St. Onge v. Blakely

245 P. 532, 76 Mont. 1, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 77
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 19, 1926
DocketNo. 5,820.
StatusPublished
Cited by41 cases

This text of 245 P. 532 (St. Onge v. Blakely) 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
St. Onge v. Blakely, 245 P. 532, 76 Mont. 1, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 77 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

*8 MR. JUSTICE MATTHEWS

delivered the opinion of the court.

This action was commenced by F. L. St. Onge and Eliza St. Onge against Charles U. Blakely, Lynnie F. Boyce and the city of Butte to obtain a decree fixing and- determining the rights of the respective parties in and to the waters of Blacktail Deer Creek in Silver Bow county. The stream flows successively through the lands of Blakely, Thompson Park, owned by the city, the lands of Boyce, and lastly through the lands owned by the plaintiffs. The pleadings are in the usual form in such actions and allege ownership of fertile but semi-arid lands and the continued use thereon of the amount of water claimed by each of the respective parties since the date of appropriation, and set out the alleged rights of the claimants as follows:

The plaintiffs claim the right to the use^of 150 inches of the waters of the stream by virtue of an appropriation made by *9 their predecessors in interest on January 26, 1877. Defendant Blakely claims the right to the use of. 140 inches of the waters of said stream, appropriated by his predecessors in interest on June 1, 1889, and as a second cause of action claims the prior right to the use of such water by adverse user and prescription dating from the year 1892, and, in this connection, alleges that the rights of all the other parties to the suit are, as to him, barred by the statute of limitations. Defendant Boyce claims rights initiated by appropriation (1) by Maxine Virnoche, November 15, 1878; (2) by J. A. Cosby in the year 1878; (3) by John H. Curtis, Green Majors and James E. Boyce, July 8, 1885; and (4) by this defendant on September 9, 1891, which last appropriation is for 1,000 inches and includes all former appropriations. The city of Butte claims the right to use 150 inches of the water of said stream by virtue of an appropriation made by its predecessors in interest in the year 1869.

Each of the defendants alleges that, if any right was initiated by the predecessors in interest of the plaintiffs, such right was-abandoned and lost by nonuser between 1882 “and the middle nineties.” By stipulation filed, all parties agreed that the “affirmative allegation of each party should be deemed denied by the remaining parties.”

At the close of the trial each party requested the court to make written findings and submitted proposed findings of fact, and thereafter the court made and filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law, and, at the same time, made and entered its decree awarding to the several parties to the action the following rights:

(1) To the plaintiffs jointly, 87 miner’s inches of the waters of Blacktail Deer Creek and its tributaries, for use upon the lands described in the complaint, as of August 17, 1885, “prior and superior to the use thereof of each and all of the defendants.”

(2) To the defendant Lynnie F. Boyce, 90 miner’s inches of the waters of said stream for use upon the lands described *10 in her cross-complaint, as of date September 9, 1891, “superior to the use of all parties other than the plaintiffs.”

(3) To Charles U. Blakely, 50 miner’s inches of the waters of said stream for use upon the lands described in his cross-complaint, as of date May 1, 1892, and an additional 59 miner’s inches of said waters as of the date of the commencement of this action.

(4) To the city of Butte, for use in Thompson Park, all the remaining flow of said stream and its tributaries, after the rights of other parties to the action “are satisfied and fulfilled.”

These provisions conform to the findings of fact, with the exception of the date of the initiation of plaintiffs’ right and certain findings respecting the Boyce right. As to plaintiffs’ right the findings are to the effect that, on or about January 26, 1877, the predecessors in interest of plaintiffs made a valid appropriation of the waters of said stream by means of a ditch with a capacity of 183 miner’s inches, and that, by mesne conveyances, plaintiffs became the owners of said right on August 17, 1885. Immediately after the filing of the findings of fact and of the decree, plaintiffs ’ counsel moved the court to correct the decree by substituting therein “January 26th, 1877,” in lieu of “August 17th, 1885,” and each of the defendants moved the court to set aside the findings made and substitute therefor his or her proposed findings. After hearing the several motions, the court granted the motion of plaintiffs and corrected the decree, and thereupon denied the motion of each of the defendants. From the judgment as corrected, the defendants Blakely and Boyce then perfected separate appeals.

Defendant Blakely makes thirty-eight assignments of error, and defendant Boyce thirty-nine. It will not be necessary to set out these assignments, as the great majority of them challenge the sufficiency of the evidence to support specific findings, and, in their entirety, they raise only the questions hereinafter discussed.

*11 Tbe evidence is voluminous, comprising more than 1,000 typewritten pages of the transcript and but a: brief synopsis of the pertinent portions can be included in this opinion.

1. Had the court authority to correct its decree on motion of the plaintiffs? By its findings the court prescribed what the judgment should be; having found that the plaintiffs’ right was initiated in 1877, the declaration in the decree that their right should date from August 17, 1885, was not supported by the findings and did not “express what was actually decided,” and was, in effect, a mere mistake in drafting the decree.

While a judgment once rendered as intended becomes final and can be revised or corrected only on appeal or on motion for a new trial (Whitbeck v. Montana Central Ry. Co., 21 Mont. 102, 52 Pac. 1098; State ex rel. Smith v. District Court, 55 Mont. 602, 179 Pac. 831), courts have the power to correct or amend their judgments to the end that they will express what was actually decided or to grant the relief that was intended to be granted originally (Keene v. Welsh, 8 Mont. 305, 21 Pac. 25; State ex rel. McHatton v. District Court, 55 Mont. 324, 176 Pac. 608; Barber v. Briscoe, 9 Mont. 341, 23 Pac. 726; State ex rel. Smith v. District Court, above). The situation here was analogous to that in Keene v. Welsh, above, wherein it was held that a decree determining the rights of the several parties to the use of the waters of a stream was properly amendable on motion to the extent that the relief granted may be such as was intended.

2. The defendants contend that the evidence adduced is sufficient to warrant the court’s finding that F. L. St. Onge is the successor in interest of the original appropriators of the water he claims.

The evidence on this question discloses that on January 26, 1877, Joseph V.

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Bluebook (online)
245 P. 532, 76 Mont. 1, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 77, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/st-onge-v-blakely-mont-1926.