Carlson v. Water Unlimited, Inc.
1991 WY 171
822 P.2d 1278
Case Number: 90-216, 90-217
Decided: 12/30/1991
Supreme Court of Wyoming
LOUIS W. CARLSON; LORA M. CARLSON; EDWIN EGGE; JANIEVE EGGE; DONNIE PATTON; AND ELIZABETH PATTON, APPELLANTS (PLAINTIFFS),
v.
WATER
UNLIMITED, INC., A WYOMING CORPORATION, APPELLEE
(DEFENDANT).
WATER
UNLIMITED, INC., A WYOMING CORPORATION, APPELLANT
(DEFENDANT),
v.
LOUIS
W. CARLSON; LORA M. CARLSON; EDWIN EGGE; JANIEVE EGGE; DONNIE PATTON; AND
ELIZABETH PATTON, APPELLEES (PLAINTIFFS).
Appeal from the District Court,
Weston
County, Timothy J. Judson,
J.
Peter
K. Michael of Lathrop, Rutledge & Michael, P.C., Cheyenne, for appellants in
No.
90-216 and appellees in No. 90-217.
Donald
B. Hansen of Hansen & Peck, Newcastle, for appellee in No. 90-216 and appellant in
No. 90-217.
Before URBIGKIT, C.J., and THOMAS, CARDINE,
MACY and GOLDEN, JJ.
GOLDEN,
Justice.
[1.] An appeal and a
cross-appeal are taken from a judgment in a declaratory judgment action in which
the trial court was called upon to declare the parties' rights and duties under
a water right agreement dated August 15, 1977.
[2.] The action was filed by
Mr. and Mrs. Louis W. Carlson, Mr. and Mrs. Edwin Egge, and Mr. and Mrs. Donnie
Patton, each of whom own certain parcels of property which on August 15, 1977,
comprised the Mountain View Trailer
Court owned only by Carlsons. Water Unlimited, Inc.
(W.U.), a Wyoming corporation, owns Carlson well No. 1,
which is the source of the water right referred to in the agreement in question.
In the action, W.U. filed a counterclaim seeking payment for the water furnished
the Egges and the Pattons since they each became owners of their respective
parcels of property.
[3.] The Carlsons, Egges,
and Pattons asserted that the water right agreement was unambiguous and
prevented W.U. from imposing any water line maintenance fee on the Egges and
Pattons until such time as the Carlsons were no longer the owners of any parcel
of the property that once comprised the Mountain View Trailer Court. Disputing that
assertion, W.U. claimed that the water right agreement was ambiguous.
Additionally, W.U. claimed that extrinsic evidence showed the parties to the
agreement intended it to mean that once the Carlsons sold to any third party any
part of the property comprising the Mountain View Trailer Court, then W.U.
could charge the third party a water line maintenance fee based upon the amount
of water consumed by the third party.
[4.] The trial court found
that the water right agreement was ambiguous, took extrinsic evidence, and found
in favor of W.U. Because of proof problems on the counterclaim, the trial court
directed the parties to determine a price for the water consumed or, failing in
that effort, to return for a hearing on that issue. The Carlsons, Egges, and
Pattons appeal from that judgment. W.U. appeals from that part of the judgment
directing the parties to determine a price or return for a hearing, claiming
that it proved its monetary entitlement at trial.
[5.] We reverse the trial
court's judgment since our holding is in favor of the Carlsons, Egges and
Pattons and their construction of the water right agreement. We remand with
direction to enter judgment in their favor in accordance with this
opinion.
FACTS
[6.] In 1954, Mr. and Mrs.
Carlson owned the Mountain View
Trailer Court property (hereinafter called original
property) described as follows:
Lots
10 through 15, in Block 9, and Lots 1 through 10, in Block 10 of Duff Grey
Addition, and Lot 1 in Block 17, and Lots 1, 2 and 3, in Block 18 of Washington
Park Addition, in the City of Newcastle, Weston County,
Wyoming.
On
this property they built a brick home and established two trailer courts, one
designated as Mountain View Trailer Court and called part A of the original
property, and the other designated as Carlson Court and called part B of the
original property.
