Lowe v. Adams

419 P.2d 764, 77 N.M. 111
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedOctober 31, 1966
Docket7752
StatusPublished
Cited by2 cases

This text of 419 P.2d 764 (Lowe v. Adams) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering New Mexico Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Lowe v. Adams, 419 P.2d 764, 77 N.M. 111 (N.M. 1966).

Opinion

OPINION

CHAVEZ, Justice.

This is an appeal from an action seeking partition of real estate in Lea County.

The trial court found that defendant-appellee Mary L. Almon is the owner of and may remove from the lands involved in this litigation the water right and other improvements placed thereon by Almon. Defendant-appellant P. G. Adams has aligned himself with plaintiff-appellant H. L. Lowe.

The trial court found that on March 1, 1948, one Almira Adams executed a written lease of the surface to her daughter, Mary L. Almon, defendant-appellee, to run from March 1, 1948, to February 28, 1953. The lease provided for a rental of $250 per year and allowed appellee to:

“* *. * drill wells and install pumps for irrigation purposes, and that any and all fixtures and improvements in their nature removable may be removed by the Lessee upon the termination of this lease.”

The trial court also found that on March 24, 1948, appellee made application to the state engineer to appropriate water for the purpose of irrigating 320 acres of the land in question, and that said application was approved on May 18, 1948. Under that approval, and approval of supplemental applications in 1951 and 1954, appellee drilled a total of three wells and irrigated the land.

The trial court further found that on September 1, 1953, Almira Adams executed another written lease of the surface to appellee Mary L. Almon. The rent remained at $250 per year and the lease expired on •December 31, 1957. The lease was orally extended from year to year and was in effect at the time of Almira Adams’ death. This lease provided:

“2. It is understood that this is a renewal of a similar lease between the parties on said premises, that by the terms of the previous lease second party [appellee] was to make such improvements on the land including houses, irrigation units and the development of water rights as she saw fit, and all improvements made by her were to remain her property and could be removed by her at any time. And that pursuant thereto she now has upon the land one four room frame house, one-two room frame house, one'aeromotor windmill, one eight inch Smithway irrigation pump with Chrysler motor and 500 gallon Propane tank, one ten inch Smith-way irrigation pump with Buiclc motor and 500 gallon Propane tank, and water right permits allowing the development of as much as 320 acres of water rights. That all of said improvements shall remain the property of the second party and may be removed by her at any time during the term hereof or a reasonable time after the termination of this lease. * * *»

The trial court also found that the reasonable market value of the 320 acres of irrigated land in controversy, with the water right, wells, pumping equipment, tenant house or houses, and'all other improvements in connection with the use of said water right, is the sum of $250 per acre; that on the date of the death of Almira Adams there was an enhancement in value of said 320 irrigated acres of land in controversy in the sum of $200 per acre, on account of the said water right, wells, equipment, improvements, etc., and that the improvements could be removed from the land without material injury thereto.

The trial court concluded that the water right was the sole property of appellee; that it was appurtenant to the possessory right of appellee and to the life estate of Almira Adams; that upon termination of the life estate, appellee had the right to sever her water right from the land; and that, since appellee was a tenant in common with the other parties to the partition action, she should be required to leave the water right and improvements on the land, if the other parties were willing to reimburse her for their share of the enhancement value brought about by said water right, equipment and improvements.

Appellants claim that the trial court erred in reaching these conclusions. They cite the general rule that the lessee of a life tenant cannot charge the remaindermen for improvements made to the realty, even if the lessee is one of the remaindermen. They additionally contend that the water right was. obtained by virtue of the ownership of the remaindermen, and that it passed to all remaindermen upon the death of the life tenant.

Section 75-5-22, N.M.S.A., 1953 Comp., provides in part:

“All water used in this state for irrigation purposes, * * * shall be considered appurtenant to the land upon which it is used, and the right to use the same upon said land shall never be severed from the land without the consent of the owner of the land; but by and with the consent of the owner of the land, all or any part of said right may be severed from said land, * *

Appellants contend that, since Almira Adams was only a life tenant, she was not the “owner” within the purview of § 75-5-22, supra, and did not have the power to effect such a transfer. We note here that no other state appears to have a statute similar to ours.

Appellee directs our attention to the judgment in cause No. 3160, district court of Lea County, entitled W. W. Adams, et al, v. Almira Adams, et al., decided by Judge James B. McGhee on March 8, 1938. That cause was a suit to quiet title, to determine the ownership of the lands herein involved, brought by Almira Adams, the children of W. W. Adams and his deceased first wife, and' the children of W. W. Adams and Almira Adams, his second wife. Judge McGhee at first concluded that the nine children of W. W. Adams owned the property subject to the life estate of Almira Adams; however, in his findings he stated:

“VIII. * * * that under the strict construction of the law applicable to life tenants and remaindermen, the defendant Almira Adams, should be required to account to the plaintiffs and defendants herein other than herself, for the sum of $2875.00; but, that under the terms of her letter to the plaintiffs on December 24, 1925, whereby she was to have a comfortable living from said lands during her life time, the Court finds that such sums so received by her from said estate were necessary for a comfortable living and that she should not be required to account to the plaintiffs for such sums or any sum whatever.”

And concluded:

“3. That a trustee should be appointed to collect the mineral rentals on the lands involved herein, with authority to execute a new or renewal mineral lease on the lands upon the expiration of the one now in force upon application to the Court and notice to the plaintiffs and defendants, and to also collect any royalty moneys which may be received, and to pay out so much of the royalty money, as well as that received on account of rentals or bonus, as may be necessary to give to Almira Adams a net annual income of $100.00 per month, from the lands in question during her life time, and jurisdiction of this cause should be retained for the purpose of carrying out the terms of the decree to be entered, and to meet any changing conditions which might require additional support money for said Almira Adams, in the event of an increase in income.”

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Bluebook (online)
419 P.2d 764, 77 N.M. 111, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/lowe-v-adams-nm-1966.