08/15/2017
DA 16-0740
Case Number: DA 16-0740
IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA
2017 MT 201N
IN THE MATTER OF THE PETITION OF THE
WATER USERS OF INDIAN CREEK WATER USERS
FOR APPOINTMENT OF A WATER COMMISSIONER.
MELANIE J. KNADLER, Personal Representative of the
Estate of PEARL JANE HARK,
Interested Party and Appellant,
v.
QUIRK CATTLE COMPANY,
Respondent and Appellee.
APPEAL FROM: Montana Water Court, Cause No. WC-2016-02
Honorable Russ McElyea, Chief Water Judge
COUNSEL OF RECORD:
For Appellant:
Jacqueline R. Papez, Jack G. Connors, Doney Crowley, P.C.,
Helena, Montana
For Appellee:
Scott D. Hagel, Crowley Fleck PLLP, Kalispell, Montana
Submitted on Briefs: June 21, 2017
Decided: August 15, 2017
Filed:
__________________________________________
Clerk
Justice Jim Rice delivered the Opinion of the Court.
¶1 Pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c), Montana Supreme Court Internal Operating
Rules, this case is decided by memorandum opinion and shall not be cited and does not
serve as precedent. Its case title, cause number, and disposition shall be included in this
Court’s quarterly list of noncitable cases published in the Pacific Reporter and Montana
Reports.
¶2 The water right issue between Pearl J. Hark (Hark) and Quirk Cattle Company
(QCC) dates back at least thirty years. Separately, Hark and QCC hold three of the senior
water right claims on Indian Creek: (1) QCC’s 1884 claim for 5 cfs, 76D 118113-00
(QCC’s 1884 Claim); (2) Hark’s 1890 claim for 1.25 cfs, 76D 140172-00 (Hark’s 1890
Claim); and (3) QCC’s 1894 claim for 7.5 cfs, 76D 118111-00 (QCC’s 1894 Claim).
Central to this dispute is the priority between the latter two claims. QCC’s 1884 Claim has
never been disputed by Hark.
¶3 In 1984, the Water Court issued the Kootenai River Temporary Preliminary Decree
for Basin 76D. QCC objected to Hark’s 1890 Claim on the basis of priority. However, on
February 26, 1985, QCC and Hark entered into a Water Use Agreement (Agreement),
which stated:
[W]hile the parties recognize the first and senior appropriative rights of the
Quirk Cattle Company in and to the waters of Indian Creek and the ditch and
pipeline rights of the Quirk Cattle Company, the parties and their
predecessors in interest have historically shared the waters of Indian Creek
and are desirous of providing for their continued cooperation and sharing of
the waters of Indian Creek in accordance with those established practices[.]
Except for further Whereas Clauses, the Agreement stated in full:
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NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the respective rights of the parties
and the mutual promises and agreements hereinafter set forth, the parties
hereby agree as follows:
1. That the Quirk Cattle Company has the senior and first appropriative right
to the waters of Indian Creek, both through filed appropriations and historic
and long-continued use.
2. That the Quirk Cattle Company has the right to appropriate all of the
waters of Indian Creek through its ditch and pipeline referred to hereinabove,
and does so appropriate all of the waters of Indian Creek, during conditions
of low water.
3. That as the volume of the flow of the waters of Indian Creek increases, the
parties have historically shared the waters of Indian Creek during such times
of surplus flow.
4. That during such periods as there exists in Indian Creek a volume of flow
in excess of the needs of the Quirk Cattle Company, the parties have
historically shared such waters and the Harks have diverted the waters of
Indian Creek at such times for application to beneficial uses upon lands
owned by Hark through the ditch and pipeline of the Quirk Cattle Company
herein-above mentioned.
5. The parties hereby agree that they shall continue to apportion and share
the waters of Indian Creek in accordance with their established practices.
6. That this Agreement shall be binding upon and inure to the benefit of the
successors in interest of the parties.
The Agreement was signed by Leland Driggs, President of QCC, Pearl Hark, and Hark’s
sons, Frank Rettig (Rettig) and Grant Hark (Grant). Simultaneously with the signing of
the Agreement, Rettig and Grant signed affidavits affirming that QCC had “claimed and
continuously put to beneficial use the first waters of Indian Creek.”
