Lead Opinion
delivered the Opinion of the Court.
T1 In this original proceeding under seetion 1-40-107(2), C.R.S. (2011), we review the Ballot Title Setting Board's ("Title Board") findings that proposed Initiative 2011-2012 No. 3 ("Initiative 3"), its title, and its ballot title and submission clause (the "Titles") contain a single subject.
I. Facts and Procedural History
T2 Respondents Richard G. Hamilton and Phillip Doe proposed Initiative 3 to enact the "Colorado public trust doctrine" by adding new subsections (2) through (7) to article XVI, section 5 of the state constitution. Specifically, proposed subsection (2) would expressly adopt a version of the public trust doctrine to "protect the public's interests in the water of natural streams and to instruct the State of Colorado to defend the public's water ownership rights of use and public enjoyment." Proposed subsections (8) and (4) would subordinate contract, property, and appropriative water rights to the "public estate in water." Proposed subsection (5) would allow public access "along, and on, the wetted natural perimeter" of any "natural stream in Colorado," and would extend this public access right to the "naturally wetted high water mark of the stream." Proposed subsection (6) would provide enforcement mechanisms for the new public trust doctrine, and proposed subsection (7) would authorize the legislature to enact laws supplemental and complementary to the new constitutional provisions.
T3 The Title Board designated the Titles for Initiative 3 in accordance with section 1-40-106(1), C.R.S. (2011), during a public meeting on December 21, 2011. The title reads as follows:
An amendment to the Colorado constitution concerning the public's rights in the water of natural streams, and, in connection therewith, making public ownership of such water legally superior to water rights, contracts, and property law; granting unrestricted public access along and use of natural streams and their stream banks up to the naturally wetted high water mark; prohibiting the state from transferring its water rights; allowing the state government to manage others' water rights, while requiring state government to act as steward of and to protect, enforce, and implement public ownership of water; and allowing any Colorado citizen to sue to enforce the amendment.
(Emphasis added).
4 The ballot title and submission clause contains the same language as the title, phrased in the form of a question. Petitioner Douglas Kemper filed a Motion for Rehearing on December 28, 2011, arguing that Initiative 3 and the Titles violated the single subject requirements of section 1-40-106.5 and of article V, section 1(5.5) of the Colorado Constitution. The Title Board heard testimony on the Motion for Rehearing during its meeting on January 4, 2012. It discussed
II. Analysis
I 5 We hold that the Title Board correctly found that Initiative 3 and its Titles contain a single subject because they necessarily and properly relate to "the public's rights in the waters of natural streams." We first de-seribe our limited role in reviewing the Title Board's decision. We then outline Colorado's single subject rule, noting the dangers of omnibus initiatives. Finally, we analyze the plain language of Initiative 3 to conclude that it complies with the single subject rule. We also hold that the Titles fairly and clearly reflect the proposed measure and its single subject.
A. Standard of Review
16 In reviewing a challenge to the Title Board's decision, "we employ all legitimate presumptions in favor of the propriety of the [Title] Board's actions." In re Title, Ballot Title, Submission Clause for 2009-2010 No. 45,
17 In addition, the Title Board has considerable discretion in setting the titles for a ballot initiative. Im re Title, Ballot Title, Submission Clause, and Summary Adopted March 20, 1996 by the Title Bd. Pertaining to Proposed Imitiative "1996-6,"
18 Our limited role in this process prohibits us from addressing the merits of a proposed initiative, and from suggesting how an initiative might be applied if enacted. In re Title, Ballot Title and Submission Clause for Proposed Initiative 2001-02 No. 48,
B. The Single Subject Requirement
19 Colorado law requires "that every constitutional amendment or law proposed by initiative ... be limited to a single subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title." §$ 1-40-106.5(1)(a); see also Colo. Const. art. V, § 1(5.5) ("No measure shall be proposed by petition containing more than one subject, which shall be clearly expressed in its title. ..."). A proposed initiative violates this rule if its text "relate[s]l to more than one subject, and [has] at least two distinct and separate purposes not dependent upon or connected with each other." People ex rel. Elder v. Sours,
{10 A proponent's attempt to characterize a proposed initiative under "some overarching theme" will not save the measure if
1 11 We have previously explained that the single subject rule prevents two "dangers" associated with omnibus initiatives. See In re Proposed Imitiative 2001-02 No. 48,
112 Recognizing these dangers, we have applied the single subject rule to public trust doctrine initiatives-like Initiative 3-on several previous occasions. In 1995 and 2007, we held that the proposed public trust initiatives contained multiple subjects. See Pub. Rights in Waters II,
1 13 With this legal framework in mind, we turn to Initiative 3 and its Titles.
