Blasdel v. Montana Power Co.

                                  No. 80-208
                        IN THE SUPREME COURT OF THE STATE OF MONTANA




J. 0 BLASDEL and ETHEL BLASDEL,
    .

                                           Plaintiffs and Respondents,


THE MONTANA POWER COMPANY, a
corporation,
                                           Defendant and Appellant.


Appeal from:           District Court of the Eleventh Judicial District,
                       In and for the County of Flathead
                       Honorable Robert C. Sykes, Judge presiding.
Counsel of Record:
     For Appellant:
             Warden, Christiansen & Johnson, Kalispell, Montana
             Merritt N. Warden argued, Kalispell, Montana
     For Respondents:
             McGarvey, Lence & Heberling, Kalispell, Montana
             Jon L. Heberling argued, Kalispell, Montana


                                   Submitted:   October 21, 1981
                                     Decided:    FED   2 1DBI
Filed:
         :   -.   ,
                  J
                  .   - 1982
Mr. Justice John Conway Harrison delivered the Opinion of
the Court.
       In this inverse condemnation action the defendant,
Montana Power Company, appeals from a judgment in favor of
the plaintiffs landowners.
       Plaintiffs-respondents, the Blasdels, filed suit on
December 1, 1960, against the Montana Power Company for
inverse condemnation of the Blasdel farm.       B1-asdels claim
that Montana Power Company's construction and operation of
the Kerr Dam on Flathead Lake caused the water table to rise
and severely damage their farm.
       Montana's Eleventh Judicial District Court, in and
for the County of Flathead, bifurcated      the issues.       In
February 1979, a two-week nonjury trial found liability and
a taking without just compensation.      In November 1979, a
two-week jury trial established damages as follows:
                                          jury verdict
                                              interest
       $115,448.64                litigation expenses*
       $316,457.02                      Total Judgment
       Plus 10% interest from 12/10/79
       *Awarded after a one-day nonjury trial
       On appeal, Montana Power claims the cause is barred
by prescription and the statute of limitations.          It also
challenges certain findings of fact, conclusions of law,
admission of certain exhibits, and attorney fees and costs
awarded to the plaintiffs.
       In 1930 the Federal Power Commission issued a license
to the predecessor of the Montana Power Company to build
Kerr Dam located just off the south end of Flathead Lake.
That dam was completed in 1939, and in 1940 the appellant,
Montana Power Company, began to operate Kerr Dam.     Prior to
the construction of the dam, the water level in Flathead
Lake r e m a i n e d a t 2883 f e e t a b o v e s e a l e v e l             (FASL), e x c e p t

d u r i n g two months o f h i g h w a t e r e a c h s p r i n g .           A f t e r t h e dam

was c o n s t r u c t e d    i n 1939, t h e water l e v e l of              F l a t h e a d Lake
r e m a i n e d a t 2893 FASL f o r a p e r i o d o f f i v e m o n t h s e a c h y e a r
(May t h r o u g h S e p t e m b e r ) a n d a v e r a g e d 5 . 4     f e e t higher       than
t h e predam l e v e l .
            The r e s p o n d e n t s , J . 0 . and E t h e l B l a s d e l , f i r s t b e g a n
o p e r a t i n g t h e f a r m l a n d i n q u e s t i o n i n 1928 a s t e n a n t s .    They
p u r c h a s e d t h e a r e a i n v o l v e d a t t h r e e d i f f e r e n t times.       The
first      purchase         was    made      in   January       1942,       the    second      in
December 1 9 4 5 , a n d t h e t h i r d i n 1 9 5 7 .

            The B l a s d e l f a r m i s l o c a t e d o n e and o n e - h a l f          miles
north      of    Flathead         Lake,     one-half       mile      from    the     Flathead

River,      and o n e - f o u r t h    m i l e from a s l o u g h t h a t i s c o n n e c t ed

t o t h e Flathead River.                   The f a r m     is surrounded           on t h r e e
s i d e s by w a t e r - - t o   t h e n o r t h and t o t h e e a s t by t h e F l a t h e a d
R i v e r , a n d t o t h e s o u t h by F l a t h e a d L a k e .         The s o u t h b o u n d

F l a t h e a d R i v e r makes a l a r g e t u r n a b o v e t h e B l a s d e l f a r m a n d
t u r n s e a s t and p a r a l l e l t o t h e n o r t h e r n b o r d e r o f t h e farm.