¶4 The Agreement was filed with the Water Court, and QCC withdrew its objection to
Hark’s 1890 Claim. The Water Master incorporated the text of the Agreement in the
Master’s Report for 76D-58. The Master’s Report stated that the Agreement “resolved the
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objections by Quirk Cattle Company to Pearl Hark’s claims” and found that “[t]he
agreement reached between Quirk Cattle Company and the Harks should be incorporated
in the decree.” On August 24, 1987, then-Chief Water Judge W.W. Lessley incorporated
the text of the Agreement into the Temporary Preliminary Decree for the Kootenai River
Basin.
¶5 In 2015, by motion filed with the Water Court, Hark challenged an issue remark that
had been placed on the Hark 1890 Claim abstract indicating the claim was subject to the
Agreement. Noting that the remark had not been placed on the claim when initially filed,
but had been added in 1993 without notice, Hark argued the remark was incorrect and
should be removed. The Water Court, noting that there may have been a failure “to follow
a clearly defined process in 1987” when attempting to add the remark to the three claims
subject to the Agreement, stated that, however, “[i]t is apparent Hark is not seeking to
correct a clerical error or procedural oversight. Rather, she is contesting the enforceability
of the 1985 Water Use Agreement with respect to [the Hark’s 1890 Claim].” Associate
Water Court Judge Douglas Ritter concluded:
While the specific water right claim numbers are not listed [in the
Agreement], the intent is clear. Quirk has senior rights, entitling it to all the
waters of Indian Creek at low water. During high water, Quirk and Hark
historically shared the use of Indian Creek. The parties agreed to continue to
abide by this basic understanding and bind their respective successors
in interest accordingly. Since the Water Use Agreement was filed in case
76D-58, which included Hark[’s] Indian Creek claim 76D 140172-00
[Hark’s 1890 Claim], and Quirk withdrew its objection based on the
Agreement, there is no doubt this claim is one of the high water rights owned
by Hark and is subject to the terms of the Water Use Agreement.
The Water Court’s order was entered on June 26, 2015, and was not appealed.
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¶6 On July 5, 2016, a Hark representative contacted the Water Commissioner for
Indian Creek and requested distribution of water “based on Ms. Hark’s 1890 Right.” Hark
asserted there was sufficient water in Indian Creek to fill the two senior water rights
(QCC’s 1884 Claim and the claim of another party not in this action), as well as the Hark
1890 Claim. The Water Commissioner refused, citing the Agreement, and allowed QCC
to fulfill its 1894 Claim ahead of Hark’s claims.
¶7 Hark filed a Verified Dissatisfied Water User Complaint with the Nineteenth
Judicial District Court, asserting a right to divert water based on priority under the Hark
1890 Claim. QCC petitioned the District Court to certify the priority question to the Water
Court, which was granted, and then moved the Water Court for summary judgment. Hark
answered, moved for discovery pursuant to M. R. Civ. P. 56(f), and moved to strike
portions of QCC’s summary judgment reply brief. Hark’s motions were denied. In its
summary judgment order, the Water Court explained that the scope of the certified question
encompassed fourteen water right claims (three for Hark and eleven for QCC), but that the
three claims cited supra were “central” to the dispute. The Water Court concluded that
there was no ambiguity regarding the priority issue in the Agreement:
Ambiguity exists when reasonable people disagree as to a document’s effect
and meaning. A Water Master, two Water Judges, and a water commissioner
have all either directly or impliedly concluded that the Agreement
subordinated Hark’s right to the rights of QCC. The only person who
disagrees is Hark, who waited three decades to assert an alternative
interpretation, and declined to appeal Judge Ritter’s 2015 determination that
her Indian Creek right was part of the Agreement she signed.
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The Water Court held that “[t]he Agreement subordinates [Hark’s] Indian Creek water
rights (claims 76D 140170-00, 76D 140171-00 and 76D 140172-00) to QCC’s rights on
Indian Creek,” and entered summary judgment in favor of QCC on the question.
¶8 Hark appeals, arguing the Water Court abused its discretion when it denied both her
motion for discovery under M. R. Civ. P. 56(f) and her motion to strike part of QCC’s reply
brief, erred in its interpretation of the Agreement, and erred in the determination of
the scope of the order by including Hark’s Indian Creek Ditch water right claim, 76D
140171-00, as one of Hark’s Indian Creek water rights, and leaving Hark’s Derozier Creek
water right, 76D 118115-00, in the caption of the order.
