Bell v. Elder

782 P.2d 545, 121 Utah Adv. Rep. 16, 1989 Utah App. LEXIS 169, 1989 WL 130848
CourtCourt of Appeals of Utah
DecidedNovember 3, 1989
Docket880202-CA
StatusPublished
Cited by6 cases

This text of 782 P.2d 545 (Bell v. Elder) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Court of Appeals of Utah primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Bell v. Elder, 782 P.2d 545, 121 Utah Adv. Rep. 16, 1989 Utah App. LEXIS 169, 1989 WL 130848 (Utah Ct. App. 1989).

Opinion

OPINION

Before BULLOCK, Senior District Judge, 1 and JACKSON and ORME, JJ.

J. ROBERT BULLOCK, Senior District Judge:

Plaintiffs Bell appeal from a judgment dismissing their claims for rescission of a contract to buy real property and for restitution of the amounts paid thereunder. We affirm.

The Bells and other persons surnamed Waldron (the Waldrons are not parties to this action) contracted in 1977 to purchase ten acres of undeveloped land from a partnership comprised of the defendants (Elders) for a total of $25,000. Part of the price was paid at closing, with the remainder to be paid later. The Bells were to convey legal title on receipt of payment in full.

*546 The land sold was zoned for agricultural use at the time of the contract, with no more than one residence per ten-acre parcel permitted. The parties had hopes of developing the area more extensively than the zoning then permitted, but their hopes did not prove feasible. Property values in the area have generally declined since the contract was made.

The contract was reduced to writing by filling in a pre-printed form entitled “Uniform Real Estate Contract,” into which the following typewritten words were inserted:

The Seller [Elders] hereby agrees and warrantys [sic] to furnish water and electrical power [and] roads to this Property by July, 1978. If Buyer is unable to obtain [a] building permit by July, 1978, the seller agrees to endemnify [sic] and repay this contract within 6 months.

This insertion in the original contract was the subject of a “Supplimental [sic] Agreement” dated November 3, 1978, which read as follows:

Because of unforeseen circumstances that have arisen with regard to furnishing utilities to the [subject] property, the following Supplimental [sic] Agreement is added.... It is now understood and agreed that the Sellers ([Elders]) at their expense will furnish to each of [2 5-acre] plots,[ 2 ] the culinary water, electrical power, and roads. That Buyer is to pay $1,000 hook-up and installation fee for culinary water. The fee to be paid at the time of home construction and no fees payable for electrical power or roads, to property fade lines.
If Buyers should sell any lots from their 5[-]acre plots, then and in this event a $4,000 utilities improvement fee is payable to Sellers at the time of sale for each and every lot sold. This pays for the utilities, roads, electrical power and culinary water. Buyers of these lots would pay in addition $1,000 culinary water hook-up and installation fee. Sellers ([Elders]) hereby agree to furnish at their cost, sewer facilities to each of these 5[-]acre plots_
It is further understood and agreed that if the Sellers are unable to furnish these utilities on or before October 15, 1980 the Sellers agree to endemnify [sic] and repay this contract within six months.
The provisions of this Supplimental [sic] Agreement shall not alter or reduce in any way the conditions, terms, and provisions of the original contract.

At the time of trial, Elders had not furnished water to the property, but the court found that they were “ready, willing, and able at all times” to supply the required water. Bells, however, had not obtained, or applied for, a building permit, and had not paid the $1,000 hook-up and installation fee. The trial court found that the Bells had “decided not to build on the [property] because they were going to live elsewhere.”

The Bells sued to rescind the contract and recover the amounts they had paid thereunder, arguing in essence that the Elders had breached it by failing to supply culinary water to the property as the contract required. However, the trial court saw no purpose in requiring installation of culinary water facilities to serve rather remote property not intended for residential use, and held that the Elders were required by the contract to be merely able to furnish water to the subject property by October 15, 1980, and that they were required to actually furnish the water to the property only if the Bells had obtained a building permit and were about to construct a house, so that the water would be put to “beneficial use.” 3 The Bells appeal, challenging the findings (1) that the Elders were able to supply culinary water and (2) that the culinary water would have no val *547 ue until the defendants would be able to use it. 4 Bells also argue that residential use of the property was not a condition precedent to the Elders’ obligation to furnish culinary water.

Turning first to the Bells’ challenge to the trial court’s finding that the Elders were able to perform, we note at the outset the applicable standard of review: We reverse a finding of fact resulting from a trial to the bench only if, after the appellant has marshaled all available and relevant evidence, the finding appears to be clearly erroneous. 5 The Bells cite selectively to the record in support of their arguments against this finding, but have failed to thoroughly marshal all evidence relevant to the facts in question. Moreover, our review of the record indicates that there is substantial, albeit somewhat conflicting, evidence to support the challenged finding. In such circumstances, mindful of the trial court’s advantaged position in hearing the testimony first hand, 6 we are not convinced that a mistake has been made.

As noted above, the trial court interpreted the contract as requiring that the Elders merely be able to furnish water to the subject property by October 15, 1980, and not that water actually be furnished, observing that there was as yet no house on the property, nor was construction of a house imminent. In thus interpreting the contract as requiring only that the Elders be able to furnish water by October 15, 1980, the trial court relied extensively on parol evidence to augment the tersely worded operative provisions of the written contract. 7 The propriety of admitting parol evidence to facilitate the contract’s interpretation has not been challenged. Accordingly, the court’s interpretation is reviewed on appeal under the standard applied to findings of fact. 8 That standard, as noted above, permits us to reverse only if the appellant marshals all evidence relevant to the finding in question and thereby shows it to be clearly erroneous. The Bells have failed both to thoroughly marshall the evidence and to demonstrate that the trial court’s fact-based interpretation of this term of the contract is clearly erroneous. We therefore affirm the holding that the Elders were contractually required to be able to furnish culinary water to the property by October 15, 1980. Since they were thus able at all material times, it follows that the Elders did not breach their obligation to be able to furnish water.

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
782 P.2d 545, 121 Utah Adv. Rep. 16, 1989 Utah App. LEXIS 169, 1989 WL 130848, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/bell-v-elder-utahctapp-1989.