State Ex Rel. Nett v. District Court

232 P. 204, 72 Mont. 206, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 5
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 5, 1925
DocketNo. 5,658.
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 232 P. 204 (State Ex Rel. Nett v. District Court) 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
State Ex Rel. Nett v. District Court, 232 P. 204, 72 Mont. 206, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 5 (Mo. 1925).

Opinion

*208 MR. CHIEF JUSTICE CALLAWAY

delivered the opinion of the court.

In a proceeding charging her with having committed a contempt of court Anna E. Nett was found guilty. The court rendered judgment imposing upon her a fine of $250, and also ordered therein that the complainant recover from her his costs in the proceeding. Thereupon she made application to this court for a writ of supervisory control, upon which an order to show cause was issued.

The proceeding was instituted by affidavits filed by John A. Willard as complainant, which recited, among other things, that in a decree rendered by the district court of Cascade county in 1911, to which both he and Nett were parties, the water rights of the parties thereto were established in Sun River and its tributaries; by the terms of the decree the parties thereto were reciprocally enjoined and restrained from interfering in any manner with one another “in their respective rights to the use of * * * the said waters of Sun River, or its tributaries, and the said water ditches and water rights of the respective parties.” The decree awarded 80 inches of the waters of Willow Creek, a tributary of Sun River, diverted by a certain ditch for irrigating certain lands, to a predecessor of Willard. It is set forth in Willard’s affidavit that ever since on or about the twenty-second day of December, 1913, he “has been and now is the owner of the above-described lands and the aforementioned water right; * * * that said water right has never been abandoned.” That on May 31, 1924, at a time when the complainant’s lands were in great need of irrigation, he turned the water to which he was entitled into the ditch and Nett, relatrix here, closed down the headgate and thereafter prevented any water from flowing down the ditch. Upon the affidavits an order was issued requiring the relatrix to show cause why she should not be punished as for a contempt of court.

After a number of continuances by consent of counsel the cause came on for hearing October 4, 1924. Relatrix entered *209 a plea of not guilty. Thereupon evidence in support of the affidavits was given by complainant and his witnesses. Relatrix then took the stand in her own behalf.

It appears that the ditch through which complainant claims the right to conduct the waters of Willow Creek to his land first passes over the lands of relatrix. She has a right to use water through this ditch, a right prior in time to complainant’s but this fact is not material to the present controversy for the reason that at the time complainant attempted to run water through the ditch there was ample water in the stream. to supply the rights claimed by both parties. The relatrix admitted that she had turned the water out of the ditch and back into the creek, thereby preventing its flow down to the lands of the complainant. In defense of her action in so doing she attempted to show, first, that the reason she turned off the water was to protect her lands, contending that the ditch was not in a condition to convey water, and when complainant turned in the water it overflowed the banks of the ditch and went then upon the farming lands of relatrix, thus preventing her from seeding her lands which she was then attempting to do. The court sustained an objection to proffered testimony along that line, saying: “I don’t think you can come in here with that kind of defense. You ought to have set that up affirmatively. ’ ’ As will be seen presently, we think the court was wrong in taking that position.

Whether the proffered testimony would have been of sufficient substance to purge relatrix of the contempt charged we shall not intimate an opinion; the weight of the evidence, viewed in the light of all the surrounding facts and circumstances, was for the trial court to determine. If for no other purpose, the testimony was admissible as bearing upon the good or ill intentions of the relatrix when she interfered with the water which complainant had turned into the ditch. But it is pertinent to observe here that where one has been enjoined from meddling with the ditch of his neighbor it is not every *210 sort of interference with the ditch which will be followed by condign punishment: As, if my neighbor who lives below me on the stream has a ditch along a hillside above my land and through no fault of mine the ditch breaks, carrying sand and gravel upon my growing crops, whereupon I shut off the water to save myself from loss; in that case certainly my explanation will be received to show that I did not intend any contempt of the court’s decree when I shut off the water. If it should appear that the ditch in this ease was insufficient to carry water, which fact was known to complainant, and yet he persisted in turning water therein knowing that it would run upon the land of the relatrix and prevent her from seeding it, and relatrix then in good faith shut off the water to prevent loss and damage to herself, it would be a harsh rule that would reject her explanatory testimony.

Relatrix next essayed to show that complainant did not have any right in the ditch; she attempted to introduce testimony showing an abandonment of his right. An objection was sustained to this line of testimony, the court saying: “That should have been specially pleaded.” Thereupon counsel for relatrix asked leave to file an answer which the court denied.

Contempt proceedings are sm generis (State ex rel. Zosel v. District Court, 56 Mont. 578, 185 Pac. 1112), but are criminal in their nature (State ex rel. Rankin v. District Court, 58 Mont. 276, 191 Pac. 772). So highly penal are they in character that the evidence must show that the accused is guilty beyond a reasonable doubt, otherwise he is entitled .to be discharged. (State ex rel. Boston & Mont. C. C. & S. M. Co. v. Judges, 30 Mont. 193, 76 Pac. 10.) In the case last cited this court said that from an examination of the practice provided for in the Code of Civil Procedure (secs. 2170-2183 of the 1895 Codes, corresponding to sections 9908-9921, Rev. Codes, 1921) for summary punishment of contempts it is apparent that contempt proceedings “have most, if not all, the characteristics of a criminal case and few, if any, of a civil action.”

*211 Our statute provides that when a person arrested upon a charge of contempt has been brought up or has appeared, the court or judge must proceed to investigate the charge, and must hear any answer he may make to the same and may examine witnesses for or against him. (Sec. 9916, Rev. Codes 1921.) The character of the “answer” is not indicated; but that the statute contemplates that a full and fair investigation of the offense charged shall be made by the court or judge is beyond question. When the accused is brought up, or appears, “the court or judge must proceed to investigate the charge” and “must hear any answer” which the accused may make. That an oral answer, a plea of not guilty, is sufficient for all purposes we have no doubt. A search of the authorities for the historical background of our statute has not afforded any information of an interpretive character. But it seems to us that the language of the statute speaks its own interpretation.

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Related

Pelletier v. Glacier County
82 P.2d 595 (Montana Supreme Court, 1938)
State Ex Rel. Burns v. District Court
271 P. 439 (Montana Supreme Court, 1928)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
232 P. 204, 72 Mont. 206, 1925 Mont. LEXIS 5, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-nett-v-district-court-mont-1925.