C. Initiative 3 and its Titles Contain a Single Subject
{14 Initiative 3 and its Titles contain a single subject: "the public's rights in the waters of natural streams." Initiative I's proposed subsections are necessarily and properly connected to this subject, see Pub. Rights in Waters II,
1. Initiative 3 Complies with the Single Subject Rule
115 Initiative 3 contains a single subject. Proposed subsection (2) expressly adopts the "Colorado public trust doctrine." The plain language of Initiative 3 indicates that this proposed doctrine is necessarily and properly connected to the subject of "the public's rights in waters of natural streams" because the doctrine's delineated purpose is to "protect the public's interests in the water of natural streams and to instruct the state of Colorado to defend the public's water own
T16 In addition, proposed subsections 8) through (5) are necessarily and properly connected to the subject of the "public's rights in waters of natural streams" because they de-seribe the proposed doctrine's legal relationship to existing contract, property, and ap-propriative rights. Subsection (8) states that the new public right to water of natural streams would be "superior to rules and terms of contracts or property law." Then, subsections (4) and (5) necessarily and properly describe how the "superior" public right to the water of natural streams will interact with usufruct water rights and with streambed and stream bank access. Subsections (6) and (7) necessarily delineate the procedures for enacting and enforcing the new public trust regime to "protect the pub-He's right and interest in water." Far from being "disconnected and incongruous," the proposed subsections of Initiative 3 have the single distinct purpose of describing a new legal regime-the "Colorado public trust doctrine"-that would govern "the public's rights in waters of natural streams." See Pub. Rights in Waters II,
117 Unlike "water" in Public Rights in Waters II,
1 18 Initiative 3 additionally does not present either of the "dangers" attending omnibus measures. First, the proponents did not combine an array of disconnected subjects into the measure for the purpose of garnering support from various factions. See In re Proposed Initiative 2001-02 No. 48,
T19 Initiative 3 also fails to trigger the second "danger" of omnibus measures because voters will not be surprised by, or fraudulently led to vote for, any "surreptitious provision{s] 'coiled up in the folds' of a complex initiative." In re Proposed Imitia-tive 2001-02 No. 43,
20 No such surprise would oceur should voters approve Initiative 3 because the plain language of the measure unambiguously proposes a new "Colorado public trust doctrine," describes the impact of that doctrine on other legal rights, and lays out procedures for implementing and enforcing the constitutional
2. The Titles Clearly Express the Single Subject of Initiative 3
$21 The Titles clearly express Initiative 83's single subject. They first explicitly state that Initiative 3 concerns "the public's rights in the water of natural streams," and then accurately and unambiguously summarize the details of the measure. Kemper argues that the Titles are unfair because the phrase "concerning the public's rights in the water of natural streams" does not clearly express a single subject. We held above that the phrase in question, as used in Initiative 3, contains a single subject in accordance with Colorado law. Therefore, we reject Kem-per's argument because "the public's rights in the water of natural streams" is the single subject of Initiative 3 and is clearly and fairly expressed in the Titles. See Colo. Const. art. V, § 1(5.5); see also § 1-40-106(8)(b), C.R.S. (2011). Kemper has not argued any other grounds upon which we might conclude that the Titles are improper. Therefore, we affirm the designation of the Titles because they contain a single subject.
III. Conclusion
1 22 We hold that Initiative 3 and its Titles contain a single subject in compliance with Colorado law. We therefore affirm the decision of the Title Board.
