Petraborg v. Zontelli

15 N.W.2d 174, 217 Minn. 536, 1944 Minn. LEXIS 600
CourtSupreme Court of Minnesota
DecidedJune 9, 1944
DocketNo. 33,727.
StatusPublished
Cited by23 cases

This text of 15 N.W.2d 174 (Petraborg v. Zontelli) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Minnesota primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Petraborg v. Zontelli, 15 N.W.2d 174, 217 Minn. 536, 1944 Minn. LEXIS 600 (Mich. 1944).

Opinion

Youngdahl, Justice.

This action was brought to restrain defendants from constructing a dam and draining the eastern section of Rabbit Lake in connection with certain contemplated mining operations thereon. The court permanently enjoined such activity. Defendant Youngstown Mines Corporation appeals from an order denying its motion for a new trial.

The trial court issued a temporary restraining order and an order to show cause why a temporary injunction should not issue. At the hearing on the order to show cause, affidavits were submitted and some oral testimony received. To secure a prompt determination of the important issues involved, the parties stipulated that the action be submitted to the court on the merits upon the affidavits and oral testimony received. Upon this stipulation the following material facts were established: Rabbit Lake is a meandered lake covering approximately 1,500 acres. It consists of two sections, lying east and west, connected by a narrower portion of the lake, locally known as the “Narrows,” and draining eventually through small streams into the Mississippi River. Both portions of the lake as well as the Narrows are of sufficient depth to accommodate small craft such as rowboats and boats equipped with outboard motors and have in fact been so used by the public generally and persons living around the lake. Apart from its use for navigation, both sections have been used for swimming, fishing, and hunting.

In 1924, defendant Youngstown Mines Corporation, hereinafter referred to as Youngstown, procured a lease from the state under L. 1917, c. 110, Minn. St. 1941, § 93.35, subd. 1 (Mason St. 1927, § 6428), covering a portion of said lake bed for mining purposes and authorizing Youngstown to drain off the waters thereof to ac *539 complish such objective. Shortly thereafter Youngstown proceeded to purchase drainage rights from owners whose property abutted upon the eastern section of the lake and employed plaintiff M. E. Ryan, an attorney at law and also owner of an undivided interest in certain property abutting upon the north shore of the eastern section of the lake, to assist in procuring such transfers. Ryan did not convey any interest in his own property to Youngstown, but the result of other conveyances of undivided interests in the same property operated to make Ryan and Youngstown cotenants therein.

Plaintiffs Petraborg for 14 years have owned 80% acres on the north shore of the western section of the lake and but slightly west of the Narrows. Until 1941 this property had been used as a fox farm and also for resort purposes, with cabins and boats for rent. The record indicates that the Petraborgs at present are engaged in defense work but intend to return and carry on their resort business and fox raising in the near future.

After a number of years of inactivity, Youngstown contracted for the services of defendants Zontelli Brothers to construct an earthen dam across the Narrows of Rabbit Lake, and in‘the early part of 1943 this operation was commenced. Youngstown’s admitted plan of operation, after the dam across the Narrows is completed, is to drain all the water from the eastern section of Rabbit Lake (approximately three billion gallons) into the western section at the rate of 15,000 gallons per minute. This will be accomplished by discharge pipes connected with mechanical pumps installed to the east of the Narrows and adjacent to the proposed initial mining operations and running through the Narrows and terminating at a point directly opposite the Petraborg property. Once the eastern section of the lake is drained, Youngstown proposes to strip off the topsoil down to the ore vein and deposit the same in a protective, dump, which will be approximately ten feet above the present water level and located to the south of such mining operations.

Plaintiffs contend that Youngstown is operating illegally, inasmuch as it has failed to cause condemnation proceedings to be instituted according to the terms of its lease; that such contemplated *540 drainage of the lake and subsequent mining operations are in violation of their riparian rights and, if not enjoined, will result in serious damage thereto. Youngstown asserts that, insofar as the Petraborgs are concerned, they will sustain no damage nor suffer any loss different from that sustained by the public generally; that plaintiff Ryan will be benefited in fact rather than suffer loss therefrom ; that, in any event, he is by virtue of his past employment as attorney for Youngstown estopped from any attempt to oppose such operations; and that, since Ryan and Youngstown are now coten-ants in the property on the eastern section of the lake, Ryan is not in a position to object to the contemplated drainage and mining operations.

Youngstown contends that, since Ryan and it are tenants in common and no damage or waste has been shown, Ryan was not entitled to an injunction.

“One cotenant of real estate may, in the absence of any agreement and if he do not exclude the other from a joint occupation with him, exclusively possess and occupy the land, and may make such profit as he can by proper cultivation or other usual means of acquiring benefit therefrom, and retain the whole of such benefits.” Shepard v. Pettit, 30 Minn. 119, 121, 14 N. W. 511, 512; Booth v. Sherwood, 12 Minn. 310 (426), 14 Am. Jur., Cotenancy, § 27. See, also, Sons v. Sons, 151 Minn. 360, 186 N. W. 811.

The rationale of the authorities ■ supporting this rule is that each cotenant has at all times the right to enter upon and enjoy every part of the common estate. But such a cotenant’s right to retain the usé and appropriate the benefits of the land extends only to the' products of its proper use and employment and not to anything which is part of the land itself and not severable in the proper use of it. He is undoubtedly liable for waste and destruction of what is of the realty or for acts amounting to a destruction of it. Freeman, Cotenancy and Partition (2 ed.) 258; Shepard v. Pettit, 30 Minn. 119, 14 N. W. 511, supra.

Youngstown has endeavored to carry the rule of cotenancy beyond its proper application. Merely because there was unity of posses- *541 sion between Eyan and it as cotenants does not mean, under the rule stated, that Youngstown has the right to drain the lake and thus take away from Eyan the riparian rights in his property. By draining the lake, Eyan will be excluded from enjoyment of the common property, and Youngstown is therefore denying his rights in the property under Minn. St. 1941, § 559.05 (Mason St. 1927, § 9560), which provides:

“In an action by a tenant in common or joint tenant of real property against a cotenant, the plaintiff shall show, in addition to the evidence of his right, that the defendant either denied the plaintiff’s right, or did some act amounting to such denial.”

Youngstown is, in effect, ousting Eyan from his property and preventing him from enjoying it as he has a right to do. Kean v. Connelly, 25 Minn. 222, 33 Am. R. 458; Cook v. Webb, 21 Minn. 428; Freeman, Cotenancy and Partition (2 ed.) § 258. The proppsed drainage of the lake would destroy his riparian rights. Youngstown is not actually going to mine the Eyan property, but it will take away the riparian rights thereof for the benefit of other property which it does intend to mine.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
15 N.W.2d 174, 217 Minn. 536, 1944 Minn. LEXIS 600, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/petraborg-v-zontelli-minn-1944.