Donich v. Johnson

250 P. 963, 77 Mont. 229, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 160
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 25, 1926
DocketNo. 5,936.
StatusPublished
Cited by24 cases

This text of 250 P. 963 (Donich 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
Donich v. Johnson, 250 P. 963, 77 Mont. 229, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 160 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

*237 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

Race Track Creek, a tributary of the Deer Lodge River, has its source in the mountains on the west side of the Deer Lodge Valley in the counties of Powell, Granite and Deer Lodge.

*238 In these mountains at an elevation of about 7,500 feet lie a number of lakes which discharge their waters directly, or eventually, into Eace Track Creek, conceded to be an adjudicated stream in virtue of a decree entered in 1890, which determined that the parties to the suit severally were entitled to quantities of water aggregating not quite 6,300 inches.

The plaintiffs are the owners of lands requiring irrigation, which could be served by Eace Track Creek, were the waters of the stream sufficiently copious. Some of them are the owners of decreed rights but these are insufficient for their needs. Conceiving that an ample supply of water might be obtained if the surplus flood and waste waters of the stream were impounded and stored, the plaintiffs at various times have constructed dams at the outlets of the several lakes and by means of the reservoirs thus created have stored water which they have sought to use. Their method of procedure was to close the headgates of the reservoirs in the late fall, releasing the water during the next summer into the channel of Eace Track Creek, then diverting water from the channel into their irrigating ditches which run thence to their lands.

The ditches of all the parties to this action are some fourteen or fifteen miles below the lakes.

The ever present need of water in irrigating seasons brought friction between the defendants, all of whom are the owners of decreed rights, and the plaintiffs, over the so-called lake rights, and this lawsuit resulted. The court found for the defendants to the effect that the plaintiffs had not made any appropriations by means of their reservoirs and have no right to impound in or use water from the lakes. From that judgment the plaintiffs have appealed.

Montana has many millions of arid, irrigable lands. With irrigation these, instead of arid would be teeming acres. Experience has shown that lands of this character, now mere grazing lands, with irrigation prove productive to a high degree. Montana also discharges across its borders flood and *239 surplus waters more than sufficient annually to cover its irrigable lands. When this water is impounded and conserved these vast areas, now fit only for ranging livestock, will ascend to the higher adaptability of supporting contented homes. Every acre of land in this state susceptible to irrigation should be cultivated. (Allen v. Petrick, 69 Mont. 373, 222 Pac. 451.)

We observed a short time ago that “it is to the interest of the public that water be conserved for use rather than be permitted to go to waste, to the end that the arid lands of the state may be put under irrigation and thus be made productive.” (Anaconda National Bank v. Johnson, 75 Mont. 401, 244 Pac. 141.) Between irrigating seasons the water of Montana’s numerous streams mostly goes to waste, and generally speaking, in high-water time, which usually is in June, tremendous quantities of flood waters run away without serving any useful purpose. The construction and maintenance of secure reservoirs for the conservation of these waters, therefore, is of very high public importance. (Kinney on Irrigation & Water Rights, 2d ed., sec. 838.) This the framers of our Constitution recognized in no uncertain terms. Section 15, Article III, of the Constitution provides in part: “The use of all water now appropriated, or that may hereafter be appropriated for sale, rental, distribution, or other beneficial use, and the right of way over the lands of others, for all ditches, drains, flumes, canals and aqueducts, necessarily used in connection therewith, as well as the sites for reservoirs necessary for collecting and storing the same, shall be held to be a public use.” The language of this section, as was said in Spratt v. Helena Power Transmission Co., 37 Mont. 60, 94 Pac. 631, in the light of our history and natural conditions in a region where the conservation and use of water is all-important to its development and progress, is a mandate from the sovereign people to the courts, and should receive a broad construction. The right to condemn land for a reservoir for the storing of water was declared in Helena Power Transmission *240 Co. v. Spratt, 35 Mont. 108, 10 Ann. Cas. 1055, 8 L. R. A. (n. s.)

567, 88 Pac. 773. The right to impound and store water has been recognized repeatedly in other opinions. (Kelly v. Granite Bi-Metallic C. Min,. Co., 41 Mont. 1, 108 Pac. 785; Ryan v. Quinlan, 45 Mont. 521, 124 Pac. 512; Jeffers v. Montana Power Co., 68 Mont. 114, 217 Pac. 652; Anaconda National Bank v. Johnson, supra.) Indeed, the practice of impounding water in reservoirs has obtained in this state from the earliest days. It was essential in placer mining carried on by means of the ground sluice. As early as 1877 the legislature passed an Act concerning dams and reservoirs to the end that public safety might be preserved (Laws 1877, p. 221). This Act, substantially, was carried forward until 1917, when it was amplified somewhat. (Pol. Code 1895, secs. 3440-3453; Rev. Codes 1907, secs. 2138-2151; Chap. 168, 1917 Session Laws, 417.) With the amplification of 1917 it appears in sections 2658-2671, Revised Codes of 1921, and see sections 7117, 7118, Id.

Since 1885 it has been’ the law, if it was not before, that “the water appropriated may be turned into the channel of another stream, or from a reservoir into a stream and mingled with its waters, and then reclaimed; but in reclaiming it, water already appropriated by another shall not be diminished in quantity, nor deteriorated in quality.” (Sec. 7096, Rev. Codes 1921.)

While not disposed to question the propositions set forth above counsel for respondents insist that reservoirs should not be permitted in the course of, or at the headwaters of, adjudicated streams. This argument cannot be admitted.

It is true that reservoirs must be constructed and used so as not to disturb the rights of prior appropriators. But the utmost prior appropriators may rightfully demand is that he who constructs and uses a reservoir shall not interfere with their use of the natural flow in the creek to the extent of their appropriations. (Ryan v. Quinlan, supra; Anaconda Na *241 tional Bank v. Johnson, supra.) What is the extent of their appropriations? Manifestly where one’s rights have been adjudicated the amount awarded him in the decree must be taken to be the amount of his appropriation, unless he shows an appropriation subsequent to the decree.

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Bluebook (online)
250 P. 963, 77 Mont. 229, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 160, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/donich-v-johnson-mont-1926.