APPENDIX-Initiative 3 and Titles
INITIATIVE TO ADOPT THE COLORADO PUBLIC TRUST DOCTRINE
Be it Enacted by the People of the State of Colorado:
Section 5 of article XVI of the constitution of the state of Colorado is amended to read:
Section 5. Water of streams public property-public trust doctrine. (1) The water of every natural stream, not heretofore appropriated, within the state of Colorado, is hereby declared to be the property of the public, and the same is dedicated to the use of the people of the state, subject to appropriation as hereinafter provided.
(2) THIS COLORADO PUBLIC TRUST DOCTRINE IS HEREBY ADOPTED, AND IMPLEMENTED, BY THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO TO PROTECT THE PUBLIC'S INTERESTS IN THE WATER OF NATURAL STREAMS AND TO INSTRUCT THE STATE oF Cornorapo to DEFEND THE PuBLIC'S WATER OWNERSHIP RIGHTS OF USE AND PUBLIC ENJOYMENT.
(3) THis COLORADO PUBLIC TRUST DOCTRINE PROVIDES THAT THE PUBLIC'S ESTATE IN WATER IN COLORADO HAS A LEGAL AUTHORITY SUPERIOR TO RULES AND TERMS OF CONTRACTS OR PROPER TY LAW,
(4) THE PUBLIC CONFERS THE RIGHT TO THE USE OF ITS WATER, AND THE DIVERSION OF THE WATER UNDER SECTION 6 OF THIS ARTICLE, TO AN APPROPRIATOR FOR A BENEFICIAL USE AS 4 GRANT FROM THE PEOPLE OF THE STATE OF COLORADO TO THE APPROPRIATOR FOR THE COMMON GOOD.
(a) THE usB or THE PUBLIC'S WATER BY THE MANNER OF APPROPRIATION, AS GRANTED IN THIS ARTICLE, IS A USUFRUCT PROPERTY RIGHT ASSOCI ATED WITH THE USE oF Warer UsurRrUCT RIGHTS FOR THE USE OF WATER SURVIVE UNDER THE LEGAL CONDITION THAT THE APPROPRIATOR IS AWARE THAT A USUFRUCT RIGHT IS SERVIENT TO THE PUBLIC'S DOMINANT WATER ESTATE AND IS SUBJECT TO TERMS AND CONDITIONS OF THIS COLORADO PUBLIC TRUST DOCTRINE.
(b) USUFRUCT WATER RIGHTS SHALL NOT CONFER OWNERSHIP TO WATER OTHER THAN USC-FRUCT RIGHTS TO THE APPROPRIATOR.
(c) UsSUFRUCT WATER RIGHTS, CONFERRED BY THE PUBLIC TO AN APPROPRIATOR FOR USE, MAY
(d) A USUFRUCT WATER USER IS IMPRESSED UNDER THE CONDITION THAT NO USE OFP WATER HAS DOMINANCE OR PRIORITY OVER NATURAL STREAMS OR PUBLIC HEALTH OR WELL-BEING.
(e) WatEr Rickts, HELD BY THE STATE OF CoLnoRr&aDo FOR GOVERNMENT OPERATIONS, SHALL BE HELD IN TRUST FOR THE PUBLIC BY THE STATE OF COLORADO WITH THE STATE ACTING AS THE STEWARD OF THE PUBLICS WATER ESTATE. WATER RIGHTS HELD BY THE STATE OF COLORADO SHALL NOT BE TRANSFERRED BY THE STATE OF COLORADO FROM THE PUBLIC ESTATE TO PROPRIETARY INTEREST.
(5) Acosss By THE PUBLIC ALONG, AND ON, THE WETTED NATURAL PERIMETER OF A STREAM BANK OF A WATER COURSE OF ANY NATURAL STREAM IN COLORADO IS A RIGHT TO THE PUBLIC TO THE USE OF ITS OWN WATER IN CONCERT WITH THE COLORADO PUBLIC TRUST DOCTRINE.
