Alice A. Platt ( 2014 )


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  •                 IN THE SUPREME COURT, STATE OF WYOMING
    
    2014 WY 142
    OCTOBER TERM, A.D. 2014
    November 6, 2014
    ALICE A. PLATT,
    Appellant
    (Defendant),
    v.
    RALPH E. PLATT, individually, and                   S-13-0239, S-14-0053
    RALPH E. PLATT AND RONALD R.
    PLATT, Co-Trustees of the Ralph E.
    Platt Ranch Revocable Trust, dated the
    11th day of May, 2006.
    Appellees
    (Plaintiffs).
    Appeals from the District Court of Carbon County
    The Honorable Steven R. Cranfill, Judge
    Representing Appellant:
    Brandon L. Jensen, Joshua A. Tolin, and Karen Budd-Falen of Budd-Falen Law
    Offices, LLC, Cheyenne, Wyoming. Argument by Mr. Jensen.
    Representing Appellees:
    William L. Hiser of Brown & Hiser, LLC, Laramie, Wyoming
    Before BURKE, C.J., and HILL, KITE*, DAVIS, and FOX, JJ.
    DAVIS, J., delivers the opinion of the Court; KITE, J., files a dissenting opinion, in
    which HILL, J., joins
    * Chief Justice at time of oral argument
    NOTICE: This opinion is subject to formal revision before publication in Pacific Reporter Third.
    Readers are requested to notify the Clerk of the Supreme Court, Supreme Court Building,
    Cheyenne, Wyoming 82002, of any typographical or other formal errors so that correction may be
    made before final publication in the permanent volume.
    DAVIS, Justice.
    [¶1] This is an action for partition of a ranch. Appellant Alice A. Platt challenges a
    district court order which requires the construction of a new ditch to carry the water she
    received to her parcel of land. We find that the orders entered by the district court are not
    sufficiently complete to establish that a partition in kind can be made without manifest
    injury to the value of the property, and that the district court’s order is clearly erroneous
    because it is not supported by competent evidence that an essential easement and
    permission for a change in means of conveyance can be obtained. We therefore reverse
    and remand for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    ISSUES
    [¶2]   We restate the issues presented as follows:
    1.      Is Appellant barred by res judicata, based upon the first order entered by the
    district court, from challenging the location and provisions related to location of the ditch
    selected by the district court?
    2.     Are the two orders, read together, sufficiently complete to resolve the
    issues necessary to partition the property as has been done?
    3.    Can a partition action require a party to acquire an easement over lands
    owned by a third party not involved in the action, and if so, was the district court’s
    requirement that they do so clearly erroneous because it was not supported by adequate
    evidence?
    4.    Can a court order a party to a partition action to obtain a change in means
    of conveyance of water from the Board of Control?
    5.    Was the district court’s selection of what is known as the Westerly Ditch to
    carry Appellant’s water clearly erroneous?
    6.     Did the district court err in denying Appellant’s request for a stay?
    FACTS
    [¶3] This partition action returns to the Court for resolution of issues relating to the
    location of a ditch easement. As will be discussed below, the property involved is a
    1
    family-owned ranch that was inherited by two brothers, Wayne and Ralph Platt.1 They
    have since conveyed their interests to the parties in this appeal.
    Proceedings Before the First Appeal
    [¶4] As we indicated in our previous decision, disagreements as to the operation of the
    family ranch located near Encampment, Wyoming led to this action. Platt v. Platt, 
    2011 WY 155
    , ¶ 3, 
    264 P.3d 804
    , 805 (Wyo. 2011) (Platt I). The district court found that the
    parties were entitled to partition, appointed commissioners as required by statute, and
    gave them comprehensive instructions as to their duties. 
    Id., ¶¶ 3-4,
    264 P.3d at 805. See
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-32-104 (LexisNexis 2011).2
    [¶5] The commissioners submitted their report in due course. They proposed a division
    of the land which will be generally described below, and they recommended that water
    rights be allocated to the parcel of land to which they were appurtenant.3 As will be seen,
    this required that the water appurtenant to the northern parcel awarded to Alice Platt be
    separated from that appurtenant to the southern parcel awarded to the Trust.4 The
    commissioners recommended the establishment of a “Dedicated Ditch” to carry Alice’s
    water to her property. This would require an additional headgate and measuring device
    to separate the parties’ water after it was diverted from the King Turnbull Ditch No. 2,
    which is not on the partitioned property.
    [¶6] The commissioners recommended leaving it up to the parties to locate the
    Dedicated Ditch, and they gave only a general description of the area in which they
    believed it should be located.
    The Commissioners recommend the installation of a
    measuring device in the King Turnbull Ditch at the
    approximate location where the King Turnbull Ditch crosses
    the east line of the NE¼NW¼ of Section 33, Township 14
    North, Range 82 West, for the purposes of measuring all of
    the water in the King Turnbull Ditch. The Commissioners
    make a further recommendation that a second measuring
    device be installed at the point of beginning of what will be a
    new dedicated “Delivery System” for the purposes of
    delivering water to the lands awarded to the Defendants.
    1
    The record indicates that there was a prior partition action involving other portions of the ranch, but tells
    us nothing about it.
    2
    This statute was amended in 2013, but the amendment has no effect on this appeal.
    3
    They also recommended that all available water in excess of adjudicated water rights in wet years be
    split equally.
    4
    The parties might have agreed to use the same means of conveyance, but have not done so. The
    acrimony between them evidently makes separation of the appropriation of each necessary.
    2
    The Dedicated Ditch would establish a headgate and
    measuring device located at approximately the SE corner of
    the SW¼ of Section 28, Township 14 North, Range 82 West.
    It would then run in a northwesterly direction approximately
    three-quarters of a mile across lands awarded to Plaintiffs at
    such location as the parties may jointly agree to the
    approximately NW corner of the SE¼NW¼ of Section 28,
    Township 14 North, Range 82 West, for the benefit of those
    lands awarded to Defendants. The location of the Dedicated
    Ditch to be specifically described and to be a permanent
    easement across those lands on which it is located.
    However, in the event the parties are unable to agree
    on the exact location of the Dedicated Ditch, to serve those
    lands awarded to Defendants by September 1, 2010, then
    Commissioners would ask the Court for authority to employ
    an engineer and to return to the lands with the engineer for
    the purposes of determining the exact location for such
    Dedicated Ditch. In making this recommendation, the
    Commissioners would point out to the Court that because
    the lands involved are currently covered with snow, it is
    impossible for them to make a recommendation for the
    exact location of such ditch at the present time.
    (Emphasis added). The commissioners also recommended using the existing ditch
    system in 2010, contemplating that the Dedicated Ditch would be built in time for use in
    the Spring of 2011.
    [¶7] The district court incorporated these recommendations in its July 1, 2010 order
    partitioning the property, which basically left the parties to work out a location for the
    Dedicated Ditch because the commissioners were not able to locate it due to snow cover.
    The ruling required them to use an existing ditch network to irrigate both parcels until the
    Dedicated Ditch could be built.
    [¶8] The Trust (during this introduction, we will refer to Appellees collectively as the
    Trust and to Appellant here as Alice because their positions changed between the two
    appeals) appealed one aspect of the district court’s decision, contending that its decision
    to set aside over 13.15 acres of their property to the ditch and grant an easement to Alice
    was improper. It argued that the district court lacked authority to modify a partition by
    court-appointed commissioners. Platt I, ¶ 
    15, 264 P.3d at 807
    . While, as discussed
    3
    below, the order was not truly final, we considered the merits of the narrow issue
    presented and affirmed.5 
    Id., ¶ 22,
    264 P.3d at 811.
    The Second Proceeding to Locate the Dedicated Ditch
    [¶9] As might have been anticipated, the parties were unable to agree on a location for
    the Dedicated Ditch. The Trust therefore moved to compel Alice to comply with the
    judgment and agree on the location of the ditch, or for reengagement of the
    commissioners to locate it. The court reappointed the same three commissioners, who
    then set out to locate the Dedicated Ditch to convey Alice’s water.
    [¶10] It is necessary at this point to touch on the history of the land involved here to
    understand the difficult issues the district court had to resolve. Isaac Platt homesteaded a
    portion of the partitioned property in 1886. Other portions of the property were
    originally owned by other homesteaders. These homesteaders filed for water rights and
    built ditches on their properties.
    [¶11] Over time, Ralph H. Platt bought up these properties, which now make up the
    partitioned ranch. As most Wyoming citizens already know, the business of ranching
    requires good pastures and leases on which cattle can graze, but it is also important to
    have hay meadows. A rancher can harvest the hay and feed it to his cattle when grass is
    in short supply and in the winter, and in a good year may even have enough hay to sell
    some of it.
    [¶12] This property includes three “fields” or hay meadows: the Home Field, the Pool
    Field, and the King Field. Before 1949, these were flood-irrigated by a number of
    different ditches. In 1949, Ralph E. Platt completed what is called the “Pool
    Enlargement,” which allowed him to “bunch” or pool water drawn from the King
    Turnbull No. 2 ditch on the neighboring Kraft ranch.6 The water was then sent down a
    ridge in a ditch the parties call either the Historic Ditch or the North-South Ditch (we will
    call it the latter). The ranch was able to divert water into ditches branching off the North-
    South ditch, flood irrigate the King Field (now awarded to the Trust), and then recapture
    any water left over and flood-irrigate the Home Field where it could be reused on the
    parcel awarded to Alice.
    [¶13] As already noted, this method could not continue after the property was
    partitioned, because the parties now own separate water rights, and some way had to be
    5
    The Court could have converted the appeal to a petition for review and ruled as it did. See Schwab v.
