Section 4
<br />Legal Framework for Water Use
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<br />4.1 Overview of State Water Laws
<br />The following basic overview of Colorado Water Law is
<br />derived primarily from Chapter 5 of the CWCB's Drought
<br />and Water Supply Assessment Report and the Colorado
<br />Foundation for Water Education's Citizen's Guide to
<br />Colorado Water Law.~
<br />4.1.1 Colorado's Prior Appropriation
<br />System
<br />As in most arid western states, the allocation of water in
<br />Colorado is governed by the doctrine of "prior
<br />appropriation," commonly described as "first in time, first
<br />in right."2 Under this doctrine, rights to water are granted
<br />upon the appropriation of a certain quantity of water for a
<br />beneficial use.3 The date of appropriation determines the
<br />priority of the water right, with the earliest appropriation
<br />establishing the most senior, or superior, right.4 Thus, th
<br />right to use water in Colorado is based on a prior
<br />appropriation, rather than by grant from the state.5 The
<br />right to use water is a valuable property right that arises <~~'~t"~"'~'
<br />by placing unappropriated water to beneficial use.s This I~
<br />right is protected under Colorado law and is rooted in ~.
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<br />Colorado's Constitution, which establishes that public ~~~ ~~~~:~~~ ~~
<br />uses of water in Colorado are subject to the right to
<br />appropriate a water right for private use:
<br />The water of every natural stream, not heretofore
<br />appropriated within the State of Colorado, is hereby
<br />declared to be the property of the public, and the
<br />same is dedicated to the use of the people of the
<br />state, subject to appropriation as hereinafter
<br />provided. Colo. Const. Art. XVI, § 5.
<br />The right to divert the unappropriated waters of any
<br />natural stream to beneficial uses shall never be
<br />denied. Colo. Const. Art. XVI, § 6.
<br />e Like other property rights, vested water rights may not be ,
<br />taken without payment of just compensation, and they
<br />may be conveyed separate from the land on which they
<br />are used.~
<br />This overview is general in nature. For additional, more detailed
<br />information, see Chapter 5 of the CWCB's Drought and Water
<br />Supply Assessment Report; Uranesh's Colorado Water Law
<br />(Revised ed. 1999) James N. Corbridge Jr. and Teresa Rice;
<br />Citizens Guide to Colorado Water Law, (Revised ed. 2004) Justice
<br />Gregory Hobbs, Jr.
<br />See Irwin v. Phillips, 5 Cal. 140 (1885)
<br />See Colo.Const. Art. XUI, § 6(The right to divert the
<br />unappropriated waters of any natural stream to beneficial uses
<br />shall never be denied"); see also C.R.S. § 37-92403(3(a)
<br />("Appropriation" means the application of a specified portion of the
<br />waters of the state to a beneficial use pursuant to the procedures
<br />prescribed by law"); and Board of County comm'rs v. Upper
<br />Gunnison River Water Conservancy Dist., 838 P.2d 840 (Cob.
<br />1992) ("To be effective, an appropriation must divert a definite
<br />quantity of water with the intent of applying such water to
<br />beneficial use").
<br />See Colo.Const,. Art.XUI, § 6("Priority of appropriation shall give
<br />the better right as between those using the water for the same
<br />purpose"); Farmers' High Line Canal & Reservoir Co. v.
<br />Southworth, 21 p. 1028 (1889) ("Priority of right to water by priority
<br />of appropriation is older than the constitution itself, and has
<br />existed from the date of the earliest appropriations of water in the
<br />boundaries of Colorado").
<br />The other major approach to water rights allocation in the United
<br />States is known as the "riparian" system, which is prevalent in the
<br />water rich states of the eastern United States. Under this system,
<br />water is allocated based on land ownership. Most riparian states
<br />now have permit statutes, under which an administrative official
<br />determines the quantity of water that may be diverted, and the
<br />terms and conditions for its use, based on criteria adopted by the
<br />legislature to protect public interests in the resource.
<br />As the doctrine of prior appropriation has been
<br />interpreted through case law, two major principles
<br />regarding the requirement of "beneficial use" and the
<br />concept of water as a property right have emerged. First,
<br />a water right does not include the right to waste the
<br />resource. Second, the right to use water must be
<br />sufficiently flexible to accommodate changes of use and
<br />the free transferability of water rights in order to allow the
<br />maximum use of water. With regard to the former,
<br />Colorado courts have required water users to employ an
<br />efficient means of diversion, and have limited the amount
<br />of water that may be appropriated to the amount
<br />necessary for the actual use. With regard to the later -
<br />flexible use of water rights - Colorado law recognizes
<br />See Sherwood Irrigation Co. v. Uandewark, 331 P.2d 810 (1958)
<br />("Water is a valuable property right, subject to sale and
<br />conveyance"); see also Justice Gregory Hobbs, "Colorado Water
<br />Law: An Historical Overview," 1 U. Denv. Water L. Rev. 1 at 2
<br />("Western prior appropriation water law is a property rights-based
<br />allocation and administration system, which promotes multiple use
<br />of a finite resource." ).
<br />See Strickier v. City of Colorado Springs, 26 P. 313, 316 (Cob.
<br />1891) ("A priority to the use of water for irrigation or domestic
<br />purposes is a property right and as such is fully protected by the
<br />constitutional guaranties relating to property in general").
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