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Montana Law Week

The Weekly Digest of Montana Law

Archives for January 2017

Title insurance, extinguishment of easement

January 14, 2017 By lilly

TITLE INSURANCE: Extinguishment of easement is not a “defect in or lien or encumbrance on the title” for which insurer may be liable… summary judgments granted on similar but different grounds for procurer and insurer… Ortley. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Past Issues, State Trial Courts Tagged With: Benjamin Hursh, Gregory Schultz, Randall Ogle

Settlements

January 14, 2017 By lilly

Plan I

Kimberly McPherson, right upper extremity, 12/10, disputed liability for certain medical, $450,000 for all claims, stipulated judgment; Thomas Murphy for McPherson, Morgan Weber (MSGIA) [Read more…]

Filed Under: Past Issues, Workers' Compensation Court

Logging/house contract, verdict amendment

January 7, 2017 By lilly

LOGGING/HOUSE CONTRACT: $75,348.18 verdict for logger/contractor against property owner upset by loss of “specimen trees” properly amended to reflect $50,348.18 as breach of contract damages rather than mutually exclusive unjust enrichment, and to vacate $25,000 for breach of implied covenant as double recovery… prejudgment interest denied due to uncertainty of amount of recovery… J. Brown affirmed. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Past Issues, Supreme Court - Civil Tagged With: Jesse Beaudette, Nathan Fluter, Rhett Nemelka

Homestead exemption, fraudulent transfer

January 7, 2017 By lilly

HOMESTEAD EXEMPTION: Claimant does not have to own the property when exemption is filed as long as it could have been claimed… Claimant’s title derived from fraudulent transfer and thus he never owned the property and could not claim exemption… equitable interest for labor/improvements may be possible but Claimant failed to show principles relied on… Wheelis affirmed. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Past Issues, Supreme Court - Civil Tagged With: Sean Frampton, Tiffin Hall

Pivot irrigation system, fixture of land

January 7, 2017 By lilly

PIVOT IRRIGATION SYSTEM installed by Plaintiff for use on Defendant’s land to grow alfalfa to attract game for Plaintiff constituted a fixture of the land… Defendant properly found not to have breached email purchase/maintenance agreement at time Plaintiff sued for return of damaged system… Plaintiff not entitled to unjust enrichment recovery… Hayworth affirmed. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Past Issues, Supreme Court - Civil Tagged With: Adam Tunning, Jordan FitzGerald, Michael Begley, Stephen Mackey

Water, BLM reservoirs, use by grazers

January 7, 2017 By lilly

WATER: BLM entitled to proceed under Montana law to appropriate water in its reservoirs for use by grazing permittees and others… Ritter affirmed.

BLM filed 6 claims related to 5 reservoirs based on Montana law and a natural pothole (Pothole Lake) based on a federal reservation of lands. The sources are wholly or partly on federal land, and BLM claims the right to use each for stockwatering by its grazing permittees and wildlife. The Water Master recommended summary judgment for BLM on each claim. Stockowners objected, stating the issue as whether BLM “under applicable state and federal laws, actually made appropriations for beneficial use.” They contend that BLM did not perfect any rights and sought an order transferring all the claimed BLM rights to the current grazing permittee and terminating all wildlife claims. Judge Ritter upheld the Master’s recommendation in most respects. Objectors appeal.

