24 Mont. 13 | Mont. | 1900
delivered the opinion of the Court.
Plaintiff, who is the respondent here, brought this action against defendants (appellants) to establish his right to the use of 200 inches of the waters of the East Gallatin river, flowing through what is known as the ‘ ‘Flannery Ditch, ’ ’ in Gallatin county. Defendants answered, denying plaintiff’s right to the use of said waters or said ditch, and setting up their own claims to certain lands, and the use of certain waters from the said East Gallatin river, through the said Flannery ditch. B. Graham intervened, claiming a right to use certain water through said ditch, and denying plaintiff’s alleged rights.
There was a trial to a jury. Special findings and general verdict were returned in favor of plaintiff, by which plaintiff
Defendants appealed from the judgment, presenting, by a bill of exceptions, the question whether the court was justified by the evidence in allowing plaintiff the use of 200 inches of water from June, 1868, which put plaintiff’s entire right upon an equal footing with the rights of the defendants and the intervenor, or whether plaintiff should have'been limited to a right to use only 50 inches as appropriated in June, 1868, and the other 150 inches as appropriated in December, 1876. We so state the question because the following material facts were testified to by plaintiff’s witnesses:
William Flannery said that he had known the land claimed by plaintiff, and called the “Toohey Land,” since 1866, and was also familiar with the lands belonging to the defendants and the intervenor; that he had lived on the Campbell land and on the Davis land, and had had these lands inclosed and cultivated; that he settled on the Toohey land about January 1, 1866, and constructed two ditches for the land, — one for himself, and the other in partnership with others; that in 1889 his individual ditch had a capacity of 3,500 inches, and that this is what is known as the ‘ ‘Flannery Ditch, ’ ’ which was used in connection with the Toohey land; that out of this ditch water was first put on the Toohey land in 1869, there having been in cultivation at that time about 10 acres of the tract, and that water had been used on the land every year after 1869 until July 9, 1885, at which time there had been brought under cultivation on the Toohey land about 50 acres; that on July 9, 1885, the land was fenced with other land about it, and there were irrigating ditches upon it at that
A witness named Arnold testified that a part of 40 acres of the Toohey land was fenced in 1869; that in that year some 6 or 8 acres had been irrigated, but that he could not state that there was ever any land cultivated on the Toohey tract, except a little piece that had been irrigated, before 1876.
The plaintiff testified that he had known the land since
Upon the foregoing undisputed facts we believe the defendants are entitled to have the decree of the district court modified so as to allow plaintiff the right to the use of but 50 inches of water through the Flannery ditch as of a date in June, 1868, together with the right to the use of 150 inches as of December 15, 1876, when Flannery took up 160 acres as a timber-culture claim. Certain principles controlling the law of water rights direct us to this conclusion. One of the rules in the system of the law of water rights is that no one man can, by prior appropriation, obtain exclusive control of an entire stream, unless his appropriation is made for some beneficial purpose, presently existing or contemplated. He is restricted in the amount that he can appropriate to the quantity needed for such beneficial purposes. ‘The intention of the claimant is, therefore, a most important factor in determining the validity of an appropriation of water. When that is ascertained, limitation of the quantity of water necessary to effectuate his intent can be applied according to the acts, diligence, and needs of the appropriator.’ (Power, et al. v. Switzer, 21 Mont. 523, 55 Pac. 32.)
The policy of the law is to prevent a person from acquiring exclusive control of a stream, or any part thereof, not for present and actual beneficial use, but for mere future speculative profit or advantage, without regard to existing or contemplated beneficial uses.
We recognize the doctrine that right to the use of water may be owned without regard to the title to lands upon which the water is to be used; that is, that a right to the use of water is a possessory one, that may be obtained by actual appropriation and diversion, perfected by application of the water so appropriated to a beneficial use then present or contemplated, and made before appropriation and use by another. But, as every appropriation must be made for a beneficial or
When, therefore, we look into the facts of the case under consideration, in our judgment, Flannery, as the appropriator of the water, never meant to use it, at the time of the diversion, upon any portion of the Toohey land other than the part inclosed, or prior to 1876. It cannot be said that he contemplated acquiring title to any part of the Toohey land not under cultivation, for he states that he used the only rights he could then avail himself of,- — pre-emption and homestead upon adjoining lands, — and admits his only claim to the Toohey land before 1876 was a squatter’s privilege. As the timber-culture act was not passed until 1873, and was not proceeded under by Flannery until 1876, he could not have had in contemplation acquisition of title to the land under this law before its enactment by congress; while he never claimed or possessed but about 25 acres under any other right before 1876. Hence it seems clear that his intent, in 1868, in the then present and contemplated use of the water then diverted, never reached beyond the purpose of irrigating the part of the Toohey tract inclosed, or about 25 acres only. Of course, when he took up the land in 1876, embracing his former inclosure and possessory claim, his right to the use of sufficient water to irrigate his whole claim from'that time forward must be recognized, and is conceded by appellants. But his rights up to 1876 must be limited to a quantity sufficient to irrigate what he then had in actual possession. This amounted to no more than 25 acres, for which a right to the use of 50 inches is sufficient.
The fact that Flannery had a partner, who was also claiming land, cannot help extend an intent that could not possibly have existed in his or his partner’s mind at the time of the diversion of the water. Neither of them ever inclosed but few acres of the Toohey ground, or irrigated more, or defined
The cases of McDonald v. Lannen, et al., 19 Mont. 78, 47 Pac. 648, and Wood v. Lowney, et al., 20 Mont. 273, 50 Pac. 794, are not pertinent, as in each of these instances the extent of the 'right of use was measured by the confessed bona jide claim to the lands sought to be irrigated. The intentions of the settlers at the times of their diversions were not the points upon which the cases turned for decision.
We recognize that possessory rights upon the public domain will be protected, and that appropriations of water for the benefit of squatters’ claims will be upheld, but such appropriations must always be for beneficial uses then existing, or contemplated in the future, and as against others, who have initiated rights, will not avail, where there is no actual possession held, and where it is evident none was claimed with a purpose of securing privileges and rights under the laws of the United States existing when the squatters went upon the unsurveyed tracts.
Flannery is, therefore, only entitled to 50 inches as of June, 1868, ’and the decree should be modified as indicated herein.
The cause is remanded, with directions to modify the decree as herein indicated, and, when so modified, the judgment will be affirmed.
Modified and afivrmed.