    JTL Group, 
    2013 WY 138
    , ¶ 14, 
    312 P.3d 790
    , 794-95 (Wyo. 2013). Perhaps Platt I can best be viewed
    as the functional equivalent of conversion.
    6
    There seems to be no doubt that there is an easement for a ditch conveying water from the King
    Turnbull No. 2 ditch on the Kraft ranch to the southern boundary of the partitioned property. Whether it
    was granted as part of a prior partition, a grant, or is prescriptive is not clear.
    4
    found to meter and keep Alice’s water separate from that of the Trust. Alice received a
    superior territorial water right.
    [¶14] The commissioners plotted a location for what the record refers to as the
    Commissioners’ Ditch. As in their original recommendation, water allocated to the
    parties would be removed from the King Turnbull No. 2 Ditch at the existing headgate on
    the Kraft Ranch. Alice’s share would then be separated by another headgate and brought
    down a new ditch which had to be constructed in the general location of the North-South
    Ditch. The district court found the negative aspects of this choice to be as follows:
     The ditch would be approximately 7,475 feet long and would require ditch
    mitigation measures down virtually its entire length as it traverses the center of the
    land partitioned to the Trust.
     It would require approximately nineteen crossings for machinery, equipment, and
    cattle, eight crossover pipes and eight related headwalls to carry water without
    commingling it, as well as eighteen wood boxes for drops to prevent water from
    eroding the ditch when it rapidly loses elevation.
     A number of trees would have to be removed.
     It would take up about seven acres of the Trust’s primary irrigated hay meadow.
     The ditch would be visible from Ron Platt’s home. Mr. Platt operates the ranch
    for the Trust.
     The parties would have to work with machinery in close proximity to maintain
    their respective ditch networks. They have not been able to get along.
    In addition, the Commissioners’ Ditch would require an easement across lands owned by
    the Kraft Ranches due to the topography of the area.
    [¶15] Alice proposed that the court simply locate the ditch in the same area as the North-
    South Ditch. The court found as follows concerning that option:
     This would be the longest ditch of the three proposed, and it would require ditch
    mitigation measures for its entire length. The ditch is so wide and deep that more
    than a thirty-foot easement would be required to place another ditch in that area,
    and the trust would lose more than seven acres of its primary hay meadow.
     It would require more crossings, crossover pipes, headwalls, and wood box drops
    than the Commissioners’ Ditch.
    5
     It would be visible from Ron Platt’s home.
     Its location would make it difficult if not impossible for the Trust to use water it
    receives from another source, Little Beaver Creek.
    [¶16] We note that this location would also require the parties to work with machinery in
    close proximity to each other in order to maintain or repair their respective ditches. All
    water to both ditches might have to be shut off if the Dedicated Ditch “blew out.” On a
    positive note, this alternative would not require an easement to be obtained from a
    neighboring property owner, nor, evidently, permission to change the means of
    conveyance from the Board of Control. Alice also points out that the North-South Ditch
    is a known commodity, because it has been used since approximately 1949.
    [¶17] At the hearing, the Trust proposed a third option to the west of the other ditches,
    which is therefore referred to as the Westerly Ditch. The proposed route was simply
    drawn on a map by Ron Platt, and it has not therefore been surveyed. The district court
    found as follows concerning the Westerly Ditch:
     It is the shortest ditch of the three at 5,870 feet.
     Because it is located to the west of the Trust’s irrigated lands, it will require ditch
    mitigation measures on only one side.
     It will require at most three crossings for machinery and two crossover pipes,
    although it will require eight drop pipes in three locations, three concrete diffusers
    (to mitigate the effects of falling water), and three headwalls at the drop pipe
    locations.
     No trees will need to be removed.
     The route is in the general area described in the order of partition described above.
     It will not be visible from Ron Platt’s home.
     The ditch can be checked from a county road adjacent to the Trust’s parcel.
     It will result in the loss of only 3.3 acres of the Trust’s irrigated pasture, as
    opposed to approximately seven acres of irrigated hay meadow.
    [¶18] On the negative side, no ditch exists in this area, although there is a remnant of a
    ditch that has not been used since the 1950s. The general area is therefore untested and
    6
    may contain porous soils, meaning that water may have to be carried in a pipe or a lined
    ditch for at least a portion of its length to reduce conveyance losses. It is a steep route,
    and hence the drop structures are required to avoid having the force of falling water
    destroy the ditch.7
    [¶19] On the other hand, all of the commissioners, who are ranchers who irrigate
    themselves, conceded that the Westerly Ditch could work, although measures to deal with
    the elevation loss and other factors will be needed, and there will be costs associated with
    these measures. As with the Commissioners’ Ditch, an easement would have to be
    obtained from the Kraft Ranch to the south of the Trust property, and the Board of
    Control would have to approve a change in the means of conveyance of the water. As of
    the date of argument, neither of those things had occurred.
    [¶20] A hearing related to all of the above took place on June 19 and 20, 2013. The
    parties submitted proposed findings of fact and conclusions of law. In a decision letter
    filed August 26, 2013, the district court chose the Westerly Ditch, although it noted that
    this was arguably the most expensive option. It commented as follows:
    The Court is in a difficult position. While the decision
    should be fair and equitable, as well as cost effective[,] the
    Court has to take into consideration the Parties’ inability to
    cooperate in this matter. Therefore, the Court will adopt Mr.
    Platt’s proposal because it has the best future outcome for
    both parties, being that there would be minimal to no
    interaction between them for maintenance and inspection.
    The Court recognizes the expense that both parties will have
    to incur to achieve this result, however all the proposals
    required some amount of construction and cost.
    [¶21] The district court entered the findings of fact and conclusions of law proposed by
    the Trust on August 26, 2013. It ordered the parties to share the cost of installing a
    headgate to split their water, as well as the cost of building and constructing a workable
    irrigation system and addressing any problems encountered with the Dedicated
    (Westerly) Ditch for a period of three years from Alice’s first use of the ditch. The orders
    are contradictory as to which party must pay the costs of correcting any problems and
    maintenance after that time period.8 The parties were required to pay their portion of the
    7
    Appellees point out that the total drop is all the same, because the water must be moved from the King
    Turnbull Ditch to the Pool Field. However, elevation is obviously not lost at the same rate on all
    alternatives.
    8
    The July 1, 2010 Final Judgment and Order Partitioning Real Property indicates that “[f]uture
    maintenance costs incurred in the maintenance of the headgate and second measuring device located at
    the approximate SE corner of the SW¼ of Section 28, Township 14 North, Range 82 West, shall be the
    responsibility of the Defendants and the cost of maintaining the Dedicated Ditch once constructed shall
    7
    costs within thirty days of receiving a statement for them, and if a party did not pay, the
    other person or entity could recover attorney fees and interest at ten percent. It also
    required that the work be completed “prior to the 2014 irrigation season,” but did not
    define that term.
    [¶22] Importantly, the Westerly Ditch can only become a reality if an easement can be
    obtained to convey water across Kraft Ranches, Inc’s land. Appellee informs us that one
    of the appraisers, Jerry Kraft, is a shareholder in and president of Kraft Ranches, Inc.,
    although this is not reflected in the record. The commissioners’ report, which was signed
    by Mr. Kraft, indicated as follows:
    Kraft Ranches, Inc., owner of the property where the
    measuring devices and headgate are to be located, will allow
    easement for Dedicated Ditch, access to and from the
    location, dirt materials necessary for installation and
    maintenance of same at no cost. Costs associated with any
    paper work or surveying work deemed necessary to
    accomplish this shall be shared by the parties of the partition.
    Owners of Kraft Ranches, Inc. need to be notified of any
    upcoming work and reserve the right to advise and oversee
    any construction or maintenance on their property.
    [¶23] The district court evidently believed this language sufficient to assure that a
    workable easement could be obtained, although it does not demonstrate that the Kraft
    Ranches corporation had approved the gift, the location or the size of the proposed
    easement, or exactly what rights it retained to “advise and oversee.” The court ordered
    Alice to work with Kraft Ranches to obtain and locate an easement across its land, and
    directed the parties to share the cost of establishing and building the ditch on that
    property. The order was then appealed.
    Petition for Stay
    [¶24] Appellant petitioned for a stay on November 18, 2013. She claimed that the order
    entered on August 26, 2013 would effectively prohibit her from appealing from it
    because she would have to expend the funds needed to pursue an appeal to build the
    also be the responsibility of the Defendants.” Under that order, Alice would be responsible for
    maintenance after three years. However, the August 26, 2013 order indicates that “[b]ecause the
    problems created on the Plaintiffs’ land with the creation of the Dedicated Ditch are hard to predict until
    the Dedicated Ditch is put in service, such ditch remediation measures shall be undertaken and completed
    within three years of the Defendant’s first use of the Dedicated Ditch and thereafter, the Plaintiffs shall be
    responsible for all costs associated with the ditch remediation measures.” This provision would require
    the Trust to maintain the ditch after three years, even though it gains no benefit from it. We anticipate
    that this ambiguity will be cleared up on remand.
    8
    ditch. She filed an affidavit attesting that she obtained estimates to survey and engineer
    the ditch, as well as the cost of pipeline materials and bids for construction. The attached
    estimates ran from $115,000 to $180,000.9 Affidavits from the two contractors who
    provided bids were also attached. She also filed a copy of a proposal by the United States
    Department of Agriculture Natural Resources Conservation Service (NRCS), to whom
    Alice and Ron Platt had evidently applied for a grant and assistance in designing a means
    to convey Alice’s water. NRCS estimated the cost of installing a twelve- or fifteen-inch
    pipeline at $80,773 and $96,873, of which the parties would pay thirty-five percent. For
    reasons that are not clear in the record, the proposal did not come to fruition.10 Appellant
    also pointed out that the location of the ditch might change after appeal, and that it would
    be fruitless to expend as much money as would be required in light of that possibility.
