93 P. 345 | Mont. | 1908
delivered the opinion of the court.
This action was brought to obtain a decree adjudicating the respective rights Of the parties plaintiff and defendant against each other and among themselves, to the use of the waters flowing in Indian creek, a tributary of Euby river, in Madison county. Each of the eleven plaintiffs claims separate rights, though they were represented by a single attorney. The eight defendants, were represented by the same attorneys, though each filed a separate answer. From this condition of affairs it would seem that the parties plaintiff and defendant made common cause against each other, but, as among themselves, proceeded upon the theory that their respective interests were not conflicting. In any event, the trial resulted in findings of fact and conclusions of law upon each right involved, as to the date of appropriation, the amount thereof, the character of the beneficial use, etc., and a decree’ was entered accordingly.
The defendant McKay (appellant) is the owner of certain lands situate on Mill creek, another tributary of Euby river. He also owns a flouring-mill, situate on the same stream, which is propelled by water-power. It seems that the water diverted by him through his mill ditch, and for the irrigation of his
The appellant claims as the successor in interest of one Hall, now dead, who, with others, built the mill and constructed the ditch in 1866. The court found that “it was the intention of those who built the mill ditch and appropriated the waters of Indian creek thereby to use the waters for mill and power purposes when the waters of Indian creek were not needed for irrigation purposes.” It was accordingly adjudged that the defendant’s use must be confined to the autumn, winter, and early spring months, when the “waters of Indian creek are not required for the proper irrigation of lands.” This defendant has appealed from an order denying his motion for a new trial. The ground of his motion was surprise, in that two witnesses, introduced by him to establish his right,'made statements at the trial directly contrary to what they had induced him to believe they would make when he had interviewed them to ascertain what their testimony would be touching his right. His affidavit in support of the motion states, in substance, that he was charged by his counsel with the duty of finding and producing witnesses in support of his water-right through his mill ditch; that in performance of this duty he questioned witnesses John Hatfield and William Ferm as to the use of the water in the mill during the time Hall.was one of the owners of it; that he questioned them fully, but neither of them disclosed to him any fact or information tending to impair the superiority of his right during Hall’s ownership, or tending to show that Hall ever recognized any right in Indian creek superior to the mill ditch right; that, on the contrary, Hatfield, when questioned by affiant as to the conduct of Hall when the farmers without his consent diverted the water from the mill ditch, told him
Coming, now, to the merits of the motion, it is the general rule that a new trial will be granted on the ground of surprise only when it is clearly shown that the movant was actually surprised, that the facts from which the surprise resulted had a material bearing on the case, that the verdict or decision resulted mainly from these facts, that the alleged condition is not the result of movant’s own inattention or negligence, that he has acted promptly and claimed relief at the earliest opportunity, that he has used every means reasonably available at the time of the surprise to remedy the disaster, and that the result of a new trial will probably be different. (O’Donnell v. Bennett, 12 Mont. 242, 29 Pac. 1044; Schellhous v. Ball, 29 Cal. 605; Doyle v. Sturla, 38 Cal. 456; Chicago & Great Eastern Ry. Co. v. Vosburgh, 45 Ill. 311; Hull v. Minneapolis St. Ry. Co., 64 Minn. 402, 67 N. W. 218; 1 Spelling on New Trial and Appellate Practice, sec. 201; 14 Encyclopedia of Pleading and Practice, 723.) If, at the time the condition arises, the party can make use of other evidence at hand, or can avoid the threatened disaster by securing a continuance, or by submitting to a nonsuit, he must do so; and not only so, but, after these means have failed, he must by his showing make it clear that his al-* legation is not a mere pretense to cover his own lack of diligence. As was said in Schellhous v. Ball, supra: “It is the duty of the courts to look upon applications for new trials upon the ground of surprise with suspicion, for the reason that from the nature of the case surprise may be often feigned and pretended, and the opposite party may be unable to show that such is the case. Hence, the party alleging surprise should be required to show it conclusively, and by the most satisfactory evidence within his reach.” In Chicago & Great Eastern Ry. Co. v. Vosburgh, supra, the court said: “In applications for new trials on such ground it is not only necessary that the party should have been surprised, but that it was in a matter material to
Applying this rule to the appellant’s affidavit, we find that it is insufficient in several particulars. It does not appear therefrom, except by way of conclusion of the affiant, what inquiry appellant made of the witnesses whose conduct is complained of; nor does it appear, except in the same way, what they told him they would testify to. Except the statement of Hatfield that Hall said he “went and took it,” referring to the water, we have but the conclusion of the appellant as to what the purport of the statements to him by the witnesses were. They may have had the purport and evidentiary value assigned to them by the appellant, but that this is true we cannot say, because the details of them are not before us. T-he evidence heard by the trial court is not before us. Therefore, we cannot say, except from the statements in the affidavit, that the court based its findings as to the mill ditch mainly upon their testimony. So far as we know, there may have been other evidence in the case, and sufficient to justify the finding, even if the witnesses had testified as appellant supposed they would. For, while we may infer from the affidavit that they were the only witnesses called by appellant, there is no positive statement that such was the case, or that they were the only witnesses who testified as to the mill ditch. From the affidavit, as a whole, coupled with the fact that many other witnesses were found after the trial was over who could furnish the desired evidence, we think the inference permissible that the appellant was negligent in the search for evidence to sustain his contention prior to the trial, and that the judge who decided the motion thought so.
There is a total want of any showing of prompt action and diligence on the part of the appellant in his effort to avoid the result of his alleged surprise at the testimony, when it came
A consideration, which is conclusive, however, is that it is not at all apparent that there is any probability that the result reached by the trial judge would be different if a new trial were granted. As stated above, the evidence is not before us, and though it may be-conceded that the new witnesses whose affidavits are embodied in the record would testify as they allege, in the absence of the evidence, we cannot say that a different result would probably be reached.
We are of the opinion that no abuse of discretion is shown, and that the order denying a new trial should be affirmed. It is so ordered.
Affirmed.