Fox v. BHCC II, Inc.

2017 MT 218, 401 P.3d 705, 388 Mont. 443, 2017 Mont. LEXIS 564
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 5, 2017
DocketDA 17-0069
StatusPublished
Cited by1 cases

This text of 2017 MT 218 (Fox v. BHCC II, Inc.) 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
Fox v. BHCC II, Inc., 2017 MT 218, 401 P.3d 705, 388 Mont. 443, 2017 Mont. LEXIS 564 (Mo. 2017).

Opinion

JUSTICE WHEAT

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Herman Fox filed a complaint against the Billings Hotel & Convention Center (BHCC or Hotel) in December 2015 alleging that BHCC was interfering with his right to distribute irrigation water and maintain the irrigation ditch to which he holds senior rights. Following a non-jury trial in August 2016, the District Court ruled that while Fox has existing and historical ditch and water rights across BHCC’s property, as well as an established secondary easement, BHCC was not unreasonably infringing on Fox’s easement rights. The court determined that Fox shall have access to the easement property to inspect the easement but BHCC will continue to be responsible for using reasonable efforts to maintain the ditch located on its property. The court further concluded that Fox was not entitled to damages. It awarded BHCC reasonable attorney’s fees and costs. Fox appeals. We affirm.

ISSUES

¶2 A restatement of the issues on appeal is:

¶3 Did the District Court err when it determined that BHCC did not unreasonably interfere with Fox’s secondary ditch easement by planting and maintaining trees and shrubs along the ditch?

¶4 Did the District Court err by imposing a duty on BHCC to clean and maintain the ditch on its property?

¶5 Did the District Court err by awarding costs and fees to BHCC?

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

¶6 This case arises over rights and obligations associated with an irrigation ditch in Yellowstone County known as Hogan’s Slough/Canyon Creek. Easement rights to Hogan’s Slough were established in 1905. Since 1927, the Fox family, including Herman Fox currently, has held the easement and has diverted water from the Yellowstone River through Hogan’s Slough to the family’s farmland.

*445 ¶7 In the early 1970s, two hotel complexes were constructed adjacent to Hogan’s Slough—the Billings Hotel (formerly Ramada Inn) is located south of the slough and a Radisson Inn (formerly Holiday Inn) is located to the north. In 1999, BHCC acquired the existing hotel located on the south side of the slough with its accompanying approximate twelve acres of land. At the time of BHCC’s acquisition, two footbridges, multiple mature and immature cottonwood and spruce trees, numerous utility boxes and power poles, and a picnic table were located within ten feet of the center line of the ditch. Over time, the existing fifty-foot cottonwood trees required pruning. The utility company undertook the task in 2011. However, after pruning the trees were no longer stable and had to be removed by the utility company. In 2012, BHCC replaced the downed trees with multiple small spruce trees and expanded the landscaped area with additional trees and shrubs.

¶8 In 2012, Fox contacted BHCC asserting that BHCC was encroaching upon his easement. He claimed he could no longer access the ditch with his ditch maintenance equipment because the trees and shrubs blocked access. He demanded removal of all trees, footbridges, and other improvements within fifteen feet of the center line of the ditch.

¶9 In December 2015, after the parties could not reach agreement, Fox filed his complaint against BHCC in the Thirteenth Judicial District Court, Yellowstone County. He asserted BHCC, through tree and shrub planting, was interfering in his right to distribute irrigation water and maintain the irrigation ditch. He further claimed the foliage sheds limbs, leaves, cones, and other detritus into the ditch disrupting the flow of water as well as the operation of his irrigation piping and equipment. Lastly, he complained that BHCC placed decorative items and seating in the easement area thereby encouraging hotel patrons to use the easement leading to further debris.

¶10 In July 2016, BHCC made an offer of settlement which, among other things, acknowledged Fox’s ownership of the easement and his right to access the property for inspection, repair, and maintenance purposes. BHCC proposed Fox provide it with forty-eight hours’ notice of his intent to perform maintenance. The offer also required that Fox not damage or destroy the existing foliage, parking lots, footbridges, and the utility and landscaping elements as he had threatened to do earlier in the litigation. The Hotel pledged to use reasonable efforts to keep the ditch free from trash, debris, and foliage detritus, and to control the weeds on its side of the slough. The offer assured Fox that nothing therein superseded his rights or those of his heirs, successors, *446 or assigns. BHCC offered to pay Fox $1,008.75 to reimburse him for his court filing fee and his share of the mediator’s fees. F ox did not respond to the offer.

¶11 On August 22, 2016, the District Court conducted a non-jury trial at which Fox testified as did three witnesses with long-term relationships with the property and BHCC. One of the BHCC witnesses is the owner of the Billings Hotel. He testified that since 1999 BHCC has performed regular maintenance of its side of the ditch, including, but not limited to, necessary tree removal and replacement, debris cleanup, and mowing and weeding the ditch bank. This was done to ensure the operation of the irrigation ditch as well as to render the easement safe and aesthetically pleasing to its patrons.

¶12 Another BHCC witness, the current director of sales for BHCC, testified that she has been associated with the Hotel in some capacity since shortly after its construction, with a few hiatuses, one of which was when she was the general manager for the adjacent Holiday Inn. She was very familiar with Hogan’s Slough and the maintenance work both hotels have performed on the ditch. She testified that the Holiday Inn hired students or used its maintenance personnel to mow and weed its side of the ditch.

¶13 The last BHCC witness is the current general manager of the Billings Hotel who has worked for the Hotel since 2008 and oversees all departments including the maintenance staff. Additionally, he resided at the Hotel for a period of five years. He testified that he regularly walked the property in the evenings while living in the Hotel and noted the maintenance accomplishments or needs on the property. He further testified to the regular actions taken by the maintenance staff to keep the slough running smoothly and the surrounding property aesthetically pleasing. All three BHCC witnesses testified that neither they nor their staffs ever saw Fox or anyone acting on behalf of Fox clean or maintain the slough.

¶14 The District Court reviewed the multiple land transfers of the property through the decades as well as the various title policies and determined, in its October 2016 Findings of Fact and Conclusions of Law and its January 2017 Judgment, that “Fox has an existing and historical ditch right and water right across the BHCC Property which benefit the farmland Fox owns and farms.” The court further concluded that Fox has a secondary easement that, under § 70-17-122, MCA, BHCC may not encroach upon or impair; nor may BHCC “unreasonably interfere” with Fox’s easement rights. Engel v. Gampp, 2000 MT 17, 298 Mont. 116, 993 P.2d 701. The District Court, after visiting the site to view the slough and the adjacent property, observed *447

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Bluebook (online)
2017 MT 218, 401 P.3d 705, 388 Mont. 443, 2017 Mont. LEXIS 564, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/fox-v-bhcc-ii-inc-mont-2017.