(a) THs Richt or THE PUBLIC TO THE USE OF THE WATER IN A NATURAL STREAM AND TO THE LANDS OF THE BANKS OF THE STREAMS WITHIN COLORADO SHALL EXTEND TO THE NATURALLY wETTED HIGH WATER MARK OF THE STREAM AND IS IMPRESSED WITH NAVIGATION SERVITUDE FOR COMMERCE AND PUBLIC USE AS RECOGNIZED IN THE COLORADO PUBLIC TRUST DOCTRINE.
(b) THE WATER OF A NATURAL STREAM AND ITS STREAMBED, AND THE NATURALLY WETTED LANDS OF THE SHORES OF THE STREAM, SHALL NOT BE SUBJECT TO THE LAW OF TRESPASS AS THE WATER OF NATURAL STREAMS AND THE BANKS OF THEIR STREAM COURSES ARE PUBLIC HIGHWAYS FOR COMMERCE AND PUBLIC USE.
(c) PUBLIC USE OF WATER, RECOGNIZED AS A RIGHT IN THE CoLORADO PUBLIC TRUST oc-TRINE, SHALL NOT BE CONTROLLED IN LAW AS A USUFRUCT BUT SHALL BE A RIGHT OF THE PUBLIC TO PROTECT AND ENJOY ITS OWN WATER.
(6) ENFORCEMENT AND IMPLEMENTATION OF SUBSECTIONS (2) to (7) or THIS SECTION OF THE COLORADO PUBLIC TRUST DOCTRINE TO PROTECT THE PUBLICS RIGHTS AND INTERESTS IN WATER ARE MANDATED TO THE EXECUTIVE, LEGISLATIVE, AND JUDICIAL BRANCHES OF COLORADO STATE GOVERNMENT TO ACT AS STEWARDS TO PROTECT THE PUBLICS INTERESTS IN ITS WATER ESTATE. ANY CITIZEN OF THE STATE OF COLORADO SHALL HAVE STANDING IN JUDICIAL ACTIONS SEEKING TO COMPEL THE STATE OF COLORADO TO ENFORCE THE PROVISIONS OF THIS SECTION.
(7) SussEctions (2) to (7) or THIS SECTION ARE SELF-ENACTING AND SELFP-EXECUTING, BUT LAWS MAY BE ENACTED SUPPLEMENTARY TO AND IN PURSUANCE OF, BUT NOT CONTRARY TO, THE PROVISIONS THEREOF.
Pri1LIip DOE
LITTLETON, COLORADO
RicHarDp HAMILTON
FAIRPLAY, COLORADO
Ballot Title Setting Board
Proposed Initiative 2011-2012 #3
The title as designated and fixed by the Board is as follows:
An amendment to the Colorado constitution concerning the public's rights in the water of natural streams, and, in connection therewith, making public ownership of such water legally superior to water rights, contracts, and property law; granting unrestricted public access along and use of natural streams and their stream banks up to the naturally wetted high water mark; prohibiting the state from transferring its water rights; allowing the state government to manage others' water rights, while requiring state government to act as steward of and to protect, enforce, and implement public ownership of water; and following any Colorado citizen to sue to enforce the amendment. The ballot title and submission clause as designated and fixed by the Board is as follows:
Shall there be an amendment to the Colorado constitution concerning the public's rights in the water of natural streams, and, in connection therewith, making public ownership of such water legally superior to water rights, contracts, and property law; granting unrestricted public access along and use of natural streams and their stream banks up to
Notes
. Petitioner Douglas Kemper presented the following two issues for our review:
A. Whether, in identifying the measure's subject in the Title as "the public's rights in waters of natural streams," the Board incorrectly determined that Initiative 2011-2012 # 3 is limited to a single subject, as required by Article V, section 1(5.5) of the Colorado Constitution and C.R.S. § 1-40-106.5, in light of the multiple objectives of this measure to:
1. Adopt the "Public Trust Doctrine" that would subordinate water rights to public ownership interests; and
2. Transfer real property adjacent to and beneath all natural streams from private landowners to the public.
B. Whether the Board's title and ballot title and submission clause for Initiative 2011-2012 #3 is unfair in that the phrase "concerning the public's rights in the water of natural streams" does not clearly express a single subject.
