delivered the opinion of the court:
Plaintiffs and defendant were owners of the Bolles and Manney ditch, taking water from the Uncomp ahgre river. During the year 1890 there was-an adjudication of water rights in Water District No. 41, being the district in which the TJncompahgre river is located. Plaintiffs and the grantor of defendant filed their statement of claim for a priority in such proceeding, and a decree was rendered awarding the Bolles and Manney ditch an appropriation of water ■ amounting to 123] statutory inches. This present action is brought to determine the respective rights of each of the water consumers tailing water from this ditch.
It was contended by the plaintiffs that the interest of each consumer was measured by the amount *270of land which he irrigated at the time of and previous to the rendition of the decree. Defendant denied this, and contended that each, of the five owners was entitled to a one-fifth part of the appropriation, irrespective of the amount of land which he irrigated. It appears that there was no difficulty concerning the division of the water until shortly before the bringing of - this action, at which time the defendant had brought under cultivation twenty acres of land in addition to that which had theretofore been irrigated upon his premises, and sought-to irrigate it with water obtained from this ditch, and by so- doing he diminished the quantity which plaintiffs had theretofore been able to obtain. The court found the issues for the plaintiffs, and determined that the respective parties were the owners of the following amounts of water as appropriated by the ditch, namely: Sargent, 43 inches; Garren, 33.5 inches; the heirs of Stevens, now.deceased, 24 inches; Woods, 11.5 inches; and, Thompson, 11.5 inches. The court also found that at the time of the rendition of the decree the parties had irrigated lands as follows: Sargent, 45 acres; Stevens, 25 acres; Garren, 35 acres; Woods, 12 acres; and Thompson, 12 acres, and concluded that the water should he divided in the same proportion.
The plaintiffs, to maintain the issues on their part, offered in evidence “all of the papers, evidence and exhibits relating to the Bolles and Manney ditch that are now on file in this court in the matter of the petition of John H. Garren et al., in the adjudication of water rights in Water District No. 41, state of Colorado.” This was objected to because of its being immaterial and incompetent; that there was nothing to show that it was all of the testimony taken in the proceeding before the referee; that there was nothing to show that the decree was based upon this *271testimony; and, that it was not a proceeding in which defendant Thompson or defendant Woods was a party. This objection was .overruled, and the first assignment of error raises the question as to the propriety of this ruling of the court.
The original decree awarding the priority, of course, does not determine the rights of the several owners of the ditch to the water as between themselves. It. does not, and could not, determine the amount of the appropriation of each individual. The only authority which the court had in the premises was to render a decree fixing the amount of the appropriation to which the ditch was entitled, and the date of its-priority. — Evans v. Swan, 38 Colo. 92; Putnam v. Curtis; 7 Colo. App. 437; Oppenlander v. Left Hand D. Co., 18 Colo. 142.
In order to constitute an appropriation of water, there must not only be a diversion of the water from the stream and a carrying of it to the place of use, but it must be beneficially applied, and the measure of the appropriation does not depend alone upon the amount diverted and carried, but the amount which is applied to a beneficial use must also be considered. For instance, in the ease of New Mercer Ditch Company v. Armstrong, 21 Colo. 307, it was determined by the decree that the ditch had a carrying capacity of about 33 cubic feet of water per second of time. It was constructed to irrigate 120 acres of land, and it was determined that the appropriator was entitled to only so much water as he could beneficially apply upon that land. In this case the proof taken before the referee shows that the ditch had a carrying capacity of something like fourteen cubic feet of water per second of time, but the proof shows that there was only about 130 acres' of land irrigated from the ditch. The court did not render the decree for the amount of the carrying capacity of the *272ditch as shown by the proof, bnt rendered it for 123-J statutory inches, presumably the amount of water which it considered was sufficient to irrigate that amount of land. This is somewhat less than one statutory inch per acre. The amount of the appropriation being based upon the amount of water which the consumers applied to a beneficial use, it follows, as a matter of course, that he who irrigated forty acres of land had appropriated twice as much as he who irrigated but twenty. The appropriation being made upon the basis of the entire number of acres irrigated from the ditch allowing less than one' statutory inch to the acre, if it should' be determined that each of the claimants was entitled to one-fifth of the entire appropriation, the result would be that he who irrigated forty-five acres would not have sufficient to irrigate his land and that he who irrigated but twelve acres would have more than enough. So that the rights of the parties must be determined, not according to their ownership of the ditch, but according to the amount of water which they respectively used at the time of the rendition of the decree, and no more satisfactory way to prove that amount can be arrived at than by the testimony taken before the referee in the adjudication proceedings. It will not' be presumed that any of the claimants would testify that they had applied to a beneficial use a less amount of water than they actually did, or that they irrigated a less number of acres than they actually did, at the time the decree was being sought.
The evidence of witnesses who testified at that time, while the matter was fresh in "their minds, would be more apt to be correct than those who, at the time of the trial, testified as to conditions existing fourteen years before. That this testimony was pertinent, see 1st Greenleaf on Evidence, sections 551 and 553.
*273Defendant contends that there was nothing to show that the files contained all the testimony that was introduced before the referee. It is made the duty of 'the referee to- take the testimony in writing and to file it with the clerk of the district court, and it is made the duty of the clerk to preserve the files intact and, unless there is something in the record by which it affirmatively appears that some of the files or some of the depositions were missing, we will presume that these officers did their duty and that the files contained the entire record.-
It is also contended that the defendant was not a party to the original action and consequently is not bound by the testimony introduced in that proceeding. Defendant’s grantor was a party to the proceeding, was one of the petitioners for the adjudication ; the grantor’s rights in this water were measured by the adjudication proceedings and the defendant could procure from his grantor no greater rights than the grantor himself possessed. We think the court did not err in the overruling of the objection to this testimony.
The other assignments of .error all go to the assertion that the findings and judgment of the court are not supported by the evidence. While the oral testimony introduced at the trial was somewhat conflicting as to the number of acres which the plaintiffs and defendant irrigated at the time of the rendition of the decree, there was no conflict in the testimony taken by the referee in the original proceedings and the whole testimony is amply sufficient to sustain the findings and judgment of the district court.
There being no other errors assigned, the judgment will be affirmed. Affirmed.
Chibe Justice Steele and Mr. Justice Goddaed . concur.