Well Augmentation Subdistrict of the Central Colorado Water Conservancy District and South Platte Well Users Association v. Water (In Re Water Rights of Well Augmentation Subdistrict of Central Colorado Water Conservancy District ) , 435 P.3d 469 ( 2019 )


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    ADVANCE SHEET HEADNOTE
    February 19, 2019
    
    2019 CO 12
    No. 16SA256, Well Augmentation Subdist. v. Centennial Water & Sanitation Dist.—
    Water Law—Burden of Proof.
    Centennial appealed from an order of the water court dismissing its objection to
    the Well Augmentation Subdistrict’s proposal to use additional sources of replacement
    water for its previously decreed augmentation plan. Centennial had asserted that WAS
    failed to comply with the notice requirements of the decree itself and that this failure
    amounted to a per se injury, for which it was entitled to relief without any further
    showing of operational effect. The water court heard Centennial’s motion objecting to
    WAS’s proposed addition of new sources of replacement water and, without requiring
    WAS to present evidence, found that Centennial failed to establish prima facie facts of
    WAS’s inability to deliver augmentation water in quantity or time to prevent injury to
    other water users. Referencing C.R.C.P. 41 as the appropriate procedural vehicle, the
    water court dismissed Centennial’s objection.
    The supreme court affirms, holding that because exercise of the water court’s
    retained jurisdiction was statutorily limited to preventing or curing injury to other water
    users, and because the evidence presented by Centennial failed to establish that WAS
    would be unable, under the conditions imposed by the Engineer for approval of the
    additional sources of replacement water, to deliver augmentation water sufficient to
    prevent injury to other water users, the water court’s dismissal of Centennial’s objection
    was proper.
    The Supreme Court of the State of Colorado
    2 East 14th Avenue • Denver, Colorado 80203
    
    2019 CO 12
    Supreme Court Case No. 16SA256
    Appeal from the District Court
    Weld County District Court, Water Division 1, Case No. 03CW99
    Honorable James F. Hartmann, Water Judge
    Concerning the Application for Water Rights of Well Augmentation Subdistrict of the
    Central Colorado Water Conservancy District and South Platte Well Users Association,
    Applicants-Appellees:
    Well Augmentation Subdistrict of the Central Colorado Water Conservancy District and
    South Platte Well Users Association,
    v.
    Opposer-Appellant:
    Centennial Water and Sanitation District,
    and
    Opposers-Appellees:
    Bijou Irrigation Company; Bijou Irrigation District; Cache La Poudre Water Users
    Association; City of Aurora; City of Black Hawk; City of Boulder; City and County of
    Denver acting by and through its Board of Water Commissioners; City of Englewood;
    City of Greeley acting by and through its Water and Sewer Board; City of Sterling; City
    of Thornton; City of Westminster; Ducommun Business Trust; East Cherry Creek Valley
    Water and Sanitation District; Farmers Reservoir and Irrigation Company; Fort Morgan
    Reservoir and Irrigation Company; Harmony Ditch Company; Henrylyn Irrigation
    District; Irrigationists’ Association, Water District 1; Jackson Lake Reservoir and
    Irrigation Company; Lower Latham Reservoir Company; Lupton Bottom Ditch
    Company; Lupton Meadows Ditch Company; New Cache La Poudre Irrigating
    Company; Cache La Poudre Reservoir Company; North Poudre Irrigation Company;
    Pawnee Well Users, Inc.; Public Service Company of Colorado; Riverside Irrigation
    District; Riverside Reservoir and Land Company; South Adams County Water and
    Sanitation District; State Engineer and Division Engineer; United Water and Sanitation
    District; and Westfarm, LLC,
    and concerning
    Appellee Pursuant to C.A.R. 1(e):
    David Nettles, Division Engineer, Water Division 1.
    Judgment Affirmed
    en banc
    February 19, 2019
    Attorneys for Opposer-Appellant:
    Buchanan Sperling & Holleman PC
    Veronica A. Sperling
    Paul F. Holleman
    Boulder, Colorado
    Attorney for Applicants-Appellees:
    Lawrence Jones Custer Grasmick LLP
    David P. Jones
    Johnstown, Colorado
    Attorneys for Opposer-Appellee State Engineer and Division Engineer and Appellee
    Pursuant to C.A.R. 1(e) David Nettles, Division Engineer, Water Division 1:
    Philip J. Weiser, Attorney General
    Paul L. Benington, First Assistant Attorney General
    Denver, Colorado
    Attorneys for Amicus Curiae City of Colorado Springs:
    City of Colorado Springs Attorney’s Office
    Michael Gustafson
    Colorado Springs, Colorado
    Hill & Robbins, P.C.
