Rock Creek Ditch & Flume Co. v. Miller

17 P.2d 1074, 93 Mont. 248, 89 A.L.R. 200, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 1
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1933
DocketNo. 6,955.
StatusPublished
Cited by44 cases

This text of 17 P.2d 1074 (Rock Creek Ditch & Flume Co. v. Miller) 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
Rock Creek Ditch & Flume Co. v. Miller, 17 P.2d 1074, 93 Mont. 248, 89 A.L.R. 200, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 1 (Mo. 1933).

Opinion

*254 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

This is an appeal by plaintiff from a judgment in favor of defendants. The plaintiff, a corporation, was organized principally to supply water to its stockholders who owned irrigable lands in the Trout Creek Yalley in Granite county, but under its articles of incorporation it has ample power to appropriate, acquire, sell and otherwise dispose of water. Pursuant to its primary purpose, the plaintiff, in 1914, constructed a ditch, or canal, seven miles in length, running from the east fork of Rock Creek over the ridge which separates the Rock Creek and Trout Creek watersheds, into' the Trout Creek basin, where plaintiff sold water conveyed by the canal to its stockholders for irrigation, among others the Messrs. Mungas, who owned section 12, T. 5 N., R. 15 W., upon which the canal terminates; water is there delivered to the Mungas ditches and used upon that section.

Wyman, or Pool, Creek has always been a natural stream, with well-defined banks, having its sources in section 7, T. 5 N., R. 14W., and in sections 1 and 12, T. 5 N., R. 15 W. This stream is tributary to Trout Creek for a short period during high water, but after that its waters, if not taken from the stream, sink and are lost.

In 1906 P. S. Carey appropriated 25 inches of the waters of Wyman Creek for irrigating his lands in section 8, adjoining section 7.

The court found the Millers, defendants, appropriated 120 inches of the waters of Wyman Creek as of date May 1, 1911, by means of a ditch tapping the stream in section 5, T. 5 N., *255 R. 14 W., and running thence to their lands in section 32, T. 6 N., R. 14 W. This finding is attacked on several grounds, but none is tenable. That the Millers did dig their ditch and thereby appropriate water from Wyman Creek, which they used immediately upon their lands about the date fixed (the exact date being immaterial here), there can be no doubt; nor under the fact conditions is the amount fixed material to this decision.

In section 7 the principal feeder of Wyman Creek is a spring, which is a material factor in this controversy.

The Mungas people, in 1914, began irrigating their lands in section 12 with water from the Rock Creek canal. Two years later the flow of the above-mentioned spring began to increase materially. While there is considerable argument in the brief of counsel for the Millers against the assertion, we think it is reasonably certain, as plaintiff contends, that the increase resulted from the use of Rock Creek water employed in irrigating section 12. This increase came to the spring by underground seepage, percolation, none of it through a surface channel. The canal ends a mile from the spring, and there is not any ditch which brings Rock Creek water anywhere near the spring or Wyman Creek. If, as seems probable, water, originally diverted from Rock Creek, enters the spring, it does so after the Mungas people have purchased the use of it from plaintiff and have used it for the irrigation of section 12.

Doubtless there were other accessions to Wyman Creek from seepage; the evidence indicates that its sources of supply in sections 1 and 12 were also increased by irrigation upon section 12.

Neither the plaintiff nor any of its officers or stockholders have made, or attempted to make, any appropriation of the waters of Wyman Creek or its tributaries. John Hickey, a stockholder, is the owner of section 7, having acquired it in 1927, although beginning with 1925 he had possessed it under a lease for pasturage purposes. He purchased shares of stock in the corporation from George Mungas in November, *256 1926, and, while they were negotiating respecting the transfer of the stock, they discussed the feasibility of taking water out of Wyman Creek by means of a ditch which would cover a considerable portion of section 7. Hickey did not attempt to use any of the waters of Wyman Creek until 1928, when he, in co-operation with the Messrs. Mungas, constructed a ditch leading from the spring to his adjacent lands, by means of which he would have taken all its waters (although doubtless he would have respected the prior right of Carey, whose ditch diverts from Wyman Creek), if he had not been interfered with by the defendants Miller; they tore out his dam and prevented his use of the water, which occasioned this lawsuit.