The r i v e r t h e n t u r n s s o u t h , and r u n s p a r a l l e l t o t h e e a s t e r n
b o r d e r of t h e farm.            T h i s e n t i r e a r e a of t h e r i v e r remains
a t t h e same l e v e l a s F l a t h e a d Lake.            Therefore, the Blasdel
farm      is    surrounded         by     water    that     now      averages       5.4     feet

h i g h e r t h a n t h e l e v e l o f t h e predam y e a r s .
            P r i o r t o t h e c o n s t r u c t i o n o f K e r r Dam,      and i n a n t i -
c i p a t i o n of problems t h a t might a r i s e c o n c e r n i n g t h e w a t er
t a b l e r i s e c a u s e d by t h e dam, t h e U n i t e d S t a t e s G e o l o g i c a l
S u r v e y (USGS) began a s t u d y i n 1928 e n t i t l e d ,               " E f f e c t Upon
Ground Water            L e v e l s Of    Proposed      S u r f a c e Water       Storage In

F l a t h e a d L a k e , Montana."         T h i s r e p o r t i s known a s t h e "Cady
report" and was issued by the U S G S in 1940.           References will
be made to this report herein as it is one of the base
reports for the findings of fact and conclusions of law
reached by the trial judge.
          The Cady report predicted that the high water would
slowly seep through the fine soils of the Blasdel farm and
that it would take a number of years before the water table
levels would reach the predicted level of 4.2 feet higher
than the predam years.          Contained in the Cady report were
studies made from forty observation wells dug by the U S G S
commencing in 1928.         These wells were in the vicinity of the
Blasdel    farm, and    the     recorded   information was       used     to
gather base line data on water             tables for the Kerr           Dam
proposal.
         Testimony and documentary evidence introduced at
trial indicate the Blasdels first complained of damage to
their land in 1941.         Again in 1948 complaints were made and,
as a    result of complaints        in 1957, a letter which was
introduced at trial          from Montana      Power's   land    agent    to
Montana Power's attorney in Kalispell, Montana, noted: "If
the proof develops strong enough, we may have to change our
mind about not acknowledging any liability."             On December 1,
1960, the first complaint in this matter was filed.
          In all, five complaints have           been    filed    in   this
action.     The first complaint was filed on December 1, 1960,
and    noted   that   the    Blasdels   were    "deprived       . . .    of
unrestricted use for more than five years last past."                  This
complaint also noted that the water flooded and remained on
the lands in 1959 and 1960.        The second complaint (the first
amended complaint) was filed on December 31, 1965, and was
similar to the first complaint except that it specified that
134   acres   had    been     completely    destroyed    and    126      acres
partially destroyed.          The third (second amended) complaint
was filed on August 9, 1967, and was similar to the second
complaint.    The fourth (third amended) complaint was filed
on June 25, 1971.      For the first time it listed the specific
date of injury, "1959," and alleged that 104 acres of land
were completely destroyed and 121 acres were 75% destroyed.
The complaint again referred to the continuous flooding in
1959-1960, and for the first time spoke of new damage in
1959-1960 and "a permanent taking."              The final and fifth
(fourth amended)        complaint      is   similar     to     the    fourth
complaint filed except that larger amounts of damages were
requested.     The     difference     between    the    first      and    last
complaints    is    largely    a   matter   of   damages     claimed        and
semantics.    The first complaint asked for $50,000 in damages
and   referred to     flood waters      remaining on         the     farm    in
1959-1960.    The last complaint asked for $142,847.89, plus
interest, in damages          and referred to the damage becoming
permanent in 1959 and 1960.
       The District Court made extensive findings of fact,
forty-eight in number, and eight conclusions of law.                        In
finding of fact no. 37, the court found that the post-dam
water table at the Blasdel property rose 4.2 feet.                       Three
feet of this was due to the Flathead Lake and 1.2 feet was
due to increased precipitation.             Montana Power claims the
entire increase, if any, was due to increased precipitation.
        Testimony indicates that the water table fluctuated
until 1960.   Although Blasdels first complained of damage in
1941, there were no problems during dry years such as 1955.
Consequently, the court found the problems caused by the
gradually increasing water table were temporary before 1959-
1960.     In 1959-1960, the water table stabilized, and the
problem became permanent.
         The higher water         table damaged       the Blasdels         in a
number     of       ways.     First,    sloughs     that   were     small or