    David W. Robbins
    Matthew A. Montgomery
    Denver, Colorado
    No appearance by or on behalf of Bijou Irrigation Company; Bijou Irrigation District;
    Cache La Poudre Water Users Association; City of Aurora; City of Black Hawk; City of
    2
    Boulder; City and County of Denver acting by and through its Board of Water
    Commissioners; City of Englewood; City of Greeley acting by and through its Water
    and Sewer Board; City of Sterling; City of Thornton; City of Westminster; Ducommun
    Business Trust; East Cherry Creek Valley Water and Sanitation District; Farmers
    Reservoir and Irrigation Company; Fort Morgan Reservoir and Irrigation Company;
    Harmony Ditch Company; Henrylyn Irrigation District; Irrigationists’ Association,
    Water District 1; Jackson Lake Reservoir and Irrigation Company; Lower Latham
    Reservoir Company; Lupton Bottom Ditch Company; Lupton Meadows Ditch
    Company; New Cache La Poudre Irrigating Company; Cache La Poudre Reservoir
    Company; North Poudre Irrigation Company; Pawnee Well Users, Inc.; Public Service
    Company of Colorado; Riverside Irrigation District; Riverside Reservoir and Land
    Company; South Adams County Water and Sanitation District; United Water and
    Sanitation District; or Westfarm, LLC.
    CHIEF JUSTICE COATS delivered the Opinion of the Court.
    3
    ¶1     Centennial appealed from an order of the water court dismissing its objection to
    the Well Augmentation Subdistrict’s proposal to use additional sources of replacement
    water for its previously decreed augmentation plan. Centennial had asserted that WAS
    failed to comply with the notice requirements of the decree itself and that this failure
    amounted to a per se injury, for which it was entitled to relief without any further
    showing of operational effect. The water court heard Centennial’s motion objecting to
    WAS’s proposed addition of new sources of replacement water and, without requiring
    WAS to present evidence, found that Centennial failed to establish prima facie facts of
    WAS’s inability to deliver augmentation water in quantity or time to prevent injury to
    other water users. Referencing C.R.C.P. 41 as the appropriate procedural vehicle, the
    water court dismissed Centennial’s objection.
    ¶2     Because exercise of the water court’s retained jurisdiction was statutorily limited
    to preventing or curing injury to other water users, and because the evidence presented
    by Centennial failed to establish that WAS would be unable, under the conditions
    imposed by the Engineer for approval of the additional sources of replacement water, to
    deliver augmentation water sufficient to prevent injury to other water users, the water
    court’s dismissal of Centennial’s objection is affirmed.
    I.
    ¶3     In 2003, the Well Augmentation Subdistrict of the Central Water Conservancy
    District and South Platte Well Users Association applied for approval of a plan for
    augmentation to replace out-of-priority well depletions to the South Platte River, and
    Centennial Water and Sanitation District, the appellant before this court, was one of the
    4
    opposers to that application. In 2008, the water court for Division 1 entered a decree
    approving WAS’s augmentation plan, subject to the conditions specified in the decree. In
    2015, WAS proposed to add certain sources of replacement water, as expressly permitted
    by the initial decree, by giving written Notice of Use of Water Rights for Augmentation
    to the water court, the Division Engineer, and all the objectors.
    ¶4     Centennial filed an objection to the addition of one particular category of
    replacement water in WAS’s proposal, designated “Category 2” water, but that objection
    was dismissed on the ground that the decree permitted a challenge in the water court to
    a proposed additional or alternative source of replacement water only after that
    additional source had been approved by the Division Engineer, and only then by
    invoking the statutorily retained jurisdiction of the water court. After entertaining the
    objections of Centennial, the Engineer approved the use of WAS’s proposed Category 2
    water, subject to six specified conditions. Centennial again filed an objection, this time
    invoking the retained jurisdiction of the water court in reliance on the provisions of
    paragraph 45.2 of the decree and asserting that WAS’s Notice of Use failed to fully
    comply with the requirements of paragraph 13.1 of the decree by failing to specify the
    available amount, location of delivery, and method of accounting for the use of its
    Category 2 water.
