Faught v. Platte Valley Public Power & Irrigation District

51 N.W.2d 253, 155 Neb. 141, 1952 Neb. LEXIS 49
CourtNebraska Supreme Court
DecidedJanuary 11, 1952
Docket32987
StatusPublished
Cited by8 cases

This text of 51 N.W.2d 253 (Faught v. Platte Valley Public Power & Irrigation District) 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
Faught v. Platte Valley Public Power & Irrigation District, 51 N.W.2d 253, 155 Neb. 141, 1952 Neb. LEXIS 49 (Neb. 1952).

Opinion

Chappell, J.

Plaintiffs brought this suit in equity to cancel and rescind a water right deed and contract and quiet title to described farm land owned by them' as against the same because of material changed conditions and abrogation of the deed and contract by defendant. Defendant for answer and cross-petition denied generally and specifically plaintiffs’ right to relief prayed and sought a personal judgment against plaintiffs for increased annual water service maintenance charges allegedly due and unpaid by them for the years 1948, 1949, and 1950.

After hearing upon the issues the trial court rendered a decree which cancelled and terminated the contract as of December 3, 1949, the time when notice of rescission was operative, quieted the title to plaintiffs’ land against the same, free and clear of any liens for maintenance charges accruing after December 3, 1949, upon *144 condition, however, that plaintiffs pay into court for the benefit of defendant the sum of $521.91, with interest at 7 percent within 60 days from date of the decree, and in event of default thereof the judgment and decree entered upon plaintiffs’ petition should be vacated and set aside. Defendant’s cross-petition was dismissed without prejudice to a future action for foreclosure of such unpaid liens arising from the contract.

Defendant’s motion for new trial was overruled, and it appealed, assigning substantially that the judgment was not sustained by the evidence but contrary thereto, and contrary to law. We conclude that the assignments should not be sustained. Plaintiffs did not cross-appeal.

At the conclusion of the trial, but after argument and submission, defendant asked leave in open court to amend the prayer of its cross-petition, reducing its interest demand from 9 percent to 7 percent, and praying that any judgment awarded for maintenance service charges should be declared a lien upon plaintiffs’ property and a foreclosure thereof should be decreed. The request with regard to interest was granted. The other part of the request was denied without prejudice to future action brought for that purpose. In defendant’s brief it was argued that the trial court thus erred. In that regard, however, it appears from the record that defendant did not assign such alleged error either in its motion for new trial or in its brief filed in this court. The applicable rule is that to obtain a review of errors of law occurring upon the trial of an equity case, a motion for new trial must be filed assigning the same therein. Oertle v. Oertle, 146 Neb. 746, 21 N. W. 2d 447. Likewise, such alleged errors must be assigned and discussed in the brief filed in this court on appeal, or they will not ordinarily be considered. Hartman v. Hartmann, 150 Neb. 565, 35 N. W. 2d 482. In any event, however, the form of the judgment was such that in the light of our conclusions herein, defendant could not have been preju *145 diced in any manner by the court’s refusal to permit the amendment.

The facts are not in dispute. The record discloses that in March 1935, Hastings College owned the farm lands here involved. On and prior to that time, Dawson County Irrigation Company was a privately organized and operated Nebraska common carrier public service utility corporation, with a water appropriation from the state. On March 2, 1935, the College entered into a written contract with such corporation whereby! it sold and conveyed to the College and to its heirs and assigns “the right to use water from the canal of the” corporation, including a pro rata share of its available contractual reservoir waters “during the irrigation season of each year, in an amount not exceeding” a designated rate “to. be used upon and for the purpose of irrigating” the described lands here involved. The consideration therefor was $750 paid in cash by the College and payment by it “annually in advance, on or before the first day of March in each and every year, the further sum of one and 50/100 ($1.50) Dollars, per acre of the land above described, as an annual maintenance charge” which payments were made a lien upon the land from the date when they became due, plus, as further consideration, a waiver and release of any and all claims then existing in favor of the College for loss or damage by reason of any leakage, seepage, breakage, or overflow from any of the canals, laterals, sub-laterals, or ditches of the corporation to any land owned or controlled by the College, together with a conveyance of a right-of-way through the land for the canal and the laterals of the corporation as then constructed upon the land.

The contract contains no date of termination except as hereinafter recited, and it was agreed therein that “this contract shall have the force and effect of a covenant running to and with the said land * * * for above described, and the canal * * It provided that “The *146 water to be furnished under this agreement is intended to form a part of the appurtenances to the said land iabove described, and the right thereto shall be transferable only with and run with said land” and that the ^corporation should be “bound by this instrument to all present and subsequent owners of said land, but to no other person.” (Italics supplied.)

The agreement was made upon the express condition that if the College, its heirs, or assigns, at any time failed, neglected, or refused to make any of the annual maintenance charge payments at the time the same became due and payable, the corporation should have the election, without notice, to furnish the supply of water and sue for the annual payment in law or equity at its election or upon such default to shut off such supply and cease to furnish water under its provisions until payment was made of all such defaulted payments to the corporation with interest thereon at 9 percent from date of default until date of payment, and that upon full payment of such defaulted payments with interest, the College should be reinvested with all rights and privileges theretofore conferred, provided, however, that if any annual payment to be made should remain unpaid and in default for a period of three years, the corporation at its option and upon 60 days’ notice in writing to the College, could declare the contract and deed forfeited for failure to pay such maintenance charge, whereupon the deed and contract should terminate and the rights granted therein should revert to the corporation. The contract was appropriately recorded.

The land involved is located four and one-half miles from the main canal on the end of a lateral serving several other consumers.

In 1941 defendant, a public power and irrigation district organized under the provisions of sections 70-601 to 70-671, R. R. S. 1943, purchased all the property and assets and expressly assumed and succeeded to all the *147 rights, liabilities, and obligations of the Dawson County-Irrigation Company, a corporation.

In February 1947, plaintiffs purchased the farm land here involved, and received an ordinary warranty deed to the same, which did not refer in any manner to the water right here involved. They took possession and used no irrigation water in 1947 but paid defendant the annual maintenance charge of $1.50 an acre for that year as specifically provided in the water right deed and contract.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
51 N.W.2d 253, 155 Neb. 141, 1952 Neb. LEXIS 49, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/faught-v-platte-valley-public-power-irrigation-district-neb-1952.