Mielke v. Daly Ditches Irrigation D

CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 16, 1987
Docket85-617
StatusPublished

This text of Mielke v. Daly Ditches Irrigation D (Mielke v. Daly Ditches Irrigation D) 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
Mielke v. Daly Ditches Irrigation D, (Mo. 1987).

Opinion

IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA

PERCY A. MLELKE and DEBORAH G. MIELKE , Plaintiff and Respondents,

DALY DITCHES IRRIGATION DISTRICT AND BOARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF DA.LY DITCHES IRRIGATION DISTRICT, Defendants and Appellants,

DALY DITCHES IRRIGATION DISTRICT AND ROARD OF COMMISSIONERS OF DALY DITCHES IRRIGATION DISTRICT, Third-Party Plaintiffs and Appellants,

THE STATE OF MONTANA and DEPARTMENT OF NATURAL RESCURCES AND CONSERVATION OF THE STATE OF MONTANA, Third-Party Defendznts and Appellants.

APPEAL FROM: District Court of the Fourth Judicial District, In and for the County of Ravalli, The Honorable Douglas Harkin, Judge presiding.

COUNSEL OF RECOFD: For Appellant: Larry Persson argued for Daly Ditches, Hamilton, Montana Candace West argued for Dept. Natural Resources, Helena, Montana For Respondent : Jeffrey H. Langton argued for Mielke, Hamilton, Montana

Submitted: December 9 , 198N

Decided: January 1 6 , 1 9 8 7

Filed: JAN 16 1987 Mr. Justice John C. Sheehy delivered the Opinion of the Court.

The Daly Ditches Irrigation District, the State of Montana and the Department of Natural Resources and Conservation (DNRC) of the State of Montana appeal herein from a final decision of the District Court, Fourth Judicial District, County of Ravalli, which held that the plaintiffs Percy and Deborah Mielke have a first priority water right for irrigation from Gird Creek on the basis of adverse use. We determine under the facts of this case that the Mielkes have failed to establish the requisite elements to acquire the prescriptive water right which was accorded to them by the District Court. The plaintiffs Mielkes are residents of Ravalli County, Montana, and own farm lands of which 98.44 acres produce crops by irrigation. They obtained irrigation water through a lateral ditch owned by them and a headgate on Gird Creek which diverted water from the creek through their lateral. Gird Creek is a part of the Daly Ditch Irrigation District system. In July, 1983, the Daly Ditches Irrigation District locked the headgate through which Mielkes diverted water from Gird Creek to irrigate their lands. This caused the Mielkes to commence an action in District Court against the defendant Dal-y Ditches Irrigation District. In their complaint, the Mielkes alleged that they were the owners by appropriation of 200 inches of water from Gird Creek and they asked for an

injunction against the inference by the District with their water right. The District filed its answer, generally denying the allegations of the complaint, pleading affirmatively that the water rights have been transferred by a predecessor so as to sever the water rights from the land and counterclaiming against. the Mielkes for fees for the 1983 irrigating season. The Mielkes responded to the counterclaim and affirmative defenses by general denial, and by alleging affirmatively that they had an adverse use right to irrigation water for 98.44 acres. The Mielkes further contended that Contract No. 90, which provided water to the Mielkes at the rate of $1.25 per acre-foot was perpetual in its terms and that the State had wrongfully raised the fees during the period the State operated the project. The State of Montana and the DMRC were brought into the action as third party defendants by the District on a claim of indemnity. The Daly Ditches Irrigation District (sometimes referred to as the Daly Ditch Project) is a water project located in Ravalli County. The project consists of several irrigation ditches and systems designed to supply water to irrigable lands near Hamilton, Montana, on the east side of the Bitterroot River. Historically, the Daly Ditch Project came into existence as a result of the acquisition of lands and water rights around the turn of the century by the Butte copper king, Marcus Daly. Mielkes' present farm lands were first described as part of lands passing by patents issued to Winfield Sherrill and Jacob Sherrill, dated 1889 and 1895, respectively. In 1888, Jacob Sherrill filed in the county records a notice of appropriation for 600 miner's inches of water from Gird Creek, claiming an original appropriation date of 1864. In June, 1890, Winfield Sherrill and the Estate of Jacob Sherrill conveyed title to the land with the appropriated water right to James C. Flanner. In September, 1890, Flanner conveyed title to the land and the water right to James W. Hamilton. Hamilton, in turn, conveyed the same to Marcus Daly in October, 1890. In December, 1901, the Estate of Marcus Daly conveyed the various ditch and water rights acquired during Daly's lifetime (includ-ingthe waters of Gird Creek) to Ravalli Land and Irrigation Company. On the same date, the estate conveyed many parcels of land (including what is now the Mielkes' property) to Ritterroot Stock Farm, another corporation. The land deed to Bitterroot Stock Farm specifically excepted and reserved therefrom all water rights, water ditches and rights-of-way for ditches which attached to or were part of the lands conveyed. In legal effect, then, Daly's lands were conveyed to the Bitterroot Stock Farm. The water rights, ditches and easements for ditches, which were formerly held by Daly a.s appurtenant to the lands were separated and conveyed to Ravalli Land and Irrigation Company. In 1920 and 1934, John Kalberer (Mielkes' predecessor in interest) purchased land from the Ritterroot Stock Farm. At the same time, he also entered into water contracts with the Ra-valli Land and Irrigation Company for the purchase of water to irrigate his purchased lands. The water contracts were designated as Contract or Account No. 90. In 1946, Mielkes purchased the lands from Kalberer, and took from him an assignment of Contract No. 90 for the irrigation water. Mielkes currently irrigate 98.44 acres. Under Contract No. 90 with Ravalli Land and Irrigation Company, Mielkes purchased (after Plielkes sold off 10 acres) water to irrigate 50 acres. While Kalberer was still the owner of the lands, in 1943, Ravalli Land and Irrigation Company had conveyed all of its right, title and interest in its water rights, d.itches, easements, headgates and other structures to the State of Montana. The State, under the Water Conservation Board (now DNRC) took over all the water company's water contracts as part of the Daly Ditch Project. The State had come into the picture as a part of a depression-era effort to establish public work programs through the encouragement of construction of public works. On April 23, 1943, Ravalli Land and Irrigation Company executed a deed, dated October I-, 1942, conveying all of the Ravalli Land and Irrigation Company's right, title and interest in the Daly Ditch project to the State Water Conservation Board. From that date, the Water Conservation Board, and its successor DNRC, undertook operation of the Daly Ditch Water Project and continued to perform the water contracts with purchasers such as Mielkes through the 1982 irrigation season. Prior to 1942, the Estate of Margaret Daly (holder of about 1,250 acres) and the Bitterroot Stock Farm (holder of about 2,700 acres), as successors in interest of Marcus Daly, had not contracted with Ravalli Land and Irrigation Company for the purchase of water though these holders had continued to use water from the project on lands not sold by the Stock Farm. At the time of the take-over by the State and. prior thereto, the Estate of Margaret Daly and the Bitterroot Stock Farm negotiated contracts with Ravalli Land and Irrigation Company similar to the water purchase contracts held by other water users on the project beginning February 1, 1942. This project was the only state-owned water project that the State directly operated, maintained and repaired.

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