253 P. 24 | Colo. | 1927
Original Proceeding. THE people, ex rel. the City and County of Denver and its board of water commissioners, filed in this court a petition for a writ of prohibition running to the district court of Douglas county and commanding that tribunal to desist from further proceeding in, and to transmit to the district court of the City and County of Denver, a certain suit there pending wherein the plaintiffs — as owners of water priorities decreed to them respectively more than forty years ago by the district court of Park *540 county in a special statutory adjudication proceeding brought in water district No. 23 — were questioning the validity and integrity, as against them, of a certain priority decree awarded to the City and County of Denver by the district court of Douglas county, rendered March 23, 1922, in a similar adjudication proceeding by the district court of Douglas county in water district No. 8. Upon filing of the petition we issued a rule to show cause, to which the respondent Douglas county district court made its return. Therefrom it appears that the relators here, defendants in the Douglas county court suit, had filed a motion therein for a change of venue to the Denver district court supplementing the same by affidavits, the two grounds relied upon being convenience of witnesses and that the county designated in that complaint is not the proper county for the trial of the suit. The first ground seems to have been abandoned or, if not, it was premature. The second ground, and the only one necessary to consider, is said to make the removal imperative because the water which the Douglas county decree permits the city to divert from Platte river, which is the common source of supply of both the plaintiffs and the city, is used almost entirely within the City and County of Denver, and no part thereof is used within Douglas county; that the supplying of such water is a public utility of vital necessity to the inhabitants of Denver, and that the suit sought to be removed affects such utility and, therefore, under section 26 of our Code of Civil Procedure (1921) must be tried in Denver county and not elsewhere. It seems fitting to repeat, what we have so often declared, that the jurisdiction of the Supreme Court to issue prerogative writs to an inferior court is not properly invoked unless, among other things, the matter in dispute is publici juris, affects the state as a whole and in its sovereign capacity, and unless the inferior court is without jurisdiction in the premises, and always the issuance of the writ is discretionary and not as of right. This doctrine has not only been carried into *541 our decisions but is recognized and embodied in rule 57 of this court. It must not be inferred that the showing in this petition brings the application within the requirements, but as our conclusion is that the rule to show cause must on other grounds be discharged, for our present purpose only we shall assume, but not decide that jurisdiction is invoked. Unless section 26 of the Code is controlling there is no reason at all for interfering with the Douglas county court for that is the only basis for the contention of the relators. The section, so far as pertinent here, reads: "All actions affecting property, franchises or utilities, whether by foreclosures, appointment of receivers, or otherwise, shall be tried in the county where such property, franchise or utility is situated, or in the county where the greater part thereof is situated."
If, as argued by counsel for relators, the furnishing of water is a public utility, the return of the respondent Douglas county court states that while the water in question, or the greater part thereof, is used within the city, its diversion from Platte river, which constitutes the alleged injury to the plaintiffs, is made outside the city and not within Denver county into whose district court removal of the suit in question is asked. It is not merely the use, but the diversion that follows the use, i. e., the appropriation resulting from the combined acts that causes the injury. The affidavits for the change of venue may state that the greater part of the utility is situate in Denver county, but that is nothing more than the affiants' conclusion. The record of the case, included in the return, does not show that the greater part of such utility affected by this suit is situate in Denver county, and unless that fact is made clearly to appear, as it has not been, Denver county is not the proper place of trial. It must not be overlooked that this suit also affects the properties of all the plaintiffs, and it affects them directly in Douglas county.
But there are other and compelling reasons for discharging the rule. The relators admit that if the suit *542
brought and now pending in the district court of Douglas county was one between rival decreed priorities in the same water district, or, as they denominate it, if it was an "intra-district suit," it was properly brought in that court and Douglas county is the proper place for trial.Farmers Independent D. Co. v. Agricultural D. Co.,
The relators further say that this Douglas county suit is in the nature of a suit to quiet title, citing Weldon Co.v. Farmers Co.,
MR. JUSTICE DENISON dissenting.
MR. JUSTICE BUTLER did not hear the oral argument or participate in the decision.