    ¶5     Over the objection of the Engineer, the court permitted Centennial to proceed
    under the court’s retained jurisdiction, despite there not yet having been any operational
    experience with the additional sources, as approved by the Engineer; and after also
    granting Centennial’s request for an evidentiary hearing on its motion objecting to the
    5
    additional sources of replacement water, the court ordered discovery and expert
    disclosures, and ultimately heard the motion. At the hearing, Centennial presented
    testimony, based on the report of its expert, to the effect that the notice provided by WAS
    failed to comply with paragraph 13.1, and therefore should be denied, and that if the
    Category 2 replacement water were permitted without requiring a separate notice
    complying with paragraph 13.1, additional terms and conditions would be required, to
    include a requirement that all available paragraph 13.1 information be provided to
    Centennial at least thirty days in advance of projection and use of any new Category 2
    recharge accretions. At the close of Centennial’s evidence, the water court made findings
    and concluded that Centennial had failed to factually establish that any injury would
    occur if the Category 2 sources of water were added to the augmentation plan under the
    conditions approved for administration by the Engineer, and it dismissed Centennial’s
    objection.
    ¶6     In its ruling, the water court articulated more specifically its understanding of the
    controlling statutes, rules of procedure, and provisions of the decree, and how those
    authorities dictated its conclusion. With regard to its dismissal at that stage of the
    proceedings, the court found that C.R.C.P. 41 applied to this type of retained jurisdiction
    proceeding, and that in a proceeding to add a source of replacement water which the
    applicant had a legal right to use, Centennial, as the objector to the proposal, bore an
    initial burden of establishing prima facie facts proving that injury would occur under the
    conditions imposed by the Engineer. In light of Centennial’s failure to even attempt to
    prove facts indicating that WAS would be unable to deliver augmentation water in
    6
    quantity and time to prevent injury to other water users under those conditions, the water
    court found that, as a matter of law, Centennial failed to establish a prima facie case of its
    entitlement to relief and, therefore, that dismissal was proper without requiring any
    further showing by WAS.
    ¶7     With regard to Centennial’s continuing assertion that injury was sufficiently
    established by proving WAS’s failure to comply with the notification procedures of the
    decree alone, the water court first found that for recharge credits that would only accrue
    from future diversions like the Category 2 water at issue here, estimates based on past
    deliveries would be sufficient to comply with the notice requirements of the decree. In
    any event, however, the water court interpreted the procedures of the decree, as left to
    the discretion of the water court by section 37-92-305(8) of the revised statutes, to allow
    for the addition of new sources of replacement water, without applying to the water court
    for a change in the plan, as long as WAS gave the required notification to the court, the
    Engineer, and objectors; objectors were afforded time to comment to the Engineer; the
    Engineer determined the conditions under which the additional proposed source could
    be used without causing injury to other water users and approved use of the additional
    source subject to those conditions; and any objectors were then permitted a challenge to
    the operational effect of the Engineer’s decision by invoking the statutorily retained
    jurisdiction of the water court. On the grounds that the court retained jurisdiction only
    for the purpose of preventing or curing injury to other water rights resulting from
    implementation of a plan for augmentation, the water court found that even a violation
    7
    of the notification requirements of the decree, had one occurred, would be insufficient to
    entitle Centennial to relief.
    ¶8     Centennial appealed to this court from the water court’s ruling.
    II.
    ¶9     A plan for augmentation is to be approved if it will not injuriously affect the owner
    of or persons entitled to the use of water under a vested water right or a decreed
    conditional water right. § 37-92-305(3)(a), C.R.S. (2018). More particularly, a plan for
    augmentation must be considered sufficient to permit the continuation of diversions
    when curtailment would otherwise be required to meet a senior call for water, to the
    extent that the applicant provides replacement water necessary to meet the lawful
    requirements of a senior diverter at the time and location and to the extent the senior
    would be deprived of his or her lawful entitlement by the applicant’s diversion.
