34 Mont. 135 | Mont. | 1906
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought to have determined the relative rights of the parties to the use of the waters of Beaverhead river and its tributaries. The appellant was plaintiff in the court below. The appeal is from that portion of the decree which awards to John B. Smith, who was one of the defendants, the prior right to the use of two hundred and fifty inches of water.
Appellant is satisfied with the findings of fact returned by the trial court, .but the contention is made in this court that the trial court erred in its conclusion of law No. 3, and in entering its decree in accordance with such conclusion. The court found that the plaintiff appropriated four thousand two hundred and fifty-four inches of the waters of Beaverhead river in August, 1883. Findings No. 4 and 5 are as follows:
‘ ‘ (4) That Battlesnake creek is, and was, at all times herein mentioned a tributary of Beaverhead river, and that the waters thereof flow into the Beaverhead river at all times above the head of plaintiff’s canal; but this finding does not imply that the plaintiff is entitled to the spring or seepage watery rising in the channel of Battlesnake creek, hereinafter mentioned.
“(5) That beginning with the year 1890, certain seepage or spring waters began to rise in Battlesnake creek, and have continued to increase from year to year; that during the month of May, 1897, Cox and Pyle, the predecessors in interest of John B. Smith, built a dam across Battlesnake creek, and by means of said dam and ditch constructed from said Battlesnake creek, known as and called the ‘Cox and Pyle Ditch,’ diverted from said creek certain springs and seepage waters arising in the bed of said creek on the Perkins and McLaughlin ranches, to the amount of two hundred and fifty inches, and thereby ap*138 propriated the same; and the said defendant and his said predecessors have ever since said date made a beneficial nse thereof. ’ ’
The foregoing are all the findings made by the court which affect the rights of either of the parties to this appeal, and from these findings the court drew its conclusions of law Nos. 1 and 3 as follows:
“ (1) That the plaintiff is the owner, and entitled to the prior use of four thousand two hundred and fifty-four statutory inches of the waters of Beaverhead river for irrigation, and other useful purposes, as of date August 15, 1883.”
“(3) That John B. Smith is now, and he and his grantors and predecessors in interest have been since May, 1897, the owner and owners of, and entitled to the prior use of, two hundred and fifty statutory inches, or six and one-quarter cubic feet, of the waters of certain spring or seepage waters arising in the bed of Rattlesnake creek on the Perkins and McLaughlin ranches, taken thereout and appropriated by means of his certain ditch, known as and called the ‘Cox and Pyle Ditch,’ tapping said creek, and leading to and upon his lands in the county of Beaverhead and state of Montana, mentioned in his answer on file herein.”
In the answer of the defendant Smith it is alleged that the spring or seepage water appropriated by his predecessors in 1897 would not, if permitted to flow uninterruptedly, reach the head of plaintiff’s ditch. This allegation is denied in the reply. As the court did not specifically make any finding upon the issue thus raised, it is urged by counsel for respondent that a finding in consonance with the allegation in the answer will be implied, and this is true provided such implied finding is not inconsistent with any express finding of the court. But we are not able to reconcile such an implied finding with findings No. 4 and 5 above.
If the spring or seepage water, the prior right to the use of which defendant Smith makes claim, rises in Rattlesnake creek (finding No. 5), and Rattlesnake creek is a tributary of Beaver-head river, and the waters of Rattlesnake creek “flow into the
Conclusion No. 1 awards to the plaintiff the prior right to the use of four thousand two hundred and fifty-four inches of water, and conclusion No. 3 awards to defendant Smith the prior right to the use of two hundred and fifty inches. We must assume that the trial court proceeded upon the theory that as this spring or seepage water did not appear, as such at least, in Rattlesnake creek until several years after plaintiff made its appropriation, such spring or seepage water, although it formed a part of the waters of Rattlesnake creek after 1890, and, if unmolested, would flow into Beaverhead river above the head of plaintiff’s canal, was nevertheless unaffected by plaintiff’s appropriation and open and subject to appropriation by the predecessors of defendant Smith in 1897, and contention is made for this theory by counsel for respondent in their brief. They say: “The rights of appellant were and are limited to the natural condition of Beaverhead river and its tributaries at the
This increased supply of water to which reference is made is that occasioned by artificial means. That this is the author’s meaning is made manifest by the reference in support of the text (Paige v. Rocky Ford Canal etc. Co., 83 Cal. 84, 21 Pac. 1102), and when thus understood, the language of the text first quoted above is made plain, viz., that if defendant Smith by his own exertions had increased the supply of water in Rattlesnake creek, he would have the prior right to such increased supply, and, of course, as against him the plaintiff would not have any interest in such water so caused to flow there by artificial means. There is not anything to indicate that this spring or seepage water is caused to rise in Rattlesnake creek by artificial means, and in the absence of a finding to that effect the
It is common knowledge that springs form the source of many of these mountain streams, and to hold to the doctrine for which contention is made by respondent would impose upon the prior appropriator the burden of constantly watching the source of his water supply, and in fact make his water right the most unreliable and hazardous species of property imaginable; for, if that doctrine should prevail and the particular springs which gave rise to the stream from which his water supply was obtained should cease to flow, and other springs furnishing a like amount of water should commence to flow into and feed the same stream above the head of his canal, a subsequent appropriator could deprive him of his prior right, merely because in the course of nature water which had formerly come to the surface in one spring had afterward found a new outlet. We are satisfied that such a result was never contemplated.
The prior appropriator of a particular quantity of water from a stream is entitled to the use of that water, or so much thereof as naturally flows in the stream, unimpaired and unaffected by any subsequent changes which, in the course of nature, may have been wrought. To the extent of his appropriation his supply will be measured by the waters naturally flowing in the stream and its tributaries above the head of his ditch, whether those waters be furnished by the usual rains or snows, by extraordinary rain or snowfall, or by springs or seepage which directly contribute.
Of course, the court’s finding that the waters of Rattlesnake creek flow into Beaverhead river at all times above the head of plaintiff’s canal does not establish the fact that they will continue to do so during the irrigation season of every year hereafter; and if it should occur that Rattlesnake creek becomes dry below these springs and above the head of plaintiff’s canal, at such times plaintiff could not complain if defendant Smith uses these waters which otherwise would be lost. (Raymond v. Wimsette, 12 Mont. 551, 33 Am. St. Rep. 604, 31 Pac. 537.)
Modified and affirmed.