Factual Background & Procedural | Elistory
1I1 Cottonwood Creek watershed is an area covering approximately 879 square miles in parts of Logan, Oklahoma, Canadian and Kingfisher Counties. The area was prone to flooding, and in March of 1962, Logan County Soil and Water Conservation District No. 9 (LCSWCD), Cottonwood Creek Water and Soil Conservancy District No. 11 (CCWSCD), and the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), prepared a plan to alleviate dangers associated with uncontrolled water flow. Proposed structural measures under the plan included construction of fifty-eight floodwater -retarding structures designed to detain water, store sediment deposits, and enhance the state's water supply. One of the structures included in the work plan was. Floodwater Retarding Structure No. 54 (FWRS 54). -
' {2 On September 24, 1962, D.C. Fitzwater and Odessa Ann Fitzwater granted an easement (Fitzwater Easement) to CCWSCD and LCSWCD, which read, in part:
[Flor the purpose of:
For or in connection with the construction, operation, maintenance and inspection of the following described works -of improvement to be located on therabove described land; for the flowage of any waters in, over, upon or through such works of improvement; and for the permanent storage and temporary detention, either or both, of any waters that are impounded, stored or detained by such works. of improvement:
a. floodwater retarding structure No. 54{.]
1. In the event constructlon of the above described works of improvement is not commenced within 120 months from the date hereof, the rights and privileges here- . in granted shall at once revert to and become the property of this Grantor, his heirs and
2. This easement includes the right of mgress and egress at any time, over and upon the above descnbed land of the Grantor and any other land of the Grantor adjoining said land for the purpose of construction, the checking of operations, and the inspeétion and maintenance of the structure. _ '
8. There is reserved to the Grantor, his heirs and assigns, the rights and privileges to use the above described land at any time, in any manner. and for any purpose that does not interfere with construction, operation, maintenance and inspection. of the structure.
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5. The Grantee is responsible for operating and maintaining the above descmbed works of improvement.
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The Fitzwater Easement covered the NW 4 of Section 86, Township 15 North, Range 8 West. Additional easements were obtained
[F jor the purpose of:
For the permanent storage and temporary detention, either or both, of any waters that are impounded, stored or detained by those certain works of improvement which are described and are to be located as follows:
a. floodwater retarding structure No. 54[.] ~
Aside from geographical boundaries, neither the Fitzwater nor Impoundment deeds contained mandatory design specifications for FWRS 54.
T8 Construction of FWRS 54 was finalized in November of 1978, At the time of its completion, FWRS 54 was classified as a significant hazard class (b) dam, which indicates uncontrolled flooding could cause significant damage to agriculture and infrastructure.
{4 In 1977; LCSWCD executed a deed returning part of the Fitzwater and Im-poundment Easements to the current ser-vient estate holders.
T5 Changes in safety criteria and the development of houses downstream compelled the USDA and Oklahoma Water Resources Board (OWRB) to recast FWRS 54 as a high hazard class (c) dam.
T6 On March 25, 2011, LCCD filed a petl— tion with the District Court of Logan County, seeking a. declaratory judgment allowing it to perform rehabilitation work on FWRS 54. The petition alleged the Fitzawater and Im-poundment Easements vested LCCD with the right to complete the rehabilitation project. Property owners Phyllis Jean Crowder and John Herman White, Jr. answered and claimed that the proposed work did not fall within the scope of the original easements. Accordingly, Crowder and White maintained the rehabilitation project would lead to an improper taking of their land. Pleasant Oaks Lake Association (POLA) and individual homeowners also answered, alleging the project would constitute a taking requiring payment of compensatmn
T 7 On April 11, 2012, LCCD filed a motion seeking summaryqudgmentThe motion as
T8 POLA and individual homeowners renewed their motions for summary judgment on March 14, 2014. In their supporting brief, POLA claimed that by emptying the lake, LCCD's actions would kill fish, eliminate wildlife, and devastate the quality of life for the homeowners for an unknown length of time, POLA also alleged that rehabilitation of FWRS 54 would cause "real and valid damage" to the homeowners' property, Once more, POLA provided no scientific or other evidence to support these contentions.
