Ash v. State

572 P.2d 1374, 1977 Utah LEXIS 1336
CourtUtah Supreme Court
DecidedDecember 13, 1977
Docket14919
StatusPublished
Cited by11 cases

This text of 572 P.2d 1374 (Ash v. State) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Utah Supreme Court primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Ash v. State, 572 P.2d 1374, 1977 Utah LEXIS 1336 (Utah 1977).

Opinion

MAUGHAN, Justice:

Plaintiffs, as fee owners, initiated a quiet title action against the state to a described parcel of land. Specifically, plaintiffs alleged the state asserted a right adverse to plaintiffs’ fee title ownership in the westerly 40 feet of their parcel and that the state’s claim was wrongly asserted. The state responded that the area in dispute had been taken in an eminent domain proceeding from plaintiffs’ grantors, the Fidlers. Upon trial to the court, the title to the property as described in the conveyance to plaintiffs was quieted in them. The state appeals. We affirm. Costs awarded to plaintiffs. All statutory references are to U.C.A.1953.

An action to quiet title is an action at law where the pleadings put in issue the ownership and possession of real property. 1 In such an action, the plaintiff must succeed by virtue of the strength of his own title rather than the weakness of defendant’s title; nevertheless all the plaintiff need do is to prove prima facie that he has title, which if not overcome by defendant, is sufficient. 2 Since this is an action at law, upon review, the findings and judgment of the trial court will be presumed valid, and the record will be reviewed in a light favorable to them. The appellant is required to sustain the burden of proving error, and the judgment of the trial court will not be disturbed if there be substantial evidence in the record to support it. 3

In 1963, the state filed a condemnation action against Fidlers (plaintiffs’ predecessors in interest). In 1966, a final order of condemnation was entered and recorded. The condemnation proceeding was supposed to take, in fee simple, a strip of Fidlers’ tract sufficient to enlarge 5th East in American Fork, Utah; from 66 feet to 120 feet. After the condemnation judgment was recorded, the county prepared a new description for tax purposes and a new plat was prepared. On April 1973, Fidlers conveyed by special warranty deed the land to plaintiffs. A policy of title insurance was issued. The description was based on the Utah County tax records and the plat map in the recorder’s office.

The trial court found the state to have used a false starting point in the description of the property. And, in addition, the state so erred in the description of the property it could not reasonably advise plaintiffs, their grantors, or the public of the subject matter of the condemnation proceedings; as it pertained to the land involved in the instant action. The trial court found plaintiffs acted with reasonable care throughout the *1377 transaction, which resulted in their purchase of the property. Also, the transfer was supported by the files and records of the Utah County Recorder’s office, and by a policy of title insurance issued in their favor. The trial court ruled the state had no right to the real property described in plaintiffs’ complaint.

Prior to the condemnation of Fidlers’ property, the western boundary was on the easterly line of 5th East. The northern boundary ran at an angle southeasterly along the south boundary of Highway 91; owing to this angle the eastern boundary was 45 feet shorter than the western boundary.

The final order of condemnation described the property as follows:

A parcel of land in fee for a highway known as Project No. 001-6, being part of an entire tract of property situated in the WA of the NW 1 /. of Section 24, T. 5 S., R. 1 E., S.L.M. The boundaries of said parcel of land are described as follows:
Beginning at the SW corner of said entire tract of property, which corner is 11.57 chains East from the SE corner of Block 1, Plat “A” American Fork City Survey; thence North 385 ft., more or less, along the west boundary line of said entire tract of property to the NW corner of said entire tract of property; thence S. 73° 26' E. 72 ft., more or less, to a point 60.0 ft. perpendicularly distant easterly from the survey line of said project; thence S. 0° 49' 19" W. 363 ft., more or less, to the south boundary line of said entire tract of property; thence West 75 ft., more or less, along said south boundary line to the point of beginning. The above described parcel of land contains 0.64 acres, more or less.
78-34-15, provides:
. A copy of the judgment must be filed in the office of the recorder of the county, and thereupon the property described therein shall vest in the plaintiff for the purpose therein specified.

Under this statute only the property described in the final order of condemnation, which was recorded, vested in the state. Since the trial court found plaintiffs to have acted reasonably in the transaction, the state can prevail only if the judgment gave notice of record to plaintiffs.

The warranty deed to plaintiffs described the property as follows:

Commencing South 89° 29' East 799.25 feet along line from the Southeast Corner of Block 1, Plat “A” American Fork City Survey; thence North 26' East 8.77 feet; thence East 28.2 feet; thence North 350 feet more or less to Highway; thence South 72° 22' East 121.75 feet; thence South 2° 27' West 323.8 feet; thence North 89° 29' West 135.26 feet to beginning.

On appeal, the state contends the description gave notice to plaintiffs of the state’s interest in the westerly portion of the property.

The requisite degree of accuracy in a description is an eminent domain proceeding is stated as follows in 6 Nichols On Eminent Domain (3rd Ed.), Sec. 26.112, pp. 26-48.1 to 26-57:

The petition must contain an accurate description of the land sought to be taken, so that the extent of the claim will appear on the record. In the absence of an opportunity to amend the petition, failure in this respect will invalidate the proceeding. The description should be as accurate as is required in the case of a deed of land. At any rate it must be such that a surveyor could locate the parcel described without the aid of extrinsic evidence. It has been held that the land must be so exactly described as to be understood by an ordinary person who has no engineering knowledge. Accordingly, unless the whole tract taken is surrounded by natural boundaries such as streams or highways, the description must be by metes and bounds, that is, it must contain an initial point definitely situated, and courses and distances of the boundary lines (the courses either being given by the points of the compass or constituting a straight line from one fixed point to another). .

*1378 In County of Orange v. Metropolitan Transportation Authority 4 the court stated the description of the property to be acquired should be sufficiently definite to enable a surveyor to determine the starting point and plot the route, and the property should be described with that degree of accuracy that it can be readily located by anyone familiar with the locality.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
572 P.2d 1374, 1977 Utah LEXIS 1336, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/ash-v-state-utah-1977.