Thrasher v. Schreiber

250 P. 600, 77 Mont. 221, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 149
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 22, 1926
DocketNo. 5,951.
StatusPublished
Cited by7 cases

This text of 250 P. 600 (Thrasher v. Schreiber) 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
Thrasher v. Schreiber, 250 P. 600, 77 Mont. 221, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 149 (Mo. 1926).

Opinion

MR. JUSTICE STARK

delivered the opinion of the court.

The controversy involved in this action arose out of the following situation: The plaintiff is, and for more than ten years last past has been, the owner, in possession and entitled to the possession, of the north half of section 16, township 9 north, range 11 west, in Powell county, and during the same period of time the defendant and his predecessors in interest were the owners, in possession and entitled to the possession, of the southeast quarter of said section. Blum Creek flows diagonally across the defendant’s land from the southwest corner to the northeast corner thereof.

About October 1, 1915, in a certain action then pending in the district court of Powell county, wherein the Pioneer Placer Mining Company was plaintiff, and Otto A. Swant, Henry W. Schreiber and others were defendants, these two named defendants were adjudged and decreed to be in possession, and entitled to the possession, of said southeast quarter of section 16, and it was likewise adjudged and decreed that they were the owners of seventy-five inches of the waters of Gold Creek, appropriated July 10, 1910, and 150 inches of the waters of said creek, appropriated October 31, 1910, together with the ditches, dams and flumes used in connection therewith, for the purpose of irrigating their said lands. What transpired *223 with reference to the title of this southeast quarter between the date of the above-mentioned decree and November 26,1918, is not disclosed, but on the latter date the state of Montana conveyed the same to Otto Swant, together with all the water rights appurtenant thereto.

Some time in the fall of 1918 Swant conveyed this land to Albert Thrasher, a brother of the plaintiff, who took possession thereof, and remained in possession until some time in the fall of 1921, when he turned it back to Swant. By a conveyance dated May 8, 1922, Swant conveyed this southeast quarter, together with the water rights appurtenant thereto, to defendant Frank 0. Schreiber, the present owner, and on October 12', 1922, Henry W. Schreiber and Swant joined in a conveyance of this land to the defendant, in which conveyance the decreed water rights above mentioned were specifically mentioned and described.

Plaintiff contends that prior to the summer of 1918 the ditch conveying the waters from Gold Creek to and upon said southeast quarter had only been completed to a point on the south side of Blum Creek, for the reason that the owners thereof had been unable to extend it further on account of lack of financial ability, and that about the month of June, 1918, the then owner, Swant, in three separate conversations, solicited him to complete the ditch from its then terminus on the south side of Blum Creek down to the portion of said southeast quarter lying on the north side of the creek, and thence to and upon the plaintiff’s lands, so that both the plaintiff and the owner of the southeast quarter could use the ditch for conveying the water to their respective lands; that the plaintiff yielded to these solicitations, and agreed to do so. He further contends that, as a consideration for doing this, Swant agreed to give him an interest in the ditch and water right from Gold Creek. Soon after the last of these conversations, the plaintiff did some work on the ditch, but the point where the same was performed and the amount thereof were not *224 shown. However, before any considerable amount of work had been done, Swant sold the land to Albert Thrasher, who, as above pointed out, went into the possession thereof in the fall of 1918.

During the time that Albert Thrasher was in possession of the land, by arrangements entered into between him and the plaintiff, the latter furnished materials for the construction of a flume across Blum Creek, and the former built it, and also extended the ditch across the portion of the southeast quarter lying north of Blum Creek, from which place it was extended to and upon the plaintiff’s lands lying in the north half of the section. This work was completed about the year 1920, and thereafter, during the time he remained in possession of the southeast quarter, Albert Thrasher used the flume and ditch to convey water to his lands on the northerly side of Blum Creek for irrigation purposes, and the plaintiff also carried water through the ditch and flume to irrigate his lands.

When the defendant took possession of the southeast quarter in the spring of 1922, the plaintiff had a conversation with him, concerning which the latter testified: “Q. Now, what conversation, if any, did you have with Frank 0. Schreiber, the defendant in this case, about the time he went into possession of the land there? A. Why, he wanted me to lease it, and he would give me a ten-year lease, or he would do iis and that for me; so I told him just what I have been telling you about Swant. I said, ‘Frank, I have done too much work. I have done #600 or $700 worth of work, and I want an interest in this ditch.’ He wanted me to lease it. He said he owned the property. Q. Was anything said about the transaction between you and Swant in your conversation with Schreiber?

A. I said, ‘Didn’t Swant tell you something about it?’ He said, ‘Well, he said something about it,’ but he could do as he pleased about it.”

Later on, in 1925, the plaintiff went up to the head of the ditch, apparently at the point where the same was taken out *225 of Gold Creek, one night, and turned the water in. This precipitated a controversy, and he had a further talk with defendant, about which he testified as follows: “Q. And did you tell him, in that conversation, what you claimed in this ditch? A. Yes. Well, I claimed the lower part. I claimed the flume, and was trying to hold the flume and this Blum Creek part for my money. I wanted him to give me a half interest to Gold Creek, which Swant had promised me if I would even help; and it seemed he didn’t want to do it. He told me he had bought it.” This conversation occurred in 1925, and it may be noted that it is the only time plaintiff made mention specifically of what he expected to receive from Swant, and is the first time that plaintiff mentioned that he claimed an interest in Gold Creek.

During the years 1922, 1923 and 1924 the plaintiff, at intermittent periods, used water through the ditch and flume, but in 1925, at the time of the above-mentioned controversy, the defendant prevented him from doing so further, whereupon he brought this action to quiet title to an interest in the ditch and water right. Under appropriate pleadings the cause was tried before the court sitting without a jury. The court by general and special findings determined the issues against the plaintiff and in favor of the defendant, and a decree was entered accordingly, from which the plaintiff has appealed.

Although counsel for appellant have made numerous specifications of error, in the first paragraph of their brief they say: “The question turns on whether or not plaintiff has proved ownership in the half interest in the ditch and water right.”

Plaintiff’s claim to an interest in the ditch and water right is based entirely upon the agreement which he says he made with Swant, and this agreement in turn is based upon the three conversations which he had with Swant. All these conversations occurred in the year 1918.

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Bluebook (online)
250 P. 600, 77 Mont. 221, 1926 Mont. LEXIS 149, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/thrasher-v-schreiber-mont-1926.