215 P. 999 | Mont. | 1923
prepared the opinion for the court.
This is in effect an action to quiet the title to 250 inches of the waters of Your Name Creek, as being appurtenant to the lands described in the complaint. The plaintiff holds said lands under a deed executed by the Day & Hansen Security Company, one of the defendants herein, and delivered to the plaintiff on the thirty-first day of December, 1914. The granting clause of this deed, after describing the lands conveyed, continues: “Containing, according to the United States government survey, 291.50 acres, more or less, together with such proportion of vendor’s water and water rights as decreed to William T. Day and John W. Blair, September 20, 1912, of Your Name Creek, as the average amount of water of said creek will equitably supply per acre to said land above described, now under the present ditch, considering the supply from said creek to be used equitably per acre upon 3,500 acres of land, * * * together with the tenements, hereditaments, and appurtenances thereunto belonging, or in any wise appertaining, with the exceptions and reservations hereinbefore stated.” The plaintiff’s grantor succeeded to the rights of William T. Day and John W. Blair, decreed under
The plaintiff alleged in his complaint that about June 1, 1876, the predecessors in interest of plaintiff appropriated 250 miners’ inches of the waters of Your Name Creek to the land now owned by plaintiff, and that by reason of the continuous use of the same said water became appurtenant to the land. His contention is that said amount of water was conveyed to him by implication under the general appurtenance clause in the deed. Testimony was offered in support of the plaintiff’s complaint. The cause was submitted to the court sitting without a jury. No special findings were made, but judgment was rendered in favor of the defendants. The plaintiff has appealed from this judgment.
The only question presented by the appeal is a construction
In a conveyance of a water right or any other property,
Section 10520, Revised Codes of 1921, provides: “In the construction of a statute the intention of the legislature, and in the construction of the instrument the intention of the parties, is to be pursued if possible; and when a general and particular provision are inconsistent, the latter is paramount to the former. So a particular intent will control a general one that is inconsistent with it.”
By the deed in question a definite and specific water right
Section 7547, Revised Codes of 1921, provides: “All things that in law or usage are considered as incidental to a contract, or as necessary to carry it into effect, are implied therefrom, unless some of them are expressly mentioned therein, when all other things of the same class are deemed to be excluded.” The deed in this case, having expressly mentioned the water right to be conveyed, under the authority of the foregoing section, all other water rights must be held to have been excluded.
"We recommend that the judgment be affirmed.
Per Curiam : For the reasons given in the foregoing opinion, the judgment appealed from is affirmed.
Affirmed.