Huff v. Bretz

592 P.2d 204, 285 Or. 507, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 948
CourtOregon Supreme Court
DecidedMarch 20, 1979
DocketTC 75-330-L, SC 25633
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 592 P.2d 204 (Huff v. Bretz) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Oregon Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Huff v. Bretz, 592 P.2d 204, 285 Or. 507, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 948 (Or. 1979).

Opinion

*509 TONGUE, J.

This is an action in ejectment to recover possession of a ranch because of alleged breaches of a lease agreement by the defendant, as lessee. Defendant filed an answer, counterclaim and "cross complaint”. The answer denied the breaches of the lease and alleged equitable defenses of waiver and estoppel. The counterclaim sought to recover expenses incurred during occupancy of the property. The "cross complaint” asked for specific performance of the purchase option provision contained in the lease and also sought damages against plaintiffs for misrepresentations.

Because of the equitable defenses and the "cross complaint” for specific performance, the case was tried to the court as a suit in equity. 1 In a written opinion, the trial court held that plaintiffs had failed to establish breaches of the lease so as to permit them to terminate the lease and eject defendant; that the lease option was still in full force and effect; that defendant was entitled to specific performance of the purchase option provision; that defendant recover $395 on his counterclaim, and that defendant was not entitled to recover on his claim of damages for misrepresentation. Plaintiff appeals and defendant cross-appeals.

The facts.

In 1963 plaintiffs Paul and Shirley Huff purchased a ranch home with seventy-nine acres of land in Josephine County under a conditional sales contract. At the time of trial they still owed $25,000 under that contract. In 1970 Paul Huffs employment took him out of the country and plaintiffs decided to lease the ranch. Shirley Huff remained on the property to negotiate the lease.

In October of 1970 plaintiffs entered into the lease which is the subject of this litigation. 2 The lease *510 provided, among other things, that the term of the lease would be for five years, from October 1, 1970, through September 30, 1975, and that it was understood that lessees intended to use the premises for the operation of a "Junior Dude Ranch.” The lessees agreed to develop the pasture lands located on the property, to "maintain the premises in at least as good a condition and repair as it is at the beginning of this lease or as later improved, normal wear and depreciation from causes beyond lessees’ control excepted” (such repair and maintenance to be at lessees’ "own cost and expense”), and to "make beneficial use of all the water rights appurtenant to said land.”

The lessees also agreed not to allow "any strip or waste to the premises,” not "to cut or remove timber” from the premises without the lessors’ permission (which prohibition "shall not apply to the cutting and removal of any dead or diseased trees or timber located or situated on the premises”), and not to sublet the leasehold in whole or in part without the prior written consent of the lessors.

The lease also provided that if the lessees defaulted or breached the lease in any respect and did not cure such default or breach within ten days after written notice given by the lessors, the lessors could, at their option, terminate the lease upon written notice of such termination.

Finally, under the terms of the lease the lessees were given a first option to purchase the property for $67,500. The procedure by which this option was to be exercised was set forth in detail in the lease.

After various disputes between the parties, plaintiffs on January 28, 1975, gave defendant written notice that they were terminating the lease (effective ten days after defendant’s receipt of the letter) due to alleged breaches of the lease agreement by defendant. The letter demanded that defendant redeliver possession of the premises to plaintiffs. Defendant did not do so. Plaintiffs thereafter accepted rental payments *511 from defendant for the months of February, March and April.

In a letter dated April 7, 1975, defendant informed plaintiffs that "[p]ursuant to Paragraph XI of the Lease dated October 14, 1970, * * * you are hereby notified that I intend to exercise the option set forth in Paragraph XI(a) to purchase the property * * *.” Plaintiffs did not complete the sale to the defendant under that option provision and on May 9, 1975, filed this action in ejectment. Plaintiffs then refused to accept defendant’s monthly rental payments, and those payments were tendered into court.

One further matter deserves mention at this point. On January 10,1975, prior to the notice of termination given by plaintiffs to defendant, the State Engineer gave both parties notice of the initiation of proceedings to cancel certain water rights appurtenant to twenty-five acres of the property in question. A hearing was held on that matter on June 19, 1975. On August 6, 1975, the Water Resources Director of the State of Oregon issued an order which stated that because water under that water right had not been appropriated for beneficial use for a period of five or more successive years prior to June 15,1975, the water right had been forfeited under the provisions of ORS 540.610 to 540.650.

Defendant did not breach the lease.

Plaintiffs’ first assignment of error is that the trial court erred in finding that defendant did not breach the lease. Plaintiffs’ amended complaint alleged that defendant had breached the lease in that he had:

(a) cut and removed laurel and madrone trees for firewood without plaintiffs’ consent;
(b) sold and removed fir, pine and cedar trees for logs without plaintiffs’ consent;
(c) sublet the dwelling house to third parties without plaintiffs’ consent;
(d) jammed rocks down the well casing (or that his sublessees had done so), destroying the usability of *512 the well, and that he had permitted it to remain that way;
(e) failed to make beneficial use of the water rights appurtenant to the land;
(f) failed to maintain perimeter fences in good repair;
(g) removed topsoil from parts of the tillable portion of the property, exposing the granite substrata and rendering the land useless for agricultural purposes;
Ob) failed to maintain the leased farm equipment; and,
(i) failed to develop the pasture lands and farm the property in accordance with practices of good husbandry.

For purposes of analysis, these allegations will be considered in the following order: 1. trees (a,b); 2. water rights (e); 3. topsoil (g); and 4. other allegations of breach (c,d,f ,h,i). In reviewing the evidence relating to these allegations, we do so in the same manner as in Wilkinson v. Carpenter, 276 Or 311, 554 P2d 512 (1976), in which we said (at 314):

"We have read the three volumes of transcript and have examined the exhibits.

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Bluebook (online)
592 P.2d 204, 285 Or. 507, 1979 Ore. LEXIS 948, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/huff-v-bretz-or-1979.