Snow v. Pioneer Title Insurance Company

444 P.2d 125, 84 Nev. 480, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 392
CourtNevada Supreme Court
DecidedAugust 1, 1968
Docket5428
StatusPublished
Cited by10 cases

This text of 444 P.2d 125 (Snow v. Pioneer Title Insurance Company) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Nevada Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Snow v. Pioneer Title Insurance Company, 444 P.2d 125, 84 Nev. 480, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 392 (Neb. 1968).

Opinions

[482]*482OPINION

By the Court,

Mowbray, J.:

This case concerns a right claimed by the owner of certain land to take and use underground water through a well located on adjacent land of another owner.

The facts are well explained in the decision of the trial court, from which this summary is adopted.

Both parcels in question originally comprised a single property known as the Anderson Ranch, in Washoe County. The property is situated north of the Mt. Rose Highway and is in the general area of The Lancer, or Mesa Night Club, as it was formerly known. The entire property, prior to 1947, was owned by Thomas R. Anderson and his wife, Mildred. On July 10, 1947, Anderson and one John T. Coffee, Jr., entered into a partnership for the operation of the Mesa. For reasons best known to themselves, they entered into a dissolution agreement which was dated December 13, 1948, with Anderson conveying his interest in the Mesa to Coffee on December 13, 1948. This agreement is known as the Anderson-Coffee Agreement. Paragraph 8 of the agreement provides as follows:

“8. Second party agrees to transfer and set over unto first party in connection with his conveyance to first party of the real property described in Paragraph 4 hereof, all water rights, waters, ditch rights and ditches which he may have in connection with or appurtenant to the said real property; and second party further agrees that he will use his best efforts in every respect to assist first party in obtaining water rights and waters for use by first party in the maintenance of the said business known as THE MESA; and second party particularly agrees in this respect to give, make available to and transfer to first party any priority for water rights or waters which he has by reason of domestic water use or other water uses in connection with the aforesaid real property or in connection with those certain premises known as the ANDERSON RANCH and adjacent to said business known as THE MESA, sufficient, however, only for the maintenance of said business known as THE MESA.”

Below the signatures of the two parties appears paragraph 9, which reads as follows:

“9. Second party agrees that first party shall have the right [483]*483to drill a well and the right of access thereto on and over the said premises known as the ANDERSON RANCH.”

This agreement was not recorded until March 30, 1953.

On July 24, 1950, Thomas R. Anderson, as part of a divorce settlement, conveyed his interest in the Anderson Ranch to his then wife, Mildred, and this deed was recorded the following day. She undoubtedly knew of the existence of the Anderson-Coffee Agreement and its terms and conditions.

By virtue of the Anderson-Coffee conveyance and the Anderson-Anderson conveyance, the so-called Anderson Ranch was divided into two contiguous parcels, from which various subsequent conveyances branched off.

So far as the “Anderson-Anderson” portion of the ranch is concerned, it appears from the records that Mildred Anderson, on March 23, 1953, entered into an option agreement with Mrs. Lettye E. Winniman and Mrs. Helen Neal to purchase the Anderson Ranch. This agreement was recorded on July 22, 1953. In June of 1956 Mrs. Anderson, then known as Mildred McMahan, conveyed the Anderson Ranch to Mrs. Winniman and Mrs. Neal. This deed was recorded on June 14, 1956. At the time the conveyance was made, Mrs. Winniman has actual knowledge of the Anderson-Coffee Agreement and the terms thereof, and of the existence of a pipe line across a portion of the Anderson Ranch, through which The Mesa Corporation was obtaining water.

It appears that early in 1960 a Mr. I. E. Nitschke, on behalf of Mesa, approached Mrs. Winniman to discuss the location of a well which Mesa proposed to drill on the Anderson Ranch property, pursuant to the terms of the Anderson-Coffee Agreement. The location of the well was agreed upon after several meetings, and the well was completed in June of 1960 at the expense of Mesa. In 1962 the well was deepened because it had gone dry. That well, known as Well No. 3, is the subject of this litigation.

On August 31, 1960, Mrs. Winniman and Tom and Dick Neal entered into a contract of sale of real property with Snow. It is undisputed that Snow knew of the existence of the well, the pipe line, and the road providing access from the Mt. Rose Highway to the well. There is a question as to whether Snow knew of the existence of the Anderson-Coffee Agreement and the terms thereof at the time he purchased the property.

Thereafter, on April 29, 1964, Snow demanded of Mesa that it remove its pipe line and other equipment from said property and that it abandon its claim to the use of the well and the water. This demand was refused.

[484]*484With respect to the conveyances emanating from the Anderson-Coffee Agreement, it appears that on September 30, 1957, Coffee transferred the Mesa to Arthur V. Allen and assigned all of Coffee’s rights and interest created under paragraphs 8 and 9 of the Anderson-Coffee Agreement. This assignment was recorded on November 22, 1957. On November 25, 1957, Allen transferred the Mesa property to The Mesa Corporation and assigned all rights and interest under paragraphs 8 and 9 to The Mesa Corporation. This assignment was recorded on January 27, 1958.

Pioneer Title Insurance Company issued its policy of title insurance insuring title in Snow as a contract purchaser of the Anderson Ranch property against loss or damage by reason of any defect in or lien or encumbrance on the title to the property purchased by Snow. That title policy did not make reference to the Anderson-Coffee Agreement.

Snow brought this action against the Title Company to recover damages in the approximate amount of $19,000 for the alleged loss in value of his land by reason of Mesa’s water right. Mesa intervened to seek judicial confirmation of its water right and an injunction against any interference therewith by Snow. The Title Company defended primarily on the ground that Snow had knowledge of the water right when he contracted to purchase the servient property. Snow added to his original demand a claim for recovery from the Title Company of his litigation expenses against Mesa and a claim against Mesa for breach of an alleged agreement to supply water to his property.

The three parties, each seeking to uphold its interest regardless of any determination concerning the others, have advanced a maze of alternative theories and conclusions of law for our consideration. We have considered them all, but need discuss only four issues, for in our view the resolution of these is sufficient to sustain the judgment of the trial court.

1. The chain of title. As appellant suggests, the primary issue is whether the Anderson-Coffee Agreement, first recorded in 1953 after Thomas R. Anderson had conveyed his interest in the Anderson Ranch to his then wife, was shown by the public records as an encumbrance against the property purchased by Snow. Certainly it appears, physically, on the record. The question is, therefore: How far must one go who searches the record for encumbrances?

Nevada law provides expressly for the maintenance of separate indexes of grantors and grantees. NRS 247.150. These indexes have a degree of independent effect.

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Snow v. Pioneer Title Insurance Company
444 P.2d 125 (Nevada Supreme Court, 1968)

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Bluebook (online)
444 P.2d 125, 84 Nev. 480, 1968 Nev. LEXIS 392, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/snow-v-pioneer-title-insurance-company-nev-1968.