Flick v. Hahn's Peak & Elk River Canal & Placer Mining Co.

16 Colo. App. 485
CourtColorado Court of Appeals
DecidedSeptember 15, 1901
DocketNo. 2024
StatusPublished

This text of 16 Colo. App. 485 (Flick v. Hahn's Peak & Elk River Canal & Placer Mining Co.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Colorado Court of Appeals primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Flick v. Hahn's Peak & Elk River Canal & Placer Mining Co., 16 Colo. App. 485 (Colo. Ct. App. 1901).

Opinion

Wilson, P. J.

Plaintiff Flick seeks by this suit to foreclose a mechanic’s lien claimed on account of work and labor done by him for the repairing, enlargement and completion of certain ditches owned by the defendant company, and used by it for the [487]*487conveyance of water in the conduct of placer mining operations in which it was engaged. The principal ground of dispute arises from the construction of the contract for the work, which was in writing, and the material portions of which we quote.

“ This agreement made and entered into, * * * witnesseth:

That whereas the said party of the first part is the owner of those two (2) certain ditches in Routt county, Colorado, known as the Elk River ditch, which extends from a branch of the Elk River in a southwesterly direction for a distance of about twenty-one (21) miles to the town of Hahn’s Peak, and the Willow Creek ditch, which when completed, will extend from the west or main branch of the Willow Creek in a southeasterly direction for a distance of about four (4) miles to Nugget cut, a few hundred feet above said town; and
“ Whereas the said party of the first part desires the said Willow Creek ditch to be completed, and the said Elk River ditch to be repaired, improved and enlarged,
“ Now therefore, * * * (Here follows a number of specifications of the work, as to the size of the ditch, flume, etc.) A good durable, strong flume, of sufficient size to carry the waters of said ditch as enlarged, shall be constructed by said Flick around Sand Rock point, about two and one half (2½) miles below the headgate of said ditch; that said flume shall be so thoroughly and strongly anchored that it will remain in its position of construction permanently. The headgate of said ditch shall be constructed of substantial material and the dam or bulkhead across the creek, just below the head of said ditch, shall be constructed of substantial and permanent materials, so that the same will, at all times, cause sufficient amount of the waters of said Elk river to flow into said ditch to fill the same. * * * All of said work shall be completed on or before the 15th day of August, A. D. 1897, and on completion thereof, water shall be turned into the same at the headgate, and the said Flick guarantees that a full head of water shall -flow through the said ditch for its entire length for a period of thirty (30) days immediately [488]*488after its completion. It is expressly understood that a full head of water in said ditch shall mean a volume of water six (6) feet wide on top, three and one half (3-)) on the bottom, and three (3) feet deep.”

Three several cash payments were required to be made to plaintiff, the last of which was on the 1st day of October, 1897, and the contract then provided further:

“ On the last aforesaid date, in addition to the aforesaid payments, said party of the first part agrees to make, execute and deliver unto said party of the second part its conditional note, payable in one (1) year after its date, in the sum of twenty-one hundred seventy-five ($2175,) dollars, secured by seventeen thousand four hundred (17,400) shares of the capital stock of said company, with the condition that if the said note shall not be paid on or before its maturity, the said stock shall be taken and received by the said party of the second part in full payment of said note.
“ H is further agreed between the parties hereto that said first payment shall be limited to seventy-five (75) per cent of the value of all work done at that time, and the said second payment shall be made upon the completion of all the said work by said Flick and the acceptance of the same by George B. McFadden, it being the intention that said Flick upon the completion of said work, shall have received the total sum of five thousand ($5,000) dollars, and that no further payment shall be made to said Flick until after he shall have caused a full head of water to flow through said ditch for a period of thirty (30) consecutive days.”

It is conceded that the plaintiff did not cause a full head of water as described in the contract to flow through this ditch for a period of thirty days, or for any time, after its completion, and for this reason the defendant contends that the plaintiff, having wholly failed to comply with his contract, forfeited all right to recover any further payments which had been provided for. In other words, defendant insists that the principal object of the contract was to secure the specified amount of water, and that the plaintiff bound himself to [489]*489furnish it, and failing in this, he was not entitled to recover. Plaintiff contends that the principal object of the contract was to repair, enlarge and construct the ditch, so that it would be capable of holding and conveying the specified amount of water; that the only reasonable construction of the contract with reference to this requirement Upon him to turn in the water, was that it was intended thereby simply to test the capacity of the ditch after the completion of the work, to hold and carry such an amount of water, and that his guarantee was to this effect and extent only. This being true, plaintiff insists that a failure on his part to comply with this provision in the contract, would not wholly defeat his right to a recovery, but would simply entitle the defendant to set-off against, or reduce the amount of the payments to be made according to the contract, by the amount of actual damage, if any, it had suffered by reason of any imperfect or defective work. The trial court seems to have taken defendant’s view of the question, and finding that plaintiff had failed and omitted to cause a full head of water to flow through the said ditch in the complaint specified for a period of thirty days consecutively, it further found that by reason of such failure, plaintiff was not entitled to recover at all. In this we are clearly of opinion that the court was in error.

In our view, the contract is clear and specific, and sustains the position taken by the plaintiff as to the object, purpose and intent of the parties. The exclusive subject-matter of the contract was the enlargement, cleaning out, repairing, etc., of the ditches according to the specifications furnished by the chief engineer of the company. In no place is anything said about any obligation on the part of the plaintiff to furnish any water at all, nor can any such obligation be implied from anything said in the contract. The contrary clearly appears. The ditch was to convey water from Elk river. At this stream the headgate was to be placed, and the only reasonable construction of the provision requiring the plaintiff to turn in a certain amount of water of Elk river at the head-gate upon completion of the ditch, was to test the ditch in [490]*490order to see if the plaintiff had constructed it in such a manner as to hold and convey water therefrom. The words “ turn into ” in the connection used, assume that the water would be there to be turned. The contract nowhere required the plaintiff to furnish the water. Again, in the specifications as to the 'dam or bulkhead across the creek, it was provided that “ it shall be constructed of substantial and permanent materials, so that the same will at all times cause sufficient amount of the waters of the said MIc river to flow into the said ditch to fill the same.” We do not think the language could be plainer.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
16 Colo. App. 485, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/flick-v-hahns-peak-elk-river-canal-placer-mining-co-coloctapp-1901.