Mills v. Seattle & Montana Railway Co.

The opinion of the court was delivered by

Stiles, J.

This was an action for damages, brought by the respondent upon substantially the same state of facts,, and upon the terms of a similar deed, as were presented in Moorman v. Seattle & Montana Ry. Co., 8 Wash. 98 (35 Pac. 596).

But in this case the damages proved and recovered related wholly to the increased value of her land, which respondent alleges she would have realized had the ditch been constructed as provided for in the deed, and to the loss suffered by her in consequence of the failure of the appellant to-so construct and maintain the ditch. There was something additional concerning fences and a crossing, but it was immaterial.

The recovery was had upon the theory that the stipulations in the deed constituted a promissory covenant which the appellant was bound to perform and that, upon its failure, damages was the proper remedy. The appellant contended that the stipulations should be construed as a condition subsequent, and it addressed its demurrer, and many objections made upon the trial, to that point. We shall consider the demurrer only.

It is a proposition too well understood to require argument or citation, that courts do not favor forfeitures, and that for that reason, they go very far in construing the provisions of a deed poll against the grantor, to the end that the estate granted may not be defeated, since the almost universal effect of sustaining a stipulation in such an instrument as a condition subsequent is to work great hardship upon the grantee. But wherever the terms of the instrument are plain and unambiguous, there is no hesitation in enforcing the actual contract made by the parties.

Where, however, the rare instance occurs, as it does here, that the grantee is found insisting upon the construction of a *523condition subsequent, and that forfeiture shall take place, all consideration for him, and all idea of hardship to him is eliminated, and the court is free to act without such consideration. The appellant here has all along been urging the theory of a condition subsequent, and has by its answer offered to pay the just value of the land taken by it, and damages to land of the respondent not taken.

But upon the merits of the case, as set forth in the complaint, we think this a case of condition subsequent, without regard to the position of the appellant. The language of the habendum : ‘ ‘ To have and to hold the said premises, with appurtenances, unto the said party of the second part, and to its successors and assigns forever, subject to the following conditions, which are made apart of the-consideration of the foregoing transfer,” tends to support this view. The consideration is to cover not only the construction of the ditch, but the perpetual maintenance of it; so that if at any time the maintenance should be discontinued it might be said that the consideration had failed. Or if this result did not follow, there would be frequent actions for damages; or proceedings to compel specific performance, which would be impracticable. Again, the obvious purpose, and the only reasonable purpose imaginable for the construction of this ditch, was and must have been (and the evidence in the case confirms this), to provide a means by which respondent’s land might be more effectually drained and become more easily cultivated and more productive. But if the ditch had been constructed in the most efficient manner known to human skill, and no such results had been obtained, the mere existence of the ditch would have been of no value to the respondent. But, further, the respondent was the recipient of some of the neighborhood notes intended to pay for the rights of way, and she has pleaded the form of them in her complaint. This form contains the following clause: “If the railroad fails or neglects to dig the ditches in the manner specified in its deeds for right of way, or shall forfeit its right to lands deeded for said right of way, then this note to be void, and the maker hereof released from all obligations *524hereunder”; showing her understanding to be that there might be a forfeiture, when in lieu of the note she could fall back upon the right to regain her land, or have from the appellant its just value. These considerations, and the fact that the grantee in the deed is itself content with a forfeiture should have caused the demurrer to be sustained. Nor will the respondent suffer by this result. Presumably the cost of the ditch was in the eyes of both parties the equivalent of the damages for land to be taken and injured; and the respondent can now employ the money which she will receive in accomplishing the same result herself. We do not think damages of the kind here sued for were ever in the contemplation of either party.

No force is added to the complaint by the allegations that the county commissioners were about to build a ditch, but were stopped by the appellant’s proposals. The law under which the commissioners were acting has been declared void and inoperative, and nothing but failure would have followed their attempt. County of Skagit v. Stiles, ante, p. 388.

Cases more like the case at bar than any that we have observed are, Blanchard v. Detroit, etc., R. R. Co., 31 Mich. 42 (18 Am. Rep. 142), and Hammond v. Railroad Co., 15 S. C. 10. In the former, specific performance of a condition requiring the erection of a depot building and the stopping of trains on land conveyed was refused, the defendant taking the position that the stipulations constituted a condition subsequent and not a covenant; in the latter the grantor successfully contended that a provision for the maintenance of drainage ditches was a condition and not a covenant.

Judgment reversed and cause remanded with directions to sustain the demurrer and dismiss.

Hoyt and Anders, JJ., concur.

Dunbar, C. J., dissents.