Cole v. COLORADO SPRINGS COMPANY

381 P.2d 13, 152 Colo. 162, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 396
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedApril 22, 1963
Docket20007
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 381 P.2d 13 (Cole v. COLORADO SPRINGS COMPANY) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Colorado primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Cole v. COLORADO SPRINGS COMPANY, 381 P.2d 13, 152 Colo. 162, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 396 (Colo. 1963).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Frantz

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Has the trial court pending before it a justiciable controversy when a party seeks to quiet the title to realty against which it is asserted there is a condition subsequent, although the condition has not as yet been violated, but which condition, it is alleged in a reply to *164 the answer setting forth the existence of the condition subsequent, has been nullified and rendered ineffectual by certain conduct of the reversioner? This is the issue presented by this writ of error, and its affirmative resolution would require a reversal of this case.

Cole filed his suit to quiet the title to certain real estate in Colorado Springs, Colorado. He made a number of parties defendants, among them the Colorado Springs Company, a Colorado corporation. The corporation filed its answer, in which it alleged that Cole was the owner of a fee title to the property and that said fee is a determinable fee. It claimed some right, title and interest in the property, arising from a right of re-entry or reversion in the event a condition contained in the deed from the defendant to Cole’s predecessor in interest was broken, which condition prohibited the manufacture or sale of intoxicating liquors upon said premises for beverage purposes.

By reply, Cole set up a number of affirmative defenses, among them being (1) that the corporation originally laid out the first platted town of Colorado Springs and intended that said town should have no saloons or other drinking establishments, as were then in existence in Colorado City [adjacent to Colorado Springs], and develop in accordance with such plan; that since the inception of said town there has been a change of conditions, by reason of which there have been a large number of buildings and establishments in Colorado Springs in which intoxicating liquor is sold and dispensed to the public; (2) that the corporation has not enforced the condition even though it has been violated many times, and that in some instances it has sold its right to have the property revert, thereby waiving the condition subsequent.

At a pre-trial conference, a stipulation was entered into, in which it was agreed that the corporation sold lots and lands to purchasers, reserving on most of the *165 land a right of re-entry or reversion if liquor was sold to the public.

It was further stipulated:

“That in a number of instances the lots which were platted and sold by The Colorado Springs Company, and which land was originally deeded by The Colorado Springs Company with clauses providing for re-entry or reversion if liquor is manufactured or sold to the public, have had businesses which for over forty years have sold liquor to the public; yet, The Colorado Springs Company has for reasons of its own never seen fit to take steps to claim the forfeiture of all the titles upon which the businesses are situate.

“That there are owners of real estate in the City of Colorado Springs, Colorado which have through the years acquired by payment a release from The Colorado Springs Company to claim any interests or right to claim a re-entry or reversion if liquor is manufactured or sold to the public.

“That there are owners of real estate in the City of Colorado Springs, Colorado owning land which was developed originally by The Colorado Springs Company and which owners have Deeds in their chain of title from The Colorado Springs Company which contain a right of re-entry or reversion if liquor is manufactured or sold to the public; and, which owners of real estate have been offered by The Colorado Springs Company a chance to acquire by payment a release from The Colorado Springs Company to claim any interests or right of re-entry or claim a reversion if liquor is manufactured or sold to the public.”

Some evidence was introduced which was chiefty formal in character. The stipulation formed the basis of most of the evidence in the case. In its Findings of Fact, Conclusions of Law, and Decree, the court said:

“CONCLUSIONS OF LAW

“The Court has jurisdiction of the subject matter and *166 of the parties; that the interest of the Colorado Springs Company in the said property has not been lost nor waived; and that there is no valid ground at this time for the Colorado Springs Company to assert any right in the subject property but that plaintiff holds a defeasible estate and title to the property should be quieted in the plaintiff subject to the liquor covenant.

“WHEREFORE, IT IS ORDERED, ADJUDGED AND DECREED that the plaintiff is the owner of Lot 8 Block 8 in the South End Addition to the City of Colorado Springs, El Paso County, State of Colorado, subject only to the limitation that intoxicating liquor shall never be manufactured, sold, or otherwise disposed of, as a beverage, in any place of public resort, in or upon the premises hereby granted, or any part thereof; and it is herein and hereby expressly reserved by the Colorado Springs Company that in case any of the above conditions concerning intoxicating liquors are broken by said party of the second part, his assigns or legal representatives, then this Deed shall become null and void, and all right, title and interest of, in and to the premises hereby conveyed shall revert to the Colorado Springs Company.”

What is the nature of the restriction in the deed which provides “that intoxicating liquors shall never be manufactured, sold or otherwise disposed of as a beverage in any place of public resort, in or upon the premises hereby granted, or any part thereof; and it is herein and hereby expressly reserved by the said party of the first part, that in case any of the above conditions concerning intoxicating liquors are broken by the said party of the second part, his assigns or legal representatives, then this deed shall become null and void, and all right, title and interest, of, in, and to the premises hereby conveyed, shall revert to the said party of the first part, its successors and assigns, and the said party of the second part by accepting this deed, for himself, his heirs, executors, administrators and assigns, consents *167 and agrees to the reservations and conditions aforesaid”?

In 1876 this Court interpreted the condition as one vesting in the grantor the right to “recover in ejectment upon proof of the breach, without previous entry, demand or notice.” Cowell v. Colorado Springs Co., 3 Colo. 82. Similar conditions have been the subjects of opinions of this Court. Out of these opinions has grown a body of law which is definitive. From them it may be garnered that the reversioner does not possess a present, nor a future or inchoate interest in the realty; he has only a possibility of reverter.

Like language in a deed was considered in Union Colony v. Gallie, 104 Colo. 46, 88 P. (2d) 120, and held to establish a condition subsequent, “creating a possibility of re-entry upon breach.” “It is merely a possibility of the grantor coming into an estate in the future.” There is in the grantor merely “a possibility of a reverter.” It will be noted that the possibility of something happening pervades the court’s construction of condition.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
381 P.2d 13, 152 Colo. 162, 1963 Colo. LEXIS 396, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/cole-v-colorado-springs-company-colo-1963.