362 P.2d 400 | Colo. | 1961
delivered the opinion of the Court.
This writ of error is directed to a judgment and decree of the trial court entered following reversal and remand
Reversal of the prior judgment was occasioned in part by refusal of the trial court to receive in evidence a certain correction deed offered by protestant Friend. On October 5, 1959, further proceedings were held pursuant to the remittitur of this Court. After consultation between the trial court and counsel it was agreed that rather than have a complete trial de novo the second trial should take up where the first left off, whereupon Friend called a witness who identified the correction deed referred to and this deed was thereafter received in evidence without objection. This deed disclosed a conveyance to Friend’s immediate predecessor in title of “the first and prior right to * * * an undivided three-fifths (3/5) interest in and to the 1.6 cubic feet of water” to which petitioner claims absolute ownership.
Following admission of the deed in evidence the parties proceeded to call some eighteen witnesses; and although the order of proof was perhaps not in accordance with the generally accepted practice, neither party complains that he or she was not given opportunity to fully present all evidence in support of their respective claims. Petitioner called some nine witnesses who variously testified that petitioner and her predecessors in title had for at least fifty years diverted the .96 cubic feet of water decreed to Boon Ditch No. 1 from the head-gate of the Pinon Ditch for use on the Stancato property, and certain of these witnesses negated the possibility of any use by Friend or his predecessors in title of this same water. Conversely, Friend presented an equal number of witnesses, each claiming in varying degrees to have personal knowledge of the facts, who testified that on divers occasions of sufficient frequency to stop the running of any prescriptive statute, Friend and his predecessors in title had diverted the water in contro
Petitioner initially urges as error that by its judgment the trial court in effect quieted title to the disputed water right in protestant and that actually the trial court was without jurisdiction to try title in this type of a proceeding, which was brought under C.R.S. ’53, 147-9-22, for the sole purpose of changing the point of diversion. C.R.S. ’53, 147-9-22, provides, inter alia, that “Any owner * * * desiring to secure * * * the modification of his decree by changing the point of diversion * * * may present to the court * * * a petition * * (Emphasis supplied.) In conformity with this provision Stancato in her petition alleged that she “owned” the water. Although the purpose of the statute is primarily to provide a method for changing a point of diversion
“Under this statute we consider it necessary that a petitioner show a right to the use of a certain quantity of water from a public stream for irrigation as a condition precedent to obtaining a decree permitting a change in its point of diversion. To decree in favor of such change where the volume is not fixed would probably lead to useless litigation between rival claimants and the water commissioner.” (Emphasis supplied.)
Suffice it to say that under the present circumstances petitioner’s contention that the trial court was without jurisdiction to determine and decree the nature and extent of her alleged “ownership” of the water which she seeks to divert from a new and different point of diversion is without merit. Indeed such is of necessity inextricably intertwined with the ultimate determination as to whether the point of diversion is to be changed. To hold otherwise would result in the “useless litigation” referred to in Bates v. Hall, supra.
Petitioner’s remaining assignments of error relate essentially to the findings of fact made by the trial court. It is urged that the trial court misinterpreted and misunderstood the testimony of the various witnesses, all of which culminated in the allegedly erroneous finding that petitioner’s ownership was subject to the right of Friend to a first and prior use of the water. More specifically it is urged that any record interest which Friend or his predecessors in title may have once possessed has now been lost through non-user amounting to abandonment or, conversely, that petitioner and her predecessors in title have by open, exclusive, hostile, notorious and ad