Anaconda National Bank v. Johnson

244 P. 141, 75 Mont. 401, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 38
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 18, 1926
DocketNo. 5,770.
StatusPublished
Cited by15 cases

This text of 244 P. 141 (Anaconda National Bank v. Johnson) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Anaconda National Bank v. Johnson, 244 P. 141, 75 Mont. 401, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 38 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

*404 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal from a judgment against plaintiff after its motion for a new trial was denied.

The waters of Dempsey creek in Powell county frequently have been the subject of litigation. It is conceded to be an adjudicated stream within the meaning of the statute. (Sec. 7119, Rev. Codes 1921.)

The principal stream, or south fork, rises near the foot of Mount Powell and thence takes its course for several miles through a mountainous countiy. Here and there its channel widens out and, extending over a considerable area, forms lakes. So came into being the particular subject of this lawsuit, a body of water called by some Carothers Lake, by others Dempsey Lake No. 1. This lake is in the course of and is part of the stream comprising the south fork of Dempsey creek; it is á mere enlargement of the channel. Upon plaintiff’s lands this stream joins another called the north fork.

In prior water suits it has been decreed that there are twenty-two separate rights to the use of the waters of Demp7 sey creek. Plaintiff’s right is No. 20, consisting of 100 inches of water, being diverted from the north fork. Right No. 3, 100 inches, and a portion of right No. 11, probably 40 inches, the property of defendants, also divert from the north fork. The pleadings do not challenge the right of . any of these parties to divert the three rights above mentioned to the extent thereof from the north fork. The other rights, aggregating about 2,500 inches, with the exception of one from the south fork, receive their waters from the stream below the confluence of the north and south forks. When the water is low in Dempsey creek there is barely enough to supply the first five rights.

Desiring to secure an adequate supply for plaintiff’s lands which lie mainly upon the left bank of the north fork, and which can be irrigated only by water taken from that fork, *405 Carothers, a predecessor of the plaintiff, conceived the idea of impounding flood and other waters which otherwise would go to waste, in the lake above mentioned; apparently it was his purpose originally to convey the waters so impounded to his lands by a ditch. This is indicated by a notice of appropriation which he filed October 1, 1917, and which is the main basis of plaintiff’s cause of action. He gave notice that on the 1st day of October, 1917, he did appropriate and claim 250 cubic feet of the waters of Carothers Lake and “did, on the above named date, mark the point of intended diversion by posting thereat a copy of this notice in a conspicuous place. The said waters are claimed for irrigation and other useful and beneficial purposes and the place of intended use is on the land of the appropriator, commonly known as the Bell farm on Dempsey creek. Said water is to be diverted and conveyed to said place by means of a dam and a ditch, said ditch to be two feet wide on the bottom, four feet wide on top and three feet deep. That the stream from which the diversion is to be made is more particularly described as follows, to-wit: all of that water that can be reservoired in the said lake by a dam approximately seven feet high and nine feet wide,’’ following which Is a general description of the location of the lake and the point of diversion.

In the complaint it is alleged that on or about the 1st day of October, 1917, a predecessor in interest of plaintiff appropriated of the waters of Carothers Lake an amount equivalent to a continuous flow of 250 inches during the entire irrigating season of each year for the purpose of storing, reservoiring, conserving and impounding certain flood waters arising from melting snows, spring freshets and heavy rains, for the purpose of using such waters upon the lands then owned by plaintiff’s predecessor in interest, and now owned by. the plaintiff. It is then alleged that by means of certain dams and headgates, works and improvements, plaintiff and its predecessor in interest so prepared the lake that there could be stored therein water to the average depth of six *406 feet over the entire surface of the lake above the natural level of the waters thereof. And later it is alleged, inferentially at least, that after the completion of the lake as a reservoir in the fall of 1917, the plaintiff and its predecessors in interest conserved and impounded therein such flood and surplus waters to the full extent of the storage capacity of the lake. Later on it is alleged that after such waters were so impounded and conserved, during each year from and after the fall of the year 1917, the waters have been used for irrigation of certain lands belonging to the plaintiff and its predecessors in interest. In the complaint the plaintiff disclaimed any right to the use of the normal flow of Dempsey creek as against prior appropriates or users of the waters of the stream when the normal flow of the creek is needed by such appropriates and users; averred that the plaintiff has used and now uses only such waters as have been so impounded and conserved, except during such times of the year as the normal flow of the stream is not needed by prior appropriators or others. The foregoing allegations, except as to the plaintiff’s disclaimer mentioned above, were put in issue by answer.

The court found against the plaintiff upon all its essential allegations and found specifically that “neither the plaintiff nor its predecessors in interest ever, at any time, appropriated the waters of Carothers Lake, sometimes called Dempsey Lake No. 1, for the purpose of storing, reservoiring, or conserving or impounding”' any water; that neither the plaintiff nor its predecessors in interest by means of dams, headgates or works or improvements, or otherwise, prepared the lake so that there should be stored therein any water; that neither the plaintiff nor its predecessors in interest ever used upon its lands, or for any useful or beneficial purpose, any of the waters of Carothers Lake, impounded or otherwise.

It is admitted that the plaintiff, or its predecessors in interest, did not attempt to comply with the statutes which were in force on October 1, 1917, respecting the appropriation *407 of water from adjudicated streams, nor of the provisions of section 7119 and subsequent sections of the Revised Codes of 1921.

Neither the plaintiff nor its predecessors in interest ever dug a ditch leading from the lake or the south fork of Dempsey creek to plaintiff’s lands. By reason of a mountainous ridge between the north and south forks it is doubtful whether a ditch can be constructed within the limits of reasonable expenditure which will convey waters impounded in the lake to the head of plaintiff’s north fork ditch. Plaintiff’s predecessors seem to have given up that part of the project. Instead they adopted a different course. They assumed the right to take water sufficient for their needs from the north fork and to turn into the south fork from the lake an equivalent amount of water, plus an amount added to make up for seepage and evaporation, upon the theory that by taking the waters of the north fork no one could be injured except those diverting water from Dempsey creek below the confluence of the forks.

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Bluebook (online)
244 P. 141, 75 Mont. 401, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 38, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/anaconda-national-bank-v-johnson-mont-1926.