T 9 LCCD filed objections to the respective motions. Therein, LCCD reasserted its contentions: (1) the properties were subject to the Fitzwater and Impoundment Easements; and (2) the proposed rehabilitation on FWRS 54 was within the seope of the original instruments, LCCD maintained the trial court, in its previous ruling, had improperly relied on extrinsic evidence to interpret the unambiguous deeds. LCCD further suggested legislation adopted in 2008 demonstrated the terms operation and maintenance include necessary repairs or rehabilitation work on flood control structures in Oklshoma.
© 10 On July 21, 2014, the trial court held a hearing and denied Respondents' motions for summary judgment. However, after reconsidering his previous order, the trial judge sustained LCCD's motion for summary judgment. In the September 19, 2014 Journal Entry of Judgment, the trial judge concluded 27A 0.8.Supp. 2008 § 8-8-411 "was intended by the legislature to be applied retroactively and such intent is necessarily implied from the language used in the statute."
{11 On October 17, 2014, Respondents Crowder and White filed a Petition in Error in Case No. 118,818. On October 20, 2014, Respondents POLA and individual: homeowners filed a Petition in Error in Case No. 118,818. We issued an order making the two proceedings companion cases, LCCD filed a motion requesting the proceeding be retained, which we granted.
Standard of Review
Whether summary judgment was properly granted is a question of law subject to de novo review. Benefiel v. Boulton,
Analysis
13 The issue presented on appeal is whether the language in the original Fitzwa-ter and Impoundment Easements authorize LCCD to enter the Respondents' property to perform . rehabilitation work on FWRS 54 without payment of compensation, The original easements were created by deed, According to the terms of the deed creating the Fitzwater Easement, grantee was authorized to construct, operate, maintain, and inspect FWRS 54. Additionally, the conveying instruments provided the grantee with the right of "ingress and egress ... over and upon the [subject property] ... for the purpose of construction, the checking of operations, and the inspection and maintenance of [FWRS 541," Most important, the deed expressly imposed a duty on the grantee to ensure FWRS 54 was in proper repair and functioning safely, by specifying "[the Grantee is responsible for operating and maintaining [FWRS 541." (emphasis added). The instruments creating the Impoundment Easements provided the right to utilize the property for "permanent storage or temporary detention" of water brought about through the construction of FWRS 54. They also afforded the same basic rights and pmvfleges as the Fitzawater Easement.
114 An easement creates a legal relationship between two parties. The easement holder is referred to as the dominant estate; and the owner of land subject to an easement is known as the servient estate. Bouziden v. Alfalfa Elec. Coop., Inc.,
115 When property rights originate by deed, the scope of those rights should be construed in the same manner as other written contracts. Beattie v. State ex rel. Grand River Dam Auth.,
16 In the present case, the deeds creating the Fitzwater and Impoundment HEase-ments authorized use of the subject real property to construct FWRS 54. The deeds also authorized the grantee, its successors and assigns, to enter the property for the purposes of "the checking of operations, and the inspection and maintenance of the structure." But the deeds did much more than permit these actions, they also obligated LCCD to operate and maintain FWRS 54 to ensure it was in good repair and serving its intended purpose, The critical terms contained in the easements are not words of limitation; but instead provide broad rights to allow the grantee and its successors to carry out acts necessary to ensure the integrity of FWRS 54 and the safety of the public.
