dissenting.
I regret my inability to concur with the majority. It seems to me that the conclusion reached by the court leaves the law on the main question at issue in such an unsettled condition in this jurisdiction as to make imperative a statement of the reasons for this dissent.
The principal question here presented is the right to the use for irrigation of waters escaping from the Prewitt Reservoir, an irrigation storage project. The issues are thus clearly stated in the opening brief.
“Two principal issues were presented for the final determination of the court, to-wit (a) The validity of the order of the state engineer and the jurisdiction of that officer in the premises; (b) The alleged right of the Prewitt Reservoir & Land Company and other non-official defendants to recover the waters escaping from the reservoir * * * so that the same might be separated from the waters of the river and devoted to the exclusive use of said defendants.”
For convenience I consider them in that order.
In determining the first it must necessarily be assumed that defendants are entitled to the waters in question. If so it seems clear that they must look for protection to the water officials because we have held that such claimants have no place in a general adjudication proceeding. Rio Grande Res. & Ditch Co. v. Wagon Wheel Gap Imp. Co., 68 Colo. 437, 191 Pac. 129.
These water officials are directed to distribute water “in accordance with the right of priority of appropriation, as established by judicial decree” but they also “have the authority to make such other regulations to secure the equal *264and fair distribution of water, in accordance with the rights of priority of appropriation,” etc. Sec. 3344 R. S. 1908.
Counsel for plaintiffs admit an exception to the rule that water officials may distribute water only “according to tabulated statement of priorities,” that exception being “where water is turned into a stream from a reservoir to be taken out again to be applied to the lands for which it was intended.” Sec. 3225 R. S. 1908.
If these defendants are entitled to the water in question it is because, under the law, it is to be treated exactly as water voluntarily turned out by them into the stream to be so carried, taken out and applied. It therefore comes within the admitted exception.
Defendants, however, did not rest their case upon the validity of the order of the state engineer and were not required to do so. If for other reasons than the order they are entitled to have the water in question distributed as directed the judgment herein should so declare. Equity having taken jurisdiction for one purpose will hear and determine all matters necessarily involved.
The following facts are either admitted by the parties or found by the court upon sufficient evidence.
Before any water was run into the reservoir defendants’ engineer, under their directions, investigated the feasibility of saving anticipated percolation in order to use the recaptured water and avert damage therefrom. The reservoir was completed and water turned in November 21, 1912. Within three weeks thereafter excessive seepage appeared. Final survey of the drain ditch was begun December 16, 1912. Defendants filed with the state engineer their sworn statement and map claiming the escaping waters. February 13, 1913, construction of the drain ditch was begun with promptness and completed with diligence. The waters diverted into the reservoir were otherwise unappropriated. All waters in the drain ditch came from the reservoir. These recaptured waters are but seventy per cent of the total seepage, the remaining thirty per cent *265returns to the river and is available for direct irrigation by prior appropriations. The whole would be unavailable but for the reservoir diversion. Without defendants’ recapture of a large portion of this seepage their reservoir project would be economically untenable.' The drain ditch was constructed by defendants with the intent and for the purpose of supplying the recaptured waters to their consumers for immediate irrigation when needed and reimpounding the same when not needed.
The question now is, “May a reservoir appropriator who takes his water for storage during the non-irrigating season, who finds it escaping-from his ditch or reservoir before it has served the purpose of its diversion, who begins promptly and prosecutes to completion with diligence a plan for its recapture, whose intent to recapture is made continually manifest, who retakes it for the purpose of its original diversion before it has become the basis of another appropriation, be permitted to so apply it?” Plaintiffs assert the negative. They contend that the moment seepage begins and it is manifest that the escaping water, if not interfered with, will eventually return to the stream, it belongs thereto and can not be retaken by the reservoir appropriator. They assert that this position is supported by adjudicated cases in this court and the doctrine thus firmly imbedded in our irrigation law.
