Gibbs v. Gardner

80 P.2d 370, 107 Mont. 76, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 57
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 9, 1938
DocketNo. 7,774.
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 80 P.2d 370 (Gibbs v. Gardner) 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
Gibbs v. Gardner, 80 P.2d 370, 107 Mont. 76, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 57 (Mo. 1938).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MORRIS

delivered the opinion of the. court.

The plaintiff seeks a writ of injunction to abate a nuisance. The alleged nuisance consists of maintaining and operating in an alleged unlawful manner a headgate in an irrigation ditch. The ditch is owned jointly by the parties to the action at bar and a number of others.

In 1903, in an action designated as Cause No. 1953 in the District Court of Missoula county, Montana, 23 water rights out of Rattlesnake Creek were adjudicated. The total awards by that adjudication aggregated approximately 6,000 inches, while the normal flow of the stream is approximately 2,000. The waters were diverted through the Day-Hamilton or Worden Ditch; the ditch that diverts the waters in controversy here was awarded the twenty-second right of 115 inches by that adjudication, and users under this twenty-second right obtain an ample supply only when there is an abnormal flow in the stream.

*78 The award through the Day-Hamilton ditch was made to eleven different persons named in the decree, all equal in time. But no adjudication has ever been made of the rights of the respective parties to the 115 inches of waters diverted through their joint ditch. The parties to this action are successors in interest of some one or another of the parties whose rights in Rattlesnake Creek were adjudicated by the 1903 decree.

Plaintiff’s contention is not that the headgate is a nuisance in itself, but that it is operated in a manner that results in injury to all users of water below the point where defendants’ lateral diverts the water from the main ditch. In addition to the above facts, the complaint alleges, in substance, that the lands irrigated by the waters diverted through the Day-Hamilton ditch have been divided into five-acre tracts known as the Cob-bin Camp Site; that plaintiff is in possession of Lot 14 thereof and entitled to five inches of water; that defendants’ lateral is the fourth below the intake of the main ditch; that plaintiff and others who are below the point of intake of defendants’ lateral are entitled to 90 of the 115 inches awarded to the Day-Hamilton ditch; that defendants’ lateral is 18 inches above the bottom of the main ditch, and that their headgate is built so that boards may be inserted in the headgate in a way that obstructs the entire flow of water when a limited amount is flowing, and defendants take all the water that reaches their point of diversion and prevent any from escaping down the ditch to the laterals of the lower users, resulting in injury to the latter; that by reason of the insertion of the boards in the headgate, which plaintiff designates as ■ a dam, plaintiff and other lower users are denied the use of their pro rata portion of the water; that the dam is not carefully tended by defendants, and the waters, if the flow is heavy, overrun the banks of the ditch and are wasted; that defendants frequently impound the waters in the ditch for the sole purpose of bathing therein, thereby polluting the waters and rendering them unfit for domestic purposes, for which purposes they are used by some of the lower users; that defendants can take their water out of the ditch by a lateral higher up, thereby eliminating the necessity for the dam, and *79 that plaintiff and other lower users dug such a lateral, but defendants refused to use the same; that such use of the ditch by the defendants has become a nuisance by reason of the unlawful obstruction of the free passage of the water through the ditch to the lower users. An injunction is prayed for restraining the defendants from depriving plaintiff of the use of the water to which he is entitled.

The answer admits defendants placed the boards in the head-gate in order to raise the water to a point where it will flow through the lateral; that such practice has been followed each year since the water was first diverted through the Day-Hamilton ditch in 1898; denies that placing such boards in the headgate deprives lower users of water to which they are entitled; denies that plaintiff or others use the water in the ditch for domestic purposes; admits replacing the boards in the headgate after they had been removed by others, but did so when they, the defendants, were entitled to the water.

For a further defense and affirmative relief, defendants allege the ownership of Lot 12 at the camp site mentioned, the necessity of artificial irrigation for such land for the production of fruit and garden truck to which the land is utilized; that the whole said five acres is irrigable from the Day-Hamilton ditch and not irrigable from any other source; that it is now and always has been necessary, in order to get the water to flow out of the Day-Hamilton ditch into defendants’ lateral and upon their land, to place in the headgate at the point of defendants ’ diversion a board or boards to raise the water to a height that it will flow into such lateral; that the defendants and their predecessors in interest installed and have maintained since August 29, 1898, the headgate, and have during all the years since placed the boards therein to raise the water when irrigating, as above mentioned, all of which is well known to all water users from the Day-Hamilton ditch, and has been so known since 1898; that the practice has been and is open, notorious, peaceful, exclusive, uninterrupted, adverse and hostile against the plaintiff and all others, and that defendants have acquired a right by prescription to use such headgate at such point and to place the *80 boards therein for the purpose mentioned; that the plaintiff has heretofore interfered with defendants’ rights as above set out, and has removed the boards from the headgate at times when defendants were entitled to the use of the water to defendants’ injury, and threatens to so remove the boards hereafter which will lead to the further serious injury of defendants and to a multiplicity of suits, and defendants pray that plaintiff’s action be dismissed, that defendants have their costs and that plaintiff and his representatives be enjoined from molesting defendants’ headgate or interfering with their use of their five inches of water. The affirmative matter in the answer was denied by reply.

The matter came on for hearing before the court sitting without a jury; numerous witnesses testified for the respective parties; findings were proposed by each; the court and the parties viewed the premises involved; briefs were submitted, and, after consideration, the court adopted the findings proposed by the defendants, made conclusions of law in accordance therewith, and made and entered its decree dismissing plaintiff’s action with costs allowed to the defendants. From such judgment plaintiff appeals. Seven specifications of error are assigned.

Under the established rules, the court enters upon the consideration of the questions involved upon appeal under the presumption that the trial court was correct in its determination of the controversy, and the burden is upon the appellant affirmatively to show reversible error (Downs v. Nihill, 87 Mont. 145, 286 Pac. 410), and that findings of fact made by the district court in an equity case will not be disturbed on appeal unless there is a decided preponderance of the evidence against them, nor where the evidence discloses reasonable grounds for different conclusions. (Wills v. Morris, 100 Mont.

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Bluebook (online)
80 P.2d 370, 107 Mont. 76, 1938 Mont. LEXIS 57, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/gibbs-v-gardner-mont-1938.