Case Information
*1 Before MURPHY and GRUENDER, Circuit Judges, and ROSS, District Judge.
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GRUENDER, Circuit Judge.
LAC Minerals (USA), LLC (“LAC”) and Robert Fowler are bound by an agreement relating to 944 acres of property once targeted for mining development. *2 Fowler filed suit, arguing that the agreement required LAC to assign to Fowler certain portions of the property no longer needed for mining operations. LAC counterclaimed, seeking to quiet title. After resolving certain issues on cross motions for summary judgment and the remaining issues at a bench trial, the district court [2] held that LAC’s current refusal to assign any land to Fowler did not breach the agreement but that Fowler retains a reversionary interest in the land. LAC now appeals, arguing that the district court erred in not declaring Fowler’s interest in the land extinguished. For the reasons that follow, we affirm.
I. BACKGROUND
Fowler’s predecessor-in-interest, Viable Resources, Inc. (“Viable”), and LAC’s predecessor company, St. Joe American Corporation, entered into a joint venture agreement in 1984 with the goal of developing certain mining prospects in Lawrence County, South Dakota. [3] As part of the joint venture, in 1985 Viable deeded 90 mining claims involving approximately 944 acres of land to LAC. In the deed, Viable reserved a right “to obtain a reconveyance in the property . . . as specified in” an amended joint venture agreement. [4] The parties agree that a 1988 Restated Joint Venture Agreement (“RJVA”) superseded the amended joint venture agreement *3 referenced in the deed and that the RJVA is the controlling agreement. The parties also agree that the right to obtain a reconveyance referred to in the deed is defined in section 4.3 of the RJVA, which reads as follows:
Release of Property - During the course of the conduct of mineral exploration under this Agreement the Manager [LAC] may in its sole discretion determine that certain portions of the Property have little potential for containing minerals of economic value or will not be required for mineral development or mining facilities. Upon annual review the Manager may eliminate such portions of the Property from the terms of this Agreement, and in such event [LAC] will reassign any such portions to Viable.
Section 2.1 of the RJVA establishes a minimum term of fifty years for the agreement, subject to extension under certain conditions. In 1992, however, state mining regulators issued a “stop order” for all mining operations on the property because of problems with acid drainage. There is no dispute that, as a result of the “stop order,” no mineral exploration has occurred since 1993. LAC is obligated by state regulations to continue environmental reclamation and monitoring on certain portions of the property for the indefinite future.
Fowler, one of the original organizers of Viable, succeeded to Viable’s rights in the property in November 1999. On October 11, 2001, Fowler formally requested the release of land not being used for mining purposes. Over the next several years, LAC sent occasional communications indicating that it was in the process of determining which portions of the 944 acres could be released, but it never made such a determination. In 2008, Fowler sued (1) for a declaratory judgment that LAC was obligated to reassign any portion of the property that became unneeded for mining or reclamation efforts, (2) for specific performance of that obligation with respect to *4 portions currently not needed, and (3) to quiet title for such portions. LAC counterclaimed for a declaratory judgment that it owned the 944 acres “absolutely . . . as against Fowler and all persons claiming under him” and to quiet title “against all claims of Fowler and all persons claiming under him.”
On cross motions for summary judgment, the district court concluded that LAC held the property in fee simple subject to a condition subsequent requiring it “to reassign the property back to” Fowler “when the mining deed’s purposes are exhausted.” After an ensuing bench trial, the district court found that the transfer of Viable’s reversionary rights to Fowler was not precluded by S.D.C.L. § 43-4-3, which states that “[a] mere right of reentry, or of repossession for breach of a condition subsequent, cannot be transferred to anyone except the owner of the property affected thereby,” because the deeds and RJVA established a covenant running with the land, rather than a “mere” right of reentry. However, the district court held that LAC had “acted in good faith in its decision to not release any of the [land] for reversion under Section 4.3 . . . at this time” and that LAC was not required to release any of the land at that time.
LAC now appeals, arguing that the district court erred in holding that Fowler retains an interest in the land. In support, it contends that (i) section 4.3 of the RJVA did not create a condition subsequent, but rather a contractual covenant for which damages would be the only remedy for breach; (ii) even if the RJVA did create a condition subsequent in favor of Viable, Viable was precluded from transferring its associated rights by S.D.C.L. § 43-4-3; and (iii) whatever rights Fowler might have had under the RJVA to obtain the property are a nullity because mineral exploration ended in 1993.
II. DISCUSSION
“When the district court conducts a bench trial as it did here, we review the
district court’s fact finding for clear error, and we review legal conclusions and mixed
questions of law and fact de novo.”
Eckert v. Titan Tire Corp.