[7.] From 1954 until 1962,
the Carlsons obtained water for their home and trailer court tenants from the
City of Newcastle. In April 1962, they drilled and
completed an artesian well, identified as Carlson No. 1, that produces a flow of
1,500 gallons per minute. They constructed a pipeline to serve their property
and discontinued the city water service.
[8.] In 1966, the Carlsons,
Mr. and Mrs. Warren Voss, and Forest E. Ryder formed Water
Unlimited, Inc. As shareholders, the Carlsons owned forty percent, the Vosses
fifty percent, and Ryder ten percent. The purpose of the corporation was to
market Carlson No. 1 water.
[9.] At a shareholders
meeting on May 24, 1970, they resolved that water rights be granted to lands
owned by the Vosses and to "Mountain View Trailer
Park and all land adjacent thereto owned by" the
Carlsons. There was to be no charge for the water rights until the landowners
"should sell their interest in the above lands to third parties." In that event,
a line maintenance fee of "15 per 1000 gallons used" would be charged, that
charge to be adjusted annually. At buyer's expense, a meter was to be installed
at the time of sale.
[10.] In the summer of 1977, the Carlsons
negotiated with Peter Field for the purchase of their stock in Water Unlimited,
Inc. On August 9, 1977, at a special shareholders meeting, the sale of Carlsons'
stock to Field was approved. On August 15, 1977, the water right agreement, the
interpretation of which is at issue, was executed by the Carlsons and W.U. See Appendix A
of this opinion.
[11.] In December, 1977, the Carlsons sold
their brick house to Mrs. Egge. In February, 1978, the Carlsons also sold to
Mrs. Egge part A of the original property. In January, 1988, the Egges sold to
the Pattons (Mr. Patton is Mrs. Egge's son) an interest in a portion of part A
of the original property. Mr. Patton then took over management of the trailer
court on part A. Thus, the Carlsons still own and live at part B (Carlson Court)
of the original property, the Egges own and live in the brick house located on
the original property and with the Pattons own an interest in part A of the
original property.
[12.] In May, 1989, W.U. made demand on the
Egges for $13,600 for water supplied to them since 1977. In June, 1989, W.U.
notified the Egges that in August it would begin charging them for water usage
at the rate of $8 per trailer per month. The Egges next received water useage
bills covering the months of September and October, 1989, in the amounts of $240
and $248, respectively.
[13.] Meanwhile, on September 19, 1989, the
Carlsons, Egges, and Pattons filed their declaratory judgment action against
W.U. seeking a declaration of the meaning of the water right agreement. W.U.
filed its counterclaim on October 26, 1989. On April 5, 1990, in denying a
motion for summary judgment filed by the Carlsons, Egges, and Pattons, the trial
court held that the water right agreement was ambiguous. The parties tried the
case on July 5, 1990, and, on July 19, 1990, the trial court entered its
judgment. These appeals followed.
DISCUSSION
[14.] The Carlson group contends the water
right agreement is unambiguous and, as applied to the dispute between the
parties, means that W.U. cannot impose a line maintenance charge on the Egges
and Pattons until the Carlsons or their heirs no longer own any parcel of the
original property. The trial court disagreed, as did W.U., and construed the
agreement, with the aid of extrinsic evidence, to allow W.U. to impose the line
maintenance charge on the Egges and the Pattons from the dates on which they
acquired their respective interests in the parcels of the original
property.
[15.] This court has
said,
[w]hether
ambiguity exists is a question of law. We are, therefore, at liberty to make a
determination as to the existence of ambiguity whether or not the parties here
agree thereto one way or the other, and whether or not the trial court has
reached a conclusion thereon one way or the other.
Amoco Production v. Stauffer Chemical Co. of
Wyoming, 612 P.2d 463, 465 (Wyo. 1980) (citations omitted). In determining
whether an ambiguity exists, we apply those well-established principles set
forth in numerous Wyoming decisions and nicely summarized in Amoco:
Our
basic purpose in construing or interpreting a contract is to determine the
intention and understanding of the parties. If the contract is in writing and
the language is clear and unambiguous, the intention is to be secured from the
words of the contract. And the contract as a whole should be considered, with
each part being read in light of all other parts. The interpretation and
construction is done by the court as a matter of law.
