and to quiet title, enjoin the Landowners’ use of the reservoir, and recover damages for trespass. We refer to this case, no.. 89SA302, as the declaratory judgment action. The district court entered judgment in favor of the Landowners on April 23, 1987, holding that the District has an easement for the reservoir but does not have the right to exclusive use of the reservoir for recreational and piscatorial purposes. The district court further held that the Landowners have the right to use the surface of the reservoir in a reasonable manner in common with the District, thus ruling against the District on its injunction and trespass claims. The District appealed the judgment. 1 We affirm in part and reverse in part.
On April 27, 1987, the District filed an application in the District Court for Water Division 1 for a decree changing its water storage rights, originally obtained for the beneficial use of irrigation, to recognize as additional beneficial uses its historical use of water stored in the reservoir for recreational and piscatorial purposes. We refer to this case, no. 89SA209, as the water court action. The water court held that the District has the authority under the laws of this state to “operate, maintain and control the water diverted and stored in ‘Empire Reservoir’ [under its existing decrees] for recreational and piscatorial purposes.” It found that the requested change described uses “necessary and incidental” to the diversion and storage of water for the purpose of irrigation, that the requested change would not result in any enlarged use of the decrees, and that the change would produce no material injury to other appropriators on the South Platte River. Accordingly, the water court entered judgment granting the change of water rights,
2
The rights and obligations at issue in these cases are those vested in the parties under the statutes and legal instruments governing their relationships. These eases do not present issues concerning any rights that may exist or be created in the public to make use of Empire Reservoir. See n. 17, below.
I.
Empire Reservoir is located in the Colorado counties of Weld and Morgan. It covers almost 2,100 acres and is used as storage for irrigation water by Bijou Irrigation District, which supplies water to approximately 200 farmers in northeastern Colorado for irrigation of approximately 19,000 acres of land. The dams impounding the reservoir water are made of earth and are classified as high hazard dams by the office of the Colorado State Engineer. The District is a municipal corporation organized on April 12, 1905, pursuant to the Irrigation District Law of 1905, §§ 37-41-101 to -160, 15 C.R.S. (1990). The District acquired its interest in that portion of the reservoir site at issue here on May 9, 1907, from the United States of America pursuant to the Act of March 3, 1891, authorizing grants of rights of way for irrigation and now codified at 43 U.S.C. § 946 (1988). The District’s right to divert water from the South Platte River and store it in the reservoir for the purpose of irrigation was recognized by judicial decrees setting forth the following amounts and priorities:
(1) Priority No. 24 — 37,709 acre-feet — appropriation date 5/10/05
(2) Priority No. 79-A — 30 feet gauge height — appropriation date 5/18/05
(3) Priority No. 34-R — 37,709 acre-feet— appropriation date 12/31/29.
The Landowners own property adjacent to and underlying portions of the reservoir. They derive their titles through patents from the federal government. The Landowners acquired their property with notice of the District’s interest and took title subject to that interest. A small portion of the remaining land beneath the reservoir is owned by the District. The balance, making up the majority of the land.underlying the reservoir, is owned by the Bureau of Land Management and by the State of Colorado. 3
Historically, both the District and the Landowners have used the reservoir for recreation. The general public has also used the reservoir to a limited extent for that purpose. Some of the Landowners have sold commercial memberships for recreational use of the reservoir, and the District also has leased rights to private clubs for these purposes. It is the expanding commercial use by the private Landowners that led the District to seek a declaratory judgment recognizing its right to prohibit or control all use of the reservoir by the Landowners. 4
II.
The Morgan County District Court held that the District’s interest in the land underlying the reservoir is an easement. We agree. We do not agree, however, that a right to use the surface of the reservoir by the Landowners follows from that conclusion.
A.
As a preliminary matter we must address the District’s assertion that the trial court in the declaratory judgment action lacked jurisdiction to rule on the right to use the surface of water stored in the reservoir because it involves a water matter. Water judges in the district courts “have exclusive jurisdiction of water matters within the division, and no judge other than the one designated as a water judge shall act with respect to water matters in that division.” § 37-92-203(1), 15 C.R.S. (1990). “Water matters” include “only those matters which [article 92] and any other law shall specify to be heard by the water judge of the district courts.”
