Wood v. Alm

516 P.2d 137, 1973 Alas. LEXIS 249
CourtAlaska Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 3, 1973
Docket1686, 1687
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 516 P.2d 137 (Wood v. Alm) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Alaska Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Wood v. Alm, 516 P.2d 137, 1973 Alas. LEXIS 249 (Ala. 1973).

Opinion

*138 OPINION

ERWIN, Justice.

On November 18, 1968, appellants filed a complaint against appellees Aim, Campbell Lake, Inc. and Campbell Lake Development Corp., requesting injunctive relief and damages. The complaint alleged that the appellants were the owners of certain real estate, a portion of which was covered by the waters of Campbell Lake, an artificial lake created and maintained by appel-lees by damming the waters of Campbell Creek. The injunctive relief requested in the complaint involved the appellants’ right to use of the lake, their use of a road leading to the lake, and abatement of a nuisance on the real estate of the appellants caused by the waters of the lake.

The complaint also requested damages against the appellees in the amount of $200,000 for “inconveniences and deprivations” suffered by the appellants through the years by reason of acts of the appel-lees. In addition, the appellants asked for $100,000 actual and $100,000 exemplary damages for the breach of a contract between them. The Woods alleged that in the latter part of 1957 they promised not to interfere with the plan to flood this area in return for the promise of the appellees to protect their right to conduct an airplane parking and airplane repair business on the new lake, and that appellees would not compete with the Woods by using the lake for that purpose. The alleged breach of agreement occurred in 1968 when appellees sought and obtained a rezoning of the area which would prohibit the use of the appellants’ land for the business contemplated.

In October 1970 the Woods filed an amended complaint adding the Greater Anchorage Area Borough as a party defendant. The relief sought against the defendant Borough was to enjoin the Borough from deviating from a sewer plan, assessing the appellants’ land for a sewer and to set aside an order vacating a segment of Noblewood Street which abutted the Wood property.

The appellees, Aim and the two corporations in which he was the majority shareholder, filed an answer denying all material allegations of the complaint and pleaded as affirmative defenses that the tort and breach of contract damage claims were barred by statute of limitations. They also asserted that damages, if any, to the real estate of the appellants were caused by independent intervening causes over which they had no control.

The Greater Anchorage Area Borough filed a motion to dismiss the appellants’ complaint against it, or alternatively to restrict the scope of the proceedings to a review of the record. Subsequently, the trial judge dismissed the Borough as a defendant after the Borough stipulated that it had no authority, nor had it purported, to extinguish private rights in Campbell Lake or private rights in the segment of Noblewood Street vacated by the Borough Planning-Commission on November 13, 1968. No appeal was taken by the appellants from the action dismissing the defendant Borough.

At the trial of this action Vernon Wood testified that he did not intend to start his aircraft repair business at Campbell Lake until the spring of 1973, when he retired from his present job. He testified that the contract with the appellees regarding establishment of a business by the appellants was made in 1957, and that he had not told the appellees that the business contemplated was not to be started until the spring of 1973. He testified that the agreement with the appellees placed no time limitation on starting the contemplated business.

At the close of the appellants’ case the appellees moved for a directed verdict against the contract claim of the appellants on the grounds that there could be no breach of a contract for which the time of performance by the appellees had not yet arisen. The trial judge ruled that the question of breach of contract damages was not to be submitted to the jury, but by Special Interrogatory No. 4 the question of the existence of a contract between the ap *139 pellants and the appellees was sent to the jury.

A trial was had which lasted approximately seven days, with the jury viewing the premises. Testimony revealed that initially, as the lake was developed, the parties contemplated a seaplane base similar to that now existing at Spenard Lake, but that this was abandoned when it was decided that the best use of the land around the lake was as residential property.

When the water level of the lake rose, after the dam was built, the land belonging to the Woods was partially flooded. This partial flooding occurred as a result of water seeping around an earthen dike which was erected on the lower part of the Wood property by the appellees to hold back the water. The portion of the Woods’ land flooded has increased with erosion of the bank.

Mr. Wood testified that he agreed to the construction of the lake initially, but that he had not agreed to the progressive flooding of his land.

There was a fracture of the creek channel during the 1964 earthquake which caused the dam to drain and lowered the level of the lake. Shortly thereafter work was done on the Wood property in an attempt to make the dike higher to avoid further flooding of the property, but there were difficulties because of the boggy condition of the land, and the attempts to make the dike higher were discontinued. In 1965 the lake was drained to permit the laying óf a sewer across the lake. Heavy equipment from the sewer contractor was permitted on the Wood property pursuant to a written easement.

On January 19, 1972, the trial judge entered a judgment consistent with the jury’s answers to three of the four interrogatories 1 and Verdict No. 1, which found the flood damages claimed were barred by the statute of limitations and that the Woods had failed to establish any adverse use of Noblewood Street. The judgment also awarded the appellees $348.00 as costs and $3,300.00 attorney’s fees. The judgment on jury verdict also provided that the issue of breach, if any, of the contract found to exist between the appellants and the appellees be tried to a separate jury during or after the spring of 1973.

On June 12, 1972, the trial judge disposed of the equitable issues in the litigation by a memorandum decision. Appellees were ordered to abate a continuing nuisance, consisting of the flooded, boggy condition existing on the flooded portion of appellants’ land, by filling a portion of the boggy area with soil so as to provide the appellants access across their land to Campbell Lake and to avoid the problems of greater inundation of the Wood land. The trial judge also awarded plaintiffs $1,000.00 in attorney’s fees in the memorandum decision. This appeal and cross-appeal followed.

*140 I. WOOD APPEAL

The major issue before this court is the Woods’ contention that they were entitled to bring a lawsuit and have a determination of damage on the question of breach of contract, and that the postponement of this suit until after the spring of 1973 was error. The new R-l zoning for the area now prevents any business use of the Wood property while the original agreement entered into in 1958 permitted this business use. Wood claims there was an anticipatory breach of that agreement in 1968 when the restrictive zoning occurred at the instigation of appellees.

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Bluebook (online)
516 P.2d 137, 1973 Alas. LEXIS 249, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/wood-v-alm-alaska-1973.