Incidentally, it does not appear that any contract was made, or understanding had, between the plaintiff and Hickey respecting the construction of this ditch or the use of the water to be diverted thereby; what was done was the result of an understanding, or an arrangement, between Hickey and the Mungases, stockholders of the plaintiff.

Plaintiff’s theory is that by bringing Eock Creek water into the Trout Creek watershed it has created a new source of supply therein; that the Eock Creek water, after its use by irrigation, by percolation has increased greatly the flow of the spring in section 7, and has otherwise increased the flow of Wyman Creek; that through its stockholder Hickey, who built a ditch on his land “at its instance,” plaintiff “recaptured” this “excess” of water for the use and benefit of its stockholders. Plaintiff’s counsel say: “It is the contention of the plaintiff that it at all times has been entitled to the use for sale to its customers and stockholders of all the water brought into the basin and that the same has never been the proper subject of appropriation by the defendants, since it has never constituted a part of the natural flow of any stream. ’ ’

But plaintiff’s principal premise is not sound. Without reference to the right of a land owner to control underground water upon his own land, when it joins a natural stream it *257 becomes a part of that stream and is publici juris. This comes down by gradations from the civil law doctrine of “the negative community.”

The classification of running water with what has been called “the negative community” runs through both civil and common-law jurisprudence. In the Institutes of Justinian it is said: “By natural law these things are common to all, viz.: air, running water, the sea, and as a consequence the shores of the sea.” Pothier, the learned French jurist, wrote of the civil law doctrine: “The first of mankind had in common all those things which God had given to the human race. This community was not a positive community of interest, like that which exists between several persons who have the ownership of a thing in which each has his particular portion. It is a community which those who have written on this subject have called a negative community, which resulted from the fact that those things which were common to all belonged no more to one than to the others.” Pothier then lists as among those things belonging to the negative community the air, water which runs in the rivers, the sea and its shores, and animals ferae naturae. (1 Wiel on Water Rights, 3d ed., sec. 2.)

The Romans included running water in the term “res communes.” The civil law principle that running water is in the “negative community” passed into the common law. (Wiel, Id., sec.

Free access — add to your briefcase to read the full text and ask questions with AI

Related

Montana v. Wyoming
563 U.S. 368 (Supreme Court, 2011)
Hidden Hollow Ranch v. Fields
2004 MT 153 (Montana Supreme Court, 2004)
Department of Ecology v. United States Bureau of Reclamation
827 P.2d 275 (Washington Supreme Court, 1992)
Northport Irrigation District v. Jess
337 N.W.2d 733 (Nebraska Supreme Court, 1983)
Reynolds v. City of Roswell
654 P.2d 537 (New Mexico Supreme Court, 1982)
Fuss v. Franks
610 P.2d 17 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1980)
Holmstrom Land Co. v. Meagher County Newlan Creek Water District
605 P.2d 1060 (Montana Supreme Court, 1979)
Tweedy v. Texas Company
286 F. Supp. 383 (D. Montana, 1968)
Keller v. Magic Water Company
441 P.2d 725 (Idaho Supreme Court, 1968)
McGowan v. United States
206 F. Supp. 439 (D. Montana, 1962)
Lone Star Gas Company v. Murchison
353 S.W.2d 870 (Court of Appeals of Texas, 1962)
United States v. 31.07 ACRES OF LAND, ETC.
189 F. Supp. 845 (D. Montana, 1960)
Forrester v. Rock Island Oil & Refining Co.
323 P.2d 597 (Montana Supreme Court, 1958)
Jones v. Hanson
320 P.2d 1007 (Montana Supreme Court, 1958)
City of Corpus Christi v. City of Pleasanton
276 S.W.2d 798 (Texas Supreme Court, 1955)
Midkiff v. Kincheloe
263 P.2d 976 (Montana Supreme Court, 1953)
West Edmond Salt Water Disposal Ass'n v. Rosecrans
226 P.2d 965 (Supreme Court of Oklahoma, 1951)
Perkins v. Kramer
198 P.2d 475 (Montana Supreme Court, 1948)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
17 P.2d 1074, 93 Mont. 248, 89 A.L.R. 200, 1933 Mont. LEXIS 1, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rock-creek-ditch-flume-co-v-miller-mont-1933.