Harrer v. Northern Pacific Railway Company

410 P.2d 713, 147 Mont. 130, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 364
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 2, 1966
Docket10929
StatusPublished
Cited by4 cases

This text of 410 P.2d 713 (Harrer v. Northern Pacific Railway Company) 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
Harrer v. Northern Pacific Railway Company, 410 P.2d 713, 147 Mont. 130, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 364 (Mo. 1966).

Opinion

*132 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JAMES T. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Defendant-appellant, Northern Pacific Railway Company, brings this appeal from a declaratory judgment rendered in the district court of Gallatin County in favor of the plaintiff-respondent, Fred O. Harrer.

The facts are that in the days of the steam locomotive, the defendant maintained two sets of track between Bozeman and Logan, Montana. One of these tracks was direct and of fairly steep grade. To facilitate the movement of heavy freight trains, the company, in 1917, erected what is known as the “BozemanLogan Low Line.” The Low Line followed a circuitous route in order to lessen the grade, thereby enabling locomotives then in use to pull heavy loads. With the advent of the diesel engine, the Low Line served no further purpose and it was abandoned. Several irrigation ditches were crossed in the construction of the Low Line, one of which was known as the Beck and Border Canal. In order to maintain the required grade, the railroad constructed a cut some 20 feet deep at the point where it intersected the Beck and Border Canal, and it was necessary, therefore, to construct a cement drop, siphon and flume to carry the water under the tracks before returning it to the canal.

In 1957, the Railroad abandoned its use of the Low Line, removed its rails and equipment, and in 1960 quitclaimed the property to one Kenneth B. Anderson, who owned the lands adjoining the siphon and flume. Thereafter, the railroad has refused to maintain the cement drop, siphon and wooden flume —a function or service it had performed since 1917.

Both parties agree that considerable effort and expense is required to maintain the siphon. It must be drained in wintertime to prevent freezing; it must be kept free of mud, gravel and debris; and the cement and wooden portions must be repaired and replaced from time to time.

The lower court held “that this a declaratory judgment de *133 daring the rights of the parties to this action and * * # that the defendant is legally obligated at this time to continue to maintain the siphon and flume involved in the action known as the Beck and Border Ditch * * * or to replace such siphon and flume in such a manner as to restore the ditch in which the plaintiff owns an interest to its former state of usefulness so that it will not require continual care, maintenance and replacement other than ordinary maintenance that would have been required for the ditch prior to the construction of the siphon and flume.”

The Beck and Border Canal is an irrigation ditch in which many persons other than plaintiff have undivided interests. The Canal delivers the plaintiff’s adjudicated water right of 491 inches to his land from the West Gallatin River.

Both parties agree there are but three questions to be answered :

(1) What was the duty enjoined upon the defendant by R.C.M.1947, § 72-205, subd. 5?
(2) Were the proper and necessary parties before the court?
(3) Is the action barred by limitation?
R.C.M.1947, § 72-205, subd. 5, states in part:
“Every railroad corporation has power: * * *
“5. To construct their road across, along, or upon any # * * canal, ditch, or flume which the route of its road intersects, crosses, or runs along * * *; but the corporation shall restore the * * * canal, ditch, or flume thus intersected to its former state of usefulness, as near as may be, or so that the railroad shall not unnecessarily impair its usefulness or injure its franchise.”

Heckaman v. Northern Pacific Ry. Co., 93 Mont. 363, 20 P.2d 258, construed this statute and removed the ambiguous meaning of “its usefulness or injure its franchise” by saying that “its” did not refer to the railroad, but rather to those facilities intersected by the route of the Railroad.

The Railroad obeyed the command of the statute by con *134 structing the facility and. maintaining it. This facility permitted passage of water in amounts equal to the water rights of the lower land owners, but it did so only so long as it received proper care and maintenance. If the railroad had refused to maintain the siphon prior to its abandonment of the route, it is clear that it would have been in violation of the statutory duty imposed upon its right to cross such canals and ditches. But as long as the railroad did maintain the siphon it constructed, the plaintiff’s water right was restored and the usefulness of the ditch was not unnecessarily impaired or injured, and under such circumstances, the plaintiff had no valid claim for interference with his water rights.

The question now is whether the abandonment and sale of the railroad’s property changes its duties and obligations regarding the Beck and Border Canal and the plaintiff’s water rights.

Diligent search by both counsel and this court have failed to reveal authority or precedent to guide us.

The following concepts require no citation of authority: One who has appropriated water in Montana acquires a distinct property right; this water right is a species of property in and of itself and may exist separate and independent of a ditch right; each is capable of several and distinct injuries; both water rights and ditch rights are considered property of. the highest order.

Through R.C.M.1947, § 72-205, subd. 5, the State of Montana is, in effect, exercising its power of eminent domain through an instrumentality — railroad companies. In the same breath, however, the legislature recognizes the importance of water rights and ditch rights. It emphatically states that, even though an interference with such rights is permissible when required for the general public benefit, the railroad “shall restore” such rights to their former state of usefulness.

It must be remembered that the point where the route of the railroad cut through the Beck and Border Canal was not *135 located on the plaintiff’s land. No compensation was paid the plaintiff in 1917 when the railroad bnilt its right-of-way. No real injury was done to the plaintiff at that time.

This court feels that the act of abandonment of property taken in the first instance under the theory of eminent domain, and statutorily burdened with the duties as set forth in section 72-205, subd. 5, does not of itself relieve the condemnor of such duties and obligations. The act of condemnation is subject to due process of law, and the abandonment of property so acquired, so far as it affects those property rights is also subject to due process. This seems to be particularly clear when one realizes that condemnation is supported by the concept that the land is necessary for the general benefit of the public. This justifies interference with private interests and ownership. Abandonment of property so acquired is in this case founded upon no such justification.

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Bluebook (online)
410 P.2d 713, 147 Mont. 130, 1966 Mont. LEXIS 364, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/harrer-v-northern-pacific-railway-company-mont-1966.