Montana Code Annotated 1995

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     85-2-233. Hearing on temporary preliminary decree or preliminary decree. (1) (a) For good cause shown and subject to the provisions of subsection (7), a hearing must be held before the water judge on any objection to a temporary preliminary decree or preliminary decree by:
     (i) the department;
     (ii) a person named in the temporary preliminary decree or preliminary decree;
     (iii) any person within the basin entitled to receive notice under 85-2-232(1); or
     (iv) any other person who claims rights to the use of water from sources in other basins that are hydrologically connected to the sources within the decreed basin and who would be entitled to receive notice under 85-2-232 if the claim or claims were from sources within the decreed basin.
     (b) For the purposes of this subsection (1), "good cause shown" means a written statement showing that a person has an ownership interest in water or its use that has been affected by the decree.
     (c) A person does not waive the right to object to a preliminary decree by failing to object to a temporary preliminary decree. However, a person may not raise an objection to a matter in a preliminary decree if that person was a party to the matter when the matter was previously litigated and resolved as the result of an objection raised in a temporary preliminary decree, unless the objection is allowed for any of the following reasons:
     (i) mistake, inadvertence, surprise, or excusable neglect;
     (ii) newly discovered evidence that by due diligence could not have been discovered in time to move for a new trial under Rule 59(b), Montana Rules of Civil Procedure;
     (iii) fraud, misrepresentation, or other misconduct of an adverse party;
     (iv) the judgment is void; or
     (v) any other reason justifying relief from the operation of the judgment.
     (2) If a hearing is requested, the request must be filed with the water judge within 180 days after entry of the temporary preliminary decree or preliminary decree. The water judge may, for good cause shown, extend this time limit up to two additional 90-day periods if application for an extension is made prior to expiration of the original 180-day period or any extension of it.
     (3) The request for a hearing must specify the paragraphs and pages containing the findings and conclusions to which objection is made. The request must state the specific grounds and evidence on which the objections are based.
     (4) Upon expiration of the time for filing objections and upon timely receipt of a request for a hearing, the water judge shall notify each party named in the temporary preliminary decree or preliminary decree that a hearing has been requested. The water judge shall fix a day when all parties who wish to participate in future proceedings must appear or file a statement. The water judge shall then set a date for a hearing. The water judge may conduct individual or consolidated hearings. A hearing must be conducted as for other civil actions. At the order of the water judge a hearing may be conducted by the water master, who shall prepare a report of the hearing as provided in Rule 53(e), Montana Rules of Civil Procedure.
     (5) Failure to object under subsection (1) to a compact negotiated and ratified under 85-2-702 or 85-2-703 bars any subsequent cause of action in the water court.
     (6) If the court sustains an objection to a compact, it may declare the compact void. The agency of the United States, the tribe, or the United States on behalf of the tribe party to the compact is permitted 6 months after the court's determination to file a statement of claim, as provided in 85-2-224, and the court shall issue a new preliminary decree in accordance with 85-2-231. However, any party to a compact declared void may appeal from that determination in accordance with those procedures applicable to 85-2-235, and the filing of a notice of appeal stays the period for filing a statement of claim as required under this subsection.
     (7) Upon petition by a claimant, the water court may grant a motion for dismissal to an objection to a temporary preliminary or preliminary decree if the objection pertains to an element of a water right that was previously decreed and if dismissal is consistent with common-law principles of issue and claim preclusion.
     (8) The provisions of subsection (7) do not apply to issues arising after entry of the previous decree, including but not limited to the issues of abandonment, expansion of the water right, and reasonable diligence.

     History: En. Sec. 23, Ch. 697, L. 1979; amd. Sec. 7, Ch. 268, L. 1981; amd. Sec. 4, Ch. 667, L. 1985; amd. Sec. 3, Ch. 605, L. 1989; amd. Sec. 2, Ch. 421, L. 1995.

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