    [¶25] The district court denied the application for a stay without hearing on January 24,
    2014, finding only that it was “inappropriate.” Appellant timely appealed that order. She
    did not build the ditch, and was no longer able to use the North-South Ditch to convey
    water to her land. She applied to this Court for a stay on February 12, 2014, and the
    Court denied the application on March 4, 2014. The appeals were consolidated.
    DISCUSSION
    Res Judicata as to Location of Ditch
    [¶26] Before addressing the merits, we must resolve a threshold question raised by
    Appellee Trust. It claims that the first order, which described itself as “Final,” resolved
    the location of the Dedicated Ditch, and that because that aspect of the order was not
    challenged in Platt I, it cannot be challenged on appeal now. For more than one reason,
    we disagree.
    [¶27] Determination of whether the doctrine of res judicata (or claim preclusion) applies
    is a question of law, which we review de novo. Goodman v. Voss, 
    2011 WY 33
    , ¶ 23,
    
    248 P.3d 1120
    , 1126 (Wyo. 2011) (citing Erwin v. State Dep’t of Family Servs., 
    2010 WY 117
    , ¶ 10, 
    237 P.3d 409
    , 412-13 (Wyo. 2010)). The elements of res judicata are: (1)
    identity in parties; (2) identity in subject matter; (3) the issues are the same and relate to
    the subject matter; and (4) the capacities of the persons are identical in reference to both
    the subject matter and the issues between them. Rathbun v. State, 
    2011 WY 116
    , ¶ 9, 
    257 P.3d 29
    , 33 (Wyo. 2011) (citing Eklund v. PRI Envtl., Inc., 
    2001 WY 55
    , ¶ 15, 
    25 P.3d 511
    , 517 (Wyo. 2001)). In addition, in order for res judicata or collateral estoppel to
    apply, the proceeding in question must have terminated with a final or appealable order.
    In re E.R.C.K., 
    2013 WY 160
    , ¶ 28, 
    314 P.3d 1170
    , 1176 (Wyo. 2013); Aragon v.
    9
    The major difference between the two was in the contractors’ estimates. One of the contractors
    recommended that the ditch not be used for one year in order to allow the soils to resettle and compact.
    10
    We note that the bids Alice solicited were for twenty-four inch pipe, which may explain the cost
    differences.
    9
    Aragon, 
    2005 WY 5
    , ¶ 12, 
    104 P.3d 756
    , 760 (Wyo. 2005) (decree which did not
    determine custody did not collaterally estop father seeking custody); In re KRA, 
    2004 WY 18
    , ¶ 10, 
    85 P.3d 432
    , 436 (Wyo. 2004). As a leading federal treatise explains:
    Judicial actions must achieve a basic minimum quality
    to become eligible for res judicata effects. First, there must be
    a judgment. The traditional words used to describe this
    quality require that there be a judgment that is valid, final,
    and on the merits. It seems safe to guess that most res judicata
    questions are raised by judgments that easily satisfy these
    requirements. Difficulties remain, however, with respect to
    each requirement.
    . . .
    The requirement that a prior judgment be “final”
    employs a word that immediately invokes the relationships
    between rules of appealability and res judicata. Tentative or
    incomplete action, avowedly subject to further
    consideration, does not alone suffice for appeal or res
    judicata.
    18A Charles Alan Wright et al., Federal Practice and Procedure § 4427 (2d ed. updated
    2014) (emphasis added) (footnotes omitted).
    [¶28] By this standard, it is apparent that the first “final” order did not bar consideration
    of the location of the easement for the Dedicated Ditch, for the following reasons:
     The commissioners made it clear in their report that they could not locate the ditch
    because the land was covered with snow. They testified at the second trial that
    they had no specific location in mind, and intended for the parties to agree on a
    location for the ditch.
     Easements which are not specifically described are null and void and of no force
    or effect unless they can somehow be located. Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 34-1-141(a), (c)
    (LexisNexis 2013); Horse Creek Conservation Dist. v. State ex rel. Wyoming
    Attorney General, 
    2009 WY 143
    , ¶ 36, 
    221 P.3d 306
    , 317-18 (Wyo. 2009) (use of
    the word “adjacent” was sufficient to describe lands available for public access).
     The description of the Dedicated Ditch in the commissioners’ responses to special
    interrogatories is not sufficient to locate it on the ground – it was more of a
    suggestion than a description (emphasis added):
    The Dedicated Ditch would establish a headgate and
    measuring device located at approximately the SE corner of
    10
    the SW¼ of Section 28, Township 14 North, Range 82 West.
    It would then run in a northwesterly direction approximately
    three-quarters of a mile across lands awarded to Plaintiffs at
    such location as the parties may jointly agree to the
    approximately NW corner of the SE¼NW¼ of Section 28,
    Township 14 North, Range 82 West, for the benefit of those
    lands awarded to Defendants. The location of the Dedicated
    Ditch to be specifically described and to be a permanent
    easement across those lands on which it is located.
     The district court’s order includes the same language, and it also provides that the
    commissioners will be reengaged and shall employ an engineer for “purposes of
    determining the exact location for such Dedicated Ditch.”
     The district court and the commissioners did not consider the order to have
    resolved the issue. The commissioners proposed a ditch in an entirely different
    location. The district court engaged in a lengthy analysis of the relative merits and
    disadvantages of all three proposed ditches, which would have been unnecessary if
    the first order in fact adequately specified the location.
    [¶29] It is readily apparent that neither the court nor the commissioners ever ruled on the
    location of the Dedicated Ditch, but instead deferred that decision hoping that the parties,
    who had not to that point agreed on much of anything, would find an amicable resolution
    of this important issue. The Trust argues that the location later traced on a map by Ron
    Platt is consistent with the very vague and general description in the second order, which
    is true, but not particularly helpful.
    [¶30] The dissent correctly points out that the parties have not argued that the first order
    was not appealable. However, this Court has in the past found orders not to be
    appealable and dismissed even when the parties did not “directly raise” the issue
    supporting dismissal. Bd. of Trustees of Memorial Hosp. of Sheridan Cnty. v. Martin,
    
    2003 WY 1
    , ¶¶ 9, 16, 
    60 P.3d 1273
    , 1275-77 (Wyo. 2003). The Trust “indirectly”
    brought the issue to our attention by its argument. It is not surprising that the parties do
    not always raise appealability because they do not have the same interest as appellate
    courts do in avoiding piecemeal appeals. 15A 
    Wright, supra
    , at § 3905. Appellate courts
    in other states have held that they have a duty to examine whether an order is appealable
    sua sponte. Kulp v. Hrivnak, 
    765 A.2d 796
    , 798 (Pa. Super. Ct. 2000); Jensen v.
    Howard, 
    926 S.W.2d 77
    , 77 (Mo. Ct. App. 1996); Baltimore Home Alliance, LLC v.
    Geesing, 
    97 A.3d 220
    , 224 (Md. App. 2014); 15A 
    Wright, supra
    , at § 3905.
    [¶31] Appeals of non-appealable orders are generally dismissed. However, in this
    unusual case, a decision was reached in Platt I. For that reason, we will not dismiss, but
    we will decline to apply res judicata or claim preclusion to an incomplete order.
    11
    [¶32] The Trust also argues that the 2010 ruling is the law of the case. We disagree for
    the same reasons we find that res judicata/claim preclusion does not apply. The ruling
    did not decide the location of the Dedicated Ditch, but instead simply urged the parties to
    come to some agreement.
    [¶33] Appellant is not barred from challenging the location of the Westerly Ditch.
    Finality of First and Second Order
    [¶34] Unfortunately for these parties, who have expended considerable money, time, and
    emotion in a struggle to divide the property which is their birthright, our determination
    that the original “Final Judgment” entered by the district court was not complete has
    more profound implications for this appeal. The issue presented in Platt I was narrow,
    and the completeness of the order was not raised by the parties, and so the aspect of the
    order we have been asked to review was not scrutinized in that case as it is now.
    [¶35] The partitioned property is used for agriculture and ranching. Those activities
    require irrigation water beyond that which falls on the land in the form of rain and snow.
    Without water diverted from streams and other watercourses, this land is worth much
    less. As a member of this Court has observed:
    Water is the lifeblood of Wyoming. It is a scarce resource
    which must be effectively managed and efficiently used to
    meet the various demands of society.
    In Re General Adjudication of All Rights to Use Water in Big Horn River System, 
    835 P.2d 273
    , 279 (Wyo. 1992) (plurality opinion).
    [¶36] The property has excellent water rights, some of them dating back to when
    Wyoming was a territory pioneering the system of priority by appropriation, which has
    become the model for western states.11 The commissioners recommended, and the court
    11
    Thus United States Supreme Court has explained the same:
    Certainty of rights is particularly important with respect to water rights in
    the Western United States. The development of that area of the United
    States would not have been possible without adequate water supplies in
    an otherwise water-scarce part of the country. The doctrine of prior
    appropriation, the prevailing law in the western states, is itself largely a
    product of the compelling need for certainty in the holding and use of
    water rights.