If
the contract is ambiguous, resort may be had to extrinsic evidence. An ambiguous
contract "is an agreement which is obscure in its meaning, because of
indefiniteness of expression, or because a double meaning is present." Ambiguity
justifying extraneous evidence is not generated by the subsequent disagreement
of the parties concerning its meaning.
Amoco, 612 P.2d at 465 (citations
omitted).
[16.] The water right agreement, provides, in
pertinent part:
*
W.U. will deliver well water of Carlsons "in such quantities as [they] may use,
need or desire in the area known as Mountain View Trailer park owned by [them]
which land * * * is described as follows * * *."
*
The description was of the total property on which was located the brick home
and the two trailer courts (part A and part B). The water will be delivered to
Carlsons "at no charge so long as either [Mr.] Carlson or [Mrs.] Carlson, or
their heirs, are the owners of the land described
[above]."
*
"[A]t such time as [the Carlsons], or the survivor of them, or their heirs,
shall sell all of their right, title and interest in the land described [above]
to any third party, then the water right established by this agreement shall
continue in favor of such third party * * * provided however, that from the date
of such sale [W.U.] shall have the right to charge the then owner a line
maintenance charge * * * of fifteen cents * * * per 1000 gallons of water used
and delivered [to be adjusted annually] * * *. [T]he purchaser of this water
right at the time of sale shall be required to install a meter [at purchaser's
expense] * * *."
*
The delivery point for Carlson water is the Boyd Street valve box on the east side of
the Carlson property. From that delivery point to all points within the
boundaries of the total property "to which this water right has been
established[,]" "[Carlsons] shall be responsible for the construction, repair
and maintenance of all water lines, connections and appurtenances for the use
and distribution of water * * *."
*
From the well to Carlsons' delivery point, W.U. shall be responsible for the
"repair, maintenance [or] replacement of the water line * *
*."
*
"[A]s to any repair or maintenance or replacement need which may occur at any
point on the line between the south side of U.S. Highway 16 and [Carlsons'
delivery point] * * *[,] during the time that [Carlsons] or their heirs shall
remain the owner of the water right hereby established, * * * [W.U.] will
provide all of the parts and materials necessary for any repair or replacement
and [Carlsons] or their heirs will provide all of the labor and equipment
required to make any line repair or replacement * * *."
*
When the Carlsons or their heirs sell the water right, "[W.U.] shall be
responsible for all of the cost of such repair, maintenance or replacement of
[the water line from the well up to [Carlsons] delivery point] * *
*."
*
Carlsons "will not deliver or sell any water * * * for use outside of [the total
property] * * * however, * * * [they] may and will supply water in any manner
[they] deem proper to any person, firm or corporation within [the total
property] to which this water right has been established."
*
"[T]he water right granted to [Carlsons] under this agreement shall become an
obligation and burden on the [property on which Carlson No. 1 is
located]."
*
"[If] [W.U.] should sell * * * any or all of the water wells located on [that]
property * * * it must sell such well or wells subect [sic] to such burden and
obligation * * *."
[17.] Applying our contract construction
principles to the water right agreement, we hold that the agreement is
unambiguous and that the parties' intent was adequately expressed in, and can be
determined from, the language of the whole agreement.
[18.] The intent of the parties as expressed in
this agreement is to tie inextricably together the Carlsons' water right
established by the agreement and Carlsons' line maintenance responsibility. As
long as the Carlsons own any part of the original property, they have line
maintenance responsibility as provided in the agreement. As long as the Carlsons
have that responsibility W.U. shall not impose a line maintenance charge. When
the Carlsons no longer own any part of the original property, they no longer
have line maintenance responsibility; that responsibility passes to W.U. At that
time, W.U. is allowed to impose a line maintenance charge upon the Carlsons'
successors in title at the rate as provided in the agreement. Those successors
in title will own Carlsons' water right established by the agreement, but they
will have no line maintenance responsibility as that passed totally to W.U. upon
Carlsons' selling the last part of the original property they owned. Under those
circumstances, it is only fair and right that W.U. be allowed to impose the
charge and Carlsons' successors in title be required to pay the
charge.
[19.] Since the Carlsons still own part B of
the original property and have line maintenance responsibility under the
agreement, W.U. is not allowed to impose a line maintenance charge on the Egges
and the Pattons.
