47 Colo. 239 | Colo. | 1910
delivered the opinion of the court:
The object of this action is to relieve against a threatened forfeiture of certain rights and privileges which plaintiff storage company claims it obtained as the result of a contract which it entered into with defendant canal company. The character of this contract, made December 5, 1898,' is disclosed, and its material provisions which gave rise to the pending controversy are embodied, in paragraphs 1, 2, 8 and 9, which are substantially as follows:
1. “That for and in consideration of $1 in hand paid by said Storage Company, to the said Canal Company, the receipt of which is hereby acknowledged, and in consideration of the premises and the undertakings herein set forth, to be kept and performed by the said Storage Company, the said Canal Company hereby grants to the said Storage Company, its successors and assigns, the right and privilege of using and enjoying its canal and headgates, for the purpose of conveying water to any and all reservoirs constructed along the line of said canal owned by the said Canal Company, * * * with the right to extend and enlarge the said canal, or any section of the same, to such extent as may be requisite to convey the waters of the South Platte river and its tributaries to the lands, canals and reservoirs now
2. “The Canal Company also grants to the Storage Company the privilege of building laterals, branches or extensions of the Canal Company’s canal, through which surplus, waste and seepage water might be conducted and delivered direct to purchasers from the Storage Company.”
8. “It is further agreed and understood that the said Storage Company shall complete a system of reservoirs along and under the line of said canal within five years from the time of the ensealing and delivery of these presents, and if at the termination of the said period the said Storage Company shall have failed to have used said canal for the purpose referred'to in this contract, then all of the rights and privileges herein mentioned and granted by the said Canal Company to the said Storage Company shall be waived, and this contract be void,- otherwise it shall 'remain in full force and effect. ’ ’
9. “It is hereby agreed by the parties hereto to co-operate to the end that the widest service of the canal and the storage system shall obtain, and the largest public utility result. ’ ’
Other clauses particularly define the reciprocal rights and duties of the parties, and the limitations, as to the nature, and length of time, of the use of the canal, to which they are subjected when the contract is fully performed.
The principal dispute concerns the eighth clause. The parties are not in accord as to its meaning or the proper construction of the contract as a whole. The plaintiff says that this clause is a mere covenant and the only remedy for its breach an action for damages; but if not a covenant, then it is a condition subsequent, which does not prevent the vesting of the estate which is the subject-matter of the contract,
’ For about three years and a half after the date of the contract, plaintiff did practically nothing towards performing any of the conditions which were named as the consideration for the things granted to it. In the summer of 1902 it began preliminary surveys for the prescribed reservoirs and made filings under the statute. No actual work in the way of building reservoirs was then, or ever, done. The system along the line of defendant’s canal contemplated was for the storage of water by means of which government lands, and lands owned”by private individuals, favorably situated, might be irrigated. Some time during the summer of 1902 the United States government withdrew from entry its lands in this neighborhood, and it was publicly announced and generally understood in that part of the country that the government contemplated the building of a large reservoir with which to irrigate both public and private lands. Plaintiff company then entirely ceased all operations with the avowed intention of abandoning its enterprise, after having reached the conclusion that this project of the government, if consummated, would render commercially unprofitable the system of reservoirs and extension and enlargement of defendant’s canal which this contract contemplated on its part. Nothing further under the contract was done by plaintiff until some time in the spring or early summer of the year 1903. The United .States government abandoned its project in July, 1903. Plain
Plaintiff seeks to avoid the forfeiture of its rights as the result of its failure to build a system of reservoirs, which it has avowedly abandoned and admits that it does not propose to construct, on the ground that by a subsequent agreement it was released from that obligation. For its failure to complete the extension of, and to use, the canal for the purposes mentioned in the contract within the period of five years it says that defendant actively, and wrongfully interfered therewith, and, besides, is estopped to insist upon its right to terminate the contract on that account because of its own conduct, which would make it inequitable now to do so. These contentions present the important questions for decision.