Id.
Thus, an action for determination of a water right or a change of water right, each of which concerns the right to use of water, is a water matter within the exclusive jurisdiction of the water judge.
See id.;
§ 37-92-302(1), 15 C.R.S. (1990);
Humphrey v. Southwestern Development Co.,
The declaratory judgment action does not directly involve either the right to use of water or the ownership of a water right. Instead, it relates to the nature and scope of interests in the land upon which the Empire Reservoir is situated based on the construction of a grant by which the District acquired its right to build and maintain the reservoir. The construction of instruments of grant or conveyance and the identification of the legal rights transferred and retained pursuant to such instruments are matters traditionally within the jurisdiction of the district courts of this state even when construction of an instrument will have an incidental impact on the use of water on the land.
See, e.g., Navajo Development Co., Inc. v. Sanderson,
B.
The District obtained the right to use the portion of the reservoir site at issue here by a federal grant pursuant to the Act of March 3, 1891, authorizing grants of rights of way for irrigation. The nature and extent of the District’s rights to the reservoir site, therefore, must be determined by construction of the grant. The 1891 Act, as amended prior to the grant to
That the right of way through the public lands and reservations of the United States is hereby granted to any canal or ditch company [ 5 ] formed for the purpose of irrigation ... to the extent of the ground occupied by the water of any reservoir ... and fifty feet on each side of the marginal limits thereof.[ 6 ]
Ch. 561, § 18, 26 Stat. 1101 (1891). 7
In 1921 the United States Supreme Court, interpreting the 1891 Act, stated in dictum
8
that “[t]he right of way intended by the act was neither a mere easement nor a fee simple absolute, but a limited fee on an implied condition of reverter in the event the grantee ceased to use or retain the land for the purpose indicated in the act.”
Kern River Co. v. United States,
In 1942 the United States Supreme Court reconsidered the nature of a railroad grant under the 1875 Act construed in
String-ham
and held that Congress intended to grant only an easement.
Great Northern Railway Co. v. United States,
We hold that
Great Northern
provides compelling authority for construction of the 1891 Act as authorizing grants of easements, not limited fees.
Great Northern
effectively overruled Stringham,
11
the basis for the statement in
Kern
that a limited fee was intended by the 1891 Act. In doing so, it reviewed legislative history not considered by the Court in
Kern.
Importantly,
Great Northern
made specific reference to the 1891 Act as reflecting approval of the administrative interpretation of the 1875 Act as providing for grants of easements.
The conclusion that the District holds an easement rather than a limited fee does not end our inquiry. The question remains whether the Landowners’ interests in the land include the right to use of the overlying appropriated water for recreational purposes. We hold that they do not.
The extent of the Landowners’ interests as owners of the servient estate is limited by the scope of the District’s rights under its easement. “The owner of the servient estate continues to enjoy all the rights and benefits of proprietorship
consistent with the burden of the easement.” Barnard v. Gaumer,
The 1891 Act provided for grants of rights of way “to any canal or ditch company formed for the purpose of irrigation.” Ch. 561, § 18, 26 Stat. 1101. Such rights of way were “for the purpose of irrigation, but not for any other purpose.”
Kern River,
The scope of the District’s rights as defined by the easement’s nature and purpose necessarily includes construction and maintenance of the reservoir and storage of water appropriated for irrigation. The critical question is whether the District’s right to store water in the reservoir is exclusive of any right by the Landowners to use the reservoir for recreational purposes. We conclude that it is. We acknowledge the familiar principle that “[ujnless the grant conveying an easement specifically characterizes the easement as ‘exclusive,’ the grantor of the easement retains the right to use the property in common with the grantee.”
Bergen Ditch & Reservoir Co. v. Barnes,
The federal grant of the reservoir easement to the District is not characterized as
The District uses the reservoir to store water diverted from the South Platte River by exercise of its three storage decrees. Although we have stated that water once diverted becomes the personal property of the appropriator,
Brighton Ditch Co. v. Englewood,
The practical considerations incident to administration of a reservoir and application of these waters to irrigation use support recognition of the right of the appropriator to control the stored water. In administering water stored in a reservoir to maximize beneficial use, it is sometimes necessary to lower or raise the water level significantly in a short period of time.
