Schutter v. Board of Land Commissioners
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The case revolves around a dispute between Debra and Sidney Schutter (the Schutters) and the State of Montana Board of Land Commissioners (the Board) over the ownership of a water right, identified as Claim 13169. The Schutters use a groundwater well on their private property to irrigate four parcels of land, one of which is school trust land owned by the State of Montana. The Board objected to the Schutters' claim of exclusive ownership of the water right, asserting that the State holds an ownership interest in the portion of the water right used to irrigate the school trust land.
The Montana Water Court granted summary judgment to the Board, adding the State as a co-owner of Claim 13169, but only for the portion of the claim appropriated to irrigate the school trust land. The Schutters appealed this decision, arguing that the Water Court erred in applying the precedent set in a previous case, Pettibone, and that no portion of Claim 13169 is appurtenant to the school trust land.
The Supreme Court of the State of Montana affirmed the Water Court's decision. The court held that the portion of Claim 13169 used to irrigate the school trust land is appurtenant to that land and, therefore, the State is a co-owner of that portion of the right. The court also rejected the Schutters' argument that the Water Court erred in applying the Pettibone precedent, stating that the Schutters' reliance on the point of diversion as singularly controlling was misplaced. The court concluded that the Schutters used the school trust land they leased to qualify for and establish the parameters of Claim 13169, and without the ability to claim a beneficial use on the school trust land, the Schutters' claim to a water right would have been different, perhaps smaller.
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