O'Hare v. Johnson

153 P.2d 888, 116 Mont. 410, 1944 Mont. LEXIS 47
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 6, 1944
DocketNo. 8415.
StatusPublished
Cited by13 cases

This text of 153 P.2d 888 (O'Hare v. Johnson) 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
O'Hare v. Johnson, 153 P.2d 888, 116 Mont. 410, 1944 Mont. LEXIS 47 (Mo. 1944).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE ADAIR

delivered the opinion of the court.

*412 Plaintiff Ed. O’Hare and defendant Gustave T. Johnson own adjoining farms in the Bitter Root Valley in Ravalli county. The Johnson land lies southeast of the O’Hare land with an east and west county road between. The general slope of the country is from southeast to northwest with the O’Hare land lying lower than the Johnson land.

O’Hare’s land comprises 160 acres which he purchased in 1934. The two west forties then consisted of very poor, wet, undrained alkalied waste land where only alkali grass and salt grass grew, and, extending from the south to the north was a depression or slough which was completely covered with cattails, moss and watercress. Upon taking possession of the farm in the spring of 1935, O’Hare constructed a drain ditch through the west forties and he filled and leveled off the slough and reclaimed and cultivated the land, making it highly productive.

Defendant Gustave Johnson purchased his farm in 1939. It was irrigated by water conducted from the Bitter Root river by means of a large man-made canal formed by the combining of two ditches known as the Surprise and the Supply ditches which run in a northeasterly direction along the easterly or upper side of the Johnson land. Mr. Johnson’s water right calls for 280 inches out of these ditches. To the west of the Surprise and Supply ditches, and running parallel therewith, are two other canals known respectively as the Union and the Aetna and sometimes called the twin ditches. These conduct water from the Bitter Root river and cross the Johnson farm in a northeasterly direction.

The main part of the Johnson farm lies above and to the east of the twin ditches but there is a tract comprising about 66 acres which lies to the west of such ditches. At and prior to the time Mr. Johnson acquired the land, only about four acres of the last-mentioned tract were irrigated but in 1941 defendants decided to drain the tract and to apply irrigation to wash down the soil and clear the land for cultivation. Accordingly, along the west line of said tract, defendant constructed an experimental drain ditch about 3 feet wide, 20 inches deep and half a *413 mile long running northerly from a point near where the Aetna ditch intersects the west line of the land to the northwest corner of the Johnson farm, the northerly terminus being at the southerly side of the county road known as Spooner Lane.

The 40-acre tract which adjoins the Johnson land on the west and the county road on the south is owned by Herbert Garnett. A swale or depression, marking what remains of an old channel of Birch Creek, runs in a northerly direction through the Gar-nett forty and, at a point about 400 feet west of the northwest corner of the Johnson farm, it crosses the county road and enters the south line of the O’Hare farm, continuing until it connects with the south terminus of the O’Hare drain ditch above mentioned. With the development of irrigation and the construction of numerous canals and ditches leading from the Bitter Boot river which intersect the old channel and with the various changes wrought by the construction of the Northern Pacific Bailway’s roadbed and right of way, the old channel of Birch Creek became greatly altered and at places it became completely abandoned and obliterated by being filled in, leveled off and farmed by the upper land owners with holdings lying south of the Garnett land.

The experimental drain ditch along the west line of the Johnson land conducts the waste water from said land northerly to the northwest corner of the Johnson farm from which point the water, following the natural slope of the land, flows westerly along the south side of the county road for a distance of 400 feet where it enters the old channel of Birch Creek and thence flows northerly beneath a bridge which spans the old channel at the county road and from whence it flows upon the O’Hare land.

The experimental drain ditch demonstrated that the 66 acre tract could be drained in the above manner and Mr. Johnson arranged for a man with a power shovel to construct a drain ditch following the course of the experimental ditch and, from the northern terminus thereof to construct a second ditch running 400 feet westerly paralleling the north boundary of the *414 Garnett forty. This ditch was to receive all the waste water from the entire drainage system at a point about 50 feet south of the south line of the O’Hare farm and where it would flow northerly upon and over the O’Hare farm and fill his drain ditch with much more water than it could possibly carry.

By means of a flume across the Union and Aetna ditches, Mr. Johnson conducts his 280 inches of water out of the Surprise and Supply ditches for use in irrigating his westerly 66 acre tract. To rid his own land of this large quantity of foreign water conducted from the Bitter Root river, Mr. Johnson requires the aforesaid drain ditches which, if constructed, would carry and discharge such waste water upon the farm of Mr. O’Hare. The evidence shows that it would be both possible and feasible for Mr. Johnson to conduct his waste water across the old channel of Birch Creek and thence westerly to a ditch now in use along the east side of the Northern Pacific Railway right of way, thus entirely avoiding the O’Hare farm.

The plaintiff commenced this action to restrain the defendant owner Gustave T. Johnson and his manager and brother, Oscar Johnson, from constructing the proposed drainage ditch until they shall have provided an outlet for same other than upon the O’Hare farm.

A trial was had and the court made written findings of fact and conclusions pursuant to which a decree was entered for plaintiff, enjoining defendants from collecting irrigation or drainage water on their lands and discharging same where they would flow onto the lands of the plaintiff. From such decree the defendants have appealed.

Defendants attack the sufficiency of the complaint. They assign error in the overruling of their general demurrer to the complaint and in overruling their objection to the introduction of evidence. The complaint describes the respective tracts owned by plaintiff and defendants and then alleges:

“III. That the general slope of these lands are to the northward, and the lands of the defendants above named are seeped and their use until the present date, has been as a pasture *415 and that no irrigation has been practiced thereon. That the defendants are now engaged in constructing a drainage ditch along the west line of the above described lands, by which it is intended to drain the same, and in order to produce crops thereon, it will be necessary, and the defendants intend to irrigate said lands, and spread thereon water from a foreign source to-wit: from a ditch conveying water from the Bitter Root River, and this ditch will be used to carry and convey the waste water from such irrigation to a point north of the north line of defendants’ lands above described, and that no outlet is provided for such water at such point, and that said water will flow onto the lands of plaintiff to his damage.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
153 P.2d 888, 116 Mont. 410, 1944 Mont. LEXIS 47, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ohare-v-johnson-mont-1944.