Rase v. Castle Mountain Ranch, Inc.

631 P.2d 680, 193 Mont. 209, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 756
CourtMontana Supreme Court
DecidedJuly 2, 1981
Docket80-92
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 631 P.2d 680 (Rase v. Castle Mountain Ranch, Inc.) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Montana Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Rase v. Castle Mountain Ranch, Inc., 631 P.2d 680, 193 Mont. 209, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 756 (Mo. 1981).

Opinions

MR. JUSTICE SHEEHY

delivered the opinion of the Court.

Both sides appeal from a judgment entered by the Third Judicial District Court, Powell County, imposing a constructive trust for more than 40 cabin sites at Rock Creek Lake in Powell County, on real property now owned by Castle Mountain Ranch, Inc., successor to Ward Paper Box Company (Ward).

The cabin sites which surround Rock Creek Lake about 15 or 20 miles from Deer Lodge, Montana, were owned until 1972 by Rock Creek Irrigation, Inc., a subsidiary of Williams and Tavenner, Inc. (Tavenner), which operated the surrounding ranch. In 1972, Tavenner sold the ranch, including the lakeshore property, to Ward Paper Box Co. The ranch has since been transferred to Castle Mountain Ranch, Inc. Louis Ward is the principal shareholder or [212]*212owner in both corporations and was the primary actor in the purchase of the ranch, including the cabin sites around Rock Creek Lake.

The respondents and cross-appellants here (plaintiffs in the District Court) are owners of summer homes and cabins around the lake. They and their predecessors, acting individually, at various times since 1922, built and improved summer homes, some quite substantial, on the Rock Creek Lake front, on real property owned by Tavenner, and with the consent and permission of Tavenner. The issue for us to decide, as in the District Court, is the nature and extent of any agreement between the cabin owners and Tavenner, individually or collectively, express or implied, for termination of the permission.

The cabins were built around the lake over a course of many years, by friends, neighbors and employees of the ranch owners, with their consent and possibly with their implied invitation. These were permanent structures, sometimes built with timber from the ranch and sometimes with the assistance of the ranch owners. The ranch owners owned one of the cabins. Reasons given for the ranch owners extending permission include the wish for companionship at the ranch, the help of the cabin owners in protecting the ranch properties, their availability for fire lookout and fire fighting, and their help in maintaining the roads, as well as their friendship and society.

For at least 50 years, relations between the cabin owners and the ranch owners were amicable. The cabins were inherited, bought and sold without interference from the ranch owners. Cabins were expanded and renovated, and the ranch owners were advised of sales or inheritances of the cabins, sometimes after the fact. Through the years, the cabins were modernized, expanded and improved. The ranch owners were aware of the continuing maintenance of the summer homes. County records, at the time of trial, indicated that the summer cabins had an assessed value of $300,000. The ranch owners did insist on permanent structures to be located on the cabin sites; no trailers or movable homes were permitted.

[213]*213On some occasions, various cabin owners attempted to purchase the underlying cabin sites, but the ranch owners advised that the lake provided water for the ranch, and the ranch owners wanted to maintain control over the lake itself. The use of the lake for irrigation did not interfere with the owners’ use of their cabins.

In the very earliest years, no documents were entered into between the ranch owners and the cabin owners. After some period of time, some of the cabin owners entered into lease agreements with the ranch owners, but these agreements expired by their own terms. Starting in 1963, however, the cabin owners signed documents that were entitled “license agreements.” These documents had been drafted by the lawyer for the ranch owners. All of the license agreements had the same general provision, and essentially provided as follows:

1. A license from Rock Creek Irrigation, Inc. to the cabin owner for the use of the cabin site together with right of access thereto.

2. A term for the license, solely for a summer camp or cabin site, beginning January 1, 1963 and ending on termination.

3. A fee for $6.00 per year payable in advance or 50 cents per month for any part of a year on or before January 1 of each year.

4. A provision for the erection of structures on the cabin site by the licensee, to be approved in advance by the licensor, and providing that such structures should be removed by the licensee at termination, or the structures became the property of the licensor.

5. A provision making the licensee liable for damages to the crops, timber, fences and improvements of the licensor.

6. A save harmless provision for the licensor.

7. A termination provision which is the heart of this lawsuit and which provided: “Either party may terminate this agreement any time, without regard to payment periods, by written notice to the other specifying the date of termination, which notice shall be given not less than thirty (30) days prior to the termination date therein specified ...”

[214]*2148. A provision that the relationship of landlord and tenant was not created between the parties, and that the license is personal to the licensee and not transferable to administrators, executors, successors or assigns of the licensee.

9. A provision for written notice by certified mail.

Tavenner did not ever serve a notice of termination upon any of the cabin owners. In the years from 1963 to 1972, the provision of the license agreement were breached in many respects by various owners, without objection from Rock Creek Irrigation, Inc. Particularly, the cabins were bought and sold or transferred by inheritance without objection from the licensor.

Robert Tavenner testified, however, that the reason there were no terminations was “we had no thought of selling the ranch.” He further said they had no reason to terminate the permissions, but “we wanted to be in a position to terminate if we had to.”

It was probably assumed by all parties that the ownership of the ranch property would remain unchanged through the years. However, in 1969, on the death of one of the ranch owners, the position of the owners changed, and the ranch property became available for sale. In 1972, Ward Paper Box Company entered the picture in the person of Louis Ward, its chief officer. He visited the ranch in the spring or early summer of 1972, and on July 21, 1972, his company (Ward) entered into a contract to purchase the ranch including the land surrounding Rock Creek Lake. The contract provided for a closing date of December 1, 1972. Attached to the contract for sale was a schedule of the license agreements which included the notation “consent of licensees to assignment not required.”

Robert Tavenner, one of the ranch owners, testified that near the end of the negotiations, Louis Ward requested that Tavenner terminate the cabin owners. Tavenner refused. He testified:

“Q. Now as a matter of fact if that had been made a condition of the sale you wouldn’t have gone through with the sale? A. We wouldn’t have gone through, we told him that. If that had been we wouldn’t have gone through.

[215]*215“Q. So, basically he took the sale and lake as it was, isn’t that right? A. After I told him that we had a family conference, he said let me have a little time to think about it. And a day or two went by and he said he would take the ranch as planned, the cabins and all.”

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
631 P.2d 680, 193 Mont. 209, 1981 Mont. LEXIS 756, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rase-v-castle-mountain-ranch-inc-mont-1981.