Fellows v. Giese v. Saylor

2016 MT 45
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 1, 2016
Docket15-0392
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 MT 45 (Fellows v. Giese v. Saylor) 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
Fellows v. Giese v. Saylor, 2016 MT 45 (Mo. 2016).

Opinion

March 1 2016

DA 15-0392 Case Number: DA 15-0392

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA 2016 MT 45

CHARLES E. FELLOWS, an individual,

Plaintiff and Appellee,

MONTE GIESE, STEVE KELLY and WILLIAM REICHELT,

Plaintiffs-Intervenors and Appellees,

v.

PATRICK SAYLOR, an individual; FARMERS COOPERATIVE CANAL COMPANY, ELDORADO COOPERATIVE CANAL COMPANY, TETON COOPERATIVE CANAL COMPANY; TETON COOPERATIVE RESERVOIR COMPANY; JOHN D. PEEBLES, an individual, WILLIAM S. PEEBLES, an individual; OTTIS BRYAN, an individual; and SYLVIA BRYAN, an individual,

Defendants and Appellants,

The Office of Water Commissioner for Perry v. Beattie Decree Case No. 371; TETON COOPERATIVE RESERVOIR COMPANY,

Defendants.

APPEAL FROM: Water Court of the State of Montana, Cause No. WC 2015-01, Honorable Douglas Ritter, Presiding Judge

COUNSEL OF RECORD:

For Appellants:

Michael J.L. Cusick, Abigail R. Brown, Moore, O’Connell & Refling, PC, Bozeman, Montana For Appellees:

Peter G. Scott, Gough, Shanahan, Johnson & Waterman, Bozeman, Montana (for Charles E. Fellows)

Stephen R. Brown, Garlington, Lohn & Robinson, PLLP Missoula, Montana (for Intervenors)

Submitted on Briefs: December 30, 2015

Decided: March 1, 2016

Filed:

__________________________________________ Clerk

2 Justice Beth Baker delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Appellants1 appeal the order of the Water Court denying their motion to alter or

amend its final order on certification that tabulated the water rights necessary to address

Charles Fellows’s underlying complaint in the Ninth Judicial District Court, Teton

County. This is the second time this matter has been before this Court on appeal.

Fellows v. Office of Water Comm’r, 2012 MT 169, 365 Mont. 540, 285 P.3d 448

(hereafter Fellows I). The Perry Defendants raise several issues on appeal that we restate

as follows:

1. Whether the water right claims in controversy were properly determined following this Court’s remand in Fellows I.

2. Whether the District Court erred in granting Fellows’s motion for substitution.

¶2 We affirm.

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶3 Because the background facts are delineated in Fellows I, we restate the facts only

briefly.

¶4 Montana’s Constitution requires the Legislature to “provide for the administration,

control, and regulation of water rights” and to “establish a system of centralized records”

for those rights. Mont. Const. art. IX, § 3(4). In implementing this constitutional

mandate, the Legislature created the Water Court, which has jurisdiction over “all matters

1 Appellants are Patrick Saylor, Farmers Cooperative Canal Company, Eldorado Cooperative Canal Company, Teton Cooperative Canal Company, John D. Peebles, William S. Peebles, Ottis Bryan, and Sylvia Bryan. Appellants refer to themselves collectively as the Perry Defendants and we will do the same. 3 relating to the determination of existing water rights within the boundaries of the state of

Montana.” Section 3-7-224(2), MCA. The law provides district courts with jurisdiction

to enforce the provisions of water rights decrees and to supervise the distribution of

adjudicated water. Tit. 3, Ch. 7, Pt. 2, MCA; Tit. 85, Ch. 2, MCA. The Water Court is in

the process of adjudicating the water rights of all appropriators in Basin 41O, which

includes the Teton River and Spring Creek—the sources of water at issue here. Although

the Water Court has issued a temporary preliminary decree for Basin 41O, it has not yet

issued a final decree. Therefore, the adjudication process in Basin 41O is still ongoing.

¶5 Fellows owns several water rights in Spring Creek near Choteau, Montana. His

rights were decreed in Sands Cattle & Land Co. v. Jackson, Case 727 (Mont. 10th

Judicial Dist. Ct., May 31, 1892). Fellows claims that Spring Creek is recharged by

water seeping through a subsurface aquifer from a stretch of the Teton River known as

the Springhill Reach. In other words, Fellows asserts that Spring Creek and the Teton

River are hydrologically connected. Fellows therefore contends that maintaining the flow

of Spring Creek is dependent upon maintaining water in the Springhill Reach.

¶6 The Perry Defendants own various water rights in the upper Teton River

northwest of Choteau. Their rights were decreed in Perry v. Beattie, Case 371 (Mont.

11th Judicial Dist. Ct., March 28, 1908). The Ninth Judicial District Court, Teton

County, now supervises the distribution of water pursuant to both Perry and Sands. The

water rights decreed in Perry are administered by a water commissioner pursuant to

§ 85-5-101, MCA. In administering water rights under Perry, the Water Commissioner

4 has diverted water out of the Teton River into the Bateman Ditch above the Springhill

Reach as a water management tool. Fellows I, ¶ 4; Eldorado Co-Op Canal Co. v. Lower

Teton Joint Objectors, 2014 MT 272, ¶ 32, 376 Mont. 420, 337 P.3d 74 (hereafter

Eldorado). Fellows alleges that water diversion through the Bateman Ditch diminishes

the flow of water through the Springhill Reach and adversely affects the water available

to satisfy his Spring Creek rights.

¶7 In February 2011, Fellows filed a complaint challenging the Water

Commissioner’s administration of water under the Perry decree. Specifically, he

challenged the Water Commissioner’s authority to divert water out of the Teton River by

means of the Bateman Ditch. The District Court ultimately dismissed Fellows’s

complaint under M. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6) for failure to state a claim upon which relief could

be granted, and Fellows appealed.

¶8 In Fellows I, we reversed the District Court’s dismissal and remanded for further

proceedings. Fellows I, ¶ 22. We agreed with the District Court that Fellows could not

seek relief from the action of the Perry Water Commissioner under § 85-5-301, MCA,

because he did “not derive his Spring Creek water right from the Perry decree . . . .”

Fellows I, ¶ 16. We concluded, however, that Fellows could seek declaratory relief and

that his allegations were sufficient to state a claim under M. R. Civ. P. 12(b)(6).

Fellows I, ¶ 19. We concluded further that if Fellows could “prove hydrological

connectivity between Spring Creek and the Teton River, then the next step should be

certification to the chief water judge under § 85-2-406(2)(b), MCA.” Fellows I, ¶ 21.

5 ¶9 On remand, Fellows filed a motion for substitution of district court judge, which

Judge Olson granted. After Judge Oldenburg assumed jurisdiction, Monte Giese,

William Reichelt, and Steve Kelly (Intervenors) intervened.2 Fellows then moved for

summary judgment on the issue of hydrological connectivity. Following consideration of

the parties’ expert depositions, the District Court granted Fellows’s motion, concluding

that Spring Creek and the Teton River are hydrologically connected. The court found it

unnecessary “at this stage of the proceeding” to address the scope, extent, or timing of the

connectivity.

¶10 Fellows then requested the court to certify a question to the Water Court. The

Perry Defendants objected to the request; the District Court held, however, that the

“applicable and appropriate scope of the determination of the rights involved in the

controversy is best left to the processes of the Water Court.” Accordingly, the District

Court certified the following issue for determination by the Water Court:

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