Those authorities, they say, are the following: Water S. & S. Co. v. L. & W. Res. Co., 25 Colo. 87, 94, 53 Pac. 386; Buckers Irr. Mill & Imp. Co. v. Farmers’ D. Co., 31 Colo. 62, 70, 72 Pac. 49; Comstock v. Ramsay, 55 Colo. 244, 133 Pac. 1107; In re German Ditch & Res. Co., 56 Colo. 252, 139 Pac. 2; Durkee Ditch Co. v. Means, 63 Colo. 6, 164 Pac. 503; Trowel Land & Irr. Co. v. Bijou Irr. Ditch Co., 65 Colo. 202, 176 Pac. 292; Rio Grande Res. & Ditch Co. v. Wagon Wheel Gap Imp. Co., 68 Colo. 437, 191 Pac. 129.
An examination of these cases, and a comparison of their facts with those in the instant case, shows no one of them in point.
In Water S. & S. Co. v. L. & W. Res. Co., supra, the lan*266guage relied upon by plaintiffs is:
“Waste waters which are again returned either to the main stream, or its tributaries, become a part of the waters of the stream the same as though never diverted, and inure to the benefit of appropriators in the order of their appropriations.”
This statement is general and unless “waste waters” referred to by the court therein are the kind of waters here involved the language is inapplicable. The fact is that the water in question in that case had served the purpose for which it had been diverted, or been permitted to escape with no manifestation of an intent to retake it and no question of the right of the original appropriator thereto was, or could have been, involved.
In Buckers Irr. Mill & Imp. Co. v. Farmers’ D. Co., supra, there was no question of an attempted recapture by reservoir appropriators. The Buekers Company was merely claiming water which it insisted it had developed. This was a “development” from sloughs, surface and seepage waters. It made no pretense that this water had escaped from its diversion. The court expressly found that “no question of percolating waters is involved.” None of the material facts of the Bucker’s case are similar to those before us.
In Comstock v. Ramsay, supra, the contest was over surface water which had developed in excessive quantities in 1890 and 1891. The first attempt at a diversion of any of it did not occur until 1894. Ramsay’s claim to the seepage waters rested upon a conveyance by Gordon and Varvel who did not construct their ditch until 1907, and the main question was whether such seepage waters were tributary to the river. It appeared that upon them “old decreed priorities have long depended for their supply,” “that such water is not only now, but for years has been, a material and substantial source of supply to the South Platte river.” True it is said that:
“When it is shown or admitted that these waters ultimately return to the river and thereby augment and re*267plenish its flow, they are part and parcel thereof, whether the limit within which this occurs be long or short. The moment they are released by a user under an appropriation from the river, which has been duly decreed, and start back in their course to the stream, they become and are as much a part thereof as when they actually reach the stream. Whenever these waters start to flow.back to the river and it is apparent they will reach it, they constitute a part of the stream.”
Upon this language, more than any other in the adjudicated cases, rests the contention' now made by plaintiffs, but the applicability depends upon a similarity of facts wholly absent. The waters had become actual seepage. No claim was made to them by the original appropriator. No attempt had been made by it to recapture them. No diligence had been shown by any one. The water had served the purpose of its original diversion and had become the basis of other appropriations. Nor must we overlook the language following that last quoted, and which modifies and explains the statement there made, i. e., such waters “are not subject to independent appropriation as new or added water, or because they have been used to serve one priority.” The water there discussed by the court is water which has left “the control of the original appropriator, having been used either for direct irrigation or reservoir purposes, without intention of recapture or further use, by-him.” The sole question disposed of in the Comstock case is thus summed up by the court:
“What and all we do intend to here determine, on this particular point, is that where it appears that such waters are in fact tributary to the stream, and form a substantial and material source of its supply, upon which appropriators therefrom have long depended for .water to satisfy their priorities, that then, as between such bona fide appropriates and users of such waters and a new claimant, the former has the first and better right.”
It is - thus observed that the question now before us is left wholly untouched by the Comstock case, save for an *268inference from general language applied there by the court to a wholly different state of facts, and afterwards qualified.