Ritter did not err in concluding that BLM holds stockwater rights under Montana law in reservoirs on federal land, for the use of grazing permittees. Under the law established in Bailey (Mont. 1912), relied on by both parties, there is no “public service corporation rule,” but only recognition of a public policy of the State to allow and even encourage individuals and entities to appropriate water and make it available for use by others. We reject Objectors’ argument that BLM cannot appropriate water because it does not separately charge grazers for use of the reservoir water. As long as the water is made available for sale, rental, or distribution or disposal to others, id., it is a valid appropriation under Bailey. Montana law “clearly shows a steadfast commitment to recognizing the ability to appropriate water for its ultimate use by a third party.” Curry (Mont. 2016). Contrary to the Dissent’s argument that BLM has never put water to a beneficial use, Art. IX §3(2) states: “The use of all water that is now or may hereafter be appropriated for sale, rent, distribution, or other beneficial use … and the sites for reservoirs necessary for collecting and storing water shall be held to be a public use.” Nor can Objectors’ argument that BLM’s claims are invalid because it “simply facilitated use of water already appropriated” by their ancestral free grazers be supported under Montana law. It has long been the common law and then statutory law in Montana that multiple appropriators can claim rights from the same source and that the first in time has the best right. It is well known that there have been so many appropriators on some sources that the waters have become “over appropriated.” Trout Unlimited (Mont. 2006) While that creates its own issues, it does not mean that the one that made the first use acquired the right to exclude any others from claiming water from the same source.

Ritter correctly concluded that Pothole Lake was reserved by an act of Congress in 1926 and that nothing raised by Objectors supports any change in that status.

McGrath, Cotter, Wheat, Baker, Shea, Rice.

McKinnon dissented: The Majority’s conclusions that Stockowners’ claims are separate from BLM’s claims ignore that they share the same beneficial use: BLM’s claims are premised on actual beneficial use of water consumed by Stockowners’ cattle. To conclude that BLM has perfected its claim, which may only be characterized as overlapping Stockowners’ claim, the Majority again revisits Bailey and further erodes the long-established principle in western water law that application of water to beneficial use is essential to a completed appropriation. By concluding that BLM has a right in the samewater which has been placed to an actual beneficial use for over a century by Stockowners, the Majority distorts Bailey, fails to address well-reasoned Montana and federal law, and upends the touchstone of the prior appropriation doctrine.

Claimant: BLM; Objectors: Barthelmess Ranch et al, DA 15-533, argued 9/23/16, decided 12/28/16.

John Cruden, Elizabeth Peterson, John Smeltzer, James Dubois, and Anna Stimmel (USDOJ); John Bloomquist & Rachel Meredith (Bloomuist Law Firm), Helena, for Objectors.

Filed Under: Past Issues, Supreme Court - Civil Tagged With: Anna Stimmel, Elizabeth Peterson, James Dubois, John Bloomquist, John Cruden, John Smeltzer, Rachel Meredith

Marital, Master’s report review

January 7, 2017 By lilly

MARITAL: Judge properly refused to review Master’s report or hold hearing because objections lacked specificity… Salvagni affirmed. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Past Issues, Supreme Court - Civil Tagged With: Christopher Gillette, Suzanne Marshall

Marital, support reduction

January 7, 2017 By lilly

MARITAL: Father’s support properly reduced from CSED amount based on changed circumstances… McKeon affirmed. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Past Issues, Supreme Court - Civil Tagged With: Lindsay Lorang

Sanctions, $306,954.23, failure to disclose 1st Will

January 7, 2017 By lilly

SANCTIONS: Informal probate of contested 2011 Will executed by dying man disinheriting son named in 1980 Will and leaving Estate to wife of 13 months denied as default sanction for failure to timely disclose Will executed days before contested Will… contested Will also rejected in formal probate… $306,954.23 fees/costs assessed under Rule 37 for untimely disclosure of Will, plus fees-for-fees (disputed as to joint & several with counsel)… Larson. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Past Issues, State Trial Courts Tagged With: Dana Henkel, Jesse Froehling, Lon Dale, Michael Bybee, Perry Schneider, Robert Terrazas

Wrongful arrest, mistaken identity

January 7, 2017 By lilly

WRONGFUL ARREST and related claims against County based on mistaking father for son in arrest dismissed as time-barred or for failure to establish elements of claims… Halligan. [Read more…]

Filed Under: Past Issues, State Trial Courts Tagged With: Charles McNeil, Emma Mediak, Terry Wallace

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