nonexistent         in the past       have    significantly    increased      in
size.    As the sloughs increase in size, the amount of arable
land decreases, the remaining                  fields assume irregular
shapes,       and     it    becomes    more    difficult      to   move    farm
machinery.           Second, the salt and         sodium content of          the
topsoil       has    increased   dramatically.        This     soil,      called
"tuffitt," is very unproductive, very expensive to treat,
and can affect adjacent land.                 Crop yields in the affected
areas have declined from 33% to 100%.                As a result, one of
the two families that had farmed this land was forced to
leave in 1960 to seek other employment.                 Third, in 1956 a
new spring developed and began flowing across the Blasdel
farm, saturating even more land.
          Five issues are presented to this Court for review:
         1.     Is the plaintiffsf action barred by statute of
limitations?
         2.     Is the plaintiffs' action barred by prescriptive
easement?
         3.     Are the District Court's findings supported by
substantial evidence?
         4.     Did the District Court err in admitting certain
of the plaintiffs' exhibits?
         5.     Did the District Court err in allowing certain
costs to the plaintiffs?
I.     STATUTE OF LIMITATIONS
         Appellant, Montana Power Company, claims that the
respondents first complained of the rising water table in
1941, that the cause of action started running in 1941, and
that the statute of limitations, therefore, expired long
before this suit was filed on December 1, 1960.
         Appellant plead in its answer to the fourth amended
complaint filed on April 27, 1973, as an affirmative
defense, the three-year statute of limitations on actions
"upon an obligation or          liability, not   founded   on   an
instrument in writing, other than a contract, account or
promise" (section 93-2605 (3), R.C .M. 1947, now section 27-
2-202, MCA); the two-year statute of limitions "for injury
to or for waste or trespass on real or personal property"
(section      93-2607(2), R.C.M.   1947, now section 27-2-303,
MCA); and the five-year statute for all actions not other-
wise    covered   (section 93-2613, R.C.M.   1947, now section
27-2-215, MCA) .    Later, after the respondents admitted that
the appellant had invaded their land, the appellant filed a
motion for summary judgment based on the defense of pre-
scriptive easement.
         The appellant cites a number of cases indicating that
the cause of action started running when the damage first
accrued.    Heckaman v. Northern Pac. Ry. Co. (1933), 93 Mont.
363, 20 P.2d 258 (cause of action accrued when a railroad
embankment caused flooding, not when built); Ackerman v.
Port of Seattle (Wash. 1958), 329 P.2d 210 (action accrued
when flights started, not when airport was built);         United
States v. Dickinson (4th Cir. 1946), 152 F.2d 865, aff'd.,
331 U.S.    745, 67 S.Ct. 1382, 91 L.Ed. 1789 (1947) (action
accrued when flooding occurred, not when the dam was built);
Castro    v.     United   States    (Ct. C1.     1974),       500    F.2d   436
(statute of        limitation did       not    run until damages             so
manifested themselves that a final account may be struck).
The appellant concludes that at least sixty acres of the
land flooded in the 1940s, and, consequently, the statute of
limitations (whether two, three or five years) expired long
before 1960.        It further argues that this is true even if
the     flooding was      intermittent, citing         Barnes       v.   United
States (Ct. C1. 1976), 538 F.2d 865.              In the instant case,
the damage was temporary pr ior to 1959-1960 and permanent
after 1959-1960.          Therefore, if anything, the above-cited
cases actually support the respondents' position that the
cause of action did not start running until 1959-1960.
         The only water        table case cited         by    appellant      is
Korgel v. United States (8th Cir. 1980), 619 F.2d 16.                        In
Korqel large amounts of diverted water ran off an airbase
and raised the water table in 1969 until it flooded the
plaintiffs'      land.     However, since the plaintiffs waited
until 1976 to file suit, the court found the action was
barred     by    applicable    two-year       statute    of     limitations
provision.        In Korgel,       the plaintiffs apparently waited
until five years after the water table stabilized to file
suit.    Thus, Korgel is not on point.
         At a11 times in the District Court the Montana Power
Company denied any damage.          Therefore, it did not attempt to
prove a date of permanent injury other than to allege that
if the cause ripened, if ever it did, it did so in 1941 and
because    the    action here was not          filed    until       1960,   the
statute barred respondents' action.              Throughout its proof,
and to the day of oral argument of this appeal, appellant
denieu that the water table rose and denied that damage, if
