Thompson v. Thompson
Decision Date | 21 July 1986 |
Docket Number | No. 11130,11130 |
Citation | 391 N.W.2d 608 |
Parties | Vernon Eugene THOMPSON, and Andrew C. Thompson and Thomas A. Thompson, Co-Conservators for Helen Alice Thompson, Plaintiffs and Appellees, v. Eugene THOMPSON, Defendant, Myrna E. Thompson, Defendant and Appellant, and Peavey Company, Defendant. Civ. |
Court | North Dakota Supreme Court |
Kent M. Morrow, Watford City, for plaintiffs and appellees.
Peter H. Furuseth, of MacMaster & Bonner, Williston, for defendant and appellant Myrna E. Thompson.
Myrna E. Thompson appealed from a district court judgment declaring that Vernon and Helen Thompson own a salt-water-disposal well and are entitled to all payments associated with its use. We affirm.
On January 1, 1980, Vernon and Helen Thompson entered into a contract for deed for the sale of land to Eugene and Myrna Thompson. The contract for deed provided that the sellers "reserve and except all oil and gas."
When the contract for deed was executed, there was located on the premises an abandoned oil and gas well being used for the disposal of salt water from wells on other land. The sellers continued to receive the proceeds from use of the disposal well until 1983, when a dispute arose as to who was entitled to proceeds from use of the well, after which the salt-water-disposal company placed the proceeds in escrow. The well is no longer being used.
Vernon Thompson brought an action to quiet title in 1984, alleging that the buyers were in default under the terms of the contract for deed. Andrew C. Thompson and Thomas A. Thompson, co-conservators of the estate of Helen Thompson, intervened as plaintiffs to have the contract for deed cancelled for nonpayment.
Myrna Thompson answered and filed a counterclaim in which she alleged that, pursuant to a divorce judgment, she was awarded the sole interest of the vendee under the contract for deed and that:
The trial court concluded that the contract for deed was ambiguous and received evidence as to the parties' intentions. Judgment was entered declaring that the buyers were in default under the contract for deed, setting a redemption period, and decreeing that Vernon and Helen "are the owners of all right, title, and interest in the salt-water-disposal well ... and they are entitled to all payments associated with the use of said well, ..."
Myrna's issues on appeal relate only to the salt-water-disposal well: (1) Did the trial court err in concluding that the contract for deed is ambiguous and in receiving parol evidence; and (2) Did the grantors reserve an interest in the salt-water-disposal well.
Although arguably not an interest in "all oil and gas," the right to receive the proceeds from the disposal of salt water from oil wells on other land into an abandoned oil and gas well is nevertheless such an unusual interest that one would expect it to be expressly dealt with in a contract for deed executed by persons selling land and reserving oil and gas, but no other estate. The existence of such a well, known to all the contracting parties but not mentioned in the contract, when considered in light of the assertion in Myrna's counterclaim that the sellers had accepted payments for the use of the well rightfully due to the buyers, created a latent ambiguity as to the interests conveyed by the contract for deed which could be explained by parol evidence. See Harney v. Wirtz, 30 N.D. 292, 152 N.W. 803 (1915); 23 Am.Jur.2d Deeds, Sec. 314 (1983). Thus the trial court did not err in concluding that the contract for deed was ambiguous or in receiving extrinsic evidence as an aid in determining the factual question of the parties' ambiguously expressed intentions.
Consent to a contract "is not mutual unless the parties all agree upon the same thing in the same sense." Section 9-03-16, N.D.C.C. "A contract must be so interpreted as to give effect to the mutual intention of the parties as it existed at the time of contracting...
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