MacLay v. Missoula Irrigation District

3 P.2d 286, 90 Mont. 344
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedSeptember 23, 1931
DocketNo. 6,784.
StatusPublished
Cited by31 cases

This text of 3 P.2d 286 (MacLay v. Missoula Irrigation District) 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
MacLay v. Missoula Irrigation District, 3 P.2d 286, 90 Mont. 344 (Mo. 1931).

Opinion

MR. 'JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

By action filed April 7, 1927, Harry D. Maclay sought to recover damages suffered by reason of alleged wrongful de *347 privation of water for irrigation of Ms crops in the month of July, 1923, and, by a second count, to enjoin the defendant district from interfering with his use of water from the “Miller-Kelley-Cave-Gannon Consolidated Ditch” on lands within the Fort Missoula Military Reserve held under lease, and from charging to Mm and collecting from Mm any portion of the cost of maintenance and operation of the irrigation district. In his complaint plaintiff joins numerous individuals, being the officers of the irrigation district, as defendants.

By answer the defendants denied the material allegations of the complaint, alleged certain statutes of limitations, and affirmatively pleaded that plaintiff is estopped from denying the right of the irrigation district to operate and administer the affairs of the ditch in question, and that plaintiff, during the period for which he claims damages, was taking water in excess of the amount to which he was entitled and using it upon lands outside the district, thereby depriving other owners of water to which they were rightfully entitled.

At the close of plaintiff’s case the court granted a motion for nonsuit as to each of the individual defendants and, after submission of the cause, made findings against plaintiff and in favor of the irrigation district on all issues presented, and thereon judgment on the merits against plaintiff and in favor of the defendant district was duly entered.

Plaintiff has appealed from the judgment; he makes twelve assignments of error, general in their nature, which raise but the questions hereinafter discussed.

The record presents several novel problems in irrigation and water right law; it contains substantial evidence as to the following facts: Prior to 1902 numerous owners of arid land in the vicinity of the city of Missoula appropriated, in the usual manner, sufficient water from the Missoula River for their irrigation. These appropriators constructed a joint canal of sufficient capacity to carry the total amount of their several appropriations from the river to a point from which all could be served, and thereafter each diverted water from the main canal through an individual ditch, or a ditch serving two or *348 more water owners, as though diverting water from a natural stream. This system received various designations and finally became known as the “Miller-Kelley-Cave-Gannon Consolidated Ditch,” the diversions from which were given the names of the owners but were finally designated as laterals to the main by letter; thus, by way of illustration: the “Garret Ditch,” which figures prominently in this action, became “Lateral F.” Certain of these laterals were again divided and the branches designated by figures, as for example, “Lateral H” and “Lateral H-l.” It is reasonably clear that each water owner acquired a proprietary interest in this irrigation system up to the point at which he diverted his water, but had no interest therein below that point.

Prior to 1905 much of the land for which these appropriations were made was platted into additions to the city of Missoula and subdivisions of five-acre tracts known as “Orchard Homes,” and with the sale of each lot or tract was conveyed water for its irrigation at the rate of one inch to the acre. In this manner the number of owners of water rights and interests in the irrigation system was increased to approximately 250.

In 1901 one Samuel Dinsmore appropriated 2,000 inches of the waters of the Missoula River for use upon certain designated lands through the irrigation system described and the following year conveyed certain of his holdings, with 500 inches of the water included in such appropriation, to the R. M. Cobban Realty Company. This land was platted and certain lots sold, and thereafter the realty company transferred the balance of its holdings, with 465 inches of water, to E. B. Weirick, trustee.

In 1905 Weirick and others commenced an action in the district court of Missoula county for the adjudication of the rights of all owners of rights in the waters carried through the canal and laterals, which action resulted in a consent decree fixing the rights of the numerous owners as of the date set opposite their names. Weirick was decreed 465 inches as of the date of the Dinsmore appropriation; others, holding *349 under original appropriations or transfers thereof, received like dating, while those holding title to the subdivided lots and tracts were accorded priority as of the date of their deeds. After disposing of all of the designated rights, the court declared: “Samuel Dinsmore is entitled to the balance of the water remaining in said ditch.” This action is designated “Cause No. 2500.”

In 1909 Weirick, trustee, conveyed numerous lots in the “R. M. Cobban Orchard Homes,” together with 368 inches of the waters of the irrigation system and ditch rights to one Fred McDonald. This subdivision is in sections 29 and 32 of township 13 north of range 20 west. McDonald conveyed a portion of his holdings, with 150 inches of the water, to the “Car Line Company.”

In 1920 plaintiff purchased from McDonald 20 inches of water without purchasing land to which it was appurtenant, and, in April, 1922, purchased in like manner 25 inches of water theretofore appurtenant to five lots in “ Dinsmore’s Orchard Homes No. 4.” He also purchased lots 91 and 92 of the “Humble Orchard Homes,” with 10 inches of water appurtenant thereto.

Each year subsequent to the entry of the decree above mentioned the district court appointed water commissioners, authorized to distribute the waters of the irrigation system in conformity to the decree in cause No. 2500, as though the decree dealt in its entirety with appropriations from a natural source, up to and including the year 1922.

For the years 1921, 1922, and 1923 plaintiff held lands in section 25, township 13 north of range 19 west and section 30 in township 13 north of range 20 west, being a part of the Fort Missoula Military Reserve, under lease from the War Department, and, in 1921 and 1922, used water from the irrigation system for their partial cultivation, with the consent of the water commissioner.

In 1922 the great majority of the owners of water rights and proportionate interests in the canal and laterals again attempting to apply statutory provisions enacted with reference *350 to natural streams, petitioned the court for the establishment of the defendant irrigation district. All owners, but plaintiff and some ten or twelve others, consented. All steps necessary for the creation of such district were regularly taken and the district was duly created and regularly organized. The decree establishing the district provides “that the operation, maintenance and complete administration of the Miller-Kelley-Cave-Gannon Consolidated Ditch, heretofore administered in the case of Weirick et al. v. Marcia Finley, Case No. 2500 of this court, is conferred upon said Missoula Irrigation District,” and the order theretofore appointing a water commissioner under that decree was revoked.

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Bluebook (online)
3 P.2d 286, 90 Mont. 344, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/maclay-v-missoula-irrigation-district-mont-1931.