any, was due to the lake.                 Therefore, we find few facts on
appellant's side to sustain its alternative claims of the
statute of limitation and prescription.                  Indeed, as we will
note later in considering the evidence produced here, the
appellant offered no proof of how much the water table rose
on the Blasdel farm due to the rise in the lake or when it
rose.
         The District Court made a final finding of fact that
respondents           ". . .      could   not   with   reasonable   certainty
ascertain permanent damage to any substantial portion of the
[respondents']             land   until   the growing    season 1959-1960."
This finding is also stated as part of the first conclusion
of law: "[Substantial damage to the respondents' land]                  . . .
could not be reasonably ascertained until the growing season
1959-1960."           On that basis, the court concluded: "Plaintiffs
filed    their        complaint within       the   statute of    limitations
pertaining to a permanent taking."                 In so ruling, the court
did not answer the issue of which statute of limitations is
applicable in an inverse condemnation case of invasion by
underground seep.              To solve this issue we must begin with a
case of this Court, Hauser v. Toston Irr. Dist. (1977), 172
kont. 530, 565 P.2d 632.
         In Kauser, this Court held that a rising water table
is a "taking" or permanent invasion of land which is action-
able.    However, we have not previously addressed the issue
of when that cause of action accrues.                   Paraphrasing Brigham
Young when qe )arrived in Utah, "This is the time and the
    ,L*l)
        ,   ,
            .
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-
case."      Eickinson -v. B d - t e d - St-akes (1947), 331 U.S.     745, 67
S.Ct. 1382, 91 L.Ed. 1789, is helpful:
         "Property is taken in the constitutional
         sense when inroads are made upon an owner's
         use of it to an extent that, as between
         private parties, a servitude has been
         acquired either by agreement or in course of
         time .   The Fifth Amendment expresses a
         principle of fairness and not a technical
         rule of procedure enshrining old or new
         niceties regarding 'causes of action1--when
         they are born, whether they proliferate, and
         when they die. We are not now called upon to
         decide whether in a situation like this a
         landowner might be allowed to bring suit as
         soon as inundation threatens. Assuming that
         such an action would be sustained, it is not
         a good enough reason why he must sue then or
         have, from that moment, the statute of
         limitations run against him. If suit must be
         brought, lest he jeopardize his rights, as
         soon as his land        is   invaded, other
         contingencies would be running against him--
         for instance, the uncertainty of the damage
         and the risk of res judicata against
         recovering later for damage as yet uncertain.
         The source of the entire claim--the overflow
         due to rises in the level of the river--is
         not a single event; it is continuous. And as
         there is nothing in reason, so there is
         nothing in legal doctrine, to preclude the
         law from meeting such a process by postponing
         suit until the situation becomes stabilized.
         An owner of land flooded by the [defendant]
         would not unnaturally postpone bringing a
         suit against the [defendant] for the flooding
         until the consequences of inundation have so
         manifested themselves that a final account
         may be struck."      331 U.S. at 748-749, 67
         S.Ct. at 1385, 91 L.Ed. at 1794.
         In the instant case, as in Dickinson, Montana Power
could have admitted liability years earlier and settled the
claim.     Instead, it denied liability.           The Blasdels, who
waited to sue until damages stabilized and became permanent
should not be penalized.           Thus, we hold that the damages
stabilized in 1959-1960, the cause of action accrued at that
time, and     this action was - barred by the statute of
                              not
limitations.
         It   should   also   be    noted   that   even   though   the
complaint was amended four times, the statute of limitations
was tolled when the first complaint was filed.                     Rule 15(c),
M.R.Civ.P.,      provides that "whenever the claim               .. .   asserted
in    the      amended    pleadings     rose     out   of        the    conduct,
transaction, or occurrence set forth or attempted to be set
forth in the original pleadings, the amendment relates back
to the date of the original pleadings."
          Further, when a new theory of liability is based on
the same facts as those brought to the attention of the
opposite party by a previous complaint, no prejudice                          is
worked by allowing the amendment.               Rierson v. State (1980),

