Thompson v. Harvey

519 P.2d 963, 164 Mont. 133, 1974 Mont. LEXIS 480
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 13, 1974
Docket12598
StatusPublished
Cited by3 cases

This text of 519 P.2d 963 (Thompson v. Harvey) 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
Thompson v. Harvey, 519 P.2d 963, 164 Mont. 133, 1974 Mont. LEXIS 480 (Mo. 1974).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE CASTLES

delivered the Opinion of the Court.

This is an appeal from a judgment of the district court of Broadwater County denying a petition for an order authorizing a change in point of diversion on Deep Creek in Broadwater County.

This action was brought under the 1891 decree adjudicating the waters of Deep Creek and bears the title of the original parties. The actual petitioners are Gerald F. Olsen and L. Bonita Olsen. The actual protesters are Robert Hoppe, John .Plymale, Frank McArthur, Maurice Hunsacker, Martin Clarke, .John Walter, Herb Hoppe, Lou Nichols, Ray Goodwin, Hubert White, Norman Parmalee and the Montana State Department .of Natural Resources and Conservation. The petitioners are *135 the present owners by purchase of a 75 inch water right with a 4th priority on Deep Creek. The protesters are, with the exception of the Department of Natural Resources, either the; owners of water rights subordinate to the petitioners or contract purchasers of water from the Missouri-Broadwater Ditch Company. The Department of Natural Resources is the marketing contractor for the Missouri-Broadwater Ditch Company..

The 75 inch right owned by petitioners was purchased from. Ernest Grimm who had used it for the last 10 years in conjunction with a 50 inch right to irrigate approximately 80 acres. The 80 acres and the point of diversion currently being used!, in the exercise of these two water rights are located downstreams on Deep Creek from the point at which the Missouri-Broadwater Canal intercepts the creek.

The petitioners propose to move the point of diversion for the 75 inch right upstream on Deep Creek approximately 4% miles. The 75 inch right will be used to irrigate approximately 80 acres out of 308 acres of land belonging to the petitioners. This move would plaee the point of diversion some 3 miles above the. intersection of Deep Creek and the Missouri-Broadwater Canal.

The objectors are almost all located upstream from the intersection of Deep Creek and the Missouri-Broadwater Canal. Most, are also contract purchasers of water from the canal. Because of the topography of the area it is not feasible to transport water from the canal directly to their land. This problem has been solved by diverting the natural flow of Deep Creek for use on the objectors’ lands and then replacing the water so taken with water from the canal which is placed in the stream channel at the point the canal crosses the stream. This system has been in use since the canal was completed in 1939. This exchange is specifically allowed under section 89-806, R.C.M. 1947. It provides the only practical method by which those individuals with inferior water rights, whose land is located above the canal, can obtain the water needed for irrigation. This water is obtained without prejudice to the superior rights located downstream *136 since the water from the canal is available for their use. The water commissioner testified that it was his duty as an officer of the court to make the exchange.

The transfer of the point of diversion of petitioners’ 75 inch right to a point above the canal will mean that it cannot be replaced by water diverted from the canal. It will also mean that at least an additional 80 acres of land will be placed under irrigation. It also means that the 50 inch right on the Grimm place below will be used a much longer period of time on the 80 acres there. These factors will reduce the amount of water available to those individuals whose rights are inferior to the 4th right owned by petitioners.

The controlling issues on this appeal are two in number: First, would the proposed change in point of diversion and use of the water right injure other parties? Second, did the objectors meet their burden of proving injury, if the change in point of diversion were allowed? We will consider these issues together.

The nature and extent of the petitioners’ right to a change in point of diversion is set out in section 89-803, R.C.M. 1947, which provides:

“The person entitled to the use of water may change the place of diversion, if others are not thereby injured, and may extend the ditch, flume, pipe, or aqueduct, by which the diversion is made, to any place other than where the first use was made, and may use the water for other purposes than that for which it was originally appropriated.”

The limitation on the petitioners’ right to make the change sought is clear. They may not make the change if injury to others is shown to be a result of such change. The burden of showing such injury is on those who claim to be adversely affected. McIntosh v. Graveley, 159 Mont. 72, 495 P.2d 186; Thrasher v. Mannix & Wilson, 95 Mont. 273, 26 P.2d 370; Lokowich v. City of Helena, 46 Mont. 575, 129 P. 1063; Hansen v. Larsen, 44 Mont. 350, 120 P. 229.

*137 To meet this burden of proof the objectors introduced uncontroverted testimony indicating that if the changes sought by petitioners was allowed it would render impossible the program of exchanging canal water for the natural flow of the stream thus reducing by approximately 24% the amount of water available for those with inferior rights located above the canal. It was also uncontroverted that the change in point of diversion would lead to an increased use of water because of the increase in acreage to be irrigated and the time of use. That a decrease in available water and increase in use of the water that is available represents an injury to those individuals who will be deprived of water as a result is indisputable.

The petitioners do not deny that the protesters will be injured as a result of change but assert instead that the protesters do not have the requisite status to object to the change because of both unclean hands and the misuse of the channel of Deep Creek. Petitioners premise these assertions of impropriety on exchange of canal water for stream water which is removed at points above the canal. This procedure is affirmatively sanctioned by the laws of Montana. Section 89-806, R.C.M. 1947, provides:

“Any person, persons, association or corporation, owning or in possession of lands susceptible of irrigation from any stream, the waters of which are so diminished by prior appropriations that a sufficient amount of water for the irrigation of their lands cannot be obtained from the natural flow of the stream, who shall construct a reservoir, or shall purchase or lease water from a reservoir owned by the state water conservation board of the state of Montana, or another, or shall otherwise acquire an interest in such reservoir, which is so located that because of natural or other obstacles the water impounded therein cannot be conducted to the lands which they desire to irrigate, may, provided the stored water can be discharged into the stream in such a manner that it can be used beneficially by prior appropriators, divert the natural flow of the stream for the irriga *138 tion of their lands in lien of an equal amount of stored water, provided, however, that such exchange can be made without injury to said prior appropriators.”

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Bluebook (online)
519 P.2d 963, 164 Mont. 133, 1974 Mont. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thompson-v-harvey-mont-1974.