This is probably a long shot, but does anyone have a recommendation for a water lawyer in Colorado?
A little background: we have a second home on 20 acres in Durango that has a water well shared by two other homes. It was supposed to be located on a 35 acre lot, but it was accidentally placed about 50 feet too far south into our lot. Colorado requires 35 acres for a shared well, but this happened 20 years ago and we've been under the radar until now. The developer did this before any of us owned the lots, and has been aware of the issue for awhile.
The other two lot owners are selling, and the title company identified the problem, so now they have written an augmentation plan they want me to sign. They are estimating the water court will require an acre foot of water per year be bought from the local water authority to compensate for excess water pulled from the aquifer, at a cost of $450 per year, shared by the three lots in perpetuity. The cost will rise, but who knows how much. The agreement also transfers responsibility of the well from the developer to the three lot owners, but he and the two selling lot owners are paying the legal costs of the plan.
I proposed that the new lot owners cover the annual, perpetual, fee and got a threatening reply from the attorney, stating the well permit will be revoked and the well shut down. One of the lots is scheduled to close this week, and this may force a delay, so they really want me to sign. After the threats, I told them I'll need my own attorney to review the agreement.
A little background: we have a second home on 20 acres in Durango that has a water well shared by two other homes. It was supposed to be located on a 35 acre lot, but it was accidentally placed about 50 feet too far south into our lot. Colorado requires 35 acres for a shared well, but this happened 20 years ago and we've been under the radar until now. The developer did this before any of us owned the lots, and has been aware of the issue for awhile.
The other two lot owners are selling, and the title company identified the problem, so now they have written an augmentation plan they want me to sign. They are estimating the water court will require an acre foot of water per year be bought from the local water authority to compensate for excess water pulled from the aquifer, at a cost of $450 per year, shared by the three lots in perpetuity. The cost will rise, but who knows how much. The agreement also transfers responsibility of the well from the developer to the three lot owners, but he and the two selling lot owners are paying the legal costs of the plan.
I proposed that the new lot owners cover the annual, perpetual, fee and got a threatening reply from the attorney, stating the well permit will be revoked and the well shut down. One of the lots is scheduled to close this week, and this may force a delay, so they really want me to sign. After the threats, I told them I'll need my own attorney to review the agreement.