Apecella v. Overman

2025 MT 219
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 30, 2025
DocketDA 24-0576
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2025 MT 219 (Apecella v. Overman) 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
Apecella v. Overman, 2025 MT 219 (Mo. 2025).

Opinion

09/30/2025

DA 24-0576 Case Number: DA 24-0576

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

2025 MT 219

FRANK A. APECELLA and SHIRLYNNE APECELLA,

Plaintiffs and Appellees,

v.

LILLIAN A. OVERMAN and LARRY ROBINSON,

Defendants and Appellants.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Twenty-First Judicial District, In and For the County of Ravalli, Cause No. DV-21-240 Honorable Howard F. Recht, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellants:

Rick C. Tappan, Connlan W. Whyte, Tappan Law Firm, PLLC, Helena, Montana

Dale Schowengerdt, Landmark Law, PLLC, Helena, Montana

For Appellees:

David B. Cotner, Taylor N. Eisenzimer, Cotner Ryan Blackford, PLLC, Missoula, Montana

Submitted on Briefs: July 30, 2025

Decided: September 30, 2025

Filed:

__________________________________________ Clerk Justice Katherine Bidegaray delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Lillian Overman and Larry Robinson (collectively, Overman) appeal separate

March and May 2024 Orders from the Montana Twenty-First Judicial District Court,

Ravalli County, granting Frank and Shirlynne Apecella (collectively, Apecellas)

declaratory judgment that they have an irrigation ditch easement through Overman’s

property for delivery of their water right and Overman interfered with their easement by

filling in the ditch, and awarding Apecellas attorney fees. We address the following

restated issues:

1. Did the District Court erroneously conclude that Overman failed to prove abandonment or reverse adverse possession of Apecellas’ irrigation ditch easement?

2. Did the District Court erroneously award Apecellas attorney fees as the prevailing party on their statutory ditch interference claim under § 70-17-112, MCA?

We affirm.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶2 In late December 2020, Apecellas bought a house and property in Hamilton,

Montana (the Apecella Property). Overman is their neighbor adjacent to the entire western

boundary of the Apecella Property, and the properties are separated by a two-foot-high

rock wall. Overman purchased her property in June 2002 (the Overman Property); her

husband, Robinson, lives there with her.

¶3 The historic Decker Ditch originates at Roaring Lion Creek and conveys water

approximately one mile across adjacent properties and to the western boundary of the

Overman Property. Within the Overman Property, the open ditch runs due east and then

2 splits at a “bifurcation point.” At this point, the ditch runs due north to the northern

boundary of the Overman Property and crosses it to deliver water to northern neighbors.

The ditch also continues from the bifurcation point due east across the Overman Property

before entering the rock wall dividing the Overman and Apecella properties through a

metal pipe. On the other side of the rock wall, the pipe spills through a screen into a buried

pipe that runs slightly southeast a short distance through the Apecella Property to where it

converges with another ditch, the Spring Ditch. The Spring Ditch originates at a natural

spring in the southwest corner of the Apecella Property, runs north to the convergence with

the Decker Ditch, and then turns east across the property. The portion of the ditch running

east from the bifurcation point on the Overman Property to the rock wall on the

Overman/Apecella boundary is the “Ditch in Question” in these proceedings.

¶4 Apecellas own an irrigation water right in Roaring Lion Creek, with the point of

diversion at the headgate for the Decker Ditch.1 The first spring after they moved in,

Apecellas were not receiving any water through the Ditch in Question and hired a

consultant, Tracey Turek, to investigate their water right. Turek did a site inspection of the

Apecella and Overman properties in early May 2021 and determined that Apecellas had a

1 Apecellas co-own an irrigation water right (76H 2506 00) with other lot owners in the 36-acre Roaring Lion Estates subdivision. The co-owned water right is for a maximum of 404 GPM for a period of use from April 1 through October 4. Apecellas own subdivision Lots 1 and 2. The 2009 recorded subdivision plat allocates Lot 1 74 GPM and Lot 2 53 GPM (127 GPM total) of this 404 GPM water right. Overman’s water right (76H 43178-00) is for 55 GPM of Roaring Lion Creek water, also delivered through the Decker Ditch and for a period of use from April 1 through October 4. The Apecella and Overman water rights are of equal priority, established May 1, 1897, and are not disputed here. This Court has long recognized that “ditch easements and water rights represent separate and distinct property rights.” Roland v. Davis, 2013 MT 148, ¶ 24, 370 Mont. 327, 302 P.3d 91. 3 water right on the Decker Ditch. Shortly after, Apecellas approached Robinson asking for

their water. Robinson diverted water through the Ditch in Question into the Apecella

Property. The water flowed freely until the ditch became clogged with lawn debris in late

May 2021. The parties removed the clog together. Two days later, however, Robinson

filled in the ditch with dirt, cutting off all water flow to the Apecella Property, and installed

a “no trespassing” sign. When confronted, Robinson told Frank Apecella to “have your

people call my people.”

¶5 In late June 2021, Apecellas initiated a district court action seeking a declaratory

judgment affirming their ditch easement right and secondary right to enter, inspect, repair,

and maintain the ditch, and alleging that Overman interfered with their ditch easement in

violation of § 70-17-112, MCA. They sought injunctive relief enjoining Overman from

further interference with their ditch. In their complaint, Apecellas also separately alleged

claims for “intentional interference with property rights” and “nuisance.” Overman

admitted the Decker Ditch ran though her property but denied it extended to and served the

Apecella Property. Overman later amended her answer to assert extinguishment of any

ditch easement by abandonment and reverse adverse possession.2

¶6 The District Court held a three-day bench trial in July 2023. We summarize the

pertinent trial testimony and exhibits as follows:

2 In her answer and at trial, Overman used the phrase “reverse prescription,” but abandoned it on appeal in favor of the phrase “reverse adverse possession.” 4 1. Evidence of An Implied Irrigation Ditch Easement at the Time of Severance of the Boldt Family Homestead in 1966.

¶7 From 1943 to 1966, Ted Boldt Sr. and Felsie Decker Boldt owned approximately

600 acres of land encompassing what are now the Apecella Property and the Overman

Property. Beginning in 1966, they sold all the property but a 36-Acre Remainder

containing the original homestead, part of which later became the Apecella Property. On

May 30, 1986, they conveyed the 36-Acre Remainder to their son and daughter-in-law,

Ted and Patty Boldt, who owned it for 19 years, until 2005. In 2005, Ted Jr. and Patty

Boldt conveyed the 36-Acre Remainder to Wayne and Cindy Anderson, who, in 2009,

subdivided it into four lots and, in 2010, sold Lots 1 and 2 to Richard Kelm. In 2020, Kelm

sold Lots 1 and 2 to Apecellas.

¶8 The Overman Property was separated from the 600 acres in 1966 when Ted Sr. and

Felsie Boldt retained the 36-Acre Remainder and sold the rest, which included what

became Tract F, part of which became the Overman Property. The chain of title to the

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