Kelly v. Granite Bi-Metallic Con. Mining Co.

108 P. 785, 41 Mont. 1, 1910 Mont. LEXIS 62
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 26, 1910
DocketNo. 2,710
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 108 P. 785 (Kelly v. Granite Bi-Metallic Con. Mining Co.) 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
Kelly v. Granite Bi-Metallic Con. Mining Co., 108 P. 785, 41 Mont. 1, 1910 Mont. LEXIS 62 (Mo. 1910).

Opinions

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE BRANTLT

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was1 brought to determine the rights of the plaintiff and the defendants Hynes and wife and McLeod to the use of the water flowing in Fred Burr creek, in Granite county, and to adjust the relative priorities and amounts of their respective appropriations. As indicated by the annexed outline [3]*3map, the stream has its sources on the west slope of the mountains, and flows into the valley toward the northwest.

At some distance below the junction of its three principal branches are situated agricultural lands, owned and occupied by the plaintiff and the defendants Hynes and McLeod. To irrigate these lands they have ditches, diverting water from the main stream near where it debouches into the valley. The Hynes ditch with its laterals is nearest to the mountains; those of the plaintiff and defendant McLeod are a short distance below, the latter being farthest down. When the action was originally instituted, it presented a controversy solely between the plaintiff and Hynes and wife; the allegations of the complaint being that these defendants at the time were diverting water to the use of which plaintiff was entitled by priority of appropriation, thus doing him irreparable injury. McLeod was made a defendant ostensibly because he was and is entitled to' the joint use with plaintiff of the oldest right upon the stream, both holding under direct or mesne conveyances from a common predecessor, and because he was and is the owner of other-rights based upon appropriations, of later dates. Upon a prima facie showing made by Hynes and McLeod that the defendants-Granite Bi-Metallic Consolidated Mining Company and the-Fred Burr & Granite Ditch Company, hereinafter referred to* [4]*4as the mining company and the water company, were causing the interference complained of by the plaintiff, and were in' any event necessary parties to the action in order to determine all the conflicting rights, they were made parties defendant. The principal issues tried and determined arose upon the claim of right by the companies to maintain dams at the outlets of the lakes designated on the map as the Upper and Lower Fred Burr lakes, the apparent sources of the north branch of the stream, for storage of flood waters, and incidentally to divert into the upper lake, by means of a pipe-line, a portion of the water flowing in the middle fork of the stream, and to convey the water thus obtained by means of a flume to the town of Granite to supply its inhabitants, and also the mining and reduction works of the mining company at Granite and at the mill on Douglas creek below. Involved in this controversy was also the right, asserted by the companies, to increase their supply by diverting into the flume, by means of intakes, the water of small streams- and springs issuing from the slope of the mountain above the line of the flume between the lakes and the town. The contention of the plaintiff -and the other defendants was that the companies by these various devices seriously interfered with the natural flow of the stream, and -thus deprived them of the amount of water to which they were entitled under their respective appropriations.

The mining company based its claim of a prior right to the use of -the water, for the purpose for which it and its associate water company were diverting it, mainly upon three different appropriations; the first, made by one Degenhart, of 150 inches, in March, 1876; a second, made by One Owens, of 200 inches, in July, 1879; and a third, of 500 inches, made by one John McLeod, in 1886. In 1888 the Granite Mountain Mining Company, the immediate predecessor of the defendant mining company, acquired by mesne conveyances a one-half interest in the Degenhart right, -and the entire interests of the owners of the other two. At that time these -rights were ap.purtenant to, and were used to irrigate, the lands now owned [5]*5by the plaintiff. These lands were also acquired by the Granite Mountain Mining Company at the same time it acquired the water rights referred to. This company and the water company then began to divert water at the outlet of the Lower Fred Burr Lake. In the year 1889 they constructed a dam across the outlet of this lake, and thereafter conveyed water by means of the flume indicated on the map to the town of Granite, and to the reduction works of the Granite Mountain Mining Company. They also supplied the Bi-Metallic mill, then owned by an associated corporation known as the BiMetallic Mining Company. None of the water which was so diverted to the town of Granite or the works of the Granite Mountain Mining Company ever returned to Fred Burr creek, but such of it as escaped as waste or surplus flowed into Douglas creek. This condition continued until this company was succeeded by the mining company in 1898, which then became the owner of all of its property, as Well as that of the BiMetallic Mining Company, with which it was then consolidated. In addition to the rights thus acquired, the Granite Mountain Mining Company and the water company also made various other appropriations in different amounts, ranging in date from April 11, 1887, to February 11, 1890, at points on tributaries of the stream, in the neighborhood of the lakes. This company also made appropriations on March 6, 1886, and on February 11, 1890, to supply water to its mill at Bnmsey. The appropriation of the water to be conveyed by the pipe-line was made by the water company in January, 1902, and the line was completed during that year. The amount thus conveyed is between six and seven inches. In 1889, and in the following years, the companies also increased the height of the dam at the outlet of the lower lake, and erected another at the outlet of the upper lake, for the purpose of storing flood waters, in order to increase the supply and render it uniform. The water claimed under these later appropriations was diverted, either through the pipe-line into the upper lake, or through the intakes into the flume. On November 30, 1903, the defendant [6]*6mining company by deed convejmd to the plaintiff all its right, title and interest in the lands heretofore mentioned and now owned by him, together with its interest in the Degenhart, Owens and John McLeod water rights, reserving, however, and excluding from the grant, certain privileges in connection with the water rights, which are described as follows: “All the water of said Fred Burr creek which is tributary to Fred Burr lake, and all the water of said Fred Burr creek -or Fred Burr lake which may have been at any time a portion- of or part of said water rights herein mentioned, and which has been used or appropriated, or may be used or appropriated for any use whatever by the Fred Burr & Granite Ditch Company or its predecessors, which are tributary to said Fred Burr lake. * * * ” The relationship which the mining and water companies sustain toward each other does not distinctly appear. What this relation is exactly is not important; for though they answered separately, -and in the findings and decree are awarded separate rights under the appropriations made by the water company and the Granite Mountain Mining Company, the predecessor of the mining -company, they claim the right to th-e joint use of the water diverted from the lakes by means of the flume and the intakes used in connection therewith, and were treated as joint owners by the court in its findings.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
108 P. 785, 41 Mont. 1, 1910 Mont. LEXIS 62, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/kelly-v-granite-bi-metallic-con-mining-co-mont-1910.