    Arizona v. California, 
    460 U.S. 605
    , 620, 
    103 S. Ct. 1382
    , 1392, 
    75 L. Ed. 2d 318
    (1983) (citations
    omitted), decision supplemented, 
    466 U.S. 144
    , 
    104 S. Ct. 1900
    , 
    80 L. Ed. 2d 194
    (1984)
    12
    ordered, that the water rights be awarded to the party who received the lands to which
    they were appurtenant, which is a logical solution that the parties do not challenge. Water
    rights can be partitioned along with the real property to which they pertain, provided that
    each parcel receives an equitable share of the right and has enough water to permit
    continued use of the land as it has historically been used. Kravik v. Lewis, 
    691 P.2d 1373
    , 1376 (Mont. 1984); 59A Am. Jur. 2d Partition § 12 (2014). Water rights are
    presumed to be appurtenant to the land on which the water is used when the land is
    conveyed. Frank v. Hicks, 
    4 Wyo. 502
    , 530-31, 
    35 P. 475
    , 484 (1894).
    [¶37] However, water rights are useless if the water cannot be delivered to the land. To
    state the obvious, for water to be used, there must be ditch rights and easements for
    ditches sufficient to carry it to the land. Ditches require maintenance, and the easements
    for those ditches must therefore be sufficient to allow the use of heavy equipment. It may
    be necessary for the owner of the ditch to use dirt on the servient property to repair the
    ditch or rebury it if the water is carried through a pipe. Laden v. Atkeson, 
    116 P.2d 881
    ,
    883 (Mont. 1941) (holders of dam or ditch easements may use a reasonable amount of the
    soil on the servient estate to repair them) (quoting Thompson on Real Property and Jones
    on Easements)). 12
    [¶38] At English common law, partition in kind had to be accomplished even if it might
    be “inconvenient, injurious, or even ruinous to the parties in interest.” A.C. Freeman,
    Cotenancy and Partition: A Treatise on the Law of Ownership as it Exists Independent of
    Partnership Relations Between the Co-Owners § 433, at 569 (2d. ed. 1886). American
    courts tempered that rule by refusing to partition in kind when to do so would practically
    destroy the property’s value. 
    Id. (citing Brown
    v. Turner, 
    1 Aik. 350
    , 15 Am. Dec. 696
    (Vt. 1826)). The Wyoming Territorial Legislature adopted the latter rule when it enacted
    in 1886 what is now Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-32-109, as the statute provides for partition by
    allotment (where a coparcener essentially buys the other out) or by public sale, if “the
    estate cannot be divided according to the demand of the writ [of partition] without
    manifest injury to” the property. See Wyo. Stat. Ann. §§ 1-32-109 through -114 (Lexis
    Nexis 2013), and Revised Territorial Statutes of Wyoming §§ 2970 through 2974 (Daily
    Sun Steam Printing House of Cheyenne 1887). (The statutes have remained unchanged
    for over 120 years).
    [¶39] “Section 1-32-109 applies when the real property cannot be divided in kind
    without causing manifest injury to its value.” Hutchins v. Payless Auto Sales, Inc., 
    2004 WY 22
    , ¶ 13, 
    85 P.3d 1010
    , 1013 (Wyo. 2004) (Hutchins II). The commissioners in this
    case answered special interrogatories in which they found that the property could in fact
    be partitioned “without manifest injury to the whole.” The interrogatory answers were
    12
    Of course, the language of an easement may eliminate or further limit the rights found to be implied by
    the grant in Laden. R.C.R., Inc. v. Deline, 
    2008 WY 96
    , ¶ 5, 
    190 P.3d 140
    , 146 (Wyo. 2008) (language of
    easement determines its scope and rights of the parties).
    13
    incorporated in the district court’s initial order partitioning the property. The
    commissioners had been instructed to determine whether the property could be divided
    “without manifest injury to the property’s value.”
    [¶40] A finding by commissioners which is accepted by the trial court is treated as if it
    were a finding made by the trial court, and it is reviewed under the same standard. Taran
    v. Vermont Structural Slate Co., Inc., 
    431 A.2d 448
    , 450 (Vt. 1981); 59A Am. Jur. 2d
    Partition § 130 (2014). We review trial court findings of fact to determine whether they
    are clearly erroneous in light of the record. Barlow Ranch, Ltd. Partnership v. Greencore
    Pipeline Co. LLC, 
    2013 WY 34
    , ¶ 52, 
    301 P.3d 75
    , 91 (Wyo. 2013). We review
    questions of law decided by the trial court de novo. 
    Id. [¶41] Neither
    the district court nor the commissioners could have made a valid
    determination that the partition settled upon would not result in manifest injury to the
    property’s value without locating the Dedicated Ditch necessary to carry water awarded
    to Appellant to her partitioned parcel. Without a means to convey water to irrigate
    meadows and pasture, the land awarded to her could not be used as it historically had
    been. 
    Kravik, 691 P.2d at 1376
    . There can be little doubt that a property with good water
    rights and a means to convey the water to the land is worth considerably more in arid
    Wyoming than land without one or the other.
    [¶42] Another problem is that two of the solutions eventually explored, the North-South
    and Commissioners’ Ditches, will take approximately seven acres of the valuable hay
    meadows awarded to Appellees, which would undoubtedly impact the value of their
    parcel. There is no engineering data, and there are no feasibility studies, cost estimates,
    or evidence of conveyance losses which would have allowed the commissioners or the
    district court to assess the cost of the Dedicated Ditch, because its location was
    undetermined.
    [¶43] The initial order of partition exhorted the parties to work out a ditch location and
    determined how costs would be shared, no doubt in the hope that reason would prevail
    and that the ditch could be built at reasonable cost. Hope, unfortunately, is not a
    definitive ruling.
    [¶44] The dissent characterizes the costs involved as “a wash,” and it is true that the
    parties would pay the same amount under the district court’s order. The record does not
    tell us, however, how much is “washed.” Hypothetically, all would agree that if it costs
    $1,000,000 to build the ditch, there would be manifest injury to the value of the property.
    The only cost information in the record was provided by Appellant after the district court
    entered its second order, and it could not therefore have been considered in that ruling.
    [¶45] The fact that the ditch was not located makes any finding that partition in kind
    would not manifestly injure the value of the property clearly erroneous. Requiring the
    14
    parties to pay the cost of locating and building ditches may manifestly injure the value of
    the property. Amounts paid out to utilize the water reduce the value of the land to an
    affected coparcener.
    [¶46] However, whatever the shortcomings in the original partition order, the second
    trial and order may have resolved them. Appellant contends that the district court’s
    second ruling was legally and factually erroneous. These arguments provide a focus for
    determining whether that ruling was a correct and complete determination based upon the
    record.
    Ordering Parties to Obtain an Easement Not on Partitioned Land
    [¶47] Appellant contends that the district court erred in the second decision when it
    ordered the Dedicated Ditch to be built partly on land belonging to Kraft Ranches, which
    is not a party to the partition action. She points out that the partition statutes allow a writ
    for “estates of lands” held in joint tenancy, tenancy in common, or coparcenary, citing
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-32-101. The Trust does not confront this argument head-on, but
    argues instead that the parties are required to work the location of the easement out with
    Kraft Ranches, and that Jerry Kraft was one of the persons signing the ditch report in
    which the commissioners indicated that Kraft Ranches would allow an easement for the
    Dedicated Ditch with some restrictions. The parties are really addressing two different
    things – Appellant argues that the district court had no power to require the parties to
    acquire an additional easement across the lands of others, while Appellees argues that it
    may be possible to do so.
    [¶48] We will first address the court’s power to order the parties to obtain an easement.
    We have exhaustively searched for a case which confronted this issue, and we have found
    nothing. The parties have apparently had no success either, as they have not cited a case
    on point. Under the circumstances, we are left to our own devices to determine whether
    the district court could order something like it did. The viability of the court’s decision to
    require construction of the Westerly Ditch is completely dependent on the parties’ ability
    to obtain an easement from Kraft Ranches. Appellant is of course correct that the district
    court had no power to compel Kraft Ranches, a non-party, to grant her a ditch easement
    in this case.
    [¶49] An approach lies in the concept of “owelty,” although whether it can apply in this
    case rests on factual determinations which remain to be made. In Platt I, the Court held
    that district courts continue to have supplemental equitable common-law powers to
    partition property even though partition is also governed by statute. Platt I, ¶ 18, 
    264 P.3d 808-09
    . As we have previously explained, owelty is a common law doctrine which
    addresses a disparity in the value of the partitioned parcels, and is
    15
    [a] sum of money paid by one of two coparceners or
    cotenants to the other, when a partition has been effected
    between them, but, the land not being susceptible of division
    into exactly equal shares, such payment is required to make
    the portions respectively assigned to them of equal value.
    Hutchins II, ¶ 
    17, 85 P.3d at 1014
    .
    [¶50] The value of the parcel awarded to Appellant without a definite means of
    conveying water to it is unknown. The cost of building a ditch affects the value of
    Appellant’s parcel to an unknown extent. If the record supported the conclusion that it is
    possible to obtain an easement and build a ditch connecting the nonexistent Westerly
    Ditch to the King Turnbull Ditch, the district court could have directed Appellees to pay
    the difference in value, i.e., the cost of establishing the ditch, if that is actually the
    difference. It could also divide that cost as it did in order to equalize values. While this
    solution may not fit the strict definition of owelty, it accomplishes the same thing – an
    equitable division.
    [¶51] However, we disagree with Appellee Trust and the dissent when they contend that
    the record supports the district court’s decision. The record does not in fact support,
    through any competent evidence, a conclusion that an adequate easement can be
    obtained, and it therefore does not establish that partition will not result in manifest injury
    to the value of the property, or at least to the portion awarded to Alice Platt, for the
    following reasons:
     The Trust indicates that there was “consent” to cross Kraft Ranches with the ditch.
