65 Colo. 48 | Colo. | 1918
delivered the opinion of the court.
This is a review of a judgment on petition of C. A. King and others to have made absolute the conditional parts of a decree rendered in a water adjudication on May 5, 1888. The decree is a part of a general one adjudicating water rights in Water District No. 45. Protest was filed by Sheridan N. Schwartz in the' court below, and upon trial the issues were found for the petitioners, with decree and judgment accordingly. The protestant brings the cause here for review on error. In this opinion he will be designated as defendant, and petitioners as plaintiffs.
Plaintiffs are the owners of the Talmadge and Gibson Ditch, taking water from East Divide Creek, in Water District No. 45. Their proprieties are numbered 36, dating from August 14, 1885, and calling for 372 cubic feet of water per minute of time; No. 49, on account of the first enlargement of said ditch, dating from April 10, 1886, calling for 315 cubic feet of water per minute of time; and No. 82, dating from July 9, 1887, calling for 100 cubic feet of water per minute of time being water for approximately 656 acres of land, under the general decree of May 5, 1888.
This general decree was absolute as to only 118 acres, and the balance contingent upon the bringing of the remainder of the land under irrigation with reasonable diligence. Plaintiffs set up that they had, with reasonable diligence, increased the irrigable lands under their ditch
Defendant is the owner of the Johnson Ditch No. 70A, and of priority No. 114A, calling for 72 cubic feet of water per minute absolutely, and six cubic feet conditionally, dated April 14, 1893, the decree for which was entered December 3, 1907, without notice to plaintiffs or others interested. He claims in substance that neither the plaintiffs nor their grantors have brought additional lands under cultivation with reasonable diligence, so far as his priority, No. 114A, is concerned; that by reason of the long delay, any relief granted them should be subject to his priority; since he has been making beneficial use of all the water adjudicated to him, long prior to the use by plaintiffs of any water for additional land. Upon hearing of testimony the conditional parts of the decree of May 5, 1888, were made absolute, according to the prayer of the petition, subject to prior appropriations, but not subject to that of defendant.
The only question to be determined is whether plaintiffs were reasonably diligent in making beneficial use of their conditional allotments of water. It appears that in 1888 and 1889 the lands for which the water was decreed were incumbered by trust deeds by their owners, for the benefit of an investment company, which later failed and made an assignment; and that the land passed to various trustees, assignees and successors in trust, who were non-residents, and who never were on the land. For the period of approximately ten years no new lands were brought under irrigation by any one. It then passed to others, who made beneficial use of the water upon increased acreage, until, at the time of the filing of the petition, water had been put to beneficial use upon approximately 450 acres.
“That the interval from 1882 to 1893 was presumptively too long must be conceded, were the reasons and circumstances unexplained * * * but how can that enure to the benefit of appellants? If, by neglect to apply the water within a proper time, the right to apply was forfeited, the water reverted, any one could proceed to appropriate and apply it; but such right could only attach while the right of the former claimant was in abeyance by reason of his negligence, and the second party must have availed himself of the right before the re-entry'and prosecution of the enterprise by the first party. Unless, during the interim, when by failure to prosecute the enterprise the water rights may be regarded as having reverted, some party intervenes and makes a valid and legal appropriation of the water, the first party may resume, and if such resumption occurs before intervening rights attach, the right to appropriate is lost.”
It is claimed on the part of defendant that plaintiffs did not begin to apply the water until after he had commenced to use it. This question being disputed, the conclusion reached by the trial court against the defendant will not be disturbed, there being ample evidence to support it.
As to whether, after the land was again put into cultivation, plaintiffs or their grantors used reasonable diligence in
“It is impracticable, if not impossible, for a settler to seed and irregate 160 acres of sod breaking a year. Settlers on the public domain are usually poor men, and cannot do all this at once, even if it were possible. It is a continuing process, requiring a number of years * * * The test is not necessarily the number of acres irrigated each year. If these tracts were farmed, and all the water necessary was beneficially used with reasonable diligence in the improvement of the land, it is sufficient.”
And also to the same effect from Conley v. Dyer, 43 Colo. 22, at page 29, 95 Pac. 307:
“What constitutes due diligence and what is a reasonable time depend, of course, upon many circumstances; and one adjudication cannot be taken as a test by which to determine these matters in another trial, for the reason that the circumstances are never precisely the same in both.”
The question of due diligence, as well as questions upon other material and essential facts, were sharply in dispute. All were resolved in favor of the petitioners. We find nothing in the record which warrants a reversal of the findings of the court upon the facts involved. The judgment should therefore be affirmed, and it is so ordered.
Judgment affirmed.
Mr. Chief Justice Hill and Mr. Justice Allen concur.