Black Hills Power & Light Company v. Schuft

193 N.W.2d 429, 86 S.D. 194, 1972 S.D. LEXIS 101
CourtSouth Dakota Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 6, 1972
DocketFile 10821
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 193 N.W.2d 429 (Black Hills Power & Light Company v. Schuft) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering South Dakota Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Black Hills Power & Light Company v. Schuft, 193 N.W.2d 429, 86 S.D. 194, 1972 S.D. LEXIS 101 (S.D. 1972).

Opinion

JONES, Circuit Judge.

The plaintiff herein seeks a declaratory judgment pursuant to SDCL 21-24 to determine the rights and obligations of the parties hereto.

The factual background of the case is as follows. Commencing in the spring of 1878 and continuing until 1903, one David M. Dorsett farmed in Lawrence and 'Butte Counties, and irrigated his *196 farm with water from the Redwater River which forms the boundary between Lawrence and Butte Counties and meanders through the Dorsett farm. The defendants herein now own the Dorsett farm. Dorsett and his neighbors to the west had a small irrigation canal which took water from a dam on the Redwater River and conveyed it to their farms in such a manner as to permit them to irrigate their farms by gravity flow. The dam which diverted water to this canal washed out in 1903, and it had not yet been rebuilt in 1905. Thus, in 1905 Dorsett had by prior appropriation a consumptive water right to use for irrigation 125 miner's inches of water (50 miner's inches of water equals one cubic foot per second) but no means to get the water into his irrigation ditches.

In May 1905, Dorsett was approached by Richard B. Hughes and Milton L. Brenn, representatives of the Black Hills Traction Company. This company proposed to construct an electric trolley line from the Redwater River through Spearfish and on to Deadwood. The trolley line was to be powered by a hydroelectric plant on the Redwater River about one mile downstream from the Dorsett farm. In order to get a sufficient head of water to operate the hydroelectric plant it was necessary for the company to divert the Redwater River about seven and one-half miles upstream and transport it to the plant by means of a canal and pipeline. The company needed a strip of land from Dorsett for this canal.

On May 29, 1905, Dorset! conveyed to the Black Hills Traction Company a 100-foot strip of land across his farm, totaling approximately six and four-tenths acres. The deed recited a consideration of one dollar and contained the following clause which was endorsed on the back of the deed prior to its execution:

"As a further and necessary consideration for the execution of this deed the Black Hills Traction Company, party of the second part, agrees and binds itself or assigns in case of failure to complete its trolley line to the Redwater river within three years from date of this instrument to reconvey the premises herein described to the party of the first part, or in case of completion of the canal for which the right of way is granted and failure *197 to build the trolley line the said party of the second part shall furnish to the said party of the first part One Hundred and Twenty-five Miner's inches of water from said canal free of cost to said first party."

The parties hereto disagree on the meaning and effect of the foregoing clause, and the problem in this case is one of determining the rights and obligations of the parties under this deed. The plaintiff herein is the successor company to the Black Hills Traction Company.

The trolley line was never built, but the canal was built in 1906 and 1907 and the hydroelectric plant was put in operation. However, thereafter, the traction company refused to let Dorsett take water from their canal and a lawsuit resulted. It reached this court in 1912. Dorsett v. Black Hills Traction Company, 30 S.D. 420, 138 N.W. 808.

From 1912 to 1966 water flowed through the canal to the hydroelectric plant, Dorsett and his successors in interest took 125 miner's inches of water therefrom, and the relations between the parties were harmonious.

In 1966 a major break-down occurred at the hydroelectric plant which by this time had become economically unfeasible to operate. Rather than make repairs to the plant and canal estimated at $180,000, the plant was dismantled and abandoned, and the plaintiff no longer maintained its canal. In July of 1967 a big flume above defendants' farm washed out and the canal has not been operable since that time.

The canal when built had a bottom 12 feet wide and was capable of handling in excess of 5,000 miner's inches of water, or 100 cubic feet of water per second.

We believe the general rule in cases of this nature to be that a grant of a right to take water from a canal imposes no duty on the grantor to either maintain the canal or to provide an alternate method of transporting the water, in the absence of an *198 express or implied agreement to that effect. The Supreme Court of California long ago in Bryan v. Idaho Quartz Min. Co., 73 Cal. 249, 14 P. 859, held that a deed which granted to a mining company a right-of-way across the grantor's land for a flume to its quartz mine and for a reservoir and waste water ditch, but reserved to the grantor the right to use so much of the waste water from-the reservoir as he shall choose, did not imply a covenant that there shall be any waste water. It is also stated in Farnham, The Law of Waters and Water Rights, Vol. III, § 774, that a mere grant of a right to take water from a dam imposes no duty upon the grantor to maintain the dam. See also 93 C.J.S. Waters § 212; Percival v. Williams, 82 Vt. 531, 74 A. 321.

We must examine the deed given by Dorsett to the Black Hills Traction Company to determine whether or not it contains an express or implied agreement that the Black Hills Traction Company, by their acceptance of the deed, contracted to either maintain the canal in perpetuity or in the alternative to provide Dorsett or his successors with free transportation of water to their farm by other means. If the deed can be so construed it would supersede the general rule previously stated. Missouri-Kansas-Texas Railroad Company v. Freer, Mo., 321 S.W.2d 731.

General rules of construction govern us in the effort to interpret and find the meaning of the original parties. 93 C.J.S. Waters § 221; 26 C.J.S. Deeds § 82.

In construing this deed we must endeavor to ascertain and enforce the intention of the parties. Under the rules of construction we must first try to arrive at this intention from a reading of the whole instrument, but if, in doing so, the language used leaves the intention of the parties in doubt then we must turn to and consider the situation and circumstances of the parties at the time of the execution of the deed in order to determine what was within their contemplation at that time. 17 Am.Jur.2d, Contracts, § 272; 26 C.J.S. Deeds § 92; Huffman v. Shevlin, 76 S.D. 84, 72 N.W.2d 852; Unke v. Thorpe, 75 S.D. 65, 59 N.W.2d 419.

*199 We must also view this deed prospectively as the-parties viewed it at the time of its execution and not from a retrospective point of view. 17 Amjur.2d, Contracts, § 240.

The rule of construction as stated in 23 Am.Jur.2d, Deeds, § 159, is particularly appropriate to this case:

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193 N.W.2d 429, 86 S.D. 194, 1972 S.D. LEXIS 101, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/black-hills-power-light-company-v-schuft-sd-1972.