    § 37-92-305(8)(c). With regard to the decree approving such a plan, section 37-92-305(8),
    as amended in 2003, authorizes a plan for augmentation to provide procedures to allow
    additional or alternative sources of replacement water to be used in the plan after the
    initial decree is entered if, among other reasons, those sources have been decreed for such
    use. Ch. 204, sec. 5, § 37-92-305, 2003 Colo. Sess. Laws 1446, 1454. The amendment does
    not dictate more specifically any particular requirements for using additional or
    alternative sources of replacement water without formally amending its augmentation
    plan. See 
    id. ¶10 As
    contemplated by statute, a decree for a plan for augmentation is effectively a
    prediction of how the plan can operate without causing injury to existing water rights.
    8
    See § 37-92-305(3)(a); Farmer’s Reservoir & Irrigation Co. v. Consol. Mut. Water Co., 
    33 P.3d 799
    , 811 (Colo. 2001). Section 37-92-304(6), C.R.S. (2018), expressly requires that any
    decision of the water judge dealing with a plan for augmentation include the condition
    that approval of the plan be subject to reconsideration on the question of injury to the
    vested rights of others, for whatever period after entry as is necessary or desirable to
    preclude or remedy any such injury. We have previously characterized this retained
    jurisdiction as functioning as a test period for the operation of the augmentation plan,
    during which the water court may test the prediction and finding of non-injury it made
    in its judgment and decree. See Farmer’s Reservoir & Irrigation 
    Co., 33 P.3d at 811
    .
    ¶11    In pertinent part, the 2008 decree at issue in this case provides for the use of
    additional sources of various kinds, with the approval of the Division Engineer. In re
    Application for Water Rights of Well Augmentation Subdist. of the Cent. Colo. Water
    Conservancy Dist. & S. Platte Well Users Ass’n, No. 03CW99 (Dist. Ct. Water Div. 1 May 14,
    2008) (Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Decree of the Water Court). As
    applicable to WAS’s notification, section 13.1 permits the use of a water right not already
    approved for use under the decree, if that water right has been decreed for or is lawfully
    available for augmentation use; if WAS gives notice of its proposed use to the court, the
    Division Engineer, and all of the objectors; and if the Division Engineer approves that
    use. Notice of Use of Water Right for Augmentation must be given in writing, at least
    thirty days in advance, and must describe: (1) the water right, (2) the amount of water
    available to WAS from the water right, (3) the location the water will be delivered to the
    9
    stream, (4) evidence that the water will not be used by anyone else, and (5) how WAS will
    account for the use of the water.
    ¶12    In addition, section 45 of the decree indicates that the decreed Plan for
    Augmentation shall remain subject to perpetual general retained jurisdiction, pursuant
    to section 37-92-304(6), permitting any person, including the State and Division
    Engineers, to invoke retained jurisdiction by filing a motion with the court. It further
    requires that any motion to invoke retained jurisdiction set forth with particularity the
    factual basis and the alleged injury upon which the requested reconsideration is
    premised, together with proposed decree language modifications offered by the moving
    party to remedy the alleged injury. In language not dissimilar to holdings of this court
    dictating the relative burdens in a proceeding invoking the retained jurisdiction of a
    water court, see Upper Eagle Reg’l Water Auth. v. Wolfe, 
    230 P.3d 1203
    , 1216–17 (Colo. 2010),
    the section also specifies that the moving party shall have the initial burden of going
    forward to establish the prima facie facts and the existence of the injury alleged in the
    motion, but that WAS shall have the ultimate burden of proof to show either that the
    alleged injury has not occurred or will not occur, or to propose additional terms and
    conditions which will prevent the injury from occurring.
    III.
    ¶13    Despite the absence of any factual dispute concerning the actual content of WAS’s
    notification, the water court found that Centennial failed to meet its burden for two
    different reasons. First, interpreting the decree as a whole to require no more than
    estimates with respect to sources as to which credits would continue to accrue pursuant
    10
    to a lease agreement, the court found that the notice given by WAS actually was sufficient
    to satisfy the decree. In this regard, it observed that elsewhere in the decree, other water
    users were adequately protected by limiting WAS’s projections to credits that had already
    accrued. Second, interpreting the decree to permit additional sources of water upon
    approval of the Engineer, subject to challenge by invoking the court’s retained
    jurisdiction to prevent or cure injury to other water users, just as would be the case with
    respect to the operational effect of the plan had no new source of replacement water been
    added, the court found that Centennial’s objection failed, as a matter of law, because
    Centennial offered no evidence that injury to other water users had or would result from
    operation of the plan. We find it unnecessary to review the water court’s interpretation
    of the decree concerning the required specificity because, at the very least, the court
    properly held Centennial to proof that more specific notice than that provided was
    necessary to prevent injury to other water users.