16
These rapid fluctuations in water level can create hazards for users of the reservoir. This makes it essential that the reservoir owner have control of use of the reservoir in order to protect the reservoir users. A reservoir owner also is liable for damage caused by waters escaping from a reservoir as the result of negligence. § 37-87-104(1), 15 C.R.S. (1990). It is essential for purposes of public protection and liability control, therefore, that the reservoir owner carefully monitor the condition of the dams, maintain only' that amount of water in storage consistent with safety, and assure that the processes of filling and discharging from the reservoir do not create hazards for reservoir users. These considerations undoubtedly provide the rationale for our long established acceptance of the principle set forth in
Fort Morgan,
We believe that a reservoir company’s long-recognized right to control stored water, based as it is on the practical considerations in administration and safe storage of this water, militates against recognition of a right in the Landowners to make private
D.
The Landowners also rely on
People v. Emmert,
In
Bergen Ditch
a landowner had granted a reservoir company an easement over private land to overflow and use that land as part of the reservoir.
The considerations leading to recognition of the right of the District to control stored waters are directly related to assuring that the waters can be safely, effectively and efficiently administered to maximize beneficial use for irrigation purposes, the primary purpose of the federal grant. Accordingly, we hold that the Morgan County District Court erred when it held that the Landowners “have the right to use the surface, in common and in a reasonable manner, with the District.”
E.
The Landowners, however, assert that by acquiescence in their historical use of the reservoir the District is now es-topped from seeking relief. The brief answer to this contention is that it was not ruled on by the district court. However, the facts found by the district court do not establish the elements of a claim of estop-pel.
III.
A.
We next consider the challenges to the decree of the water court granting the District’s application for a change of water rights to recognize recreational and piscatorial uses of the stored water by the District. The water court held that the District has sufficient power and authority under Colorado law “to operate, maintain and control” the water diverted and stored in Empire Reservoir under its storage decrees for recreational and piscatorial purposes. The court also found that these uses were necessary and incidental to the primary use of irrigation and that the District has devoted and applied the water stored in Empire Reservoir to such incidental uses from the “date of inception” of the storage decrees. The court found that recreational and piscatorial use would result in no enlarged use and that such incidental uses would not cause material injury to other appropriators on the South Platte River. The decree specifies that it does not enlarge the time, method or volume of storage.
The Landowners and others objected to the District’s application for recognition of recreational and piscatorial purposes under its storage decrees. On appeal, they assert that the District, under the doctrine of collateral estoppel, was bound by the Morgan County District Court’s conclusions in the declaratory judgment action that (1) the District’s authority under Colorado law is limited to administration of stored water for irrigation; and (2) recreational and piscatorial use of the stored water by the District is not within the scope of the subsidiary uses recognized in the 1891 Act. Furthermore, if the District is not precluded by collateral estoppel from obtaining its desired change of water rights, the Landowners challenge the authority of a district organized under the Irrigation Law of 1905 to appropriate and store water for recreational and piscatorial purposes, and assert that the evidence does not support the water court’s conclusion that recreational and piscatorial purposes are necessary and incidental uses of the waters stored for irrigation purposes.
A change of water right includes a change in the type of use. § 37-92-103(5), 15 C.R.S. (1990). Implicitly, any such use must be a beneficial use, for appropriation is based on application of waters of the state to beneficial use. § 37-92-103(3)(a), 15 C.R.S. (1990). Impoundment of water “for recreational purposes, including fishery or wildlife” is a beneficial use. § 37-92-103(4), 15 C.R.S. (1990). We believe, however, that unless the owner of a water right can legally put water to a particular new use, the use cannot be recognized as beneficial.
Cf. Colorado River Water Conservation District v. Vidler Tunnel Water Company,
Our disposition of the issue makes it unnecessary to determine whether an irrigation district organized under the Irrigation Law of 1905 has the authority to appropriate water for recreational and piscatorial use incident to an appropriation for the primary purpose of irrigation. It is also unnecessary to determine the merit of the objectors’ collateral estoppel contentions or its argument that the evidence does not support the recognition of use of the District’s storage right for these incidental purposes.