{17 This Court has previously considered the terms "operation" and "maintenance" for purposes of statutory interpretation and concluded words should be read utilizing ordinary meanings unless contrary to the intent and purpose of the statute, Medina v. State,
{18 Respondents argue that 27 O.$.Supp.. 2008 § 3-8-411 cannot be applied retroactively to interpret the Fitzwater and Impoundment deeds, At the time the parties executed the Fitzwater and Impoundment Easements, the Conservancy Act of Okla: homs (82 0.8. 1961 § 581, et seq.) was in effect. Under this Act, conservancy districts were established throughout the state to assist with flood prevention, regulating the flow of water systems, and the development of water for domestic, agricultural, and commercial use. 82 0.8. 1961 § 541(b). To carry out this statutory purpose, districts were permitted to build, operate, maintain and repair reservoirs, canals, levees, and dams. 82 0.8. 1961 § 541(b)(7). Districts were further authorized under the federal Watershed Protection and Flood Prevention Act, to work with the USDA "in carrying out, maintaining, and operating the works of improvement authorized by said Act." 82 0.8. 1961 § 541.1, The language of the 1961 Conser-vaney Act mirrors the language contained in the original deeds. The intended purpose of FWRS 54 and the original easements was the permanent eradication of flooding in the Cottonwood Creek watershed. The parties to the 1962 conveyance intended the servitudes to be perpetual, or at least open-ended; empowering the easement owner to respond to public safety issues presented by aging or damaged levees, dams, and other flood prevention infrastructure. Because the 2008 statutory clarification is consistent with the original purpose of the flood prevention statutes
19 Considering the unambiguous terms of the deeds, together with the easements' intended purpose of protecting citizens and property in 'this state, we must find that the subject easements permit necessary rehabilitation to keep FWRS 54 functioning in a safe manner.
20 For example, in Nazworthy v. Ill. Oil Co.,
If there is any one fact established in the history of society and the law itself, it is that the mode of exercising this easément is expansive, developing and growing as civilization advances. In the most primitive state of society the conception of a highway was merely a footpath; in a slightly more advanced state it included the idea of a way for pack animals; and next a way for vehicles drawn by ammals—constltutmg, respectfiflly, the iter, the actus, and the via of the Romans. And thus the methods of using public highways expanded with the growth of civilization until today our urban highways are devoted to a yariety of uses not known in former times, and never dreamed of by the owners of the soil when the public easement was acquired. Hence it has become settled law that the easement is not limited to the particular methods of use in vogue when the easement was acquired, but includes all new and improved methods, the utility and general convenience of which may after-wards be discovered and developed in aid of the general purpose for which highways are deszyned And it is not material that these new and improved methods of use were not contemplated by the owner of the land when the easement was acquired, and are more onerous to him than those then in use.
Id. ¶ 17,
21 A similar case stemming from a landowner's claim of entitlement to compensation for alterations and improvements to a public
(22 Unless, specifically prohibited by a conveying instrument, the owner of an easement is entitled to conduct repairs and improvements necessary to ensure enjoyment. This is true so long as repairs or improvements do not exceed the rights bestowed by the original easement or unduly burden the servient estate. Restatement (Third) of Prop., Servitudes §§ 4.10 (2000). "The manner, frequency, and intensity of the use may change over time to take advantage of developments in technology and to accommodate normal development of the dominant estate or enterprise benefited by the servitude." Id. gee also H.D.W., Right of owner of easement of way to make improvements or repairs thereon, 112 ALR. 1308 (1988) ("It is a general rule that the owner of an easement of way may prepare, maintain, improve, or repair the way in a manner and to an extent reasonably calculated to promote the purposes for which it was created or acquired, causing neither an undue burden upon the servient estate, nor an unwarranted interference with the rights of common owners or the independent rights of others.").
123 An almost identical dispute was resolved by the Kansas Supreme Court in the City of Arkansas City v. Bruton,
124 Progress and technological advancements are a certainty in this world. It would be unreasonable to conclude an easement which authorizes the construction of a flood prevention structure, designed to ensure the safety and well-being of Oklahoma's citizens, also prohibited future repairs or improvements. According to the 2006 Supplemental Watershed Plan, if FWRS 54 were to suffer a catastrophic failure, it would endanger the lives of multiple households downstream.