    ¶14    Centennial’s assertions that strict compliance with the notice provisions of section
    13.1 is required, that a failure to strictly comply constituted a per se injury, and that the
    water court erred in finding that Centennial did not meet its burden of proof, all appear
    to stem from a fundamental misconception about the meaning of the General Assembly’s
    2003 amendment to section 37-92-305(8).         Centennial expressly asserts that a party
    seeking to add a new source of replacement water to an existing augmentation plan, as
    now permitted by statute, necessarily bears the same burden to prove that its plan will
    not injure other water users as was imposed on it for approval of its augmentation plan
    in the first instance. It reasons, therefore, that a failure to strictly comply with the notice
    11
    requirements of section 13.1 demonstrates a sufficient likelihood of injury to other users,
    in and of itself, and that by demonstrating a failure by WAS to comply, Centennial met
    its burden, which WAS should have been forced to rebut.
    ¶15    The 2003 amendment, however, authorizes decrees for plans for augmentation to
    include procedures to add replacement sources after a final decree entered, without
    requiring an applicant to seek a change of right or new augmentation plan. Ch. 204, sec.
    5, § 37-92-305, 2003 Colo. Sess. Laws 1446, 1454. Nothing in section 37-92-305(8)(c)
    purports to require specific notification or other procedures for such an addition of
    replacement sources to the existing decree, and nothing in the statute suggests an
    expansion of the jurisdiction of the water court to entertain challenges to compliance with
    the terms of the decree once it has entered. Not only is the imposition of any such
    requirement not implied in the language of the statute itself, but to impute such a
    requirement would be little short of mandating a court-approved change to the water
    right, effectively nullifying the 2003 amendment.
    ¶16    Rather, in addition to the seemingly unambiguous language of the amendment
    permitting the original decree to provide for the addition of new sources of replacement
    water not originally included, the historical context in which the amendment originated
    provides a strong motivation for the legislature to have intended precisely what it said.
    The General Assembly enacted SB 03–073 on the heels of two decisions from this court
    determining that, with limited statutory exceptions, it is the province of the water courts,
    not the Engineer, to approve and decree augmentation plans allowing for out-of-priority
    diversions. See Simpson v. Bijou Irrigation Co., 
    69 P.3d 50
    , 63 (Colo. 2003); Empire Lodge
    12
    Homeowner’s Ass’n v. Moyer, 
    39 P.3d 1139
    , 1153 (Colo. 2001). Those decisions vitiated
    efforts by the Engineer to authorize out-of-priority pumping in the South Platte Basin and
    elsewhere through replacement plans and substitute supply plans in lieu of a decreed
    augmentation plan from the water court. See 
    Simpson, 69 P.3d at 56
    ; Empire Lodge
    Homeowner’s 
    Ass’n, 39 P.3d at 1144
    –45. Senate Bill 03–073 affirmed those holdings and
    specifically required groundwater users in the South Platte Basin to file for an
    augmentation plan in water court by 2006 or face curtailment. See Ch. 204, sec. 5,
    § 37-92-308, 2003 Colo. Sess. Laws 1446, 1446–47.
    ¶17    At the same time, SB 03–073, in its amendment to section 37-92-305(8), restored
    some authority to the Engineer by allowing decree holders, if so permitted in the decree,
    to add new replacement water sources without returning to water court. See Ch. 204, sec.
    5, § 37-92-305, 2003 Colo. Sess. Laws 1446, 1454. Instead, the procedures imparted into
    the decree would condition when and how new sources could be added to the plan. See
    
    id. In this
    way, SB 03–073 contemplated that for this process, the Engineer, not the water
    court, would function as the primary safeguard for ensuring that the decree holder has
    followed those procedures and could add those sources to its plan without injury, sparing
    the decree holder from the kind of cumbersome water court process SB 03–073
    specifically sought to avoid.
