MOON LAKE WATER USERS ASSOCIATION, a corporation, Plaintiff and Appellant, v. Lester HANSON and Vera H. Gagon, as Trustees in Trust for the Use and Benefit of the children and heirs, devisees and legatees of Paul S. Hanson, Deceased, et al., Defendants and Respondents.
No. 13785.
Supreme Court of Utah.
May 9, 1975.
535 P.2d 1262
Equitable remedies are a matter of grace and not of right and equitable discretion should not be used to protect an intentional wrongdoer. We find no abuse of discretion in the trial court‘s judgment.
The judgment of the court below is sustained. Costs are awarded to respondents.
HENROID, C. J., and CROCKETT, ELLETT and TUCKETT, JJ., concur.
E. J. Skeen, Skeen & Skeen, Joseph Novak, Salt Lake City, for plaintiff-appellant.
Clair M. Aldrich, Aldrich & Nelson, Provo, George E. Stewart, Roosevelt, for defendants-respondents.
MAUGHAN, Justice:
In January of 1963, plaintiff filed an action against Lester Hanson and Vera H. Gagon, as trustees, and against Gordon Hanson and his wife, hereafter Hanson, for the purpose of condemning land for a reservoir site. The action was brought pursuant to the provisions of
Pursuant to the provisions of
On the 23d day of October, 1972, plaintiff commenced the instant action against the trustees seeking to quiet title to the oil and mineral rights under the land it had condemned nine years earlier. It was thereafter discovered by counsel for the trustees that the final judgment of October
It was at this time that the trustees amended their answer and counterclaim seeking to quiet title to the oil and mineral rights, not only in the lands taken from the trustees, but also in those taken from Hanson.
At the conclusion of the cause the trial judge, confronted with these obvious ambiguities in the judgments, construed the final judgment to conform to the pleadings, granted defendants the relief prayed for in their counterclaim, thus quieting title in the minerals in defendants. We sustain the action of the trial judge; indeed, it was the only action which reasonably could have been taken.
That an ambiguous judgment is subject to construction according to the rules that apply to all written instruments is well settled. In Huber et al. v. Newman, 106 Utah 363, 145 P.2d 780 (1944) this court construed a judgment which was rendered ambiguous because of its failure to relate reasonably to the conclusions of law. In Graham v. Graham, 174 Cal.App.2d 678, 345 P.2d 316, 321 (1959) it was said:
If a court order or judgment admits of two constructions, that one will be adopted which is consistent with the judgment required by the facts and the law of the case [citations]. In construing a court order or judgment, resort may be had to the pleadings and findings.
Where construction is called for it is the duty of the court to interpret an ambiguity which will make the judgment more reasonable, effective, conclusive, and one which brings the judgment into harmony with the facts and the law. This we think the trial court did in the instant matter. (Paxton v. McDonald, 72 Ariz. 378, 236 P.2d 364, 367 (1951); Pennington v. Employers Liability Assurance Corp. (Alaska), 520 P.2d 96 (1974).) The trial judge took into consideration the situation to which the judgment was applied, and the purpose which was sought to be accomplished, Johnson v. Johnson, Okla., 460 P.2d 954, 956 (1969).
The trial judge had ample evidence before him to sustain his action. To begin with, plaintiff initiated the original condemnation actions pursuant to a statute under which they could acquire no more than a right of way, viz.,
When the findings, conclusions and judgments rendered in September of 1963 were served on counsel for defendants, counsel noted that paragraph 6 of the findings rendered in the Hanson action made a reference to “fee simple land described above.” He immediately called this language to the attention of counsel for plaintiff, to which plaintiff‘s counsel responded with a letter of instructions to plaintiff, with a copy to counsel for defendants. In part it is:
As I recall, during the trial it was stipulated that we did not condemn, indeed we could not condemn oil and mineral rights. Under the circumstances, in order to clear the record in this matter, please have executed and return to me as soon as convenient the enclosed quitclaim deed.
This letter was sent in December of 1963, two months after the final judgments of condemnation had been rendered and filed with their offending fee simple language. The deed alluded to in the letter concerned the Hanson land only, for the reason that it was only the Hanson findings which made reference to a fee simple title. The findings in the trustees’ cause had no such reference. In addition, since these two matters were consolidated for
The court had before it evidence of a stipulation made during the first trial, by counsel for plaintiff, that plaintiff was not condemning any of the minerals lying beneath defendants’ ground. This evidence was in the form of testimony, (as well as in the letter above) and was corroborated by the evaluation report of an appraiser who testified in the first trial, which report stated that no value was placed on minerals, because the minerals were understood to be reserved to the owners.
Objection is made by appellant to the introduction of the parol evidence. It only needs to be said that here, as in other instances of ambiguities in written instruments, parol evidence may be resorted to to establish the truth of the matter.1
An interpretation, in consonance with the trial court‘s judgment, was made by the parties. It is clear from the record that plaintiff did not think it owned minerals, until it came time for the trustees to renew this oil lease covering the minerals here in issue. At that time, a land man for Shell Oil Co. informed plaintiff of the fee simple language in the judgment of October 1963. It is equally clear that the trustees thought they owned said minerals, because they had leased them and were moving to renew. The parties, by their action and performance demonstrated what their meaning and intent was. (Zeese v. Estate of Max Siegel et al., 534 P.2d 85, Utah 1975, and cases therein cited, f. n. 8.)
We think counsel for defendants had a right to rely on representations made to him, and the right to rely on the allegations in plaintiff‘s complaint. Particularly, in view of the fact the final judgments of condemnation were never served on him.
We note that it is the practice in this state for counsel to notify their opposition through the simple expedient of mailing to them copies of pertinent pleadings, and by making a certificate of such mailing a part of the pleading. This practice seems to have caused the disuse of
For the reasons stated above the trial court is sustained. Costs are awarded to respondents.
TUCKETT, J., concurs.
HENRIOD, C. J., concurs in the main opinion, and also concurs in the views expressed in the concurring opinion of CROCKETT, J.
CROCKETT, Justice (concurring).
I concur in affirming the judgment, but think it desirable to make these observations:
It appears to be an indisputable fact that the judgment in the prior condemnation case sought only to condemn the property for the purpose of constructing a reservoir as authorized by
In doing so here, it is seen that the trial judge, with commendable thoroughness and perspicacity, in his memorandum decision accomplished the purpose above set forth. He pointed out therein that the prior judgment did not conform to the intent and purpose of the condemnation proceeding; that it went beyond the authority of the court to enter such a judgment under the statute; and expressly stated that for those reasons the defendants were entitled to the benefit of amendment of that judgment as it should have been entered according to the stipulation of the parties and the applicable law.
For the foregoing reasons I join in affirming the judgment.
ELLETT, J., concurs in the views expressed in the concurring opinion of CROCKETT, J.
