24 Colo. App. 496 | Colo. Ct. App. | 1913
delivered the opinion of the court.
The Centennial Irrigating Ditch Company, a Colorado corporation, obtained a decree of the district court in and for the county of Costilla, changing the point of diversion of seventy-five cubic feet of water per second of time from the headgate of the Centennial ditch, through which it had been diverted for thirty-five years or more, to another point about two miles further up the Rio Grande river. The Monte Vista Canal Company, The San Luis Valley Irrigating District, The Rio Grande and Piedra Valley Ditch Company, and others, junior appropriates, protested against the change prayed for, and appealed from the judgment granting the same.
1. Appellants deny the right and capacity of the petitioner to maintain this statutory proceeding, the denial of such capacity being predicated on the fact that petitioner was neither the owner nor user of water for
“Section 1. Every person, association or corporation desirous of changing, in whole or in part, the point of diversion of his or its right to use water from any of the streams of the state shall present a petition to the district court from which the original decree issued, * * * praying that such change be granted.” — Session Laws 1903, page 278.
Independent of the statute, and prior to its enactment, any person or corporation having the right .to divert water from the natural streams of this state had also the qualified right to change the place of its diversion, but subject to the condition that the vested rights of others to the use of water from such stream should not be injuriously affected thereby; and after an adjudication of the water rights under our system of determining priorities as between ditches, subject to the further condition that an order or decree of court permitting such change be obtained. This promissory decree becomes, in effect, a modification of the general adjudication decree, in so far as the place at which the water may.be diverted through any.ditch is changed from that fixed in the general decree, and without which modification-the state officers charged with the distribution of water may not deliver it elsewhere. The petitioner was the owner of the Centennial ditch. Under a general adjudication, about eighty second feet of water was permitted to be diverted from the stream at a point there designated, and thence to flow into and through said ditch, for the use of the persons lawfully entitled thereto. • Petitioner was a corporation. or association known as a mutual ditch company, carrying water for the use of its stockholders only, maintaining and operating the ditch solely for their use and benefit, and, although it owned no land except for its right of way, and as a corporation irrigated no land for
Moreover, we think the statute, in so far as it relates to the person who may pray for a change, has the same meaning as if it had provided that ‘ ‘ every person, association or corporation desirous of changing, in whole or in part, the point of diversion of any water which Be or it has the right to divert from any of the streams of the state, shall present a petition,” etc.'
2. It is not shown that all appropriators of water from the Eio Grande river in said water district, junior in right to petitioner, were served with notice of the hearing on the petition, and for that reason it is urged that the court did not obtain jurisdiction to try the issues. The court found that all persons whose rights would be affected had been duly notified. This finding was based upon a showing of service upon a multitude of persons and corporations, and as there is slight, if any, evidence in the record to overcome that finding, it will not be disturbed.
3. That the evidence does not warrant the decree appealed from is quite clear. It is settled law that a person who seeks to obtain an order of the court changing the point of diversion of his adjudicated water right must prove by competent and sufficient evidence that the change sought will not injuriously affect the vested rights of others. The burden of proof in the proceeding is upon the petitioner, and not upon the person who resists the application for such change. — Fort Lyon Canal Co. v. Chew, 33 Colo., 392, 81 Pac., 37; Vogel et al. v. Minnesota Canal Co., 47 Colo., 534, 107 Pac., 1108; New Cache la Poudre Irrigating Co. v. Water Supply & Storage Co., 49 Colo., 1, 111 Pac., 610; Farmers’ High Line etc. Co. v. Wolf, 23
An extended or detailed statement of the evidence would serve no useful purpose. A brief review thereof will suffice. The testimony on all material conditions and circumstances is practically undisputed. It shows that the Centennial ditch, as theretofore used, was located upon the lowlands near the river; that practically all land irrigated therefrom was what is called “first bottom” lands lying between the ditch and the river, and so situated that all seepage and other return waters reached the river certainly and quickly after irrigation, and above the headgates of several other ditches having decrees in the aggregate exceeding 100 second feet of water, much,
The evidence in this case brings the petitioner within and subject to the bar of the established rule that, as against the change sought, the junior appropriators have a vested right to the continuance of conditions that existed on the stream at and subsequent to the time they made their appropriations, including the general method of use of water therefrom. — Vogel et al. v. Minnesota Canal & Res. Co., 47 Colo., 534, 107 Pac., 1108; Larimer Co. Canal v. Poudre Valley Res. Co., 23 Colo. App., 249, 129 Pac., 248; Farmers’ High Line etc. Co. v. Wolf, 23 Colo. App., 570, 131 Pac., 231.
The judgment of the trial court seems to be predicated upon the following findings of fact and law:
“It appears that the purpose of wanting to make this change is to get the new ditch on higher ground and for the purpose of taking a portion of the waters of this ditch, or of the decree, from lands near the river and using these waters on lands further from the river. The lands'from which a portion of these waters are to be withdrawn are to be irrigated with water taken from the same river through another ditch. It is objected that a portion of these waters, carried further away from the river*504 for use in the irrigation of other lands, will return to the river, by seepage, or otherwise, further down the river, and, by reason of that, vested rights will be injured.
“There is some contention also, that it may take more water to irrigate the farm lands further away from the river than is required for the meadow lands nearer the river. If we may take judicial knowledge of the records of this court, it must appear that a great many ditches and canals, inclusive of the ditches of these objectors, carry water much further from the river, for use in irrigation, some of them taking water ten, twenty, thirty or even forty miles away from the river, and I think it is well known by all who have given any careful attention to that, that instead of this fact proving an injury, it has proven beneficial, for the reason that the greater the area that is covered with water in irrigation, the more water finds its way back to the river as seepage, in seasons of the year when water becomes scarcer: That the river carries more water by reason of this seepage, upon account of the enlarged area that is covered by water in irrigation. The water which might otherwise flow away and leave the country, in times of sufficiency of water, would instead, by reason of a large area being irrigated,, be seeping back by means of percolation and seepage, reaching the river during all portions of the year, so that the flow in the river would be more nearly equalized during the entire season.
“It is the opinion of the court that the change that is here asked for can do no injury to any vested rights, but that the tendency would be to benefit vested rights, rather than to injure.”
We may readily concede the correctness of the views expressed by the learned trial judge, that, as a whole, the vast territory irrigated or to be irrigated from the Rio Grande river may be benefited in general by the application of water during flood seasons to the largest possible
This court hesitates in any case to substitute its conclusions for those of the trial court as to the effect which will be produced by certain admitted or proven facts, but as we view the case from the record, our duty is clear. In view of the conclusion we have reached, other matters raised by the assignments of error need not be decided.
The judgment will be reversed and the cause remanded, with directions to deny the petition.
Reversed and Remanded.