- Mont. -,           614 P.2d 1020, 37 St.Rep. 627; cf., Vincent
v. Edwards (1979),         - Mont. -,          601 P.2d 1184, 36 St.Rep.
1886.       In the       instant   case, the     basic      facts were       all
presented       in the first complaint.           Consequently, we hold
that the amendments relate back to the original complaint.


11.     PRESCRIPTIVE EASEMENT
          Is    the plaintiffs'       action    barred      by    prescriptive
easement?
         The party asserting a prescriptive easement must show
(1) open, (2) notorious, (3) exclusive,                  (4) adverse,        (5)
continuous, and (6) uninterrupted use of an easement claimed
for the full statutory period.            Taylor v. Petranek (1977),
173 Mont. 433, 437, 568 P.2d 120, 122.                   Occupancy for a
five-year period must also be shown.              Sections 70-19-404 and
70-19-405, MCA.
          Montant Power put all its eggs in one basket labeled
"a denial of proximate cause."                 Here, appellant did not
prove "open and notorious" occupation of the Blasdel land
for any period of time; it did not prove the date when it
first "occupied" the Blasdel land; it did not prove a date
when    the   lake   influence became dominant; and                it has
consistently denied     occupation of     the    land.    Upon       this
record, the appellant failed to prove facts necessary to
establish the elements of prescription.
         We should also note that no intention to occupy the
land has been shown.      Montana Power has never claimed any
right, title or interest in the Blasdel property.         Intention
is a central element of (1) prescriptive easements and (2)
adverse possession.      ,Consequently, appellant has failed to
                        ;,
                         -,-1&5
prove either claim.      SeeIbr~amme e b s o n (1883). 4 Mont.
                                   M

560, 2 P. 298; Blackfoot Land        Development Co.          v.    Burks
(1921), 60 Mont. 544, 199 P. 685;          Stetson v. Youngquist
(1926), 76 Mont.       600, 248 P.   196; Magelssen v.             Atwell
(1969), 152 Mont. 409, 451 P.2d 103; Brown v. Cartwright
(1973), 163 Mont.      139, 515 P.2d 684.        See also, Rude v.
Marshall (1917), 54 Mont. 27, 166 P. 298;         Brannon v. Lewis
and Clark County (1964), 143 Mont. 200, 387 P.2d 706.                  We
hold there was no prescriptive easement.


