Our labors in the case before us would have been somewhat simplified, and, indeed, would be generally simplified in water right cases, by having incorporated into the record a diagram of the situation of the ditches over which the litigation has arisen. Witnesses upon the trial of such causes are apt to presume that the jurors and the trial judge have some personal knowledge of the lay of the land, and of the ditches conducting water thereto. This assumption is perhaps often well taken as applied to jurymen, who frequently know the more important ditches and water claims in in their counties, and therefore easily comprehend the full meaning of a witness when he refers to a ditch by the local name given it in the neighborhood, and it may be that the trial judge is well enough acquainted with the section to readily understand the meaning of any such reference; but when the case comes to the appellate court, and the testimony is, for instance, that ‘ ‘on the north side the wheat crop could not be irrigated by the McLaren ditch, ” and there is no map to convey any idea of north, south, east or west, or to illustrate where the McLaren ditch is, and no lucid explanation of its situation, the task of locating it becomes laborious, and can only be performed by deductions from scattering statements of the several witnesses who referred to the ditch as if every one knew of its owner, course and size. We do not mean to apply these remarks particularly to one side of this case, but are prompted to make them by the example afforded by this record of a practice which we hope will hereafter be avoided.
On the trial, plaintiff’s evidence tended to show that in April and May, 1883, his predecessors in interest constructed an irrigating ditch of a capacity of 165 inches of water from a point at least a quarter of a mile above plaintiff’s land to the land now owned by plaintiff, and cultivated about 12 acres by means of said ditch in the first year of said appropriation, and that ever since 1883 the land has been irrigated by means of said ditch and laterals therefrom until 1895, when defendants interfered with the water. Plaintiff then rested.
The defendants introduced a witness named Strout, who
J. B. Stuart, who located the ditch with Strout in 1882, testified that he owned the present Harrington ranch, having bought out Buker’s improvements thereon in 1880; that he claimed 160 acres; that he never filed on the land; that in 1882 “his brother came out, and he let him have it if he would prove up on it;” that the water was located for use on that land in 1882, and was used ever afterwards; that, when he transferred to his brother William, he had no deed to the property, as he never had filed upon it; and that he gave no deed to William, but that William took possession that fall, and lived there until he proved up; that William never raised a crop there, but that witness raised a crop on part of the Harrington ranch in 1884; that, when he turned over the ranch to his brother William, he did not “turn over the water right at the same time; that he told him the water was taken out in 1882 for the land, and went with it.”
Thereupon counsel for plaintiff asked the court to withdraw from the consideration of the jury the testimony of J. B. Stuart detailing the transfer of the water right from him to his brother, because it was improper to show a right in William Stuart to the water right, and was not a conveyance of a water right, so as to enable William Stuart to date his appropriation back to the time when tT. B. Stuart made the appropriation of the water, and was not such a transfer óf a water right as was authorized and required by law. The court sustained the objection, and, upon a similar motion, struck out of the case and withdrew from the consideration of the jury the testimony of the witness Strout concerning the sale of his interest in the water right to Crane, as testified to by Strout.
We believe that these rulings of the court were erroneous, and that, on account of them, the judgment must be set aside, and the cause remanded to the District Court for a new trial.
In McDonald v. Lannen, 19 Mont. 78, 47 Pac. 648, it was decided that a squatter on the public domain could transfer the possession of his claim, including the water right appurtenant thereto, and the improvements thereon verbally, and that the transferee who is put in possession becomes his successor in interest. That decision is directly applicable to the case before us, as demonstrating the error of the District Court in excluding the evidence of the verbal transfers from Stuart to his brother, and from Strout to his successors. The respondent, however, says that the doctrine of the McDonald-Lannen case is controlling only where there has been a verbal sale of the improvements and water rights on unsurveyed ground. Although we think the evidence in this record tends stiongly to show that the lands transferred by verbal sale by Stuart and Strout were unsurveyed at the times of such transfers, we fail to see wherein there is any reason for the distinction respondent draws. If the claimant and appropriate!' of land
It is argued that J. B. Stuart abandoned the land in his brother’s interest. But where is the evidence of such an abandonment other than the relinquishment of a personal intention on J. B. Stuart’s part to acquire title to the land for himself ? His own statement to his brother that the water went with the land when he told him he could have the land if he proved up on it, his own subsequent cultivation of it, and later on, when William acquired title thereto, his purchase of it, all, as appeared on the trial, disclose not alone •that he had no intent to abandon the place, but every purpose and wish to hold on to the land and water rights he had, and to transfer the same to his brother. The transfer may not have been in good faith under the laws of the United States,— that is, there may have been an agreement between William and James concerning the transfer of the property to James when acquired by William; but William took possession of the place, and while in such possession the water was used from the water appropriated by James to irrigate the land. But there is no suggestion of fraud throughout the case, and we regard the evidence as tending to show a valid transfer of James Stuart’s rights to his brother.
Stress is laid upon the point that the evidence fails to show any consideration for the transfer from James to William Stuart. That, as intimated before, might be a circumstance tending to show a collusive agreement between the brothers to
We find it unnecessary to extend the discussion. To do so is to repeat the doctrine of the McJDonald-Lannen case. We are constrained to hold that the lower court ought to have considered the evidence excluded, and for failure to do so, appellant’s rights were prejudiced, and a new trial must be had.
Reversed and Remanded.