    In reality, the only document in the record evidencing such a consent is the portion
    of the commissioners’ second report quoted above. It indicates that Kraft Ranches
    “will” allow an easement – this is at best a vague promise of future performance.
     The commissioners’ report recommended a different ditch than the district court
    settled on. Kraft Ranches’ willingness to provide an easement for the Westerly
    Ditch was not addressed in the report or the testimony the district court heard.
     An easement is an interest in land, and to obligate the grantor to supply the
    easement, any agreement must satisfy the Statute of Frauds, which would require
    that there be a conveyance or agreement to convey signed by the party to be
    charged, i.e., Kraft Ranches. Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-23-105(a)(v) (LexisNexis
    2013); Restatement (Third) of Prop.: Servitudes § 2.1 (2014). Jerry Kraft signed
    the commissioners’ report as a commissioner, not as a representative of Kraft
    Ranches, Inc. Although the Trust indicates in its brief that Mr. Kraft is the
    President of Kraft Ranches, and that might be true, the record does not validate
    this claim.
    16
     As noted above, Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 34-1-141(a) and (c) requires easements to be
    specifically described.      The commissioners’ report does not satisfy this
    requirement. The statement does not indicate whether the easement will be
    appurtenant (and run with the land) or in gross (and expire on conveyance of the
    land). It does not describe the width of the easement that would be granted.
     The report indicates that Kraft Ranches will reserve the right to “advise and
    oversee” any construction and maintenance. The document does not tell us what
    limitations this language is meant to impose, and whether it would be a burden on
    Appellant’s ability to maintain that portion of the ditch. If the burden is too great,
    it may affect the value of the property awarded to her.
     The district court understood that there was no specific agreement requiring Kraft
    Ranches to grant an easement, because it indicated that the location of the ditch
    would be worked out and ordered Appellant to “work with the landowner to
    establish the location and appropriate documentation.”
    [¶52] Whether or not the district court’s finding that the Westerly Ditch was clearly
    erroneous is an issue discussed below. However, it is obvious that neither the
    Commissioners’ Ditch nor the Westerly Ditch can carry water to Appellant’s parcel
    without crossing Kraft Ranches’ property. Without determining that the easement could
    in fact be obtained, that it would allow appropriate construction and necessary
    maintenance of the ditch, and that it would run with the land, the district court had no
    basis to determine that the value of the partitioned property would not be manifestly
    injured or that the partition was equitable. Its decision in this regard was therefore clearly
    erroneous.
    [¶53] However, this does not mean, as the dissent suggests, that an easement must
    actually be obtained before the district court can require the parties to build the Westerly
    Ditch. Rather, the cost and availability of an easement can be established by sworn
    testimony or documentary evidence. Mr. Kraft could have been asked about this issue
    when he testified earlier, but he was not.
    [¶54] Appellees argue, and the dissent agrees, that if an easement cannot be obtained by
    agreement, one can be condemned under Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-26-815. In order to
    exercise the power of eminent domain, the parties would have to prove the elements of §
    1-26-504(a):
    (i) The public interest and necessity require the project
    or the use of eminent domain is authorized by the Wyoming
    Constitution;
    17
    (ii) The project is planned or located in the manner that
    will be most compatible with the greatest public good and the
    least private injury; and
    (iii) The property sought to be acquired is necessary
    for the project.
    Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-26-504(a) (LexisNexis 2013).
    [¶55] Given the alternative means of conveying water, and the availability of partition
    other than in kind, the necessity of the condemnation would almost certainly be an issue
    with an uncertain outcome in a contested proceeding. Beyond that, the parties would
    have to engage in more protracted litigation, divide costs, expenses, and attorney fees,
    and moreover pay fair compensation in an unknown amount if successful. No evidence
    was presented as to the net effect this would have on the value of the property because of
    the funds which would have to be expended to use it. It is certainly not an easy solution
    as the Trust and dissent suggest, and it is not one that was presented to or considered by
    the district court.
    Change in Means of Conveyance
    [¶56] Appellant argues that the Westerly Ditch chosen by the district court requires her
    to change the means of conveyance for the water she received in the partition, and that
    she cannot be compelled to do so. She points to Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 41-3-114(a)(i), which
    provides that “[a]ny person entitled to the beneficial use of water . . . who desires to
    change the point of diversion or means of conveyance, or both, shall file a petition with
    . . . the board of control . . . .” (Emphasis added). She also directs us to Wyo. Stat. Ann.
    § 41-3-114(f), which provides that no petition for a change in the point of diversion or the
    means of conveyance shall be granted if the right of any appropriators will be injuriously
    affected.
    [¶57] The Trust correctly responds that the means of conveyance can be changed
    without changing the point of diversion, and argues that, despite the language of the
    statute, the means of conveyance can be changed without filing a petition with the Board
    of Control or state engineer’s office. But there is no competent evidence in the record to
    this effect. In support of the argument, the Trust supplied the district court and this Court
    with the telephone number of an employee of the State Board of Control it claims has
    provided it this information. Neither the district court nor this Court is permitted to make
    ex parte, off-the-record contacts with persons claimed to have knowledge of facts
    pertinent to cases before them. The state employee referred to did not testify at trial. We
    must therefore decide this issue based upon our reading of the statute.
    [¶58] Guided by our rules for statutory interpretation, see Aland v. Mead, 
    2014 WY 83
    ,
    ¶ 11, 
    327 P.3d 752
    , 758-59 (Wyo. 2014), the clear and unambiguous language of the
    18
    statute convinces us that the Wyoming Legislature intended to require a person changing
    the means of conveyance of water supplied through a water right to obtain approval by
    the Board of Control.
    [¶59] Appellees argue that the district court had the power to order Appellant to change
    her means of conveyance. We think both parties miss the point. The district court did
    not in fact order Appellant to change her means of conveyance. We conclude that
    Appellant may choose to change her means of conveyance or not; however, if the district
    court makes appropriate findings and orders her to use the Westerly Ditch, she will be
    compelled to change her means of conveyance if she wants to bring water to her land.
    That may be a Hobson’s choice, but it may also be unavoidable.
    [¶60] However, there was no evidence presented as to whether Appellant can in fact
    obtain approval to change the means of conveyance of her water. The record does not
    tell us whether the rights of junior appropriators would be affected in any way. If the
    evidence shows that Appellant cannot obtain permission to change the means of
    conveyance to carry water to her land, the value of the partitioned parcel she received
    would be affected. We will remand to the district court to determine, among other things,
    whether Appellant can obtain approval for a change in the means of conveyance. We
    recognize that this determination may be difficult to make, and if it cannot be made, the
    district court may have to select another route or otherwise adjust the partition.
    [¶61] The dissent suggests that it would be unnecessary to require Appellant to first
    obtain a change in the means of conveyance before ordering the Westerly Ditch built.
    We agree. However, whether a change in the means of conveyance will be granted can
    be proven by a preponderance of competent evidence like any other fact. The individual
    the Trust suggested the district court and this Court call on the phone can testify in person
    or by telephone if that is more convenient. See Uniform Rule of District Court 802
    (allowing testimony by conference call).
    Abuse of Discretion in Choice of Westerly Ditch
    [¶62] Appellant contends that the district court abused its discretion in choosing the
    Westerly Ditch. She contends that the North-South Ditch provided an existing and
    proven means of conveying water to her partitioned land, and that the Commissioners’
    Ditch would also have been a better choice than the Westerly Ditch. She points out that
    none of the Westerly Ditch exists, and that it is unproven.
    [¶63] The Trust directs us to testimony indicating that the appointed commissioners and
    Ron Platt, all of whom were experienced irrigators, testified that the Westerly Ditch
    could be successfully built and operated, although it may be necessary to encase all or
    parts of it in pipe and/or to employ other measures to prevent water loss from porous
    soils. An engineer retained by Appellant agreed.
    19
    [¶64] We conclude that there was sufficient evidence for the district court to conclude
    that the Westerly Ditch could be successfully built and operated if the parties expend
    enough money, time, and effort. However, the court was presented with no evidence as
    to the cost of constructing it until after it selected the Westerly route. The district court
    therefore had nothing to establish that a partition which required the location and
    construction of the Westerly Ditch would not manifestly injure the value of the property
    because of the cost of surveying, engineering, and building it. Because we remand to
    determine whether an easement and a change in means of conveyance can be obtained,
    we also remand for a determination as to whether the cost of building the Westerly Ditch
    would manifestly injure the value of the property.
    Other Issues Relating to the Order
    [¶65] The order presents other issues that should be addressed:
     The order requires the parties to pay any statement for surveying, engineering,
    building, and maintaining the Dedicated Ditch within thirty days, and it also
    provides for interest at ten percent and attorney fees if the bill is not paid. We are
    aware of no authority that would allow a court to in essence make a contract for
    the parties. We have generally held to the contrary in cases involving contract
    interpretation. See, e.g., Michael’s Const., Inc. v. American Nat’l Bank, 
    2012 WY 76
    , ¶ 34, 
    278 P.3d 701
    , 710 (Wyo. 2012).
    Prejudgment interest is limited to seven percent per annum unless the
    parties otherwise agree, although a judgment accrues interest at ten percent unless
    otherwise agreed by contract. Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 40-14-106(e), § 1-16-102(a) and
    (b) (LexisNexis 2013). The district court had no power to set a rate not authorized
    by statute for a prejudgment debt.