There is testimony by the president of plaintiff company that the advent of the government with its reclamation scheme so upset its plans that, until the government gave up its project, there was.no intention by plaintiff to carry out the scheme outlined in the contract. When the government decided to withdraw, the plaintiff company again proposed to carry out the contract scheme in part, but not in its entirety. Because of the unsuccessful efforts of the officers of plaintiff company to enlist the co-operation of
Even a cursory reading of the contract shows that plaintiff was not required to extend defendant’s canal. Plaintiff was given the privilege of doing so, which might, or might not, be exercised at its pleasure. In one sense, therefore, the extension of the canal was no part óf the consideration for the rights and privileges which were given to plaintiff. If, however, in a certain contingency the extension of the canal was a part of such consideration, it was only a part, and not all, and even if such part of the consideration was rendered, it would not excuse or justify the failure of plaintiff to fulfil the other and imperative condition, the building of the system of reservoirs. While not necessary for us definitely to determine whether defendant wrongfully interfered with plaintiff’s work of constructing a ditch, or, by its conduct, is estopped to take advantage of the failure to complete the same and to use the canal for the purposes mentioned in the contract within the prescribed period of .five years, it is doubtful if the alleged obstruction was wrongful, or the estoppel pleaded sufficiently established. As to. the former,
It is true that two of the five directors of defendant, but so far as the record shows none of the other three, were aware that plaintiff was engaged from about March until some time in November of 1903 in the work of building a ditch, which, apparently, it was its intention to connect with the canal of defendant. These two directors made no objection to the same, neither did they say to the officers of plaintiff that, if the work was not done, or the canal used, within the time limited, defendant would insist upon its right to terminate the contract. These circumstances, however, are not sufficient to create an estoppel. There is an' entire absence of allegation in the complaint, and of any evidence that plaintiff would not have gone on with its work of extension, even if it had been reminded by defendant that all conditions should be performed within the time limit, else a forfeiture would be enforced. There is no evidence. that the two directors of defendant knew that
In thus disposing of the ease, as already suggested, we have not found it necessary to pass upon the opposing contentions as to the proper construction of clause eight. If it constitutes a condition precedent, of course no right to use defendant’s canal was ever vested in plaintiff, because the condition named was not complied with. The same result, however, is reached if the clause is to be regarded as a condition subsequent, or a mere covenant. In neither event was the important condition or covenant in the contract which plaintiff was obliged to perform ever fulfilled, and, if the estate ever vested, it was after-wards defeated or destroyed.
The decree which gave plaintiff the right to enter upon defendant’s canal at any time within seventeen months, to date from the entry of the decree below, or from its affirmance in this court in ease of a review here, and that the work of enlargement of the canal should be deemed a full perform
It is true that a court of equity will not lend its aid to enforce, but, in a proper case, will often relieve against a forfeiture. ¥e are constrained to say that plaintiff’s laches, its change of purpose, from time to time, as to performing the contract, its unexcused failure to render the only consideration for the grant which it bound itself to give, compel us to deny the relief it asks. In the very nature of things the mere enlargement of the canal is not the equivalent of the use by plaintiff of the canal for the purposes mentioned in the contract. Those purposes included the use of th.e canal for conveying water to be stored in reservoirs along its course that were to be built by plaintiff, and if they were not built it was impossible for plaintiff to use the canal for all the purposes mentioned in the contract.
Apparently it was a controlling consideration with the trial court that defendant company, as it was said, suffered no injury as the result of the noncompliance by plaintiff with the terms of the contract. The argument seems to be that the system of reservoirs, if built, and the extension of the canal, if made, were to be the property of the plaintiff, and whatever profits were realized through the storage and sale of water would belong to plaintiff, and not to defendant. Such reasoning is not satisfactory. Usually it is for the covenantee, not the covenantor, for the party for whose benefit a condition is imposed, not for the one who is to perform it, to say whether it shall be kept or observed. And we might well conclude that when paragraph eight was inserted it was so because defendant regarded it as important