. We again emphasize that we may not opine on the merits of Initiative 3 nor may we suggest how the initiative might be applied if enacted. In re Proposed Initiative 2001-02 No. 43,
Dissenting Opinion
dissenting.
123 I respectfully dissent. In my view, Initiative 2011-12 #38 relates to more than one subject and it has at least two distinct and separate purposes that are not dependent upon or connected with each other. Accordingly, under our precedent in Waters I1, we should hold that the Title Board erred in setting the Title and Ballot Title and Submission Clause for this initiative and remand the case to the Board with directions to strike them and return the initiative to its proponents. In re Title, Ballot Title, Submission Clause & Summary Adopted April 5, 1995, by the Title Board Pertaining to a Proposed Initiative "Public Rights in Waters II ",
I. Standard of Review
24 An initiative that joins multiple subjects poses the danger of voter surprise and fraud occasioned by the inadvertent passage of surreptitious provisions coiled up in the folds of a complex initiative. In re Title, Ballot Title & Submission Clause, for 2007-2008, # 17,
4 25 "[In order to pass the single-subject test, the subject of the initiative should be capable of being clearly expressed in the initiative's title." In re Title, Ballot Title, Submission Clause, Summary for 2005-2006 No. 78,
{26 We must ensure that the Board's titles and summary enable "informed voter choice." In re Title, Ballot Title, Submission Clause, Summary for 1999-2000 No.29,
127 The Board must "avoid titles for which the general understanding of a 'yes' or 'no' vote will be unclear." In re Title, Ballot Title & Submission Clause & Summary Approved April 6, 1994, & April 20, 1994, for
128 Just as "water" was too broad a theme in Waters IIL,
II. Initiative 2011-12 #3 Surreptitiously Contains Multiple Purposes and Subjects in Contravention of Colorado's Constitution
€ 29 We have a duty to determine whether a proposed initiative the Title Board has approved for the ballot contains cleverly concealed multiple purposes under a seductively-stated broad title. In re 2007-2008, #17,
T 30 In reciting this purpose, the initiative is consistent with 150 years of Colorado constitutional, statutory and case decision water law. In Empire Lodge Homeowners' Ass'n v. Moyer,
(1) waters of the "natural stream," (the term used in article XVI, section 5 of the Colorado Constitution), includes both surface water and tributary groundwater as a public resource that is subject to the establishment of public ageney or private use rights in unappropriated water for beneficial purposes;
(2) water courts adjudicate the water rights and their priorities; and
(3) the State Engineer, Division Engineers, and Water Commissioners administer the waters of the natural stream in accordance with the judicial decrees and statutory provisions governing administration.
131 Thus, a casual reading of Initiative 2011-12 # 3 could lead a voter to vote for the initiative as a reaffirmation of Colorado's longstanding water law doctrine, which provides that the water resource is always owned by the public, subject to adjudication and administration of use rights created in priority through appropriations of unappropriated water by public and private entities. However, within the folds of this complex initiative are coiled three separate and discrete subjects that are not dependent upon or necessarily connected with each other. Any one of these subjects might lead a voter to vote for the initiative even though the voter does not favor one or more of the other subjects. This is precisely the logrolling dilemma that the voters intended to avoid when they adopted the single subject requirements of article V, section 1(5.5) of the Colorado Constitution. In re Title, Ballot Title & Submission Clause for 2009-2010 # 91,
T32 First, Initiative 2011-12 #3 would subordinate all existing water rights in Colorado created over the past 150 years to a newly created dominant water estate, the purpose of which is "to protect the natural environment and to protect the public's enjoyment and use of water." This provision would create a super water right for such purposes. Under current Colorado law, environmental and recreational uses are subject to appropriation in priority by the Colorado Water Conservation Board for instream flow and lake level water rights under section 37-92-102(8), C.R.S. (2011), and by local governmental entities for recreational in-channel
1 33 Second, Initiative 2011-12 #3 would subject the "lands of the banks of the streams within Colorado" to a newly created "navigation servitude for commerce and public use" extending to "the naturally wetted high water mark of the stream." This provision would vest in the public possessory rights to the beds and banks of the stream now owned by local public entities and private landowners in Colorado.
