Christopher v. Owens

2016 NMCA 099, 385 P.3d 633, 10 N.M. 679
CourtNew Mexico Court of Appeals
DecidedAugust 22, 2016
DocketDocket 34,588
StatusPublished

This text of 2016 NMCA 099 (Christopher v. Owens) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Christopher v. Owens, 2016 NMCA 099, 385 P.3d 633, 10 N.M. 679 (N.M. Ct. App. 2016).

Opinion

OPINION

BUSTAMANTE, Judge.

{1} This case — which may turn out to be much ado about nothing — presents an object lesson in how not to structure the purchase and sale of water interests in New Mexico, The district court ruled that Appellee Kenneth Owens did not — indeed, could not — reserve any cognizable water interest when he sold a ranch to Appellees David and Julia Christopher (Christophers). The district court also held that Owens did not provide any actionable warranty covenants when he deeded his interest to Appellant Sonora Corporation. Only Sonora appeals. We reverse.

FACTUAL AND PROCEDURAL BACKGROUND

{2} The historical facts giving rise to this case are simple and undisputed. In 1998 Owens sold his “High Nogal Ranch” to the Christophers by warranty deed. The ranch included a water source commonly known as the Maxwell Springs. Owens was apparently initially reluctant to include the land surrounding the Maxwell Springs in the sale, but eventually agreed to include the property in exchange for an additional $100,000 over the sale price and an agreement that he could retain an interest in the water produced from it. The warranty deed conveying the real estate includes the following language:

Reserving, however, a right of way over the existing roads from Highway 54 to the Apache Ranch.
Together with a full three[-]inch pipe line of water from Maxwell Springs to the High Nogal Ranch house through the existing three[-] inch pipe line. Water flow will be 24 hours a day 7 days a week. The balance of water produced from Maxwell Springs now existing or as developed in the future will be owned [fifty percent] each by David Christopher and Kenneth H. Owens.

{3} Owens then sold his fifty percent interest to Appellant Sonora in 2002 using a New Mexico form real estate contract. The real estate being conveyed was described as follows:

All the Grantor’s right, title and interest in and to the reservation to him of water and rights thereto from the Maxwell Springs located on the High Nogal Ranch contained in that certain [w]arranty [d]eed dated May 8, 1998[,] and filed for record on May 15,1998[,] in Book 889 atPage 43 of the records of Otero County, New Mexico, by and between the Grantor and David Christopher and Julia M. Christopher, his wife, as Grantees. The division of water from said Maxwell Springs is stated therein as follows:
“Together with a full three[-]inch pipe line of water from Maxwell Springs to the High Nogal Ranch House through the existing three[-] inch pipe line. Water [f]low will be 24 hours a day 7 days a week. The [b]alance of water produced from Maxwell Springs now existing or as developed in the future will be owned [fifty percent] each by David Christopher and Kenneth H. Owens.”
This conveyance is intended to not impair any rights granted to the Christophers, but includes all right, title and interest in said water from the Maxwell Springs retained by Kenneth H. Owens in said warranty deed.

The warranty deed accompanying the real estate contract repeated this legal description and, in accord with the statutory deed form, concluded “with warranty covenants.” For reasons not important to our analysis, the real estate contract was later converted to a note and mortgage. As a result of the conversion, the deed was recorded in February 2009.

{4} The difficulties between the parties arose from their efforts to develop and market water from the Maxwell Springs. In January 2003 the Christophers filed an “Application for Permit to Appropriate” water from the Maxwell Springs with the New Mexico State Engineer. The record does not reveal what the current status of the application is, but it is not disputed that the City of Alamogordo (the City) filed an objection to the Christophers’ application with the State Engineer. In January 2007 the Christophers and the City settled their differences by entering into an agreement whereby they would not interfere with each other’s attempts to establish water appropriation rights. In addition, the City agreed to purchase “up to the permitted amount of Maxwell Spring[s] water” subject to certain conditions. The record does not reveal whether the Christophers have received a permit or whether this agreement has been put to actual effect as yet.

{5} On or about July 2,2007, Owens filed his own “Application for Permit to Appropriate” water from the Maxwell Springs. Given that Owens had sold his interest in the Maxwell Springs water to Sonora some five years earlier, it is not clear why Owens filed the application. The record below provides no clarity on the matter. In any event, Owens’ application and the recording of the Owens/Sonora warranty deed apparently prompted the filing of this action.

{6} In March 2009 the Christophers filed a complaint naming only Owens as a defendant. Within three weeks they filed an amended complaint naming Sonora as an additional defendant. The substantive allegations of the complaints are the same. The complaints sought a declaration that Owens did not own an interest in the water from the Maxwell Springs and that his attempt to reserve an interest in the water was a legal nullity. The complaints also asserted that since Owens owned no legally cognizable interest in the waters of the Maxwell Springs, he had conveyed nothing to Sonora. And, thus Sonora had no basis on which it could seek to appropriate water from the Maxwell Springs either. The complaints also asserted claims of slander of title, civil conspiracy, and tortious interference with the contractual relations between the Christophers and the City.

{7} Initially represented by the same counsel, Owens and Sonora filed a joint answer, including a counterclaim for declaratory judgment in their favor as to the legal “effect of the reservation contained in the Owens-Christopher deed.”

{8} After an initial discovery period, the parties filed motions for summary judgment. Relying on general water law principles, the Christophers argued that Owens never had a recognized water right in the Maxwell Springs water because he did not do anything required by New Mexico law while he owned the ranch to have such a right acknowledged and approved by the State Engineer. The Christophers also argued that he could not legally reserve any interest in the Maxwell Springs water because of the inherently speculative nature of such an interest. And, the Christophers argued, Owens’ simple ownership of the land over the Maxwell Springs did not by itself create an ownership interest in the water located beneath the land. Hydro Res. Corp. v. Gray, 2007-NMSC-061, ¶ 17, 143 N.M. 142, 173 P.3d 749 (noting that “a water right is not an automatic stick in the bundle of rights a landowner receives upon purchasing even a fee interest in land” (internal quotation marks and citation omitted)).

{9} Still represented at the time by the same attorney, Owens’ and Sonora’s motion for summary judgment took an entirely different tack.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
2016 NMCA 099, 385 P.3d 633, 10 N.M. 679, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/christopher-v-owens-nmctapp-2016.