King v. Schultz

375 P.2d 108, 141 Mont. 94, 1962 Mont. LEXIS 9
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 14, 1962
Docket10384
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 375 P.2d 108 (King v. Schultz) 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
King v. Schultz, 375 P.2d 108, 141 Mont. 94, 1962 Mont. LEXIS 9 (Mo. 1962).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the tenth judicial district, which judgment decreed the rights in the plaintiffs in certain waters of Elk Creek in Petroleum County, and enjoined the defendants from interfering with or diverting the waters of Elk Creek in derogation of the plaintiffs’ rights.

The plaintiffs, respondents here, are owners of land in Petroleum County. The defendants, appellants here, are owners of land in Fergus County. The lands of both are on Elk Creek; plaintiffs’ land being about eight miles downstream from defendants’ land.

Elk Creek is a somewhat typical stream of the area, flowing water in good years but not in dry years and usually not an adequate amount of water to irrigate properly the lands of both parties. The defendants, being upstream, had first opportunity *96 to use the water and did so. The plaintiffs brought this action to enjoin the defendants.

The trial court found that plaintiffs had the rights to use 1,680 inches of the waters of Elk Creek prior to the rights of the defendants. Plaintiffs’ exhibits and proof show their rights established between June 22, 1893, and October 1, 1910. Defendants do not question the establishment of these rights, but assert that their own rights to 400 inches of water are prior in time to those of plaintiffs. The trial court found otherwise, finding that defendants’ rights to flood -waters dated from April 1, 1911.

In addition, the defendants pleaded and attempted to prove that even if they did not have a prior appropriation, they nevertheless had a right to 400 inches by prescription, said right dating from July 20, 1934.

The specifications of error are divided into three parts: (1) That the court erred in refusing to admit into evidence defendants’ Exhibit 13, which exhibit consisted of certified copies of the applicants’ final proof on his desert land entry together with the depositions of two of his witnesses; (2) That the court erred in finding that the defendants admitted the prior rights of plaintiffs and released water on demand; (3) That the court erred in not finding that the defendants had a prescriptive right regardless of any priority of rights.

As to the first specification, defendants’ Exhibit 13 consisted of documents offered all together as one exhibit. They were objected to upon the ground that they were self-serving declarations and no proper foundation had been laid for their introduction and that they were inadmissible under the case of Osnes Livestock Co. v. Warren, 103 Mont. 284, 62 P.2d 206. It appears from defendants’ offered Exhibit 13, that defendants’ predecessor in interest, one David Foreman, was a desert entryman and in the course of making his desert land entry irrigated the lands in the Fall of 1885. One of the documents was a handwritten deposition of Foreman, one a deposition of one Charles *97 Y. Peck, and one a deposition of Oslow E. Roberts. It is urged that had Exhibit 13 been admitted in evidence it would have shown a valid appropriation of water, notwithstanding a failure to file a notice of appropriation with the clerk and recorder as required by statute.

It is defendants’ contention that the depositions contained in Exhibit 13 should have been admitted into evidence as ancient documents or public records, such being exceptions to the hearsay rule. In making this argument, counsel urge that this court in the Osnes Livestock Co. case did not consider the effect of the ancient documents rule, and that the ease should not be controlling. In the Osnes case, the same type of depositions in desert land entry proofs was considered. There the court, at p. 296, 103 Mont., at p. 211, 62 P.2d, stated:

* # the greater part of the lands under the McDonald ditch consisted of desert land entries, and certified copies of many, if not all, of the filings made by predecessors in interest of plaintiff, obtained from the General Land Office, were offered and received in evidence over objection. In the declaration of the applicant, and also the affidavits of the supporting witnesses, appears the following statement: ‘That no portion of said land has ever been reclaimed by conducting water thereon.’ Some of the declarants were predecessors in interest of plaintiff, and others who were witnesses were predecessors in interest as to other tracts. These exhibits were not properly admissible to prove nonirrigation of the land in question. In order for a declaration of a predecessor in interest to be admissible, the proper foundation must be laid, which has been stated in the case of Washoe Copper Co. v. Junila, 43 Mont. 178, 115 P. 917, 919, as follows: ‘However, when a declaration of this character is offered, the party making the offer must show (a) that it was made while the declarant was holding the title to the property in controversy; (b) that the declarant was in fact the grantor of the party against whom the declaration is offered; and (c) that the declaration was against interest.’ See, also, Kurth v. Le *98 Jeune, 83 Mont. 100, 269 P. 408. The declarations made by these predecessors at the time they were made were not against the then interest of the declarant. They were declarations made in the furtherance of the declarant’s interest as it then existed. Accordingly, we must hold that the court could not properly consider these statements as substantive evidence.”

The basis of the foregoing holding, and the Washoe Copper Co. case cited therein, went to the rule referred to by Justice Holloway as the statutory rule contained in section 7866, Revised Codes of 1907, now R.C.M.1947, § 93-401-6, that,

“Where, however, one derives title to real property from another, the declaration, act, or omission of the latter, while holding the title in relation to the property, is evidence against the former.”

The reason for the rule was explained as being that declarant was so situated, and his interests were such, that he would not have made the admissions to the prejudice of his right unless they were true.

The ancient document rule does not change the basis for admission of evidence other than as to the genuineness of the document. The rule is embodied in R.C.M.1947, § 93-1301-7, subd. 34, which provides:

“All other presumptions are satisfactory, if uncontradicted. They are denominated disputable presumptions, and may be controverted by other evidence. The following are of that kind:

“34. That a document or writing more than thirty years old is genuine, when the same has been since generally acted upon as genuine, by persons having an interest in the question, and its custody has been satisfactorily explained.”

In Cook v. Hudson, 110 Mont. 263, 284, 285, 103 P.2d 137, 147, the court considered the foregoing presumption in this language :

“* * * plaintiffs’ Exhibits ‘G’ and ‘H’, Grant’s notices of location of water right, -were dated and acknowledged Octo *99

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Bluebook (online)
375 P.2d 108, 141 Mont. 94, 1962 Mont. LEXIS 9, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/king-v-schultz-mont-1962.