,
Under South Dakota law, “[w]e interpret a deed as we would a contract.”
Full
House, Inc. v. Stell
,
LAC first asserts that section 4.3 of the RJVA establishes a contractual
covenant, rather than a condition subsequent. “The chief distinction between a
condition subsequent and a covenant pertains to the remedy in the event of a breach,
which in the former subjects the estate to a forfeiture and in the latter is merely a
ground for recovery of damages.”
Rowbotham v. Jackson
,
In this case, the deed specifically refers to a “right[] to obtain a reconveyance in the property . . . as specified in” the parties’ agreement (emphasis added). In turn, the referenced agreement states that, should certain specified events occur with respect to any portion of the property, LAC “will reassign any such portions to Viable” (emphasis added). This express language unequivocally establishes the grantor’s right to reacquire the relevant portions of the deeded estate upon occurrence of the stated conditions. Cf. DeHaven , 753 N.W.2d at 436-37 (finding a deed established a covenant that was susceptible to a remedy only of damages, rather than a condition subsequent to be remedied by reversion to the grantors, where the deed stated a duty to maintain the granted easement but included “no language that expressly or implicitly provides that the easement will be forfeited if [the grantees] fail to maintain it”). As a result, we agree with the district court that the deed here establishes a condition subsequent, rather than a covenant.
In opposition, LAC argues that section 4.3 cannot create a condition subsequent
because it gives the grantor no power to terminate the estate. “A conveyance that
creates a fee simple estate subject to a condition subsequent provides the grantor,
heirs, and successors a
power to terminate
upon the happening of the stated event, i.e.,
when a condition is broken.”
Swaby
,
LAC next asserts that Viable was precluded from transferring its rights
associated with the condition subsequent by S.D.C.L. § 43-4-3. Section 43-4-3
prohibits the assignment to a third party of a grantor’s right of reentry or repossession
unless the original instrument contemplated such assignments or otherwise indicated
an intent for the restriction to run with the land.
See Rowbotham
,
*8 Finally, LAC contends that Fowler’s right to obtain reassignment of the property has become a nullity because mineral exploration ended in 1993. LAC argues that, under the plain language of section 4.3, it is only “[d]uring the course of the conduct of mineral exploration under this Agreement” that LAC may identify “certain portions of the Property [that] have little potential for containing minerals of economic value or will not be required for mineral development or mining facilities.” In LAC’s view, because it never identified such portions of the property before mineral exploration ended in 1993, there never will be “such portions of the Property” to reassign as mandated in the second sentence of section 4.3. LAC also makes a corollary argument that the statute of limitations on Fowler’s declaratory judgment claim must have begun to run no later than 1993. Fowler responds that LAC’s duty to reassign “such portions” in the second sentence of section 4.3 reaches not only those portions that were specifically identified “[d]uring the course of the conduct of mineral exploration” but also any similar portions no matter when they are identified.
We must resolve the dispute by giving the words used in the RJVA their “plain
and ordinary meaning.”
Gloe
,
III. CONCLUSION
For the foregoing reasons, we affirm the district court’s judgment that Fowler retains a reversionary interest in the land.
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Notes
[1] The Honorable John A. Ross, United States District Judge for the Eastern District of Missouri, sitting by designation.
[2] The Honorable Jeffrey L. Viken, United States District Judge for the District of South Dakota.
[3] Through a series of corporate name changes, St. Joe American Corporation became St. Joe Gold Corporation, which eventually became Bond Gold Richmond Hill, Inc. After additional name changes and a merger, the company became LAC. For simplicity, we subsume all of these entities under the name “LAC.”
[4] One of the ninety mining claims that “was previously inadvertently omitted” in the parties’ initial agreement was transferred by a separate deed in 1987, and that deed also referred to rights reserved to Viable under the amended joint venture agreement. Because no party argues that this second deed should be construed differently from the first deed, we refer solely to the first deed.
[5] Fowler acquired the rights from a friend and business associate, Donn C. Douglass, Viable’s largest shareholder in 1999, who in turn acquired the rights from Viable in 1997.
[6] The district court found that both Douglass (the intermediate assignee) and Fowler were “affiliates” of Viable for purposes of section 11.1, and LAC does not challenge that finding.
[7] The district court noted LAC’s broad discretion in reviewing the use of the
property under section 4.3 and found that, as of the time of the district court’s
judgment, LAC had exercised this continuing duty in good faith. Fowler did not
appeal the district court’s ruling. To the extent LAC argues in its reply brief that the
district court erred by determining that an implied duty of good faith and fair dealing
applies to its exercise of discretion under section 4.3, we decline to address the merits
of the argument.
See Cavegn v. Twin Pipe Trades Pension Plan
,
