In Re the Adjudication of the Existing Rights of Musselshell River Drainage

840 P.2d 577, 255 Mont. 43, 49 State Rptr. 866, 49 St. Rep. 866, 1992 Mont. LEXIS 274
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 8, 1992
Docket90-468
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 840 P.2d 577 (In Re the Adjudication of the Existing Rights of Musselshell River Drainage) 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
In Re the Adjudication of the Existing Rights of Musselshell River Drainage, 840 P.2d 577, 255 Mont. 43, 49 State Rptr. 866, 49 St. Rep. 866, 1992 Mont. LEXIS 274 (Mo. 1992).

Opinion

JUSTICE GRAY

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Rueben C. and Lavone M. Pitsch appeal from an adjudication of water right claims in Big Coulee Creek, a tributary of the Musselshell River, by the Montana Water Court, the Honorable Bernard W. Thomas presiding. We affirm.

We address the following issues on appeal:

1. Did the Water Court err in determining that the 1893 and 1921 water rights claimed by appellants were abandoned?

a. Should this Court expressly overrule 79 Ranch?
b. Did the Water Court err in its application of 79 Ranch?

2. Did the Water Court err in determining that the claimed 1973 water right was not perfected?

3. Are appellants entitled to a 1976 priority date for water applied to a beneficial use?

This is the third occasion on which the water right claims of Rueben and Lavone Pitsch have been appealed to this Court. For the most part, the claims before us originally went to trial in 1979 and appealed. We vacated and remanded in 79 Ranch, Inc. v. Pitsch (1981), 193 Mont. 229, 631 P.2d 690, and findings of feet, conclusions of law and judgment on remand were entered in 1982. The case was appealed again and resulted in our decision in 79 Ranch, Inc. v. Pitsch (1983), 204 Mont. 426, 666 P.2d 215, in which we affirmed in part and remanded for modification. A modified decree and judgment was entered on August 22,1983.

Before the earlier proceedings finally had been resolved in August, 1983, Pitschs filed five Statements of Claim pursuant to Montana’s 1973 Water Use Act. The Water Court consolidated the claims of existing water rights in Big Coulee Creek, a tributary of the Musselshell River, asserted by Pitschs and other parties into Case No. 40A-48C. Claims by Eugene and Lois Schaff, Warren Sillivan and Coulee Hill Ranch, Inc., Chris and Betty Schaff and appellants *46 Pitschs, as well as objections to those claims, were tried beginning February 8,1990.

After hearing, the Water Court ruled on the water right claims before it. With specific regard to appellants, the court determined that their one-third interest in the 1893 Montana Cattle Company water right (Claim No. 45635) had been perfected for 131 acres, but abandoned by their predecessors in interest. In addition, the court ruled that a 1921 Notice of Appropriation (Claim No. 45634) had been perfected for 23.5 acres, but abandoned, and that another 1921 Notice of Appropriation (Claim No. 45632) was not perfected or, if perfected, was abandoned. The court further determined that a 1953 irrigation right based on a reservoir right (Claim No. 182127) was not perfected. Finally, the court determined that appellants’ claim based on their predecessors’ 1973 Notice of Appropriation (Claim No. 45633) was not perfected by reason of lack of reasonable diligence in putting the water to beneficial use.

This appeal followed entry of judgment and certification pursuant to Rule 54(b), M.R.Civ.P. We note at the outset that only the Pitschs appeal from the judgment of the Water Court and that they do not appeal the Water Court’s determination that the asserted 1953 irrigation right was not perfected.

1. Did the Water Court err in determining that the 1893 and 1921 water rights claimed by appellants were abandoned?

Appellants argue two separate issues in support of their contention that the 1893 and 1921 water rights were not abandoned. First, they argue that this Court should expressly overrule 79 Ranch, Inc. v. Pitsch (1983), 204 Mont. 426, 666 P.2d 215 (hereafter 79 Ranch). Second, they argue that, in any event, the Water Court erred in its application of 79 Ranch to the facts of their water right claims. We will address these issues separately.

a. Should this Court expressly overrule 79 Ranchi

Appellants assert that our decision in 79 Ranch in 1983 and our subsequent decision in E.E. Eggebrecht, Inc. v. Waters (1985), 217 Mont. 291, 704 P.2d 422, have resulted in an irreconcilable conflict in the law of abandonment in Montana. We disagree.

79 Ranch addresses the question of abandonment of claimed water rights. Eggebrecht addresses the extent and abandonment of an easement by grant and decides only the narrow issue of who has standing to raise the issue of abandonment of such a grant originally made by the United States. The two interests are separate and *47 distinct and the distinctions between the two form the basis for the difference in legal approach to questions regarding them, including the question of abandonment.

Montana law has long recognized that water rights and easement rights such as ditch rights are distinct interests which can be conveyed separately and abandoned separately. See McDonnell v. Huffine (1912), 44 Mont. 411, 120 P. 792. The controlling principle upon which water “rights” in Montana are perfected and continue to possess legal validity is that of beneficial use; water rights cease when the water is no longer applied to a beneficial use. Power v. Switzer (1898), 21 Mont. 523, 55 P. 32; 79 Ranch, 204 Mont. at 431-32. Water rights are thus inherently different from other rights or interests not fundamentally premised or conditioned on use of the particular right or interest; necessarily, then, abandonment of a water right is a question distinct from abandonment of a right created in a different manner.

In this regard, Montana’s law on abandonment of water rights has a long and evolutionary history. See, e.g., Smith v. Hope Mining Co. (1896), 18 Mont. 432, 45 P. 632; Moore v. Sherman (1916), 52 Mont. 542, 159 P. 966; Thomas v. Ball (1923), 66 Mont. 161, 213 P. 597; Shammel v. Vogl (1964), 144 Mont. 354, 396 P.2d 103; Holmstrom Land Co. v. Meagher Cty. Newlan Creek (1979), 185 Mont. 409, 605 P.2d 1060; 79 Ranch (1983); § 85-2-404, MCA. Appellants correctly assert that our decision in 79 Ranch was a change in the law of abandonment of water rights. Given Smith and Holmstrom, however, both of which held a long period of non-use of water rights to be “strong evidence” of intent to abandon, it was not the “stunning reversal” appellants assert it to be.

Eggebrecht did not relate to water rights or abandonment of water rights.

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Bluebook (online)
840 P.2d 577, 255 Mont. 43, 49 State Rptr. 866, 49 St. Rep. 866, 1992 Mont. LEXIS 274, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/in-re-the-adjudication-of-the-existing-rights-of-musselshell-river-drainage-mont-1992.