In the German Ditch & Reservoir case, supra, the action was one for the adjudication of priorities from Dry Creek. The question arose upon an application for rehearing, review and reargument to determine whether Dry Creek was a natural stream. Interveners contended that it was and that its waters had long since been appropriated by decrees on the South Platte river and that such waters had been used thereunder for many years. It appeared that waste and seepage waters began to flow into Dry Creek between 1880 and 1885, which condition continued and increased through many years to the date of the hearing. Under such circumstances the trial court found that Dry Creek was not a tributary of the South Platte river and that finding we reversed. There is nothing in the case which throws any light upon the question now before us.
The Durkee Ditch Company case, supra, was likewise a proceeding for the adjudication of priorities. The petitioner took its waters from Madsen Gulch which emptied into Dry Creek. These Madsen Gulch waters were seepage and return waters and the question was whether Madsen Gulch was tributary to Dry Creek and appropriations on the latter thereby interfered with. The holding was that the waters of Madsen Gulch were tributary to Dry Creek and not subject to independent appropriation. These were not escaped waters. No original appropriator was claiming them and they had all served the purpose of their original diversion.
The Trowel Land & Irr. Co. case, supra, was a general adjudication proceeding and we are concerned only with that portion of it relating to the claim of the Trowel Ditch under the alleged rights of the Shoemaker seepage ditch. The Shoemaker ditch had a conveyance of the seepage water in question from the Jackson Lake Reservoir, and had succeeded to the rights of the Currey Ditch. The appropriation claimed by the Currey Ditch had been aban*269doned and it thereafter became a natural water course, collecting and carrying tó the river under ground waters. It also carried waters escaping from Jackson Reservoir. These waters it was impossible to distinguish. Until the construction of the Jackson Reservoir the lands, after-wards drained by the Shoemaker Ditch, were cultivated and dry. Thereupon they became seeped and swampy. One damage suit was. initiated and others threatened against the Jackson Lake Company by reason of this seepage. The construction of the drainage ditch was a compromise of these claims and the reservoir company contributed to it to escape liability. Shoemaker was an outsider and built this ditch on the theory that he would be entitled to the water collected. It is said in this opinion that:
“The law makes no distinction as relates to the return of water to the stream between that from a reservoir supplied by a natural stream, or from a ditch supplied directly from the stream, regardless of the fact that the reservoir may be chiefly supplied in time of high water, or in the non-irrigation season.”
Büt again the language must be applied to the facts there under consideration and those only. The reservoir company there was not claiming the water. It was merely attempting to escape a liability and to that end had transferred its supposed rights. Lack of diligence, rather than diligence, was disclosed. The original appropriator had manifested no intent to recapture and use the water. The case is not in point.
In the Rio Grande Res. & Ditch Co. case, supra,, appear many facts similar to the case at bar. If the main opinion there only were looked to some excuse might be found for its citation. But again the facts are in many particulars different. On the point here involved three of the Justices dissented and two of them wrote dissenting opinions. On application for rehearing this opinion was given a construction Per Curiam, which must be taken as absolutely *270limiting and controlling the authority. That construction reads:
“The sole question determined as to seepage water is that no decree, on the facts of this case, for an apropriation thereof by the reservoir company, for direct irrigation, antedating all appropriations from the river for like use, can lawfully be awarded. No other question, upon the subject of seepage, has been presented, considered or adjudged herein.”
It must be observed that the Justice who wrote the opinion, and those concurring therein, acquiesced in this construction. It is therefore certain that the Rio Grande case is authority for nothing in the instant case save that the Reservoir Company would not be entitled to ask an original, direct appropriation, in a general adjudication proceeding, for the water here involved.
From the foregoing it seems clearly apparent that the cases cited by plaintiffs, nor any one of them, upholds the contention now made, or depended upon facts similar to those now before us, and that, if no other authority were to be found, the question with which we are now dealing would be a new one in this jurisdiction.
