Almeria Irrigation Canal Co. v. Tzschuck Canal Co.

93 N.W. 174, 67 Neb. 290, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 392
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 21, 1903
DocketNo. 12,522
StatusPublished

This text of 93 N.W. 174 (Almeria Irrigation Canal Co. v. Tzschuck Canal Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nebraska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Almeria Irrigation Canal Co. v. Tzschuck Canal Co., 93 N.W. 174, 67 Neb. 290, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 392 (Neb. 1903).

Opinion

Duffie, 0.

This is an appeal from a decree entered by the district court for Loup county declaring a contract entered into between one of the appellants and appellee for the sale of an irrigation canal a mortgage, ordering a foreclosure of the same and a sale of the property described in the contract. The appellants did not preserve the evidence taken on the trial by a bill of exceptions, and we have nothing before us but a copy of the pleadings and the decree entered, and can therefore only consider and determine whether the decree is supported by the pleadings in the case.

The petition and the contract made between the parties a copy of which is attached as an exhibit, are quite voluminous and we will endeavor to set out the substance of each without copying the same at length. It is alleged in the petition that the Almeria Irrigation Canal Company is a corporation and that on June 17, 1897, it was the owner and operator of an irrigation canal in Loup county commencing at the point of diversion and connecting with the North Loup river in the northwest quarter of section 24, township 22, range 20, and running thence southeasterly across certain lands which are particularly described;' that on said date it entered into a contract with the defendant, which is also an irrigation company, for the sale to the latter of said canal for the sum of $6,250, $1,000 of which was paid in cash and the balance was to be paid in water or water rights, either annual or perpetual; that these rights were to be furnished by the defendant to the plaintiff, or to such parties and at such times as the plaintiff might designate, and at prices which were agreed on and set out in the contract; that for its security the plaintiff should have a good and valid lien upon all the property conveyed, which should not be impaired in any manner by any incumbrance by the defendant company, and which lien might be enforced in case of default made in the payment of the $5,250, in manner and form as provided in the contract, by proceedings either at law or in [292]*292equity, and tlie same lien and right to enforce the same should extend to the holder of any water-right certificates. The contract further provided that in order to protect the security the defendant company would, until payment in full of the consideration, keep said canal in a good state of repair and not allow the same to go to waste, etc. It is then alleged that the defendant company has made default in performing the contract according to its terms, and instances-of failure to furnish water and water rights and to keep the canal in repair and good condition are recited. It is claimed that there is still unpaid on the contract the sum of $4,663.12, for which a decree was asked and allowed by the court.

We have no doubt that this contract, which specially reserves a lien in favor of the plaintiff, may he foreclosed by proceedings in equity upon default in payment, and that when such default occurs the payments should be treated as a money dein and for the purpose of foreclosure proceedings. It will be noticed that by the terms of the contract the water rights, in which the $5,250 still due upon the contract was to be paid, were to be issued to the plaintiff or to such parties as the plaintiff might designate. The petition discloses that certain water-right certificates were, at the request of the plaintiff, issued to certain parties living along the line of the canal, and it is insisted that the rights of these parties and of other parties holding water rights owning land further south than this canal extended, but along- the line of a canal connecting with it and constructed by the defendant, who sought to intervene in the action, were not protected by the court in its decree.

We will hereafter notice the case made by the parties seeking to intervene in the action, and now dispose of the claim made that the decree is faulty in not protecting the interest of the parties wbo held water rights issued to them at the instance of the plaintiff and in part payment of the consideration named in the contract. These parties, by the express terms of the contract, held a lien on the [293]*293canal for their protection. This lien was given them by the contract which ivas being foreclosed and it ivas not sought in this action to cut off or in anywise affect this lien. If the plaintiff should become the purchaser the canal on a sale made to satisfy the decree, we think on equitable principles it would be compelled to recognize this lien, which is given by the very instrument on a foreclosure of which it obtains title, and no third party purchasing at the sale could acquire a better right than could the plaintiff itself. The foundation of the title of a purchaser at the foreclosure sale is the instrument which gives these parties a lien on the canal for their protection, and until that lien is divested by some proceeding in which they are made parties their rights can not be affected.

It seems from the matters disclosed by the record and by the briefs of counsel, that prior to the making of this contract between the parties the Tzschuck Canal Company had commenced and partially completed a canal which lay south and east of the one sold to it by the plaintiff; that this canal was originally intended to parallel the plaintiff’s, and to connect with the Loup river at or near the point where plaintiff’s ditch did or was to connect with that river. There was apparently some trouble between the two companies over the right to take water from the river, and this may have been the occasion of the sale and contract. The plaintiff’s canal is about eleven miles in length, and after the sale the defendant company made a connection between the one which it was constructing and the one purchased from the plaintiff, thus forming a ditch some thirty-three miles in length, the part constructed by the plaintiff being, as before stated, about eleven miles in length, while the-part constructed by the defendant is about twenty-two miles in length. Several parties living along the line of that part of the ditch constructed by the defendant company, had purchased water rights from the defendant, and these parties sought to intervene in the action and filed peti[294]*294tions setting up the facts and showing to the court that the whole water supply on which they must depend came from the Loup river through that part of the canal constructed by the plaintiff, and that to foreclose the lien claimed by the plaintiff and sell that part of the canal covered by the lien would in effect destroy the use of the larger part of the canal. An estoppel as against the plaintiff to enforce its lien was also claimed on the ground that at the time of making the sale the plaintiff knew that the defendant company had expended a large sum of money in constructing its ditch and had sold a large number of water rights, and that by making the sale and allowing the two canals to become connected and consolidated, the plaintiff had implicitly agreed that those parties living adjacent to that part of the canal constructed by the defendant company should have at all times free flowage of water through the part so sold. The court sustained a demurrer to these intervening petitions and this is alleged as error.

We do not think that the interveners have any cause of complaint from the action of the court. If it were to be conceded that an implied agreement of the kind asserted by the interveners could be read into a written contract plain and express in all its terms, there is still no reason to believe that the plaintiff or any other purchaser at the foreclosure sale would refuse to carry it into full effect.

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Bluebook (online)
93 N.W. 174, 67 Neb. 290, 1903 Neb. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/almeria-irrigation-canal-co-v-tzschuck-canal-co-neb-1903.