[20.] For this reason, W.U.'s counterclaim
fails; the trial court's judgment in favor of W.U. on that counterclaim is
reversed. We reverse and remand with direction to enter judgment in favor of the
Carlsons, Egges, and Pattons in accordance with this
opinion.
APPENDIX A
AGREEMENT
[21.] THIS AGREEMENT made and entered into on
the 15th day of August, 1977, by and between WATER UNLIMITED, INC., a Wyoming
corporation, whose mailing address is 3 Seminoe Avenue, Newcastle, Wyoming
82701, hereinafter referred to as WATER UNLIMITED and LOUIS W. CARLSON and LORA
M. CARLSON, husband and wife, whose mailing address is 1103 South Summit Avenue,
Newcastle, Wyoming 82701, hereinafter referred to as
CARLSON:
WITNESSETH:
[22.] WHEREAS, Water Unlimited is the owner of
a water well known as Carlson Well no. 1 situated on the following described
property, to-wit:
Township
45 north, range 61 west of the 6th P.M.
Section
28 N.W. 1/4 NE 1/4
and
Water Unlimited may drill additional wells on this property;
and
[23.] WHEREAS, Carlson was one of the original
incorporators of Water Unlimited and at present both Louis W. Carlson and Lora
M. Carlson own stock in said corporation; and
[24.] WHEREAS, the corporation took official
action at a meeting of the shareholders held on May 24, 1970 to grant a water
right in favor of the property described as the Mountain View Trailer Park in
the City of Newcastle, Wyoming, owned by Carlson;
[25.] NOW, THEREFORE, in consideration of the
premises and of the mutual promises and covenants of the parties herein
contained, it is agreed as follows:
[26.] 1. Water Unlimited will deliver water
from the Carlson Well No. 1 or any other wells drilled on the hereinabove
described property to Carlson in such quantities as Carlson may use, need or
desire in the area known as Mountain View Trailer Park owned by Carlson which
land is situated within the City of Newcastle, Wyoming, and is described as
follows:
Lots
10 through 15, in Block 9 and lots 1 through 10, in Block 10 of Duff Grey
Addition and Lot 1, in Block 17 and Lots 1, 2 nd 3, in Block 18 of Washington
Park addition, in the City of Newcastle, Weston County,
Wyoming.
However,
it is understood that Water Unlimited does not guarantee any particular line
pressure.
[27.] 2. Water Unlimited will deliver such
water to Carlson at no charge so long as either Louis W. Carlson or Lora M.
Carlson or their heirs, are the owners of the land described in paragraph one
above.
[28.] 3. It is agreed that at such time Louis
W. Carlson and Lora M. Carlson, or the survivor of them, or their heirs, shall
sell all of their right, title and interest in the land described in paragraph 1
above to any third party, then the water right established by this agreement
shall continue in favor of such third party from the date of such sale or
transfer, provided however, that from the date of such sale Water Unlimited
shall have the right to charge the then owner a line maintenance charge in the
amount of fifteen cents ($.15) per 1000 gallons of water used and delivered,
with the further understanding that such line charge may be adjusted annually,
either upwards or downwards, by Water Unlimited in accordance with the cost of
living index arrived at by the United States government on June 1 of each year
compared to the cost of living index on the date of this contract. It is
understood and will be required that the purchaser of this water right at the
time of sale shall be required to install a meter at a point to be designated by
Water Unlimited and the cost of the meter and of its installation shall be borne
by said purchaser.
[29.] 4. This agreement shall be effective from
and after May 24, 1970.
[30.] 5. It is understood and agreed that the
point of delivery at which Carlson shall receive water from Water Unlimited will
be the valve box at Boyd Street on the east side of the Carlson property.
Carlson shall be responsible for the construction, repair and maintenance of all
water lines, connections and appurtenances for the use and distribution of water
from the point of delivery to all points within the boundaries of the land
described in paragraph 1 above to which this water right has been
established.
[31.] 6. Water Unlimited shall be responsible
for the repair, maintenance of replacement of the water line from the well up to
the point of delivery to Carlson as defined in this agreement, and Water
Unlimited agrees to maintain its line in a good state of repair so that there
will be no unnecessary interruption of service or delivery of water to Carlson.