134 Third, Initiative 2011-12 #38 would create a new property right of "access by the public" to "any natural stream in Colorado." This provision would vest a recreational casement in the public across all private property in Colorado through which even a trickle of water runs. It would abrogate the right of private property owners throughout Colorado to prohibit trespass onto and across their land.
'I 35 These three subject matters separately and together propose to drop what amounts to a nuclear bomb on Colorado water rights and land rights. Masquerading as a measure to protect the public, Initiative 2011-12 #8 contains surreptitious measures that would strip members of the public, cities, farms, and families throughout this state of their most valuable economic interests.
III. The Initiative Improperly Lumps Land and Water Interests Together in Derogation of the Historical and Doctrinal Framework of Public Trust Law
1186 In People v. Emmert,
37 As a recent U.S. Supreme Court decision holds, federal law determines whether a state takes riverbed title under the equal footing doctrine when the state is admitted to the Union; on the other hand, the existence and seope of the public trust doctrine in any given state for public access to that land is for the state to determine. PPL Montana, LLC v. Montana, -- U.S. --,
T38 The public trust doctrine originated with English common law, ultimately deriving from the Roman law that the seas were common to all. As most land owned in England came from grants from the Crown, there became recognized a presumption that the Crown, in granting lands near seashores, did not grant tidelands, but reserved them against private ownership. This presumption extended to navigable, tidal lands. It came to be understood that the Crown held these lands in trust for the public rights of fishery and navigation.
39 The United States adopted this common law understanding, more or less intact, in Shively v. Bowlby,
{41 This indicates that California's extension of the public trust doctrine was a melding of that doctrine with the reasonable use doctrine endemic to riparian water law. Earlier decisions, beginning with the 1945 New Mexico case, provide a more relevant explanation for opening all waters to fishing and recreation. There, the court traced the public right to Native American and Mexican law, and to Colorado's Coffin v. Left Hand Ditch Co.,
T 42 In concordance with Mexican law, the public therefore had a right to fish these public waters. Id. at 488. Wyoming, Idaho, and South Dakota followed the New Mexico opinion, holding public use of the waters themselves to sound in constitutional provisions and the Colorado doctrine rather than the common law public trust doctrine. See S. Idaho Fish & Game Ass'n v. Picabo Livestock, Inc.,
1483 Our Park County Sportsmen's Ranch decision explains Colorado's rubrics that "water is a public resource" and "the waters of the natural stream" include "tributary ground water." Bd. of Cnty. Comm'rs of Cnty. of Park v. Park County Sportsmen's Ranch, LLP,
(1) water is a public resource, dedicated to the beneficial use of public agencies and private persons wherever they might make beneficial use of the water under use rights established as prescribed by law;
(2) the right of water use includes the right to cross the lands of others to place water into transportation systems, occupy and convey water through those lands, and withdraw water from the natural water-bearing formations; and
(3) the natural water-bearing formations may be used for the transport and retention of appropriated water.
This radically new law of the arid region created a property-rights-based allocation and administration system that promotes multiple use of a finite resource for beneficial purposes. Id. at 706.
T 44 In so holding, we relied on statutory provisions adopted by the first Colorado Territorial General Assembly in 1861
(1) effectuated a severance of water from the land patents issuing out of the public domain;
(2) confirmed the right of the states and territories to recognize rights to water established prior to the federal acts; and
(8) granted the right to states and territories to legislate in regard to water and water use rights.5
145 In sum, public water ownership and public submerged-land ownership evolved under completely different cireumstances and completely different legal regimes. As such, they cannot be considered a single subject. In Emmert, we ruled both that the public trust doctrine in Colorado did not divest landowners of lands beneath non-navigable waters and that Colorado's constitutional doctrine vesting unappropriated waters with the public did not create a public right of navigation.
146 Initiative 2011-2012 #8 appears to seek to overturn all aspects of Emmert, and goes farther by creating a "public trust" not only in all water rights in the state, as with California's Mono Lake case, but also in all natural stream beds regardless of navigability, which would be a novelty among jurisdictions in the United States.