111.    DISTRICT COURT'S FINDINGS
        Are the District Court's findings supported by sub-
stantial evidence?
         Few cases that have reached this Court have had a
longevity period greater than this case.          Factwise it goes
back to the decision of the federal government to build a
dam in the early 1930s and to investigations made by federal
and    state agencies even prior     to   that    time   to    prepare
factual information on the feasibility of Kerr Dam.                    As
previously noted, construction began in the early 1930s and
ended       in   1939, at    which    time   appellant   took    over   the
     operation of the dam.         The respondents first noted a change
in their land and complained to the appellant in 1941.                    A
twenty-year period went by before a complaint was finally
filed for the damages to the property.
            The files herein         are numerous and      the exhibits
extensive.         The trial court, facing the problem brought
about by the case, bifurcated the the issues.               In the first
two-week trial, the court found Montana Power liable for
damages to the Blasdel property.              A second two-week trial
established the extent of damages and just compensation.
Montana Power appeals.             This Court has had to consider a
transcript of 2,670 pages, court files dating back to the
early 1960s, and numerous exhibits.                From all this, it can
be seen that it has been a period                  of conflict for all
parties involved.       It is natural that there is a conflict of
views on the evidence presented to the trial court upon
which it made its decision.
         This Court's standard of             review is whether         the
findings of fact and conclusions of law are supported by
substantial evidence.          See, Kearns v. McIntyre Const. Co.
(1977), 173 Mont. 239, 567 P.2d 433.                The evidence must be
reviewed in a light most favorable to the prevailing party
in the District Court.         Johnson v. Johnson (1977), 172 Mont.
94, 560 P.2d         1331.     Rule    52(a), M.R.Civ.P.,       provides:
"Findings of fact shall not be set aside unless clearly
erroneous, and due regard shall be given to the opportunity
of    the    trial   court    to     judge   the   credibility    of    the
witnesses. "
         Appellant argues that there is no credible evidence
to support the trial court's finding that the water table on
the respondents' land had risen about 4.2 feet from 1938 to
the present time.     The holding of the trial court is as
follows:
       "As compared     to the water      table on
       plaintiffs' land prior to 1938, the 1959-1960
       water table was about 4.2 feet higher.     Of
       this higher water table, about 1.3 feet was
       due to precipitation factors, and 3 feet due
       to the operation of the Kerr Dam.     Of the
       precipitation factors a substantial portion
       of the same was the result of the operation
       of Kerr Dam and higher water tables."
       During the 1930s, the USGS had Dr. Cady investigate
the feasibility of Kerr Dam and the effect that the higher
lake water level would have on ground water levels.          The
Cady report noted:
       "If the annual stage of the lake is raised
       through regulation from 2,884 feet to 2,890
       feet, the average annual stage of a we11
       2,500 feet from the lake or the river will be
       raised from about 2,887 feet to about 2,893
       feet.   It indicates likewise that at other
       points in the interior of the area the water
       ground levels will rise from about the same
       amount that the average lake level is raised
       by regulation."
       The appellant argues that the trial court erroneously
relied heavily upon    the   respondents' expert, Dr.   Robert
Curry, a University of Montana geologist, who did not even
see   the   respondents'   farm until    1971.   In addition,
appellant contends that Dr. Curry relied upon a "faulty"
1938 study by the USGS known as the Cady report.     Appellant
further argues that in his report Dr. Cady assumed that the
Flathead Lake would be full twelve months out of the year
when it actually was full only four months of the year.
Therefore, Cady's predictions are       irresponsible, and   Dr.
Curry's opinions, based upon the Cady report, were totally
inaccurate.
         Respondents,      in replying        to   appellant's   argument,
note that the Cady report of 1941 was based on a presumed
average lake elevation of 2,890 FASL, which is the 1.941-1949
average lake level.           Thus, as predicted, the water table
rose to a point of 2,892.
         In addition, Dr. Curry              in his   study   relied    upon
eleven observation wells near the respondents' farm.                    The
eleven wells were monitored on a monthly basis from 1928 to
1976 and       showed an average increase of 4.2              feet in the
ground water level.        An independent United States Department
of     Agriculture      report      issued    in   1969    confirms    this
information.      Further, a March 1960 report by the Montana
Power hydrologist noted:            "In future years the effect of the
lake    regulation will        become    increasingly noticeable        and
eventually the preregulation water table will rise by an
estimated 3-5 feet as a consequence of the regulation."                 The
appellant's       expert      hydrologist,         Keith   Anderson,     on
examination testified concerning the water table:                     "There
certainly has been a rise in the water table, not only under
his property, but practically under the entire area."                  With
such a record before the trial court, we cannot say that it
erred in finding that the water table had risen 4.2 feet.
         As    a part    of   this issue, we have before us the
question of whether the rise in the water table was due to
the operation of Kerr Dam or, as argued by appellant, due to
precipitation.       Both parties presented expert testimony.
Dr.    Curry   testified      for   respondents, and       Keith Anderson
testified for the appellant.              The following facts appear
undisputed:      (1) Montana Power Company controlled the level
of Flathead Lake; (2) the average level of the Flathead Lake
rose 5.4     feet in 1959 and stabilized at an elevation of
2,890 feet; (3) for twenty-one miles upstream, to a point
known as Foys Bend, the Flathead River is at the same level
as Flathead lake; (4) the lake and the river "surround the
Blasdel property";     (5) the Wiley Slough    (one-fourth of a
mile northwest of the Blasdel farm) is connected to the
backwaters of the Flathead River; (6) the lake is the outlet
of the ground waters such that raising the lake raises the
ground water tables; (7) a number of old river channels cut
across the lower valley, including the area of the Blasdel
farm; and (8) the soils in the lower valley area are fine
grain, glacial deposits such that ground water movement is
very slow.     The experts did not agree on two issues: (1)
whether the ground tables in the interior area, more than a
half mile from the reaches of the lake or river, would be
influenced by the higher lake levels; and (2) whether the
Wiley Slough influences the water        tables at the Blasdel
property one-quarter of a mile away.
        The trial court had     considerable expert testimony
before it.     Some of this testimony is conflicting and much
can be interpreted either way.          However, we can find no
error   with   the basic   findings of the trial court.        It
obviously accepted the testimony of respondents ' pr incipal
witness, Curry, and rejected the testimony of appellant's
witness, Anderson.     The trial judge was entitled to accept
one over the other in arriving at his ultimate decision.
While there is a dispute as to whether the river and the
lake (more than one-half mile away) and the Wiley Slough
(one-fourth     mile   away)   affect    the   water   table   on
respondents' property, the inland water        table was indeed
affected by the high water on the river, lake, and slough.
         The appellant's entire defense on the water table
issue seemed to be directed to the fact that 1941 through
1947 were wet years.            It introduced testimony and charts
showing that historically 1900 to 1917 were wet years, 1917
to 1941 were dry, and 1941 through 1970 were wet. Therefore,
appellant argues that the rise in the water table was due
entirely to      increased precipitation.         Credible testimony
contradicting appellant's theory was accepted by the trial
court.    The court found: (1) unlike the 1950s, there was no
water in the Grange Hall Slough during 1915-1920; (2) a new
spring developed at 2893 FASL on the Blasdel farm in 1956;
(3) maps and aerial photographs show far more surface water

