Rentfro v. Dettwiler

26 P.2d 992, 95 Mont. 391, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 143
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedNovember 17, 1933
DocketNo. 7,121.
StatusPublished
Cited by16 cases

This text of 26 P.2d 992 (Rentfro v. Dettwiler) 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
Rentfro v. Dettwiler, 26 P.2d 992, 95 Mont. 391, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 143 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

The defendant, Rudolph Dettwiler, has appealed from a decree in favor of thé plaintiffs J. C. and Catherine Rentfro, *393 declaring that the plaintiffs and. the defendant have equal rights in a certain irrigating ditch, and enjoining the defendant from interfering with the equal use of the ditch by the plaintiffs.

In June, 1931, the plaintiffs brought action against the defendant by filing a complaint in which certain lands, owned by the plaintiffs and the defendant, respectively, are described, and in which it is alleged that on or about the twenty-fifth day of April, 1922, the plaintiffs and the defendant jointly made an appropriation of 150 inches each of the waters of the Jocko River in Lake county, by means of a ditch 20 inches deep and 60 inches wide, running from the river to and across the lands of the defendant and then to and upon the lands of the plaintiffs. It is then alleged that the parties jointly maintained the ditch and used the appropriated water through the same up to April, 1931, when the defendant obstructed the ditch by means of dams placed therein, and prevented the plaintiffs from using the water through it.

The defendant interposed a general demurrer to the complaint, which was overruled, and then filed a general denial of the allegations of the complaint.

On the trial the defendant first objected to the introduction of any evidence on the ground that the complaint does not state a cause of action, and thereafter repeatedly objected to questions propounded, on the ground that an interest in land cannot be established by parol testimony. These objections form the bases of defendant’s fifteen assignments of error, whieh are here argued from the premise that the defendant but gave the plaintiffs permission to use his ditch, which permission was a mere license, revocable at will, and which was revoked in April, 1931.

The facts disclosed by the testimony are substantially as follows: The land involved is on the Flathead Indian Reservation, in Lake county. For a period of years, beginning in 1919 and ending in 1925, the defendant had leased and resided upon the east half of the northwest quarter of section 35, township 17 north, range 20 west, known as the Callahan *394 place. In 1919 lie purchased, at an “Indian sale,” the west half of the quarter-section, an “Indian allotment.” The Jocko River, flowing in a southwesterly direction, cuts the southeast corner of the Callahan land and, after clearing the remainder of the quarter-section, flows in a northwesterly direction through portions of section 35 and section 27, cutting the southwest corner of the northeast quarter of that section.

There had existed on the Callahan-Dettwiler quarter-section, from a time prior to the opening of the reservation to settlement, a small ditch, made by running one or two plow furrows. This ditch tapped the Jocko and ran in a northwesterly direction across the Callahan and Dettwiler land to a point just south of Dettwiler’s north line. Dettwiler appropriated the ditch to his own use and, by diverting water from the river, put approximately 33 acres of land under cultivation.

In the spring of 1921 the plaintiffs acquired the west half of the northeast quarter of section 27, and, with the assistance of a surveyor, J. C. Rentfro was seeking to locate a line for a ditch from the river at some point within the intervening half mile between the south line and defendant’s north line, when he met Dettwiler in friendly converse. Dettwiler told Rentfro that he could not maintain a ditch on that low ground, as the river would wash it out every spring, and advised him to build on the ridge to the east and connect with the end of his ditch. The two are not in accord as to just what was said with reference to the use of the old ditch. Dettwiler’s testimony is that he said: “To accommodate you for the present you can just connect with my ditch and it will be all right,” and “if you connect with my ditch and keep up the ditch through my place to the Callahan place, * * * it would be all right.” Rentfro’s testimony is that Dettwiler “suggested that I come up through his place with a ditch; there was no question of the time limit or anything like that; # # * he just simply told me I might go up through his *395 place with the ditch. * * * I considered it a friendly act. ’ ’

That year, 1921, Rentfro constructed his ditch from the end of the ditch on Dettwiler’s land to his land, and irrigated a certain portion of his 80 acres by means of the water thus obtained.

In 1922 both parties desired to bring additional land under cultivation. There was an abundance of water available, but the Dettwiler ditch would not carry sufficient water for the enlarged use by either party. In April the parties joined in executing and filing a notice of the appropriation of 300 inches of the waters of the river, or 150 inches for each, which notice recites that the appropriation was to be made by means of a ditch 60 inches wide and 20 inches deep, and that the appropriated claim the ditch and the right of way therefor from the point of diversion to the point of final discharge. Working together, the appropriators forthwith constructed a ditch of the designated dimensions on the line of the old ditch, or enlarged the old ditch to those dimensions, and thereafter constructed a permanent double headgate at the point of diversion from lumber furnished by Rentfro, and later still ran a wing-dam out into the river, again by the use of lumber furnished by Rentfro.

In 1925 Dettwiler built a house on his land, moved thereto and gave up the Callahan place, which was leased for 1925, 1926 and 1927, to Evan J. Williams, and was in 1928 sold to J. A. Hunt. While in possession of the Callahan place, Dettwiler increased the irrigated acreage on his land and irrigated tracts on each 80 acres from the ditch. During his tenancy Williams assisted Dettwiler and Rentfro in the work on the headgate, and he and Rentfro ran a ditcher the full length of the ditch.

When Hunt was investigating as to the advisability of purchasing the Callahan place, he consulted Dettwiler as to the availability of water, and was told by Dettwiler that “there was three that was interested in the ditch — Callahan, Dettwiler and Rentfro.” Neither Callahan nor his tenant or sue *396 eessor made any objection to Rentfro’s activities in enlarging, improving, and using the ditch, and it was used as a triparty ditch up to April, 1931, when Dettwiler contending that Rent-fro used the ditch in such manner as to cause his lands to be flooded, cut the ditch at the lower end of his place and deprived Rentfro of its further use.

The defendant adduced some evidence to the effect that, in 1926, Rentfro had sought to find a new line for a ditch without crossing the Dettwiler plaee, and that later a ditch had been constructed by the government under the Flathead irrigation project, which would serve Rentfro. The defendant contends that the parties had this ditch in contemplation at the time Dettwiler gave Rentfro permission to tie onto his ditch, having in mind the termination of Rentfro’s license on the completion of such a ditch.

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Bluebook (online)
26 P.2d 992, 95 Mont. 391, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 143, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rentfro-v-dettwiler-mont-1933.