€25 In POLA's motion for partial summary judgment, the association asserted that draining the lake to reconstruct FWRS 54 and permanently lowering the lake's water level would amount to a taking of private property for which compensation must be paid. POLA provided no authority in support of this conclusory argument. Generally, propositions which are unsupported with authority are deemed waived. Hough v. Hough,
126 On this issue we agree with the rationale adopted by the Nebraska Supreme Court in Kiwanis Club Found., Inc., of Lincoln v. Yost,
Conclusion
. {127 We hold that the unambiguous terms of the instruments creating the Fitzwater and. Impoundment , Easements authorize LCCD to enter the subject property to perform rehabilitation work on FWRS 54. The need to perform rehabilitation FWRS 54 is undisputed and necessary to continue serving its intended purpose. The property owner's purchased their respective properties subject to burdens associated with the Fitawater and Impoundment Easements. Further, the trial court correctly determined LCCD is not required to maintain any particular level of retained water. As such, the trial court correctly awarded summary judgment in favor of LCCD.
TRIAL COURTS J OURNAL ENTRY OF JUDGMENT IS AFFIRMED
Notes
. A work plan was prepared in 1962 by several conservancy districts affected by the Cottonwood Creek watershed, together with help from the USDA. This work plan is the only document which provides design specifications pertaining to the initial assembly of FWRS 54.
.. Although not entirely clear in the record, it appears as though the portion returned to the landowners was either (a) not needed in furtherance of constructing FWRS 54; or (b) unnecessary for impoundment of water.
. OWRB is vested with the power to carry out the provisions of the Oklahoma Dam Safety Act (82 0.8. 2011 § 110.1, et seq.), including "rules relating to hazard and size classifications, minimum standards for design, operation and maintenance of dams." 82 0.8. 2011 §110.5.
. Chrls Stoner is a professional Engineer with the National Resource Conservation Service, a division of the USDA.
. The unpublished Court of Civil Appeals opinion in Case No. 106875 is distinguishable and unpersuasive, More importantly, the record in the 'present case lacks army evidentiary material which would support Respondents' position that the proposed rehabilitation of FWRS 54 exceeds the scope of the original easements.
.. Letters/affidavits from several homeowners were attached to POLA/Homeowners' motion. However, none of this evidentiary material challenged the scope of the Fitzwater or Impoundment Easements, or the authority of LCCD to exercise its rights under the easements.
. Title 27A O.8.Supp. 2008 § 3-3-411(B) of the Conservation District Act became effective in 2008, and provides:
Pursuant to the Conservation District Act, the phrase "operation and maintenance" or "operate and maintain" as used in a variety of contractual documents, easements, statutes, rules, and other legal authority by the conservation districts and their assigns shall be interpreted to:
A. - Encompass the terms repair, modification, alteration, rehabilitation, upkeep, upgrade, improvement, construction, reconstruction, decommission, and inspection; and
B. Benefit the state and conservation districts. ©
, Journal Entry of Judgment -dated September 19, 2014, Rec. Vol. IV, Doc: 15.
. See Rest. (Thlrd) of Prop., Servitudes § 4.1(1) (2000) ("A servitude should be interpreted to give effect to the intention of the parties ascertained from the language used in the instrument, or the circumstances surrounding creation of the servitude, and to carry out the purpose for' whxch it was created.")
. Decisions around the United States consistently recognize the inherent right of an ease 'ment holder to maintain, repair, or improve the property interest in furtherance of its intended purposes. see e.g., Woods v. Shannon,
. Unlike the Fitzwater and Impoundment Easements, the easement in Bruton included technical plans and specifications for building the floodwater retarding structure.
. See also, Hous. Pipe Line Co. v. Dwyer,
. Interestingly, the 2006 plan contains the following excerpt: "Seismic: The Cottonwood Creek Watershed is located in an area of very low potential seismic activity. Therefore, seismic activity presents a low potential mode of failure for [FWRS 54]." Appendix to Petitioner's Motion for Summary Judgment, Rec. Vol. I, Doc. 2, Exhibit G.
. The Yost Court believed that property owners who build or improve land adjacent to an artificial lake are clearly on notice of the risks inherent with such development:;
Construction and maintenance of a dam over a long period of years may well tend to lead persons owning property above the dam to believe that a permanent and valuable right has been acquired, or is naturally present. The very fact that a manmade dam is obviously present, however, is sufficient to charge them with notice that the water level above the damis artificial as distinguished from natural, and that its level may be lowered or returned to the natural state at any time.
Id. at 361.