on the property in 1956 than was on the property in 1928;
(4) there were no salt problems in the area in 1928; and (5)
the water table dropped very little in dry years and rose
dramatically in the 1950s.            We find substantial credible
evidence to support the court's findings in this matter.


IV.   PLAINTIFFS' E X H I B I T S
         Did   the   trial court     err   in   admitting certain   of
plaintiffs' exhibits?          This objection is to surveys of the
Blasdel farm, twenty-four photographs taken in 1970, 1971
and 1972 by respondents' attorney, and aerial photographs of
the Blasdel farm taken in 1961, 1972 and 1974.
         Plaintiffs' Exhibit P150 is the original survey of
the Blasdel farm.           Exhibit PI54 shows various tracts in
different colors and was introduced to show the degrees of
soil damage.       The colored tracts showed: area in red, 100%
loss--no longer planted as of 1959; area in orange, 2/3 crop
loss, poor production due to salt; area in yellow, 1/3 crop
loss, spotty areas of salt damage; and area in brown, no
claim, pasture and other areas.          The appellant objected to
this exhibit on the grounds that              it was a self-serving
statement by Blasdel and had such a contaminating effect
that it constituted error.
        The record indicates that respondents offered ample
foundation for the conclusions illustrated in the accepted
exhibits.     Blasdel testified that the red areas (100% loss
areas) had been productive         in the 1930s and were either
under    water    or   not   planted   in   1960     due   to    the    wet
conditions.      For other areas, he estimated the yield he had
received by measuring how much land had to be harvested to
fill a forty-bushel hopper         in his combine.           This Court
recognizes a farmer's competence to testify, with proper
foundation, about the effects of water damage to his crop
and land.     Watson v. Colusa-Parrot Mining and Smelting Co.
(1905), 31 Mont. 513, 79 P. 14.          The color coded chart was
properly admitted.
        Should     the   photographs     of    the    farm      taken    by
respondents' counsel have been admitted?             Appellant objects
to the admission of some twenty-four             snapshots taken         in
1970, 1972, and 1973 by respondents' counsel.              These photos
were used to depict the "same" conditions in 1959, which was
many years earlier.      Therefore, according to appellant, they
snould not have been admitted.         We find that the photographs
were admitted to show "similar," not the same, conditions as
those found in 1959 and, as such, are admissible.                 Lamb v.
Page    (1969), 153 Mont.      171, 455 P.2d         337; Teesdale       v.
Anschutz Drilling Company (1960), 138 Mont. 427, 357 P.2d 4.
Having previously found that the conditions of the property
stabilized in 1959, the sloughs pictured in 1970, 1972 and
1973 were similar to the sloughs in 1959; thus, we find no
error in admitting the photos.
        Next the appellant objects to the aerial photographs
of the farm, arguing that the aerial photographs of the
Blasdel farm taken in 1961 were improperly admitted because
this action had been filed in 1960, one year before and,
therefore, the conditions after filing the suit were not at
issue and the photos should not have been admitted.               We find
no merit to this argument due to the fact that damages
stabilized in 1959-1960.        The later photos objected to by
appellant were representative of the 1959-1960 conditions
and properly admitted.
        The objection raised by appellant as to the aerial
photographs     taken   in   1972   and    1974    is   that   they   were
irrelevant    and   "highly confusing        and    prejudicial."       In
addition, the appellant alleges that "since the action was
filed in 1960, the only pertinent dates had to be prior to
that time."      We do not agree with appellant's position.
Having established 1959 as the year of stabilization, it was
necessary to have information both before and after 1959.
These aerial photos helped to indicate the conditions on the
farm not only in 1961 but 1974.           They were properly admitted
to   indicate    that   after   1959      the     conditions     remained
approximately the same for over fourteen years.