Provided, however, during the time that Carlson or their heirs shall remain the
owner of the water right hereby established, it is agreed that Water Unlimited
will provide all of the parts and materials necessary for any repair or
replacement and Carlson or their heirs will provide all of the labor and
equipment required to make any line repair or replacement as to any repair or
maintenance or replacement need which may occur at any point on the line between
the south side of the U.S. Highway 16 and the point of delivery to Carlson as
defined in this agreement. From and after the date of sale of the water right by
Carlson or their heirs, Water Unlimited shall be responsible for all of the cost
of such repair, maintenance or replacement of said water line as herein
provided.
[32.] 7. Upon notice to Water Unlimited that a
break or leak exists in the line to be maintained by Water Unlimited, Water
Unlimited shall proceed forthwith to make the necessary repairs to said line so
as to prevent any interruption of service or the delivery of water to Carlson.
In the event Water Unlimited does not repair said line within 12 hours from the
time of notice, Carlson shall be authorized to enter upon the property and to
make any necessary repairs to said line or to contract with other persons or
firms for the repair of such line, and all of the costs and expenses incurred by
Carlson in making such repairs shall be the obligation and responsibility of
Water Unlimited and shall be paid by Water Unlimited to Carlson within ten days
after submission to it of a proper invoice.
[33.] 8. Carlson agrees that he will not
deliver or sell any water to any person, firm or corporation for use outside of
the land described in paragraph 1 above. It is understood, however, that Carlson
may and will supply water in any manner he deems proper to any person, firm or
corporation within the land designated in paragraph 1 above to which water right
has been established.
[34.] 9. This agreement and the water right
hereby granted is subject to force majeure and if the delivery of water to
Carlson under this agreement is prevented or interrupted by any cause of force
majeure, then the operation of this contract shall be suspended without penalty
to either party during the term of such interruption.
[35.] 10. It is understood that the water right
granted to Carlson under this agreement shall become an obligation and burden on
the following described real property situated in Weston County, Wyoming, to-wit:
Township
45 North, Range 61 West of the 6th P.M.
Section
28: NW 1/4 NE 1/4
and
on any and all water wells located on said land, and it is further agreed that
in the event Water Unlimited should sell, transfer or convey any or all of the
water wells located on the property described in this paragraph, which property
has hereby been made subject to the burden and obligation of the water right
created under this agreement in favor of the land owned by Carlson, it must sell
such well or wells sub[j]ect to such burden and obligation, and all of the
obligations and burdens of this agreement must be assumed by any such
purchaser.
[36.] 11. This agreement shall be binding and
inure to the benefit of the heirs, representatives, successors and assigns of
the respective parties hereto.
[37.] IN WITNESS WHEREOF, the parties have
hereunto set their hands and seals to this agreement on the date above
written.
WATER
UNLIMITED by /s/ Warren Voss /s/ Peter Field,
President
LOUIS
W. CARLSON /s/
LORA
M. CARLSON /s/
STATE
OF WYOMING
ss
COUNTY OF WESTON
[38.] The foregoing agreement was acknowledged
before me this 31st day of August, 1977, by /s/ Warren Voss &
Peter Field the Secretary of Water Unlimited, Inc., a Wyoming corporation, on
behalf of said corporation.
[39.] Witness my hand and official
seal.
/s
Rebecca K. Hawki Notary Public
My
commission expires: November 28, 1979.
STATE
OF WYOMING
ss
COUNTY OF WESTON
[40.] The foregoing agreement was acknowledged
before me this 31st day of August, 1977, by Louis W. Carlson and Lora M.
Carlson, husband and wife.
[41.] Witness my hand and official
seal.
/s
Rebecca K. Hawki Notary Public
My
commission expires: November 28, 1979.
THOMAS,
Justice, dissenting.
[42.] I cannot agree that this case should be
reversed. Our definition of an ambiguous contract is that, upon consideration of
the whole instrument, it is:
"`*
* * [A]n agreement which is obscure in its meaning, because of indefiniteness of
expression, or because a double meaning is present. * * *' Bulis v. Wells, Wyo., 565 P.2d 487, 490
(1977). And see Meuse-Rhine-Ijssel Cattle
Breeders of Canada Ltd. v. Y-Tex Corporation, Wyo., 590 P.2d 1306 (1979); Amoco Production Company v. Stauffer
Chemical Company of Wyoming, supra [Wyo., 612 P.2d 463 (1980)]." McCartney v. Malm, 627 P.2d 1014, 1019
(Wyo.