We have, however, in this court, a case determined upon facts so similar that no controlling distinction can be drawn, and one which settles the question adversely to the contentions now made by plaintiffs. McKelvey v. North Sterling Irr. Dist., 66 Colo. 11, 179 Pac. 872. It was decided En Banc, without dissent, the only Justice not participating being the one who had tried the case below and reached the same conclusion. The plaintiff was represented by counsel who now appear for the plaintiffs here. The cause was orally argued. The Justice who wrote the opinion also wrote the opinion in the Trowel case, and the Justice who wrote the opinion in the Comstock case, the Durkee case and the Rio Grande case, concurred therein. The action was for injunction. It was brought by the owners of the reservoir from which seepage escaped. They had been diligent in their effort to recapture the escaping water. *271The water had never been used for the purpose of its original diversion. The Company had filed a map and statement which were construed as evidence of the appropriator’s intent. All as in the instant case. The only apparently material difference being that McKelvey, claimant of the water through the construction of a drain ditch, was not a prior appropriator on the stream. This becomes immaterial in view of the fact that the reservoir owner brought the action and could succeed only on the basis of the validity of its own right. Had the law been as now contended by plaintiffs herein no relief could have been given the North Sterling Irrigation District in the McKelvey case.
An examination of the briefs of plaintiff in error in that case will show that the same question was involved, the same contention made, and the same authorities relied upon as in the instant case. There, as here, the storage rights of the Reservoir Company had not been adjudicated. It was contended there, as here, that the findings and decree of the lower court were under a misapprehension of law, and that the escaping water was tributary to the river and lost to the reservoir appropriator. The' unmistakable conclusion of the court was that the owner of the reservoir, who took the water during the non-irrigating season (which water escaped before serving the purpose of its diversion) whose intent to recapture was made continually manifest, whose work of recapture was begun with promptness and prosecuted to completion with diligence, and who retook the water before it became the basis of another appropriation, was entitled thereto. To sustain the judgment in the instant case therefore requires no departure and involves no conflict; to reverse it, the rule laid down in McKelvey v. North Sterling Irr. District, supra, must be ignored. From this conclusion there seems to me no escape.
An affirmance of this judgment would enrich all prior appropriators on the river to the extent of thirty per cent of the water escaping from the Prewitt Reservoir, which *272has not, and can not be recaptured, but has gone to supply their decrees. A reversal gives them now the other seventy per cent, upon which they have never depended, which they have spent no effort and no dollar to acquire, and which must be taken from a project rendered “economically untenable” by reason of the deprivation thereof. To do this a strict interpretation must be given to mere general statements and declarations in adjudicated cases never intended to apply to such a state of facts as that before us. Such a construction seems to me to do violence to the authorities and destroy a fundamental principle in irrigation law.
From territorial days down through our constitution, statutes, and all adjudicated cases, a single purpose has been kept constantly in view, and in times of doubt has been controlling — the necessity for the enactment of such legislation, and such a construction thereof, as would be a constant encouragement to irrigation development, to the initiation of new enterprises and the security of all rights established under those completed in the past. The affirmance of this judgment, and the declaration of the principle of law necessary thereto, can never be of the slightest disadvantage to vested rights, but its reversal, and the contrary declaration thereby necessitated, will, at least until relief has been furnished by further legislation, be a death blow to storage projects in the future. The threat becomes doubly ominous when we remember that the future of the state rests largely upon agricultural development, and this in turn upon irrigation by storage. The waters of the state have been so generally appropriated that the day of direct irrigation enterprises is closing, while that of storage has scarcely more than dawned. Seepage from practically all storage projects is so general, and ordinarily so extensive, that if the promoters thereof be told in advance that all such percolation is lost to them forever, that it may under no circumstances be recaptured, reclaimed, or conserved, save by the construction of absolutely impervious works, few men will have the hardihood to take the risks which *273such a limitation imposes, and much of the good work done by this court in the past must be undone.
I think the only authority for this reversal is dictum and the only principle a departure, and that the judgment should be affirmed.
I am authorized to say that Mr. Justice Denison concurs in this opinion.