Gelwicks v. Todd

24 Colo. 494 | Colo. | 1898

Chieb Justice .Campbell

delivered the opinion of the court.

Action for the specific performance of a contract. The plaintiff, appellant here, was indebted to the defendant, appellee, in the sum of $3,822, evidenced by promissory notes secured by a trust deed upon town lots and agricultural lands and a water right used in irrigating the latter. As the plaintiff was unable to pay the notes, he entered into a contract with the defendant whereby he agreed to convey to her said farm lands and water right, in consideration of which she agreed to cancel and surrender to him said notes.

The defendant at once, or very soon after the agreement was made, entered into and took possession, and still holds possession, of the land and water right. A short time after surrendering possession, the plaintiff tendered to defendant his warranty deed of conveyance, describing the lands and the water right, and demanded of her the surrender and can*496cellation of the notes; but she declined to accept the deed and refused to give up the notes; and this action was then brought.

The complaint specifically describes the land, but does not, in terms, mention the water right. There is an allegation that the conveyance was to be of the land “ together with all appurtenances thereto belonging.” In her answer the defendant alleges that the contract, though calling for a conveyance of the land and a water right used in connection therewith, was conditioned upon its approval by some of her relatives or friends, which was not given. She also claims that the plaintiff misrepresented the value of the water right; but, if it be assumed that such are good defenses under the other admitted facts, there was no sufficient proof of either.

Upon the trial, the court submitted to a jury two questions for their finding, in substance as follows : First, was the contract, as set out in the complaint, made? Second, did the defendant take possession of the subject-matter of the contract in pursuance of its terms ? The jury answered both questions in the affirmative. The court approved, and adopted as its own, the jury’s findings in response to the second question, but set aside their answer to the first, for the reason that the evidence of both parties showed that the contract was for the conveyance of land and a water right, while the complaint declared upon a contract for the conveyance of land only.

The questions involved upon this appeal are sufficiently indicated by the two general propositions assumed by the appellant in Iris brief: first, that the language of the complaint “together with all appurtenances thereto belonging,” especially when considered in connection with the uncontroverted evidence that both parties intended and understood that a water right was to be conveyed, was sufficiently comprehensive to allow, and of itself constituted an allegation under which, proof of the contract for the conveyance of a water right used on the land might be introduced; or, as *497might be otherwise expressed, a contract to convey land may carry with it a water right, depending upon the circumstances of the case; second, if the foregoing proposition is not true, then it was the duty of the court, under the facts of the case, to permit an amendment of the complaint to be made to make the pleading correspond to the proof.

From an examination of the opinion of the district court brought up in the bill of exceptions, it clearly appears, and counsel on both sides in their argument admit, that the decision below was based entirely upon a declaration of the court of appeals in Bloom, et al. v. West et al., 3 Colo. App. 212, in which it is said that the doctrine of the supreme court of this state laid down in Strickler v. Colo. Springs, 16 Colo. 61, where, inter alia, it was held that a water right originally applied to specific lands for irrigation could be segregated from that land, sold, and taken out at a different point, and applied to a different beneficial use, “ is utterly repugnant to the idea of water as ‘ appurtenant ’ under any circumstances.” The district court, therefore, held that under the allegation “ together with all appurtenances thereto belonging ” found in the complaint, the plaintiff could not introduce evidence that a water right was included with the land, and also held that it was improper to allow the desired amendment.

At the time of this ruling, the opinion in the case of Arnett v. Linhart, 21 Colo. 188, though handed- down, probably was not reported, at least, not called to the attention of the trial court. In this case, this court, basing its ruling upon the Strickler Case, supra, says :

“ Although a water right may be appurtenant to the land, it is the subject of property and may be transferred either with or without the land. Strickler v. City of Colorado Springs, 16 Colo. 61. Being therefore a distinct subject of grant, and transferable either with or without the land, whether a deed to land conveys the water right depends upon the intention of the grantor, which is to be gathered from the express terms of the deed; or, when it is silent as *498to the water right, from the presumption that arises from the circumstances, and whether such right is or is not incident to and necessary to the beneficial enjoyment of the land.”