1981).
[43.] The majority opinion recites from Amoco Production Company v. Stauffer
Chemical Company of Wyoming, 612 P.2d 463 (Wyo. 1980), the applicable legal precepts,
including the requirement that the contract be considered as a whole. It then
states quite positively that the contract that is involved is unambiguous. The
argument is strong, but the analysis is frail. In making the assertion that
"[t]he intent of the parties as expressed in this agreement is to tie
inextricably together the Carlsons' water right established by the agreement and
Carlsons' line maintenance responsibility," the majority addresses only part of
the contract. Op. at ___. The imposition of the line maintenance charge by Water
Unlimited upon third-party users of the water is tied to their ownership of the
land. It has no direct relationship to the line maintenance responsibility of
the Carlsons. Stated another way, the shift of the responsibility for line
maintenance "between the south side of U.S. Highway 16 and the point of delivery
to Carlson" depends upon the sale of the water right, not upon a retention of a
partial interest in the Carlsons' property.
[44.] Instead, the Agreement inextricably ties
the free use of the Carlsons' water right to their continued ownership of the
land described in paragraph one of the Agreement. Paragraph one
provides:
"1.
Water Unlimited will deliver water from the Carlson Well No. 1 or any other
wells drilled on the hereinabove described property to Carlson in such
quantities as Carlson may use, need or desire in the area known as Mountain View
Trailer Park owned by Carlson which land is situated within the City of
Newcastle, Wyoming, and is described as follows: * * *."
If
any significance is to be given to the phrase "owned by Carlson," the Carlsons,
after the sale, had no right to have water delivered to the portion of the
premises owned by the Egges and the Pattons. The obligation imposed upon Water
Unlimited is to "deliver water from the Carlson Well No. 1 or any other wells
drilled on the * * * [same property] to Carlson in such quantities as Carlson
may use, need or desire in the area known as Mountain View Trailer Park owned by
Carlson * * * [emphasis added]." It is clear that this condition no longer
pertains as to part of the tract. As to the part of the property that has been
sold, can it be said that the water delivered to the purchasers fits within the
quantities of water that Carlson may use, need or desire?
[45.] The majority position depends upon a
conclusion that Carlsons have not sold "all of their right, title and interest
in the land described in paragraph 1 above to any third party * * *." Literally,
that is true, but they have sold all of their right, title and interest to part
of that land. Yet, the majority avows that only after the Carlsons have sold the
entire tract will it be right and fair that Water Unlimited be permitted to
impose a line maintenance charge upon any purchasers, even though those who have
purchased part of the land have no line maintenance
responsibilities.
[46.] Paragraph two
states:
"2.
Water Unlimited will deliver such water to Carlson at no charge so long as
either Louis W. Carlson or Lora M. Carlson, or their heirs, are the owners of
the land described in paragraph one above."
It
is clear from the record that the conditions of paragraph two no longer pertain.
The Carlsons now own only part of the land described in paragraph one, and the
Egges and the Pattons now own the other part of that land. Perhaps the true
resolution is that the water right has been terminated since the Carlsons or
their heirs no longer own the entire tract described in the Agreement. This
result is certainly as reasonable as the one adopted in the majority opinion,
but that would be an intolerable solution.
[47.] The next paragraph of the Agreement
provides:
"3.
It is agreed that at such time as Louis W. Carlson and Lora M. Carlson, or the
survivor of them, or their heirs, shall sell all of their right, title and
interest in the land described in paragraph 1 above to any third party, then the
water right established by this agreement shall continue in favor of such third
party from the date of such sale or transfer, provided however, that from the
date of such sale Water Unlimited shall have the right to charge the then owner
a line maintenance charge in the amount of fifteen cents ($.15) per 1000 gallons
of water used and delivered, with the further understanding that such line
charge may be adjusted annually, either upwards or downwards, by Water Unlimited
in accordance with the cost of living index arrived at by the United States
government on June 1 of each year as compared to the cost of living index on the
date of this contract. It is understood and will be required that the purchaser
of this water right at the time of sale shall be required to install a meter at
a point to be designated by Water Unlimited and the cost of the meter and of its
installation shall be borne by said purchaser."
