Hidden Hollow Ranch v. Fields

2004 MT 153, 92 P.3d 1185, 321 Mont. 505, 2004 Mont. LEXIS 237
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJune 15, 2004
Docket02-582
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 2004 MT 153 (Hidden Hollow Ranch v. Fields) 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
Hidden Hollow Ranch v. Fields, 2004 MT 153, 92 P.3d 1185, 321 Mont. 505, 2004 Mont. LEXIS 237 (Mo. 2004).

Opinion

*507 JUSTICE RICE

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶ 1 Hidden Hollow Ranch (Hidden Hollow) brought this action in the Montana First Judicial District, Broadwater County, requesting an order holding Gregory W. Field (Field) in contempt of court for violating the provisions of the Confederate Creek Water Cases, Consolidated Decrees of 1918 and 1931 (Confederate Creek Decree), and requiring Field to install measuring devices to ensure proper distribution of water in the future. Following a bench trial, the District Court entered findings of fact and conclusions of law dismissing Hidden Hollow’s petition and enjoining Hidden Hollow from interfering with Field’s diversion works and water conveyance system. The District Court further ordered the Water Commissioner, Tom O’Donnell (O’Donnell), to take all acts necessary to ensure that Hidden Hollow not manipulate or modify Field’s diversion system and to see that Field allow 0.83 miner’s inches of water to be distributed through the diversion system to Hidden Hollow. From these findings of fact and conclusions of law, Hidden Hollow appeals. We affirm.

¶2 Hidden Hollow raises numerous issues on appeal, which we restate as follows:

¶3 1. Did the District Court exceed its jurisdiction under § 85-2-406, MCA, and re-adjudicate either party’s underlying water rights as previously decreed in the Confederate Creek Decree?

¶4 2. Did the District Court err in denying Hidden Hollow’s motion to certify the issue involving the controversy as to the source of the parties’ respective water rights to the Chief Water Judge?

¶5 3. Did the District Court erroneously shift the burden of proof to Hidden Hollow, in contravention to § 85-2-411, MCA, to prove how much water Hidden Hollow contributed to the natural drainage from its independent source?

¶6 4. Did the District Court’s order regarding Hidden Hollow’s water right deprive Hidden Hollow of due process of law by ruling on issues not raised by the pleadings?

BACKGROUND

¶7 The current dispute, concerning the appropriate distribution of the water of Confederate Creek and its tributaries, relates back to the Confederate Creek Decree entered by the First Judicial District Court, Broadwater County, in consolidated Cause Numbers 1918 and 1931, on September 24,1940. In that decree, the District Court decreed the water rights of Confederate Creek and its tributaries to the predecessors in interest to Hidden Hollow and Field.

*508 ¶8 Hidden Hollow’s right is found in findings of fact numbers 13 and 18 in the decree. Finding of fact number 13, setting a priority date of June 1, 1867, decreed the interest of Howard Matthews, Hidden Hollow’s predecessor in interest, and provides:

That Howard Matthews is the owner of, and entitled to the beneficial use and enjoyment of, and the right to use, [t]wenty-five (25) miner’s inches of the waters of Clear Creek, a tributary of Confederate Creek, which said right was initiated and perfected as of June 1, 1867, for the beneficial use upon the:
N% Sec. 22;
EV&NEV4 Sec. 21, T. 9, N.R. 2 E.
Said water is to be diverted through ten (10) ditches coming out of the creek, some on the south side of the creek and some on the north side of the creek, all of said diversion points being in the:
NV2 Sections 21 and 22;
WV2 Section 23, T. 9, N.R. 2 E.

¶9 Finding of fact number 18, setting a priority date of June 1,1869, provides:

That Howard Matthews is the owner of, and entitled to the beneficial use and enjoyment of, and the right to use, [t]wenty-five (25) miner’s inches of the water of Clear Creek, a tributary of Confederate Creek, which said right was initiated and perfected as of June 1, 1869, for beneficial use upon the:
N½ Sec. 22;
W/2 NE% Sec. 21, T. 9, N.R. 2 E.
Said water is to be diverted through ten (10) ditches coming out of the creek, some on the south side of the creek and some on the north side of the creek, all of said diversion points being in the:
NV2 Sections 21 and 22;
WV2 Sec. 23, T. 9, N.R. 2 E.

¶10 Field’s water right is found in finding of fact number 12 in the Confederate Creek Decree. Finding of fact number 12 decreed the interest of Howard Doggett, Field’s predecessor in interest, and provides as follows:

That Howard Doggett is the owner of, and entitled to the beneficial use and enjoyment of, and the right to use, the entire flow of that certain stream designated in the pleadings of said Howard Doggett as Willow Creek, or Willow Canyon Creek, and also known as the headwaters of Clear Creek, and also as Lone
*509 Tree Creek, to be diverted from said stream as a point in the:
NEViNEU Sec. 13, T. 9, N.R. 2 E„
at the mouth of the canyon where said stream leaves the upper reaches of the mountain range to the east and south of Confederate Creek, and at the point where the present ditch of said Doggett taps said stream at the date of this decree, and by means of the same diversion now employed by him, and said Howard Doggett is entitled to the beneficial use and enjoyment of the entire flow of said stream, to be diverted by him as aforesaid, prior to the right of any other party to this action, at any time when said Howard Doggett shall have need of such water for beneficial uses, and shall be able to employ and use the same for a beneficial purpose.
Said waters have been appropriated for, and beneficially used upon, and are appurtenant to the:
S 1 /^ Sec. 22;
Sections 23-26-27-33-34, T. 9, N.R. 2 E.,
Sec. 4, T. 8, N.R. 2 E.

¶11 Around 1905, Howard Doggett, acting pursuant to the Confederate Creek Decree, diverted the Willow Creek water in a southwesterly direction through a ditch known as the Upper Doggett Ditch. At the lower end of the Upper Doggett Ditch is a confluence where the ditch turns into a natural drainage area that, for the purpose of the current controversy, was referred to by some witnesses as the South Fork of Clear Creek, but was referred to by Field and his expert simply as an unnamed drainage or a tributary of Clear Creek 1 . ¶12 The Willow Creek water, after flowing through Upper Doggett Ditch, reaches and follows this natural drainage in a westerly direction until it arrives at Field’s lower diversion, known as the Lower Doggett Ditch.

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Bluebook (online)
2004 MT 153, 92 P.3d 1185, 321 Mont. 505, 2004 Mont. LEXIS 237, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hidden-hollow-ranch-v-fields-mont-2004.