    ¶18    Understood as a process to allow for the use of new sources of replacement water,
    in accordance with conditions determined by the Engineer to be sufficient to prevent
    injury to other users, section 13.1 does not purport to duplicate the burden of proof
    required for a new augmentation plan, nor does section 37-92-305(8)(c) contemplate as
    13
    much. In the absence of expanded jurisdiction for review, the information to be provided
    the Division Engineer, and objectors with an interest in avoiding injury, is clearly
    mandated to facilitate the inclusion of conditions designed to minimize the risk of injury
    in actual operation. Once approved by the Engineer, the operational effect of including
    additional sources of replacement water remains subject to review, pursuant to the water
    court’s retained jurisdiction, to the extent it has or will cause injury, just as any other
    aspect of the augmentation plan. See Upper Eagle Reg’l Water 
    Auth., 230 P.3d at 1215
    –16;
    Farmer’s Reservoir & Irrigation 
    Co., 33 P.3d at 810
    –11 (citing § 37-92-304(6)).
    ¶19    Finally, Centennial objects to reliance on C.R.C.P. 41 as the appropriate analog for
    proceedings under the water court’s retained jurisdiction. Consistent with its view that
    an applicant for an augmentation plan retains an obligation to prove that other water
    users will not be injured by its addition of a new source of replacement water, Centennial
    characterizes the applicant as occupying the position of a plaintiff in a civil proceeding,
    the party against whom rather than in favor of whom Rule 41 provides for a judgment to
    be rendered. See C.R.C.P. 41(b)(1). For the reasons we have explained, this is simply a
    misreading of section 37-92-305(8)(c).
    ¶20    Relying in addition on the decree’s insertion of the term “prima facie,” Centennial
    also misreads section 45.2 to deviate from our prior apportionment of the relative burdens
    of proof in a proceeding under the court’s retained jurisdiction. See Upper Eagle Reg’l
    Water 
    Auth., 230 P.3d at 1216
    (“[T]he persons seeking to invoke reconsideration of the
    injury question under the decree’s retained jurisdiction provision have the initial burden
    of establishing that injury has occurred . . . .” (quoting Farmer’s Reservoir & Irrigation Co.,
    
    14 33 P.3d at 812
    )) (emphasis omitted). The decree assigned Centennial, as the objector
    invoking the court’s retained jurisdiction, the initial burden of “establish[ing] the prima
    facie facts and the existence of the injury alleged in [its] motion” before WAS would have
    “the ultimate burden of proof to show either that the alleged injury ha[d] not occurred or
    [would] not occur, or to propose additional terms and conditions which [would] prevent
    the injury from occurring.” Although Centennial concedes that this burden requires it to
    “establish” facts and the “existence” of injury sufficient to sustain a judgment in its favor
    unless contradictory evidence is produced by WAS, as a result of the decree’s reference
    to “prima facie facts,” it appears to understand its burden as merely requiring the
    production of evidence from which a reasonable trier of fact could find in its favor in the
    absence of contradictory evidence.
    ¶21    As Centennial argues, we have commonly used the term “prima facie” in
    distinguishing the plaintiff’s burden in overcoming a motion for directed verdict in a jury
    trial from its burden to survive a motion to dismiss in a trial to the court pursuant to
    C.R.C.P. 41(b), see, e.g., Teodonno v. Bachman, 
    404 P.2d 284
    , 285 (Colo. 1965); and we have
    similarly applied that distinction in cases governed by the water rules, where the water
    court is the trier of fact. See City of Aurora ex rel. Util. Enter. v. Colo. State Eng’r, 
    105 P.3d 595
    , 615 (Colo. 2005); Public Serv. Co. of Colo. v. Bd. of Water Works, 
    831 P.2d 470
    , 480 (Colo.
    1992). In that context, we have juxtaposed making a prima facie case, meaning producing
    evidence from which a reasonable jury could find in the plaintiff’s favor, from proving to
    the satisfaction of the trial court that the plaintiff should prevail, in the absence of
    evidence subsequently offered by the movant proving the contrary. See City of Aurora ex
    15
    rel. Util. 
    Enter., 105 P.3d at 615
    ; Public Serv. Co. of 
    Colo., 831 P.2d at 480
    . The term itself is,
    however, not so limited, and there is no indication in the decree of any intent to alter the
    relative burdens required in a retained jurisdiction proceeding.