B.
The District cross-appealed the judgment in the water court action to challenge the water court’s statement that “[njothing in this decree shall be deemed to [affect] any concurrent non-exclusive right which the underlying land owners may have to make use of the surface of the reservoir, or any part thereof, for recreational or piscatorial purposes.” This language does not purport to create any right in the Landowners. Any suggestion that the Landowners may have such rights is inconsistent with our holding in the portion of this opinion relating to the declaratory judgment action, and we disapprove any such suggestion.
IV.
We affirm the judgment of the Morgan County District Court in the declaratory
We reverse the judgment of the water court granting a change of water rights to recognize a right in the District to make incidental use of its storage decrees for recreational and piscatorial purposes.
Notes
. We accepted jurisdiction pursuant to § 13-4-109, 6A C.R.S. (1987), prior to final determination by the Colorado Court of Appeals, based on a certification by that court that the case raises issues of first impression that have significant public interest and involves legal principles of major significance.
. The water court recognized the same appropriation dates as specified in the original decrees and described the newly decreed uses as follows:
Use of Water:
The use of the waters stored in Empire Reservoir under the hereinabove described decrees for the incidental purpose of recreational and piscatorial purposes. The use of said waters stored under the said described decrees shall be limited to the volume and amounts of those waters as historically stored in said reservoir under said decrees for irrigation purposes, and that this decree shall in no way enlarge the time, method and volumes of water stored under said decrees in accordancewith the historical practices of said' diversions and storage for irrigation purposes.
. On March 7, 1944, the State of Colorado granted a right of way to the District for that part of the reservoir site on state lands in Section 36, Township 4 North, Range 61 West of the 6th Principal Meridian. The District stipulated with the State in the declaratory judgment action that the State owns fee title to all state lands underlying the reservoir and agreed that the relief sought in that action would not adversely affect Colorado’s property rights.
. The District adduced testimony at the trial of the declaratory judgment action about problems concerning the impairment of the structural integrity of earth-fill dams that can result from motor vehicle travel on the dams and displacement of concrete, rocks and tires used for rip-rap on the embankments. The District’s evidence suggested, however, that the principal precipitating cause of the litigation was the District’s difficulty in obtaining liability insurance. The district court specifically held that the availability of liability insurance was not relevant to the issues presented for resolution.
. The provision was amended in 1917 to add "or drainage district” after "canal or ditch company,” ch. 184, § 1, 39 Stat. 1197, and in 1926 to substitute "canal ditch company, irrigation or drainage district” for "canal or ditch company or drainage district,” ch. 409, 44 Stat. 668.
. The statute provided for filing of the articles of incorporation of the company and a map of the reservoir with the Secretary of the Interior. Ch. 561, § 18, 26 Stat. 1101 (codified as amended at 43 U.S.C. § 946 (1988)) and § 19, 26 Stat. 1102 (codified as amended at 43 U.S.C. § 947 (1988)). After approval of the map by the Secretary, and notation of such approval on plats in the Secretary’s office, "all such lands over which such rights of way shall pass shall be disposed of subject to such right of way.” Ch. 561, § 19, 26 Stat. 1102 (codified as amended at 43 U.S.C. § 947 (1988)).
. Now codified, with amendments, as 43 U.S.C. § 946 (1988). 43 U.S.C. § 946 was repealed in 1976 with respect to public land administered by the Bureau of Land Management and land in the National Forest system. Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976, Pub.L. 94-579, § 706(a), 90 Stat. 2793 (codified as 43 U.S.C. §§ 1701-1784 (1988)). The 1976 Act established new guidelines for grants of rights of way and gave the Secretary of the Interior authority to issue grants on BLM land and the Secretary of Agriculture similar authority over National Forest land. Pub.L. 94-579, § 501(a), 90 Stat. 2776 (codified as 43 U.S.C. § 1761 (1988)). The 1976 Act specified, however, that "[njothing in this title shall have the effect of terminating any right-of-way ... heretofore issued.” Pub.L. 94-579, § 509(a), 90 Stat. 2781 (codified as 43 U.S.C. § 1769 (1988)).
