Rio Costilla Cooperative Livestock Ass'n v. W. S. Ranch Co.

467 P.2d 19, 81 N.M. 353
CourtNew Mexico Supreme Court
DecidedFebruary 9, 1970
Docket8888
StatusPublished
Cited by5 cases

This text of 467 P.2d 19 (Rio Costilla Cooperative Livestock Ass'n v. W. S. Ranch Co.) 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
Rio Costilla Cooperative Livestock Ass'n v. W. S. Ranch Co., 467 P.2d 19, 81 N.M. 353 (N.M. 1970).

Opinion

OPINION

GEORGE L. REESE, Jr., District Judge.

Rio Costilla Cooperative Livestock Association sued W. S. Ranch Company in the District Court of Taos County, New Mexico, alleging that it was the owner in fee simple, by virtue of a tax deed, of a tract of land in Taos County, New Mexico, known as the Costilla Reservoir; that the property was completely surrounded by lands owned by the defendant, except for a public roadway traversing defendant’s land to said reservoir and beyond; that the defendant had wrongfully attempted to prevent the free and uninhibited use of said roadway and that no other access existed to plaintiff’s property. Plaintiff sought an injunction prohibiting the defendant from interfering with the use of the roadway by plaintiff, its agents and representatives.

In the second claim, plaintiff, on the same averment as to ownership, alleged that the defendant wrongfully attempted by force to limit plaintiff’s right to the unrestricted use of its property, and sought an injunction against the defendant’s attempted interference or trespassing. The plaintiff also sought damages for the alleged wrongful interference and attempts to deprive it of its property rights, and demanded a trial by jury.

The defendant denied the fee simple ownership of the plaintiff in the reservoir and alleged that the roadway was a private roadway, but that it had permitted authorized personnel of the plaintiff to use the 'roadway for such travel as was necessary for the operation and maintenance of the dam and irrigation works and for releasing water-at what is known as the Costilla Dam. For further defense to the first claim, the defendant alleged that the questions of law and fact raised in the complaint with regard to the roadway had been previously adjudicated in cause No. 5059 in the District Court of Taos County, wherein Rio Costilla Cooperative Livestock Association was plaintiff and Costilla Land Company, W. S. Ranch Company and the State of New Mexico were defendants. A further defense to the first claim was that the action to enjoin interference with an alleged public road was not brought by the real party in interest or, in the alternative, that the State of New Mexico or the County of Taos was an indispensable party. Lastly, defendant asserted that it and its predecessors had, for a period in excess of ten years, openly uninterruptedly, peaceably, notoriously and adversely to all persons, maintained the roadway for strictly private use.

As to the second claim, the defendant admitted that it claimed certain rights in the properties mentioned in the complaint and denied the remaining allegations.

During the progress of the case in the .district court, the defendant secured a temporary restraining order, followed by a temporary injunction, enjoining the plaintiff, its agents, servants, officers, employees, and individual members, from going upon the lands of the defendant for any and all purposes other than inspecting, maintaining and operating the dam and irrigation works located at Costilla Reservoir, and providing further that only the officers or employees of the plaintiff, not exceeding seven who were designated by the president of the Association in writing, would be permitted to go over defendant’s lands.

Motions for summary judgment were filed by both parties and extensive findings of fact and conclusions of law were requested by each party, after which the trial court filed its findings of fact and conclusions of law. Judgment, on the issues above stated, was entered for the defendant. The judgment made permanent the temporary injunction. The findings and conclusions made by the trial court will be disregarded, since they are not required and serve no useful function in a summary judgment proceeding. The parties will be referred to herein as they were in the district court.

From allegations in the application for the temporary restraining order above mentioned, and from depositions in the record, it appears that the real controversy between the parties involves an effort on the part of the plaintiff and its members to secure passage over the roadway to the reservoir, for the purpose of fishing and a reverse effort on the part of the defendant to prevent not only the plaintiff and its members, but the public generally, from poaching on what it considers its private fishing ground. It also appears that the plaintiff might have in mind the fencing of its reservoir site, and preventing the defendant and members of the public from reaching the reservoir waters without its permission.

The basic question presented on this appeal concerns the character of the estate in the dam, reservoir and roadway, which the plaintiff acquired by its deed from the State.

The tax deed from the State to the plaintiff was based upon a tax deed from the county treasurer óf Taos County to the State of New Mexico, which in turn was based upon a certificate of sale for delinquent 1946 taxes. The tax deeds described the property as it was described in the 1946 tax assessment as follows:

“The Costilla Dam and Irrigation Works of the San Luis Power and Water Company, located in the Sangre de Cristo Grant * * * assessed to the San Luis Power & Water Company. iji iji it

The same assessment, tax sale, and tax deeds, with which we are here concerned, were involved in the case of San Luis Power & Water Co. v. State, 57 N.M. 734, 263 P.2d 398 (1953). There, the validity of the tax deed and the 1946 assessment were challenged, but the deed was held to be valid. It was argued that the assessment covered only the dam and machinery, but the court held:

“ * * * The term ‘irrigation works’ is comprehensive; it not only means the grounds and structures, but it includes the dam and machinery appurtenant thereto, dam site, reservoir and reservoir site as used by appellant in connection with irrigation. See State ex rel. State Tax Comm. v. San Luis Power & Water Co., 51 N.M. 294, 183 P.2d 605; Storrie Project Water Users Ass’n v. Gonzales, 53 N.M. 421, 209 P.2d 530; § 77-103, 1941 Comp.”

The assessment in question, in the case last cited, was not by legal subdivision nor even as lands. It was “The Costilla Dam and Irrigation Works of the San Luis Power and Water Company,” and was described on the tax roll as “improvements.” It was argued that this rendered the assessment void, because improvements affixed to land under the law then in effect could not be assessed separately. We held that the dam and irrigation works are land for taxation purposes, but refused to void the assessment because of tire erroneous classification as “improvements.”

In this case, the action of the assessor in describing the property as “improvements” is significant in determining the character of the estate in the land which was actually covered by the assessment. We also think it is significant that the property was referred to as being that of the San Luis Power and Water Company, plaintiff’s predecessor in interest.

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Bluebook (online)
467 P.2d 19, 81 N.M. 353, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/rio-costilla-cooperative-livestock-assn-v-w-s-ranch-co-nm-1970.