288 P. 177 | Colo. | 1930
IN June, 1882, the district court in a water adjudication in Water District No. 6 decreed to the predecessor of the plaintiff in error priority 21 for 26.37 cubic feet of water per second of time as of 1870 and priority 24 for 192 second feet as of 1871 from South Boulder Creek *392 and other streams in said district. The defendants in error, junior appropriators on the stream, brought this suit in the district court against plaintiff in error seeking a decree enjoining the use by the plaintiff in error of all except 66 second feet of its decreed water on the ground that the remainder had been abandoned. The lower court found and decreed "that for a period of about forty years subsequent to the awarding of the said priorities, all water in excess of sixty-six (66) cubic feet of water per second of time of the said priorities was totally disused by the said defendant corporation and its predecessors in title and interest" and granted the requested injunction. This writ is now prosecuted to review this judgment.
The trial in the lower court was extensive and exhaustive, consuming eleven days and occasioning a voluminous record here. Notwithstanding this, we believe that the solution of the controversy is simple.
Two questions are here presented: (1) Is evidence of nonuse for a long period of years sufficient to establish abandonment? (2) Is the evidence sufficient to support the decree?
[1] 1. Abandonment must be proven by evidence of nonuse and intention to abandon. Intention may be shown either expressly or by implication. The fact that a decreed appropriator of water has failed to use the same for a period of forty years evidences an intention to abandon. While evidence of nonuse for a period of forty years may not be conclusive of abandonment, a prima facie case thereof is so shown. In Sieber v. Frink,
Counsel cite various Colorado cases in an effort to show that the rule hereinabove quoted has been *393
abrogated or modified and that mere nonuse even for a long period of years is insufficient to constitute abandonment. While an examination of the cited cases discloses that in addition to mere nonuse, there was other evidence of intention to abandon, still this court has neither directly nor indirectly repudiated or modified the rule announced in the Sieber case, supra. The decision in the case ofNorthern Colo. Irr. Co. v. Burlington Co.,
While the record in this case undoubtedly discloses evidence of intention to abandon other than that imputed by nonuse over a long period of years, still we have no hesitancy in ruling that evidence of nonuse of water for a period of forty years in itself is sufficient to prove a prima facie case of abandonment.
[2, 3] 2. It is urged that the evidence is insufficient to support the decree. It would serve no useful purpose here to summarize the evidence disclosed by the record. It suffices to say that, from a painstaking examination thereof, we are satisfied that there was ample, clear and *394 convincing evidence to support the decree. It is true that the evidence was conflicting, but its determination was for the trial court.
Judgment affirmed.
MR. CHIEF JUSTICE WHITFORD, MR. JUSTICE BUTLER and MR. JUSTICE BURKE concur.