McCafferty v. Young

397 P.2d 96, 144 Mont. 385, 1964 Mont. LEXIS 140
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 19, 1964
Docket10662
StatusPublished
Cited by9 cases

This text of 397 P.2d 96 (McCafferty v. Young) 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
McCafferty v. Young, 397 P.2d 96, 144 Mont. 385, 1964 Mont. LEXIS 140 (Mo. 1964).

Opinion

*387 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JAMES T. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

Plaintiff brought an action to quiet title and defendants appeal from an amended judgment entered following trial before the court.

The ease arises out of a boundary line dispute between two ranchers. The plaintiff-respondent’s ranch lies generally to the west of the North Fork of the Sun River, and the defendant-appellant’s ranch lies generally to the east. The complaint was filed February 14, 1961, after several river bank arguments concerning the location of fences separating the ranches.

The area of conflict lies in Sections 7, 17, and 18 in Township 21 North, Range 6 West M.P.M. in Lewis and Clark and Teton counties. Originally, before 1942, one Christian A. Peterson owned the land comprising the two ranches. In 1942, Peterson sold the part of the ranch lying roughly to the west of the river to Woessner, a predecessor of plaintiff McCafferty. Then by contract for deed in 1944, Peterson sold the other segment lying to the east of the river to defendant Young.

It is the contention of the defendant that the center of the river as presently located is the boundary between the two ranches. This contention is made on the basis of testimony that Peterson, Woessner, Woessner’s successor (Knudson), Young, and even plaintiff, all considered the river as presently located as the boundary between the two ranches, and that each acted accordingly. The plaintiff contends that the documentary exhibits do not support this argument, but that the clear import of these instruments indicates that the county line was intended to be the boundary.

The problem may be resolved by reference to the instruments, the statutory descriptions of Lewis and Clark and Teton county, and to the law of avulsion and accretion.

Lewis and Clark County was established in 1871 by legislative act (Territorial Legislature, Statutes of 1871, Section 6 p. 430; presently, section 16-225, R.C.M.1947). At that time the county *388 line was described to run along tbe “Sun River on tbe most northerly branch thereof.” Likewise, Teton County, when established in 1893 (Laws of 1893, p. 205; presently, section 16-252, R.C.M.1947) was described to border along Lewis and Clark County by “meandering and following the center of the channel of the north fork of the Sun River.”

The conveyances from Peterson to Woessner or to Young were not introduced into evidence by either party, but the conveyance from Knudson (Woessner’s grantee) to McCafferty was introduced. The contract for deed between Peterson and Young of the other half of the Peterson ranch was introduced and complements the Knudson deed. We take it that the court below referred to the Knudson deed in order to ascertain what Peterson had originally conveyed to Woessner because the Knudson deed and the Young contract together cover all the land along the river in the area in dispute, and, therefore, the original conveyances by Peterson must have contained the same descriptions. Only by such deduction can an intelligible study of the case on appeal be made.

The Young contract recites that Peterson would convey: “the lot, piece, or parcel of ground situated in the county of Teton and State of Montana, known and described as [several sections not in dispute are described, along with the ones in issue, as follows:] Pt. N% SE, SE, SE of Sec 7, Twp. 21, Rge 6 * * * Pt. SW SW * * * of Sec. 8, Twp. 21, Rge. 6 * * * E% NW, Pt. Wi/2 NW * * * of Sec. 17, Twp. 21, Rge. 6.” (Emphasis supplied.)

The Knudson to McCafferty deed recites that conveyance is made of “the hereinafter described real estate, situated in the County of Lewis and Clark, and State of Montana, to-wit: [the disputed sections, as follows:] * * * and all that part of the SE14 situated in Lewis and Clark Coimty Section 7 * * * and all that part of W% NW % * * * situated in Lewis and Clark County, Montana Section 17 * * * and all that part of *389 the NE% situated in Lewis and Clark County, Montana Section 18.” (Emphasis supplied.)

When these two descriptions are sketched out on a map showing both the present channel of the river and the 1871 channel it is seen that the descriptions make sense only by using the old channel as the boundary between the two grants. Were the new channel used, the northeast part of Section 18 would not be described in any instrument.

To illustrate, the following sketch depicts the old channel and present channel in the area in question.

The county line show by the dotted line . The old ehan- shown by the dotted line. The old ehan *390 nel of 1871 is depicted by tbe parallel broken lines and the present channel by the broken dotted line.

The two instruments referred to show that the MeCafferty deed was of land situated in Lewis and Clark County, and the Young contract was of land situated in Teton County, with the exception of two small tracts of land not in issue. Therefore, in light of both the legal descriptions of the parcels and the language of the instruments it appear that the county boundary is the division between the two ranches, with the exception of the two small parcels. The issue, therefore, is whether the county line remains in the center of the channel of the river as it existed in 1871. William R. Bandy, a civil engineer for more than half a century, prepared a survey of the area in 1960 upon request of Lewis and Clark County, which request was precipitated by this dispute. That survey shows the location of the river both before and after an alleged 1918 flood. In 1871, the river flowed south in the W% E% of the SE% of Section 7, then it turned east and north into the SW% SW% of Section 8, then south through the E% W% of Section 17. Sometime after 1871, allegedly in 1918, the river switched its course and flowed straight south out of the SE^ SE"i4 of Section 7, then turned east through NE% NE% of Section 18, and rejoined the former channel in the middle of the NW% of Section 17. As shown by the sketch, is is seen that the river formerly looped from Section 7 to Section 8 and then south to Section 17, but that it later changed course and flowed from Section 7, into Section 18, and then east into Section 17.

Plaintiff asserts that the relocation of the river was due to flood conditions occurring in 1918, and contends that the river flows in the new channel because of that avulsive change. If the evidence bears this contention out then the county line lies in the former channel as depicted in the Bandy Survey. We said in Bode v. Rollwitz, 60 Mont. 481, 493, 199 P. 688, 692, that, “Where the channel of a river is sud *391 denly and sensibly changed * * * so that the old channel is abandoned, except in high water, and a new channel formed, no change in the boundary or ownership of land riparian owners is worked thereby.” This is the law governing avulsive changes, and in the Bode case the court reviews the several authorities supporting the rule. See also, 56 Am. Jur., Waters, § 477, p. 892.

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Bluebook (online)
397 P.2d 96, 144 Mont. 385, 1964 Mont. LEXIS 140, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/mccafferty-v-young-mont-1964.