75 Colo. 199 | Colo. | 1924
delivered the opinion of the court.
The defendants in error were petitioners in the district court for a decree adjudicating to them certain priorities
A careful reading of the voluminous record discloses no ground upon which this decree was or could be made. Indeed, the trial court itself, at the conclusion of conflicting evidence, said that the petitioners could not then have a decree for irrigation water and added that, when one asserts a right to use for irrigation water which he has actually added to a natural stream and thereby increased the natural flow, it may be awarded to him, but, until such showing is made upon clear evidence, no decree could pass. Notwithstanding this statement of the court, what is called an interlocutory decree was entered by which the date of the priority claimed was determined, and then the court continued the case to enable petitioners to make further measurements and to collect other evidence which, when completed, might.be presented to the court upon a subsequent hearing. The court also permitted the petitioners to make use of this water in the meantime for domestic purposes, although no provision by law in this state has
That one who artificially develops or produces water and adds or turns the same into a natural stream, which water would not in due course otherwise have reached the stream on the surface or in the underlying sands, may acquire a right thereto superior to the adjudicated rights of earlier appropriators of the natural waters of the stream only, may be conceded. When, however, one makes such a claim he should, by clear and satisfactory evidence, prove that the water thus added was produced and contributed by him, and that, if not interfered with and left to flow in accordance with natural laws, it would not have reached the stream. The petitioners base their right, not upon the fact that they produced or developed this water by bringing into the stream water from another watershed, or from springs or by similar means or other sources of supply, but because of the natural surface of the lands in the vicinity, which is more or less rocky and uneven, by some process of diversion thereof into the stream and collecting or assembling it at a certain place in their ditches leading from the stream, waters which would not thus have been there brought to the surface or have been available at such point or points, were not thereby taken from any other appropriators but would go to waste; hence it is added water subject to appropriation as such. The
In a recent case, Bieser, et al. v. Stoddard, et al., 73 Colo. 554, 216 Pac. 707, a similar attempt was made to get a decree for an artificially developed or added increase to the waters of a natural stream, which was disallowed. The showing in that case was stronger than that of the petitioners in this case. This seems to be an illy disguised attempt on the part of junior appropriators on a stream to claim as their own, waters developed by some mysterious process of accumulation and diversion from the natural stream, itself, or its tributaries, which inevitably must have at some point on the stream reached the natural channel where it would be available to superior claims of consumers below had it not been for the interference or the process of the so-called developers.
The judgment and decree of the district court is, therefore, reversed with instructions to set it aside so far as
Mr. Chief Justice Teller and Mr. Justice Sheafor concur.