30 Mont. 172 | Mont. | 1904
prepared tbe following opinion for the court:
Appeal from judgment and order overruling motion for a new trial. The action was instituted by respondent, Ida B.
Plaintiff’s complaint contains allegations which, briefly stated, are as follows:
(1) That one Pat Toohey owned certain land.
(2) That it was arid, and required irrigation.
(3) That there is appurtenant to said land a certain water right through the Flannery ditch, which was owned by defendant, P’atrick Toohey, Joseph Davis and Benjamin .Graham as tenants in common.
(4) That Toohey leased this land to the plaintiff.
(5) That slie prepared the ground for seed, and planted certain crops.
“(6) That on or about the Jth day of July, 1898, and frequently thereafter during the irrigation season of 1898, defendant and "said Joseph Davis, and each of them, wrongfully and unlawfully constructed dams and embankments in and near-said Flannery ditch, and otherwise wrongfully and unlawfully interfered with and obstructed this plaintiff’s use thereof, and the flow of the water therein, and plaintiff’s use of the water right and water ditch hereinbefore mentioned; and by reason of said wrongful and unlawful acts, and the interference and obstruction of the said Davis and this defendant, plaintiff was able to obtain and did use only a small part of the water to which said land was entitled by virtue of the said water right, and, during the greater portion of said irrigation season, was able to and did obtain or use no part of said water for the irrigation of said crops or other purposes; and plaintiff was unable
In the seventh paragraph of the complaint she alleged specific damage to each of the crops which she had planted.
The defendant, in his answer to this complaint, denied generally or specifically all its material allegations, and in answer to paragraph 6, above quoted, says: “Defendant denies each and every allegation of paragraph 6, and alleges the truth to be as follows, to-wit: That on the 7th day of July, 1898, he turned the water out of said ditch, at the head thereof, for the purpose of enabling him to put in a gate at a point at which he diverted the water from the same for use upon his said ranch; this diversion was done jointly by this defendant and said Joseph Davis; that they put in said gate on said 7th day of July, 1898, and that on the following day they turned the water back into the ditch at its head or junction with the East- Gallatin river, and allowed the said water to flow down said ditch; that this defendant never diverted or used any of the water until the 13th day of July, 1898, but that said Davis did divert and use the same for irrigating his crops upon his said ranch during the 8th, 9th, 10th, 11th, 12th and 13th days of July, 1898, and also a portion of it the 14th and 15th; that on the 15th day of July, 1898, Pat Toohey, who claimed to be the owner of the land, brought an action in the district court of Gallatin county against this defendant and said Joseph Davis, and enjoined them from using said water, and that the same was immediately turned back into the said ditch and allowed to flow down to the ranch or premises described in paragraph 1 of this complaint”
To this the plaintiff filed a reply, in the first part, of which
The complaint, as above stated, bases the right of action upon the unlawful diversion of water by defendant. Plaintiff did not plead or rely in her complaint upon the admissions in defendant’s answer in the Toohey Case, or the judgment in that case, either as an estoppel or res judicata, but tendered an issue upon the fact of an unlawful diversion of the waters in question by the defendant. Defendant had a clear right to join issue on these allegations. Plaintiff had admitted by her complaint that defendant had allowed some of the water claimed by plaintiff to pass down to her, and that she had used it. This clearly appears from the following allegation, above quoted: “Plaintiff was able to obtain, and did use, only a small part of the water to which said land was entitled by virtue of the said water right.” Defendant, in paragraph 6 of his answer, above quoted, meets the issues of paragraph 6 of the complaint, and alleges his version of the facts bearing thereon. In plaintiff’s reply, above noted, she sought to plead an estoppel or res judicata against the facts set up in defendant’s answer to the issue tendered by the complaint as above stated, claiming that this estoppel or res judicata prevented defendant from pleading, relying upon, or showing the existence of the facts which he had alleged in his answer. This condition, therefore, is disclosed by the pleadings : (1) The plaintiff alleges that defendant deprived her of water sufficient to irrigate her crops. (2) The answer denied this allegation, and set forth facts showing that she had ample water. (3) Plaintiff in her reply denied the
Thus it appears that plaintiff insists, by her replication, that-the defendant is estopped from saying that plaintiff was not deprived of all the waters belonging to the leased land, yet we find in her complaint a direct- allegation that she did use a portion thereof, thus by her own complaint contradicting the effect of her plea of estoppel or res judicata. This she cannot do. She cannot in her complaint take one position, and, in her replication to defendant’s answer, take another one inconsistent with the allegations- of her complaint. (Code of Civil Procedure, Sec. 720; Laws- of 1899, p. 142; Hill v. Rich Hill Coal Min. Co., 119 Mo. 9, 24 S. W. 223; Merrill v. Suing, (Neb.) 92 N. W. 618; Union Casualty, etc. Co. v. Bragg, 63 Kan. 291, 65 Pac. 272; Johnson v. State Bank, 59 Kan. 250, 52 Pac. 860.)
But, again, the record discloses that plaintiff’s own 'witnesses, when sworn in her ease in chief, testified that some of the water was allowed to pass the obstructions complained of at all times, thus contradicting the replication. By defendant’s witnesses, when called upon the stand, it -was disclosed, without objection, that, from seventy to eighty inches of water, to which plaintiff was- entitled at all times, passed the obstructions complained of. Plaintiff’s attorney sought to avoid the effect of this testimony hy a request for the following instruction, which was given by the court: “(8) The court instructs you that- if you find from the evidence that the defendant and Joseph Davis filed their answer verified by defendant Campbell in the injunction case of Toohey v. Campbell and Davis, in which, answer they alleged that they denied the right of Toohey to use said Flannery ditch, or any part thereof, for any purpose, and that from July -7, 1898, till enjoined in said action, they had prevented any water flowing through said Flannery ditch upon the Toohey land, and that they intended to continue so to do, and that, unless re
Counsel for respondents, in their brief, use the following language: “There was no estoppel. The former case of Toohey against Campbell and Davis did not estop any one. It did determine the truth, though, and, having been determined in that case, it cannot be again questioned by the parties thereto or their privies.” We agree with counsel’s statement that no estoppel was involved. The record discloses that upon the trial plaintiff offered in evidence the judgment roll in the Toohey Case. This judgment roll is not contained in the record, but the purpose of the suit is recited as having been as follows: “This was an action to determine the right of plaintiff to an interest in a cer^ tain water ditch known as the ‘Flannery Ditch,’ and to establish his right to the use of said ditch, to transmit water to his premises or ranch, and to enjoin the defendants from interfering with the plaintiff’s said use of said ditch for said purpose.”
The court erred, as alleged, in the first specification.
We therefore advise that the judgment and order overruling defendant’s motion for a new trial be reversed, and the case remanded for a new trial.
For the reasons stated in the foregoing opinion, the judgment and order are reversed, and the cause is remanded for a. new trial.