23 Colo. 233 | Colo. | 1896
This is an action brought by The Montrose Canal Company and the other plaintiffs in error, in be
It appears, inter alia, from their complaint, that on the 14th day of November, 1888, an adjudication of the priorities of water rights in water district No. 41, and of the ditches taking water from the Uncompahgre river, was had, wherein a priority of 48 cubic feet of water per second of time was decreed to the Loutsenhizer ditch, in advance of, and prior to, any water being allowed to plaintiff’s ditch; and that the defendant company has ever since made claim to and taken from said stream that amount of water.
To this complaint defendants demurred upon the grounds, among others, that there was a misjoinder of parties plaintiff and defendant, and that the prior adjudication constituted a bar to the maintenance of the present action. The court below sustained the demurrer, and, the plaintiffs electing to stand by their complaint, judgment was rendered dismissing the action. From this judgment the plaintiffs prosecute this writ of error.
The principal questions presented by this record have been determined by this court in decisions rendered since the commencement of this action. The ruling of the court below upon the ground of misjoinder of parties, plaintiff and defendant, is sustained by the decision in Farmers' Ind. Ditch Co. v. Agricultural Ditch Co., 22 Colo. 513. It is therein held that, by reason of the number of consumers under ditches of this character, it would be impracticable to make them parties to a proceeding like the one before us; and that the ditch company itself is the proper party to maintain.the action, it
The right to maintain this action, notwithstanding the prior adjudication of priorities between the respective ditches under the acts of 1879 and 1881, was also determined adversely to plaintiffs in error in the case of the Louden Irr. Canal Co. v. Handy Ditch Co., 22 Colo. 102, and the Boulder and Weld County Ditch Co. v. Lower Boulder Ditch Co., 22 Colo. 115. In the former case it was held that unless the former proceeding was opened in the manner and within the time provided in the act, it was res adjudieata, at least in so far as it fixes the priorities of those who were parties thereto and participated in such proceeding. In the second case the court, discussing the sufficiency of the plea of res adjudieata predicated upon a decree entered in such a proceeding, held it was good and that it determined and settled the quantity of water to which the parties thereto were entitled, and that being in effect, plaintiffs were not entitled to readjudicate the same matters in that action.
Upon more mature consideration, we are confirmed in the view that section 2434, Mills’ Ann. Stats., ought not to be given a construction that will permit parties to the adjudication, and whose rights have been determined therein after a full hearing, to ignore that decree and, by independent action, relitigate the matters therein determined. That it was not within the contemplation of the legislature to confer the right to maintain such an action by parties to a former proceeding is manifest from other provisions of the statute. By section
It is claimed that the decision in Greer v. Heiser, 16 Colo. 306, is an authority for bringing this action, but there is a marked difference between that case and this. That was a direct proceeding to amend the decree, and, it appearing that Heiser having had no actual notice of the proceeding and having made no appearance or filed his claim, the court held that this would seem to take the case out of the statutory limit. It is clear from the reasons given for that conclusion that had he made an appearance and offered testimony before the referee, the decree rendered in the statutory proceeding would have been held as res adjudieata of the matters sought to be litigated.
From the averments of the complaint it sufficiently appears that the plaintiff ditch company was a party to the statutory proceeding, and that its rights were therein adjudicated. No reason appears why it should not be bound by the decree therein rendered. Certainly no facts are urged that entitle it to maintain the present action. It is, however, insisted that the complaint is sufficient to entitle the consumers under the plaintiff ditch to fifty cubic feet of water per second of time for domestic use, regardless of the priority of defendant ditch to the use of water for irrigation; that the use of water for domestic purposes is recognized by the constitution
We think this claim is untenable. While it is true that section 6 of article 16 of the constitution recognizes a preference in those using water for domestic purposes over those using it for any other purpose, it is not intended thereby to authorize a diversion of water for domestic use from the public streams of the state, by means of large canals, as attempted in this case. The use protected by the constitution is such use as the riparian owner has at common law to take water for himself, his family or his stock, and the like. And if the term “ domestic use ” is to be given a different or greater meaning than this, then as between such enlarged use and those having prior rights for agricultural and manufacturing purposes, it is subject to that other constitutional provision requiring just compensation to those whose rights are affected thereby. Strickler v. Colorado Springs, 16 Colo. 61; Armstrong v. Larimer County Ditch Co., 1 Colo. App. 49.
In the Stricleler Case, this court, in construing the constitutional provision referred to as applied to water rights antedating its adoption, said:
“ Our conclusion, therefore, is that the constitutional provisions relied upon were not intended to affect, and do not affect, prior vested rights, but that all owners of such rights are entitled to compensation therefor before the same can be taken or injuriously affected.”
We think- the doctrine of that decision is equally applicable to the rights of .prior appropriators for manufacturing or agricultural purposes acquired since the adoption of the constitution. To give the phrase “ domestic use ” the construction contended for by appellants would result in laying waste many valuable agricultural lands, and destroying manufacturing rights to the use of water, to the end that the same may be diverted for domestic use by communities settling at
In the view we have taken of the foregoing questions, it becomes unnecessary to consider the objection urged against the sufficiency of the complaint in other particulars. We think the ruling of the court below on the demurrer was correct, and its judgment dismissing the action is accordingly affirmed.
Affirmed.