    Attorney fees can only be awarded if permitted or required by contract or
    statute. Fix v. South Wilderness Ranch Homeowners Ass’n, 
    2012 WY 96
    ¶ 17,
    
    280 P.3d 527
    , 532 (Wyo. 2012). There is no applicable statute or contract in this
    case. If a party willfully fails to obey a court order he or she is able to perform,
    perhaps a compensatory contempt award could be made, but that would require a
    hearing to establish facts specific to the alleged contempt. Walker v. Walker, 
    2013 WY 132
    , ¶ 39, 
    311 P.3d 170
    , 178 (Wyo. 2013).
     The order does not address the complex mechanics of entering into contracts to
    build the Westerly Ditch. It is doubtful that contractors will put tens of thousands
    of dollars of material and labor into a project without an assurance of payment in
    the form of a deposit, security or an agreement that protects their right to payment.
    Liens in the event contractors are not paid are another issue. It is unlikely that
    20
    Kraft Ranches would want a lien on its property. It is thus unclear what obligation
    each party would have to enter into necessary contracts, and the consequences if
    they do not. See, e.g., Redco Const. v. Profile Properties, LLC, 
    2012 WY 24
    , 
    271 P.3d 408
    (Wyo. 2012) (no lien on property of lessor for improvements contracted
    for by lessee unless there is an agreement or lessee is lessor’s agent).
     The order is not specific as to the specifications to which the ditch must be
    constructed. The options range from a ditch which may be partially or mostly
    earthen with some piping and drop structures to a ditch completely enclosed in
    pipe. The order leaves the parties to agree on the nature of the ditch, which will
    affect its cost, and they seem to have agreed on very little to date.
    Petition for Stay
    [¶66] As noted above, Appellant applied for a stay in the district court and here, and was
    denied both times. The decision to reverse and remand will result in further delay during
    a time in which she has no means of conveying water to her land. We can only hope that
    sufficient rain fell in 2014, a very wet year, to permit ranching operations. The record
    reflects that in most years there is no available irrigation water in this area after July 4,
    and that date is long past. On remand, we anticipate that the district court will develop an
    interim means of assuring that Appellant receives sufficient water to carry on ranching
    operations, and that it will set a realistic and specific time frame for completion of a
    Dedicated Ditch, if it decides that it can in fact partition in kind.
    SUMMARY AND CONCLUSION
    [¶67] Because this case is complex and our opinion is long, and because this is the
    second time we have dealt with this partition action, we will provide a more detailed
    summary than is our usual practice. The district court must first determine if a partition
    can be made without doing manifest injury to the value of the property, and that the
    division is equitable to all parties. We understand that for the litigants, ranching is not an
    occupation – it is a way of life. Their forebears occupied and served as stewards of this
    land for well over a century, and some of them are buried upon it. We grasp that neither
    party probably wants the land partitioned by allotment or sale.
    [¶68] We also understand that the expense of presenting evidence to resolve the issues
    we have identified may be considerable, and that they have already undoubtedly incurred
    sufficient legal expense to build a very fine ditch. We appreciate the work done by the
    commissioners and the difficult decisions the district court has been faced with.
    Nonetheless, this not an amicable partition in which the parties agreed on all significant
    issues, and it may simply not be possible to partition in kind in light of the nature of this
    property. See Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-32-108 (amicable partition). There are simply too
    many unresolved issues to allow us to determine whether the partition in kind ordered by
    21
    the district court is possible, much less whether it will result in manifest injury to the
    property, or for this to be a final order which an appellate court can adequately review.
    [¶69] The dissent suggests that a remand to make the factual determinations above will
    unjustly prolong this already prolonged dispute. It correctly points out that we
    considered a narrow issue three years ago. While this is true, that decision unfortunately
    involved an order which did not resolve necessary issues. The district court’s order
    currently before us is also incomplete and unworkable, and it is unavoidable that further
    proceedings will be required.
    [¶70] A condemnation proceeding, if required, would be another lawsuit, and would
    probably entail more time and considerable expense. The district court, however, can
    efficiently hold a hearing to resolve the factual issues identified below, and enter an
    appropriate order on a complete record. If the parties are not satisfied and feel it
    necessary to appeal again, at least this Court will have a sufficient record to allow it to
    make an informed decision on the merits, rather than speculating as to what the facts
    might be.
    [¶71] We remand for the district court to determine whether the land can be partitioned
    in kind without manifest injury to its value, and if so, in light of the costs and obstacles
    involved, whether the district court still believes that the Westerly Ditch provides an
    equitable means of dividing the property. The district court should determine the
    following:
     Can a permanent easement running with the land be obtained from Kraft Ranches,
    and if so, will it be large enough and free of restrictions which would cause
    manifest injury to the value of Appellant’s property?
     Is the location in the second order specific enough to locate the ditch on the
    ground?
     Will Appellant probably be able to obtain permission to change her means of
    conveyance? This will also require a determination of the probable interests of
    junior appropriators.
     If a permanent easement can be obtained, and if a change in means of conveyance
    is likely to be approved, what specifications must the ditch meet, and how much
    will it cost? Will the cost of the ditch cause manifest injury to the value of the
    property because the parties must pay to survey, build, and maintain it?
     Whichever route the district court chooses for the Dedicated Ditch, are special
    provisions required to assure that they will enter into appropriate contracts?
    22
     If the court concludes that the Westerly Ditch cannot be built for any of the
    reasons discussed above, and selects the North-South or Commissioners’ Ditch,
    will the location of the ditch take enough of Appellees’ hay meadow to render the
    partition inequitable?
     What is an appropriate time frame to complete the ditch after the ruling, and what
    interim means will be used to supply Appellant with water?
    [¶72] Reversed and remanded for further proceedings consistent with this opinion.
    23
    KITE, Justice, dissenting, with whom HILL, J., joins.
    [¶73] The record in this case, together with this Court’s opinion in Platt v. Platt, 
    2011 WY 155
    , 
    264 P.3d 804
    (Wyo. 2011) (Platt I), supports the district court’s decision to
    select the Westerly Ditch and that decision should be affirmed. The majority’s decision
    will waste the parties’ time and money, as well as, unnecessarily expend judicial
    resources. Consequently, I respectfully dissent.
    [¶74] The 2010 district court order partitioned the property and set out in significant
    detail the basic structure for the post-partition irrigation system including providing the
    general location of the Dedicated Ditch on the west side of the Trust’s property. The
    order stated:
    5.      For the 2010 irrigation season, the parties and the
    ranch property partitioned hereby, shall maintain its historic
    water right operation and distribution system for calendar
    year 2010.13 The following irrigation and water rights
    division shall be completed and implemented beginning in the
    Spring of 2011. In making this division/allocation of water
    rights, except for the construction of the Dedicated Ditch as
    provided herein, it is not the intention of the Court to change
    the historic use and manner of use previously made of the
    water rights. The Court recognizes that Wyoming water law
    is based on the doctrine of prior appropriation. Under
    Wyoming water law, since water is appurtenant to the lands
    for which it is appropriated, the Court orders that adjudicated
    water rights remain with the lands awarded to each of the
    parties. However, to the extent that there is water available in
    excess of the adjudicated water rights each party will hold or
    be entitled to under the doctrine of prior appropriation, the
    Court orders that such water, including flood irrigation water,
    be split equally between the lands awarded to the Plaintiff and
    those lands awarded to the Defendants, for which
    appropriations exist.
    13
    When the Trust petitioned the district court to reappoint the commissioners to specifically locate the
    Dedicated Ditch, Alice objected on the basis that she had the right, under the 2010 order, to continue
    using the North/South (Historical) ditch even after the 2010 irrigation season. In other words, she argued
    that she could choose the North/South ditch as her Dedicated Ditch. The district court properly rejected
    Alice’s argument. Her interpretation of the order completely ignores the obvious intent to locate a new
    Dedicated Ditch for her use beginning in 2011. There would have been no reason to include the
    approximate location of the Dedicated Ditch in the original order if the court intended the North/South
    ditch to be the Dedicated Ditch.
    24
    The parties shall install a measuring device in the King
    Turnbull Ditch at the approximate location where the King
    Turnbull Ditch crosses the east line of the NE¼NW¼ of
    Section 33, Township 14 North, Range 82 West, for the
    purposes of measuring all of the water in the King Turnbull
    Ditch. The parties shall install a second measuring device at
    the point of beginning of what will be a new Dedicated Ditch
    for the purposes of delivering water to the lands awarded to
    the Defendant. The Dedicated Ditch would establish a
    headgate and measuring device located at approximately the
    SE corner of the SW¼ of Section 28, Township 14 North,
    Range 82 West. It would then run in a northwesterly
    direction approximately three-quarters of a mile across lands
    awarded to the Plaintiff at such location as the parties may
    jointly agree to the approximately NW corner of the
    SE¼NW¼ of Section 28, Township 14 North, Range 82
    West, for the benefit of those lands awarded to the
    Defendants. The location of the Dedicated Ditch shall be
    specifically described and be a permanent easement across
    those lands on which it is located. In the event the parties are
    unable to agree on the exact location of the Dedicated Ditch,
    to serve those lands awarded to the Defendants by September
    1, 2010, then, at the request of the Defendant, the
    Commissioners acting herein will be reengaged and shall
    employ an engineer and . . . return to the lands with the
    engineer for the purposes of determining the exact location
    for such Dedicated Ditch.
    The cost for purchasing and installing all headgates
    and measuring devices as well as the costs incurred in
    engineering and constructing the Dedicated Ditch shall be
    split equally between the parties to the extent assistance is not
    available through NRCS. After installation and construction
    of the headgates and measuring devices, the costs relative to
    the maintenance of the first measuring device located at the
    approximate point where the King Turnbull Ditch crosses the
    east line of the NE¼NW¼ of Section 33, Township 14 North,
    Range 82 West, would be shared equally by the parties.