V.   LITIGATION EXPENSES
       Did the trial court err              in allowing        litigation
expenses to plaintiffs under section 70-30-306, MCA?                   We
first note that the trial court held a one-day trial on
litigation      expenses    at    which    the    parties       submitted
documentary     evidence   in    support   of    their   fees    in   this
matter.      The statute here involved is section 70-30-306,
MCA, which provides:
          "Necessary expenses of litiqation defined.
          (1) Necessary expenses of litigation as
          authorized by 70-30-305 mean reasonable and
          necessary attorney fees, expert witness fees,
          exhibit costs, and court costs. (2) Reason-
          able and necessary attorney fees are the
          customary hourly rates for an attorney's
          services in the county in which the trial is
          held. Reasonable and necessary attorney fees
          shall be computed on an hourly basis and may
          not be computed on the basis of any contin-
          gent fee contract entered into after July 1,
          1977. (3) Reasonable and necessary expert
          witness fees may not exclude the customary
          rate for the services of a witness of such
          expertise in the county in which trial is
          held. "
          Appellant first charges that it should not be charged
with "faulty work," alleging that the first three complaints
were faulty work and should not be considered by the trial
court.     We note that no such finding was made by the trial
court and that the court, in settling attorney fees, is
entitled    to award   a   reasonable and        necessary   number    of
attorney hours worked by the various attorneys.
          Second, the appellant objects to what it calls hours
spent "merely for attorney education."             Appellant makes no
reference to which hours are referred to.                Counsel's time
with   consultants examining         scientific      information was
necessary and reasonable, as found by the trial court, and
we can find no error.
          Third, appellant notes there was a contingency fee
contract signed by         respondents on April          7, 1972, and
reaffirmed in 1979.        Appellant claims that under State By
And Through Dept. of Hwys. v. Rogers (1979),               - Mont. -,
602 P.2d 560, 36 St.Rep.         1758, a contingency fee contract
entered into prior to July 1, 1977, is controlling.                 We are
puzzled by this claim that the trial court should have been
held to the contingency fee contract.               Here, the award of
attorney      fees was    $77,277.      As    we   view    the   record, a
contingency fee contract based on the above-noted contracts
would have totaled $100,000.            In any event, under section
70-30-306(2), MCA, and our holding in State, By and Through
State Hwy. Com'n v. Marsh (1978), 175 Mont. 460, 575 P.2d
38, a fee award solely based on a contingency fee contract
would    be   error.      The   court   had    ample      information   and
authority to award the fees as above noted, and we affirm
the same.
          Fourth, appellant objects to the trial court's award
of     $23,482.54   for   "costs of      litigation."        This   amount
included sums for various "experts" which were never called
as witnesses, and as such, argues appellant, payment was not
authorized under section 70-30-306, MCA.               We find that the
trial court in its findings considered the expert costs
carefully and set them forth.           In reviewing the appellant's
objections we find no reference in the above objection as to
what amounts were not related.           We have long held that we
will not consider errors on appeal unless specifically set
forth.    See, Schilling v. Curran (1904), 30 Mont. 370, 76 P.
998.     Further, it is not necessary that an expert be called
at trial for his expense to be recoverable under section
70-30-306, MCA.        Rogers, 602 P.2d at 562.        We therefore find
no merit to this final objection on the expert costs.
          The judgment is affirmed.
W e concur:




Judge, sitting in place of Mr.
Justice Frank B. Morrison, Jr.


Honorable Gordon R. Bennett,
District Judge, sitting in
place of Mr. Justice John C.
Sheehy