Letica Land Co. v. Anaconda-Deer Lodge County

2015 MT 323, 362 P.3d 614, 381 Mont. 389, 2015 Mont. LEXIS 548
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 2015
DocketDA 14-0780
StatusPublished
Cited by12 cases

This text of 2015 MT 323 (Letica Land Co. v. Anaconda-Deer Lodge County) 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
Letica Land Co. v. Anaconda-Deer Lodge County, 2015 MT 323, 362 P.3d 614, 381 Mont. 389, 2015 Mont. LEXIS 548 (Mo. 2015).

Opinions

JUSTICE BAKER

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

¶1 Letica Land Company, LLC, (Letica) and Don McGee appeal the judgment of the Third Judicial District Court that two roads crossing Letica’s Emd McGee’s properties in Anaconda-Deer Lodge County are public roads. Letica and McGee raise several issues on appeal that we restate as follows:

2. Whether the District Court erred in concluding that the record, taken as a whole, established that Anaconda-Deer Lodge County statutorily created Modesty Creek Road’s lower branch terminating in Section 22, Township 6 North, Range 11 West;
2. Whether the District Court erred in concluding that the public holds a prescriptive easement across Modesty Creek Road’s upper branch.

¶2 We affirm on Issue 1, reverse on Issue 2, and remand for further proceedings.

PROCEDURAL AND FACTUAL BACKGROUND

¶3 The disputed portions of Modesty Creek Road1 pass through properties owned by Letica Emd McGee. The road includes Em upper Emd lower branch and is located near the boundary between Anaconda-Deer Lodge County (County) and Powell County in the Flint Creek Range foothills approximately ten miles north of Anaconda, Montana. ¶4 Modesty Creek Road’s lower branch begins at an intersection with Spring Gulch Road — an undisputed county road — in Section 19, Township 6 North, Range 10 West. There is an orEmge gate on the lower branch at that branch’s intersection with Spring Gulch Road. [391]*391The road travels northwest through McGee’s property along Modesty Creek’s north side and exits the property in Section 24, Township 6 North, Range 11 West. There is a green gate where the road exits McGee’s property and enters Letica’s property. The road passes a short distance over Letica’s property before entering what the parties refer to as the Launderville parcel — an inholding surrounded entirely by Letica’s property and now owned by nonparties Thomas and Patricia Donich. The District Court concluded that the lower branch reenters Letica’s property in Section 23, Township 6 North, Range 11 West, and continues west before ending in the eastern portion of Section 22, Township 6 North, Range 11 West.

¶5 The upper branch splits from the lower branch near the western Launderville/Letica property boundary in Section 23, Township 6 North, Range 11 West. The upper branch travels west/northwest across Letica’s property through Sections 23, 22, and 15, Township 6 North, Range 11 West. The road enters Powell County in Section 15. It continues into the Beaverhead-Deerlodge National Forest where it becomes a United States Forest Service road that accesses a number of lakes.2

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¶6 In March 1889, the Deer Lodge County Commission3 considered a petition to establish Modesty Creek Road as a county road. The [392]*392minutes from the meeting describe the petition as follows:

Upon the petition of John N. Nelson, et al. and proof of the posting of notices as required by law having been filed with the Clerk, Frank Stephens, Geo Jacques and Joseph Marshall were appointed viewers to meet April 11, 1889 to view out, locate and report upon the following road to wit.
Beginning at the S.E. Cortner] of Sec[tion] 22, T9NR10W,4 Deer Lodge Co. MT and running thence due west two miles along the section lines. Thence up Modesty Creek along the old road as near as practicable to the mouth of Dry Gulch.
Deer Lodge County Commissioners Records, Deer Lodge County Commission Meeting Minutes, March 21,1889, Book 6, 373. The Commission met again in June 1889 and the minutes from that meeting contain the following declaration regarding Modesty Creek Road:
Report of Frank Stephens, Joseph Marshall, and Geo Jacques - viewers appointed on March 21st and 1889 to view out, locate and report upon a road petitioned for by John N. Nelson, et al. met and accepted and the same is hereby accepted declared a public highway with the provision that all parties interested or benefited by said road bear all expense connected with the opening and building of the same.
Deer Lodge County Commissioners Records, Deer Lodge County Commission Meeting Minutes, June 3,1889, Book 6,396. An 1896 County road map shows Modesty Creek Road’s lower branch generally following the route described above and ending near a gulch labeled “Dry Gulch” in an “unsurveyed” portion of Township 6 North, Range 11 West.

¶7 The road traversed only federal public land until the federal government conveyed the land to the Anaconda Company in 1937. During the Anaconda Company’s ownership, testimony at trial indicated that the public regularly accessed both branches of Modesty Creek Road. In 1965, the Anaconda Company sold the land. A number of private interests have owned various parcels ever since. Testimony at trial indicated that the public continued to regularly access both branches until the early 1980s. Hija Letica purchased the property in 1989 and transferred the property to Letica in 1997. McGee also [393]*393purchased his property in 1997.

¶8 In the mid-1960s, the Launderville parcel’s prior owner, Joe Launderville, fenced the parcel and placed a gate across the upper branch. Launderville testified at trial that he locked the gate sporadically in the early 1980s. At around the same time, Letica’s and McGee’s predecessors in interest installed and locked the orange and green gates across the lower branch. In the mid-1980s, Shawn DeMers, an area landowner, removed a culvert at the orange gate at Launderville’s request. The culvert allowed road users to cross Modesty Creek. The locked gates on the lower branch and the culvert’s removal restricted public use of both branches. As such, both Letica and McGee maintain that they were unaware of any claim of public right of access over either branch of Modesty Creek Road at the time they purchased their respective properties.

¶9 Following a confrontation with Hija Letica, DeMers and another County resident asked the County Commission in early 2012 to reaffirm both branches of Modesty Creek Road as county roads and reopen them to the public. The County Commission retained an attorney to research the road’s history and, on March 6,2012, voted to reaffirm both branches as county roads based in part on her opinion and supporting documentation. Two days later, Letica filed a complaint for declaratory and injunctive relief. Following a hearing, the District Court issued an order in July 2012 denying Letica’s request for a preliminary injunction to close Modesty Creek Road.6 McGee joined as a plaintiff in an amended complaint.

¶10 Prior to trial, the County initially contended that both branches of Modesty Creek Road were statutorily created. After discovery closed, however, the County located a road record book that established that the upper branch was not in fact a statutorily created road. The County thereafter asserted that a public prescriptive easement established the upper branch as a public road.

¶11 In a December 2013 order, the District Court denied the parties’ motions for partial summary judgment. The court also denied Letica’s and McGee’s motion to alter or amend the July 2012 order to allow [394]

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2015 MT 323, 362 P.3d 614, 381 Mont. 389, 2015 Mont. LEXIS 548, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/letica-land-co-v-anaconda-deer-lodge-county-mont-2015.