It
would seem that, under the language of this paragraph, the Egges and the Pattons
did not receive any right to water by virtue of their purchase from the
Carlsons. Their right to water, if any there is, must be found under paragraph 1
of the Agreement.
[48.] The Agreement provides for the
continuation of the water right to a purchaser from the Carlsons, expressly
reserving the right to impose the line maintenance charge. It is silent as to
the event of a sale of part of the premises. Unless the Carlsons made some
different arrangement with the partial purchasers to assume the Carlsons' line
maintenance responsibilities, the Carlsons must have those same responsibilities
as long as they own part of the property.
[49.] The rationale invoked by the majority
begs the question in this case, which is, What did the parties intend with
respect to a line maintenance charge in the event of a partial sale of the
Carlsons' property? As to that event, the Agreement is silent, and that silence
equates with ambiguity. This is "an agreement which is obscure in its meaning,
because of indefiniteness of expression, or because a double meaning is
present." Bulis, 565 P.2d at 490.
Certainly, paragraphs 2 and 3 of the Agreement can be read in at least two ways.
Rouse v. Munroe, 658 P.2d 74
(Wyo. 1983).
Paragraph 2 would lead to a conclusion that Water Unlimited no longer has a duty
to deliver water to the Carlsons since they no longer own the land described in
paragraph 1. Paragraph 3 can be read to provide for a continuation of the water
right in favor of a purchaser, but only a purchaser of the entire tract.
Otherwise, it is lost to the purchaser. This is a contract that can be
understood in more than one way. Hollabaugh v. Kolbet, 604 P.2d 1359
(Wyo.
1980).
[50.] The logical result of the majority
rationale is that, so long as Carlsons own even one square foot of the property
described in the Agreement, Water Unlimited must follow the terms of the
Agreement and cannot impose the line maintenance charge. If it is true that
"[r]eason is the life of the law,"1 then such an extreme consequence
must be the antithesis of legal life.
[51.] The thrust of the majority opinion is
that a privilege to be free of the line maintenance charge that was personal to
the Carlsons has been extended to purchasers from the Carlsons, even though
those purchasers are contributing nothing to the maintenance of the water
service. I do not think this eventuality is addressed in the Agreement, and I
find sufficient inconsistencies to make the Agreement obscure in its meaning,
because of indefiniteness of expression or because a double meaning is present,
as defined by this court and as applied to the circumstances that actually
occurred. Consequently, the question of the intention of the parties became one
of fact for the trial court, and it correctly decided that question. I would
affirm the decision of the trial court and remand the case for further
proceedings in accordance with the determination of the trial
court.
FOOTNOTES
1 Sir
Edward Coke, First Institute (1628).
Citationizer Summary of Documents Citing This Document
Cite | Name | Level | |
---|---|---|---|
Wyoming Supreme Court Cases | |||
Cite | Name | Level | |
1995 WY 64, 894 P.2d 618, | MARTIN v. FARMERS INS. EXCHANGE | Cited | |
1998 WY 90, 962 P.2d 160, | Mathis v. Wendling | Cited | |
1996 WY 110, 921 P.2d 1104, | Brockway v. Brockway | Cited | |
1997 WY 56, 936 P.2d 451, | M & A Const. Corp. v. Akzo Nobel Coatings, Inc. | Cited |
Cite | Name | Level | |
---|---|---|---|
Wyoming Supreme Court Cases | |||
Cite | Name | Level | |
1977 WY 53, 565 P.2d 487, | Bulis v. Wells | Cited | |
1979 WY 19, 590 P.2d 1306, | Meuse-Rhine-Ijssel Cattle Breeders of Canada Ltd. v. Y-Tex Corp. | Cited | |
1980 WY 4, 604 P.2d 1359, | Hollabaugh v. Kolbet | Cited | |
1980 WY 58, 612 P.2d 463, | Amoco Production Co. v. Stauffer Chemical Co. of Wyoming | Discussed at Length | |
1981 WY 51, 627 P.2d 1014, | McCartney v. Malm | Cited | |
1983 WY 14, 658 P.2d 74, | Rouse v. Munroe | Cited |