IV. The Board's Title and Summary Will Confuse Voters
T47 The Board's ballot title and submission clause provide:
*575 Shall there be an amendment to the Colorado constitution concerning the public's rights in the water of natural streams, and, in connection therewith, making public ownership of such water legally superior to water rights, contracts, and property law; granting unrestricted public access along and use of natural streams and their stream banks up to the naturally wetted high water mark; prohibiting the state from transferring its water rights; allowing the state government to manage oth-erg water rights, while requiring state government to act as steward of and to protect, enforce, and implement public ownership of water; and allowing any Colorado citizen to sue to enforce the amendment?
{48 This contains at least two material omissions. First, it neglects to mention that it effectively will grant to the public posses-sory interests in land currently owned by private entities and individuals. Buried in the several clauses is a note that "public access" will be allowed on "stream banks." But this will mislead voters by failing to "convey to voters the initiative's likely impact," In re Title, Ballot Title & Submission Clause & Summary for 1999-2000 No. 37,
T 49 Second, the title omits any mention of the public trust doctrine or its implications. While it notes that the initiative would make "public ownership of such water legally superior to water rights," voters will inevitably confuse this concept with the principle already inherent in Colorado doctrine that waters of natural streams are public property dedicated to the people of the state. See Colo. Const. art. XVI, § 5. Individuals own rights to divert and use water of natural streams, but the water itself while in the natural stream has always been owned by the public.
{50 Because of these omissions, and the structure and complexity of the ballot title and submission clause, it will be unclear to voters what a "yes" or "no" vote would do. In re Title, Ballot Title & Submission Clause & Summary Approved April 6, 1994, & April 20, 1994, for the Proposed Initiative Concerning "Auto. Ins. Coverage", STi P.2d at 855 (Colo.1994). Exacerbating this problem is the misleading characterization in the title that the initiative concerns only the "public's rights in the water of natural streams," as the initiative concerns land as well.
{ 51 The underlying foree behind all of this confusing language is that the initiative has not one but three subjects. The ballot title fails on the rule that, "in order to pass the single-subject test, the subject of the initiative should be capable of being clearly expressed in the initiative's title." In re Title, Ballot Title, Submission Clause, Summary for 2005-2006 No. 73,
Conclusion
1 52 Contrary to the plain teachings of the United States Supreme Court in the PPL Montana case and many ballot title decisions of our court, this initiative combines the separate subject of (1) subordinating all water rights in Colorado to a new super water right for environmental and recreational uses with the separate subject of (2) vesting in the public possessory rights to the beds and banks of the streams in this state now owned by private landowners with the separate subject of (8) creating a public access easement for recreation across the private property of
1 53 Initiative 2011-12 # 3, and the subject the Title Board identified in approving it-"the public's rights in the water of natural streams"-can cause voter surprise and fraud by the inadvertent passage of surreptitious provisions coiled up in the folds of a complex initiative. In my view, we have a duty under article V, section 1(5.5) of the Colorado Constitution and the Title Board's enabling statute, section 1-40-106.5(1)(a), to reverse the Title Board's action in setting the title for this initiative.
1 54 Accordingly, I respectfully dissent.
. While some states-namely, California, Hawaii, Montana, and South Dakota-have nominally included water use and allocation within their "public trust doctrines," their holdings were based on constitutional provisions which they held embodied the public trust doctrine, and not simply on a direct application of the common law doctrine. See Parks v. Cooper,
. ''To whomsoever the soil belongs, he owns also to the sky and to the depths." Park County
. See 1861 Colo. Sess. Laws 67-68.
. Mining Act of 1866, ch. 262, § 9, 14 Stat. 251, 253 (1866); see 43 U.S.C. § 661 (2006).
. Park County Sportsmen's Ranch,
. There is much dicta in the Emmert decision. The common ground of agreement between the majority and dissent in Emmert rests in the majority's statement that, ""If the increasing demand for recreational space on the waters of this state is to be accommodated, the legislative process is the proper method to achieve this end."