    ¶22    Although the term “prima facie case” now commonly appears in distinguishing
    the relative burdens dictated by Rules 50 and 41 of the federal and state rules of civil
    procedure, see J.R. Kemper, Comment Note, Power of Court Sitting as Trier of Fact to Dismiss
    at Close of Plaintiff’s Evidence, Notwithstanding Plaintiff Has Made Out Prima Facie Case, 
    55 A.L.R. 3d 272
    (1974), its meaning is not limited so narrowly. Cf. 1 Clifford S. Fishman &
    Anne T. McKenna, Jones on Evidence § 3:6 (7th ed. 2017) (explaining that “prima facie case”
    simply means “a party’s obligation to produce sufficient evidence to move the
    proceeding on to the next stage”). Indeed, when used as a modifier, “prima facie” can
    also mean “[s]ufficient to establish a fact or raise a presumption unless disproved or
    rebutted.” Prima facie, Black’s Law Dictionary (10th ed. 2014). Courts have regularly used
    the term in this broader sense to refer to the quantum of evidence necessary to establish
    the proponent’s cause of action, unless rebutted or proved to the contrary. See, e.g., Del.
    Coach Co. v. Savage, 
    81 F. Supp. 293
    , 296 (D. Del. 1948); State ex rel. Herbert v. Whims, 
    38 N.E.2d 596
    , 599 (Ohio Ct. App. 1941); Pac. Tel. & Tel. Co. v. Wallace, 
    75 P.2d 942
    , 947 (Or.
    1938); In re Fink’s Estate, 
    21 A.2d 883
    , 888 (Pa. 1941); see generally 9 John Henry Wigmore,
    Evidence in Trials at Common Law § 2494 (3d ed. 1940) (explaining that courts use “prima
    facie case” to indicate either “the duty of producing evidence to get past the judge to the
    jury” or, alternatively, “a general mass of strong evidence” entitling the proponent to a
    favorable ruling “if [the opponent] does nothing more in the way of producing
    16
    evidence”). Especially where, as here, “prima facie” is used to modify the term “facts,”
    rather than “case,” and requires that those facts and the existence of injury be
    “established” by the proponent, the term is more naturally understood, as the water court
    understood it, in this broader sense, which is consistent with the burdens articulated in
    C.R.C.P. 41(b).
    ¶23    As importantly, however, the water court made clear its conclusion that
    Centennial failed to meet its burden of proof was not based on its assessment of the
    weight and credibility of Centennial’s evidence at all but was instead dictated by its legal
    determination of the meaning of “injury” in the context of its retained jurisdiction. The
    water court found that even if the evidence presented by Centennial were fully credited,
    it nevertheless failed, as a matter of law, to evidence “injury.” This ruling effectively
    amounted to a determination that Centennial failed even to make a “prima facie case” in
    the narrower sense in which it is typically used with reference to jury trials.
    ¶24    Rather than offering evidence of a likelihood of future injury, Centennial asserted,
    and continues to assert, that without access to the specific information describing the
    proposed replacement supply, as delineated in section 13.1, it is not possible to evaluate
    whether the proposed source can be used without causing injury, and therefore WAS’s
    failure to strictly comply amounts to a per se injury. As did the water court, referencing
    in particular other provisions of the decree further protecting objectors by prohibiting
    reliance on WAS’s projections to withdraw until replacement water was actually
    available, as well as the terms and conditions devised by the Engineer to prevent injury,
    we reject this assertion. See Simpson v. Yale Invs., Inc., 
    886 P.2d 689
    , 696 (Colo. 1994)
    17
    (“[I]njury must be demonstrated by evidential facts and not by potentialities.”) (internal
    quotation marks omitted).
    ¶25    Following the adoption of amended section 37-92-305(8), the recourse for other
    water users objecting to added sources of replacement water is to invoke the retained
    jurisdiction of the water court to demonstrate that the plan for augmentation, as decreed
    and as administered by the Engineer, nevertheless is unlikely to prevent injury to their
    senior rights. See § 37-92-304(6).
    IV.
    ¶26    Because exercise of the water court’s retained jurisdiction was statutorily limited
    to preventing or curing injury to other water users, and because the evidence presented
    by Centennial failed to establish that WAS would be unable, under the conditions
    imposed by the Engineer for approval of the additional sources of replacement water, to
    deliver augmentation water sufficient to prevent injury to other water users, the water
    court’s dismissal of Centennial’s objection is affirmed.
    18