. The irrigation company in
Kern River
had used the land obtained pursuant to the 1891 Act for the sole purpose of electric power generation.
Kern River,
. The 1875 Act provides in pertinent part:
That the right of way through the public lands of the United States is hereby granted to any railroad company ... to the extent of one hundred feet on each side of the central line of said road.
Ch. 152, § 1, 18 Stat. 482.
. In
Stringham,
the Court stated that a legal interest granted by the 1875 Act "and similar acts is neither a mere easement, nor a fee simple absolute, but a limited fee, made on an implied condition of reverter in the event the company ceases to use or retain the land for the purposes for which it is granted, and carries with it the incidents and remedies usually attending the fee.”
Stringham,
. In declining to follow
Stringham
the Court stated that the "conclusion [in
Stringham
] is inconsistent with the language of the Act, its legislative history, its early administrative interpretation and the construction placed on it by Congress in subsequent legislation. We therefore do not regard it as controlling."
Great Northern,
. We acknowledge that the 1875 Act construed in Great Northern contained a provision not present in the 1891 Act, described as follows in Great Northern:
Section 2 adds to the conclusion that the right granted is one of use and occupancy only, rather than the land itself, for it declares that any railroad whose right of way passes through a canyon, pass or defile “shall not prevent any other railroad company from the use and occupancy of the said canyon, pass, or defile, for the purposes of its road, in common with the road first located.”
. The Federal Land Policy and Management Act of 1976, which provides authority for new grants of rights of way over public land, expressly defines "right-of-way" to include "easement, lease, permit or license to occupy, use, or traverse [certain] public lands.” Pub.L. 94-579, § 103(f), 90 Stat. 2746 (codified as 43 U.S.C. § 1702 (1988)).
. The conclusion that the 1891 Act should be construed to authorize grants of easements rath
.
E.g.,
water diverted by exercise of a storage right must ultimately be applied to the beneficial use for which the water was appropriated.
See Handy Ditch Co. v. Greeley & Loveland Irrigation Co.,
. In argument to this court, counsel for the District remarked that the water level in Empire Reservoir "goes up and down like mad.” The evidence at the trial in the declaratory judgment action was that the reservoir water level varied widely during the cycle of filling the reservoir and discharge to meet irrigation needs.
.In reaching this result, we have relied to a great extent on Colorado cases setting forth general principles of the law of easements. The Landowners have argued that federal law, not state law, should be applied. We have discovered nothing to suggest that any federal law applicable to construing the scope of easements granted under the 1891 Act is at variance with the general principles set forth in our own cases.
. The Landowners are asserting private rights, not public rights, and we have no occasion to determine the nature and extent of any public rights that may exist or be created for use of Empire Reservoir. Moreover, neither the State of Colorado nor the Bureau of Land Management is a party to the declaratory judgment action, and any rights to use of the reservoir that might be asserted by these landowners are not at issue in this case.
. The cited statute, as now codified at 43 U.S.C. § 949 (1988), provides:
Nothing in sections 946 to 949 of this title shall authorize such canal or ditch company to occupy such right of way except for the purpose of said canal or ditch, and then only so far as may be necessary for the construction, maintenance, and care of said canal or ditch.
This provision has been construed to apply to reservoirs as well as canals and ditches. Zelph S. v. Calder, 16 IBLA 27, 81 I.D. 339, 345 (1974).
. No challenge has been raised to the standing of the Landowners to object to the District’s application for change of water rights. The Landowners do not assert injury to any water rights of their own.
See
§ 37-92-305(3), 15 C.R.S. (1990) (an application for a change of water right shall be approved “if such change ... will not injuriously affect the owner of or persons entitled to use water under a vested water right or a decreed conditional water right."). Where, as here, objectors such as the Landowners assert that the owner of the water right cannot make the requested uses without impermissibly burdening the objector’s own legal rights, we conclude that general principles of standing authorize the objectors to raise that limited challenge to the application.
See Wimberly v. Ettenberg,