Applying this doctrine to the case at bar, while the complaint in question does not, in terms, mention the water right, it clearly appears from the pleadings and the proofs of both parties that the grantor intended to transfer, and the grantee to receive a conveyance of, a water right along with the land. It was incident and necessary to the beneficial enjoyment of the land, and the latter was, as the defendant herself testifies, of no practical value for agricultural purposes without it. The circumstances attending the execution of the contract, the fact that the defendant was surrendering notes aggregating $3,822 in return for the conveyance of only a portion of the land covered by her trust deed, and the additional fact that the land itself without the water right was, in value, but a very small part of her claim, as well as the admission of both grantor and grantee themselves,—all show that it was the intention of both parties that the water right should pass with the land. We may go further, under the facts of the case, and safely say that the parties, in employing the language “ together with all appurtenances,” intended thereby to include the water right, and supposed they were doing so.

It should be observed that this is not a case where the grantor refuses to transfer a water right along with the land which he has agreed to convey, because the water right is not specifically mentioned in the contract; but it is a case where one entitled under a contract to a conveyance of land and a water right, seeks to avoid the contract, as made, not because the grantor refuses to convey all of the subject-matter of the grant; but on the technical ground that, in the complaint brought by the grantor to compel specific performance, he has not stated in direct terms that a water right was a part of the grant. This supposed defense, it should be said, seems not to have been in the mind of the *499defendant at the time her answer was drawn, but was raised by the court during the trial when, upon cross-examination of one of plaintiff’s witnesses, it appeared that a water right was a part of the subject-matter of the grant.

In this connection, we cite an able opinion of the supreme court of Wyoming, Frank v. Hicks, 35 Pac. Rep. 475, in which, in commenting upon Bloom v. West, supra, it is said that, although the conclusion of our court of appeals was right in the case before it, the declaration in its opinion that under no circumstances could a water right pass as an appurtenant to land was not only dictum, but that no such conclusion followed from the doctrine laid down by this court in the Strickler case, upon which the announcement in question was based, and that it was also contrary to all previous decisions. The writer of the opinion shows, and, as we think, conclusively, that, at the common law, a water right may pass in a deed to land “ as incident or quasi appendant ” thereto. If it be considered as incorporeal, it may pass as an “ appurtenant; ” if corporeal, as “ part and parcel of the grant itself.” And there is even more reason why the same doctrine should prevail in the states of the arid regions. In this announcement by the Wyoming tribunal, we concur; and, although said decision is not referred to in Arnett v. Linhart, supra, the doctrine of the latter case is to the same effect.

From this it follows that the district court erred in holding that a different contract was proved from that declared upon, and, under the conceded facts, it should have found, as the jury did, that the contract as declared upon was established by the proof in the case. If this were not so, still we are of the opinion, that since the defendant herself in the answer and in her testimony states that the contract did include a water right, she could not have been surprised,—and in truth does not claim that she was surprised,—at the plaintiff’s evidence to the same effect, and the court therefore should have allowed, if the allegations of the complaint were not already sufficiently broad, an amendment, as asked by the *500plaintiff at the time, to make the complaint correspond to the proof. 22 Am. & Eng. Ency. of Law, p. 1076, et seq.

There is no necessity for a new trial. The record and the findings of the court clearly show that the contract provided for a conveyance by the plaintiff of 160 acres of land and the water right used in connection therewith; and it further appearing, without contradiction, that the defendant took possession, and, so far as appears from the record, still holds possession, of both, the judgment here will be that the cause be, and the same is hereby, remanded to the district court ■with instructions to order the defendant to cancel and surrender up the promissory notes in question to the plaintiff upon the production of a deed of conveyance from the plaintiff of said land and water right; and it is so ordered.

Reversed.

Mr. Justice Gabbert not sitting.