State ex rel. State Highway Commission of Montana v. Roth

496 P.2d 1136, 159 Mont. 268, 1972 Mont. LEXIS 438
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMay 11, 1972
DocketNo. 12138
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 496 P.2d 1136 (State ex rel. State Highway Commission of Montana v. Roth) 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. State Highway Commission of Montana v. Roth, 496 P.2d 1136, 159 Mont. 268, 1972 Mont. LEXIS 438 (Mo. 1972).

Opinion

MR. CHIEF JUSTICE JAMES T. HARRISON

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment entered in Missoula County district court on a jury verdict in the amount of $7,250, in a condemnation action brought by the State of Montana, respondent herein, to acquire certain water rights and waters of the defendants, appellants herein.

The facts in this case may be summarized as follows: This eminent domain action was filed by the State Highway Commission of Montana (hereinafter referred to as Commission) to acquire an interest owned by defendants Donald V. Roth and Jeanne A. Roth, for Interstate highway purposes.

The interest to be acquired is a water appropriation dated in the year 1910, which may be designated as a “stream” flowing out of culvert No. 233 on the Northern Pacific Railway line. The notice of appropriation did not specify any amount of water. Further, the exact point of appropriation was not accurately determined at trial, as none of the witnesses were able to pinpoint culvert No. 233.

There was a culvert under Highway 10 which connected to a 24” x 12’ pipe, which in turn connected to a 36” x 72’ pipe under the Northern Pacific mainline. This latter 36 ” x 72 ’ pipe [270]*270discharged into a ditch running parallel to and along the southerly portion of the Northern Pacific right-of-way to a point where it intersected the Clinton Irrigation District canal. Pursuant to a long standing agreement between defendant Donald Roth and the Clinton Irrigation District Commissioners, waters from this ditch were conducted in the canal to a point of intersection with Roths’ private ditch and then on to Roths’ water irrigation system.

The Interstate project relocated the Clinton Canal and reestablished defendant Donald Roth’s connection with it through a system of pipe-headgate and ditch, pursuant to the request of Roth for the restoration of irrigation water to his lands. In addition to the water appropriation in question, defendant Roth owned about 600 inches from the Clark Fork River which, through an agreement with the Clinton Irrigation District Commissioners, was conveyed to his headgate free of charge as consideration for the commissioners being able to use Roth’s former ditch. No dispute lies as to the continued availability of this 600 inch water right after Interstate construction. The water right in question originated from lower Gaiser Slough, situated across Highway 10 from the ditch. No evidence was offered as to the condition of the pipes under the old highway and the Northern Pacific mainline, or the amount of water in the slough or its source. Further, there was no evidence showing lower Gaiser Slough connected to the upper Gaiser Slough in 1910, or before.

The state did introduce evidence showing the two sloughs were connected by a corrugated metal pipe; however, no evidence was introduced as to the condition of the pipe or if the water flowed through it in 1968.

The evidence showed that after the Interstate is built, lower Gaiser Slough is to be filled with “shot rock”, then drained by a buried 18” perforated concrete drain connected to a 30” pipe under the Interstate and present Burlington Northern mainline. In addition, the latter would then connect with an [271]*271existing 30” concrete pipe under tbe adjoining Milwaukee mainline to discharge into a ditch constructed as part of the project to convey water back into the Clinton Canal at a point south of the Milwaukee mainline. The testimony indicated the system would return a substantial amount of water, and that drainage from this system would be available to defendants.

It was defendants ’ contention that they should receive $32,500 compensation for the acquisition of this appropriation at culvert No. 233. Their expert appraiser, Melvin Beck, valued the appropriation at $140 per miner’s inch, for 90 miner’s inches, totalling $12,600. Mr. Beck then testified to replace the lost “stock water”, three wells at a price of $7,000 each would be required. The court then required Beck to elect between the two value figures for the taking. Consequently Beck chose the three wells at $7,000, totalling $21,000. Beck attempted to evaluate the appropriation, first for irrigation water purposes, and then for stock water purposes.

The commission presented testimony from Ivan Shaw, an expert appraiser, who predicated compensation on construction plans, and the cost of one stock water well at $5,000. Defendants’ counsel cross-examined Shaw at length about water from under the fill in lower G-aiser Slough, and Shaw testified the water would be recovered. The well drilling costs were authenticated by witness "William Osborne, the well driller.

Instructions to the jury included defendants’ proposed No. 7, given over objection as court’s instruction No. 13, in which the high compensation testimony of defendant Donald Roth of $32,500 and the low testimony of Shaw at $5,000 were stated as the limits for the jury. There was no objection by either of the parties as to the form of the verdict. The jury returned a verdict for Roth, awarding him $7,250 compensation.

Appellants raise two issues for review in this matter:

(1) That the trial court erred in refusing to allow testimony of comparable sales of water for irrigation purposes: and

[272]*272(2) That the verdict was rendered on state’s evidence not supported by fact.

We find no merit whatsoever in defendants’ contention that the district court erred in limiting the defendants to testimony relating to the value of G-aiser Slough waters to stock water value only. Specifically the record shows defendants did put into evidence a comparable sale of 61 inches of water for irrigation purposes that was sold for $140 per miner’s inch. Defendants contend that the district court, by its ruling took away from the jury the right to consider the value of Gaiser Slough waters for irrigation purposes, when the record was replete with testimony of the use of the water for irrigation purposes for twenty-nine years by the defendants and for three decades prior thereto by their predecessors.

Our review of all the testimony contained within the record indicates this was not at all the case and we deem it necessary to state with particularity the actual sequence of events at the trial of this matter which lends clarity to the jury’s verdict. The record shows that Melvin Beck, defendants’ expert appraiser, testified he had a comparable sale of water for irrigation purposes wherein 61 inches of water was sold for $140 an inch. A second offered sale was correctly refused by the court on the ground of surprise. At a later point in the trial of this matter, the court required Mr. Beck to elect which of the two valuations of the thing taken he would use, then excluded the other. Mr. Beck used the measurements made by witnesses Carden and Marlowe, of 90 miner’s inches applied to the appropriation in question, multiplied by $140 an inch, for a total of $12,600 for the water claimed to be acquired by the Commission. Beck then revalued this same water for stock water purposes, measuring this particular value by the extension of cost of three wells at $7,000 each, or $21,000. From the foregoing, it is clear that had the court allowed Beck to add $12,600 and $21,000, this would have totalled $361.50 or more per miner’s inch, amounting to a double value of the “taking”.

[273]*273Defendants cite tbe decision of Perkins v. Kramer, 148 Mont.

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

Related

Brothers v. Town of Virginia City
558 P.2d 464 (Montana Supreme Court, 1976)
Elite Cleaners & Tailors, Inc. v. Gentry Ex Rel. Gentry
510 P.2d 784 (Wyoming Supreme Court, 1973)

Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
496 P.2d 1136, 159 Mont. 268, 1972 Mont. LEXIS 438, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/state-ex-rel-state-highway-commission-of-montana-v-roth-mont-1972.