Lowry v. Carrier

177 P. 756, 55 Mont. 392, 1918 Mont. LEXIS 117
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 30, 1918
DocketNo. 3,956
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 177 P. 756 (Lowry v. Carrier) 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
Lowry v. Carrier, 177 P. 756, 55 Mont. 392, 1918 Mont. LEXIS 117 (Mo. 1918).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE HOLLOWAY

delivered tbe opinion of tbe court.

This suit was instituted to bave determined tbe relative rights of the parties to certain irrigating ditches. Plaintiffs prevailed, and defendant appealed from tbe judgment and from an order denying bis motion for a new trial.

[394]*394There is no substantial conflict in the evidence. Stated in general terms, the record discloses that William Scott, Magnus Johnson and Peter Madson settled upon and inclosed certain unsurveyed, unappropriated public lands in Meagher county; that Scott’s inclosure was immediately north of the inclosure of Johnson and Madson, and separated from them by a division fence; that the lands are arid and require artificial irrigation; that about 1886 Scott appropriated 600 inches of water from Sheep Creek, and constructed a main ditch running westerly from the creek to convey water upon the lands which he had inclosed; that about 1890 he sold to Johnson and Madson an undivided half interest in his water right and in his main ditch at least from the headgate to a point near his corral; that at this point a lateral ditch was constructed to convey water upon the Johnson and Madson inelosures; that later two other lateral ditches were constructed — lateral No. 2 tapping the main ditch a short distance west of the corral, and lateral No. 3 tapping the main ditch a considerable distance farther west; that a sub-lateral was constructed from lateral No. 3; that all these ditches were'constructed and used before the government surveys were made; that lateral No. 3 and the sublateral were designed to be used, and were used, originally, to irrigate lands within the Johnson and Madson inelosures; that when the lands were surveyed by the government in 1898 it was ascertained that the several parcels of land mentioned did not conform to legal subdivisions; that the fence which separated the Scott claim from the Johnson and Madson claims was moved south to the quarter-section line, with the result that a strip of land theretofore within the Johnson and Madson inclosure became a part of the Scott claim; that a county road was opened between the claims; that plaintiff Lowry is the successor in interest of Johnson and Madson; that defendant is the successor in interest of Scott; that the other plaintiffs are lessees of plaintiff Lowry, and that lateral No. 1, or “Lowry Branch,” is not involved in this controversy, it being conceded to belong to plaintiff Lowry.

[395]*395As we understand the record, the court found that the several ditches to which reference is made in the testimony of the witnesses are correctly represented by a map (Defendant’s Exhibit “A”), which is here reproduced with the addition of certain figures to identify the ditches with greater particularity:

On the map to which reference is made, lateral No. 1 is designated “Lowry Branch” and lateral No. 2 is marked ‘(Carrier Ditch.”

The issues raised by the pleadings are whether plaintiff Lowry owns or is entitled to use the main ditch from A to B, and whether she owns or is entitled to use lateral No. 3 and the sublateral. In her complaint she claims title to them: First, by virtue of the fact that they were constructed by her predecessors in interest over unsurveyed public lands; and, second, by virtue of adverse use.

The court found that the laterals in dispute were constructed by Johnson and Madson to irrigate lands within their inclosures, some of which lands fell within the defendant’s claim when the survey was made and the fence removed to the quarter-section line. The court further found that for more than fifteen years prior to the commencement of this action plaintiff had been in the open, notorious, continuous and adverse use of said laterals under a claim of right, and that for more than ten years prior to the commencement of this action defendant, Car[396]*396rier, had used the main ditch and laterals other than lateral No. 1. The court concluded that plaintiff Lowry and defendant each owns an undivided half interest in “said ditch, laterals and sublaterals as they pass through the premises of defendant. ’ ’

The decree awards to plaintiff Lowry an undivided half interest in certain ditches and an easement in the lands of defendant through which the ditches run.

Defendant complains of rulings of the court excluding evidence, of certain findings, and of the decree.

1. Upon the trial defendant sought to show the limited [1] amount of water which had been or could be used upon plaintiff Lowry’s lands and the amount used and necessary to be used on defendant’s land, but the court excluded the evidence.

The respective water rights of these parties were not involved directly, but if plaintiff Lowry had grounded her title to the ditches in controversy upon prescription exclusively, the evidence would have been material. The extent of an easement acquired by adverse user is measured by the extent of the use. (Sec. 4512, Rev. Codes; 9 R. C. L. 788, and cases cited.) The court decreed to each party a one-half interest in the ditches, without reference to the extent of the use of them by either. [2] Plaintiff pleaded title by prescription, but relied also upon the fact that the ditches had been constructed by her predecessors at a time when the land over which they were constructed and now owned by defendant was open, public land of the United States, and the evidence given by defendant himself fully sustains this latter theory.

Sections 2339 and 2340, United States Revised Statutes (U. S. Comp. Stats., sees. 4647, 4649), in effect grant to the owner of a water right the right to construct ditches over the public lands for the purpose of conducting water for irrigation purposes, and in effect declare that the subsequent entryman on such lands takes them burdened with the easement. (Cottonwood Ditch Co. v. Thom, 39 Mont. 115, 101 Pac. 825, 104 [397]*397Pac. 281.) Upon the undisputed evidence, Johnson and Mad-son became the owners of lateral No. 3 and the sublateral by virtue of the fact that they constructed them on public land, and as such owners they were entitled to use them, and the extent of their use was of no concern to defendant, in the absence [3] of a showing of abandonment. Evidence of limited use or of nonuser would not alone establish abandonment (Moore v. Sherman, 52 Mont. 542, 159 Pac. 966), and upon this theory of the case, the offered evidence was immaterial.

"While it was permissible for plaintiffs in their complaint to [4, 5] present their claim to these ditches in different counts, each founded upon a different theory to meet the exigencies of the case as disclosed by the evidence (Blankenship v. Decker, 34 Mont. 292, 85 Pac. 1035), it was not possible for them in this instance to maintain both theories, for they are incompatible; yet the court finds that both theories are sustained by the evidence. If lateral No. 3 and the sublateral were constructed by Johnson and Madson over public land, their right to the ditches was confirmed by the government which owned the land; and, in the absence of abandonment, they could not thereafter acquire the same character of title bj adverse user.

Use by a party of his own property is never adverse in the sense that the term “adverse” is employed in the law of prescription. “Adverse possession is the open and hostile possession of land under a claim of title

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
177 P. 756, 55 Mont. 392, 1918 Mont. LEXIS 117, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowry-v-carrier-mont-1918.