¶9 Starting with the procedural issues, we find no abuse of discretion by the Water
Court in denying both Hark’s M. R. Civ. P. 56(f) motion and motion to strike. “District
courts have inherent discretionary power to control discovery,” including the power to
“decide[] whether to deny or to continue a motion for summary judgment pursuant to Rule
56(f).” Envtl. Contractors, LLC v. Moon, 1999 MT 178, ¶ 19, 295 Mont. 268, 983 P.2d
390. The Water Court correctly noted that the dispute regarding the relative priorities on
Indian Creek “is not in its infancy,” and that Hark’s reference to “selective use of facts by
QCC, if true, suggests that Hark is in possession of alternative information that she can use
to respond to QCC’s assertions.” We find no abuse of discretion in the Water Court’s
handling of the summary judgment proceedings and in its denial of Hark’s procedural
motions.
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¶10 We also find no error in the Water Court’s interpretation of the Agreement on the
narrow question of priorities among water rights. First, the language of the Agreement is
clear. Anderson v. Stokes, 2007 MT 166, ¶ 33, 338 Mont. 118, 163 P.3d 1273 (“If the
language of a contract is unambiguous—i.e., reasonably susceptible to only one
construction—the duty of the court is to apply the language as written.”). The Agreement
provides that QCC “has the senior and first appropriative right to the waters of Indian
Creek, both through filed appropriations and historical and long-continued use.” It
recognizes that QCC “has the right to appropriate all of the waters of Indian Creek . . . and
does so appropriate all of the waters of Indian Creek, during conditions of low flow.”
(Emphasis added.) This language is clear on its face and means that QCC holds
appropriative rights senior to those of Hark on Indian Creek. Secondly, the Agreement
only makes sense if it served as the basis for QCC’s withdrawal of its objection to Hark’s
1890 Claim. QCC challenged the priority of Hark’s 1890 Claim. As noted by the Water
Master in 1987, the Agreement “resolved the objections by Quirk Cattle Company to Pearl
Hark’s claims.” As the Water Court reasoned, “[a]n interpretation of the Agreement that
did not subordinate Hark’s right to QCC’s other Indian Creek rights would have made the
Agreement unnecessary” because nothing else was needed to administer the rights in the
priority they were originally claimed. We find no error in the Water Court’s conclusion
that “[t]he Agreement subordinates [Hark’s] Indian Creek water rights . . . to QCC’s rights
on Indian Creek.”
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¶11 While we affirm the Water Court’s entry of summary judgment on the priority issue
before it, we note that there are further questions between Hark and QCC regarding water
use on Indian Creek not addressed in this proceeding. The Agreement also recognizes,
while QCC appropriates all of that water “during conditions of low water,” that during
times of surplus flow the parties had “shared the waters of Indian Creek.” That “sharing”
occurred when “there exists in Indian Creek a volume of flow in excess of the needs of the
Quirk Cattle Company.” The Agreement provides that the parties “hereby agree that they
shall continue to apportion and share the waters of Indian Creek in accordance with their
established practices.” The Agreement, which is very brief, does not define the terms of
this sharing arrangement, such as “surplus flow” and the parties’ “established practices,”
and these remain to be defined and resolved between Hark and QCC. Based upon the
allegations of Hark’s complaint, which was specifically grounded in priority, these other
issues were not raised here and this proceeding was not appropriate for such
determinations. Accordingly, we do not resolve these questions.
¶12 Finally, the Water Court appropriately included Claim 76D 140171-00 in the scope
of its order to the extent that the claim is covered by the Agreement and is an Indian Creek
right, because the Agreement itself was limited to only the waters of Indian Creek. On
appeal, and with no evidentiary foundation, we make no determination or holding that the
right should or should not be considered an “Indian Creek” or “Indian Creek Ditch” right—
the decree held that 76D 140171-00’s source is Indian Creek Ditch—and any
clarification on that point should be resolved in an appropriate proceeding. Regarding 76D
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118115-00’s inclusion in the caption of the order, we agree with QCC that the Water
Court’s order was limited to actual Indian Creek rights—“The Agreement subordinates
[Hark’s Indian Creek water rights] . . . to QCC’s rights on Indian Creek”—and had no
effect on 76D 118115-00, which is a Derozier Creek right.
¶13 We have determined to decide this case pursuant to Section I, Paragraph 3(c) of our
Internal Operating Rules, which provides for noncitable memorandum opinions. The
Water Court’s conclusions of law are correct, and it did not abuse its discretion by its
procedural rulings.
¶14 Affirmed.
/S/ JIM RICE
We concur:
/S/ MIKE McGRATH
/S/ LAURIE McKINNON
/S/ BETH BAKER
/S/ DIRK M. SANDEFUR
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