Hough v. Lucas

230 P. 789, 76 Colo. 94, 1924 Colo. LEXIS 480
CourtSupreme Court of Colorado
DecidedJuly 7, 1924
DocketNo. 10,693.
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 230 P. 789 (Hough v. Lucas) 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
Hough v. Lucas, 230 P. 789, 76 Colo. 94, 1924 Colo. LEXIS 480 (Colo. 1924).

Opinion

Mr. Chief Justice Teller

delivered the opinion of the court.

*96 The plaintiff in error was one of some fifteen hundred defendants in a suit brought by the defendant in error, Lucas, as receiver of The Denver Suburban Homes and Water Company. Judgment having gone against the plaintiff in error, he brings the cause here for review.

The parties will be herein designated as in the trial court.

The suit was brought for the purpose, as plaintiff’s attorneys state, of having determined the respective rights of various parties who had purchased small tracts of land, and water rights therefor, from The Suburban Homes and Water Company, and its predecessors in interest; and to settle the question of liens between the bond issues of several companies which had successively owned the property, which bonds were secured on the land now owned by the first named company; and to determine various other questions which the plaintiff conceived to be necessary of determination, that he might properly administer the affairs of the company of which he was the receiver.

The complaint alleged the creation of an irrigation district, which included the lands in question.

One of the questions raised was as to the right of this district to water for which various defendants had deeds, or contracts of purchase. Inasmuch as the court found that the proceedings to form the district were not effective for the purpose, and no district was created, that question is eliminated.

A general demurrer to the complaint was overruled. As the judgment must be reversed for the reasons hereinafter stated, we need not determine the sufficiency of the complaint.

Defendant Hough was the holder and owner of a note executed by one Nye, in part payment of the purchase price of a tract of land to which he took title as trustee for the Suburban Land Company. The note was secured by a deed of trust on the land, together with a water right of 9-45/65 cubic feet of water per second of time, from the reservoir and canals of the Denver Sugar and Land Irrigation Com *97 pany, the predecessor in interest of The Denver Suburban Homes and Water Company. The last named company was, in legal effect, the mortgagor.

The complaint alleged that the deed of trust was a lien against four hundred and fifty-five acres of said tract; that there was due on said note something over $45,000, and that the note was owned and held by defendant Hough.

The prayer of the complaint refers to the land covered by the deed of trust only twice. It asks that the court decree whether or not those who have purchased parcels of the land subject to the trust deed are entitled to receive the land so purchased free and clear of the lien of the trust deed; and further, that the court decree whether The Suburban Company, or the receiver, acted as agent for Nye, or his grantor Clark, in the collection of money from the purchase of land under contracts, and whether the receiver shall pay to Nye, or to the successor in interest of the Clark estate, the moneys collected as partial payments on the land contracts.

There was one further prayer which may affect the defendant Hough; that is, the prayer in which the court is ásked to decree the amount and priority of liens against all tracts of land mentioned in Division C of the complaint, and the nature, character and extent of the water right, if any, appurtenant to said tracts.

Counsel for defendant Hough urge that the bringing of the suit was not authorized by any provision of the Code; to which plaintiff’s counsel answer that if the complaint states a cause of action it is sufficient; though they rely upon section 21 of the Code of Civil Procedure, which provides that an action may be brought to determine a claim made by one person against another for money or property. They further cite section 255 of the Code of 1887, which section authorizes parties in possession of property to bring suit to determine the title thereto.

As the suit is against persons who are not alleged in the complaint to have made any claim against the plaintiff, or The Suburban Land Company, and seeks to have deter *98 mined title to or interest in property of which plaintiff does not claim to be in possession, the suit is clearly not authorized by either of these sections.

Further objection is made to it that it joins parties who have no joint interest in the properties the title to which plaintiff seeks to have determined. It is in fact a series of suits joined under one title, though the causes of action have no proper relation one to another. Were the question of joinder raised and presented to us, we should be obliged to hold that the suit was improperly brought. We state this much concerning the form of action lest our silence might be supposed to indicate that we approve it.

Inasmuch, however, as defendant, by cross-complaint, seeks to have the trust deed foreclosed, and the title to a tract of land quieted in him, we shall consider the case as though properly brought.

Defendant Hough, by answer, after denying sundry allegations of the complaint not necessary now to be considered, set up, by cross-complaint, ownership of several tracts of land, with a perpetual water right of 4-60/65 cubic feet of water per second of time, together with some other tracts with water rights therefor, and prayed that title thereto be quieted in him. In a second cross-complaint he set up ownership of the Nye note, the' execution of the deed of trust, etc., and asked that the deed of trust be foreclosed.

Plaintiff in answer to the first cross-complaint alleged that the land therein described, amounting to two hundred and forty-five acres, was never entitled to more than 3-50/65 cubic feet of water per second of time; that the right to water depended upon said lands having been included in the Castlewood Irrigation District.

The answer to the second cross-complaint contains no denials of the allegations of said cross-complaint, and prays the same relief as to all matters affecting the six hundred and thirty acres as was prayed for in the complaint.

The decree, adjudges that the contract for water claimed *99 as security by defendant in his second cross-complaint, had long been terminated. The reason for this finding, as given by the court, is that the contract and deed to Clark, Nye’s grantor, were made for speculative purposes; that Clark never used any water under the contract; that he never took possession of the water or applied it to beneficial use, and that defendant Hough had not paid any water assessments, though they were required under the contract; and further that no water had ever been demanded for application to said land. The decree then specifically adjudged that Hough had no right, title or interest in any water from the Castlewood System for the land described in his cross-complaints. This holding is particularly assigned as error.

The trust deed provided that one hundred and sixty acres of the land be planted to fruit trees, by the grantor, during the first year, and a like acreage during the second year, and that they be cared for during the term of the trust deed.

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Bluebook (online)
230 P. 789, 76 Colo. 94, 1924 Colo. LEXIS 480, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/hough-v-lucas-colo-1924.