    Future maintenance costs incurred in the maintenance of the
    headgate and second measuring device located at the
    approximate SE corner of the SW¼ of Section 28, Township
    14 North, Range 82 West, shall be the responsibility of the
    Defendants and the cost of maintaining the Dedicated Ditch
    25
    once constructed shall also be the responsibility of the
    Defendants.
    6. Each party shall have with respect to their water,
    water rights, ditch, and ditch rights an inviolable right to go
    upon all of the lands covered by this Order and to follow their
    ditches from their base of use to their source of beginning for
    the purpose of protection, maintenance, operation, repair and
    all other necessary or incidental activities to assure the full
    use and enjoyment of their water, water rights, ditch and ditch
    rights, without hindrance by any other party.
    7. Each party shall conduct themselves and construct,
    operate and maintain, use and repair their water and irrigation
    systems in such a manner so as not to cause any damage to
    the other party or the other party’s property or so as to
    interfere with the reasonable operation and use of the other
    party’s water or irrigation systems, canals, ditches, pipes,
    flumes, ditch rights, headgates, diversions, dams, weirs,
    measuring devices and structures used in conveying and
    regulating the flow of water of whatever character or type.
    8. The parties shall equally share in the costs of
    completing any surveys necessary to accomplish the division
    set forth above. Further, the parties shall equally share in the
    costs of constructing any boundary fences necessary to
    separate the two properties. Location of any fences will be
    agreed upon by the parties or by registered survey.
    (footnote added).
    [¶75] In Platt I, we affirmed the district court’s partition order. The location of the
    Dedicated Ditch on the west side of the Trust’s property was not questioned in the first
    appeal. Instead, the only issue raised in that case was whether the district court could
    reject the commissioners’ recommendation to award the Trust an easement (Easement 3)
    over property awarded to Alice in the partition to give it better access to the King Field.
    The district court decided not to include Easement 3 in its partition decision, and the
    Trust argued on appeal that the district court did not have authority to modify the
    commissioners’ recommendation. Id., ¶¶ 14-
    15, 264 P.3d at 807
    . We reviewed the
    partition statutes and concluded that they were supplemented by equitable principles
    which allowed modification of the commissioners’ recommendation. 
    Id., ¶¶ 15-20,
    264
    P.3d at 807-11. We noted the Trust’s appellate argument was somewhat incongruous
    given it had requested at the district court hearing that the commissioners’
    26
    recommendation be modified to actually give it title to the 13.15 acre parcel covered by
    Easement 3. 
    Id., ¶¶ 7-10,
    20-21, 264 P.3d at 805-07
    , 811. We affirmed the district
    court’s decision to reject Easement 3, altogether, and leave the 13.15 acre parcel in
    Alice’s portion of the partitioned property.14 
    Id., ¶ 1,
    264 P.3d at 804.
    [¶76] The complete record of the original partition proceeding is not included in the
    record of the appeal at bar. Our standards for appellate review require, under those
    circumstances, that we presume the evidence in that trial supported the court’s original
    factual findings and conclusions of law. Moreover, our rules of finality require that we
    respect the original order because it was not questioned in the first appeal. See, e.g.,
    Nickle v. Bd. of County Comm’rs of Platte County, 
    2007 WY 115
    , ¶ 17, 
    162 P.3d 1208
    ,
    1213 (Wyo. 2007); Sundance Mt. Resort, Inc. v. Union Tel. Co., 
    2007 WY 11
    , ¶ 18, 
    150 P.3d 191
    , 196-97 (Wyo. 2007). In addition, neither party contended the order in Platt I
    was not final.
    [¶77] It is true, as pointed out in the majority opinion, that the district court did not
    specifically identify the location of the Dedicated Ditch in 2010. It did, however, set out
    its fundamental parameters, approximate starting and ending points and a general
    location. The district court’s instructions to the commissioners upon reappointment were
    to locate the Dedicated Ditch in accordance with the original order. The Westerly Ditch
    is the only one of the three alternatives considered in the 2013 proceeding that met the
    requirements set out in the 2010 order.
    [¶78] Importantly, the general location of the ditch and its incumbent construction costs
    and other concerns were part of the original partition decision. The commissioners and
    Alice ignored the original order in proposing, respectively, the Commissioners Ditch and
    the North/South ditch as the Dedicated Ditch. If the district court would have accepted
    either of those alternatives, it would have undermined the equitable balance it achieved in
    the original partition. The district court’s decision in 2013 to approve the Westerly Ditch
    actually preserved the underlying basis of the original partition.
    [¶79] Alice claims in her appellate brief that “all of the parties involved” agreed, during
    the second proceeding, that a ditch following the parameters set out in the original order
    was not feasible. The record does not support that assertion given the Westerly Ditch
    was proposed by the Trust and ultimately approved by the district court. In addition, two
    of the three commissioners stated at the hearing that the Westerly Ditch was likely a
    better alternative than the Commissioners Ditch because its location on the western
    portion of the Trust’s property would require less interaction between the parties, fewer
    14
    Paragraph 8 of the majority opinion suggests the 13.15 acre parcel at issue in Platt I pertained to the
    proposed new ditch. However, the district court’s order and our opinion indicate the acreage was not
    related to the new ditch construction; rather, it was intended to allow the Trust shorter access to the King
    Field.
    27
    parallel ditches, crossovers, and vehicle crossings, and have less impact on the Trust’s
    irrigated property.
    [¶80] The district court’s 2012 order reappointing the commissioners and directing them
    to locate the Dedicated Ditch instructed the commissioners to “act in accordance with
    their prior oath and the Final Judgment and Order Partitioning Real Property” entered in
    2010. The district court ordered the commissioners to locate the Dedicated Ditch
    including the two measuring devices in accordance with the general parameters contained
    in the 2010 order. The ditch proposed by the Trust in the second proceeding met the
    general parameters set out in the 2010 decision. The district court’s order approving the
    Westerly Ditch as the Dedicated Ditch specifically stated that it “comports with the
    location set forth in the [2010 order] which remains in effect and is not modified in any
    way by this order.” Thus, Alice’s statement that everyone agreed that the ditch could not
    feasibly be located in accordance with the 2010 order is not supported by the record
    before us and is, in fact, contradicted by the fact that the Westerly Ditch did comply with
    that order.
    [¶81] Alice’s concerns about the costs of the Westerly Ditch, the need to obtain an
    easement from the Kraft Ranch, and the possibility of a petition for a new means of
    conveyance could have, and should have, been raised during the first partition action.
    Although other aspects of the partition were appealed in Platt I, no one contested the
    district court’s decision about the irrigation system, even though Alice was surely aware
    that the North-South (Historical) Ditch, which she now champions, was not an option
    under that ruling. Furthermore, the general location of the ditch on the west side of the
    Trust’s property as set out in the first partition order required an easement from the Krafts
    in order to get the water out of the King Turnbull Ditch. Alice knew that at the time of
    the first order, and did not appeal or otherwise object on that basis. Consequently, she
    should have to live with that, whether under the principles of res judicata, collateral
    estoppel, and/or the law of the case.
    [¶82] In my view, the district court’s order was not improper simply because it required
    further action to be taken to effectuate it. With regard to obtaining permission to utilize
    the Kraft Ranch land for irrigation purposes, the record adequately supports the district
    court’s ruling that permission had been secured, even though a formal easement or
    agreement was not part of the record. The commissioners’ recommendation stated:
    Kraft Ranches, Inc., owner of the property where the
    measuring devices and head gate are to be located, will allow
    easement for Dedicated Ditch, access to and from the
    location, dirt materials necessary for installation and
    maintenance of same at no cost. Costs associated with any
    paper work or surveying work deemed necessary to
    accomplish this shall be shared by the parties of the partition.
    28
    Owners of Kraft Ranches, Inc., need to be notified of any
    upcoming work and reserve the right to advise and oversee
    any construction or maintenance on their property.
    Jerry Kraft was a commissioner in the partition action and, when called to testify at the
    evidentiary hearing, indicated that he represented Kraft Ranches, Inc.. He gave no
    indication at the hearing that the Platts’ ability to obtain an easement over Kraft Ranch
    property for either the Commissioners’ Ditch or the Westerly Ditch was in question. In
    addition, Mr. Kraft’s signature on the commissioners’ report with the above-quoted
    language certainly indicated that he had authority to act on behalf of Kraft Ranches, Inc.,
    even if a formal corporate authorization for the easement had not yet been executed.
    [¶83] As the appellant in this action, Alice bears the burden of establishing the district
    court’s finding that an easement could be obtained was clearly erroneous. See Thomson
    v. Wyo. In-Stream Flow Comm., 
    651 P.2d 778
    , 788 (Wyo. 1982). Our standard of review
    requires that:
    [w]e do not substitute ourselves for the trial court as a
    finder of facts; instead, we defer to those findings unless they
    are unsupported by the record or erroneous as a matter of law.
    We affirm the trial court’s findings if there is any evidence to
    support them. We accept the evidence of the prevailing party
    as true and give that party the benefit of all favorable
    inferences that can fairly be drawn from the evidence, while
    disregarding conflicting evidence.
    Terris v. Kimmel, 
    2010 WY 110
    , ¶ 7, 
    236 P.3d 1022
    , 1025 (Wyo. 2010) (citations
    omitted).
