Federal Land Bank v. Morris

116 P.2d 1007, 112 Mont. 445, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 73
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedApril 4, 1941
DocketNo. 8,039.
StatusPublished
Cited by14 cases

This text of 116 P.2d 1007 (Federal Land Bank v. Morris) 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
Federal Land Bank v. Morris, 116 P.2d 1007, 112 Mont. 445, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 73 (Mo. 1941).

Opinion

HONORABLE ALBERT BESANCON,

District Judge, sitting in place of MR. JUSTICE MORRIS, disqualified, delivered the opinion of the court.

This case involves the extent and priorities of water rights. The reservoirs, dams, ditches and flumes are the instrumentalities for the impounding and conveyance of the waters. The size and extent of the instrumentalities are of interest, but these are controlled by the amount then required, or then in good faith contemplated for beneficial use; and the whole situation here existing presents nothing new, except the storage rights, and should be governed by the laws, rules and decisions of this state relative to the acquisition and storage of water.

Hay Coulee, in Blaine county, is a rather well-defined water course, whose watershed is nothing more than rolling prairie country, and it flows only at times of heavy rains or during the spring run-off when there may have been a late, heavy snowfall.

All of the lands involved were arid, requiring irrigation, when available, to produce crops to the full extent of the soil. All of the lands were open to desert entries under federal law *448 and by tbe provisions of the Acts of Congress of March 3, 1877, and August 30, 1890, now found in 43 IT. S. C., section 321. These Acts allowed the appropriation of waters on the public domain to reclaim the same, and other provisions allowed the building of dams and reservoirs under federal regulations for the storage of water, and also on the public domain. The parties met all the requirements of these provisions. True, our state laws relating to appropriation applied at that time, but the federal laws, rules and regulations bear also on the rights of these original appropriators and their intentions. None of them were trespassers.

Most of thp briefs contained statements of the case. An extended restatement of such facts would serve no good purpose, as it seems such facts will sufficiently appear in this opinion.

The-findings of the trial court well present the situation, and when considered with all of the evidence and the assignments of error, surely bring out all of the matters requiring our attention.

The Sadie Hedge appropriation, insofar as it relates to her desert entry, the construction of her reservoir and her first right to water for the irrigation of her lands, and the ownership of such lands at this time by the plaintiff, are not disputed, but the finding as to 148 acres irrigated by her before turning over the land to others is not supported by the evidence. It should have been 240 acres, or 720 acre feet. She testified that she irrigated 240 acres of her desert entry prior to turning over the place to McLaren, and of course, prior to the acquisition of the G-arthofner rights. On a re-survey of the lands it was found that only approximately 148 acres of such irrigated lands were in what became the final boundaries of her desert claim, but the other 92 acres were in what became the Christina McLaren, Peterson and McCormick lands. In what part of such lands seems of no consequence, as now the ownership is all in the plaintiff and respondent. This testimony is not disputed, and is supported by the maps and surveys, and by other testimony. Sadie Hedge, by her appropriation, the construction *449 of her dams and ditches, and her acts, did appropriate water for and irrigate 240 acres prior to the time Garthofner stepped in, and she had a right to do this even if at that time a part of the 240 acres was public domain. (Toohey v. Campbell, 24 Mont. 13, 60 Pac. 396; Smith v. Deniff, 24 Mont. 20, 60 Pac. 398, 50 L. R. A. 737, 81 Am. St. Rep. 408.) Except as to such acreage, the court’s findings XII, XIII, XIV and XV are fully supported by the evidence.

There is no question but that the Hedge appropriation for the irrigation of 240 acres, or 720 acre feet, is the first right in Hay Coulee. However,- as to the rights acquired by the plaintiff, being the Christina McLaren, 120 acres, 360 acre feet; the Martin Peterson, 40 acres, 120 acre feet; and the William J. McCormick, 15 acres, 45 acre feet; these three a total of 175 acres, reduced by the 92 included with the first right, or a remainder of 83 acres; the placing of these rights with the first right, and of course ahead of the rights of the appellants, coming from Garthofner, is not at all supported by the .evidence, and the doctrine of relation back to the time of the Hedge entry as to these three rights is clearly erroneous. It is difficult to find any other intent or purpose on the part of Sadie Hedge than to acquire a water supply for the irrigation of her desert land entry. She could not then have contemplated that other entrymen of like desert lands would come in later and acquire title to such lands and obtain water from her for irrigation; and it seems that while she and her husband lived on this land, they had no. other intent and purpose than to irrigate the same from the instrumentalities she had acquired. In some way not explained by the record, McLaren acquired some interest and probably went into possession of the Hedge lands in 1905, and many years later, when Christina McLaren, Peterson and McCormick acquired squatter rights or some other interest in their desert lands, they found 92 acres irrigated, and they acquired the use of some water from McLaren, just as the court found, by permission. Such permission of course negatives any chance to initiate adverse rights or rights by pur *450 chase, conveyance, or transactions of any other kind. There is no privity of interest shown, as between these three entrymen and Mrs. Hedge and McLaren; and certainly McLaren, under the federal land laws, could have had no interest in the lands of such three entrants. There certainly could have been no contract to sell to McLaren before they proved their entries, and this condition seems to have continued until 1913, when these entrants obtained from McLaren each a one-eighth right or interest in the Hedge water and reservoir. Later they proved up and secured patents to their desert claims, and thereafter they conveyed the lands to McLaren. When all the titles were merged in McLaren, he could use water on these lands from any source of supply that he owned. It is significant to note by the deeds, Plaintiff’s Exhibits A and B, that John McLaren acquired title to the Hedge land and the reservoir under date of January 28th, 1915, and did not acquire title to the Christina McLaren, Peterson and McCormick lands until 1918. So it seems that the rights acquired for the Christina McLaren, Peterson and McCormick lands, in the respective amount of 83 acres, or 249 acre feet, should not date at any time prior to June 1, 1913, and these three rights, now owned by the plaintiff, are third in point of time on this stream, and are subsequent and inferior to the rights acquired by the appellants up to 1913.

Findings XX to XXVII, inclusive, cover very fully the Garthofner (now defendants’ and appellants’) rights and are well supported by the evidence, except as to the matters covered by this opinion, and we believe the evidence more than preponderates in favor of the following: Garthofner completed his reservoir in 1904, and his appropriation correctly dates from that time.

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Bluebook (online)
116 P.2d 1007, 112 Mont. 445, 1941 Mont. LEXIS 73, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/federal-land-bank-v-morris-mont-1941.