8 Colo. App. 246 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1896
delivered the opinion of the court.
The terms of this contract are again submitted to this court for consideration and construction. The parties have changed, the character of the suit has been altered, but the end sought is exactly like that which was striven after in the suit of White v. The Canal Company. We do not avoid the labor because of the difficulty of the proposition, nor because our conclusion may not be determinative of the question. We are somewhat inclined to criticise counsel, who possibly exercise nothing more than their statutory right, when they bring causes here of which the supreme court has the final determination. It tends to work a little injustice and hardship on other litigants, and imposes on this court an unusual and an undue proportion of the appellate work of the state. Under these circumstances, we may be quite excused if we confine our decision of such cases within those limits which serve to express the results at which we have arrived, and suggest, rather than elaborate, the reasons on which our decision-is based. We do not intend to evade or attempt to escape a responsibility correctly laid on us to decide any questions, however difficult they may be, but we incline to the opinion our full duty is discharged if 'we go no farther than may be necessary to indicate the results. This proceeding will relieve the other tribunal of the labor which might be involved in any possible review of our decision, and leave that learned and distinguished court entirely free to formulate its own conclusions. They will undoubtedly be able to
The reversal of this judgment is put on the naked ground that no case for mandamus is made by the proof. It is barely possible enough is alleged in the petition, had it been adequately supported, to warrant these proceedings. The course of the trial, the testimony offered, the lines on which the battle was fought, and the judgment of the court, all warrant us to reach the conclusion the sole purpose and object of the suit was to obtain a judicial construction of the contract and an establishment of a perpetual right in Eli Allen and his grantees to water from the Canal Company, and not to procure temporary relief from a breach of the contract on the part of the corporation. We are very much embarrassed in this discussion, because of the apparent difference between some decisions rendered by this court and opinions promulgated by the other. We are likewise hampered by the very great difficulty which we experience in concluding what rule the supreme court has declared in regard to this question. As we understand the adjudications, our decisions are not in conflict with those of the supreme court, and yet we find in the latter some cases which, without analysis and comparison, would seem to be at variance with our conclusions. The limitations which that court has placed on some of its statements of the doctrine lead us, however, to believe that we are in harmony, as we are bound to be, with that court in our statement of the law. Mandamus will not lie to enforce private rights resting on contract, unless the case be brought within the tolerably well settled rules respecting this extraordinary writ. The legal right to the writ must be clearly established. The courts will not interfere wherever it is apparent the interests of third persons, who are not before the court, are necessarily involved. This subject received quite elaborate consideration at the hands of the learned president judge of this court, as will appear from two opin
One of these cases came up on demurrer, but the other undoubtedly decided that conflicting water rights, or the duties and obligations of a carrier of water, and its consumers, could not be legitimately determined in a mandamus proceeding. We see no occasion to change our conclusion in this particular, unless we are otherwise advised by the supreme court, nor do we think it controlled by the opinion of that court on similar questions. The matter has come before that learned court on several different occasions. The first declaration on the subject called to our attention is found in Golden Canal Co. v. Bright, 8 Colo. 144. It is followed by Wheeler v. The Northern Colo. Irr. Co., 10 Colo. 582; Townsend v. Fulton Irrigating Co., 17 Colo. 142; Combs v. Agricultural Ditch Co., 17 Colo. 146.
These are the only cases cited, or which we have observed bearing on this question. The first case was quite an elaborate consideration of the question, and, speaking by one of its then judges, the court apparently held that mandamus would lie to compel the delivery of water to which a party was entitled by virtue of an established contract, where there was no controversy respecting the contract, and the contest was based on the existence of other sources of supply, a denial of a tender, and a failure to comply with the rules and regulations of the company. We are not disposed to contest that decision, or in any wise criticise it. Wherever there is no question about the contract and the duty, except what may come from the failure of the petitioner to comply with the regulations of the company, or to prove irremediable damage in case the corporation fails to discharge its obligations, we should not hesitate either to follow that court in its conclusion or to express our views in the same direction if it was an original proposition. The Wheeler Case pursued the same general line of argument, and is based on somewhat similar conditions. There the right to the water was conceded. The concession, however, was coupled with the limi
The judgment itself is, in our opinion, erroneous, as it virtually amounts to an adjudication respecting a perpetual water light and was not' limited to the delivery of twenty-five inches of water for any one particular year. Had the judgment been thus limited, possibly error would not have been prosecuted, though we believe it would have made no difference, because the parties are evidently desirous to obtain a judicial construction of the contract. Rights of third persons were shown to be involved, and those persons were not before the court, and a judgment respecting Eli Allen’s rights, or those of his grantees, might operate to their prejudice. It must be conceded no question was made in regard to parties, nor was there any proof offered by the company to show that all the water which they had diverted and transported had been bought and delivered to consumers. It is quite possible that to make this objection available for the purposes of reversal some objection should have been made and some proof offered on this question. The reversal is not put on this basis, but it is offered as a suggestion to illustrate the difficulties which might intervene if in this sort of a proceeding the court should undertake to adjudicate the rights conferred by the Bomberger contract.
We do not believe the evidence warranted the granting of the peremptory writ, or the entry of the judgment which is before us. On the proof, the petition should have been dismissed and the party remitted to the settlement of their claims in a different form of action. It is quite possible, if it became a controversy between the defendants in error, the Canal Company, and others, in respect to the enforcement of his right to twenty-five inches of water, an action must be brought on the statute to determine this question. This
For the error committed by the court in entering its judgment, it will be reversed.
Reversed.