    [¶84] The majority’s decision has the effect of reversing this standard of appellate
    review. When the correct standard with the appropriate inferences is applied, it is clear
    that Alice has not satisfied her burden of showing the district court’s conclusion was
    erroneous. In fact, the record establishes just the opposite – Kraft Ranches, Inc. was
    willing to give an easement for the area where the new Dedicated Ditch headgate and
    measuring devices would be located. Of course, if a specifically described easement
    document cannot be obtained from the Kraft Ranch, condemnation is an available means
    of securing a right for Alice’s irrigation works to cross the Kraft Ranch property. Wyo.
    Stat. Ann. § 1-26-815.
    [¶85] Likewise, to require the parties to go through a process to obtain Board of Control
    approval of a change in the means of conveyance before the order is considered final is
    unnecessary. This situation presents a classic chicken/egg type conundrum. Alice may
    not be able to petition to change her means of conveyance until the court has approved
    29
    the partition with its incumbent ditch rights. In Altaffer v. Cross (In re Cross), 
    2013 WY 79
    , ¶¶ 6, 12-14, 25, 
    304 P.3d 932
    , 934, 936, 938 (Wyo. 2013), we approved a private
    road even though the petitioners still needed to secure a permit from the Bureau of
    Reclamation to gain full access to a public road. We held that, given the Bureau of
    Reclamation would not issue the permit unless the petitioners could show they had legal
    access to its property, the rule of reason justified granting the private road first on the
    condition that a permit would ultimately be obtained. 
    Id. [¶86] It
    is not unusual for a court to order action to be taken to effectuate its judgment
    that will require the future cooperation of non-parties. For example, district courts
    routinely order property to be sold or refinanced to accomplish property division in
    divorce cases. Such orders presuppose the parties will have to obtain the cooperation of
    non-parties such as a bank for refinancing or a realtor and purchaser for a sale. Indeed, in
    this case, the 2010 order directed: transfer of a brand which required future action by the
    Wyoming Livestock Board; auction of the ranch’s equipment with the proceeds to be
    divided between the parties which involved an auctioneer and buyers; transfer of grazing
    permits which required approval from the National Forest Service and the Bureau of
    Land Management; and collection of the proceeds of a hay sale which required
    cooperation and action from a third party. If the parties are unable to accomplish such
    tasks, they can apply to the court for a modification of the order.
    [¶87] Questioning, as the majority opinion does, whether the orders were final because a
    few matters still need to be accomplished creates a precedent that could unnecessarily
    hamstring district courts as they craft solutions to many kinds of disputes. We have, in
    the contexts of probate and partnership dissolution, ruled that orders were final even
    though there was still work left to be done. In Jubie v. Dahlke (In re Estate of Dahlke),
    
    2014 WY 29
    , ¶ 38, 
    319 P.3d 116
    , 126 (Wyo. 2014), we held a decree of estate
    distribution was final and subject to appeal even though the property still needed to be
    distributed, explaining:
    As of the date a decree of distribution is entered, the share of
    the estate each heir or devisee will be awarded has been
    determined, and that person can meaningfully challenge the
    ruling if she believes it to be incorrect. On the other hand,
    distribution of estate assets may take considerable time, as
    when real property must be sold and the proceeds of the sale
    distributed. If a decree of distribution were not final and
    appealable, an aggrieved party would be denied a prompt
    appeal of the probate court's distribution decision. Cf., In re
    Hartt’s Estate, 
    75 Wyo. 305
    , 380–82, 
    295 P.2d 985
    , 1014–15
    (1956). It would serve no useful purpose to delay an appeal
    until distribution had been made, and even further until an
    order closing the estate had been entered.
    30
    [¶88] This Court used the same type of rationale to review the district court’s plan to
    distribute partnership assets in Weiss v. Weiss, 
    2008 WY 30
    , ¶¶ 12-13, 
    178 P.3d 1091
    ,
    1096-97 (Wyo. 2008). We stated the district court’s order dissolving a partnership and
    setting over parcels of land to each partner was considered final even though a formal
    survey and conveyance of parcels of property was not yet completed. We explained:
    “We are satisfied that the district court’s order is appealable and, moreover, it is as
    ‘final’ an order as could be fashioned in this case without causing gross diseconomies of
    effort to the parties, to the district court, and to this Court.” 
    Id. [¶89] Although
    a different statutory scheme is involved in the case extant, the
    underlying policy is no different. If we require the parties to obtain approval from the
    Board of Control and finalize the easement with the Kraft Ranch before they can appeal
    the district court’s general order of partition or location of the Dedicated Ditch, they
    could potentially waste all of that time and expense if the district court’s decision were
    reversed.
    [¶90] The majority opinion also focuses on what it suggests are excessive costs
    associated with the Westerly Ditch. Those concerns do not justify a finding that the
    district court abused its discretion by approving the Westerly Ditch. The possibility of
    obtaining funding from the United States Department of Agriculture, Natural Resources
    Conservation Service (NRCS) is mentioned repeatedly in the record, indicating that
    significant federal subsidization of the costs may be available if the project can be
    designed to meet NRCS requirements.15 In addition, the district court ordered the parties
    to equally share the costs in excess of the grant funding. So, in terms of equity, the costs
    issue was essentially a wash. The fact that the costs will be shared equally will also
    provide the parties with an incentive to find the most cost-effective approach. If those
    equally shared costs are a problem for the parties, there is presumably no reason that they
    could not still enter into an agreement outside of the court’s order, such as cooperating in
    the use of the North/South Ditch, and have it approved by the district court.
    [¶91] Alice also expresses concerns that she, alone, will bear the risk of the Westerly
    Ditch not being effective to convey water to her property. Again, those concerns should
    have been raised in the original proceedings. In any event, the district court took that risk
    into account and alleviated it by ordering the parties to share the initial costs of
    construction and installation of a workable irrigation system. Therefore, the Trust will
    have to share equally in the cost of creating a ditch that will effectively supply irrigation
    water to Alice’s property.
    15
    Gene Carrico, another commissioner in this matter, testified at the hearing that funding may also be
    available through a state task force.
    31
    [¶92] I also depart from the majority opinion’s statement that the commissioners and
    district court did not finish their jobs because they did not specifically determine the costs
    of the Westerly Ditch and determine whether that expense would manifestly injure the
    value of the entire partition estate. In the original partition action, the commissioners and
    the district court specifically determined that the partition, with the location of the
    Dedicated Ditch on the west side of the Trust’s property, would not manifestly injure the
    value of the property. That decision was not challenged in Platt I. Further, the
    commissioners were not instructed in either appointment to specifically determine the
    costs of improvements that would have to be made to accomplish the partition, in general,
    or the cost of the Dedicated Ditch, in particular. Additionally, the record currently before
    us does not demonstrate that Alice requested such an instruction.
    [¶93] There is no statutory requirement for a specific determination of the cost of the
    ditch. The relevant statute is Wyo. Stat. Ann. § 1-32-106, which simply states:
    In making the partition, the commissioners must examine the
    estate and set apart the same in such lots as will be most
    advantageous and equitable, having due regard to the
    improvements, situation and quality of the different parts.
    In Platt I, ¶ 
    17, 264 P.3d at 808
    , we noted that Field v. Leiter, 
    90 P. 378
    (Wyo. l907), was
    the most comprehensive Wyoming decision on partition prior to Platt I. One of the
    issues in Field was whether the commissioners’ report was inadequate under the partition
    statutes because it failed to specifically describe the character and situation of the
    premises, or to state that the properties had been equitably and advantageously
    partitioned. 
    Id. at 388-90.
    This Court held there were no specific statutory requirements
    for the commissioners to make those findings and, consequently, their omission from the
    commissioners’ report was not a basis for rejecting it. 
    Id. Likewise, the
    commissioners’
    and district court’s failure to make specific findings about the cost of the ditch in this case
    did not violate the partition statutes or the instructions.
    [¶94] The commissioners determined that no manifest injury to the property would
    occur from the partition when they recommended a property division, with the Dedicated
    Ditch being located on the west side of the Trust’s property, in Platt I. The only statutory
    reference to “manifest injury” is in relation to a determination by the commissioners that
    dividing the property cannot occur without “manifest injury to its value.” Wyo. Stat.
    Ann. § 1-32-109 states:
    § 1-32-109. Appraisement required where estate cannot be
    divided according to writ; return by commissioners;
    election to take at appraised value.
    When the commissioners are of the opinion that the estate
    32
    cannot be divided according to the demand of the writ
    without manifest injury to its value, they shall return that fact
    to the court with a just valuation of the estate. If the court
    approves the return and one (1) or more of the parties elects
    to take the estate at such appraised value, it shall be adjudged
    to him upon his paying to the other parties their proportion of
    the appraised value according to their respective rights, or
    securing the same as hereinafter provided.
    Although the total cost of the Westerly Ditch is not certain, even the highest estimate set
    out in Paragraph 24 of the majority opinion represents less than eight percent of the total
    $2,277,875 value of the property. Platt I, ¶ 
    5, 264 P.3d at 805
    . The commissioners, the
    parties and the district court certainly knew there would be significant expenses involved
    in constructing the Dedicated Ditch on the western side of the Trust’s property. Still, the
    decision makers determined that the property could be partitioned without manifestly
    injuring the value of the entire estate when it originally partitioned the property, and
    Alice did not contest that finding in the first appeal.
    [¶95] The majority’s decision will reopen the entire partition action because, as that
    opinion rightly recognizes, any ditch which does not meet the parameters set forth in the
    2010 order may undermine the original basis for the equitable partition. These parties
    have been in litigation over this partition since 2007, and we affirmed the district court’s
    partition decision nearly three years ago. To unnecessarily drag out this expensive and
    divisive family dispute even longer does a disservice to the parties and the judicial
    system.
    33