Galiger v. Hansen

319 P.2d 1051, 133 Mont. 34, 1957 Mont. LEXIS 5
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1957
Docket9572
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 319 P.2d 1051 (Galiger v. Hansen) 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
Galiger v. Hansen, 319 P.2d 1051, 133 Mont. 34, 1957 Mont. LEXIS 5 (Mo. 1957).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ANGSTMAN:

Plaintiff has appealed from a judgment entered on a verdict in favor of the defendants after her motion for a new trial was denied.

The complaint seeks actual and exemplary damages. It alleges that defendants failed to keep clean and free from grass and weeds their irrigation ditch which crosses plaintiff’s land, and as a consequence the flow of water was retarded and water *36 was caused to seep onto plaintiff’s land. It alleges that defendants had placed large and excessive quantities of water in their ditch in violation of the judgment in former cause numbered 3851; that the conduct of the defendants has been willful, wrongful, malicious and oppressive, and as a result plain-' tiff has been damaged by flooding, crops have been injured, some of her land has become waterlogged and the market value of plaintiff’s holdings has been materially reduced.

Defendants in separate answers, admit plaintiff’s ownership of the land through which the ditch in question extends and admit the entry of the former judgment, and deny generally the other allegations of the complaint.

The cause was tried to a jury which returned a verdict in favor of defendants.

Plaintiff assigns a number of specifications of error which may be grouped under the following headings: (1) the refusal of plaintiff’s offered instructions, (2) giving of defendants’ offered instructions over objection, and (3) the court’s manner of dealing with the request of the jury for further information.

In order to consider the contentions of the plaintiff with regard to the instructions given and refused it is necessary to refer to the judgment made and entered in cause numbered 3851.

That action was commenced on December 22, 1949, by the defendants in the instant case as plaintiffs, against, the plaintiff in the instant case, her husband, who is now deceased, and one Kathryn Pankey, who is the owner of lands in the vicinity of those of the plaintiff and defendants herein, and who shares the ditch right across the lands of the plaintiff with the defendants herein. The trial in that case was before the court without a jury. From the judgment entered therein no appeal was taken.

The judgment was offered and received in evidence in this cause and, in substance, provided among other things the following :

*37 That the McFadden-Johnson-Nason Ditch (which is the one in controversy here) is the property of G. Dewey Allhands, L. W. Hansen and Kathryn Pankey; that Kathryn Pankey is the owner of an individed one-half interest in the ditch from its point of diversion from Alder Gulch Creek to the point where it enters her lands and is the sole owner of the ditch from that point throughout the remainder of the course of the ditch until the plaintiff, L. W. Hansen, acquired from her the right to conduct not to exceed one hundred miners’ inches of water therein.

The judgment also provided that Allhands, Hansen and Pankey have the right to maintain the ditch across the lands of Julia Galiger of sufficient capacity to conduct 254 miners’ inches, and that the quantity of water that each of them may lawfully convey in the ditch is as follows:

G. Dewey Allhands — not to exceed 127 miners’ inches, less any quantity of water, not exceeding 100 miners’ inches, being conveyed through the ditch by L. W. Hansen.
L. W. Hansen — not to exceed 100 miners’ inches.
Kathryn Pankey — 127 miners’ inches.

The decree further provided that Allhands, Hansen and Pankey have as a secondary easement in connection with the McFadden-Johnson-Nason Ditch a reasonable right to enter along the banks thereof for the purpose of maintaining the ditch at a capacity not exceeding 254 miners’ inches. It permanently enjoined them from making any other or further use of the lands of Julia Galiger, and each of them was enjoined from making any greater or different use of the ditch than the carrying of the quantities of water provided for in the decree as to each of the parties.

Thus the defendants in this cause, together with Kathryn Pankey, have the right to maintain the ditch across the lands of the plaintiff here, of sufficient capacity to conduct 254 miners’ inches of water.

The court instructed the jury in substance that defendants and Kathryn Pankey were co-tenants in the right to the ditch *38 in question and that each had the right as against plaintiff to conduct 254 inches of water through the ditch providing that they used ordinary care in maintaining the ditch to the capacity of 254 inches; that plaintiff had no cause to complain that excessive quantities of water were placed in the ditch unless the quantity exceeded 254 inches.

Plaintiff offered instructions to the effect that defendants were under the duty not to make any greater use of the ditch than permitted under the decree in cause numbered 3851, not to violate the injunctive portion of that decree, and not to increase the use of the easement or the size of the ditch. Those offered instructions were refused and properly so. They were but abstract statements offered, which this court has frequently held should not be given, Keller v. Flanagan, 66 Mont. 144, 213 Pac. 222; Lindeberg v. Howe, 67 Mont. 195, 215 Pac. 230; Newer v. First National Bank, 74 Mont. 549, 241 Pac. 613; Loncar v. National Union Fire Ins. Co., 84 Mont. 141, 274 Pac. 844, and also they are too general and incomplete to be of any assistance to the jury in determining the meaning of the judgment in cause numbered 3851.

But if technically they or any of them were unobjectionable plaintiff has been in no wise injured or prejudiced if the instructions given by the court were correct, because as above noted the court did advise the jury as to its interpretation of that judgment and the extent to which defendants were limited by it in using the ditch.

As above noted, the trial court adopted the theory that the defendants and Kathryn Pankey are tenants in common' in the ditch rights and that each of the co-tenants is entitled to the exclusive possession of the entire property as against everyone, except his co-tenants, that only a, co-tenant or other injured appropriator of water (and there are none here), could object to the use made by another co-tenant and a stranger could not. That view is sustained by the authorities. Osnes Livestock Co. v. Warren, 103 Mont. 284, 62 Pac. (2d) 206; Le *39 Vasseur v. Roullman, 93 Mont. 552, 20 Pac. (2d) 250; Rodda v. Best, 68 Mont. 205, 217 Pac. 669.

The cases of Hansen v. Galiger, 123 Mont. 101, 208 Pac. (2d) 1049, and Clausen v. Armington, 123 Mont. 1, 212 Pac. (2d) 440, relied on by plaintiff do not militate against this view. Those cases merely hold that after a ditch right has been acquired it cannot be enlarged or its location changed, nor can it be used in diverting an increased volume of water without the consent of the owner of the land through which it extends. None of those things are sought to be done here. The amount of water which these defendants and Kathryn Pankey have a right to convey through the ditch in question is 254 inches.

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Bluebook (online)
319 P.2d 1051, 133 Mont. 34, 1957 Mont. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/galiger-v-hansen-mont-1957.